Embark on a fascinating odyssey and learn how imagination and innovation of one man dramatically improved the future of mankind from healthcare to agriculture and transformed the HVAC Industry
Enter into the captivating world of Dr. Arthur V. Martin and get a glimpse of a global journey. With nearly forty years of remarkable abstract thinking coupled with an unyielding perseverance, see how the future of mankind is on the precipice of sought after health and wellness. From Jellybeans to a Nobel Prize Nomination is a synopsis of Dr. Martin’s life story – of his quest to better the life of all mankind by using nature to cure nature’s ills. From safer, healthier indoor pathogen control all the way to increasing world food production through organic-based technology, you will begin to understand that the future has promise for those who don’t give up when seeking answers to difficult problems. Get a glimpse into how one determined man with a brilliant, curious mind embraced cultural, religious, and ethnic diversity despite the lack of support from some who resisted change and lacked vision. The revenue future for the HVAC industry is gigantic for innovative Mechanical Contractors.
quotes from the book...
FLORIDA:
“After a couple of years of consulting with the local gas utility as their energy conservation engineer, I had the good fortune to be exposed to additional facets of environmental control and head an incredibly unique program that would require unusual skills, abstract thinking, and engineering innovation. It was a perfect challenge. I engineered a way to run the water that was heated by the engines through a heat exchanger where domestic water flowed in opposition to it, and the heat was transferred to the domestic water. That water then went to those two 500-gallon water heaters and eliminated the oil burners completely, along with any need for fuel oil on site. Since the chillers were using natural gas and not electricity, the power input to the units dropped from a requirement of a 600-amp power source to a 50-amp power source each. Energy conservation through innovation was now on the table. The local electric utility was furious. The local electric chiller sales company was furious. The customer, however, was ecstatic. The project was voted as The Most Efficient Building in the Nation in its category that year.”
MALAYSIA:
“Having worked with and in several SE Asian countries, I was certainly aware of alternative medicine. I got food poisoning once in Malaysia at a birthday dinner for a friend’s daughter and ended up in the local emergency room. I was treated traditionally and was sick for a few extra days. There was a Chinese girl in my building who had been educated in the United States. She was a stockbroker and spoke fluent English. She took me to see her father, who was a highly reputable and famous Chinese medicine doctor. He examined me, asked a few questions, and then rolled out a piece of brown paper. He opened his cabinet of herbs. He proceeded to weigh them out and stack up a bunch of those plant herbs on the paper. He took the four corners, twisted them together, and tied them tight. He didn’t speak much English, so he gave his daughter some instructions to pass on to me.”
SAUDI ARABIA:
“The four rooms were properly disinfected; however, those four rooms were part of a group of twenty-four rooms served by a single unit providing heating, cooling, and dehumidification. The scenario is like an Amtrak train. Bad pathogens are picked up at room #1 and room #2, etc., then are distributed all along the other rooms as if they were stops on the train’s route. You must clean the train, not only the station stops. After identifying and quantifying the problems and the itemized pathogen issues, a measured amount of our organic-based, chemical, drug, and alcohol-free product was applied. Re-sampling and testing random rooms several days later confirmed a successful result.”
BANGLADESH:
“The first stop was their regional headquarters in Hong Kong to get better local information. The next stop was China, where cotton was grown to make the thread that was woven into cloth. The actual thread tested positive for animal fecal coliform. Obviously, they were using animal waste for fertilizer. The next stop was Wuxi, China, where the thread was dyed and then woven into patterns on large rolls of cloth. The thread tested positive for fungi and bacteria. A day at the weaving facility with a series of fungal and bacterial sampling revealed both pathogen types on the machines weaving the contaminated thread into cloth. The trail was being exposed.”
CHINA:
“Within a year we had more than a hundred actual resolved issues. We even reached out to mothers who had children suffering from diaper rash. Our organic-based product contains a plant component that breaks down the urea enzyme and neutralizes it. A baby could urinate in their diaper, and the product instantly neutralized the acid content into something harmless and protected their delicate skin.”
USA:
“In addition to reducing and/or eliminating viable, non-viable, and non-volatile particulates, the hospital reached a new milestone. The first two quarters of operation, post M3 System® with Path-Away Anti-Pathogenic Aerosol Solution® saw a total of zero (0) hospital-acquired infections, the first since its establishment.”