The Evolved Podcast

Suppressed Technologies: Innovations That Could Have Transformed Humanity

Aaron Scott Season 1 Episode 14

What if the technologies that could have transformed our world were deliberately buried? This eye-opening exploration reveals the systematic suppression of breakthrough innovations that once promised to liberate humanity from dependency on fossil fuels, pharmaceuticals, and centralized control.

From the moment Nikola Tesla's vision of wireless free energy was shut down by JP Morgan's infamous question "Where do we put the meter?", a pattern of corporate sabotage against revolutionary technologies becomes disturbingly clear. The episode uncovers how compressed air vehicles, once competitive with gasoline cars, were systematically eliminated through the National City Lines Conspiracy. We trace Stanley Meyer's water-fueled engine development and mysterious death after claiming he was poisoned. Most shocking is Royal Raymond Rife's frequency medicine that reportedly cured terminal cancer patients before his laboratory was raided and his reputation destroyed.

These weren't failed technologies—they were targeted because they worked too well, threatening profit models built on scarcity, extraction, and dependency. What connects these innovations wasn't just efficiency or sustainability, but their fundamental harmony with natural principles. They offered humanity a different relationship with energy, transportation, and healing—one based on abundance rather than artificial scarcity.

Today, as environmental crisis looms, the same corporate powers that suppressed these technologies now profit from "green solutions" through carbon credits, greenwashing, and performative environmentalism. This isn't coincidence but strategy—a textbook example of problem-reaction-profit where those who created the crisis position themselves as saviors.

The awakening begins by recognizing these patterns and understanding that reclaiming our technological heritage isn't just about machines, but about reconnecting with an evolved consciousness that sees humanity as part of nature, not separate from it. Ready to see the world through new eyes? This episode will transform how you understand innovation, progress, and our potential future.

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Speaker 1:

Hello everyone and welcome back to the Manhattan Prophet Podcast. As a reminder, I'm here to ensure that all knowledge I give you finds meaning in a practical place in your everyday lives. It's only through properly digesting knowledge, in this case of ourselves and the world around us, that we see things clearly enough to break old patterns of behavior and begin a new path forward to a heightened state of consciousness. In this episode, we dig deep into the deliberate suppression of breakthrough technologies, those that once aligned with nature, human well-being and universal harmony, yet were systematically buried by industrial capitalists. From Tesla's wireless energy to hydrogen engines and frequency medicine, this episode explores how corporate empires rewrote the blueprint of innovation, replacing it with a profit-driven model that enslaved the world to fossil fuels, pharmaceuticals and scarcity-based thinking. We expose the coordinated sabotage, media smear campaigns and financial blacklisting that followed these inventions. But more than that, we reframe these technologies as extensions of an evolved consciousness, tools meant not just to power machines but to liberate the human being from dependency and control. This isn't just history. It's a call to awaken to what we've been sold, what we've lost, and to reclaim our future. Throughout history, it's a call to awaken to what we've been sold, what we've lost, and to reclaim our future. Throughout history, pivotal technologies that offered cleaner, more harmonious and universally accessible solutions have been systematically suppressed, not because they didn't work, but because they didn't serve the financial and controlling interests of those who had already cornered the market on more profitable extractive alternatives.

Speaker 1:

