mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
518 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
518 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
Oliver Nichelson
|
||
333 N 760 E
|
||
Am. Fork, Utah 84003
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Nikola Tesla's Long Range Weapon
|
||
|
||
|
||
Oliver Nichelson
|
||
Copyright 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The French ship Iena blew up in 1907. Electrical experts were
|
||
sought by the press for an explanation. Many thought the explosion
|
||
was caused by an electrical spark and the discussion was about the
|
||
origin of the ignition. Lee De Forest, inventor of the Audion
|
||
vacuum tube adopted by many radio broadcasters, pointed out that
|
||
Nikola Tesla had experimented with a "dirigible torpedo" capable of
|
||
delivering such destructive power to a ship through remote control.
|
||
He noted, though, Tesla also claimed that the same technology used
|
||
for remotely controlling vehicles also could project an electrical
|
||
wave of "sufficient intensity to cause a spark in a ship's magazine
|
||
and explode it."
|
||
|
||
It was Spring of 1924, however, that the time seemed best for
|
||
"death rays," for that year many newspapers carried a several
|
||
stories about their invention in different parts of the world.
|
||
Harry Grindell-Matthews of London lead the contenders in this early
|
||
Star Wars race. The New York Times of May 21st had this report:
|
||
|
||
Paris, May 20 - If confidence of Grindell
|
||
Mathew (sic), inventor of the so-called
|
||
'diabolical ray,' in his discovery is
|
||
justified it may become possible to put the
|
||
whole of an enemy army out of action, destroy
|
||
any force of airplanes attacking a city or
|
||
paralyze any fleet venturing within a
|
||
certain distance of the coast by invisible
|
||
rays.
|
||
Grindell-Matthews stated that his destructive rays would operate
|
||
over a distance of four miles and that the maximum distance for
|
||
this type of weapon would be seven or eight miles. "Tests have been
|
||
reported where the ray has been used to stop the operation of
|
||
automobiles by arresting the action of the magnetos, and an
|
||
quantity of gunpowder is said to have been exploded by playing the
|
||
beams on it from a distance of thirty-six feet." Grindell-Matthews
|
||
was able, also, to electrocute mice, shrivel plants, and light the
|
||
wick of an oil lamp from the same distance away.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sensing something of importance the New York Times copyrighted
|
||
its story on May 28th on a ray weapon developed by the Soviets. The
|
||
story opened:
|
||
|
||
News has leaked out from the Communist
|
||
circles in Moscow that behind Trotsky's
|
||
recent war-like utterance lies an
|
||
electromagnetic invention, by a Russian
|
||
engineer named Grammachikoff for destroying
|
||
airplanes.
|
||
Tests of the destructive ray, the Times continued, had began the
|
||
previous August with the aid of German technical experts. A large
|
||
scale demonstration at Podosinsky Aerodome near Moscow was so
|
||
successful that the revolutionary Military Council and the
|
||
Political Bureau decided to fund enough electronic anti-aircraft
|
||
stations to protect sensitive areas of Russia. Similar, but more
|
||
powerful, stations were to be constructed to disable the electrical
|
||
mechanisms of warships.
|
||
|
||
The Commander of the Soviet Air Services, Rosenholtz, was so
|
||
overwhelmed by the ray weapon demonstration that he proposed "to
|
||
curtail the activity of the air fleet, because the invention
|
||
rendered a large air fleet unnecessary for the purpose of defense."
|
||
|
||
Picking up the death ray stories on the wire services on the
|
||
other side of the world, the Colorado Springs Gazette, ran a local
|
||
interest item on May 30th. With the headline: "Tesla Discovered
|
||
'Death Ray' in Experiments He Made Here," the story recounted, with
|
||
a feeling of local pride, the inventor's 1899 researches financed
|
||
by John Jacob Astor.
|
||
|
||
Tesla's Colorado Springs tests were well remembered by local
|
||
residents. With a 200 foot pole topped by a large copper sphere
|
||
rising above his laboratory he generated potentials that discharged
|
||
lightning bolts up to 135 feet long. Thunder from the released
|
||
energy could be heard 15 miles away in Cripple Creek. People
|
||
walking along the streets were amazed to see sparks jumping between
|
||
their feet and the ground, and flames of electricity would spring
|
||
from a tap when anyone turned them on for a drink of water. Light
|
||
bulbs within 100 feet of the experimental tower glowed when they
|
||
were turned off. Horses at the livery stable received shocks
|
||
through their metal shoes and bolted from the stalls. Even insects
|
||
were affected: Butterflies became electrified and "helplessly
|
||
swirled in circles - their wings spouting blue halos of 'St. Elmo's
|
||
Fire.'"
