Sam Fisher (Data Drops) – Telegram
Sam Fisher (Data Drops)
1.12K subscribers
7.31K photos
4.95K videos
10.9K files
12.4K links
All the files that're in my file archive, it's like the library, but not! (you can keep these and there's no fines!)
Download Telegram
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The Chivalrous Orders and the Deception Industrial Complex

Preview clip from:

The System 'For Dummies' (Chapter 2-1): Structure Pt 1

Out Sunday 30th November 2025

At

18:30 (GMT)

On YouTube, Substack and Ticktok
🙏1
Thread saved on reseeit There is a good chance that Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr were patsies for the Soham murders of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman soham https://resee.it/tweet/1740716817633743086
👀1
Forwarded from Orgone Channel Telegram (ned)
Chronology of W. Reich’s scientific discoveries

1923-1934 He develops the theory of orgasm and the technic of Character Analysis. (Books: The Function of the Orgasm and Character Analysis.)

1928-1934 He discovers the importance of the Respiratory Block and of the Muscular Armor in Neurosis (Book: The Function of the Orgasm.)

1923-1934 He distinguishes the self-regulating primary natural drives from the secondary, perverted impulses, according to the principles of sexeconomy. (Book: The Function of the Orgasm.)

1930-1934 He studies and recognizes the role of irrationalism and of the human sexual economy in the origin of dictatorships of all political denominations. (Book: The Mass Psychology of Fascism.)

1934 Discovery of the orgasm reflex. (Book: The Function of the Orgasm.)

1935-1936 He investigates the bio-electrical nature of sexuality and anxiety. (Book: The Function of the Orgasm.)

1936-1939 Discovery of the orgone energy vesicles (bions). (Books: The Bions και The Cancer Biopathy.)

1936-1939 He discovers that the cancer cell can be produced from bionously disintegrated animal tissue and observes the organization of protozoa from bionously disintegrated moss and grass. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1937 Discovery of T-bacilli in sarcoma. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1939 Discovery of bio-energy (orgone) in sand packet (SAPA) bions. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1940 Discovery of orgone energy in the atmosphere. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1940 Invention of the Orgone Energy Accumulator. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1944 Invention of the Orgone Energy Meter. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1940-1945 Experimental orgone therapy of the cancer biopathy. (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1945 Πειραματική διερεύνηση της πρωτογενούς βιογένεσης (Πείραμα ΧΧ). (Book: The Cancer Biopathy.)

1945 Method of orgonomic functionalism. (Book: Ether, God and Devil.)

1947 Investigation of the emotional plague of man, which is now recognized as a disturbance of the bioenergetic equilibrium. (Book: Character Analysis, 3rd Edition.)

1949-1950 Orgonometric Equations. (Journal: Orgone Energy Bulletin.)

1951 Discovery of the function of Cosmic Superimposition and its role in living and non-living nature. (Book: Cosmic Superimposition.)

1947-1951 Investigation of the anti-nuclear effects of the orgone. (Journal: Orgone Energy Bulletin.)

1951-1952 Discovery of DOR (Deadly Orgone Energy), identification of its properties and its specific toxicity (DOR Sickness). (Journal: Orgone Energy Bulletin.)

1951-1954 Identification of Melanor, Orite, Brownite and Orine[1] (initial steps towards a preatomic chemistry). (Journals: Orgone Energy Bulletin and CORE.)

1952-1955 Use of the “reversed” orgonomic potential in the removal of dor from the atmosphere in cloudbusting and weather control. (Journals: Orgone Energy Bulletin and CORE.)

1954-1955 Theory of desert formation in nature and within man (emotional plague) and demonstration of their reversibility (OROP Desert Ea and the Medical DOR Buster).[2] (Journal: CORE.)

1954-1955 Formulation of the theory that diseases have to do with DOR concentration in the tissues. (Journal: CORE.)

1950-1957 Gravity and anti-gravity equations. (Unreleased notes.)

1951-1957 Development and practical application of Social Psychiatry. (Unreleased notes.)

[1] Names Reich gave to substances he observed developing on the rocks of the walls of the Observatory or he produced himself after the Oranur experiment. He theorized that their production is governed by functions that take place at a level prior to the material (atomic) basis of chemical reactions. The science investigating their nature he named “preatomic chemistry”.

[2] A device designed by Reich to directly absorb DOR from the organism.

https://wilhelmreich.gr/en/orgonomy/historic-material/chronology-of-wilhelm-reichs-scientific-discoveries/
Forwarded from Orgone Channel Telegram (ned)
AI responses may confabulate.

The word
orgasm refers to the intense physical and emotional sensation and involuntary muscular contractions experienced at the peak of sexual excitement. Its usage in English dates back to the 17th century, initially referring to violent excitement of emotions or other bodily functions more generally, before specializing to its primary sexual meaning.
Etymology and Translation
The etymology traces back through several languages to an ancient shared root.

Greek: The English word comes from the Modern Latin orgasmus, which in turn is from the Greek word ὀργασμός (orgasmos), meaning "excitement, swelling". The Greek term derives from the verb ὀργάω (orgaō), which means "to swell with moisture, to be in heat, to be excited".
Latin: The Greek orgasmos was adopted into New Latin as orgasmus, which was used in medical texts from the early 16th century.
Sanskrit: The Greek verb orgaō is related to the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root *wrog- ("to burgeon, swell with strength"), which is also the source of the Sanskrit word ūrjā (ऊर्जा). Ūrjā conveys meanings such as "nourishment, sap, vigor, strength, energy, or force".

Usage

Medical/Biological: The term is primarily used in a biological and medical context to describe the physiological sexual response cycle, including the sudden release of sexual tension and rhythmic contractions of the pelvic floor muscles.
General/Figurative: In broader or older usage (from 1763 onwards), it can refer to any "immoderate excitement or action" or "frenzy," such as a non-sexual "orgasm of emotion".
Verb: The word "orgasm" was first used as a verb in the 1970s (e.g., "to orgasm").