From Nikola Tesla's wireless energy transmission to Stanley Meyer's water-fueled engine and Royal Rife's frequency-based healing, we see a recurring pattern. Technologies that align with the natural world and are freely available to humanity often vanish under mysterious circumstances, are discredited by institutional science or are bought out and buried. This suppression was not incidental. It was strategic. The industrial capitalists of the late 19th and 20th centuries, often celebrated in mainstream media as visionaries, were in fact consolidators of power. Jp Morgan pulled funding from Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower when he realized it could provide free energy to all, thereby undermining his copper wire empire. Oil magnets, like Rockefeller, reshaped medicine to depend on petrochemical pharmaceuticals, discrediting natural therapies that couldn't be patented. In transportation, compressed air and electric cars thrived briefly in the early 1900s, that is, until Standard Oil, general Motors and tire companies conspired to eliminate them and make way for gasoline-powered dominance. In each case, superior and sustainable innovations were sidelined, not due to technical failure, but because they threatened monopolized markets, guess what. This is not a history lesson, but a glimpse into the origin and true function of many of the technologies we depend on today. What ties many of these lost technologies together is not just their efficiency or sustainability, but their resonance with the deeper rhythms of the universe. Frequency-based healing works, not by chemical suppression, but by tuning the body's vibrational field, mirroring how nature restores balance. Tesla's theories of energy tapped into the Earth's electromagnetic field, aiming to draw power from the ether, a concept echoed in ancient and indigenous understandings of the unseen forces that govern life. These innovations did not extract or exploit, they harmonized. They were not weapons of domination, but instruments of alignment. In many ways, they amplified, through real-world application, the inherent link we all have to the universe that we all too often incorrectly perceive to be distant and disconnected.

Speaker 1:

Nikola Tesla, one of the most innovative thinkers of our time, is, not surprisingly, rarely mentioned in present-day school curriculum. He was a Serbian-American inventor, engineer and futurist best known for his pioneering contributions to alternating current, electricity, radio and electromagnetism. While Tesla is often credited for his work with AC Motors and the Tesla Coil, one of his most radical visions was the development of wireless energy transmission and what many believe was a blueprint for free global energy. You see, tesla believed that the earth itself was a conductor of electrical energy and that it was possible to transmit power wirelessly through the atmosphere and ground. He envisioned a world in which electricity could be drawn from the surrounding environment and transmitted without wires to power homes, vehicles and industry. This concept came from his understanding of the Earth ionosphere cavity and his theories about harnessing naturally occurring electrical energy, such as from thunderstorms and ambient electrostatic charge.

Speaker 1:

In the early 1900s, tesla began work on the Wardenclyffe Tower in Shoreham, long Island, new York. Funded initially by financier JP Morgan with an investment of $150,000, the 187-foot tower was intended to be the first of many world wireless system stations. Tesla's stated purpose was to build a system for wireless communication across the globe, but his deeper and more ambitious goal was to create a wireless power grid that could supply energy freely to anyone anywhere. A quick breakdown of the technology itself the Wardenclyffe Tower was designed to send electrical energy into the ground, using Earth as a conductor. Tesla's system relied on resonant inductive coupling, a principle he demonstrated in laboratory experiments. He believed that this natural resonant frequency of the Earth could allow power to be transmitted with minimal loss over vast distances.

Speaker 1:

Despite the initial excitement, Tesla's ambitions met fierce resistance. Tesla's ambitions met fierce resistance when JP Morgan discovered that the tower would be used not only for communication but also for free wireless power. He withdrew further funding. According to Tesla, morgan famously asked, and I quote If anyone can draw power from it, where do we put the meter? End quote Morgan meanwhile doubled down on his investments in copper-based wired electricity infrastructure NGE. The financial support pulled, construction ceased and Tesla's broader plan to build a network of towers across the globe never materialized. The tower was dismantled in 1917, and Tesla's notes were later seized by the US government after his death in 1943.

Speaker 1:

Today, tesla's vision of wireless energy transmission is being explored again, albeit on a smaller scale, through technologies such as inductive charging used for electric toothbrushes and smartphones, and microwave or laser-based power transmission. Companies like Y-Tricity and researchers at MIT have made significant strides, but large-scale open-access energy systems remain elusive. Scale open access energy systems remain elusive. Tesla's dream lives on as both a symbol of unrealized potential and a critique of how innovation within the current scarcity-driven profit-above-all-else model of capitalism infects us all.