|
||
|
||
The most pronounced effect, and the one that captured the
|
||
attention of death ray inventors, occurred at the Colorado Springs
|
||
Electric Company generating station. One day while Tesla was
|
||
conducting a high power test, the crackling from inside the
|
||
laboratory suddenly stopped. Bursting into the lab Tesla demanded
|
||
to know why his assistant had disconnected the coil. The assistant
|
||
protested that had not anything. The power from the city's
|
||
generator, the assistant said, must have quit. When the angry
|
||
Tesla telephoned the power company he received an equally angry
|
||
reply that the electric company had not cut the power, but that
|
||
Tesla's experiment had destroyed the generator!
|
||
|
||
The inventor explained to The Electrical Experimenter, in
|
||
August of 1917 what had happened. While running his transmitter at
|
||
a power level of "several hundred kilowatts" high frequency
|
||
currents were set up in the electric company's generators. These
|
||
powerful currents "caused heavy sparks to jump thru the winds and
|
||
destroy the insulation." When the insulation failed, the generator
|
||
shorted out and was destroyed.
|
||
|
||
Some years later, 1935, he elaborated on the destructive
|
||
potential of his transmitter in the February issue of Liberty
|
||
magazine:
|
||
|
||
My invention requires a large plant, but once
|
||
it is established it will be possible to
|
||
destroy anything, men or machines, approaching
|
||
within a radius of 200 miles.
|
||
|
||
He went on to make a distinction between his invention and those
|
||
brought forward by others. He claimed that his device did not use
|
||
any so-called "death rays" because such radiation cannot be
|
||
produced in large amounts and rapidly becomes weaker over distance.
|
||
Here, he likely had in mind a Grindell-Matthews type of device
|
||
which, according to contemporary reports, used a powerful ultra-
|
||
violet beam to make the air conducting so that high energy current
|
||
could be directed to the target. The range of an ultra-violet
|
||
searchlight would be much less than what Tesla was claiming. As he
|
||
put it: "all the energy of New York City (approximately two million
|
||
horsepower [1.5 billion watts]) transformed into rays and projected
|
||
twenty miles, would not kill a human being." On the contrary, he
|
||
said:
|
||
|
||
My apparatus projects particles which may
|
||
be relatively large or of microscopic di-
|
||
mensions, enabling us to convey to a small
|
||
area at a great distance trillions of times
|
||
more energy than is possible with rays of any
|
||
kind. Many thousands of horsepower can be thus
|
||
transmitted by a stream thinner than a hair, so
|
||
that nothing can resist.
|
||
|
||
Apparently what Tesla had in mind with this defensive system was
|
||
a large scale version of his Colorado Springs lightning bolt
|
||
machine. As airplanes or ships entered the electric field of his
|
||
charged tower, they would set up a conducting path for a stream of
|
||
high energy particles that would destroy the intruder's electrical
|
||
system.
|
||
|
||
A drawback to having giant Tesla transmitters poised to shoot
|
||
bolts of lightning at an enemy approaching the coasts is that they
|
||
would have to be located in an uninhabited area equal to its circle
|
||
of protection. Anyone stepping into the defensive zone of the coils
|
||
would be sensed as an intruder and struck down. Today, with the
|
||
development of oil drilling platforms, this disadvantage might be
|
||
overcome by locating the lightning defensive system at sea.
|
||
|
||
As ominous as death ray and beam weapon technology will be for
|
||
the future, there is another, more destructive, weapon system
|
||
alluded to in Tesla's writings.
|
||
|
||
When Tesla realized, as he pointed out in the 1900 Century
|
||
article, "The Problem of Increasing Human Energy," that economic
|
||
forces would not allow the development of a new type of electrical
|
||
generator able to supply power without burning fuel he "was led to
|
||
recognize [that] the transmission of electrical energy to any
|
||
distance through the media as by far the best solution of the great
|
||
problem of harnessing the sun's energy for the use of man." His
|
||
idea was that a relatively few generating plants located near
|
||
waterfalls would supply his very high energy transmitters which, in
|
||
turn, would send power through the earth to be picked up wherever
|
||
it was needed.
