Science

Free Energy Pioneers. Stanley Meyer and the Water Powered Car

Author: Hope Girl

Free energy devices that actually work? Its time to highlight a few stories of such devices and the brave pioneers that helped to bring them into the world. With so many scams and distractions out there in our world it is difficult to cull out the legitimate breakthroughs, most of them brought through by tremendous sacrifice.

Being among the first to venture out into a new territory can be one a very a dangerous and unglamorous experience. But for those pioneers who ventured out before us we are forever grateful.  I like the way the Message Bible reads in Hebrews 12:

“Do you see what this means—all these pioneers who blazed the way, all these veterans cheering us on? It means we’d better get on with it. Strip down, start running—and never quit!”

This is what it is like for the inventors of our day, who strive towards the horizon of fulfilling Gods promises of abundance and witty inventions, while standing on the shoulders of the pioneers who plowed the way before them.

Such was the case with an inventor named Stanley Meyer.  Meyer was a former NASA employee that built a motor that ran completely on water. His revolutionary dune buggy car was seen many times on national television and he became quite respected and revered. His water fuel cell technology created energy that was 2.5 times more powerful than gasoline. He was told that the military wanted to use his technology in tanks and jeeps. He had many patents and was ready for production.   He was even offered a billion dollars by a wealthy investor to shelf the idea. He declined the offer.

You can see a better description of his technology in this clip here from the movie “It Runs on Water” from 1997.

[youtube_sc url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIC7iTLhVdY&feature=youtu.be”]
Stanley Meyers Death

On March 20, 1998 Stanley Meyer and his twin brother Stephen Meyer sat down for a business meeting at a Cracker Barrel restaurant with two Belgian investors.  His brother recalls the events that happened that evening:

“Stanley took a sip of cranberry juice. Then he grabbed his neck, bolted out the door, dropped to his knees and vomited violently.”

“I ran outside and asked him, ‘What’s wrong?’ ” Stephen recalled.

“He said, ‘They poisoned me.’ That was his dying declaration.”

People who knew him say his work drew worldwide attention: mysterious visitors from overseas, government spying and lucrative buyout offers.  His death initiated  a three-month investigation that consumed and fascinated Grove City police, but in the end, the coroner’s report listed the cause of death as a brain aneurysm.

“Meyer’s death was laced with all sorts of stories of conspiracy, cloak-and-dagger stories,” said Grove City Police Lt. Steve Robinette, lead detective on the case.

If Stephen Meyer was shocked at his twin brother’s collapse and death, he was equally amazed at the Belgians’ response the next day. “I told them that Stan had died and they never said a word,” he recalled, “absolutely nothing, no condolences, no questions. I never, ever had a trust of those two men ever again.”

We know that Stanley Meyer knew and loved Jesus and is now with him.  He painted “Jesus Christ is Lord” on the side of his controversial dune buggy that ran on water for every news camera to see.  Sadly his is not the only suspicious death in this field of alternative energy research. His technology worked and was poised to change the market forever, and there are many inventors who follow in his footsteps to pick up where he left off. One day, perhaps someday very soon, one of them will make it through, away from the slavery of corrupt energy dependence and into the promise land of clean energy.