Posted on 04/10/2025 10:19:12 PM PDT by Red Badger
Stick with me on this, I promise I’m going to deliver the goods!
Does the United States already possess teleportation technology?
You know, like “Beam me up, Scottie!”
I know that sounds crazy at first glance, but you might just change your mind once you see what I’m about to show you.
It all starts with this Tweet that caught my attention today, suggesting that President Trump has teleportation technology and so badly wants to let the cat out of the bag:
Trump wants to tell people we can teleport stuff so badly.⚡️ https://t.co/4qmUhEEpyG pic.twitter.com/uPR5IF95St— Ashton Forbes (@JustXAshton) April 10, 2025
And if that’s all I had, I’d expect you to click out now.
But that’s not how we roll around here.
We don’t write entire articles based on one unfounded and speculative Tweet.
And yet, here we are so there has to be more — and there is!
Watch this video from President Trump talking about the technology we have: “It’s far more powerful than people understand. Nobody has any idea what it is and it is the most powerful weapons in the world that we have.”
When are people going to listen to what I'm saying?😂
"It's far more powerful than people understand. Nobody has any idea what it is and it is the most powerful weapons in the world that we have."
Remember when people said Trump would leak the truth, well here ya go! https://t.co/PmTno87CwU— Ashton Forbes (@JustXAshton) April 10, 2025
TRANSCRIPT:
And we’re very powerful. This country is very powerful.
It’s far more powerful than people understand. We have weaponry that nobody has any idea what it is, and it is the most powerful weapons in the world that we have.
More powerful than anybody — even — not even close. So nobody’s going to do that.
But I think that if that’s what you’re referring to, maybe it’s—
Ok, ok I know what you’re thinking….
Still, that doesn’t prove we have teleportation technology?
And you’re right.
And perhaps we don’t but now take a look at this next clip.
In light of President Trump going out of his way to talk about the technology we have that is far more powerful than people understand, now I give you Space-Force, Steven Kwast, USAF General Ret.
pic.twitter.com/wbLFYppRhu
Whoa… Space-Force, Steven Kwast, USAF General 👀
• Technology that can take you anywhere on Earth in less than an hour.
• wireless energy from space
• Deliver wifi from space
“The power of space will change world power forever.”
Sooo, umm when can…— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) April 10, 2025
Whoa… Space-Force, Steven Kwast, USAF General
• Technology that can take you anywhere on Earth in less than an hour. • wireless energy from space • Deliver wifi from space
“The power of space will change world power forever.”
Sooo, umm when can we start? Or has it already begun?
This guy is the real deal, you can see his profile here on the official Air Force website:
Lt. Gen. Steven L. Kwast is the Commander, Air Education and Training Command, Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas. He is responsible for the recruiting, training and education of Air Force personnel. His command includes Air Force Recruiting Service, two numbered air forces and Air University. The command operates more than 1,400 trainer, fighter and mobility aircraft, 23 wings, 10 bases and five geographically separated groups. It trains more than 293,000 students per year with approximately 60,000 active-duty, Reserve, Guard, civilian and contractor personnel.
General Kwast was commissioned upon graduation from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1986. After completing a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, he was assigned to undergraduate pilot training where he earned his pilot wings in June 1989. General Kwast has served as military aide to the vice president and completed a National Defense Fellowship with the Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology and Policy at Boston University, Massachusetts.
The general has commanded at the squadron, group and wing levels, including the 47th Operations Group at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas, and the 4th Fighter Wing at Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina. He also served as the deputy director for Colonel Matters, Air Force Senior Leader Management Office, Washington, D.C., and as the commander, 455th Air Expeditionary Wing, Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. General Kwast was the deputy director for Politico-Military Affairs for Europe, NATO and Russia, Strategic Plans and Policy Directorate, Joint Staff, the Pentagon, Arlington, Va. Prior to his current assignment, General Kwast was the Commander and President, Air University, Maxwell AFB, Alabama. He has more than 3,300 flying hours, including more than 650 combat hours during operations Desert Shield, Desert Storm, Southern Watch, Allied Force and Enduring Freedom.
