Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 4 months ago
This retired U.S. Lieutenant Colonel wasn’t just a soldier — he was a physicist, an engineer, and one of the few men who claimed to understand what Tesla was really working on.
Thomas Bearden held top-level military clearance and spent decades researching the strange edges of electromagnetism — the kind that could heal, transmit disease, or even bend space-time itself.

Category

🤖
Tech
Transcript
00:00I want to tell you a story of the greatest joke on all of science in all of history because you'll
00:06never understand Tesla till you know this joke. This retired lieutenant colonel had access to
00:11the real Tesla files, the ones the public was never meant to see. What he discovered was so
00:17disruptive, intelligence agencies watched his every move for the rest of his life.
00:22By the way, it's a pleasure to do this because I would like to see Tesla get some decent press.
00:26We've tracked down a rare recording of Colonel Thomas Bearden, the physicist who claimed the
00:33lost equations were no accident. He said they were stolen, buried, and guarded because they
00:38unlocked forces that could heal, transmit disease, or even bend space-time itself.
00:43Think for a moment of the service that the limited electromagnetics we have has been put to.
00:51Think of all the electronics, the communication industry, the power systems. It's changed the
00:58life of every person on the face of the earth. Consider for just a moment what an extension
01:04to what you can do can add to the benefit of everybody everywhere for all time. And I think
01:13when one ponders and considers that implication, then the full importance and the full implication
01:20of Nikola Tesla yet to be realized will indeed be real.
01:25Before we go further, understand this. What you're about to hear from this retired colonel
01:30will shock you. He spoke about technologies that could heal, transmit disease, and even bend
01:35space-time itself. Ideas pulled straight from Tesla's stolen papers. It's one of those moments where
01:41science crosses into something far stranger. But before we dive into it, a quick word from today's
01:47sponsor. A company that's unlocking a new kind of revolution of its own.
01:52Outskill, the world's first AI-focused education platform, is hosting a two-day AI mastermind
01:58workshop this Saturday and Sunday, live from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Eastern, both days. Over 10 million
02:04people worldwide have attended this hands-on training. Normally priced at $395, it's completely
02:09free for my viewers for the next 48 hours as part of Outskill's pre-Halloween sale. Only
02:151,000 seats available. You'll learn directly from AI experts at Microsoft and NVIDIA, mastering
02:2010-plus AI tools, AI in Excel and Sheets, prompt engineering, and workflow automation. Everything
02:27you need to become AI first. You'll also get access to a private AI community, an interactive
02:33learning dashboard, and over $5,100 worth of exclusive bonuses, including the prompt Bible,
02:39a roadmap to monetize AI, and a personalized AI toolkit builder, available only if you attend
02:45both days. My team and I will be joining this one. And if you're serious about not being left behind
02:50in the next wave of technology, you should too. Grab your seat now through the link in the description
02:56and join the WhatsApp group to stay updated before the next big reveal. Now, let's get back to the
03:02video. Let's rewind back to 19th century science. James Clerk Maxwell stood before a tangled web of
03:08equations, 20 unknowns describing the raw living force of electromagnetism. His math was heavy,
03:14written in quaternions, an advanced language few dared to understand. But what it captured was wild.
03:21Hidden interactions, deeper dimensions, the strange behavior of energy that didn't fit
03:25inside neat boxes. But then came Oliver Heaviside, a self-taught genius in his own right. Heaviside
03:33looked at Maxwell's complexity and trimmed it down. Four simplified vector equations replaced the original
03:3820. Cleaner, simpler, easier to teach. Textbooks hailed it as progress, but in doing so, something else
03:47happened. Entire layers of physical reality were written out of science. Gone were the extra variables,
03:53the strange symmetries, the unseen forces. And Tom Bearden didn't mince words. He called it
04:00castration. What we use today as Maxwell's equations are only a shadow of what Maxwell actually proposed.
04:06The original electromagnetics written by Maxwell himself was written in an algebra called quaternions.