Speaker 1:

Then there is the suppressed technology of compressed air as a source of propulsion, which dates back to the early 19th century. Its principles were simple and promising Air, when compressed, can store and release energy cleanly, safely and without combustion. From the 1820s to the 1830s, french engineer Andrade and later Charles Bessemer experimented with air-propelled engines. In the 1870s, the Makarsky system emerged as one of the first practical uses of compressed air in public transportation. Louis McCarsky, a French engineer, developed trams powered by compressed air tanks. These trams ran quietly, without pollution and didn't require overhead wires like electric trolleys. Additionally, from 1879 to 1911, the Paris Compressed Air Tramway operated successfully using Makarski's invention. The system ran on pressurized tanks and became a quiet, clean alternative to steam trams. At the same time, in the early 1900s, the New York Pneumatic Power Company tested compressed air transit systems. The city even used compressed air drilling and excavation equipment in the building of its subway infrastructure, which proved both effective and durable. A related use of the technology was in the pneumatic mail tubes that whisked mail and parcels between post offices and buildings, widely used in New York, boston, paris and Berlin, where, through a vacuum-like suction, mail placed in the tubes was sent swiftly to various locations.

Speaker 1:

Before the internal combustion engine we all know quite well today became dominant, compressed air and electric cars were serious competitors. In fact, in 1900, at the first World's Fair in Paris, electric and compressed air vehicles outnumbered gasoline-powered cars. And in 1903, the new Mobil, a compressed air car designed in Europe, demonstrated speed and range competitive with gasoline cars of the time. But then the parasitic industrialists pushed back and, despite the promise, compressed air technology never received large-scale commercial adoption. Why, you might ask, couldn't some company make a ton of money with this technology? Well, you see, compressed air vehicles and trams threatened the already developed oil, coal and gas empires that were expanding rapidly.

Speaker 1:

In the early 20th century, powerful industrialists, including Standard Oil with Rockefeller at the helm, and emerging automotive moguls like Henry Ford, had heavily invested in gasoline-powered engines. Streetcar scandal. But in the 1930s to the 1950s, gm, standard Oil and Firestone collaborated to buy and dismantle electric and alternative-powered streetcar lines in over 45 American cities, known as the National City Lines Conspiracy. It replaced clean electric trams and suppressed air-based systems with diesel buses that created dependency on oil. The fact is, compressed air vehicles are non-patentable, widely reproducible and hard to meter. It's undermined monopolistic profit models.

Speaker 1:

There was actually a recent revival of this technology In the 2000s. Guy Negre, a French engineer, developed the MDI air car, which caught international attention. It was licensed by Tata Motors in India. Despite successful prototypes and test fleets, the car was never mass-produced. Speculation surrounds regulatory barriers, lack of investor support and pressures from oil-backed interests. Then again in 2010, the city of Nice, france, piloted compressed air buses, but again the technology vanished from headlines despite positive feedback.

Speaker 1:

Here's why this matters. Compressed air is a clean, renewable energy stored method, safe, low cost and scalable, but because it doesn't create recurring fuel profits and can't be easily monopolized, it was systematically ignored, sidelined or absorbed into industries that sought to bury it. Just as with free energy and electromagnetic healing, the story of compressed air propulsion is not one of technological failure, but of industrial sabotage to preserve legacy profits. Within the same transportation industry, we have the suppression of hydrogen water-fueled engine technology. The science to use is generally classified as electrolysis and hydrogen combustion, where water or H2O is made up of hydrogen and oxygen. Through electrolysis, water can be split into its components Hydrogen, a highly combustible gas, and oxygen, which supports combustion. Hydrogen, when burned or used in a fuel cell, produces energy and water vapor, making it one of the cleanest fuels imaginable.