|
||
|
||
The plan would require several of his transmitters to
|
||
rhythmically pump huge amounts of electricity into the earth at
|
||
pressures on the order of 100 million volts. The earth would
|
||
become like a huge ball inflated to a great electrical potential,
|
||
but pulsing to Tesla's imposed beat.
|
||
|
||
Receiving energy from this high pressure reservoir only would
|
||
require a person to put a rod into the ground and connect it to a
|
||
receiver operating in unison with the earth's electrical motion.
|
||
As Tesla described it, "the entire apparatus for lighting the
|
||
average country dwelling will contain no moving parts whatever, and
|
||
could be readily carried about in a small valise."
|
||
|
||
However, the difference between a current that can be used to
|
||
run, say, a sewing machine and a current used as a method of
|
||
destruction, however, is a matter of timing. If the amount of
|
||
electricity used to run a sewing machine for an hour is released in
|
||
a millionth of a second, it would have a very different, and
|
||
negative, effect on the sewing machine.
|
||
|
||
Tesla said his transmitter could produce 100 million volts of
|
||
pressure with currents up to 1000 amperes which is a power level of
|
||
100 billion watts. If it was resonating at a radio frequency of 2
|
||
MHz, then the energy released during one period of its oscillation
|
||
would be 100,000,000,000,000,000 Joules of energy, or roughly the
|
||
amount of energy released by the explosion of 10 megatons of TNT.
|
||
Such a transmitter, would be capable of projecting the energy of
|
||
a nuclear warhead by radio. Any location in the world could be
|
||
vaporized at the speed of light.
|
||
|
||
Not unexpectedly, many scientists doubted the technical
|
||
feasibility of Tesla's wireless power transmission scheme whether
|
||
for commercial or military purposes. The secret of how through-
|
||
the-earth broadcast power was found not in the theories of
|
||
electrical engineering, but in the realm of high energy physics.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Andrija Puharich, in 1976, was the first to point out that
|
||
Tesla's power transmission system could not be explained by the
|
||
laws of classical electrodynamics, but, rather, in terms of
|
||
relativistic transformations in high energy fields. He noted that
|
||
according to Dirac's theory of the electron, when one of those
|
||
particles encountered its oppositely charged member, a positron,
|
||
the two particles would annihilate each other. Because energy can
|
||
neither be destroyed nor created the energy of the two former
|
||
particles are transformed into an electromagnetic wave. The
|
||
opposite, of course, holds true. If there is a strong enough
|
||
electric field, two opposite charges of electricity are formed
|
||
where there was originally no charge at all. This type of trans-
|
||
formation usually takes place near the intense field near an atomic
|
||
nucleus, but it can also manifest without the aid of a nuclear
|
||
catalyst if an electric field has enough energy. Puharich's
|
||
involved mathematical treatment demonstrated that power levels in a
|
||
Tesla transmitter were strong enough to cause such pair production.
|
||
|
||
The mechanism of pair production offers a very attractive
|
||
explanation for the ground transmission of power. Ordinary
|
||
electrical currents do not travel far through the earth. Dirt has
|
||
a high resistance to electricity and quickly turns currents into
|
||
heat energy that is wasted. With the pair production method
|
||
electricity can be moved from one point to another without really
|
||
having to push the physical particle through the earth - the
|
||
transmitting source would create a strong field, and a particle
|
||
would be created at the receiver.
|
||
|
||
If the sending of currents through the earth is possible from the
|
||
viewpoint of modern physics, the question remains of whether Tesla
|
||
actually demonstrated the weapons application of his power
|
||
transmitter or whether it remained an unrealized plan on the part
|
||
of the inventor. Circumstantial evidence points to there having
|
||
been a test of this weapon.
|
||
|
||
The clues are found in the chronology of Tesla's work and
|
||
financial fortunes between 1900 and 1915.
|
||
|
||
|
||
1900: Tesla returned from Colorado Springs after a series of
|
||
important tests of wireless power transmission. It was during
|
||
these tests that his magnifying transmitter sent out waves of
|
||
energy causing the destruction of the power company's generator.
