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Post by auntym on Mar 15, 2015 11:24:35 GMT -6
www.ancient-code.com/the-philadelphia-experiment/The Philadelphia Experimentby Ivan Petricevic / www.ancient-code.com/author/ivanpetricevic/March 13, 2015 “…men caught fire, went mad, and – the most bizarre of all, some were embedded halfway into the deck of the ship. Others phased in and out of this reality…” The Philadelphia Experiment was a military experiment which consisted in the elaboration of a vessel made invisible to enemy radar. This test was conducted by Dr. Franklin Reno as a military version of the unified theory, also known as general theory of relativity by Albert Einstein. According to this theory it is possible to bend light around an object so that it becomes invisible, this requires a specialized team capable of generating enough energy to create a relationship between the electromagnetic force and gravity. This experiment begun during war time and was developed in Philadelphia by US and German scientists. According to the data obtained the vessel that was used in the Philadelphia experiment was an destroyer, the USS Eldridge DE-173 which was equipped with 2 generators of 75 KVA each, mounted on a tower cannon, feeding four magnetic coils mounted on the bridge, 3 RF / CW emitters 2 MWatt each mounted on the bridge, 3,000 tubes (lamps) amplifiers to drive four electromagnetic field coils and two generators. All of this was set up to generate a synchronized parameterized powerful electromagnetic field, thus allowing radio waves and light to be curved around the ship, which would make the ship “theoretically” invisible to enemy sight and radar, creating the ultimate military vessel. On July 22, 1943 at 9am researchers initiated the generators. Witnesses saw as the water around the ship began to bubble creating a strange greenish fog, finally, the ship became invisible behind some type of blueish lightning, according to witness the US naval base at Norfolk Virginia 600 km away declared seeing the Eldridge for a couple of minutes after which it disappeared from radar and returning to the original coordinates, only with catastrophic consequences. The experiment had failed as the ship did not fulfill the requirements needed for the theory that Einstein had outlined to run successfully as the magnets did not provide a balanced magnetism thus being unstable causing imbalance in the transmutation, the ship was allegedly reassembled incorrectly and the crew also suffered severe consequences falling severely ill, some mentally because of the experience, others suffered dematerializations in some parts of their bodies, while others were fused to the metal of the ship and the remaining crew vanished. Horrified officers immediately canceled all experiments related to this case. This is what had happened allegedly, and these stories cannot be verified. The details of this experiment were revealed indirectly but all documents on the subject have been withdrawn from the public and military domains but nevertheless the information was leaked. MORE: www.ancient-code.com/the-philadelphia-experiment/
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Post by auntym on Feb 1, 2018 15:02:05 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/invisible-sailors-and-a-bar-room-brawl/ Invisible Sailors and a Bar-Room Brawlby Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/January 24, 2018 Just like the Roswell saga of 1947, the 1967 Patterson-Gimlin film of a Bigfoot (or of a man in a suit, depending on your opinion), and the theory that the Moon-landings were faked, just about everyone has heard of what has become infamously known as “The Philadelphia Experiment.” According to the wild claims of a man named Carlos Allende (told to writer Morris K. Jessup in the mid-1950s) in 1943, and during a classified project, a ship was made invisible and teleported from the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard to Norfolk, Virginia. And back again. It was all said to have been an outgrowth of Albert Einstein’s Unified Field Theory. Allende claimed the ship in question was the DE 173 USS Eldridge. Allende didn’t stop there: he said he saw one of several such experiments from the safety of his own ship, the SS Andrew Furuseth. Few researchers today have much time for Allende’s stories. No one disputes that something led to the creation of the legend of the vanishing ship and its crew. Indeed, even the U.S. Navy admits that some of its wartime experiments may have provoked a number of the rumors. There is one aspect of the story that often pops up in conversations of the Philadelphia Experiment kind, mainly because it’s so entertainingly weird. Investigator Bill Moore (who, in 1979 and with Charles Berlitz, wrote The Philadelphia Experiment) revealed a strange story extracted from a a newspaper that has still yet to be