Conspiracy theories that Barron Trump, the youngest son of President Donald Trump, is a time traveller have been rekindled by a novel written more than 130 years ago.
The children’s book “Baron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey,” written in 1893 by American political author and novelist Ingersoll Lockwood, tells the story of a wealthy aristocratic youngster who lives in “Castle Trump” and is led to Russia by a man named “Don.”
Some have concluded that the Trump family has the ability to travel through time due to the book’s amazing stories and uncanny resemblance to the Trump family of today.
The outlandish notion has become so popular in recent years that Eric Trump’s wife, Lara Trump, was compelled to refute the rumours on her podcast on Thursday. She expressed amazement at the “amount of views that some of these videos get where they really dissect how this really worked out.”
I’m not attempting to ruin anyone or spoil any goodwill. In the most recent episode of The Right View with Lara Trump, Lara stated that Barron Trump is not a time traveller.
“Sorry to say it, I’m sorry, I broke a lot of people’s hearts today,” she added, referring to the hypothesis as “crazy.”
Next, Lara asked her audience to “Name me one time traveller.” I can’t think of anyone who truly believes that to be true.”People have gone so crazy about Barron Trump being a time traveller, but it doesn’t exist,” she remarked. “I don’t know what to tell you.” She went on, “I think it’s crazy.” I’ve known Barron for eighteen years. Alright, so he doesn’t go across time. I’ve watched him mature.
Barron Trump, President Donald Trump’s youngest son, has been accused by conspiracy theorists of being a time traveller.
Ingersoll Lockwood’s 1893 book “Baron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey” serves as the basis for this notion.
In Lockwood’s book, “the master of all masters,” a man named “Don,” leads Baron Trump—who has only one “r” in his first name—on a journey across Russia.
“The pathway to glory is strewn with pitfalls and dangers” is the Trump family slogan, as stated in the book.
Baron Trump is shown in the storybook as being extravagantly attired and adorned with gems when he departs Castle Trump and sets out for Russia in search of a portal to other realms.
According to the novel, Baron has a “very active brain,” an active imagination, and is bored with his opulent lifestyle.
However, Lockwood also penned the political fiction “The Last President,” which tells the story of a New York political outsider who wins the presidency.
The narrative begins in a chaotic New York City. It’s early November, shortly after a fiercely opposed candidate was elected.
The Women’s March, which started on the east side of the city the day after Donald Trump’s first inauguration, is in a “state of uproar.”
According to the 19th-century book, “Mobs of vast size are organising under the lead of anarchists and socialists, and threaten to plunder and despoil the houses of the rich who have wronged and oppressed them for so many years,” as police officers yelled through the streets.
The narrative goes on, “The Fifth Avenue Hotel will be the first to feel the fury of the mob. Would the troops be in time to save it?”
In the book, a wealthy aristocratic youngster from “Castle Trump” travels to Russia under the guidance of a guy named “Don.”
Eric Trump’s wife Lara Trump refuted the conspiracy notion on her podcast on Thursday.
Two streets from Trump Tower International on Fifth Avenue, the first Women’s March came to an end.
However, police barricades prevented the marchers from getting to the tower.
Some online users came to the conclusion that the Trump family must have travelled across time after noticing the parallels between Lockwood’s books and actual events.
They point out that Nikola Tesla’s documents were accessible to President Trump’s uncle, John Trump. In addition to being a futurist, physicist, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and inventor, Tesla was purportedly investigating time travel.
President Trump’s 2016 statement that “I know things that other people don’t know” and drawings of futuristic aeroplanes by Prussian immigrant Charles Dellschau, who arrived in the US in 1850 and passed away in 1923, have been used by theorists as proof.
Prior to his passing, Dellschau drew illustrations of fantastical flying aircraft he called “aeros,” which frequently resembled a combination of early airships, balloons, and crude aeroplanes.
They inexplicably have the word “TRUMP” and even the number 47, which conspiracy theorists say is a connection to Trump being the 47th president of the United States.
One of Dellschau’s drawings included a golden-haired person using a device bearing the number 45, which is another connection to Trump’s role as the 45th president.
Additionally, Lockwood authored the political fiction “The Last President,” which tells the story of a New York political outsider who wins the presidency.
Conspiracy theorists also use Charles Dellschau’s futuristic aircraft designs, which inexplicably include references to 45 and 47 as well as the term “Trump.” Both the 45th and 47th commanders in chief were President Donald Trump.
The American Visionary Art Museum in Maryland claims that Dellschau’s imaginary aircraft were propelled by “NB Gas,” also known as “supe,” an anti-gravity material that allowed them to fly without the usage of conventional fuels.
President Trump has promised to reveal the technology to the American people during his administration, and it is very similar to claims of UFOs, which the government refers to as Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.
No significant scientific organization, like NASA, has ever rejected the idea that time travel is not feasible.
In fact, a number of eminent scientists have asserted that time travel is feasible to some extent. One such study, published in the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity in 2020, demonstrated mathematically that backward time travel could occur without producing perplexing paradoxes or violating the laws of cause and effect.
In his 1994 book, renowned physicist Stephen Hawking contended that “the best evidence we have that time travel is not possible, and never will be, is that we have not been invaded by hordes of tourists from the future.”