barney Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 Miracle in the Void" by Dr. Brian O'Leary (get the book at amazon.com) Tokyo, Japan, stopover en route to India, Feb. 10, 1994 Shiuji Inomata and I got into a taxi at Narita Airport for a $150 ride to his laboratory in the Japanese Space City of Tsukuba. In a style Japanese hosts are famous for, he had gone out of his way to pick me up, take me to dinner, demonstrate his free energy device, and send me back to the airport in another equally expensive taxi all at his expense. Inomata is a senior scientist of 35 years' tenure with the Japanese Government, at the Tsukuba Electrotechnical Laboratory. He has a Ph.D., is author of dozens of peer reviewed papers, and is president of the Japan Psychotronics Institute. He is not the stereotype of the Saturday garage inventor. He has built a version of Bruce DePalma's unipolar generator (sometimes called the "N-machine", connoting the production of power to the Nth degree). Our conversation was animated during the two hours in the taxi, which traversed the hodgepodge of roads, powerlines, exotic billboards and an over-industrialized landscape. We had a pleasant sushi dinner at a local establishment. After nightfall he took me up to his laboratory to demonstrate his device for me, a tabletop machine that showed anomalous outputs once it ran beyond a certain threshold of speed. He spoke to me enthusiastically about a seminar he had just given before an overflow audience of six hundred leading industrialists, academics and governmental scientists. "I believe the people of Japan will support free energy," he said in mostly understandable English, with an endearing grin. "We have no domestic energy supply. We need it and we're not suppressing it. Toshiba will spend two million dollars on superconducting magnets for new unipolar generators (N machines) that will give us over-unity, more electrical output than input. Then we can manufacture them...Yes!" We nodded together in a manner exceeding mere courtesy. I knew what he was talking about. While most American decision-makers are "floundering in the backwash" (a favorite John F. Kennedy quote), denying and suppressing free energy, the Japanese are organizing themselves to take off. Inomata and several other enlightened and highly qualified scientists are moving into this area, and almost certainly it will be only a matter of time before we see Japanese free energy devices dominating the marketplace. Inomata's demonstration of his machine, a simple small-scale replica of the invention of Bruce DePalma, an expatriated American, convinced me this very intelligent and well-credentialed scientist was on his way to success in concert with government, universities and industry. Inomata then showed me a diagram that immediately made sense to me in my own path to enlightenment. It was a triangle whose apexes represent mass, energy, and consciousness. This one gestalt was all I needed to synthesize in my mind the very simple fact that our current science considers only the internal and extemal relationships between mass and energy (immortalized by Einstein's E=Mc2), while totally ignoring the influences of consciousness on creativity). The addition of the relationships of consciousness with itself and with mass and energy adds a new dimension to the linear mass-energy paradigm, and opens new doorways to understanding our greater reality. These paradigm-busting realizations were perfect preparation for the first demonstration of an over-unity (over 100% electrical efficiency) free energy device I had observed. The scientist this time, also an eminent and enlightened being, comes from India. His name is Paramahamsa Tewari. Like Inomata, Tewari built a unipolar generator (N machine) consisting primarily of two corotating magnetic disks. He calls his two free-energy devices space power generators. One operates on direct current and the other, alternating current. Both generators typically produce electrical outputs that exceed the inputs with efficiencies ranging from about 200 to 400 per cent. Also like Inomata, Tewari is a highly credentialed scientist with a Ph.D. and with several publications to his credit. He had also won first prize for his N-machine in an international science competition. His position with the Indian Government is about as high as you can get outside of the remote capital city of Delhi. He has thousands of employees working for him on a project whose gigawatt potential represents an investment of over a billion dollars. Ironically, nuclear power development in Third World countries such as India also present a considerable safety hazard one that could be relieved by the project director's own space power generator. "Commercial space power is now possible," Tewari yelled at me over the unmuffled sound of the generator. "I have now solved the problem of back torque so we can now have unlimited electricity for humanity." He shared with me his own story