identified. It described the sudden vanishing – and I do mean vanishing, as in here one second and gone the next – of a number of sailors in a local pub. With the eye-catching headline of “Strange Circumstances Surround Tavern Brawl,” the story went as follows:“Several city police officers responding to a call to aid members of the Navy Shore Patrol in breaking up a tavern brawl near the U.S. Navy docks here last night got something of a surprise when they arrived on the scene to find the place empty of customers. According to a pair of very nervous waitresses, the Shore Patrol had arrived first and cleared the place out -but not before two of the sailors involved allegedly did a disappearing act. ‘They just sort of vanished into thin air… right there,’ reported one of the frightened hostesses, ‘and I ain’t been drinking either!’ At that point, according to her account, the Shore Patrol proceeded to hustle everybody out of the place in short order.” The story continued: “A subsequent chat with the local police precinct left no doubts as to the fact that some sort of general brawl had indeed occurred in the vicinity of the dockyards at about eleven o’clock last night, but neither confirmation nor denial of the stranger aspects of the story could be immediately obtained. One reported witness succinctly summed up the affair by dismissing it as nothing more than ‘a lot of hooey from them daffy dames down there,’ who, he went on to say, were probably just looking for some free publicity. Damage to the tavern was estimated to be in the vicinity of six hundred dollars.” Moore and Berlitz’s assessment was that: “Little else can be said about the clipping itself. Anything approaching a proper analysis of the clipping is impossible, since the authors possess a photocopy only. Upon close examination, however, the possibly significant fact emerges that the column width is a bit greater than was used by any of the Philadelphia dailies in the 1940s. This suggests that the article may have originated in a local or regional newspaper in the Philadelphia area rather than in one of the metropolitan papers.” The pair concluded: “Until the article itself can be actually verified either by identifying the source of the photocopy or by discovering the name and date of the newspaper in which the article originally appeared, its existence will continue to remain a puzzle.” While the origin and authenticity (or otherwise) of the curious clipping continues to remain a puzzle, the story doesn’t stand alone. In February 1999, George Mayerchak, who served in the U.S. Navy from 1948 until 1952, publicly revealed some startling data surrounding his own, personal knowledge of what prompted the aforementioned, curious newspaper report. Mayerchak told his story in the pages of Fortean Times. It was 1949, Mayerchak said, and at the time he was stuck in the Philadelphia Navy Hospital for a few weeks with a severe case of pneumonia. Several of the other guys in the same ward – perhaps bored and looking to pass the time – told Mayerchak a strange story of a bunch of sailors who had mysteriously vanished – as in literally vanished – a few years earlier. And from a bar somewhere near the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Mayerchak said: “Oh, yeah, those gals were scared, because these guys walked into the bar and they seemed to almost disappear or something.” While many researchers of the Philadelphia Experiment saga doubt (and that’s putting it mildly!) the mid-1950s tales of Allende, it’s intriguing to note that Mayerchak claimed to have heard the same story more than six years before Allende was even on the scene. The legend lives on…
mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/invisible-sailors-and-a-bar-room-brawl/Strange Tales Of Invisibility mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/strange-tales-of-invisibility/
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Post by auntym on Oct 4, 2018 12:13:18 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/10/a-ufo-related-death-that-still-provokes-controversy/ A UFO-Related Death That Still Provokes Controversyby Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/October 5, 2018 In 1955, one of the most controversial of all the many and varied UFO books published in the fifties was released. Its title was The Case for the UFO. The author was Morris Ketchum Jessup. His book, in part, was a detailed study of the theoretical power-sources for UFOs: what was it that made them fly? How could they perform incredible, aerial feats, such as coming to a complete stop in the skies, hovering at incredible heights? Jessup believed that the answers lay in the domain of gravity. Or, as he saw it: anti-gravity. Jessup may well have been onto something, as it wasn’t long at all before the world of officialdom was taking an interest in him – specifically the U.S. Navy. And it was one particularly