Now let’s go back to what he said…
• Technology that can take you anywhere on Earth in less than an hour. • wireless energy from space • Deliver wifi from space
Watch here:
VIDEO AT LINK......................
TRANSCRIPT:
Energy.
The seed corn of all development, all growth, all survival.
Survival. Energy.
So—energy, transportation, information, and manufacturing. These are the things that change humanity, that will change world power. And they are descending upon us in ways that are very unique.
The technology is on the engineering benches today, but most Americans—and most in Congress—have not had time to really look deeply at what’s going on here.
But I’ve had the benefit of 33 years of studying and becoming friends with these engineers and these scientists.
This technology can be built today with technology that is not developmental—to deliver any human being from any place on planet Earth to any other place in less than an hour.
To deliver Wi-Fi from space, where you never need a cell tower to connect.
To deliver energy from space, where you never have to plug your phone in—and it trickle charges, and you can use that energy over time.
It can be applied to cars. To houses.
The technology of Edison and Tesla that we live with in our energy environment—our paradigm today—is expensive, it’s dangerous, and it’s wasteful.
Plug it into the wall. But yet, that’s what we all do—because we are used to paradigms.
The power of space will change world power forever. And it doesn’t have to be a big country to do it.
It can be a small island country—let’s say New Zealand.
Because the technology, if optimized, can change world power. And there’s nothing you can do if you don’t have that power.
The nature of power: you either have it and your values rule, or you do not have it and you must submit.
We see that play out again and again in history. And it’s playing out now.
But we get trapped.
Look folks, I’m not telling you what to believe…
I’m not saying we have transporter technology….
I’m just showing you what President Trump and this Air Force General are saying.
And if they’re saying in publicly, it’s usually because they’re ready for disclosure to come out.
You’ll have to decide for yourself what you think and I’d love to hear about it down in the comments.
Let me know!
Teleporter technology?
Zero point energy?
Something else?
I learned to be skeptical of WLT and Noah.
Hard to read their articles - they are all formatted in this
weird way and often repeat some stuff - WHY?
But worse I looked into Noah and his new career / job in
sales. Any product that I don’t need, way over-priced
and worse profits off of the lower IQs and elderly - NO
THANKS. If I wouldn’t buy it then why peddle it to others?
Thanks for posting. Space Force is interesting.
“Squirrel! Wait, he’s over there! No wait now he’s over here!”
I raise the tariff on your bullshit call to 125%
Short answer it is TOTAL HORSE HOCKEY!
So I asked GROK: Is there any science that supports teleportation technology?
Teleportation, as commonly imagined in science fiction, involves instantly transferring matter from one location to another without traversing the space in between. While this concept remains speculative, there are scientific ideas and experiments that touch on related principles, primarily in the realm of quantum mechanics. Here’s a breakdown of the relevant science:
Quantum Teleportation:
What it is: Quantum teleportation is a real phenomenon where the quantum state of a particle (e.g., a photon or electron) is transferred to another particle at a distant location. This relies on quantum entanglement, where two particles share a special connection such that the state of one instantly influences the other, regardless of distance.
Key experiments: Since the 1990s, scientists have successfully teleported quantum states of photons, electrons, and even small atoms over distances ranging from meters to hundreds of kilometers (e.g., via satellite in experiments by Chinese researchers in 2017). In 2020, researchers at Fermilab and Caltech teleported quantum states across 44 kilometers of fiber optic cable with high fidelity.
Limitations: This process doesn’t involve moving physical matter, only information about a particle’s quantum state. To reconstruct the original state, you need a receiving particle already in place and a classical communication channel to transmit additional data. It’s not “teleportation” of objects or people but of information, which is a far cry from sci-fi teleportation.
Entanglement and Nonlocality:
What it is: Entanglement suggests a kind of “spooky action at a distance” (as Einstein called it), where measuring one particle’s state instantly determines the state of its entangled partner, no matter how far apart. This phenomenon underpins quantum teleportation.
