submarines

4 theories and 2 videos tagged with this topic.

Theories (4)

Videos (2)

The Man Who Engineered the Future

The Man Who Engineered the Future

18:16 5K views Analyzed

This video analyzes John Knuckles (Nuckolls), the 2024 Enrico Fermi Award recipient and 'father of inertial confinement fusion' (ICF). The host connects Knuckles' work on laser-triggered fusion and 'clean bombs' to the broader pattern of nuclear physicists who have lived exceptionally long lives while working on classified projects. The video reveals that ICF - which Friedwart Winterberg said was classified for national security - was developed by Knuckles at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Key insights include: Knuckles' role in developing extreme ultraviolet lithography for microchips; the connection between early nuclear computers (IBM punch cards for calculating bomb geometry) and modern AI navigation systems; claims that fusion ignition was achieved long before the public 2022 announcement; and the theory that advanced fusion reactors already power military submarines. The host suggests academics are deliberately misled through controlled research environments while the real breakthroughs remain classified, and speculates that some aging scientists may be 'on our side' hoping for disclosure before they die.

China’s Quantum Radar Changes Everything

China’s Quantum Radar Changes Everything

8:25 4K views Analyzed

This video discusses China's development of the world's first mass-produced quantum radar using ultra-low noise single photon detectors with four channels, claiming capability to track US stealth jets like the F-22. The host explains that quantum radar uses interferometry and Josephson junctions to detect the ether (quantum field). The video features a clip of Donald Trump stating the US can detect submarines immediately anywhere they are, which the host interprets as evidence of quantum radar capability. The discussion shifts to why billionaires like Elon Musk don't know about advanced technology - because they don't understand physics and aren't involved in classified research. The host argues that compartmentalization means even defense contractor employees mostly don't know about breakthrough technologies, which are developed through classified nuclear weapons programs rather than commercial R&D.