intriguing office of the Navy that was watching Jessup – a “special weapons” division. Clearly, someone in the U.S. Navy was intrigued by Jessup’s findings and theories. In the mid-fifties, Morris Jessup became deeply worried – paranoid, even – that he was being spied on. On several occasions, he noticed that certain items in his office had clearly been moved – strongly suggesting that when he was out of his home someone was having a stealthy look around. The ante was upped when Jessup had a face to face interview with Navy representatives who wanted to speak with him about his book and the theories and the technology referred to in its pages. That wasn’t all they wanted to discuss They also wanted to know what Jessup knew about the so-called Philadelphia Experiment of 1943, in which, allegedly, a Navy ship – the USS Eldridge – was rendered invisible, something that is said to have led to the deaths of some of the crew. I should stress, though, that Jessup’s original source for the story was a man named Carlos Allende. He was a notorious hoaxer in the controversy-filled saga of the vanishing ship, which was not a good sign. USS Eldridge Of course, given the fact that Jessup was already in a deep state of fear and paranoia, the meeting with the Navy only increased his anxieties. He saw Men in Black lurking outside of his home. Hang-up calls in the middle of the night became regular occurrences. Mail arrived tampered, opened and resealed. Clearly, someone was trying to derail Jessup and his research. In the early evening of April 20, 1959, the lifeless body of Morris Jessup was found in his car, which was parked in the Matheson Hammock Park in Miami, Florida. The car’s engine was still running and a hosepipe, affixed to the exhaust, had been fed through the driver’s side window. Jessup was dead from the effects of carbon-monoxide. Jessup’s body was found by a man named John Goode, who worked at the park. He quickly called the police, who arrived in no time at all. While it looked like Jessup had killed himself, not everyone was quite so sure that things were so black and white. The window through which the hose was stuffed with a couple of towels, to prevent air from getting in and carbon-monoxide from getting out. Curiously, Mrs. Jessup — Rubeye – confirmed the towels were not theirs. Why, if Jessup took his own life, did he not take towels from the family home? What would have been the point of buying new towels? And, if he did buy such towels, where was the receipt? It certainly wasn’t in the car, or in any of Jessup’s pockets. Of course, no one can say what goes through someone’s mind when they decide to end their life, but if nothing else the matter of the towels was perceived as somewhat of a red flag. It should be noted, though, that Jessup’s life was not exactly stable in this period. And that’s putting it mildly. His marriage was in a fraught state, a car accident had limited his activities, and he was having trouble getting published. In other words, we most definitely need to look at both sides of the coin – and carefully and closely, too. Moving on, there is the fact that on the very night before his death, Jessup spent more than an hour chatting on the phone with one Manson Valentine, expressing his enthusiasm for his latest work and plans for further investigations into the Philadelphia Experiment. Jessup even told Valentine that they should have lunch together the next day. Valentine never saw Jessup again. mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/10/a-ufo-related-death-that-still-provokes-controversy/
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Post by auntym on Mar 6, 2019 14:47:28 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/03/from-shadow-people-to-the-philadelphia-experiment-part-1/ From Shadow People to the Philadelphia Experiment Part-1by Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/March 7, 2019 As someone who writes books, gives lectures, and posts articles here and there, I get a lot of feedback. For the most part, it comes via emails, phone-calls and Facebook messages, from people who want to share their experiences, ask questions, or offer their opinions on the things I have written about. Occasionally, however, I’ll find myself on the receiving end of a communication (or several) from someone claiming an “Insider”-type background. A whistle-blower, in other words. There have been a few occasions when my path has crossed with those of enigmatic characters whose backgrounds did indeed place them in the world of certain, covert activities – all connected to UFOs, in one way or another. This occurred most graphically when I was researching and writing my books, The Roswell UFO Conspiracy, On the Trail of the Saucer Spies, Body Snatchers in the Desert, and Final Events. On March 2, 2017, it happened again. In this case, it came in the form of an “Unknown