I was playing around with an idea for the electron extraction circuit.
Obviously you can't replicate this in the circuit simulator because the capacitor wont give you electrons

Basically, as you already know, the EEC pulses opposite to the VIC, so that when the VIC is off, the positive plate can be used to extract electrons when a positive potential is applied across the resistive load.
In this situation the water, being the source of the electrons, acts as the 'ground' or negative connection to the circuit.
The idea.
Step 1: Put the resistive load... light bulb... in between the top choke and the positive plate.
Step 2: Separate the VIC in between the secondary and bottom choke, so that each has it's own individual ground.
Step 3: Pulse the VIC continuously.
Step 4: Gate the ground on and off for the bottom choke, while the secondary is always grounded.
This results in the positive half of the VIC always being pulsed, and the negative half of the VIC being gated on and off. This means when the negative is gated off, the EEC comes into effect automatically, and starts pulling them through the light bulb.
Of course you have to have a working VIC, and voltage level high enough to be ionizing the water.