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November 24, 2025 24 mins

What do Nikola Tesla, the Great Pyramid, and JP Morgan's biggest fear have in common? Free wireless energy that works. Tesla proved it in 1899. The pyramids encoded it 12,000 years earlier. Ground-penetrating radar just found massive chambers 2,000 feet beneath Giza using the exact same engineering principles. The FBI seized Tesla's research. Egypt blocks excavation. Some answers are too dangerous to allow. Videos on the Discoveries under the Giza Pyramids Something MASSIVE Found Beneath the Pyramids - https://youtu.be/pzGbYPaLtJ4 

Update: SAR Pyramid Discovery Just VALIDATED? - https://youtu.be/TD_2-yRHH3M 

Find our videos on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@TheInBetweenTales 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:32):
Ground penetrating radar found somethingbeneath the Great Pyramid
that archeologists can't explain.
Chambers thousands of feet down.
Precisely engineered at a massive scale.
But Egypt blocks all investigationattempts.
In 1901, Nikola Tesla built a tower
using what he calledancient engineering principles.

(00:53):
The mathematicsmatched, the design matched,
and it transmitted powerwirelessly in tests.
J.P. Morgan pulled his funding.
The tower was demolished.
When Tesla died,the FBI took his research.
20 boxes disappeared.
Two structures,same principles, both hidden.

(01:15):
I'm Carol Ann.
Welcome to The InBetween.
He who has the power, has the power.
I have the power!
And the most iconic ancientrepresentations of power

(01:37):
are the pyramids of Giza.
But what if the pyramids aren'ta display of dynastic power,
but a showcase of energy power?
That's right.
A giant free energy power plant.
But don't just take my word for it.
Take the word of Nikola Tesla.
My favorite genius of all time.

(01:58):
Stick around, because I'mgoing to show you how an ancient idea
became a modern idea that could one daymean free energy for everyone.
And we're going to back it all upwith the latest and greatest research
from the Giza Plateau.
Now, I have no doubt thatsome of you are shouting at me right
now, wonderingwhat has taken me so long to cover this.

(02:21):
And that others of you are shouting at methat I am off my rocker.
But stick with me to the end.
Hear me out and then you can tell meif you think I'm right or wrong.
Fair enough?
Let's start in Egypt.
Dare I say that the Pyramids of Gizahave inspired awe
in every individual to ever gazeupon the behemoth wonders of the world.

(02:44):
They have, and rightfully so, inspired
people for literal millennia.
Add in the relatively recent,
civilizational speaking,discoveries of the crazy
math encoded into the measurementsof these architectural wonders,
and it gets hard to believethat they don't serve some cosmic purpose.

(03:06):
In 1864, the pyramids were measuredto be at the direct center
of all the Earth's landmasses, 30 degrees latitude,
31 degrees longitude,by a guy named Charles Piazzi Smyth.
However, turns out that good old Charles,
a Giza pyramid aficionado,kind of cherry picked his data.

(03:27):
And voila!
The pyramids are rightthere in the middle.
Now, after a true digital scan of all land
masses,the land mass center is located in Turkey,
about 650 miles north of the pyramidsin Kırşehir Province in central Turkey.
So much for that fun fact.
But let's take a closerlook at the pyramids themselves.

(03:49):
Specifically, the Great Pyramid of Khufu.
If you take the number 43,200,
which is half the number of secondsin a day, and multiply it by the pyramids
height, 481ft., you get the distancefrom the center of the earth
to the North Pole with 99.7% accuracy.
If you have the distanceof all four sides at the base,

(04:11):
which is about 756ft per side,
multiply that by 43,200,you get the circumference of the earth
to within 99.3% accuracy.
And if you take that same baseperimeter distance and divide it by
two times the height, you get a numberthat is awfully close to Pi.

(04:33):
Not to mention the factthat the base lines up to true north off
by only 0.05 of one degree.
And that the entire 13 acre base area
is almost perfectly level, off by
at most less than an inch.
I don't think anyone can denythat these ginormous piles of rock

(04:56):
are something pretty special.
But what are they here for?
Mainstream archeology,still ruled in many ways by former
head of Egypt's Minister of Statefor Antiquities affairs, Zahi Hawass,
still holds to the party line
that these marvels of architecturewere built as tombs for the kings.

(05:19):
Seriously?
This is just my humble opinion,but they're not tombs.
First of all, there's zero evidencethat any remains were ever in there.
No bodies, no oil residues, no wrappings.
And where are the wall to wallhieroglyphics,
artifacts and booby trapsThat's what I said.

