NASA

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Inside a quiet lab in Florida, NASA's lead electrostatic scientist,

Again, Buehler is not some mid-level guy at NASA.

NASA and Exodus Propulsion's very own, Dr. Charles Buehler.

He's the lead electrostatic scientist at NASA.

So I am the lead scientist of NASA's Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory, part of Swamp Works at Kennedy Space Center.

So before I go on, I have to diverse to make everyone aware that this is not affiliated with NASA, any of this work that we're doing.

It's not sanctioned by NASA.

We are not giving any credence to NASA in this.

I think maybe it's a little bizarre that NASA wouldn't want to immediately kind of jump on this work.

They're not, we're not working this technology at NASA.

But you are, is it safe to say you're the lead electrostatics scientist at all of NASA?

I mean, we only have one electrostatics lab in all of NASA, and I lead it.

What does somebody who leads electrostatics at NASA do?

We do electrostatics at NASA.

We do electrostatics at NASA at Kennedy Space Center because of incidents that occurred in the 1960s.

So we've lost, I think, 14 people to electrostatics at NASA.

So what we've done is we've understood some of the needs for NASA that are in the electrostatics realm.

So the dust mitigation is the serious ones taken by NASA.

So, and that's, you know, obviously because I had interest to do that for the NASA mission.

How does, because you're honestly, you're probably living, you know, the dream of, you know, many nerdy kids in their bedrooms right now, you know, thinking about NASA and, you know, working and, you know, sort of cool physics and electrostatics, doing stuff for them.

How did you get hooked up with NASA?

And I decided to go to NASA.

I said, oh, it's a chance to get into NASA, see what it's about.

And it was very useful for us to, as NASA, go to these electrostatics conferences where you have the pharmacy industry there.

And so I could use what I learned there to apply to NASA.

working at NASA or as contractors or been at NASA and he was just super excited that

we were not doing this at NASA.

Because once you get at NASA and get in bureaucracy and get in the government, there's a lot of

Of course, at the time I wasn't working at NASA.

Is she at NASA as well?

We all work at the space agency, different levels, not just NASA, but, you know, the

And so did you have access, you know, based on your kind of NASA background?

He's another NASA guy, NASA Eagle Works.

And I do think the fact that you lead electrostatics at NASA is this really important thing.

I think NASA reproduced it and they couldn't.

NASA was doing their own UAP thing.

You hacked into the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Department of Defense, and NASA.

And so did some like basic blank password phishing techniques to essentially hack into NASA, Navy,

Space manufacturing is something NASA is trying to get more and more involved in.

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