04:14What we mean here is a higher topology algebra in which you can do things in this kind of expression of
04:23electromagnetics that you can't do in vectors or tensors. Now, the real theory that Maxwell had, depending on who
04:32counts the equations and what they count, is something like 20 equations and 20 unknowns, to give some numbers to it.
04:40When Heaviside got through translating it into a much simpler algebra called vectors, which he helped create,
04:48and he wrote all the modern equations that are used as Maxwell's equations, not Maxwell himself. None of those ever appeared in anything by James Clerk Maxwell.
04:56When Heaviside modified it to a much easier algebra called vector analysis, which he helped complete the algebra itself,
05:04It consisted of some two equations or so with an extra equation thrown in, depending on the way you want to count that again.
05:11Certainly, if you want to count the full thing, four equations. So, you can see a remarkable reduction in the amount of variations of things you could do.
05:22And that's what I mean when I say we previously had an electromagnetics that permitted lots of functioning. It is no longer permitted by the kind of electromagnetics we're all taught to apply and use today. It's a subset of what can be done.
05:38He warned the cut was a lock on a hidden door. Once science learned to erase what didn't fit, the pattern spread. And the next thing they chose to silence was far more dangerous. The other half of every wave that moves through our world.
05:51Think about it. When a string is struck, one wave travels down it. Sharp, visible, full of motion. But something else stirs beneath it. A second wave. Quieter. Dampened. Hidden inside the instrument's body.
06:06Physicists knew this. But when they wrote the wave equations that power nearly every machine in the modern world, they tossed out the silent half. The anti-wave. Not because it didn't exist, but because it complicated the math.
06:19The result? Every generation of scientists has been taught to throw away half of physical reality without even realizing it.
06:26Tom Bearden called it the greatest joke in science. Because for over a hundred years, students have been solving equations built on a lie.
06:35Tom Bearden. Let's look now and see if there's any room for what Tesla was saying. And I want to tell you a story of the greatest joke on all of science in all of history. Because you'll never understand Tesla until you know this joke.
06:51Tom Bearden. When they were trying to write the wave equation for the plucked string wave. Of course, they were studying plucked stringed instruments. You have a taut string suspended between two points, you know, on the body of an instrument.
07:09Tom Bearden. And they simply plucked the string various ways and watched the waves. They then wrote equations for the tensile forces and so forth in the string. They isolated the string. They assumed that there's nothing else happening but the string.
07:24Tom Bearden. And using the forces and they still teach the sophomore students to do it this way. They derived the string wave equation. First of all, there is no such thing as a tight string independently existing apart from a holder anywhere in the world. There never will be.
07:42Tom Bearden. There is, however, a tight string which has equal and opposite forces in the ends of the holder that's holding the string and creating the tension on the string. If you will apply the same approach and ask yourself the full question, what system was perturbed? It was not just the tight string. It was the tight string plus the body of the instrument.
08:08Tom Bearden. What comes about is that every transverse string wave that occurred in the string, an equal and opposite highly damped wave occurred down in the body of the instrument. Every guitar picker, which I'm a very poor one, knows that the body of the instrument vibrates when you pluck the string. You depend on the characteristic of that for your sound.
08:28Tom Bearden. What happened, though, by throwing away the holder and the anti-wave in the holder. Every time a mathematician or a physicist writes a wave equation, he has thrown away half of the problem of the phenomena. The anti-wave still exists, but he threw it somewhere, usually into a highly damp system and ignores it.
08:48Tom Bearden. The way he gets by with that, at the end, where he has now described his reactions with the single wave equation, the transverse wave equation, the other wave reappears and he says,
09:00oh, that's Newton's third law reaction force because it's always equal and opposite. Well Newton's third law is not a law, it's a description. It is not a mechanism for what causes something at all.
09:12If you add back in the wave that is missing, guess what you get? You get equal and opposite waves in the vacuum. These waves are in fact longitudinal waves. They are more sound like and Tesla was right. And all the textbooks in the world are wrong.
