He ceased contact because people couldn't keep their damn mouths shut. Someone decided it would be a nice idea to send the information that Spherics provided to SM. Spherics ceased all contact after this. I do not know how it knew or if it was just coincidence.
The "Word" doc was never provided as he ceased contact either before it was finished, or before he could share it. Either way, the information is too sensitive. The principles he shared happen to have alternate purposes, such as propulsion.
As I understand what Spherics said about the video, it was he who posted it and it showed a working OU device. Apparently, some group or organization saw it on YouTube, knew he posted it, and went to his home to take his devices and whatever else they wanted. Thye did this without saying a word, but one man just held him against the wall.
You probably won't see a device like this posted on YouTube. Some group, organization, or other faction of sorts does not want this information posted at this time. I do not know who "they" are, but they could easily be a shadow agency or group in our government, or even aliens that don't want us contaminating space with our bullshit.
Look up the alien visitation story of Stan Romanek. Reproduced story movie is "Extraordinary". It's on Netflix. Then find the online pdf where a physicist discusses the equations that Stan wrote in a trance state. Ignore the many attempts t discredit him a they should not detract from the message given.
The principles at work in the TPU (all versions) are used for propulsion.
I don't know much about the groups at odds over technology, but they appear to be pretty serious about keeping mankind technologically primitive.
Quote: Stan Romanek, a prominent 54-year-old UFO enthusiast who claims to have been abducted by aliens “several times”, is set to face trial in Colorado on charges of possessing and distributing child pornography. Romanek gained a certain newfound renown ahead of his 31 July 2017 trial date when Netflix released a feature-length documentary recounting 15 years’ worth of alleged extraterrestrial and supernatural encounters. Extraordinary: The Stan Romanek Story was originally made in 2013 by Seattle director Jon Sumple but not added to Netflix until July 2017, which in turn exposed the documentary — and the man — to the streaming website’s nearly 100 million subscribers. The film is a series of vignettes without voiceover narration (all of which are presented as “mesmerizing” evidence) dating back to 2000. In dozens of home videos, photographs and interviews, often accompanied by dramatic classical music, director Jon Sumple presents “evidence” of unidentified flying object sightings, encounters with little green men in Romanek’s home, flying orbs, ghostly voices, and the purported alien abductions that have brought him public attention in the past. The body of evidence is primarily made up of easy-to-fake, even occasionally laughable images of aliens and mysterious faces appearing in the background of photos; “lights in the sky” with mundane likely explanations; and the standard material of UFO hoaxes: lawn circles, abduction flashbacks revealed under hypnosis, and “abduction” wounds. Indeed, Romanek’s claims have been challenged or debunked on a few occasions. In 2009, he was asked by ABC News to submit a purported alien implant in his leg to medical examination. When the time came, Romanek claimed it had disappeared from his body. The Rocky Mountain Paranormal research group recreated a famous video produced by Romanek, purporting to show a little green man peeking in his window. The groups claims they reenacted the video for $90. And in 2015, Romanek was forced to admit that he faked “moving objects” that appeared in the background of an earlier interview. In a further twist, he explained the hoax by claiming that authorities had intimidated him into discrediting himself: Charming fellow Grumpy
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