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N. Tesla Made Earthquakes - (ONION)
Uploaded by googols. - Technology reviews and science news videos.

and to my and The President of The United States of America...
I have but one question,
"Am I lying?"

...a very "Ben Franklin" key to the universe? as Franklin is Socrates to Tesla's Plato.


"If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6 and 9, then you would have a key to the universe."
— Nikola Tesla

1899 - Major Earthquake / Cape Yakataga, Alaska - September 4th, 1899: "Earthquake location: Cape Yakataga, Alaska. Earthquake magnitude: 7.9. Number of recorded fatalities: 0." 


1899 - Major Earthquake / Yakutat Bay, Alaska - September 10th, 1899: "Earthquake location: Yakutat Bay, Alaska. Earthquake magnitude: 8.0. Number of recorded fatalities: 0." 


1899 - How To make History Dates Stick - "Free Mason and Tesla Best Friend Sam Clemens writes How To make History Dates Stick, 1st published in 1914."

 

September 3rd, September 6th & September 9th were the real days. Not September 4th, September 7th and September 10th as is the official record 111 years ago when the government paid Aleutian Indians and prospectors in the otherwise uninhabited area of Alaska in THE BIGGEST COVER UP AND MYSTERY EVER IN THE HISTORY OF TIME.
THE BIGGEST EARTHQUAKES THAT HAD EVER BEEN RECORDED.
 IN YAKUTAT BAY 1899.
Here is wisdom. THE GREATEST STORY IN THE HISTORY
 OF MANKIND AND TIME DIVINE is the secret of the 3, the 6 and the 9...
of Yakutat Bay in September 1899
-CMS


 N light N


From:
  googol beast - Elijah III (googolbeast@live.com)
Sent: Thu 4/08/10 6:20 PM
To: douche (mdlicardi@yahoo.com)
On October 19, 1752, the Pennsylvania Gazette published a brief description of an experiment recently conducted by Benjamin Franklin. Franklin, the article said, had flown a kite in a thunderstorm, causing electricity to be conducted down the line of the kite and electrifying a key tied to it. This demonstrated that lightning, as many had speculated, was a form of electricity.

Franklin's electric kite became the most famous experiment of the eighteenth century, helping to make Franklin famous throughout Europe and America. And yet, some historians argue that it probably never happened. 

They point to a curious lack of details about the experiment. It is not known exactly when the experiment occurred. Sometime in June, 1752 was the closest Franklin ever came to an exact date. Nor did Franklin ever write a formal report about it. The only witness to the event was Franklin's son, who never said a word about it. Finally, such an experiment would have been extremely dangerous, possibly fatal, as Franklin knew.

Historian Tom Tucker suggests that Franklin originally proposed the idea for the experiment as a joke. Frustrated because the British Royal Society had been ignoring his letters to them about his earlier electrical research, he might have proposed the deadly experiment as a subtle joke. It was his way of saying, Go fly a kite in a storm! But when his suggestion reached France, where people took it seriously, Franklin decided to play along and claimed he really had conducted the experiment.

Tucker's theory remains controversial. Other historians argue that Franklin would never have risked being exposed as a liar by the scientific community.
 
 
 
 
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