Monday, February 19, 2024

Happy Monday! Air Ships

Ever heard of air ships?  They are part of our his-story.  What you may not realize is they used towers and antennas to charge and power up (that's right.  Of course throughout time this 1900s technology has been suppressed, but imagine free energy via a tower port?  More to come this week.. 

Blessings, 
Lynn 







5 comments:

Robert Schoen said...

Awesome find, Lynn! I had a book back in the '80's that listed many strange things and suppressed technology, in which this one inventor developed a box-like device with a pole on the bottom he'd stick into the ground and someone with the same device even on a boat could clearly hold conversations, presumably with their pole in water. J Pierpoint Morgan, who killed the Tesla tower to broadcast energy, was also the one who bailed on the maiden voyage of the Titanic that sunk major financiers like Guggenheim and Astor which allowed for the creation of the Federal Reserve. Such nice people at the top of the food chain...

Guedes de Miranda said...

Hi Lynn, great pic. The Tower was more an anchor of sorts to prevent the Zeppellin from getting "hijacked" by the air streams.

margaret m martin said...

I agree with Miranda. It's a docking station for cargo etc

Guedes de Miranda said...

I found this video showing the Zeppelin down close to the ground in order to fuel up and pick up passengers/luggage. https://youtu.be/wemiceKrRV0?si=ryyb6BjgN4nfar1s

Lynn White, Focus Sessions said...

@Robert: I agree. The Titanic was just a way to get the Fed in force. When you control the money, you can control and lot and they knew that.

@Guedes de Miranda and Margaret: I've went back and forth with that... I've seen a lot of pics and I also thought it could be a docking station of shorts, but I think air ships were a big part of our history and it was shut down b/c the energy fueling them was cheap if not free. I am still working on this... I will try to upload the post today if I get it completed.

Thanks again for all the comments and perspectives. I truly appreciate it.