09:30The anti-wave didn't vanish. It dropped beneath the surface into the vacuum, silent, invisible, but still alive. Modern quantum theory tells us the vacuum is anything but empty.
09:41A boiling storm of activity lives there. So what exactly did we silence when we cut those waves in half?
09:49If the missing wave is still humming in the dark, could it be more than just noise? Could it be power we were never meant to use?
09:57And if that hidden wave is still echoing beneath reality, then someone had to notice it. Someone had to hear what the rest of science chose to ignore.
10:07And one man did. And he swore the vacuum itself was alive. His name was Nikola Tesla.
10:15While the world applauded Hertz discovery of transverse EM waves, Tesla stood alone. He declared the entire theory false.
10:23He believed the vacuum wasn't a dead void, but a living medium, pulsing like a gas. Not sideways ripples, but longitudinal waves. Compression and release. Like sound traveling through fog.
10:35To everyone else, this was fantasy. But Tesla had seen it. He started to build machines that didn't follow Hertz' laws. His waves were different, deeper, stranger, and full of potential. And while the textbooks dismissed him as diluted, something else happened in the background.
10:51Quietly, quantum physicists began describing the vacuum as a virtual particle flux, a seething sea of activity, eerily close to Tesla's own words. They used a new language, but the idea was old. Tesla's idea.
11:07It was deeply involved in it. Tesla made several statements, for example, over and over, where he said, there are no transverse waves in the vacuum, no Hertz waves. The waves in the vacuum I have already proved, he said, is like the gas.
11:20And the waves in it, therefore, are like sound waves. They are longitudinal waves. And he was indeed correct. Today, for example, in modern quantum mechanics, there is a vacuum, it is a medium, and it's a virtual particle flux. And so, indeed, the vacuum is a virtual gas by today's best physics. And Tesla was right. It is a longitudinal wave.
11:38If Tesla was right about the waves in the vacuum, then the next question isn't whether they exist, it's what can be done with them. And Bearden claimed the answer was terrifying. Energy that doesn't just move, but hunts.
11:51Not all beams scatter. Some fight their way back. In optics labs, a phenomenon called phase conjugation showed that a distorted beam could reverse itself, retracing its path as if it remembered where it came from.
12:04Tom Bearden pushed this further. He claimed Tesla had already weaponized the effect, not with light, but with raw energy. Beams, he said, could pierce the earth and lock onto targets with unnatural precision.
12:17So, by self-targeting, I can hold a laser beam on a point. It doesn't have to be a booster or a defense or anything. I can hold a beam of energy on to a point that I have at a distance. That's the main thing by self-targeting.
12:29And in my own opinion, I reached the opinion that Tesla, in his telegeodynamics, had discovered how to do that with the mechanical waves. First of all, he could transmit the full wave through the earth and he could cause the thing when it came back to be phase conjugated.
12:46Once he had a reflection from anywhere, he could narrow immediately into that point and put all his energy to that point. And today, there is a theoretical basis for it.
12:55I couldn't build such equipment, but I mean, there's a theoretical way to go to do that. And apparently, according to his statements, that's my interpretation of what he was doing.
13:04He was doing iterative phase conjugation and therefore able to focus his energy regardless of what kind of route it followed to the exact point he wanted it to go to on the other side of the earth.
13:15Bearden believed Tesla's lost experiments may have been real demonstrations of self-targeting energy weapons capable of seeking out reflection points anywhere on the globe.
13:24And one of those points, he suggested, may have been a remote patch of forest in 1908 Siberia, Tunguska.
13:31Because of certain time sequences of some of his statements and incidents which actually happened, I think as a last desperate measure while his installation at Long Island was still intact and still in operation, I believe he fired the electrical pulse of energy that blew down that forest in Siberia.
13:51Oliver Nicholson has done some very good work, for example, to look at the admittedly circumstantial evidence. We can't prove it at all. I just happened to hold to the thesis that it was his last ditch effort to try to solve his problems that he'd lost with Morgan by focusing attention onto the absolute power that could be unleashed with this. And it failed. Nobody was interested.