(05:42):
Booby traps.
found in the other 65 tombs?
12 of those four other pharaohsin the Valley of the Kings.
Not to mention the fact that the Valleyof the Kings tombs all have nice
big entrances and hallways, easy
to carry in, remains for burial,but the hallways and chambers in Khufu's

(06:02):
pyramid are super cramped, like hallwaysthat are three by three and slanted.
Not the sense of grandeur and veneration
the Egyptians are knownfor showering on their kings.
Just getting a body in therewould have been a nightmare.
You would have to lower the body downor pull the body up with rope and pulleys.

(06:23):
Not the most dignified end for a king.
Not to mention the odd shafts and chambersthat seem to serve
no burial purpose whatsoever.
If you're going to build somethingthat magnificent, wouldn’t
you make sure that every blockhas a purpose?
Let's talk about those blocks.
The exterior was covered in white Turalimestone, and inside there's

(06:45):
lots of rose granite,both of which are considered
high grade stonesand are found in tombs all over.
But the core stones in the Gizapyramids are made from
something called Nummulitic limestone,which is a good stone,
just more like an everyday stone,nothing special.
If you built this gigantictomb for your king,

(07:08):
would you build the interior,where your king's body
is going to be lying in reposewhile his soul ascends to the heavens
to join the eternal stars as a God,out of anything less than the very best?
I would hope not.
So if these things aren't tombs,what are they?
The Khufu pyramid as a powerplant is an idea

(07:30):
that's been floating in the collectiveether for decades.
But thanks to one Christopher Dunn,
we now have the logisticsto go with the abstract theory.
Dunn has actually written three booksand an update on how these giant piles
of rock could have actually deliveredpower to the Nile Valley.

(07:50):
Of course,the biggest question is probably
what would they have needed power for?
Well, number one, how about lights?
It's kind of a biggie, but they alsomay have used power for everything
from electromagnetic levitationto move those huge stones
to something as simpleas healing and food preservation.

(08:11):
And I think I need to just interjectsomething else here.
Many peopleonly think in terms of what Egypt was like
when the experts I am not a scientist.
say the pyramids were built around4500 years ago, a number
they got from carbondating organic material found in mortar
that has been found in a few spotsin the interior of the pyramid.

(08:34):
And at that time,
the Egyptians were too primitiveto have needed electricity for anything.
Okay, solid reasoning.
However,did you ever notice that the three Giza
pyramidsdon't exactly line up with each other?
They're just a little off,which is surprising
given that they can comewithin three arc minutes of true north.

(08:56):
And we think that same level of precisionwould carry over
to their locations as well.But it doesn't.
Well, the three pyramidsmay not line up with each other,
but they do line up with something else.
The constellation of Orion.
The placement of the three pyramidslines up almost precisely, with the three
stars of Orion's belt matchingboth the relative brightness and size,

(09:18):
and the exact angle of Orion's belt
in the pre-dawn sky, as seen from Giza.
But not the Giza sky of today.
The Giza sky of 10,500 BC, long
before the 2500 BC date that
mainstream archeologygives for construction.

(09:40):
That would make them built beforethe flood days of the Younger Dryas.
And keep this in mind.
If we got hit by a planetkiller asteroid tomorrow,
most of what we have built onthis planet would be gone in 10,000
years, with very few tracesleft of us having ever been here.
Manhattan becomes a dense forestin just 500 years.

(10:04):
One exception is Mount Rushmore.
Can you imagine being from another planetand popping down to Earth's surface
in, say, 100,000 years to take a ganderand seeing these faces
on a random mountainwith nothing else around?
How weird would that be?

(10:25):
My point
is that 12,500 years ago,
there very wellcould have been another civilization,
one that did use energy for daily living
and built the pyramidsas the power plants to cover their needs.
But they were wiped out in the YoungerDryas floods.
My favorite argument from mainstreamEgyptologists and archeologists

(10:47):
like our friend Zahi Hawass
against the Great Pyramid power planttheory,
is highlighting the complete absenceof any wiring,
conductors, outlets or distributioninfrastructure.
Physical traces that they say would beexpected for an electrical system.
But that's the point, isn't it?

(11:07):
It's wireless.
You're not going to see the standardtelephone poles we see today.
If this theory is correct,the infrastructure
to channel this energy to the massesis the, in most cases,
still standing obelisksdotting the Nile Valley,
that acted as receivers of the energywhich could be distributed from there.

(11:28):
But does it work?
Well, lots of people think it did.
Christopher Dunn has spelled outthe entire process in his books.
But let me give you the CliffsNotesversion for people like me
who are sometimes a little physicschallenged.
You know, I consider myself to be a prettysmart cookie, but for some reason,
I just have a mental blockwhen it comes to how electricity works.

