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Viktor Schauberger

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position as Privy Counselor. This exchange of views eventually lasted 11 hours,<br />

during which <strong>Schauberger</strong> explained the destructive action of contemporary<br />

technology and its inevitable consequences. He contrasted this with all the processes<br />

of natural motion and temperature, of the vital relation between trees, water and soil<br />

productivity, indeed all the things he considered had to be thoroughly understood and<br />

practiced in order to create a sustainable and viable society.<br />

When <strong>Viktor</strong> had finished his explanations, Max Planck, who had remained silent, was asked<br />

his opinion about <strong>Viktor</strong>'s natural theories. His response was the remarkable and revealing<br />

statement that "Science has nothing to do with Nature". Pausing for a moment to take in<br />

this astonishing admission, <strong>Viktor</strong> then referred to the proposed four-year plan, the<br />

so-called Goering Plan, stating that,<br />

"not only was the time frame far too short, but, if instituted, it would gradually<br />

undermine and ultimately destroy Germany's biological foundations. As a result,<br />

the Third Reich would last only ten instead of the boasted 1,000 years." (<strong>Viktor</strong> was<br />

not far out in his estimate!)<br />

During the earlier part of the discussion, Hitler had been enthusiastic, but he became<br />

greatly perturbed at what he had just heard and ordered his technical and economic<br />

advisers, Keppler and Wiluhn, to discuss with <strong>Schauberger</strong> what could be done. Once<br />

outside the door, these two men demanded to know how <strong>Viktor</strong> had got in there in the first<br />

place. Angered at their truculently condescending air, he replied "Through the same door<br />

I've just come out of!" Seeing that his ideas had no hope of acceptance, and leaving them<br />

gaping, he returned to his hotel and left for Austria the following morning. Keppler and<br />

Wiluhn, however, were to get their revenge later, after the Anschluss on March 13th, 1938.<br />

Once again he was the victim of deceit and his ideas were usurped, for, in a later letter to<br />

his son Walter, he wrote that copies of the preliminary application had been fraudulently<br />

obtained by Prof. Ernst Heinkel, the famous aircraft designer, through a firm of patent<br />

attorneys, Lehmann-Harlens in Berlin. By mining the information contained in this<br />

document, Heinkel obtained insights into how a jet-engine could be produced, even though<br />

he misinterpreted its findings; his first prototype exploded due to his lack of proper<br />

understanding. With a certain absence of principle, he then sought <strong>Viktor</strong>'s collaboration in<br />

the project. Although some initial discussion eventually took place, <strong>Viktor</strong> did not cooperate,<br />

having become aware of what Heinkel had done, and further contact between the two men<br />

ceased. Using his ill-gotten gains, however, Heinkel persevered with his research, which<br />

culminated in the construction of the first successful jet-plane, its first flight being on<br />

August 27th, 1939.<br />

Although Heinkel never had the honesty to reveal the source of the ideas for his invention,<br />

keeping all the kudos for himself, this jet plane was nevertheless built as a direct result of<br />

<strong>Viktor</strong>'s theories. <strong>Viktor</strong> <strong>Schauberger</strong> is therefore the real father of the present jet<br />

age. He even went as far as to state that in order to develop and build fast-flying,<br />

supersonic aircraft successfully, the bodily forms of deep-sea fish should be copied. Today's

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