Caller” phone-call in the early afternoon. The elderly man at the other end of the line said that he had read my books Men in Black and Women in Black and wanted to share something relevant. It all revolved, he said, around the Philadelphia Experiment of 1943 and the MIB. This was certainly a new one on me. And I thought I had heard it all! I clearly had not. Like me, he had no time for the teleportation- or time-travel-based scenarios. But, what he did believe (or, rather, claimed to know) was certainly just as controversial. Perhaps, even more so. He said that in the early 1980s he was given the opportunity to read a particular batch of classified U.S. Navy files that told the “real” story of the Philadelphia Experiment. He was extremely cagey on verifiable facts (no surprises there, I have to say…), but maintained that the experiment had a bearing on the aforementioned MIB and Women in Black. I asked: “In what way?” His reply was that the experiment – the precise nature of which he would not comment on – created what he called “a shift.” It was a shift that allowed those aboard the ship to see certain things that, in a normal state, they, you and I would not be able to see. But, which are supposedly around us all of the time. We’re talking about the MIB, WIB, and even what have become popularly known in recent years as the Shadow People, one-dimensional entities that are considered highly dangerous. So the tale went, the stories of crew-members vanishing, or becoming fused into the metal of the ship itself, were very wide of the mark. They were, I was assured, wildly distorted accounts of the crew seeing not sailors, but encountering MIB, WIB and Shadow People walking through walls, becoming invisible, and then reappearing. It didn’t take long, though, before the “truth” of the matter became a tale of vanishing and reappearing sailors. The man claimed – even more controversially – that this particular event at sea marked the first moment when the U.S. Government became “aware” of the Men in Black phenomenon. USS Eldridge The man stressed that he used the word “aware” for a very good reason. He wanted to make it clear that the government’s awareness did not mean they fully understood the nature of the MIB (and related) phenomenon. And, then, he stressed yet again that awareness and understanding should not be confused. Yes, I got it, jeez. Interestingly, he also said that the stories of some of the crew going insane were absolutely true. He explained that this was caused by the strange ability of some of the men to randomly see the MIB, the WIB, and the Shadow People for up to at least several years later. True or not, I could understand why people might well flip their collective lids under such circumstances. Imagine being endlessly faced with ghoulish, pale creatures in black swarming all around you, all the time, and in somewhat ethereal form. And your friends and family are completely oblivious to what’s going on around them. That would surely be enough to send anyone completely off the rails. Creepiest of all, he said that when the creatures realized they could be seen by the sailors, they would respond by endlessly tormenting them. They would point their bony fingers at the men and grin in manic style. Others would “dance” around them, in wild, crazed fashion, while wailing and howling. It was a definitive bedlam, one from which there was no escape whatsoever. A Danse Macabre, one might say. Minds were lost, destroyed and never recovered. Having listened to all of that, I felt like I needed a drink. Was 3:00 p.m. on a weekday too early for hard liquor mixed with chilled Coca-Cola and ice? No, it was not. Of course, the most logical explanation for all of this is that the source was a nut-job. But, what if he wasn’t…? The story is not quite over. Part-2 will soon follow…mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/03/from-shadow-people-to-the-philadelphia-experiment-part-1/
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Post by jcurio on Mar 6, 2019 16:57:22 GMT -6
Creepiest of all, he said that when the creatures realized they could be seen by the sailors, they would respond by endlessly tormenting them.
____________________
Endlessly torment - is not what I say happens to me sometimes.
But it’s like : someone once said? “If you can see across the abyss, what keeps them from looking back?”
Well, there IS still that abyss between us. Isn’t there?
___________________
I STILL THINK that the “Montauk project” has something “significant” to do with some of our lives. Not the time traveling part.
What SEEMS so much more significant in the MONTAUK story, is the part where as children, those guys THINK that their fathers took them to “some secret place” and they don’t remember what happened in THIS PLACE.
THIS STORY came out to me, through the internet (of course), before ANY OF US WERE talking about MILABS and such.....
