Wednesday, June 4, 2014

The Philadelphia Experiment




     The Philadelphia Experiment is one of the more well-known and documented events in history that some people would like to call a "conspiracy theory." However, it is not a conspiracy theory, because it actually took place. The mystery that surrounds what exactly happened at that time is what makes people initially dismiss it as not being true, but an event surrounded by mystery does not discount all of the eye witness reports and documentation surrounding it.

     Around October of 1943, the U.S. Navy conducted an experiment on the U.S.S. Eldridge at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Pennsylvania to test some technology they had that they hypothesized would give the ship invisibility. What turned out to be a failure, led to a tragedy, because some men on the ship were reported missing, while others gruesomely fused into the metal in the ship and died tragic deaths. Not all of the people on the ship went missing or died. Some lived and gave testimony of what happened that day.

     Some say the story defies physics, but what that tells me is that some people don't even bother to give a story credibility before dismissing it. What has been termed as "The Hutchison Effect" and other experiments with antigravity have yielded similar results.

    Today, it has been mentioned multiple times on television and radio, which is why it is one of the most well-known and documented so-called "conspiracy theories" in history.

    Click here to hear a radio interview about on the subject.

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