of discovery and enlightenment in his laboratory notes of the previous December 26th, when he was able to engineer himself around a problem that beleaguers researchers of magnetic free energy devices: it seems that as free energy begins to come off the magnets, most all of the electricity the generator produces backs up on itself to counteract the sought-after effects. Tewari enthusiastically described to me his own "Eureka" to get around the problem. The overheating of his motors necessitates shut-down after about five minutes of operation, so Tewari's existing machines are not yet practical energy sources. But they do clearly demonstrate proof-of-concept, and he appears convinced he has overcome his problems for the new model he is building, which could produce kilowatts and eventually megawatts of power. Nobody believes that India, of all countries, could begin to mass-produce free energy machines for export. But in today's strange world, it may be possible, especially with a supportive international effort. Paramahamsa Tewari has already shown the impossible to be possible. -- Puttaparti, India, February 15, 1994 Grasping my hands into his, Sai Baba looked into my eyes and pushed me over toward the men's side of the small crowded room with about twenty of us selected for a private interview in his ashram palace. "Sit down, sit down," he said. And so started my third audience with the great swami, worker of miracles, considered by his fellow Indians as a living national monument. For three years in a row I was co-leader of a group of a dozen travelers on a "Saints and Miracles" tour of India. Sai Baba had taken a liking to me, perhaps because of my credentials as an ex-astronaut. Each year he had picked me out of audiences, and invited my groups into his private quarters for one-to-two hour interviews. Several times during each visit the swami had materialized things a few feet away from our unbelieving eyes. During my previous visits one and two years ago he had already manifested a beautiful ring and a watch for me while sharing his lighthearted, childlike wisdom. At the close of this morning's private audience he handed out to us his packets of vibuti, the holy ash, and then walked briskly through our gathering back out toward the palace grounds where ten thousand devotees were awaiting another glimpse of the swami. He then turned around at the door to the room and said directly to me, "I will see you this evening." I had only five hours before I would once again return to be separated from the crowd by Sai Baba's familiar hand gesture and joyful declaration, "Moon man, moon man, you come!" On most days, Sathya Sai Baba holds two darshans, or blessings, with crowds of silent devoted thousands. He comes strolling out for a few minutes, acknowledging individuals, gathering their letters containing prayers, and dazzling the onlookcrs by producing vibuti from his hand. A front row seat is coveted, reserved only for VIPs and for others by lottery. That evening I joined the guru with another group from Hong Kong for about an hour. Then he looked at me and told me to get up and walk with him into a dark back room of the palace. He sat on a small throne and asked me to sit on a pillow to his right, below and physically close to him. He gazed into my eyes lovingly and intensely for a few moments. "What would you like to ask me?" he began. I'm just glad to be here. My main question regards a realization I'm having. Just before I came here to see you, I visited with Dr. Paramahamsa Tewari in Karwar." "Yes, I know him," he said. "Yes, he admires you very much and has a picture of you on the wall of his laboratory. As you may know he is chief project engineer for the Kaiga nuclear power plant construction project, the largest one in India. He has also developed a free energy machine. Do you know about free energy?" "Yes, yes," he smiled knowingly. "Well, my insight is this," I continued. "I saw Tewari create energy out of nothing. Then I have just seen you create matter out of nothing. That must mean that nothing is something. It's our consciousness, right?" "Yes, yes! You got it. That's it!" In a flash of illumination reserved for special moments like this, I suddenly understood the reason for my quest which has taken me to the far corners of the Earth. During this century, scores of laboratory experiments and other observations plainly show that we can influence the physical properties of anything "out there" in the material world by using our consciousness to interact with it. We ourselves seem to have become inseparable from that force which may have created all of us in the first place. Free energy is more than cleverly designed machines. It is consciousness. The machines are merely an extension of that consciousness, devices to amplify what is already there and to make it work for us more efficiently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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