Beginning around 6 or 7 years ago, I began posting Happeh Theory to the internet. I sent messages to various scientists, and I went to scientific websites to post about Happeh Theory.
Within the last year or two, I made many forceful public posts at a newspaper in Britian called The Guardian. In those posts I talked about one of the main ideas of Happeh Theory: Asymmetry of the Human Body. I talked about how different patterns of Asymmetry of the Human Body were associated with various health problems. Like how masturbation will cause a specific pattern of Asymmetry in the Human Body.
Within the last year, I specifically posted at the British Guardian that scientists and doctors should take computer systems developed for facial recognition for security purposes, and apply them to the field of health. I publicly posted they should scan 1000 faces into the computer, then compare them to pictures of real human beings with medically verified health problems.
The story below is about using cameras to take pictures of people’s faces, then using computers to compare them for similarities. The similarities in facial features are then linked to various health problems. The news story ties Asymmetry of the Human Body with genetics. That idea is wrong. Or it could possibly be factually true, but that amount of influence that genetics would have on Asymmetry of the body would be small enough that it could be ignored in the majority of cases.
Asymmetry of the Human body may be influenced to some degree by genetics. According to Happeh Theory, Asymmetry of the Human Body is caused by the physical forces, or energy, that are generated within and act on the Human Body.
The man in this story must refer to genetics for financial reasons, and to retain the respect of his peers. Governments and corporations fund genetic research. They do not fund Happeh Theory. If this man says his research was influenced by Happeh Theory, he would be a laughing stock among his peers, so he needs to say the idea was his own.
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The posts that I made at the British Guardian should still be stored at their facilities for any person who wishes to verify my claims about stimulating this type of research through public posts on the internet. The posts that come to mind immediately are a post in a blog by a man with psychological illness, and posts to blogs authored by two different homosexual columnists.
I plainly stated in the blog article by the man with psychological illness that the doctors should scan 1000 faces of people with that psychological illness, and look for common physical similarities. The picture of the man who authored the blog article showed a man whose head was bowed so that the top of his head was facing the camera. His face could not be seen. He was partially bald on the top of his head.
One of the homosexual authors whose blogs I made comments in was named Peter Tatchell. Around January of 2007, I was involved in a series of posts in which I tried to convince Mr Tatchell that homosexuality was a health problem, and that the one of the symptoms of homosexuality was Asymmetry of the Body. Mr Tatchell refuted these ideas as ridiculous. I then posted that Mr Tatchell was not a man to be trusted, because he claimed to be the head of an organization that did not really exist. That exact post will confirm the nickname I was posting under then.
The other homosexual columnist whose blog I posted in was a younger man who blogs infrequently. These posts were made sometime in 2007. I made specific reference to the fact that homosexuality causes Asymmetry of the Human Body, and I posted exactly how the picture of the man in his blog proved that he, a self declared homosexual, had an asymmetric body. The man’s head was not erect. His head was bent forward, and I made reference to the fact that the left side of his head was smaller than the right side of his head.

