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ScienceDirect - Technol Rep Tohoku Univ ... - Garryck Osborne

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NICK COOK 209<br />

I told him about Thomas Townsend Brown's efforts at much the same<br />

time to interest the U.S. Air Force and Navy in an electrogravitically<br />

powered Mach 3 flying saucer and how aspects of Brown's ideas had<br />

emerged in the B-2 Stealth Bomber more than three decades later.<br />

I told him how Evgeny Podkletnov had defied the theoreticians of<br />

NASA's Breakthrough Propulsion Physics program by engineering a<br />

device that shielded gravity by as much as five percent and how, officially,<br />

Brown's work had been discredited by the U.S. military—despite its<br />

very real application to the B-2.<br />

We spoke, as well, about the glaring discrepancy between General<br />

Twining's view in 1947 that the development of a manned aircraft with<br />

the operating characteristics of a UFO was "within the present U.S.<br />

knowledge" and the fact that, even in the black world of modern U.S.<br />

aerospace technology, there were so few traces of this knowledge it was as<br />

if it had never existed.<br />

Which had brought me to the Germans.<br />

There was, via the Kammler trail, a mounting body of evidence that<br />

the Nazis, in their desperation to win the war, had been experimenting<br />

with a form of science the rest of the world had never remotely<br />

considered. And that somewhere in this cauldron of ideas, a new<br />

technology had been born; one that was so far ahead of its time it had been<br />

suppressed for more than half a century.<br />

Joerg Schauberger's grandfather, I felt sure, was integral to the truth<br />

of what had happened at that time. But unlike the Wenceslas Mine,<br />

where few traces of Sporrenberg's court testimony remained on view,<br />

Viktor Schauberger had left records. That, I told his grandson, was why<br />

I was here.<br />

At this, he gave an almost imperceptible nod and indicated we should<br />

head upstairs. It was getting late and there was a lot of material we needed<br />

to get through in the short space of time I was in Bad Ischl.<br />

Like me, he said, pausing at the base of the steps that led to the upper<br />

levels of the house, he was only interested in the truth. In the complex<br />

world his grandfather had lived in, it was a commodity that was not<br />

always so easy to get a handle on.<br />

It was then that I understood. Joerg Schauberger had been trying<br />

to assemble his own jigsaw puzzle—one that explained the intricate<br />

mystery of his grandfather's life.<br />

I held pieces of the puzzle he didn't possess.<br />

In regulating the movement of water via dams and irrigation schemes,<br />

man had obstructed the complex, vortex flow patterns that water

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