14:14The devastation was real. The cause? Still covered up. But the idea that energy could hunt, that it could think, stuck like a splinter.
14:24And imagine if Tesla knew this energy could fire a beam through the earth and have it return home like a guided ghost. Then what kind of power were they playing with? And why hasn't the world admitted it?
14:36And then in the late 1970s, shortwave radio operators across the world began hearing it. An eerie mechanical tapping. Rhythmic, relentless. Tap, tap, tap. It cut through conversations, music, and military channels alike. No one knew where it came from, but soon all fingers pointed to the Soviet Union.
14:58Moscow eventually confirmed the source, a massive over-the-horizon radar ray near Chernobyl called the Duga system.
15:05They said it was part of a Cold War early warning network designed to detect incoming missiles before they crossed Soviet airspace.
15:12But some experts weren't convinced. The power required to broadcast that far, and with such strange interference, was extreme.
15:21There's been a lot of discussion on it, and, you know, I guess the official realization was that, or calling it, was to say it's just simply over-the-horizon radar.
15:30Well, they built a lot of them. But if you look at it through the eyes of the scalar interferometry, and I mentioned the two references and have cited them in various papers,
15:39there are other work along that line too. If that approach is used in what seems to be what Tesla had done, if you use the Tesla approach to interpret it,
15:51now one is dealing with scalar interferometry, and dealing with something that can do some rather astounding potential weapon effects.
15:59With the Tesla interpretation, one of the things that would result from that line of weapons, assuming they are used as scalar interferometry weapons,
16:11one of the great things that would emerge from them would be to produce controlled energy at a distance.
16:16For example, great huge balls of controlled electromagnetic energy, or if you pulse it, great blasts of electromagnetic energy at a distance.
16:26I mentioned the business of biasing the transmitters, where you can produce either heat, like an explosion, or you could produce a cold explosion,
16:34the sudden explosive withdrawal of energy from the local, from the distant area.
16:40And in books cited incidents that are representative of what one would find if those incidents actually were occurring on that kind of scale.
16:48The incidents are there, they're real, they're documented, they're not just Tom Bearden.
16:52So, there is a good solid set of admittedly circumstantial evidence that the woodpecker signals, because of all the phenomena that can be associated in the same timeframe since they turned on.
17:07These phenomena very strongly suggest that this set of weapons is not just over the horizon radars at all, but are really Tesla weapon systems.
17:17And if they are, all the rest follows.
17:19Bearden believed this wasn't just a radar system, it was a series of tests involving scalar electromagnetic weapons.
17:26Tools that could create artificial fireballs in the sky, trigger sudden temperature changes, and even influence biological systems from a distance.
17:34Mainstream scientists dismissed it all, but the tapping never stopped.
17:39And those who listened closely felt there was more buried inside the signal than just static.
17:44And if those signals could stir the sky and twist the weather, who's to say they couldn't reach even deeper, into living cells themselves?
17:52In a Soviet lab in Novosibirsk, two jars of living cells sat side by side.
17:57One was infected with a deadly virus, the other completely untouched.
18:02No shared air, no contact, just a thin pane of glass and a beam of light between them.
18:08Then the impossible happened.
18:10The second jar began to sicken.
18:13The disease seemed to leap across space, carried not by particles, but by electromagnetic fields.
18:19There is a Soviet physicist, scientist named Kosnasev.
18:24And Kosnasev has produced a series of experiments in two Soviet military institutes before the fall there,
18:31that showed that you could transmit any sort of disease form between cells.
18:39Any sort of infectious disease, or you can radiate one sample with nuclear radiation, gamma radiation for example,
18:47or deadly poison, or infect them with viruses.
18:50You can transmit between cellular cultures into another cell, another sample from the same culture,
18:59the same disease electromagnetically, although the organisms won't necessarily be there.
19:04That works in literature if you pursue it.