Speaker 1:

Hydrogen-fueled vehicles were proven to work over a century ago, but scaling the tech required public infrastructure investment and critically challenged the economic supremacy of oil. In the 1980s, a man named Stanley Meyer claimed to invent a water fuel cell allowing cars to run on nothing but water. His modified dune buggy achieved 100 plus miles per gallon of water using high frequency electrolysis, which he claimed required minimal electrical input. Meyer filed multiple patents and even appeared on national television. He presented the technology as a clean energy solution that could liberate humanity from oil dependence. So what happened with Stanley Meyer? Well, his death has been widely known as suspicious. I don't care to opine, but here are the facts. While dining with potential investors at a restaurant in Grove City, ohio, meyer suddenly ran out into the parking lot clutching his throat and collapsed, saying, and I quote they poisoned me. He died on the spot.

Speaker 1:

There have been many other examples of real-world application of this technology. We have Rudolf Ehren, who, in the 1930s Germany, converted buses and trucks to run on hydrogen. We have Rudolf Ehren who, in the 1930s Germany, converted buses and trucks to run on hydrogen. This technology worked, but was abandoned post-World War II due to the dominance of petroleum interests. We have the Japanese company Genepax, who, in 2008, demonstrated how a car using their proprietary membrane to extract hydrogen could run on nothing but water and air. Public. Demonstrations took place, but no commercialization followed and the company shut down quietly.

Speaker 1:

So why is this technology, too, suppressed? Well, because hydrogen can be made from water anywhere, anytime. It poses an existential threat to oil cartels, as there is no need for drilling, refining or shipping. A threat to utility monopolies, as hydrogen can be stored and used off-grid. And then transportation industries, because a non-patented fuel source undermines decades of infrastructure and profit models. This goes against the entire global energy economy, which is designed around controlled distribution, not abundance. Interestingly, today hydrogen fuel cells are slowly emerging. Toyota, hyundai and Honda have produced hydrogen-powered cars. However, these rely on industrial hydrogen-made natural gas, ironically still tied to fossil fuels.

Speaker 1:

Water power technology has been proven many times to be real, reproducible and potentially revolutionary, but it continues to face systemic suppression due to the economic, geopolitical and corporate disruption it would cause. Hydrogen could power the future, but only if we first dismantle the narratives and interests that have buried it. So all of these facts still beg the question. Surely, if these technologies were so measurably innovative and demonstrated such fundamental alignment with the protection of the environment, then there is no way that we would be so blind to it, right? Well, here's the deal Mainstream media, which, as you know, I hope, is heavily owned or sponsored by energy companies, has systematically ridiculed, blacklisted or ignored inventors proposing alternative systems, despite numerous demonstrations.

Speaker 1:

Hydrogen on-demand systems were consistently labeled as hoaxes without rigorous investigation, while oil-backed quote-unquote experts were given authoritative voice. The state of industry, innovation and suppressed technology only further illustrates why looking critically at our education system is so very important. There has been point-blank educational curriculum and research funding gatekeeping. Oil-funded foundations like Rockefeller and Carnegie shaped early 20th century university curricula. This, of course, favored petrochemical based science. Even today, research grants disproportionately go to conventional energy, discouraging exploration of paradigm shifting alternatives. So as a result, we have generations of engineers, chemists and policymakers that have been trained within a fossil-fuel-centric worldview. This reduces innovation in any disruptive technology.

Speaker 1:

Lastly, let's discuss the story of Royal Raymond Reif. A bit of a tongue twister, royal Reif was an American scientist and inventor who developed a revolutionary universal microscope in the 1930s, far more advanced than anything available at the time. His microscope, which used multiple polarized light sources and prisms, could magnify specimens up to 60,000 times and allowed Reif to observe live viruses, something previously thought impossible. From these observations, reif developed what he called the Mortal Oscillary Rate, or MOR, the unique resonant frequency at which specific viruses, bacteria and pathogens would shatter, similar to how a wine glass breaks when exposed to a particular tone. He then created a frequency-generating device, what many today call the Reif machine, designed to emit precise electromagnetic frequencies to destroy pathogens without harming healthy tissue.

