Advance publicity stunts for the electrogravitic propulsion industry: Difference between revisions
Created page with "At least two accounts of incidents in the 1950s and [1960s]], described by researchers and whistleblowers like Dan Willis and [[Steven Greer] have described what are speculated to be '''advanced publicity stunts for the electrogravitic propulsion industry'''. These may have involved campaigns aimed at acclimating the public to electrogravitic technologies during the 1950s. == Speculative campaigns == Allegations suggest that the United States government..." |
EnWikiAdmin (talk | contribs) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 09:59, 11 November 2024
At least two accounts of incidents in the 1950s and [1960s]], described by researchers and whistleblowers like Dan Willis and [[Steven Greer] have described what are speculated to be advanced publicity stunts for the electrogravitic propulsion industry. These may have involved campaigns aimed at acclimating the public to electrogravitic technologies during the 1950s.
Speculative campaigns
Allegations suggest that the United States government played a significant role in these publicity stunts. This involvement purportedly included supporting corporate initiatives. The narrative around these campaigns often intersects with conspiracy theories involving non-human intelligent beings, suggesting that the publicity stunts were also a means to obscure the true origins and implications of electrogravitic technologies. Theories propose that this was a tactic to conceal advancements tied to alleged extraterrestrial technology retrievals from UFO incidents, similar to claims surrounding the Roswell UFO incident.