The Pais Effect

Written by John Carroll

“The U.S. Navy has patents on weird and little understood technology,” according to a recent Vice article, which relate to its work on a “compact fusion reactor that could power cities,” and a “hybrid aerospace-underwater craft.” The reactor reportedly works by reducing an object’s inertial mass, which is a fancy way of explaining an anti-gravity device. It’s known as the “Pais Effect,” and an understanding of not just how, but why it works might transform our understanding of the nature of reality.

Nikola Tesla theorized that the air around us is not just empty space, but instead filled with microscopic matter. His theory of the “ether” essentially rejects the theory of gravity. He believed what we understand as gravitational force still exists, of course, because if we throw a baseball in the air, it will always fall back to the Earth. However, unlike the mainstream scientific theory, which suggests gravity pushes the baseball down, Tesla believed the Earth’s electromagnetism pulls the baseball down. If he is proven to have been correct, there might be broad, and even cosmic ramifications. If gravitational force comes from, not to the Earth, then the Earth potentially exists at the center of the universe. It would suggest our planet’s orbital relationship with the Sun, and Solar System at large, might need to be reimagined, and has even led some researchers to conclude that outer space is quote, “fake and gay.”

The Pais Effect explains how “controlled motion of electrically charged matter via accelerated vibration and/or accelerated spin subjected to smooth yet rapid acceleration transients,” will “generate extremely high energy/high intensity electromagnetic fields.” Said simply, it disrupts the electromagnetic force that would otherwise pull an object down, causing that object to instead hover or levitate.

Perhaps this is what Edward Leedskalnin discovered in the 1920s, when he built Coral Castle in Florida, without any heavy machinery. It’s an engineering marvel, and is similar to mysterious ancient monuments in that it consists of astronomically-aligned, multi-ton stone blocks. Leedskalnin “liked to keep his methods secret, working at night to ensure no one would ever see how he built his masterpiece. Then he implied he knew the secrets of the pyramids, and that his castle was constructed using a mysterious theory of anti-gravity that involved lots and lots of magnets.”

According to Vice, “the Navy is claiming some of Pais’ wild tech works and has been demonstrated to Navy officials,” so Occam’s Razor might suggest Leedskalnin was correct about the pyramids. It would certainly have been an easier method than having slaves haul the blocks into place with ropes and wooden pallets, as many archeologists teach today.

The article also claims the Navy’s “patents all build on each other.” When we study how a fusion reactor works, it becomes clear how UFOs are connected to free energy. “In a fusion reaction,” explains a Department of Energy blog post, “two light nuclei merge to form a single heavier nucleus. The process releases energy because the total mass of the resulting single nucleus is less than the mass of the two original nuclei. The leftover mass becomes energy.” The forced merging of the atomic elements is what causes the disruption of the Earth’s electromagnetic currents (suspends the gravitational force of the ether), and results in a single element which has less mass than the original two elements combined. The leftover mass results in the energy, which cannot be destroyed, being displaced. In a craft, that energy displacement is what creates the propulsion necessary to fly. If conducted in a closed setting, however, energy displaced from fusion reactions can be harnessed, and used to power cities. For context, in a 2019 interview with Live Science, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research’s Sunil Gupta explained how a single thunder cloud can generate more power than a nuclear power plant.

If Leedskalnin was indeed correct that energy displacement techniques were used to construct the pyramids, they would have logically been employed for energy generation as well, and probably would have made modern fusion reactors seem like mere toys in comparison. The ancients likely used a much more elegant technique, rooted in Cymatics. A fusion reactor generates the Pais Effect by manually affecting matter, but as the Quite Frankly audience learned last year, matter can also be manipulated by sound. In his book The Giza Power Plant, Christopher Dunn claims “the Great Pyramid of Giza was actually a large acoustical device,” that “created a harmonic resonance with the Earth and converted Earth's vibrational energies to microwave radiation.” He also “shows how the pyramid's numerous chambers and passageways were positioned with the deliberate precision to maximize its acoustical qualities.” In our own study of Cymatics, we learned those acoustical qualities included the ability to concentrate electromagnetic energy, and to resonate at the same four frequencies of human DNA.

If it was a power plant, does that mean the Great Pyramid powered more than just machines? Did it also power people?

These scientific revelations force us to dream about transforming the world into a better place, but big changes often come at big costs. We touched on this dilemma when we explored the repercussions of losing the Library of Alexandria, about how the elite have structed global economies in such a way that humanity is in a proverbial Mexican Standoff with itself. How can we transition to free energy when our current energy industries make up so much of our economies? The same can be asked about defense industries in a peaceful world, and pharmaceutical industries in a healthy world.

Whatever happens, discernment will be key. It’s notable that this news about the Pais Effect was released by the propaganda arm of the current system. Why are we learning about this from Vice? To clarify, the article did not go into the same detail or ponder the kind of possibilities we have here, opting instead to dismiss the reality-shattering news as the “ramblings of a mad scientist,” despite admitting the Navy believes Pais is correct. In 2016, Vice also reported on the UFO content in John Podesta’s emails, published by Wikileaks. Podesta has a long history of cryptic comments on UFOs, and of advocating for disclosure.

In those same Wikileaks emails, Podesta also spoke with colleagues about a “Catholic Spring.” It was a reference to the left’s efforts to further weaken the Church’s stance on issues like abortion and gay marriage, so as to make it more attractive to the future, progressive society they’re building. The Church is a deep and complicated part of what’s been going on in the world, and the infiltration efforts of the last couple centuries were so effective that the pews are sparsely populated today, especially in the West. In order for the anti-Church hologram to one day fulfill the role of the Whore of Babylon, it must first acquire a much broader influence in the world. One of the strategies to accomplish this goal is ecumenism, or inter-religion dialogue, which may in reality be paving the way for a future one world religion.

But how to spark faith in this new religion… that’s where the Pais Effect might come in. Are they really going to do it? Are they really going to try to pull off Project Blue Beam?

Why else would the mainstream media have spent the past few years seeding the public consciousness with stories about UFOs, after mocking similar stories for decades? If you thought 2020 was wild, hindsight may prove it was only the warmup for what’s on the horizon.

John CarrollComment