19:07Kosnasev has several books out now that are available since the Russian system has loosened up a bit.
19:12That work has been replicated at the University of Marburg, for example, in Germany.
19:16It has been replicated at the University of Sydney in Australia,
19:20and it has been replicated by at least one researcher here in the United States.
19:23He's trained to say if there are no force fields, there's no electromagnetics.
19:26He ignores the potential that's left.
19:28He just sweeps it away and throws it away.
19:30From where we're coming from with the Tesla approach, that is the active part.
19:34That's the part that is being interfered within the bodies or whatever you wish to cause.
19:39If we couple it with the Kosnasev stuff, we are saying that such scalar transmitters in interferometry within the U.S. Embassy could indeed have produced any sort of disease they wish.
19:52However, it would have very strange signatures.
19:55A.V. Kosnasev repeated the experiment thousands of times.
20:00Some trials failed, but too many worked to ignore.
20:03Later, a handful of German and Australian labs reported the same disturbing results.
20:08Others denied it outright, but the question never went away.
20:12If sickness can jump the gap, what else might travel on those hidden currents?
20:17If the invisible fields could whisper death from one jar to another, then what else could they carry?
20:23And more importantly, what would happen if someone learned to bend those same forces towards life instead?
20:29In the back rooms of 1960s Bordeaux, a strange machine hummed like something out of science fiction.
20:35Its creator, Antoine Pryor, wasn't a doctor.
20:39But what his device did left scientists stunned.
20:42Lab animals with deadly tumors were placed inside its electromagnetic field.
20:46Days later, the tumor shrank.
20:49Some even disappeared.
20:51Reports from the French Academy of Sciences confirmed it.
20:54This machine was triggering the immune system, fighting disease without surgery or drugs.
20:59It should have changed medicine forever, but it didn't.
21:03Politics shifted, funding collapsed, and the device was dismantled.
21:07The medical approach, if you use the extended electromagnetics, if I may use that term that Tesla was talking about,
21:14there then occurs phenomena which can be used to control and change and heal almost any infectious disease whatsoever,
21:23including a genetic disease such as where the genetics have changed in the cells such as AIDS.
21:29Now that is not an idle statement.
21:32That is a very rigorous statement based on some very rigorous scientific work done in France in the late 60s and early 70s
21:39by Antoine Pryor and a team of scientists that gathered and worked with him.
21:44And these were eminent scientists, world-known.
21:46For example, one of them was Robert Courier, head of the biology section of the French Academy of Science,
21:53and also the secretariat perpetual of the French Academy at the same time.
21:58Pryor died, and with him, the secret of how it worked.
22:01Some dismissed it as a hoax.
22:03Others swore it was decades ahead of its time.
22:06And yet, the files remain.
22:08The results remain.
22:10Proof of a cure that slipped through humanity's fingers.
22:13If a single machine could shrink tumors and then vanish from history, what else has been buried?
22:19Bearden warned the prior device was only a glimpse.
22:22That the real prize wasn't healing at all, but Tesla's findings.
22:27The endless rivers of power flowing through the vacuum itself.
22:30So, we find, then, later references to Tesla, which suggest the harnessing of energy from today, we would say, from the vacuum.
22:39So, does that sound reasonable to us today from where I'm coming from?
22:43Yes, indeed, because that's exactly what we have done.
22:47We take it in the potential across the source.
22:50We simply use the hidden wave flow from the Whitaker stuff.
22:54We want to extract that and use it in this displacement current form.
22:58While it's still energy flow and none of it's being lost.
23:01We do not wish to make work until we store it up and discharge it in the load separately.
23:06We do it just like a heat pump.
23:08And I really think that's probably the way Tesla did it in that car engine.
23:12He also knew there was enormous energy in what was called cosmic rays.
23:17And he connected that with the whole idea of the energetic vacuum, we would say today.
23:22And I think that's just one of the ways he referred to it.
23:26For example, we know from T. Henry Morey's work that he was inspired by Tesla's statement that the energy of the ether itself was literally filled with rivers of energy free for the taking.
