James Doris

1.9K posts

James Doris

James Doris

@JamesDoris19

President & CEO of Camber Energy, Inc.

가입일 Ekim 2019
541 팔로잉13.6K 팔로워
James Doris 리트윗함
Camber Energy, Inc.
Camber Energy, Inc.@Camber_Energy·
Camber Energy Provides Update on Continued Validation, Field Deployment and Technical Advancements of Patented Broken Conductor Protection Technology Recent Distribution-Level Test Successfully Detects Simulated Broken Conductor Condition at U.S. Government Facility Link to full PR -> accessnewswire.com/newsroom/en/oi… Link to BCPT Presentation -> cookiestandard.com/wp-content/upl… Link to Form 8-K ->sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archiv… $CEIN #wildfiremitigation #gridstability
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SKI@skiistiredasf·
Terry Fox, a 21 year old Canadian who lost a leg to cancer, began a cross-Canada run to raise money for cancer research. He ran the equivalent of a full marathon a day. He made it 143 days and 5,373 km before the spread of his cancer forced him to quit. He d ied June 1981.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
1866: Cotton seeds are agricultural waste. After extracting cotton fiber, farmers are left with millions of tons of seeds containing oil that's toxic to humans. Gossypol, a natural pesticide in cotton, makes the oil inedible. The seeds are fed to cattle in small amounts or simply discarded. 1900: Procter & Gamble is making candles and soap. They need cheap fats. Animal fats work but they're expensive. Cotton seed oil is abundant and nearly worthless. If they could somehow make it edible, they'd have unlimited cheap raw material. The process they develop is brutal. Extract the oil using chemical solvents. Heat to extreme temperatures to neutralise gossypol. Hydrogenate with pressurised hydrogen gas to make it solid at room temperature. Deodorise chemically to remove the rancid smell. Bleach to remove the grey color. The result: Crisco. Crystallised cottonseed oil. Industrial textile waste transformed through chemical processing into something white and solid that looks like lard. They patent it in 1907, launch commercially in 1911. Now they have a problem. Nobody wants to eat industrial waste that's been chemically treated. Your grandmother cooks with lard and butter like humans have for thousands of years. Crisco needs to convince her that her traditional fats are deadly and this hydrogenated cotton-seed paste is better. The marketing campaign is genius. They distribute free cookbooks with recipes specifically designed for Crisco. They sponsor cooking demonstrations. They target Jewish communities advertising Crisco as kosher: neither meat nor dairy. They run magazine adverts suggesting that modern, scientific families use Crisco while backwards rural people use lard. But the real coup happens in 1948. The American Heart Association has $1,700 in their budget. They're a tiny organisation. Procter & Gamble donates $1.7 million. Suddenly the AHA has funding, influence, and a major corporate sponsor who manufactures vegetable oil. 1961: The AHA issues their first dietary guidelines. Avoid saturated fat from animals. Replace it with vegetable oils. Recommended oils: Crisco, Wesson, and other seed oils. The conflict is blatant. The organization issuing health advice is funded by the company that profits when people follow that advice. Nobody seems troubled by this. Newspapers report the guidelines as objective science. Doctors repeat them to patients. Government agencies adopt them into policy. Industrial cotton-seed oil, chemically extracted and hydrogenated, becomes "heart-healthy" while butter becomes "artery-clogging poison." 1980s: Researchers discover that trans fats, created by hydrogenation, directly cause heart disease. They raise LDL, lower HDL, promote inflammation, and increase heart attack risk more than any other dietary fat. Crisco, as originally formulated, is catastrophically unhealthy. This takes 70 years to officially acknowledge. Procter & Gamble's response: Quietly reformulate without admission of error. Remove hydrogenation, keep selling seed oils, never acknowledge that their "heart-healthy" product spent seven decades actively causing the disease it claimed to prevent. Modern seed oils remain. Soybean, canola, corn, safflower oils everywhere. Same chemical extraction process. Same high-temperature refining. Same oxidation problems. Just without hydrogenation so trans fats stay below regulatory thresholds. These oils oxidise rapidly when heated. They integrate into cell membranes where they create inflammatory signalling for months or years. They're rich in omega-6 fatty acids that promote inflammation. They've never existed in human diets at current consumption levels. But they're cheap. Profitable. And the food industry has spent a century convincing everyone they're healthy. The alternative, admitting that industrial textile waste shouldn't have been turned into food, would require acknowledging the last 110 years of dietary advice was fundamentally corrupted from the start. Your great-grandmother cooked with lard because that's what humans used for millennia. Then Procter & Gamble needed to sell soap alternatives and accidentally created the largest dietary change in human history. We traded animal fats that built civilisations for factory waste that causes disease. The soap company won. Your health lost.
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annie
annie@ohhanxiety·
99% of people don't know what this switch does. Can anyone explain its function? 🤔
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James Doris
James Doris@JamesDoris19·
Many Canadians, including me, are still shocked and deeply saddened by Charlie Kirk's death. We admired his intellect, passion and energy, along with his unmatched efforts to promote free speech and civil discourse. His efforts were noticed and had an impact far beyond the U.S.A.
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James Doris
James Doris@JamesDoris19·
$CEIN - as publicly disclosed yesterday, we continue to expand and strengthen our Wildfire Mitigation Technology portfolio. Our issued and pending patents cover algorithm-based broken conductor protection solutions for both transmission and distribution lines, as well as our hardware-based solution for end-of-line distribution protection...... the full suite!
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James Doris
James Doris@JamesDoris19·
France’s NF X 30-503-1 standard is considered one of the strictest in the world for medical waste decontamination equipment. NF X 30-503-1 sets the bar high with: ✅ Rigorous performance validation ✅ 6-log microbial inactivation requirements ✅ Testing under worst-case load conditions It is globally recognized as a benchmark for safety and reliability. Our VKIN-300 unit meets the standard! #CamberEnergy # Viking Ozone #Sustainability #InfectionControl #MedicalWaste #HealthcareInnovation #DecontaminationStandards
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