HELICOPTER CRASHES, TELEPORTATION SPECULATIONS, DIRECTED ENERGY DEALS, ...
There are three stories that occurred in the last few days that I strongly suspect may somehow be related. I say "somehow" because as of this writing, I haven't a shred of evidence that they are. All I have is the fact that my antennae are "pulsing with suspicion" (to borrow that wonderful line of Sir Lawrence Olivier from the movie Sleuth). So today and tomorrow, I'm going to attempt to summarize those stories, and ultimately why I think they might be related. They may not be related, of course, but the problem with our less-than-wonderful media is that they always reported such stories - whether they are connected or not - as isolated and disconnected events: "A helicopter carrying a Siemens executive and his entire family crashed into the Hudson River today after a sight-seeing tour of New York City. No one survived. Meanwhile, in other news, some people are claiming that certain remarks by Trump administration officials indicate that the USA is in possession of a functioning teleportation technology. Here to refute that idea is theoretical physicist... meanwhile in Congress, a directed energy cooperation bill between Israel and the USA is working its way through the House. Here to talk about that is retired General Thoroughly Modern Milley..."
You get the idea. If the events were connected, we'd never know it, given the standard "methodology" of the contemporary media. We have to connect the dots with sheer speculation.
So let's begin with the helicopter crash that was carrying Senor Agustin Escobar, his wife, and three small children. Here's one version of the story, shared by E.E. (with our thanks):
According to the article, in his senior executive position at the German electronic firm of Siemens, Senor Escobar got around:
The Spanish executive had been on a sightseeing trip with his family when their helicopter broke apart in midair and crashed upside-down in New York.
...
By the time it crashed while heading south, it had no rotor or propellers, with eyewitnesses claiming to have seen it disintegrate as it came down.
The Spanish CEO and his wife had both worked for Siemens, a large German tech company which focuses on industrial automation, energy, rail transport and health tech.
Well, "automation, energy, rail transport, and 'health tech'" are not all that Siemens has done in its long career as a tech giant, but we'll get back to that. As was said, Senor Escobar "got around":
Before his death, he had moved up in the company, working in cities such as Bogota, Colombia and New York City before moving back to Spain in 2018.
Then there is Senora Escobar:
Little information has been released about his wife, Merce Camprubi Montal, but she did work at Siemens Energy.
We are also informed that Senora Escobar's work for Siemens occurred in Barcelona.
We learn that Senor Escobar's work was crucial to Siemens' transport business:
Miguel Ángel López, the former head of Siemens Spain, said of Escobar: ‘His work has been key to Siemens’ success in the field of mobility and transport.’
And finally, there is the strangeness of the crash itself, where the fact that the helicopter had no rotors nor propeller, and crashed upside down, a fact which is mentioned twice in the article.
Now beyond the obvious and suggestive connections to Spain and to a famous German technical company giant, the fact that the helicopter appears to have simply "disintegrated" suggests foul play. So assuming that to be true, what might have been a motivation? I suggest that it was something connected with Siemens itself, and its public image of advanced technology for railroads or health is only a part of the story. In the very early 1950s, for example, the Siemens company took out a patent for the collimation of gamma and x-rays. When one delves into this long-forgotten patent a little bit, one discovers that what Siemens was after were cohered x-rays and gamma rays, in other words, x-ray and gamma ray lasers. One can easily imagine the uses to which such devices might be put, and taking dental x-rays is not one of them. Think, rather, of leaving the target of such a "dental x-ray" a charred and smoldering lump of carbon. In any case, one can file all this interest in advanced directed energy technologies as being under that wonderful catch-all label that the article uses, that one of Siemens' interests is in "energy". I suppose x-ray and gamma ray collimation would qualify as "energy". Lots of it. Gigantonormous amounts of it.
Then there is a completely different story out there, a wild and wooly whopper doozy that is maintaining that according to recent remarks by the general in charge of Trump's new space force (new, as opposed to the one we already had when he made his announcement that we needed another one during his first administration), that we have a teleportation technology (story shared by V.T.):
REVEALED: President Trump Has Teleportation Technology?
This article references a statement by US Space Force General Kwast, who made the following remarks:
Whoa… Space-Force, Steven Kwast, USAF General
• Technology that can take you anywhere on Earth in less than an hour.
• wireless energy from space
• Deliver wifi from space
Later the article quotes General Kwast elaborating on these remarks:
This technology can be built today with technology that is not developmental—to deliver any human being from any place on planet Earth to any other place in less than an hour.
To deliver Wi-Fi from space, where you never need a cell tower to connect.
To deliver energy from space, where you never have to plug your phone in—and it trickle charges, and you can use that energy over time.
It can be applied to cars. To houses.
The technology of Edison and Tesla that we live with in our energy environment—our paradigm today—is expensive, it’s dangerous, and it’s wasteful.
Plug it into the wall. But yet, that’s what we all do—because we are used to paradigms.
The power of space will change world power forever. And it doesn’t have to be a big country to do it.
Now, interestingly enough, in the context you'll note that General Kwast has mentioned Tesla, and in a context implying Tesla's broadcast system of wireless power. The quotation then ends with the observation that the technology is balance-of-power changing, and that that power need not be exerted by a "big country." In other words, General Kwast has simply repeated what I and others have long been warning about: Tesla's wireless power broadcast system is a game changer not just financially, but militarily and geopolitically, and could not be introduced in the late 19th and early 20th centuries because there was no worldwide way to monitor it and ensure it did not fall into the wrong hands. Now, however, such a capability potentially exists.
So, going back to the comment that there may exist, or may soon exist, a technology that can take you to any place on the planet in an hour: does this imply a teleporation technology, like something straight out of the movie The Fly (both original and remake)? It might, but it might equally imply a very fast "space plane" technology, an aircraft capable of taking off and landing like a conventional airplane, but also of orbital and sub-orbital flight paths at hyper-sonic speeds. Remember the Concord? New York to London or Paris in less than three hours. And that was the 1960s.
But let's go with the broader context of the general's remarks, which certainly do seem to embrace the possibility of "teleportation" for the simple reason that the context is "wireless energy from space". In other words, the context is electromagnetic, not aerodynamic. How might all of that be connected to Siemens with its interests in "energy"? There is a very simple reason. To make any sort of teleportation technology work, the most crucial step would be to scan and analyze the object to be teleported, and break it down, so to speak, by its internal molecular composition. It would be rather like a three-dimensional version of the scanning lines on a conventional television as the television camera scans the object, which is converted to information modulated on the broadcast wave, and then d emodulated and converted back to projected scans on the television screen at the receiving end. Television is, in other words, a kind of two-dimensional analogue of teleportation. So why might Siemens be involved or connected to all of this?
Simple: go to any hospital in the USA, Canada, Mexico, or Europe, and go to its magnetic resonance imaging facility, and you are likely to encounter a Siemens magnetic resonance imaging machine, a machine that literally does a three-dimensional magnetic mapping of what's inside the brain, or any other area of the body, one might wish to look at.
It's an essential step, in other words, in the technology tree of teleportation...
But there may be a lot more to this story, but that will have to wait until tomorrow...
See you on the flip side...
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