|
||
|
||
He received financial backing from J. Pierpont Morgan of $150,000
|
||
to build a radio transmitter for signaling Europe. With the first
|
||
portion of the money he obtained 200 acres of land at Shoreham,
|
||
Long Island and built an enormous tower 187 feet tall topped with a
|
||
55 ton, 68 foot metal dome. He called the research site
|
||
"Wardenclyffe."
|
||
|
||
As Tesla was just getting started, investors were rushing to buy
|
||
stock offered by the Marconi company. Supporters of the Marconi
|
||
Company include his old adversary Edison.
|
||
|
||
On December 12th, Marconi sent the first transatlantic signal,
|
||
the letter "S," from Cornwall, England to Newfoundland. He did
|
||
this with, as the financiers noted, equipment much less costly than
|
||
that envisioned by Tesla.
|
||
|
||
1902: Marconi is being hailed as a hero around the world while
|
||
Tesla is seen as a shirker by the public for ignoring a call to
|
||
jury duty in a murder case (he was excused from duty because of his
|
||
opposition to the death penalty).
|
||
|
||
1903: When Morgan sent the balance of the $150,000, it would not
|
||
cover the outstanding balance Tesla owed on the Wardenclyffe
|
||
construction. To encourage a larger investment in the face of
|
||
Marconi's success, Tesla revealed to Morgan his real purpose was
|
||
not to just send radio signals but the wireless transmission of
|
||
power to any point on the planet. Morgan was uninterested and
|
||
declined further funding.
|
||
|
||
A financial panic that Fall put an end to Tesla's hopes for
|
||
financing by Morgan or other wealthy industrialists. This left
|
||
Tesla without money even to buy the coal to fire the transmitter's
|
||
electrical generators.
|
||
|
||
1904: Tesla writes for the Electrical World, "The Transmission of
|
||
Electrical Energy Without Wires," noting that the globe, even with
|
||
its great size, responds to electrical currents like a small metal
|
||
ball.
|
||
|
||
Tesla declares to the press the completion of Wardenclyffe.
|
||
|
||
1904: The Colorado Springs power company sues for electricity
|
||
used at that experimental station. Tesla's Colorado laboratory is
|
||
torn down and is sold for lumber to pay the $180 judgement; his
|
||
electrical equipment is put in storage.
|
||
|
||
1905: Electrotherapeutic coils are manufactured at Wardenclyffe
|
||
for hospitals and researchers to help pay bills.
|
||
|
||
Tesla is sued by his lawyer for non-payment of a loan.
|
||
In an article, Tesla comments on Peary's expedition to the North
|
||
Pole and tells of his, Tesla's, plans for energy transmission to
|
||
any central point on the ground.
|
||
|
||
Tesla is sued by C.J. Duffner, a caretaker at the experi- mental
|
||
station in Colorado Springs, for wages .
|
||
|
||
1906: "Left Property Here; Skips; Sheriff's Sale," was
|
||
the headline in the Colorado Springs Gazette for March 6th.
|
||
Tesla's electrical equipment is sold to pay judgement
|
||
of $928.57.
|
||
|
||
George Westinghouse, who bought Tesla's patents for alter- nating
|
||
current motors and generators in the 1880's, turns down the
|
||
inventor's power transmission proposal.
|
||
|
||
Workers gradually stop coming to the Wardenclyffe labor- atory
|
||
when there are no funds to pay them.
|
||
|
||
1907: When commenting on the destruction of the French ship Iena,
|
||
Tesla noted in a letter to the New York Times that he has built and
|
||
tested remotely controlled torpedoes, but that electrical waves
|
||
would be more destructive. "As to projecting wave energy to any
|
||
particular region of the globe ... this can be done by my devices,"
|
||
he wrote. Further, he claimed that "the spot at which the desired
|
||
effect is to be produced can be calculated very closely, assuming
|
||
the accepted terrestrial measurements to be correct."
|
||
|
||
1908: Tesla repeated the idea of destruction by electrical waves
|
||
to the newspaper on April 21st. His letter to the editor stated,
|
||
"When I spoke of future warfare I meant that it should be conducted
|
||
by direct application of electrical waves without the use of aerial
|
||
engines or other implements of destruction." He added: "This is
|
||
not a dream. Even now wireless power plants could be constructed by
|
||
which any region of the globe might be rendered uninhabitable
|
||
without subjecting the population of other parts to serious danger
|
||
or inconvenience."
