Joseph P. Farrell
LINK: https://forum.gizadeathstar.com/latest
MOVING SPACE FORCE HQ TO HUNTSVILLE: THE ANTIGRAV CONNECTION
You'll recall this Monday last I blogged about the mysterious disappearing scientist case of Dr. Furkan Dolek, a Turkish physicist who had worked at CERN, Virginia Tech, and Fermilab. The case was brought to my attention by E.E., and that is the case today. Here E.E. has not only brought a story to our attention that, in my case at least, I was entirely unaware, but also outlined the high octane speculation that it suggested. So, in a certain sense, this entire blog's central focus, including its high octane speculation, are those of E.E.
The context of the story is Mr. Trump's recent announcement that he was moving the Space Force Headquarters to Huntsville, Alabama, a move that sends all sorts of messages. Huntsville was and is, of course, the home of much of America's space and military industrial complex. The Redstone Arsenal is there. Wernher von Braun retired there. Several of his fellow postwar Operation Paperclip Nazis worked there, including one time Nazi Bell scientist and subsequent Apollo manager Dr. Kurt Debus. This comes against a wider temporal context of strange announcements in recent years by people in the government regarding space. You might recall that Mr. Trump, when announcing his plans for the space force, made an odd mistake by saying "we need another space force." Either it was a simple mistake, or it was a Freudian slip, an admission, that such a force already existed, now to be supplemented by a new one... a kind of "space navy" supplement to the already existing "space coast guard"? Perhaps, though I am inclined to think that for the simple reason that Trump wasn't the only one making strange remarks in strange contexts regarding space. You might recall General Mark "Thoroughly Modern" Milley at the US Air Force Academy graduation ceremonies some years ago(2018) remarking that we must be prepared to fight "little green men?" (q.v. https://gizadeathstar.com/2018/12/remember-that-generals-little-green-men-speech/) We were told that his remarks had nothing to do with extraterrestrials, but that "little green men" was code for Russians in their camouflage combat fatigues.
Da, uh huh.... sure...
While we're talking about Huntsville, there is anti-gravity researcher Amy Eskridge, whose father had a connection to the military-industrial complex there, and who herself was one of those strange out-of-the-box thinkers:
You'll note from the article that her father worked in propulsion systems for NASA at Huntsville-Redstone, and that he and his daughter Amy went on to found a corporation based in Huntsville to do antigravity research. You'll note also that Amy herself did a presentation at Huntsville on the history of such research, and that a significant portion of her comments during the question-and-answer session following was about the need for a massive and stable system of funding, a problem which apparently she had not solved. But something was clearly going on for she also started carrying antidotes for nerve agents at all times.
Toward the end of the article, mention is made of Chinese-American scientist Ning Li, who, like Amy, also worked in anti-gravity, and like Amy, did so at Huntsville:
From the above Wikipedia article:
Ning Li (Chinese: 李宁, pinyin: Lǐ Níng; January 14, 1943 – July 27, 2021) was a Chinese American scientist. Born in Shandong, she graduated from the Department of Physics of Peking University, and in 1983 she emigrated with her family from China to the United States.[1] She is known for her physics and anti-gravity research. In the 1990s, Li worked as a research scientist at the Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research, University of Alabama in Huntsville. In 1999, she left the university to form a company, AC Gravity LLC, to continue anti-gravity research.
Anti-gravity research
In a series of papers co-authored with fellow university physicist Douglas Torr and published between 1991 and 1993, she claimed a practical way to produce anti-gravity effects. She claimed that an anti-gravity effect could be produced by rotating ions creating a gravitomagnetic field perpendicular to their spin axis. In her theory, if a large number of ions could be aligned (in a Bose–Einstein condensate), the resulting effect would be a very strong gravitomagnetic field producing a strong repulsive force. The alignment may be possible by trapping superconductor ions in a lattice structure in a high-temperature superconducting disc. [2][3][4][5] Her claim of having functional anti-gravity devices was cited by the popular press and in popular science magazines with some enthusiasm at the time.[6][7] In 1997, Li published a paper stating that recent experiments by Eugene Podkletnov reported anomalous weight changes of 0.05-2.1% for a test mass suspended above a rotating superconductor, but that her own experiments with a non-rotating superconductor showed little, if any gravitational effect.[8]
Hmmm... rotating ions (i.e. plasmas, folks), generating fields of lift perpendicular to the axis of rotation(or is that a bit of misdirection, and is it really perpendicular to the plane of rotation? Most investigations I'm familiar with would seem to suggest the latter). In any case, it kinda rings a Bell...
And then, like Amy Eskridge, we have an unfortunately not-unexpected turn of events:
In 2014, Ning Li was struck by a vehicle while crossing the street on the University of Alabama in Huntsville campus. Li’s husband, seeing the accident, suffered a heart attack and died a year later in 2015. For Li, this accident caused permanent brain damage that resulted in Alzheimer’s disease shortly after.[1] On July 27, 2021, Ning Li died at the age of 78.[12]
As the article on Amy Eskridge puts it:
Who was Amy Eskridge?
Who was Ning Li?
How is it that these two women wind up dead, working in the same field?
Why do so many scientists in this area of research and physics wind up disappeared or dead?
Indeed, and that question raises the real question: why did Mr. Trump move the Space Force Headquarters to Huntsville? And the answer appears to be simple and obvious: Huntsville is one of the centers for exotic antigravity research, and so much the better to keep an eye on developments in the neighborhood by moving the center of its military control there. The old adage is that one is an anomaly, two a coincidence, and three is a pattern. And with the presence of Bell scientist Dr Kurt Debus, of Amy Eskridge, and Ning Li all in the area, and all working in the fields of antigravity and rotating plasmas, I'd say that we have a pattern.
All Mr. Trump did was to confirm it.
See you on the flip side...
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