Relevance: While entanglement allows for instantaneous correlations, it doesn’t permit faster-than-light communication or matter transfer. The need for a classical channel to complete quantum teleportation ensures no information travels faster than light, respecting relativity.
Wormholes and General Relativity:
What it is: In theoretical physics, wormholes are hypothetical tunnels in spacetime that could connect distant points, potentially allowing near-instantaneous travel. They arise from solutions to Einstein’s field equations in general relativity.
Status: No evidence for wormholes exists, and they require exotic matter with negative energy to stay open, which is speculative and only observed in tiny amounts (e.g., via the Casimir effect). Recent theoretical work, like a 2022 study in Nature linking quantum teleportation protocols to wormhole-like structures in holographic models, suggests a deep mathematical connection between quantum entanglement and spacetime geometry. However, this is highly abstract and doesn’t imply practical teleportation.
Challenges: Even if wormholes exist, stabilizing them for matter transport would require physics beyond our current understanding, and they might only allow subatomic particles or information to pass.
Energy and Information Constraints:
Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: To teleport a complex object, you’d need to measure its exact quantum state (position and momentum of every particle). However, the uncertainty principle limits how precisely these can be known, making perfect reconstruction theoretically problematic.
Data volume: A human body contains ~10^28 atoms. Scanning and transmitting their quantum states would generate an astronomical amount of data—far beyond current or foreseeable computational capabilities. A 1990s estimate by physicist Lawrence Krauss suggested teleporting a human’s information would take longer than the age of the universe to transmit with classical methods.
Energy costs: The energy required to manipulate or entangle particles at scale, or to create conditions for something like a wormhole, would likely be immense, possibly requiring exotic forms of energy we can’t harness.
Speculative Ideas:
Some physicists, like Michio Kaku, have speculated about teleportation via advanced nanotechnology or quantum computing, where an object is scanned, deconstructed, and rebuilt elsewhere. However, this faces ethical and practical issues (e.g., is the rebuilt entity the “same” person?) and remains purely theoretical.
Concepts like “digital teleportation” (uploading consciousness to a digital medium and transferring it) are explored in philosophy and sci-fi but lack scientific grounding due to our limited understanding of consciousness.
Current Reality:
Quantum teleportation is a promising tool for quantum computing and secure communication (e.g., quantum cryptography), but it’s unrelated to moving macroscopic objects.
No experiment or theory supports teleporting complex matter, like a human or even a small object, in a way that resembles sci-fi teleportation.
The laws of physics, as we understand them (quantum mechanics, relativity), impose strict limits: no faster-than-light travel, no bypassing the uncertainty principle, and no mechanism to instantly reorganize matter across space.
Future Prospects:
Advances in quantum computing might improve quantum teleportation for information processing, but scaling this to macroscopic objects is a distant, if not impossible, goal.
Breakthroughs in unifying quantum mechanics and general relativity could reveal new possibilities (e.g., practical wormholes), but this is speculative and likely centuries away, if feasible at all.
In short, while quantum teleportation is a fascinating reality at the subatomic level, there’s no science today that supports teleportation of physical objects or people. The gaps between current physics and sci-fi teleportation are vast, rooted in fundamental limits of energy, information, and spacetime. If you’re curious about a specific aspect—like quantum experiments or wormhole theories—I can dig deeper!
Your comment is a refutation of "teleportation," but my comment does not mention it or imply that such a thing exists.
(spoiler on the excellent film during examination of the balance between science and perception)
GROK is not correct.
Getting anywhere on Earth in an hour isn’t difficult, there’s just not much reason for it, but the tech is easy enough. Anything that can get to space can land anywhere real quickly.
And from a human-rate standpoint, it’s a bit harder but simply isn’t economically feasible. Who’s gonna pay millions of dollars for one 30-min flight from DFW to Tokyo? Where you’re strapped down like an astronaut with no training, on a loud, annoying rocket trip?
Sure, millionaires might do it to say they did, but it’s not gonna be a daily flyer for anyone.
Landing safely is the actual trick.
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