New York Times Publishes on LK-99, Purported Room Temperature Superconductor
Beginning of a new era for computing, tech, and spacecraft design.
Wow, folks.
Some of you were asking… if this is so big and world changing, doesn’t the legacy media have to cover it eventually?
I mean, these monolithic propaganda monsters don’t have to do anything, but they’ve begun to incorporate LK-99 into their coverage.
NYTimes is first to the party: they published a video showing off the levitation effect of a LK-99 sample; the video was published online earlier by Kim, the lead scientist in the original South Korean paper that made such a stir.
Different world ahead… they’ll work out any kinks, improve upon the recipe, and we’ll be off to the races is my guess.
Thanks for the generous recent PayPal tips. I’ve been under appreciated lately, so the traffic lift and excitement over this is great to see… will encourage me to keep creating content as desired.
This is kind of like the Gate in reverse — that was something so horrible, and sadly true, and I had the nerve to report on it early. Now with Sound of Freedom and a slowly awakening public, it’s no longer so out there.
With LK-99 Summer — we have something so great, and remarkably true (it seems so far), and I had the nerve to do a few viral videos on the original paper that went viral and reached a couple million people over the last week.
Now bigger journalists and names are on the scene, which is great. Where were they early on?
I think it’s like the metaphorical chimpanzee who has been caged so long that when the zookeeper finally swings the door wide open, the chimp doesn’t know how to leave — or he doesn’t want to.
A room temperature superconductor is so fantastical and different from what middle aged people in media and science expect… they expect routine, monotony, all the big stuff has been discovered is what these people believe.
Not so, obviously.
There’s always something new. There is nothing in modern physics that precludes us from finding a magical mystery Scooby Doo room temp superconductor — and increasingly, I think we found one of them.
Onward.