Nikola Tesla’s 10 Inventions That Changed The World

Nikola-Tesla

Nikola Tesla is finally beginning to attract real attention and encourage serious debate more than 70 years after his death. Was he for real? A crackpot? Part of an early experiment in corporate-government control? ~ Nicholas West

We know that he was undoubtedly persecuted by the energy power
brokers of his day — namely Thomas Edison, whom we are taught in school
to revere as a genius.  He was also attacked by J.P. Morgan and other
“captains of industry.”

Upon Tesla’s death on January 7th, 1943, the
U.S. government moved into his lab and apartment confiscating all of his
scientific research, some of which has been released by the FBI through
the Freedom of Information Act.

(Embedded below are the first 250 pages
below with added an link to the .pdf of the final pages, there are 290 pages in
total).

Besides his persecution by corporate-government
interests (which is practically a certification of authenticity), there
is at least one solid indication of Nikola Tesla’s integrity — he tore
up a contract with Westinghouse that was worth billions in order to save
the company from paying him his huge royalty payments.

Let’s take a look at what Nikola Tesla
— a man who died broke and alone — has actually given to the world. 
For better or worse, with credit or without, he changed the face of the
planet in ways that perhaps no man ever has.

1. Alternating Current

This is where it all began, and what ultimately caused such a stir at the 1893 World’s Expo in Chicago. 

A war was leveled
ever-after between the vision of Edison and the vision of Tesla for how
electricity would be produced and distributed. 

The division can be
summarized as one of cost and safety: The DC current that Edison (backed
by General Electric) had been working on was costly over long
distances, and produced dangerous sparking from the required converter
(called a commutator). 

Regardless, Edison and his backers utilized the
general “dangers” of electric current to instill fear in Tesla’s
alternative: Alternating Current.  As proof,
Edison sometimes electrocuted animals at demonstrations. 

Consequently,
Edison gave the world the electric chair, while simultaneously
maligning Tesla’s attempt to offer safety at a lower cost. Tesla
responded by demonstrating that AC was perfectly safe by famously
shooting current through his own body to produce light. 

This
Edison-Tesla (GE-Westinghouse) feud in 1893 was the culmination of over a
decade of shady business deals, stolen ideas, and patent suppression
that Edison and his moneyed interests wielded over Tesla’s inventions.

Yet, despite it all, it is Tesla’s system that provides power generation
and distribution to North America in our modern era.

2. Light

Of course he didn’t invent light itself, but he did invent how light
can be harnessed and distributed. Tesla developed and used fluorescent
bulbs in his lab some 40 years before industry “invented” them.

At the
World’s Fair, Tesla took glass tubes and bent them into famous
scientists’ names, in effect creating the first neon signs. However, it
is his Tesla Coil that might be the most impressive, and
controversial. 

The Tesla Coil
is certainly something that big industry would have liked to suppress:
the concept that the Earth itself is a magnet that can generate
electricity (electromagnetism) utilizing frequencies as a transmitter. 
All that is needed on the other end is the receiver — much like a radio.

3. X-rays

Electromagnetic and ionizing radiation was heavily researched in the
late 1800s, but Tesla researched the entire gamut.

Everything from a
precursor to Kirlian photography,
which has the ability to document life force, to what we now use in
medical diagnostics, this was a transformative invention of which Tesla played a central role

X-rays, like so many of Tesla’s contributions, stemmed from his belief
that everything we need to understand the universe is virtually around
us at all times, but we need to use our minds to develop real-world
devices to augment our innate perception of existence.

4. Radio

Guglielmo Marconi was initially credited, and most believe him to be
the inventor of radio to this day. However, the Supreme Court
overturned Marconi’s patent in 1943, when it was proven that Tesla
invented the radio years previous to Marconi. 

Radio signals are just
another frequency that needs a transmitter and receiver, which Tesla
also demonstrated in 1893 during a presentation before The National
Electric Light Association. 

In 1897 Tesla applied for two patents  US 645576, and US 649621.

In 1904, however, The U.S. Patent Office reversed its decision,
awarding Marconi a patent for the invention of radio, possibly
influenced by Marconi’s financial backers in the States, who included
Thomas Edison and Andrew Carnegie.

This also allowed the U.S. government
(among others) to avoid having to pay the royalties that were being
claimed by Tesla.

