Stan Meyer once said that it would have to be up to the public to get the technology in. Not the governments of this world. I believe he was right. People don't always consider why the governments of the world would be against this technology until they examine how our government makes its money.
I realize that so many inventors are gung ho over getting patent protection while overlooking the entity that awards and records the actual patents. When you apply for a patent, the wait is roughly around one year before they are even reviewed from what I’m told. Because you are dealing with the government, other government agencies are at liberty to secretly examine your invention for things such as military viability in which case they may cause your patent to be considered a matter of national security – like they did with anti-gravity inventions - and become classified information so enemy countries can not use your new technology against the U.S. as a military weapon. This classification also gets abused too. Mostly because if Americans dropped oil and started using water as a fuel, it’s not just the “big oil” and their lobbyist that would go completely bankrupt. Our government would lose billions of dollars in tax revenues it counts on to balance its budget and pay for new road construction and maintenance. They also realize if they try to shift the current oil taxes onto water, the people will revolt as water is a necessity of life and if we pay $3 a gallon for water, many poor people will die of thirst.
What makes Meyer technology even more threatening to “big oil” and our federal government is Stanley claimed his cell could run on salt water or rain water. How would you tax that? You would have to guard the beaches and lakes so nobody filled up a container to use free water to make fuel and possible drinking water – as Meyer claimed the byproduct was fresh water – so enforcement of the water tax would be harder to enforce than the current oil/gasoline taxes.
Open source efforts are the only way to go in this particular case because I highly doubt the U.S. government will allow it – Meyer WFC technology - to become available to the general public for the previous reasons I’ve stated. Once the genie is out of the bottle through open sourced efforts, good luck getting the genie back into the bottle and trying to erase the technology completely. Our government found out the hard way this exact lesson with nuclear energy. Now that it’s out, even the Koreans have it and now maybe the Iranians.
My job is to get the genie out of the bottle and let all the governments and rich oil greedy pigs try to figure out how they are going to get the genie back into its bottle and erase all the evidence. Then after they figure out they can't erase the technology or stop it, I am curious as to what they will do with their double hull super tanker oil cargo ships, their oil refineries, their off-shore oil drilling rigs and their gas stations.
Mina.
Meyer’s patent for his fuel cell expired in 2007 anyways and is now considered public domain, if I am correct. I am only using the Meyer patent for clues and take nothing in there for gospel except SS electrodes, tap water and DC voltage. The rest is experimental.