Speaker 1:

Reif's most significant claim came from a clinical trial conducted in 1934 in Southern California. He worked with doctors from the University of Southern California and cured 14 out of 16 terminal cancer patients, with the remaining two healed after minor protocol adjustments. Witnesses included respective pathologists and MDs. Reif and many other medical experts believed that a non-invasive, side-effect-free method of eradicating disease had been discovered this through vibrational medicine. But of course, reif's discoveries pose a direct existential threat to the burgeoning pharmaceutical industry. You see, his method required no drugs, surgeries or radiation. His innovations promised permanent cures, not symptom management. It could also be administrated affordably and safely.

Speaker 1:

At the time, pharmaceutical interests, particularly those linked to Rockefeller-financed allopathic medicine, were consolidating power through standardized, patentable treatments. Reif's technology, if adopted widely, could have destabilized the entire model of for-profit, symptom-focused healthcare. By the late 1930s, reif's laboratory was raided, his equipment and documents destroyed. Reports indicate that much of his work disappeared in fires, lawsuits and orchestrated discreditation. It's really sick. What happened here In 1939, under pressure from organized medical interests, doctors who had supported Reif were threatened with license revocation if they continued using his technology.

Speaker 1:

Reif's partner, dr Milbeak Johnson, who had scheduled a press conference to announce Reif's partner, dr Milbeck-Johnson, who had scheduled a press conference to announce Reif's results, died suddenly and the conference was canceled. The corrupt American Medical Association led by Dr Morris Fishbane is believed to have played a significant role in suppressing Reif's work. Fishbane had already been involved in the suppression of non-pharmaceutical therapies, had strong ties to the pharmaceutical industry. Reif was eventually dragged into endless litigation, suffered emotionally and financially and was driven into obscurity. He died in 1971, largely forgotten by mainstream science.

Speaker 1:

Not surprisingly, today, reif's name and work are often dismissed as pseudoscience by mainstream medicine. However, independent researchers and holistic practitioners have continued to explore frequency-based healing, citing anecdotal evidence and bioresonance principles. Despite this mainstream dismissal, the ideas Reif explored are resurfacing in a serious way through PEMF therapy, through bioresonance diagnostics, sound healing techniques, vibrational and frequency-based detox methods. His approach also aligns with concepts in quantum biology and cellular coherence. These are gaining traction in progressive medical circles with strong results. Just as with innovators in other industries mentioned previously, reif's work reveals a larger pattern of suppression when non-invasive, non-pharmaceutical healing technologies emerge.

Speaker 1:

His story is emblematic of the historical struggle between open-sourced healing, which is grounded in nature and frequency, and closed-source, which is patent-driven medicine grounded in profit and control. The erasure of his discoveries was not a dispassionate scientific judgment. It was a deliberate campaign by entrenched powers to protect monopolies on disease management. We must understand that what was suppressed was never merely innovation. It was integration. These technologies weren't just about generating power. They were about attuning to power already present Wireless energy, water-fueled engines, frequency medicine.

Speaker 1:

Each of these held the potential to harmonize human life with the elegant, non-destructive intelligence of the natural world. They worked in accordance with the same principles that govern planetary orbits, cell division and spiral galaxies. But that harmony posed a threat not to society, but to those who built their empires on scarcity, dependency and control. In place of these regenerative systems, we were sold substitutes combustion, pollution, addiction, decay. The very systems that claim to quote-unquote solve our environmental crises are the ones that engineered them and now seek to profit again through artificial scarcity, carbon credits and performative green policies. Further, these corporations frequently manipulate scarcity to maintain high prices and control markets. Utility companies in many states penalize solar users through net metering caps, slowing down decentralization In agriculture.