(11:51):
I guess I just haven'tdug deep enough yet, but I managed to work
my way through thisfairly complicated process.
And it's pretty dang amazing.
Now, forgive meif I make this too simple for some people,
but I just want to make sureeveryone is tracking with me here.
First, we need to imagine electricityas an invisible river of electrons,

(12:13):
kind of like water rushing through a pipe,but it can make things
light up, heat up, or move without youseeing it.
So the trick is in creating that river.
Now, way down underthe pyramid is an aquifer.
The water running throughthat space is sloshing around due
to the Earth's interior movementand the back and forth of tidal forces.

(12:37):
That movement creates sound waves,almost like a heartbeat.
A steady pulsing.
Directly underthe base of the pyramid is a chamber
whose job it is to collectthose pulsing thumps and amplify them.
Those amplified sound wavesthen travel up through the granite stone
to the Queen's chamber, right above it.

(12:58):
The Queen's Chamber containsa chemical cocktail
of hydrochloric acid and zinc chloridethat are poured in from feeder
shafts on either side of the pyramidthat can be accessed from the exterior.
The amplified sound waves coming fromunder the chamber vibrate the chamber,
causing those two chemicals to mix,which in turn creates hydrogen gas.

(13:21):
The gasthen flows up through the Grand Gallery,
where increases the pressureon the gallery walls.
When the pressure squeezes those rocks,
the crystals in the rockpush electrons out of the rock
and into the air like squeezing a spongeto make water drip.
At the same time, just like blowingair over a bottle, the hydrogen gas

(13:44):
rushing through the gallery createsa hum - F-sharp to be exact.
As the sound, the gas, and the electronsall rush into the king's chamber
at the top of the gallery,which is built to amplify the sound waves
even more, the sound waves from that humorganize the hydrogen gas molecules,

(14:04):
which then herdall of the loose electrons into one giant,
orderly wave instead of letting themscatter everywhere.
That electron wave then moves upthrough the five layers of granite
piled on top of the King's chamber,which are also tuned to F-sharp,
adding even more electronsto the mix, strengthening flow even more

(14:28):
until it reaches the now missingand presumed
to at one pointhave been gold capstone at the top,
where the electron flow can be beamed outfor everyone to enjoy.
In short, vibrations turn to gas pressure.
Pressure squeezes rocks for electron flow.

(14:48):
More vibrations juiced the system
and the top serves upthe resulting electron river of power.
So what does any of this have to dowith how I live my life, right?
Well, keep following me and I'll show you.
Pop quiz.
Who invented the radio?
Marconi, right? Wrong.
That was Tesla.

(15:09):
Well, Tesla and a couple of others.
The point being that while Marconican keep the credit for making radio
commercially viable,his ideas were built on Tesla's ideas.
I'm sure most of you are familiarwith Nikola Tesla.
Maybe you just recognize the name,or know him as the guy who duked it out
with Thomas Edison.
But if you don't know any more than that,you should.

(15:32):
This guy is responsiblefor way more than half of the things
that make your life a first worldexistence.
Things like AM/FM radio.
Cell phones, WiFi. Neon signs.
Fluorescent light.
Hydroelectric dams. EVs.
Air conditioning.
Refrigerators. Washing machines. X-rays.

(15:53):
Wireless charging MRI's.
Induction cooktops.
Bluetooth. Digital TV. GPS.
Cordless power tools.
And last but not
least, the electricity to your house.
He is the reason we havethe wireless technology we have today.
Smartphones, tablets,electric toothbrushes,

(16:15):
electric shavers,smartwatches and earbuds are all things
that workbecause of wireless charging technology.
But Tesla was thinking way bigger.
In 1899,he built a test facility in Colorado
Springs to start experimenting on the ideaof wireless power distribution.
And it worked.

(16:36):
In one test, he built a giant Tesla coil,
which is basically a giant sparkmaking machine that turns normal
electricity into huge lightningbolts, walked hundreds of feet away
holding ordinary light bulbs with no wiresattached, and the bulbs lit up
just from the invisibleenergy waves in the air.

(16:56):
The result he got from those experimentsdrove him to go big or go home,
constructing an even bigger tower calledWardenclyffe in Long Island, New York.
Guess what?
The plans for that tower showthat he designed Wardenclyffe using the
same electron boosting principlesthat are used in the Khufu pyramid.