|
||
|
||
1915: Again, in another letter to the editor, Tesla stated: "It
|
||
is perfectly practical to transmit electrical energy without wires
|
||
and produce destructive effects at a distance. I have already
|
||
constructed a wireless transmitter which makes this possible...
|
||
When unavoidable, the [transmitter] may be used to destroy property
|
||
and life."
|
||
|
||
Important to this chronology is the state of Tesla's mental
|
||
health. One researcher, Marc J. Seifer, a psychologist, believes
|
||
Tesla suffered a nervous breakdown catalyzed by the death of one
|
||
the partners in the Tesla Electric Company and the shooting of
|
||
Stanford White, the noted architect, who had designed Wardenclyffe.
|
||
Seifer places this in 1906 and cites as evidence a letter from
|
||
George Scherff, Tesla's secretary:
|
||
|
||
Wardenclyffe, 4/10/1906
|
||
Dear Mr. Tesla:
|
||
|
||
I have received your letter and am very glad
|
||
to know you are vanquishing your illness. I
|
||
have scarcely ever seen you so out of sorts
|
||
as last Sunday; and I was frightened.
|
||
|
||
In the period from 1900 to 1910 Tesla's creative thrust was to
|
||
establish his plan for wireless transmission of energy. Undercut
|
||
by Marconi's accomplishment, beset by financial problems, and
|
||
spurned by the scientific establishment, Tesla was in a desperate
|
||
situation by mid-decade. The strain became too great by 1906 and
|
||
he suffered an emotional collapse. In order to make a final effort
|
||
to have his grand scheme recognized, he may have tried one high
|
||
power test of his transmitter to show off its destructive
|
||
potential. This would have been in 1908.
|
||
|
||
The Tunguska event took place on the morning of June 30th, 1908.
|
||
An explosion estimated to be equivalent to 10-15 megatons of TNT
|
||
flattened 500,000 acres of pine forest near the Stony Tunguska
|
||
River in central Siberia. Whole herds of reindeer were destroyed.
|
||
The explosion was heard over a radius of 620 miles. When an
|
||
expedition was made to the area in 1927 to find evidence of the
|
||
meteorite presumed to have caused the blast, no impact crater was
|
||
found. When the ground was drilled for pieces of nickel, iron, or
|
||
stone, the main constituents of meteorites, none were found down to
|
||
a depth of 118 feet.
|
||
|
||
Many explanations have been given for the Tunguska event. The
|
||
officially accepted version is that a 100,000 ton fragment of
|
||
Encke's Comet, composed mainly of dust and ice, entered the
|
||
atmosphere at 62,000 mph, heated up, and exploded over the earth's
|
||
surface creating a fireball and shock wave but no crater.
|
||
Alternative versions of the disaster see a renegade mini-black hole
|
||
or an alien space ship crashing into the earth with the resulting
|
||
release of energy.
|
||
|
||
Associating Tesla with the Tunguska event comes close to putting
|
||
the inventor's power transmission idea in the same speculative
|
||
category as ancient astronauts. However, by looking at the above
|
||
chronology, it can be seen that real historical facts point to the
|
||
possibility that this event was caused by a test firing of Tesla's
|
||
energy weapon.
|
||
|
||
In 1907 and 1908, Tesla wrote about the destructive effects of
|
||
his energy transmitter. His Wardenclyffe transmitter was much
|
||
larger than the Colorado Springs device that destroyed the power
|
||
station's generator. His new transmitter would be capable of
|
||
effects many orders of magnitude greater than the Colorado device.
|
||
In 1915, he said he had already built a transmitter that "when
|
||
unavoidable ... may be used to destroy property and life."
|
||
Finally, a 1934 letter from Tesla to J.P. Morgan, uncovered by
|
||
Tesla biographer Margaret Cheney, seems to conclusively point to an
|
||
energy weapon test. In an effort to raise money for his defensive
|
||
system he wrote:
|
||
|
||
The flying machine has completely demoralized
|
||
the world, so much so that in some cities, as
|
||
London and Paris, people are in mortal fear from
|
||
aerial bombing. The new means I have perfected
|
||
affords absolute protection against this and
|
||
other forms of attack... These new discoveries I
|
||
have carried out experimentally on a limited
|
||
scale, created a profound impression (emphasis added).
