Is there truth about the Nikola Tesla Time Travel experiment?
I have long been an admirer of the great inventor Nikola Tesla. That should come to no surprise to anyone who has read some of my previous books. Here was a man whose genius was far beyond the great minds of his day. He had an intellect that at times seemed almost unearthly. I suppose this is why some have speculated that such a remarkable individual could not have sprung from the bosom of mother Earth, but instead was the product of extraterrestrial intervention. I must admit that for a while the idea that Nikola Tesla was not of this planet held a certain appeal to me. It would certainly answer a lot of questions about this enigmatic man – but of course it would also create even more questions that would be impossible to answer in my lifetime. So I was finally left with the simplest explanation on the true origins of Nikola Tesla. I have concluded he was an extraordinary human the likes we so rarely see. My primary schooling was bereft of any education of Tesla or his great achieveme
There has been much controversy and debate over the years about the so-called “Philadelphia Experiment.” which supposedly happened in 1943 and was an experiment that was conducted by the Navy to try and make a ship that would be not be detected by mines and radars. According to nhatky.in, original reports say that a guy by the name of Alfred Bielek claimed that he had traveled in time to the future. He also claimed that Dr. Albert Einstein, Dr. Nikola Telsa and Dr. John Von Neumann were involved in the project. Although this claim has also brought about controversy of Telsa’s part in the project as he died on January 7th 1943, which was only a two month period of time after the experiment took place. Some say that this story was all a hoax, but I guess we’ll never really know. http://www.inentertainment.co.uk/20090710/nikola-tesla-time-travel-and-philadelphia-experim
The idea for the experiment came from investigations and experiments by a group involving Tesla for the possibility of invisibility through the use of electricity. The experiments succeeded for small objects, and around 1939, it was presented to the government. The military was particularly interested in this, possibly due to the fact that there was a war going on at the time, and technology like this would be monumental. In 1943, the government decided to perform a test on domestic animals on a ship. It was the USS Eldridge on which the animals were placed in metal cages. The ship did indeed go invisible, but when the animals were observed again, several of them bore radiation and burn marks, and several were missing. They had decided that humans were not to be tested. Sources: http://www.nhatky.