tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post7977480530971896428..comments2024-03-19T11:13:40.642-07:00Comments on A Different Perspective: Chasing Sources - The Philadelphia ExperimentKRandlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06333125414889883920noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-61628765096091073712016-09-12T10:22:40.970-07:002016-09-12T10:22:40.970-07:00You may also want to check out my webpage, it prov...You may also want to check out my webpage, it provides some of the highest quality and quantity of images, articles, Most complete sample of the USS Eldridge’s Logs, and original research done on the Philadelphia Experiment of 1943 that can be found on the Internet.<br /><br />http://www.de173.com, or http://www.phialdelphiaexperiment.navy<br /><br />AndrewAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02477430755824539051noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-22165949863141698122016-08-15T14:25:08.671-07:002016-08-15T14:25:08.671-07:00Yes but Kevin, where are you actually 'chasing...Yes but Kevin, where are you actually 'chasing' sources? What is new in your post? With all respect, but all of this, the Bielek-nonsense, the non-involvement of the Navy in regards to the Varo edition and the Allende hoax as primary source is already well known and all over the internet. It was well known even long before Goerman's expose. And we also know what happened with the Eldritch (where it was ultimately salvaged etc.)<br /><br />What I would like to know is where Carlos Allen got his idea from. John Keel had an idea as to what might have served as an source of inspiration for Allende's wild yarn (the 1904 Mohican incident).<br /><br />And I'd like to know why George Langelaan is mentioned in the saga. And if that elusive newspaper clipping supposedly proving the reality of the case mentioned in Berlitz and Moore's book on the PX is an outright conscious lie.<br /><br />I am a bit disappointed by this post-mortem. I guess I'd expected more.<br /><br />Best regards,<br /><br />Theo<br />theo paijmanshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17890509406570628152noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-33693428458582429772016-08-15T12:08:52.943-07:002016-08-15T12:08:52.943-07:00Memory is wonderful! I SINCERELY believed that my...Memory is wonderful! I SINCERELY believed that my first time with this was as a SF paperback novel in my boyhood (perhaps 1945-52), with a recognized big name author. Didn't even slightly pretend to reality, just a great tale.<br />Ol' Bab.Ol' Babhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15575391882329946475noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-63748988234267706572016-08-10T22:25:28.923-07:002016-08-10T22:25:28.923-07:00I don't believe I'd ever heard of him, but...I don't believe I'd ever heard of him, but a Google Search of his name provides several accounts of his "Time Slip" in 1935, which I realised I had read of previously.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-45478684170444297652016-08-10T08:58:33.684-07:002016-08-10T08:58:33.684-07:00This comment has been removed by the author.Paul Younghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04267452625547760508noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-38575179832390894892016-08-10T06:03:13.472-07:002016-08-10T06:03:13.472-07:00The Philadelphia Experiment has never felt like an...The Philadelphia Experiment has never felt like anything other than a pulp story created for boys. Frankly, it's only ever felt like a part of a pulp story, there's always been something missing.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05375222676275036528noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-49879781167405126962016-08-10T01:28:38.150-07:002016-08-10T01:28:38.150-07:00There was a news story a number of years ago with ...There was a news story a number of years ago with interviews of the sailors who served on the USS Eldridge. None said there was anything out of the ornately while serving onboard. I chalk it up to a hoaxer trying to make a quick buck.Mr. Sweepyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09966969362028196312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11558306.post-28389543867220691842016-08-09T17:21:38.819-07:002016-08-09T17:21:38.819-07:00I first read about this in 1972, when the tale was...I first read about this in 1972, when the tale was still alive but faltering.<br /><br />I was just a kid and found it fascinating until I discovered there was really no evidence to support it. Additionally, it's not even plausible.<br /><br />If the USN wanted to test a secret electromagnetic cloaking device with the possibility of time transportation or teleporting, why would they ever choose to do it at a naval harbor literally on the front doorstep of a major city (Philadelphia)? They wouldn't.<br /><br />Why didn't they test it on some benign object first, instead of a ship? They didn't.<br /><br />Why test it with an onboard crew at port if the goal was just to render it invisible for a few minutes? They could have done it without a crew. But they didn't.<br /><br />Sure Norfolk is another naval base, but why there? Why not just teleport it across the Philadelphia shipyard? For that matter who teleported the ship back to Philadelphia?<br /><br />Why didn't anyone see it materialize at Norfolk? The harbor is visible to the public from multiple directions.<br /><br />It's amazing that even today you can watch dozens of time traveling YouTube vids which still claim this experiment really happened!<br /><br />And yet, what should we make of British Air Marshal Sir Victor Goddard's time travel claim?Brian Bhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04201018843054563257noreply@blogger.com