So entire cities and water-work canals were made and then destroyed by explosives and we've never heard of it? The Canals get me, thats' not temporary. Or maybe you have heard of all this before, since you apparently understand the tech behind Tesla's miraculous claim that he made in his Colorado Springs Labs before they were burnt to the ground:
Tesla: (I am paraphrasing:) with one Power Plant I can generate "10 million horse-power" and send energy across the entire world and power many people's homes and devices from a distance.
Tesla's own writings anticipated iphone devices / steve jobs and all the rest who stole his work. His vision was to easily power many people's entire homes/lives from one power plant. Dare I say "free" energy?
The issue with our modern day grid is They want to fucking control it.
I'm not sure why you say we've never heard about it. I've heard of it and learned a lot about it. Then again I'm an engineer and to me it's not such an amazing feat as for you. Just European engineers doing white things.
The amazing tech is alternating current. And yeah we send energy under the ocean right now using it. And that's how we send energy from the power plant to your house. All of that tech was developed a long time ago. We are kind of stagnating tech wise since we are focusing on diversity and other useless shit.
I agree, with decentralized energy we would all have basically free energy no problem, but then the jews would lose money and they can't have that.
I think Tesla rocks and was way ahead of his time. It is amazing because of the way he discovered it noticing atmospheric resonance or whatever. You can tell I am not an engineer, that's fine. But it is still awe inspiring to me. (:
You can't dig temporary canals just like that "overnight".
It's inspiring to me too, that kind of stuff is what got me into engineering. I prefer making explosives though. You can dig temporary canals that fall in on themselves because you haven't provided proper wall support in a couple months no problem. For example the suez canal was completed in 1869. So they had the tech to make really good long lasting canals, which took a long time. This would have been way easier and they likely would have used water and horse power to move the dirt quickly.
Remember it's a lot easier to make stuff when it's not built to last. Just look at all the cheap shit we get from China that they produce in a day that breaks in a week.
Tesla is one of the greatest modern inventors and it is a shame we lost his lab and many of his prototypes because of those bastards. Luckily a lot of his technology and research remains available and is used all across the world.
Nuclear power could do exactly as you say. We could have one power plant supplying the globe with energy. Or we could all just use the sun with solar and hydrogen batteries. There are lots of options. None are fantasy or impossible, if we just ignore the jews and start doing white people things again.
An engineer fed schools me on how Tesla tech "is totally still in use, goy" yet I continue to pay my inflated electric bill like a good wage slave every month. Laughable. "But trust me I'm an Engineer." Right, lol
Lmao. You really don't have to pay if you don't want to. You can install all sorts of energy producing devices like pyrolysis engines for example on your property, water wheels and then have batteries, super caps, or electrolysis fuel cell combos and have no electricity use. I don't know personally how tesla was planning to harness the energy in the air to do it, but that is literally the only tech of his that we don't use daily. However there are many engines out that purport to do just that, I wouldn't be surprised if one does just that. You should build one and report back if you're interested.
Also I didn't respond to your other post specifically about why a city would be an attraction, but that's what all big cities used to be. They were attractions to draw in country folk. This was when lots of people were starting to migrate to big cities which is in contrast to the later migration to the suburbs.
They wanted people to have things to do and see. And it worked. Even now more than one hundred years later, it still looks awesome to explore.
If you want to read about something really trippy you should look up some of DaVinci's inventions from the 1400s. It's mind blowing that he was in the Renaissance imagining the industrial revolution and fucking helicopters.
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