23:39It inspired him and his great undertaking.
23:41But here's the catch.
23:42Our machines aren't designed to see it.
23:44Our circuits were built to pull from the grid, not the cosmos.
23:48Worse, Bearden claimed the silence around this energy wasn't an accident.
23:52Oil, nuclear, and defense industries had no interest in a world where power came freely from space.
23:59So the vacuum remained untapped.
24:02Not because we couldn't, but because we weren't allowed.
24:05And if they could silence the vacuum itself, what chance did a single man have?
24:10In January 1943, a frail Nikola Tesla was found dead in room 3327 of the New Yorker Hotel.
24:18He died alone with a stack of notebooks and half-finished blueprints beside him.
24:22Within hours, agents from the US government arrived and seized every paper, every sketch, every trace.
24:28The man sent to evaluate them?
24:31John G. Trump, an MIT electrical engineer.
24:34And his final assessment was that the documents held no practical value.
24:39To some, that ended the story.
24:42Science itself is unforgiving.
24:44There is many histories of scientists' persecution of other scientists with whom they disagreed.
24:49The system is very prone to either destroy, condemn, or bury any scientist who seriously disagrees with it to this day.
24:57Well documented.
24:58We could make another documentary movie on just that.
25:02However, here was a preeminent example of a disagreement with the current scientific control.
25:10And the scientific control was adamant that he get wiped out of the books and he get labeled a lunatic.
25:17And that's exactly what happened.
25:19He wound up with his name, Tesla, attached to a coil.
25:24And one unit of measurement named after his name.
25:27And as far as the scientist was concerned, that was enough.
25:30He didn't deserve anything else.
25:31Most of them.
25:33So the scientific community rejected him.
25:36After Morgan turned his back, the financial community rejected him.
25:41Here was a loner then again.
25:42Absolute loner.
25:43What was he to do?
25:44Exactly what he did.
25:46Retire to his hotel room and feed the pigeons.
25:48And think grand dreams.
25:49Live on a small pittance which kept life and him together from his native Yugoslavia.
25:58And once a year have a press conference where he spoke of all the grand things that he thought of and wished to have happened.
26:06But at least overtly, as far as we know overtly, never again was Nikola Tesla to ever have a chance to attempt any of the great things that always surged through his restless mind.
26:20But to others, including Bearden, it marked the start of something darker.
26:25What if that phrase was a smokescreen?
26:27What if those papers held secrets that could shatter entire industries?
26:31Free energy would erase the need for oil.
26:34Scalar tech could destabilize nuclear superpowers without firing a missile.
26:38And for the same reason, the safest way to manage such power wasn't to develop it.
26:43It was to bury it.
26:44In vaults.
26:45Behind laws.
26:46Beneath layers of ridicule.
26:48You want the truth?
26:50This was never just about equations on a blackboard.
26:53It was about control.
26:55About erasing the one thing that could rewrite everything we know.
26:59Energy without fuel.
27:00Healing without medicine.
27:02Weapons that don't need bombs.
27:04Bearden called it a razor.
27:06A razor sharp enough to cut through spacetime itself.
27:10He said it bends reality.
27:12Not metaphorically.
27:13Literally.
27:14And if you twist the fabric of space wrong, it doesn't just snap back.
27:19It tears.
27:21Biological shock waves.
27:23Dimensional fractures.
27:24Things we haven't even named yet.
27:26So maybe that's why Tesla's papers vanished the night he died.
27:30Maybe that's why Pryor's device was gutted and buried.
27:33Maybe it was never about the tech.
27:35It was about who gets to decide if humanity is ready to play with the fuse box of the universe.
27:40Now, you've seen the breadcrumbs.
27:43The question is no longer if this knowledge exists.
27:47The question is should this power belong to all of us or stay buried forever?
27:52You decided.
27:53Drop your thoughts below.
27:55Because if Bearden was right, this choice may not stay theoretical much longer.
Comments

Recommended