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The Lost Journals of Nikola Tesla
Contents
Introduction - By Timothy Green Beckley .................................5
Chapter One - The Secret Life of Nikola Tesla ........................10
Chapter Two - Alien Signals in the Night................................ 18
Chapter Three - Communicating With Other Planets .... 30
Chapter Four - Extraordinary Experiences...............................48
Chapter Five - Tesla and Electronic Voice Phenomena ... .60
Chapter Six - UFOs and Antigravity Propulsion ..................... 74
Chapter Seven - Free Energy - Fact or Fiction? ....................... 98
Chapter Eight - The Truth About Alternative 3 ..................... 116
Chapter Nine - HAARP - Chemtrails - Alternative 4 ______ 130
Conclusion ............................................................................. 150
Afterthoughts on Nikola Tesla - By Diane Tessman ..............154
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The Lost Journals of Nikola Tesla
INTRODUCTION
By Timothy Green Beckley
There is a teacher named John W. Wagner who thinks that the Smithsonian
Institute is playing favorites. After studying the remarkable life of Nikola Tesla,
Wagner, along with his third grade class, started a campaign to educate the world
about the obscure electrical genius from Yugoslavia.
Wagner and his class wrote many letters to important people asking for their
support. A former student persuaded her father, an accomplished sculptor, to
create a bust of Tesla for their class.
A Third Grade requirement is to learn cursive handwriting, so their class work
now had a purpose...writing letters to raise money for their Tesla bust.
Unfortunately, most people had never heard of Nikola Tesla. And those who had,
seemed not to want to listen.
In fact, when the bust of Tesla was finished, Wagner and his class of eager
students offered it to the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC. Dr. Bernard
S. Finn, (Curator of the Division of Electricity and Modern Physics) refused,
claiming he had no use for the bust.
They could not understand why the Smithsonian would have no use for a
$6,000 bust of such a great American and world-class scientist. After all, Tesla was
no slouch. Much of our modern technology owes its beginnings to Tesla. In 1882
he made the discovery that changed the world ! harnessing the awesome power
of Alternating Current (AC).
In 1888 Tesla obtained U.S. patents covering an entire system of polyphase AC
that remains unchanged in principle today. Tesla then promptly sold all of his
patents to George Westinghouse, an acquisition that made the Westinghouse
Company the giant it is today.
Westinghouse and Tesla were consummate friends, but after Westinghouse died
in 1913, the company forgot about its chief benefactor and Tesla fell victim to hard
times. Tesla died January 7, 1943, alone, and all but forgotten, in a New York
hotel room, paid for by a meager stipend provided by the Yugoslavian
government.
Today, industries prosper and flourish, the world surges from the power his
fertile mind created, radios blare with news and music, their transmission made
possible by his great intellect, all telling us that the forgotten genius, Nikola Tesla,
was here.
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The Lost Journals of Nikola Tesla
Tesla is preceded in greatness only by Michael Faraday who in 1831 rocked
the scientific world with his discovery that magnetism can produce electricity, if
it is accompanied by motion.
Faraday discovered the principle, but not how to make it power the world;
Tesla alone accomplished this singular feat. Tesla is one of only two Americans
to have a unit of electrical measurement named in his honor. Names for units of
electrical measurement are derived by using the names of scientists who made the
greatest contributions in electrical science, forming perhaps the most elite group
in the world.
Throughout the entire history of electrical science only fifteen men worldwide
have received this honor. Tesla is one of these great men. In addition, Tesla
received fifteen honorary degrees from famous universities worldwide, including
Yale and Columbia in the United States.
He also received fourteen Awards of Merit from other world class groups.
Dr. David L. Goodstein, Vice Provost and Professor of Physics at California
Institute of Technology, calls Tesla one of the "Saints of Science" and equates him
to Leonardo Da Vinci.
Tesla is the greatest inventor the world has ever forgotten. He is also the
greatest inventor the Smithsonian has swept under the carpet. The Smithsonian's
curator essentially credits Edison for our worldwide system of electricity. He also
credits Marconi for the invention of radio.
This is a deliberate assault on factual history and needs to be challenged. The
United States Patent Office and the U.S. Supreme Court view things a little
differently over the much distorted history the Smithsonian publicizes.
Tesla holds over forty U.S. patents (circa 1888) covering our entire system of
Polyphase Alternating Current (AC). These patents are so novel that nobody
could ever challenge them in the courts.
The Direct Current (DC) system Edison used in his much touted Pearl Street
generating station was invented by others before his time; he merely copied the
work of others to promote his business enterprise. . . and the Smithsonian wants
you to believe he was America's 'King of Electricity.'
There is simply no evidence to support this claim. The U.S. Supreme Court, in
a landmark decision dated June 21, 1943, Case No. 369, overturned Marconi's
basic patent for the invention of radio because Tesla's patent on the four-tuned
circuit predated Marconi's patent. Marconi had simply copied Tesla's work.
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The Lost Journals of Nikola Tesla
Tesla's four-tuned circuits two on the receiving side and two on the transmitting
side, secured by U.S. patents #645,576 and #649,621) were the basis of the U.S.
Supreme Court decision (Case #369 decided June 21,1943) to overturn Marconi's
basic patent on the invention of radio.
Marconi merely demonstrated Tesla's invention, but the gullible media and the
greedy industry that followed perpetuate a myth that Marconi invented radio.
Who do you believe has more credibility... the industries that promote their own
businesses, or the U.S. Supreme Court?
Marconi's two-tuned circuit system was the same as that advanced by Heinrich
Hertz and was no more a viable system of radio than that advanced by Mahlon
Loomis in 1872. . . long before Hertz or Tesla.
If you visit the Smithsonian, next to Edison's bust you will see Tesla's invention
that revolutionized the world - drawing of Tesla's rotating magnetic field device,
giving us polyphase AC and the AC motor.
Tesla's U.S. patent number is on his invention, but you wont find any
recognition for Tesla. When Dr. Bernard S. Finn was asked why he had placed
Edison's bust on display next to Tesla's invention, he said the sculptor was a
phrenologist and wanted to examine the bumps on Edison's head; this made it
authentic.
Edison used Direct Current (DC), a technology invented and developed by
others, before his time, as a means of powering his incandescent lamp. Big
business and the media have exaggerated this story so much that now everyone
believes Edison is the father of our system of electrical power.
The Smithsonian Book of Invention is an extra-large hardcover book almost
7/8 of an inch thick. Many inventors and their inventions are shown and their
impact on civilization discussed - including Edison, Marconi, Archie Bunker, and
Colonel Sanders. Tesla and his epic-causing discoveries are omitted.
Dr. Bernard S. Finn is Curator and first author of this Smithsonian publication.
In his section entitled: The Beginning of the Electrical Age, he names forty-three
contributors to the science of electricity. Mr. Edison's name is cited many times
along with his photographs, but Nikola Tesla's name is omitted.
Equally outrageous is the Niagara Falls power station picture of Tesla's AC
generators on the last page. . .and Dr. Finn's concluding remark: "When the
Niagara Falls power station began operating in 1895, it signaled the final major
act in the revolutionary drama that began in Menlo Park in the fall of 1879."
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