In response Joyce Chandler to her Publication

I've tested this with a voltmeter.
You can ONLY ground yourself when walking barefoot on grass or
sticking a metal rod in the ground and connecting to it.
You CANNOT ground barefoot on sand, dirt, concrete or asphalt.
You CAN ground yourself WITH shoes on by touching or holding to a plant, branch, or tree.

ULTRA MAGA, Gen X, Texas Patriot. #WWG1WGA #GOD WINS.

In response Oʼ Boy WTF to his Publication

I am reading it works on pave stone, cement but not asphalt. Lots of conflicting info on this.

I've testes on paved stone and cement and I was not grounded.
We need to fully understand what grounding fully is.
Because stepping or toughing living matter works.
Tested this 100's of time.

In response Bootsie 1776 to her Publication

Only people mentioned by @V_Anon in this post can reply

In response Oʼ Boy WTF to his Publication

I had heard that you were grounded on cement too, but questioned it as cement does not conduct electricity. I think you're right. Thought you would be grounded on sand and dirt though. Curious if you would be by walking on wood mulch. And have you tested all these places when they are wet like after a rain fall or a dewy morning? I have at times when having a sore back laid down in the grass, surprisingly or not, it works. Nice day, lay in the grass and look at the clouds, things we use to do as a kid... sometimes wonder if we get more stupid the older we get!

In response Pink Totter to her Publication

I also tested over wood mulch with negative effects.
Their are a lot of discrepancies abound on grounding
and after my observations I think more research is needed
to justify how grounding actually works in our natural world.
Example
Holding a branch of a tree with you shoes on seems to work.
Or waking barefoot on grass. Is touching life force from the ground
the only way to ground? We need more science on this.

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