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September 21, 1998: Hyperdimensional Physics, Free Energy - Richard C. Hoagland & Tom Bearden
Published 1 year, 11 months ago
Description
Art Bell hosts Richard C. Hoagland and retired Army Lieutenant Colonel Tom Bearden for a wide-ranging discussion on hyperdimensional physics and its implications for energy and weapons technology. Hoagland presents a NASA anomaly reported in New Scientist showing that deep space probes including Pioneer and Voyager are not as far from the Sun as predicted, suggesting the standard gravity model may be fundamentally flawed. He proposes that the speed of light itself may be increasing, which would explain the discrepancy without requiring stronger solar gravity.
Bearden describes longitudinal electromagnetic waves derived from the original Maxwell equations, which he claims were deliberately simplified over a century ago. He asserts that Russia has weaponized this technology under KGB oversight for decades, using it to manipulate weather patterns over North America since 1976, induce seismic events, and even destroy the USS Thresher submarine in 1963. He explains how these waves can heat or cool ocean waters at a distance, connecting the technology to El Nino anomalies.
Both guests argue that these classified capabilities could be used to protect satellites from the approaching Leonid meteor shower in November 1998. They warn that losing even 20 percent of geosynchronous satellites could trigger a global economic crisis and urge that black-world technologies be brought into public use for planetary defense and clean energy applications.
Bearden describes longitudinal electromagnetic waves derived from the original Maxwell equations, which he claims were deliberately simplified over a century ago. He asserts that Russia has weaponized this technology under KGB oversight for decades, using it to manipulate weather patterns over North America since 1976, induce seismic events, and even destroy the USS Thresher submarine in 1963. He explains how these waves can heat or cool ocean waters at a distance, connecting the technology to El Nino anomalies.
Both guests argue that these classified capabilities could be used to protect satellites from the approaching Leonid meteor shower in November 1998. They warn that losing even 20 percent of geosynchronous satellites could trigger a global economic crisis and urge that black-world technologies be brought into public use for planetary defense and clean energy applications.