The Synchronicity War Part 3
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The Science Behind The Synchronicity Wars
In my article on space combat in Part 2, I briefly mentioned the electro-gravitic effect discovered by and named after Thomas Townsend Brown. Dr. Paul LaViolette talks about it in depth in his book The Secrets of Anti-gravity Propulsion. Brown discovered that if an object has one side with a very high concentration of negative ions while the opposite side has a very high concentration of positive ions, the fabric of local space will become curved and the object will 'slid down' the slope of that curve. The bigger the difference between the two charged ends, the steeper the slope of the curve and the faster the object will move. The B-2 bomber is considered by many aeronautical experts to be the first field deployment of this technology although the Air Force has never admitted this. Brown was able to demonstrate this effect by charging two metal disks that were attached to the ends of a rotating device. As electric current was used to move ions to where Brown wanted, the disks began to move causing the device to rotate around its axis. Brown claimed that the whole thing could be made self-sustaining by hooking the rotating portion to a generator that would supply the power to the disks and have surplus electricity left over for other uses.
But that is not the only real world science that deals with gravity and is in my books. In Part 3, I mention a gravity beam weapon and I wrote that it was based on research conducted by Russian scientists at the beginning of the 21st century and that is true. I found the information in an article by Nick Cook, who is an aerospace consultant for Jane's Defense Weekly and who wrote a bestselling book about anti-gravity called The Hunt for Zero Point. In his article (http://www.ufoevidence.org/documents/doc1064.htm), he talks about the gravity research conducted by Dr. Evgeny Podkletnov and the potential for weaponization of that research. In my book I asserted that the Russians weren't able to make it into a practical weapon but that is still to be determined in real life.
The title of Cook's book also relates to the next example of (potentially) real science. Zero Point Energy is the name often used to describe the foamy sea of energy that scientists believe exists everywhere even in the vacuum of empty space. Tapping into that energy is the new Holy Grail of what some call fringe science. There are some who claim they've figured it out in their basement or garage or small laboratory and there are also those who claim that the government has gotten their hands on the technology long ago and are using it covertly in order not to upset the Military/Industrial/Banking complex that would suffer financially if our oil-based economy shifted suddenly to unlimited energy. I don't really know if anyone's cracked the secret but I do know that a lot of people are working on it and I wish them success. It would be a game changer for sure. Just think of how much better off you'd be if you could buy a power device and never have to pay for electricity or gasoline ever again.
The next item of potentially real science is bomb-pumped, x-ray laser weapons. Fans of David Weber's Honor Harrington series will recognize the concept where rods of special materials convert the raw power of a nuclear explosion into coherent beams of concentrated x-rays. Weber has made excellent use of the concept but he didn't invent the idea. To the best of my knowledge, the first person to suggest something like that was Dr. Edward Teller, otherwise known as the 'father of the H-bomb'. My recollection is that he suggested the idea to Ronald Reagan as part of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars).
The last example of real science is the ballotechnic nature of high-spin platinum. Believe it or not, I did NOT make that up. If you don't believe me just Google 'ballotechnics'. Back in the late 20th century during the last few years of the Cold War, western intelligence agencies were all in a flutter about rumors that the Russians had figured out how to make something called Red Mercury, which supposedly could be used to make nuclear bombs small enough to carry in a suitcase. That rumor was never confirmed publically (which doesn't mean it wasn't true) but the idea of some metals having the ability to store and then suddenly release energy via electrons in higher than normal orbits has been confirmed. As far as I know, nobody is building fusion bombs with high-spin metals but the basic science is real. Just as an interesting side note, I nearly fell out of my seat when I saw Spock use a small portion of red liquid from his huge floating ball, to do some interesting things in the movie remake of Star Trek. The other fascinating aspect of something that has mercury in it (maybe) and might be red is its use in a bell-shaped device that was THE most secret military project of the Nazis by the end of WW2. Far more secret than rockets and even more secret than the atomic bomb. If you want to read a non-fiction account of what REALLY happened at the end of the war, get your hands on The Reich of the Black Sun and The SS Brotherhood of the Bell, both by Dr. Joseph Farrell. He knows what he's talking about and it will blow your socks off.
I wish I could say that retro-temporal communication was based on real science but as far as I know, it isn't. This in spite of persistent rumors that the US government has stumbled onto the technology to either look through time or travel through time. Interestingly the Nazi Bell project supposedly had some bizarre temporal effects too. Just sayin.
D.A.W.