Video•Apr 30, 2026
Could Anti-Gravity Really Be Possible?
The video examines whether true anti‑gravity can be realized, sparked by recent UAP disclosures and congressional hearings, but quickly grounds the discussion in established physics.
It explains that aircraft, rockets, and magnetic levitation achieve lift through aerodynamics, thrust, or electromagnetism—not gravity cancellation. NASA’s vacuum tests of ion lifters and the Microscope satellite’s equivalence‑principle measurements found no anomalous forces, and CERN’s Alpha‑g experiment showed antihydrogen falls like ordinary matter.
The presenter cites historic outliers such as Ning Li’s AC‑gravity superconducting disk and Evgeny Podkletnov’s rotating‑superconductor claims, both of which have never been independently reproduced. Boeing’s rumored GRASP project and speculative gravito‑electromagnetism are mentioned, but no public evidence confirms any functional anti‑gravity propulsion.
The takeaway is that without a breakthrough in quantum gravity or negative‑mass physics, anti‑gravity remains speculative. Investors and defense planners should treat current claims as unverified, focusing instead on incremental advances in propulsion and space‑flight technologies.