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The Suppression <strong>of</strong> Unorthodox Science 203<br />

said Viktor could travel home, but first he had to sign a contract <strong>and</strong> agree<br />

to take a course in English. Unfortunately the contract was in English <strong>and</strong><br />

Viktor did not know the language. His biographers say he was pressured<br />

to sign quickly; their flight would leave shortly <strong>and</strong> there was no time to<br />

quibble.<br />

Viktor at that point only wanted to get out <strong>of</strong> the hellish heat <strong>and</strong> away<br />

from these deceptive people. He signed. Walter refused to sign. He would<br />

be on dangerous ground with immigrant authorities if he signed such a<br />

contact, for one thing.<br />

After Viktor gave in <strong>and</strong> signed, suddenly there was ample time before<br />

they needed to go to the airport. Champagne corks popped <strong>and</strong> their hosts<br />

celebrated.<br />

One can only imagine the conversation between father <strong>and</strong> son on the<br />

flight home. At last we can go home; get away from those thieves. But<br />

what have we done<br />

Walter probably had the heartbreaking task <strong>of</strong> spelling it out to his<br />

father. "Yes, it is as I told you when they were pressuring you to sign; the<br />

contract says that now you can't write about or even talk about your<br />

past-<strong>and</strong>-future discoveries, <strong>and</strong> you are bound to give everything you<br />

know to that boss <strong>of</strong> the Texas consortium. Their contract says they now<br />

have all the rights to the 'Schauberger business' as they put it."<br />

Was Schauberger's implosion process considered by the American<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficials to be "cold fusion" The Austrian observer <strong>of</strong> nature apparently<br />

did arrive at results related to modern sub-atomic research. In the late<br />

1980s, an independent researcher tried to get information on the Texas incident.<br />

Erwin Krieger's attempt to get information through the Freedom <strong>of</strong><br />

Information Act failed; he was told by a form letter that the material may<br />

be related to national security.<br />

"I DON'T EVEN OWN MYSELF"<br />

Viktor Schauberger was at the end a despairing man. In the last few days<br />

<strong>of</strong> his life he reportedly cried over <strong>and</strong> over, "They took everything from<br />

me, everything. I don't even own myself!" Stripped <strong>of</strong> hope, he died five<br />

days after they returned home.<br />

His passion for learning nature's ways <strong>and</strong> then applying that knowledge<br />

to life-enhancing technology, <strong>and</strong> his efforts to interest those who<br />

could fund its development, had let him a long way from the peaceful forest.<br />

The more recent loss was the legal right to work on his implosion<br />

technology. But how did that compare to what seemed like the loss <strong>of</strong> his<br />

lifetime <strong>of</strong> hard-won insights The world had ignored warnings—from<br />

him <strong>and</strong> <strong>other</strong>s—about what would happen if natural forests disappeared<br />

en masse, <strong>and</strong> his planet's weather, water, soil <strong>and</strong> air deteriorated as a

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