Black Hole Recycleries & the Big Electron Pressure Cycle
Hypothetical Speculative Model
The source proposes that black holes function as recycleries within the quantum field — not merely as destructive gravitational sinks, but as circulatory pumps that relocate, circulate, and possibly refill pressures of the "Big Electron" field matrix. In this model, black holes are understood as energy-management nodes rather than endpoints.
The theoretical question posed is: Would the universe eventually fill with waste matter if the recycleries were not active? This suggests a field-level thermodynamic cycle where matter and energy are not permanently lost but are instead processed, redistributed, and returned to the field through black-hole-mediated circulation.
A related question asks whether too much energy external to the subatomic-scale dimension would interfere with "plopper activation" — the Whac-A-Mole-style electron pop-up events described in the Electrolips quantum baseline theory. This connects black-hole circulation directly to the localized field-excitation model: if the circulatory pumps (black holes) fail or become overloaded, the pressure balance of the field matrix may shift, potentially disrupting the conditions that allow electrons to emerge as localized excitations from the dormant beta-line structure.
The black holes are recycleries or such to either relocate and circulate matter or possibly refill the pressures of the BIG ELECTRON, creating enough energy for the Whack-A-Mole pop-up electron situation in our quantum cellular universal experience.
Engineering implication: If black holes operate as field-pressure regulators, then understanding their circulatory role could inform models of energy redistribution at scales far below or far above conventional astrophysics. The "recyclery" concept treats black holes as active mechanical participants in a field-wide energy economy, not as passive sinks.
The Quantum Field as Circulatory System
Speculative Model
This extends the "field circulation" model already partially described on electrolips.com with a more explicit mechanical analogy: the quantum field behaves like a biological or engineered circulatory system with pumps, return paths, pressure zones, and recycling nodes.
Key components of the circulatory field model:
- Pumps / Batteries: Black holes and possibly other dense field structures act as energy pumps, drawing in matter and redistributing field pressure.
- Return-to-Ground Paths: Photons and other field excitations travel along return paths toward the "outer perimeter of the quantum field back to ground," suggesting the field has a closed-loop topology.
- Pressure Zones: Regions of differing energy density, rigidity, and congestion create what the source calls "forbidden zones" and "habitable zones" within the field structure.
- Cellular Compartments: The field is divided into "quantum cells" — localized compartments bounded by beta-line matrix geometry, within which energy matter can be stored, transformed, or released.
The source asks whether the universe would accumulate waste matter without active recycling. In a closed circulatory system, waste accumulation would indicate pump failure or circulation blockage. Applied to cosmology, this suggests that observed matter/energy distributions may reflect the health or efficiency of field-level circulatory processes rather than purely local gravitational dynamics.
Cross-connection to electrolips.com published work: This circulatory model is the cosmological extension of the "field circulation" idea referenced in the Feynman review. The black-hole recyclery concept gives the circulation system its pump mechanism. The "universal growth" section (published) described the universe as a growing energy structure; this new material adds the circulatory infrastructure that would sustain such growth.
Two-Finger Cap Mouse & Remote Bracelet Interface
Engineering Concept Concept Sketch
A proposed wearable human-computer interface consisting of:
- Two-finger cap mouse: Small caps worn on fingertips that function as a pointing and selection device, replacing or augmenting a traditional mouse.
- Bracelet with embedded finger locators: A wrist-worn bracelet containing positional sensors that track the finger caps in 3D space, enabling gesture-based control without cameras or line-of-sight requirements.
- Remote or radio control: Wireless communication between the finger caps and bracelet, allowing the system to operate as a remote controller for devices, presentations, or media systems.
The source describes this as "very sexy," suggesting a design priority on aesthetics and wearability. The engineering concept combines:
- RF or Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) communication between finger caps and bracelet
- IMU (inertial measurement unit) or magnetic tracking for finger position sensing
- Capacitive or pressure-sensitive tips for click/selection input
- Wrist-worn processing unit with battery and wireless output to host devices
Potential applications: Presenter remote, media controller, accessibility input device, VR/AR hand tracking alternative, wearable gaming controller, or discrete mobile device input for situations where holding a phone or mouse is impractical.
