Schauberger

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Every mention of Schauberger across the entire archive — with clickable timestamps to jump straight to the source.

3 Videos
13 Mentions
Finally, the German flying saucer program employed a mysterious prodigy inventor named Victor Schauberger.
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Schauberger had invented a very unique form of propulsion using what he dubbed an impeller.
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In 1941, an SS officer approached Schauberger in Austria, which prompted a period of complete silence in his life.
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Schauberger stays behind in Germany, but gets approached by Frost in 1953.
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After Schauberger rejects Frost's offer, a German-American counterintelligence agent named Karl Gersheimer
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visits Austria in 1957, promising Schauberger millions to continue his work in Texas.
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Gersheimer then tricks Schauberger into signing all of his IP over to the US, which gets branded as atomic energy research.
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In fact, he had graduated from Vienna Technical Institute, and there are suggestions that he was a contemporary of Victor Schauberger.
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Victor Schauberger, an Austrian scientist, had allegedly developed a craft with an anti-gravity effect that defied conventional physics.
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According to historian Nick Cook's great book The Hunt for Zero Point, CIC agents interrogated Schauberger for nine months, fully aware of his most classified work.
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After the war ended, another Army CIC agent, Neil Gershimer, tricked Schauberger into signing all of his work over to the United States.
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And then you had Richard Mita, Victor Schauberger, you know, a lot of these guys, Henry Kwanda,
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Schauberger, I know the Army counterintelligence court tricked into giving all of his propulsion,
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