Page 22 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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The agitator was having a negative effect on the men arguing with him
about power-beaming inventions. He appeared to feed on their annoyance. Later in
the afternoon Manning again wandered out of the meeting hall for a mid-lecture
break, head throbbing with new concepts. The same loud-voiced man, whom we will
call Gregory Jones, was talking to another man and the two drew her into
conversation. Gregory had the bouncy energy of someone who was looking for a
quick laugh as well as an argument. Asked why he insults Nikola Tesla at a Tesla
symposium, he replied, "I like deflating idols."
This iconoclast was a full-time researcher regarding what he said is a subtle,
powerful but little-known dynamic energy which resides in the atmosphere and
nearly everywhere. He said a number of experiments have proven that a dynamic
non-material energy exists in all living forms.
Manning had enough of wild concepts for one day. However, at a gut level
she felt that it was true. Living people, animals, plants and even the atmosphere
seemed to exude some type of electricity or vitality when in a healthy state and when
free from the effects of pollution. Was it possible that official science really doesn't
know much about something so basic, because the measuring instruments hadn't yet
been invented to detect it?
Gregory was saying that the coarse form of electricity used in nineteenfh-
and twentieth-century technologies is an irritant to the primal form of energy in the
air. According to that worldview, if Tesla had been able to send electricity wirelessly
all over the world, it would have been an ecological disaster.
"Humans. My least-favorite species!" Gregory bellowed, following the
embarrassed journalist toward the door to the meeting hall. "Listen to this. I just
about got myself kicked out of the meeting. I went up to the speaker; you heard his
talk?"
The electrical engineering professor with a Ph.D. that Gregory mentioned
had seemed highly respected by the audience. The scientist had done much
experimenting toward the goal of repeating Tesla's wireless electricity experiments.
He had talked about wanting to "resonate the Schumann cavity". But Gregory was no
respecter of academic degrees; he apparently had caused another commotion in the
hallway by confronting this professor. "1 told him that if he tried to be another Tesla,
he could cause the biggest ecological disaster we've ever had."
In Gregory's view, it was fortunate for the planet that Tesla's tower on Long
Island - intended to broadcast power around the earth - was never completed. After the
banker J .P. Morgan withdrew funding, no other financier would touch the project. It
was just as well; the project would have been insane, Gregory insisted. Whether they
send their electrical power through the air or through the earth, he said, these
experimenters would be playing with our planet on a big scale.