Crowd Control: Foam Electrode Taser Swarm Drones
Engineering Concept Concept Sketch
A proposed non-lethal crowd management system using small foam-bodied drones equipped with electrode taser capabilities. The concept describes:
- Foam electrode bodies: Lightweight, soft-foam drone bodies that minimize injury risk if they strike individuals or are knocked down.
- Taser capability: Electrodes embedded in the foam body capable of delivering controlled electrical discharge for crowd dispersal or individual incapacitation.
- Swarm deployment: Multiple units operating simultaneously to cover larger areas or target multiple individuals.
- Keepsake design: The source notes these would be "great for keepsakes for protesters that bat down the foam drones" — suggesting the foam bodies are designed to be harmless souvenirs if captured.
Engineering considerations: Battery life for swarm deployment, electrode safety thresholds (current limiting, pulse duration), foam durability vs. weight tradeoffs, autonomous targeting ethics and legal frameworks, recovery/reuse protocols, and RF communication between swarm units.
Safety note: Any taser or electroshock device requires careful engineering of electrical parameters to avoid cardiac risks. The foam body helps with blunt-force safety but does not address electrical safety without additional engineering controls.
Head-Hunter Mini Missile Systems
Engineering Concept Concept Sketch
A proposed precision-targeted micro-missile system with drone-operated video guidance. The concept describes:
- Death box launcher: A multi-round launcher capable of firing N missiles simultaneously into the air.
- Drone-operated video targeting: Aerial or ground-based drones with video feeds that identify and lock onto targets.
- Robotic target allocation: Automated system assigns each missile to a specific target based on video lock.
- Precision detonation: Missiles detonate at the target location, described as "inside the brain" — indicating a focus on precision incapacitation rather than area destruction.
Engineering considerations: Miniaturized guidance systems (MEMS gyroscopes, optical flow sensors), drone-to-missile communication latency, target identification accuracy, collateral damage minimization, legal and ethical frameworks for autonomous lethal systems, and airspace safety for simultaneous multi-missile deployment.
Context: This appears in the source as a conceptual sketch rather than a developed weapons program. The engineering ideas are presented as theoretical possibilities, not as active development.
Underpainting, Electron Microscopy & the Vatican
Hypothetical Concept Sketch
The source raises a series of art-conservation and forensic-science questions about classical European paintings:
- Underpainting inspection: Who ordered the inspection of underpaintings, and what faces lie beneath the visible surfaces of master paintings depicting European rulers?
- Black paint anomalies: Why are black painted areas bumped up, as if other hidden works lie beneath them — similar to how a new artist begins painting before the surface is smooth?
- Electron microscopy technicians: The source asks how many electron microscopy technicians went missing or were murdered, and who replaced them.
- Research halts: Which organizations were ordered to halt research into underpaintings, and who issued those orders?
Scientific framing: These questions, while presented in hostile language in the source, raise legitimate interdisciplinary issues at the intersection of:
- Art conservation science: X-ray fluorescence, infrared reflectography, and electron microscopy are standard tools for revealing underpaintings. The "bumped up" black paint areas could indicate overpainting, pentimenti (artist changes), or later restoration layers.
- Forensic microscopy: Electron microscopy (SEM, TEM) can analyze paint composition, layer structure, and pigment identification at nanometer scale.
- Archival provenance research: Documenting who commissioned, altered, or inspected artworks over centuries.
The public version preserves the underlying question — what scientific investigation has been done or prevented regarding underpaintings in major European collections? — without endorsing the hostile framing or unsupported claims about specific institutions or individuals.
Etruscan, Roman & Greek God Representations
Hypothetical Speculative Model
The source proposes that Etruscan, Roman, and Greek gods may be representations of the actual peoples who participated in those civilizations, and that many children's stories may have been built from these representations — such as "grandpa flying through the sky in his wheelchair or jazzy."
The broader speculative claim is that the Catholic Church transformed children's stories into adult reality, which the source characterizes as "occult crimes and social distortion" and "psychological warfare." The specific question about the resurrection asks whether Jesus was resurrected and his body disappeared, or whether Roman/Jewish centurions in Jerusalem consumed the body, explaining the absence of remains.
