Kudeznik Nikola Tesla





Perpetual motion machine
If you go through dubious sites that sell all sorts of nonsense, such as a “capcan for Santa Claus” or “magic ball for communicating with the otherworldly”, then sooner or later you will definitely come across a relatively inexpensive “Tesla eternal energy generator”. Don’t be a fool, it’s a scam. If the scientist did invent a source of eternal energy, we will hardly know, because he burned his entire archive under the pretext that “humanity is not yet ready for the greatness of my inventions.” However, the story comes to us that in 1931 Nicola conducted a curious experiment. Instead of a traditional internal combustion engine, he installed a small box in a Pierce-Arrow car with two rods sticking out of it. After that, the car worked without recharging for a week. Witnesses say that Tesla managed to accelerate the car to 150 kilometers per hour. That's hard to believe.



Wireless transmission of electricity at a distance
In the spring of 1908, Tesla wrote in a letter to the editor of the New York Times: “Even now, my wireless power plants can turn any area of the globe into an area uninhabitable.” I don't think the scientist was bluffing. In any case, regardless of whether it is true or fiction, something incredible happened in Siberia in the summer – June 30 of that year. Most naively believe that there fell a meteorite, later called “Tunguska”. But one hypothesis is that there was no fall. The explosion was the result of Nicola’s experiments, which involved transmitting energy over long distances. At the same time, supporters of the fantastic assumption claim that the version has evidence. Alternatively, this: on the eve of the fall of the “Tunguska meteorite”, in the skies of Canada and Northern Europe, the clouds suddenly turned silvery and seemed to pulsate. This one-in-one coincides with the accounts of eyewitnesses who previously watched Tesla’s experiments in his laboratory in Colorado Springs.



Superweapon
In 1958, the American agency DARPA undertook a project called Swing. The operation took almost a decade and about 30 million of the most convertible currency in the world. The project seemed to fail, and scientists together with the soldiers classified its results. However, the press leaked information that the Americans were trying to recreate the mysterious “death rays” that Tesla invented. Twenty years before the experiment, when the great scientist was still alive, he offered the US government a superweapon capable of destroying 10,000 aircraft from a distance of 400 kilometers. It is strange that then – on the eve of World War II, this invention remained unclaimed by the Americans. “Death rays” are shrouded in mystery, but it is known that it was based on a radio frequency oscillator – a device that used the Earth’s atmosphere as a source of colossal energy. By the way, there are rumors that, unlike the United States, the Soviet Union was interested in technology, and apparently even bought from Tesla drawings for 25 thousand dollars. And, who knows, maybe in the invention of lasers, which are now actively used both in the secular and in the military industry, there is a bit of genius of the great Serb.



The Philadelphia Experiment
Another mystery, closely associated with the name of the great scientist and found reflection in science fiction literature and cinema, is called the “Philadelphia Experiment”. It is said that before World War II, Tesla cooperated with militarists, in particular, with the US Navy. For them, Nikola developed a project that was to create the technology of “invisibility” of naval ships for enemy radars. And it seems that it took him literally a year to conduct an experimental confirmation of his theory: in the midst of the Great Patriotic War, in January 1943, the heart of the genius stopped beating. However, ten months after the death of the creator of the technology, the Americans seem to have implemented Tesla’s idea in practice. They managed to use Nicola’s generators to create an electromagnetic shield around the destroyer Eldridge. But, again, rumors say that the ship not only disappeared from radar, but also became invisible to human eyes – it simply disappeared. The ship was found two hundred kilometers from the experiment site. At the same time, the crew members of the Eldridge suffered significant mental disorders.

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Parapsychology and clairvoyance

Believe it or not, Tesla’s contemporaries were not surprised when they passed on the story that Tesla’s inventions came from somewhere outside, either from parallel space or from the future. This, of course, seems like a ridiculous joke, but the scientist himself has repeatedly made very unexpected statements about this. For example, there is a letter from a scientist to a friend, where he writes that, studying high-frequency currents, he came across something fantastic: “I discovered a thought.” And soon you will be able to read your poems to Homer in person, and I will discuss my discoveries with Archimedes himself. In any case, even if we discard mysticism, it is still impossible not to note that the genius of Tesla was a mystery to his contemporaries and remains a mystery to us – descendants. Where did he get his ideas? How do you understand things that seem meaningless at first? How did he get to the bottom of the forces hidden from human eyes? It seems that in his research, he was really ahead of time. By the way, the famous Indian philosopher Vivekananda, who visited the United States to find out the possibility of uniting all existing religions, visited Nikola Tesla in his laboratory in New York in 1906. After the meeting, he wrote a letter to his Indian friend Alasing, in which he spoke enthusiastically about the acquaintance: "This man is different from all Western people." He demonstrated his experiments with electricity, which he treats as a living being, with whom he talks and gives orders. There is no doubt that he has a higher level of spirituality and is able to recognize all our gods.”

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