Re: Morgellons Moves with a Quickness
Those are some great finds.
Especially the first two.
Thanks for posting them.
Reminded me a bit of nematocysts.
There's some fairly good video beginning at the approx. 1:57 mark:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7WJCnC5ebf4
Here's another:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zJiBc_N1Zk
Something interesting at the approx. 55 second mark of this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NbpB5F9CcLc
There is a jellyfish that is a subject of interest and research in that it doesn't appear to naturally die. Other than predation by other creatures it appears to go on and on.
A clip of a freshwater Cnidaria, Hydra.
This one doesn't show the close-up firing. It's kind of interesting in its own way. The hydra is of interest to some biologists as it appears to not age:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dl_oVns2oa8
You probably have seen the lady's videos referring to what she has termed, "intelligent lint,"....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKs6DEMBn38&list=ULWgUjqBv5CSk&index=3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zr9g0gC-wPI&index=2&list=ULlKs6DEMBn38
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgUjqBv5CSk&list=ULhToha45bN0o&index=26
She shares thoughts on chemtrailing in the comments just under that last vid.
Is there some Cnidaria involvement in morg?
Has the rapid fire coil and release aspect somehow been incorporated into whatever else may be in this in a mode of growth process itself, documented in the vids in the opening post?
A cascade of such action... continuously loading up and stepped, extended, progression after progression, when in such growth mode?
A rapid fire bing bing bing bing?
Or perhaps a multiple loading up in advance of a growth spurt, then release?
Again, a rapid fire bing bing bing bing?
If so, was such a, "side experiment," caught on camera here and there, or part and parcel of morg as a whole?
I wouldn't know.
This post is just the result of a memory, "triggered," by those first two vids.