Ominous Invention Came
To Its Creator In A Dream
By James Donahue
February 2005
French inventor Troy
Hurtubise claims that he dreamed the complete design of an eight-foot-long device he claims can see through solid walls.
The 41-year-old Hurtubise
says the machine that he calls Angel Light, appears to defy all known rules of physics, but it opens windows to solid objects
as if there were no barrier there at all.
Scientists at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology have tested the device and confirm that it can do exactly what Hurtubise claims it can do.
He has sold the rights
to the machine to the French government for a reported $40,000. This sounds like a substantial amount of money except Hurtubise
claims the machine cost him $30,000 to build, and other big corporations like Motorola have spent millions attempting to develop
technology that will do the same thing.
Phoenix-based Motorola
wants a unit like this for its military applications, as well as to provide police, fire and other emergency first responders
the ability to more easily find the source of trouble when rushing down dark streets to the scene.
If Hurtubise’s
story is correct, the existence of such a machine has troublesome implications.
Armed with Angel Lights
and other invasive new inventions such as acute listening devices that can pick up conversations through walls, there will
no longer be any secrets, even in the once hallowed privacy of our homes. It will mean that the Orwellian World of the classic
novel 1984 will at last be upon us, without reservation.
It could soon mean that
people who refuse to accept the hard-line Christian controlled society being unraveled by an extreme right-wing United
States administration could be charged with criminal acts for doing once private things.
These might include spanking a child, smoking a marijuana cigarette or having sex with someone we are not married to within
the confines of our homes.
Other activities that
may be under attack include same sex marriages, reading pornographic material, serving alcoholic beverages to our underage
children (common in homes of many European-oriented families), or simply speaking too loudly against our government.
The other mystery behind
the Hurtubise invention is how this man acquired the information he needed to build his Angel Light.
He told a writer for
Bay Today that it all came to him in a dream.
“I saw it, saw
the whole casing and everything, and I saw what it could do,” he said. “I had the same dream three times and by
the third time I had it in my head and I started to build it.”
Hurtubise said he relied
solely on his memory and put the machine together without using blueprints, drawings or schematics. Once finished, he said
he turned it on and was shocked at what it could do.
His first vision was
through the walls of both his home and a garage located behind his laboratory. He said he could clearly read the license plate
on his wife’s car, and even see salt on the lower panels.
The vision was so clear
Hurtubise said it was almost as if there was a hole in the wall. “You could be fooled into believing that you could
actually walk through the wall,” he said.
Further experiments with
the machine have shown that its beam has the power to turn off electronic things like portable radios, televisions and even
a microwave. It also interrupts remote controlled signals.
The device sees through
ceramic, wood, steel, tin, titanium and even lead.
Eventually Hurtubise
began testing the machine on himself. He said he put his hand in the beam and could see blood vessels, the muscles and bones.
But after that, he said he lost feeling in the finger of his exposed hand and experienced an overall malaise.
When he turned the ray
on a tank of goldfish, he was shocked when the fish died within minutes.
He believes the machine
should never be turned on humans or other living creatures.