Speaker 1:

There are GMO seed monopolies like Monsanto and Bayer. They prevent farmers from saving seeds. They require repurchase each season. This is manufactured dependency. And then there's the Nestle company who, with water, has been accused of over-extracting in poor regions and reselling it as bottled water. They commodify an abundant public resource. Not sure if you're familiar with the carbon credit system, but it was initially designed to help reduce emissions but has been co-opted into a profit-making loophole.

Speaker 1:

Polluters can pay to offset emissions rather than reduce them. Many quote-unquote offset projects have been found to be fraudulent or ineffective, for example, trees that would have been protected anyway. Shell and BP have spent more on marketing their quote-unquote green initiatives than on actually transitioning to renewables. In 2022, only 1% of Shell's capital expenditure went to renewable energy. The rest went to oil and gas. There are green bonds, which are issued by companies with poor environmental records, using vague metrics and weak oversight. But corruption doesn't stop with the companies. Governments often pass green legislation that allows polluters to meet targets with accounting tricks. This legislation offers subsidies to large corporations while blocking smaller, decentralized alternatives. It focuses on consumer guilt rather than regulating systemic pollution. For example, the 2015 Paris Agreement relies on voluntary national pledges and carbon trading, while allowing the fossil fuel industry to remain largely untouched and unaccountable.

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The same industries and political structures that created the ecological crisis now present themselves as the solution, not by dismantling harmful systems, but by rebranding them under new profit models. This is a textbook example of problem-reaction-profit A cycle where the cause becomes the savior and the people continue to pay the price. But beneath the deafening, grumbling stomachs of the endless industrialist appetite, the calming, resonant rhythm of universal order still pulses, and it invites us back not to fantasy, but to the embedded, infinite power of the natural world of the universe. The true environmental movement doesn't start in the halls of government. It starts in the heart of consciousness and alignment. It remembers that the most efficient system is not the one with the most wires or metrics, but the one that aligns with the rhythm of life itself.

Speaker 1:

These suppressed technologies are not relics. They are resonances still waiting to be reclaimed by a people willing to listen again. The call now is to awaken not only to the crimes of the industrial capitalist, but to the deeper opportunity of re-anchoring our lives technologically, ecologically and spiritually into the geometry of truth. Evolution will not be manufactured. It will be remembered, and in remembering, we restore the future that was stolen. This is why the suppression of these technologies is not merely a material loss. It is, in truth, a spiritual one.

Speaker 1:

Each of these ideas emerged from a deeper level of insight, a recognition that humanity could exist in symbiosis with its environment rather than in constant conquest. They represent the very qualities of an evolved consciousness Decentralization, integration, harmony and empowerment. The tragedy is not that we lost the machines, but that we abandoned the mindset that created them. In this light, reclaiming suppressed technologies is not just a technical or political act. It is a conscious act of awakening. When we begin to question the systems that benefit from our disconnection, whether from the earth, our bodies or our own awareness, we begin to remember. We remember that progress is not linear accumulation but cyclical alignment, that real power doesn't lie in controlling resources but in attuning to the source itself.

Speaker 1:

The evolution of consciousness demands that we revisit these suppressed breakthroughs, not only for what they can do, but for what they represent the return of innovation that honors life. It is not coincidence that these technologies feel sacred, holistic or elegant. They were designed with an understanding that we are not above nature. We are part of it, and any true advancement must reflect that truth. Only when our external tools and internal compass begin to mirror one another can we say we've truly evolved.

Speaker 1:

As you continue listening to the Manhattan Prophet podcast, I'm going to unveil the true nature of the world that exists right under your nose. I'm going to analyze with you, out in the open, the systems at play here and the ways we can grow together and evolve. My aim To provide you with real ways to touch higher levels of awareness through truth and knowledge. Episodes are updated weekly. If you want to change your world for the better and support this evolution of consciousness, please show me by following, sharing this podcast with those you love and leaving a review. If you enjoyed our time today, please donate on. Buy Me A Coffee, linked in the show notes below. Until next week, let's level up and master your universe.