In fact, I remember thinking that THAT PART of the story seemed SO FAMILAR... but back then, saying that, ....,,, even my “recall”, was SO unbelievable
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Post by auntym on Mar 7, 2019 13:56:57 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/03/from-shadow-people-to-the-philadelphia-experiment-part-2/ From Shadow People to the Philadelphia Experiment Part-2by Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/March 8, 2019 Part-1 of this article began as follows: “As someone who writes books, gives lectures, and posts articles here and there, I get a lot of feedback. For the most part, it comes via emails, phone-calls and Facebook messages, from people who want to share their experiences, ask questions, or offer their opinions on the things I have written about. Occasionally, however, I’ll find myself on the receiving end of a communication (or several) from someone claiming an “Insider”-type background. A whistle-blower, in other words. There have been a few occasions when my path has crossed with those of enigmatic characters whose backgrounds did indeed place them in the world of certain, covert activities – all connected to UFOs, in one way or another. This occurred most graphically when I was researching and writing my books, The Roswell UFO Conspiracy, On the Trail of the Saucer Spies, Body Snatchers in the Desert, and Final Events. On March 2, 2017, it happened again. In this case, it came in the form of an “Unknown Caller” phone-call in the early afternoon. The elderly man at the other end of the line said that he had read my books Men in Black and Women in Black and wanted to share something relevant. It all revolved, he said, around the Philadelphia Experiment of 1943 and the MIB.” mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/03/from-shadow-people-to-the-philadelphia-experiment-part-1/There the extract from part-1 of this article ends. Now, it’s time for part-2. As interesting as this almost crazed story admittedly was, I quite naturally asked the man for something to back up his extraordinary claims. He told me to keep a look out for something that would be arriving in a couple of days. The phone then clicked. He had hung up. I thought: how can something be coming to my apartment when he didn’t even have my address? Two days later, on March 4, 2017 I found out. Apparently, he, or someone associated with him, did have my address. Around noon, I went down to get the mail. As I opened my apartment door, I saw a yellow envelope sitting on my “Welcome” mat. What was particularly odd about the envelope was its complete lack of stamps or address: the entire envelope was blank. It wasn’t even sealed; the flap had just been pushed inside the envelope. I looked around, but didn’t see any unfamiliar faces wandering around. That was not surprising: it could only have been placed there some time after I last returned to the apartment, which was around 10:00 p.m. on the previous night, after I had helped a friend haul a new recliner into his second-floor apartment, one block down from mine. Logically, though, I figured it was probably delivered in the early hours of the morning, when there would have been hardly anyone awake or in a position to see the person who made the stealthy delivery. So, I took the envelope inside and sat down on the couch. I opened it and could see what looked like an old book. That’s exactly what it was. I took it out. What I was holding in my hands was an original, 1950 edition of a book published by the Bureau of Ships, U.S. Navy Department. Its title was Microwave Techniques. It had been prepared by the Radiation Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. On the “Acknowledgments” page, it said: “Microwave Techniques is a Bureau of Ships edition of the report T-13, Microwave Technique as of May 1943, issued by the Radiation Laboratory.” It was signed “D.H. Clark, Rear Admiral, U.S. Navy, Chief, Bureau of Ships.” Interestingly, Rear Admiral Clark was the Commander of the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Why is that of interest? Well, because in the legend, the “teleported” ship turned up at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. And although I don’t buy into the wild tales of teleportation (or of time-travel, too), it was clear to me that someone was trying very hard to make a point. When, back in the 1980s and the early-to-mid-1990s, I used the Freedom of Information Act to a significant degree, I was used to receiving government-, military-, and intelligence-based documents through the mail. But, this was very different: via FOIA you would always get photocopied material. And, of course, it would be delivered in conventional fashion. On this occasion, though, I was the recipient of an original military document. Plus, it wasn’t delivered by the mail, by UPS, or FedEx. On this occasion, someone had climbed the stairs to my apartment and had very quietly placed it right outside of my door (in the dead of night, I concluded), knowing that I would soon find it. Also, there was the not insignificant fact that the “Acknowledgments” section of the Microwave Techniques document referenced 1943 – the year of the Philadelphia Experiment. The report didn’t mention the legendary experiment, but there was no doubt in my mind that it came from the old man on the phone two days earlier. Or, at the very least, from an associate of his. After perusing the book for an hour or so, I went outside and scanned the apartment blocks. Everything was as normal as it ever was. Or, rather, it seemed to be. Beneath the veneer of normality, though, I detected a sense of something else. Of dark machinations and of an unclear, masked agenda. mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/03/from-shadow-people-to-the-philadelphia-experiment-part-2/
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