|
||
|
||
Again, the evidence is circumstantial but, to use the language of
|
||
criminal investigation, Tesla had motive and means to be the cause
|
||
of the Tunguska event. He also seems to confess to such a test
|
||
having taken place before 1915. His transmitter could generate
|
||
energy levels and frequencies that would release the destructive
|
||
force of 10 megatons, or more, of TNT. And the overlooked genius
|
||
was desperate.
|
||
|
||
The nature of the Tunguska event, also, is not inconsistent with
|
||
what would happen during the sudden release of wireless power. No
|
||
fiery object was reported in the skies at that time by professional
|
||
or amateur astronomers as would be expected when a 200,000,000
|
||
pound object enters the atmosphere. The sky glow in the region,
|
||
mentioned by some witnesses, just before the explosion may have
|
||
come from the ground, as geological researchers discovered in the
|
||
1970's. Just before an earthquake the stressed rock beneath the
|
||
ground creates an electrical effect causing the air to illuminate.
|
||
If the explosion was caused by wireless energy transmission, either
|
||
the geological stressing or the current itself would cause an air
|
||
glow. Finally, there is the absence of an impact crater. Because
|
||
there is no material object to impact, an explosion caused by
|
||
broadcast power would not leave a crater.
|
||
|
||
Given Tesla's general pacifistic nature it is hard to
|
||
understand why he would carry out a test harmful to both animals
|
||
and the people who herded the animals even when he was in the grip
|
||
of financial desperation. The answer is that he probably intended
|
||
no harm, but was aiming for a publicity coup and, literally, missed
|
||
his target.
|
||
|
||
At the end of 1908, the whole world was following the daring
|
||
attempt of Peary to reach the North Pole. Peary claimed the Pole
|
||
in the Spring of 1909, but the winter before he had returned to the
|
||
base at Ellesmere Island, about 700 miles from the Pole. If Tesla
|
||
wanted the attention of the international press, few things would
|
||
have been more impressive than the Peary expedition sending out
|
||
word of a cataclysmic explosion on the ice in the direction of the
|
||
North Pole. Tesla, then, if he could not be hailed as the master
|
||
creator that he was, could be seen as the master of a mysterious
|
||
new force of destruction.
|
||
|
||
The test, it seems, was not a complete success. It must
|
||
have been difficult controlling the vast amount of power in
|
||
transmitter and guiding it to the exact spot Tesla wanted. Alert,
|
||
Canada on Ellesmere Island and the Tunguska region are all on the
|
||
same great circle line from Shoreham, Long Island. Both are on a
|
||
compass bearing of a little more than 2 degrees along a polar path.
|
||
The destructive electrical wave overshot its target.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Whoever was privy to Tesla's energy weapon demonstration must
|
||
have been dismayed either because it missed the intended target and
|
||
would be a threat to inhabited regions of the planet, or because it
|
||
worked too well in devastating such a large area at the mere
|
||
throwing of a switch thousands of miles away. Whichever was the
|
||
case, Tesla never received the notoriety he sought for his power
|
||
transmitter.
|
||
|
||
In 1915, the Wardenclyffe laboratory was deeded over to Waldorf-
|
||
Astoria, Inc. in lieu of payment for Tesla's hotel bills. In 1917,
|
||
Wardenclyffe was dynamited on orders of the new owners to recover
|
||
some money from the scrap.
|
||
|
||
The evidence is only circumstantial. Perhaps Tesla never did
|
||
achieve wireless power transmission through the earth. Maybe he
|
||
made a mistake in interpreting the results of his radio tests in
|
||
Colorado Springs and did not produce an effect engineers, then and
|
||
now, know is a scientific impossibility. Perhaps the mental stress
|
||
he suffered caused him to retreat completely to a fantasy world
|
||
from which he would send out preposterous claims to reporters who
|
||
gathered for his yearly, copy-making pronouncements on his
|
||
birthday. Maybe the atomic bomb size explosion in Siberia near the
|
||
turn of the century was the result of a meteorite no one saw fall.
|
||
|
||
Or, perhaps, Nikola Tesla did shake the world in a way that has
|
||
been kept secret for over 80 years.
|
||
ansmitter |