5. Remote Control

This invention was a natural outcropping of radio. Patent No. 613809
was the first remote controlled model boat, demonstrated in 1898. 

Utilizing several large batteries; radio signals controlled switches,
which then energized the boat’s propeller, rudder, and scaled-down
running lights.

While this exact technology was not widely used for some
time, we now can see the power that was appropriated by the military in
its pursuit of remote controlled war.

Radio controlled tanks were introduced by the Germans in WWII, and
developments in this realm have since slid quickly away from the
direction of human freedom.

6. Electric Motor

Tesla’s invention of the electric motor has finally been popularized by a car
brandishing his name. While the technical specifications are beyond
the scope of this summary, suffice to say that Tesla’s invention of a
motor with rotating magnetic fields could have freed mankind much sooner
from the stranglehold of Big Oil. 

However, his invention in 1930
succumbed to the economic crisis and the world war that followed.
Nevertheless, this invention has fundamentally changed the landscape of
what we now take for granted: industrial fans, household applicances,
water pumps, machine tools, power tools, disk drives, electric
wristwatches and compressors.

7. Robotics

Tesla’s overly
enhanced scientific mind led him to the idea that all living beings are
merely driven by external impulses. 

He stated: “I have by every thought
and act of mine, demonstrated, and does so daily, to my absolute
satisfaction that I am an automaton endowed with power of movement,
which merely responds to external stimuli.” 

Thus, the concept of the
robot was born. However, an element of the human remained present, as
Tesla asserted that these human replicas should have limitations —
namely growth and propagation.

Nevertheless, Tesla unabashedly embraced
all of what intelligence could produce. His visions for a future filled
with intelligent cars, robotic human companions, and the use of
sensors, and autonomous systems are detailed in a must-read entry in the
Serbian Journal of Electrical Engineering, 2006 (PDF).

8. Laser

Tesla’s invention of the laser may be one of the best examples of the
good and evil bound up together within the mind of man. Lasers have
transformed surgical applications in an undeniably beneficial way, and
they have given rise to much of our current digital media.

However, with
this leap in innovation we have also crossed into the land of science
fiction.  From Reagan’s “Star Wars” laser defense system to today’s Orwellian “non-lethal” weapons’
arsenal, which includes laser rifles and directed energy “death rays,”
there is great potential for development in both directions.

9 and 10. Wireless Communications and Limitless Free Energy

These two are inextricably linked, as they were the last straw for
the power elite — what good is energy if it can’t be metered and
controlled? Free?  Never. 

J.P. Morgan backed Tesla with $150,000 to
build a tower that would use the natural frequencies of our universe to
transmit data, including a wide range of information communicated
through images, voice messages, and text. 

This represented the world’s
first wireless communications, but it also meant that aside from the
cost of the tower itself, the universe was filled with free energy that
could be utilized to form a world wide web connecting all people in all
places, as well as allow people to harness the free energy around them. 

Essentially, the 0’s and 1’s of the universe are embedded in the fabric
of existence for each of us to access as needed.  Nikola Tesla was
dedicated to empowering the individual to receive and transmit this data
virtually free of charge. We know the ending to that story…
until now?

Tesla had perhaps thousands of other ideas and inventions that remain unreleased. A look at his hundreds of patents
shows a glimpse of the scope he intended to offer. 

Additional technical and scientific research of Nikola Tesla should
be revealed for public scrutiny and discussion, instead of suppressed by big industry and even our supposed institutions of higher education.

The release of Nikola Tesla’s technical and scientific research —
specifically his research into harnessing electricity from the
ionosphere at a facility called Wardenclyffe — is a necessary step
toward true freedom of information.  Please add your voice by sharing
this information with as many people as possible.

There are some who have pointed out that Tesla’s experimentation with the ionosphere very well could have caused the massive explosion over Tunguska, Siberia in 1908, which leveled an estimated 60 million trees over 2,150 square kilometers, and may even have led to the much maligned HAARP technology. 

I submit that we would do well to remember that technology is never the true enemy; it is the misuse of technology that can enslave rather than free mankind from its animal-level survivalism.

Source

 

November 7, 2015 – KnowTheLies

 

References

 

Source Article from http://www.knowthelies.com/node/10909

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium WordPress Themes | Thanks to Themes Gallery, Bromoney and Wordpress Themes