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www.earthpulse.com 18 www.earthpulse.com
Manning learned more about Nikola Testa two years later, after another
symposium in Colorado Springs. One of the papers in the proceedings of that
meeting was by a historian and psychology professor, Dr. Marc Seifer. She would
recall it years later when learning about unpublicized experiments in lighting up the
upper atmosphere.
Seifer gave Tesla credit for inventing fluorescent lights, just as the revered
American inventor Thomas Edison is the inventor of the incandescent light bulb. The
biographer notes that Tesla and Edison clashed over Edison's insistence that the
country should stick to his direct current (DC) technologies for electrical lighting and
power distribution. Tesla's AC system was better because AC electricity can travel
hundreds of miles over power lines at high voltages, while a wire carrying DC would
be unable to light bulbs a mile away from the generating plant.
Strangely, Edison was the one who was lionized in American history books.
One of the stories that is told and retold, for example, is how he sent men to the
Amazon to look for materials for the best filament for his light bulb. Edison's
persistence is highly praised. However, most people today are unaware that Tesla's
demonstrations showed the filament to be superfluous - not needed for electric lights.
Using very high-frequencies (increased vibrations of the electrical current), he
showed that the action of the air was more important than the filament. And thus he
out-'Edisoned' Edison, said Dr. Seifer.
Seifer pulled together parts from 53 reference works, in his presentation
"Nikola Tesla: The History of Lasers and Particle Beam Weapons".30 For an example
of Tesla research, two brothers, both scientists, traveled to the Tesla Museum in
Yugoslavia and read materials not available in North America. They suggested that
Testa's particle-beam work evolved from his pioneering experiments with X-rays, as
well as from his idea of lighting up the skies with his "magnifying transmitter" by
beaming up electrical energy to the stratosphere (a level of the atmosphere above the
clouds - about seven to thirty-one miles above the ground).
"That would be some light-up display!" Manning thought as she read the
article. However, she wondered about the wisdom of treating the upper atmosphere as
if it were merely gases in a giant fluorescent bulb.
She winced as she read a list of military uses for Tesla's many inventions:
earthquake contrivances, world radar, particle beam weapons and brain wave
manipulation. "One or more magnifying transmitters could theoretically send
destructive impulses through the earth to any location," said Seifer. "For instance, a
well-placed jolt of many millions of volts could theoretically destroy the
communications network of any major city."
30 Dr. Marc J. Seifer, "Nikola Tesla: The History of Lasers and Particle Beam Weapons",
Proceedings of 1988 International Tesla Symposium.