(17:18):
Tesla built Wardenclyffe over an aquifer.
Just like the Khufu pyramid.
But instead of using the sound wavescoming from the moving
water, Tesla went straight to the source,so to speak.
That same method of extracting electronsfrom pressurizing rock
that's used in the pyramid, also happensnaturally underground all the time.

(17:39):
So Tesla drilled copper wires like, 300ftinto the ground over his aquifer
to just collect the Earth’snaturally occurring current.
Inside the building,he used giant coils that vibrated at
low rhythms to match the planet's ownrhythm,
amplifying the power like the pyramidsresonating rooms.

(18:01):
The 187ft tower ended in a big copper
dome that acted like the pyramid’smissing gold cap,
to hold and send out energy as standingwaves through the earth and the sky.
No wires needed.
Free for the world.
So why didn't it work?
Well, Tesla got the fundingto build the Wardenclyffe tower from J.P.

(18:24):
Morgan, whom everyone pretty much knowswas a wealthy businessman
with business interest all over the place.
Morgan loved the ideawhen Tesla pitched it as advancing
communications technology,which it certainly would have done.
But once Tesla startstalking about how the experiments
he's running in the towerwould create free electricity, Morgan

(18:47):
no longer has interestin funding the tower.
That free electricitythat Tesla is so excited about
would decimate his portfolio.
So he shut off the funding spigot.
And with no other generousand visionary donors in sight,
Wardenclyffe effectivelybecame the world's biggest paperweight,

(19:08):
and was torn down in 1917and sold for scrap.
When Tesla dies,pretty much broke, in 1943,
80 boxes of his paperworkare confiscated by the US
Office of Alien PropertyCustodian, acting on orders from the FBI.
Even though he's beena naturalized citizen for 50 years

(19:30):
at this point, since he was bornin Austria, and it's 1943
and we're at war with them,so therefore, Tesla
was classified as an enemy alien.
But when his nephew came to collectwhat was now his,
only 60 boxes were delivered.
No one knows to this day what the FBI

(19:52):
is hiding in those 20 missing boxes.
Now, after getting through all of that,I started thinking.
I know, dangerous, right?
And came up with the coolest part.
I started thinking about the videoswe did a while ago with the new synthetic
aperture radar, or SAR scans done on theKhafre pyramid, the second largest one.

(20:16):
Links to
those videos will be in the descriptionif you want to learn more about that.
The inside of the Khafrepyramid doesn't look
anythinglike the inside of the Khufu pyramid.
But the SAR scans detectedthese large pillars
with tunnels or staircaseswinding around them, down about 2000ft,

(20:36):
where they hook up with two hugetube chambers
that are over 200ft on each side.
So here's my thought.
What if those underground chambersdeep in the ground are meant
to take the places of some of the chambersbuilt into the Khufu pyramid?
Maybe the KhafrePyramid is like Khufu Power plant 2.0.

(20:58):
Of course.
There's no way for us to find out for sureuntil we get more feedback
on those scan results,or until the Egyptian Minister of State
for Antiquities Affairsdecides to let excavations happen.
Not holding my breath on that one.
But let's be clear about exactlywhat's at stake here.

(21:20):
The scanning and testing and excavationsthat need to happen
to figure out the truth about whatthese monuments were actually for,
could have repercussionsfor all of humanity.
Tesla envisioned wireless energy as free
because it would tap Earth's ambientelectrical charge like a natural battery

(21:42):
and send that energy outthrough the ground and the air,
but with no wires, meters, or
per kilowatt hour billing.
To be clear, there would be huge costsupfront to get the infrastructure,
lots of towerslike Wardenclyffe all built,
and then there would be maintenance costsfor the towers after that.

(22:04):
But power could then flow globally
to anyone with a receiver,like tuning a radio.
But in the end, Teslajust couldn't sell the idea.
Or at the very least, he couldn'tfind the right person to sell the idea to.
Even if he found a new donor,getting free energy out to the masses

(22:25):
would mean taking on JPMorgan and others like him.
That would have been a very big task.
Interesting that in Tesla'ssearch for free power,
he was ultimately brought down by power.
In today's quest for the truth on the GizaPlateau
is also being stifled by power.

(22:51):
Not a huge surprise.
Every time someone comes upwith a new breakthrough idea of how
to generate limitless power, somehow
they just fade away into obscurity.
Because they know.
He who has the power has the power.

(23:12):
I know I got a little tinfoil
hat at the end of that one,but it's hard not to.
Sometimesyou just have to look past the matrix
and acknowledgewhat is staring you right in the face.
If you would like to break out
of the matrix even further,go ahead and watch this one.
It will blow a hole right through it.

(23:34):
Be careful out there.
And I will see youhere again, on The InBetween.
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