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Source: Dateline Zero
Andrew Basiago is a Seattle attorney who claims some interesting bragging rights. Among them: He says he’s worked for DARPA, testing time travel technology. Basiago also says he can be seen in a grainy photograph of then-President Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg in 1863, and he was at Ford’s Theater the night of Lincoln’s assassination.
Basiago says that from the time he was 7 to when he was 12, he participated in “Project Pegasus,” a secret U.S. government program that he says worked on teleportation and time travel under the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
“They trained children along with adults so they could test the mental and physical effects of time travel on kids,” Basiago told The Huffington Post. “Also, children had an advantage over adults in terms of adapting to the strains of moving between past, present and future.”
According to the Los Angeles Times, Hong Kong physicist Shengwang Du issued a paper last year saying time travel is impossible, because nothing moves faster than the speed of light. So, is what Basiago claiming “impossible”?
Well, some people believe rules are made to be broken — even scientific rules. Alfred Webre, a lawyer specializing in exopolitics, is just such a person. Webre says teleportation and time travel have been around for 40 years, but are hoarded by the Defense Department instead of being used to transfer goods and services faraway distances.
“It’s an inexpensive, environmentally friendly means of transportation,” Webre says. “The Defense Department has had it for 40 years and [former Defense Secretary Donald] Rumsfeld used it to transport troops to battle.”
Basiago said he experienced eight different time travel technologies during his stint in the program. Mostly, he said, his travel involved a teleporter based on technical papers allegedly discovered inNikola Tesla‘s New York City apartment after his death in January 1943.
Full post at Dateline Zero
uh huh