David Hamel

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David Hamel (1924[citation needed] –) is a carpenter and inventor who claims to be inspired by extraterrestrials, living in Ontario, Canada with his wife.

Hamel claims to have been contacted by aliens, from a planet called Kladen, which is "located three billion miles from our Earth", and to have been in continuous contact with them ever since.[1]

He claims the aliens taught him the principles of free energy or perpetual motion, anti-gravity, alternate realities, the truth about the Bible, the Dead Sea Scrolls and ancient architecture such as the pyramids, Stonehenge (which he says is a landing pad for a flying saucer), Atlantis, and other "ET artifacts". They also taught him how to build a flying saucer.[2]

On the walls of the pyramids, David Hamel claims, the "Neubians", whom he describes as "the small people", inscribed the theory of "Free Energy". The reason why he hasn't yet realized the blue prints, he says, is that the 'men in black', who "usually don't know what they are looking for", seize his materials from time to time, forcing him to begin again from the start with his "prototype".[3]

According to Hamel and his wife, after alien contacts "mystical flower buds", which David says have been left by the extraterrestrials as a sign of hope, appear everywhere — some of which Hamel has kept in a plastic bag and claims to have stayed green for over 20 years.[4]

Contents

[edit] Inventions and patents

David Hamel believes his purpose is to share the information given to him by the extraterrestrials with the public and help get rid of the old and polluting energy.[5]

According to David Hamel's official site the Patent Office in Ottawa has ignored the "hundreds of drawings" sent there by Hamel over the decades, and denied his patent requests.[6]

Because of the unconventional subject matter, David Hamel has also had to make his own measuring instruments.

[edit] Media

[edit] Video

[edit] Trivia

  • Hamel's Free Energy Generator was featured in an episode of the MythBusters thinking that its purpose was an anti-gravity generator that sent off electromagnetic charges that repelled against the Earth's magnetic charge causing it to lift. It didn't work.

[edit] Further reading

  • The Granite Man and the Butterfly by Jeane Manning.[7]

[edit] External links