Shredd6 wrote:
By all rights he should have been the richest man in the world while he was alive, but instead he died a poor man due to the greedy nature and sabotaging of J.P. Morgan, Rockefeller, Ford, and Marconi
You left out Edison, who should have been first on that list.
But in fairness to the greedy lot, Tesla was also a victim of himself. He had mental illness which contributed to his lack of knowledge or caring, for how to use his money, and he just epected to be financed to continue his studies for the science of it alone. But of course it doesn't work that way. For the wealthy to spend a fortune backing something, the investor needs a reasonable epectation of financial reward.
And I think you are mistaken about any government conspiracy to take his papers to prevent the spread of free energy, or anything similar. It was more likely due to national security concerns. Shortly before his death, Tesla was working on a "death ray" that he had pitched to the U.S. Military, but they showed little interest at the time.
After his death, the government was most likely concerned that his discoveries and research would fall into foreign hands, since, after all, Tesla, though a naturalized citizen of America, was of foreign decent, with family in what is now, modern day Croatia.
The government would not have had to wait until his death, to steal his papers or perform some kind of sabotage. The fear was that his work would end up in foreign hands, and potentially be used against us.
But I have been fascinated by Tesla, quite literally, since I was a child. To me, he was, for inventors, what Newton or Einstein were to physicists. He was brighter and more ground-breaking than Edison or any of his contemporaries. He was a genius, and far and away, ahead of his time.
He's one of my favorite people in history.
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