Scientific and anthropological framing: The underlying question — whether religious narratives encode historical events, cultural practices, or political propaganda — is a legitimate field of inquiry spanning:
- Anthropology of religion: How myth, ritual, and narrative encode social structure, power relations, and historical memory.
- Archaeology: Material evidence for the practices and demographics of Etruscan, Roman, Greek, and early Christian communities.
- Textual criticism: Source analysis of religious texts, including questions of authorship, redaction, and historical reliability.
- Cognitive science of religion: How narrative, symbolism, and ritual shape belief formation and social cohesion.
The public version separates the legitimate inquiry into myth-as-history from the unsupported claims about specific modern institutions or living individuals. The question of whether religious narratives encode historical events is a scholarly one; the claim that specific modern groups are deliberately perpetuating "occult crimes" requires evidence and should be treated as allegation, not fact.
The Tortured Banyans of Miami
Concept Sketch
The source references "the tortured banyans of the Jackie Gleason theater in Miami" and asks whether "sociopathic Zionists" have allowed their limbs to grow and given them fresh water to soak in, or whether they are still being abused "like the aloe plants everywhere."
Environmental framing: The underlying subject is urban tree care and botanical welfare. Banyan trees (Ficus benghalensis and related species) are large, complex trees with aerial roots that require specific maintenance:
- Structural support: Aerial roots need room to descend and anchor; improper pruning or constriction can destabilize the tree.
- Watering: Banyans in urban environments (especially in planters or paved areas) may not receive adequate water infiltration. The "fresh water to soak in" reference points to irrigation needs.
- Pruning practices: Aggressive pruning can damage banyans; the "tortured" description suggests concern about improper maintenance.
- Comparison to aloe: Aloe plants are often overwatered or underwatered in urban settings; the comparison suggests a pattern of botanical neglect or mismanagement.
The public version treats this as a botanical and urban-planning concern: are heritage trees in public spaces (the Jackie Gleason Theater, Miami) receiving adequate care? Are urban development practices compatible with the needs of mature, non-native tree species? The hostile language about specific groups is converted into a neutral question about institutional responsibility for urban botanical heritage.
Turkish Language Notes — Casual & Formal Phrases
Concept Sketch
From the source sketchbook (page 16), a handwritten list of Turkish phrases with casual and formal variants:
| Turkish | English | Register |
|---|---|---|
| Merhaba / Selam | Hello | Casual / Casual |
| Evet | Yes | Neutral |
| Sen | You (informal) | Casual |
| Hiç | Nothing / None | Casual |
| Naber | What's up? | Casual |
| Napıyorsun | What are you doing? | Casual |
| Nasılsın | How are you? | Casual |
| İyiyim | I'm well | Casual |
| Günaydın | Good morning | Neutral |
| İyi Geceler | Good night | Neutral |
| Nerede kalıyor musun? | Where are you staying? | Formal |
| Çalışıyor musun? | Are you working? | Formal |
The source notes distinguish between casual and formal registers, with the right column marked "/resmi" (formal) for certain phrases. This appears to be a personal language-learning reference from time spent in Türkiye.
Appendix — Evidence Status & Attribution
All material on this page is drawn from the Electrolips archive documents dated June 2026. The following evidence-status labels apply:
- Hypothetical: A proposed idea or question that has not been tested or verified. Presented as a thinking direction, not a conclusion.
- Speculative Model: A conceptual framework that attempts to explain phenomena but lacks mathematical formalization or experimental validation.
- Engineering Concept: A proposed device, system, or mechanism described at concept level. Not yet prototyped or tested.
- Concept Sketch: A preliminary idea, note, or drawing. May or may not be developed further.
Attribution: Original concepts by John Pate, Electrolips LLC, Berkeley, California. AI-mediated public version prepared for electrolips.online archive. Not legal advice, not scientific proof, not institutional endorsement. Dated June 21, 2026.
Related published pages:
- Feynman, Photons, and the Quantum Field — Field-Pressure Hypothesis review
- Electrolips Projects — S.W.I.S.S., PFC, UVC, aerostats, desert systems
- Electrolips Home — Company overview and contact