📜 John Hutchison and the Hutchison Effect
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Who:
John Hutchison, an eccentric Canadian inventor and experimenter, heavily influenced by Nikola Tesla's work. -
What:
In the late 1970s and 1980s, Hutchison began experimenting with electromagnetic fields, high-voltage Tesla coils, static electricity, and radio waves — overlapping them to create strange phenomena. -
His reported effects include:
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Levitation of heavy objects.
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Jellification of metals (making metal bend, warp, or fracture without heat).
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Spontaneous fracturing of materials.
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Localized, unexplained heating effects.
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Apparent "disappearing mass" effects under certain conditions.
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The Building/Bending Steel:
Hutchison was able to show, on video and to witnesses, steel beams bending or cracking under low apparent heat or without traditional mechanical force — purely through frequency and field interactions. -
Judy Wood Connection:
Dr. Judy Wood, in her forensic analysis of the 9/11 destruction (Where Did the Towers Go?), cited phenomena consistent with Hutchison’s experiments —
especially the odd vehicle damage, including:-
Melted steel components without surroundings burning,
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Cars flipped upside down,
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Paper nearby untouched while steel structures twisted,
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Apparent field effects that Hutchison had described decades earlier.
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She suggested that directed energy effects — possibly resembling what Hutchison called the "Hutchison Effect" — could explain anomalies that traditional explosives or jet fuel fires could not.
🎯 Summary of Key Points About Hutchison:
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Location | British Columbia, Canada |
| Technology | Tesla coils, radio frequency, high-voltage fields |
| Effects | Levitation, metal bending, spontaneous material transformation |
| Relation to 9/11 Research | Judy Wood references similar phenomena observed during WTC collapse Important |
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