If you're a DJT hodler, an energy nerd, pay too much in energy bills, or just want some utopian hopium, this is a good video about the promise of DJT's fusion reactor. https://youtu.be/X2SiNBr67pg
And we know that he's still got a great record of keeping promises, especially the crazy ones.
From Promethean Science, it's a breakdown of why we'll get free energy (not actually free but at a cost that's negligible) soon, presuming the reactor is all it's cracked up to be. Video is under 10 minutes and very relatable.
The other videos on the channel also look good, but I haven't watched them yet. If anyone wants to review one of them below, please do. Enjoy!
We all hope for an energy pot of gold; is TAE it? TAE Technologies (pronounced "T-A-E"), a well-established and legitimate private company in the clean energy sector. TAE Technologies is a real American fusion energy company founded in 1998 (originally as Tri Alpha Energy). It is headquartered in Foothill Ranch, California, and focuses on developing aneutronic fusion power using a proprietary advanced beam-driven field-reversed configuration (FRC) approach, primarily with hydrogen-boron fuel. The company has: • Raised significant funding over the years, including investments from Google (which has partnered with them on AI/machine learning for fusion research). • Built multiple generations of experimental fusion devices (six completed, with a seventh in development as of recent updates). • Published numerous peer-reviewed papers and presented at scientific conferences. • Spun off subsidiaries like TAE Power Solutions (energy storage) and TAE Life Sciences (cancer therapy applications). • Announced ambitious goals, including aiming for a prototype commercial fusion reactor and net energy milestones. In late 2025, TAE Technologies made headlines with a major all-stock merger deal valued at over $6 billion with Trump Media and Technology Group (the parent of Truth Social). This would make the combined entity a publicly traded company focused on fusion power development, alongside other ventures, with plans mentioned for starting construction on a utility-scale fusion plant. While fusion power remains an emerging (and still pre-commercial) technology—no company has achieved sustained net-positive fusion energy at scale yet—TAE is widely regarded as a serious player in the field, backed by credible investors, scientists, and ongoing R&D. TAE Technologies' path to commercialization of fusion energy—defined here as deploying grid-connected power plants that generate and sell electricity at scale—has accelerated based on recent technical breakthroughs and the pending merger with Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG). However, fusion remains a high-risk, capital-intensive field with historical delays across the industry, so timelines are aspirational and subject to technical, regulatory, and funding hurdles. Here's a breakdown of their projected speed to commercialization, drawing from official announcements, recent progress, and analyst perspectives as of February 2026. Current Status and Recent Milestones TAE has operated five experimental fusion devices since 1998, with the latest, Norman (Norm), achieving record plasma temperatures, stability, and efficiency using a simplified neutral beam injection (NBI) approach. tae.com This has allowed them to shorten their roadmap by skipping a planned sixth machine (Copernicus) and moving directly toward a prototype commercial reactor called Da Vinci. tae.com They've also published peer-reviewed results on enhancing hydrogen-boron fusion reactions, their preferred aneutronic fuel, which produces minimal radioactive waste. @TAENon-fusion spin-offs, like power management for EVs and cancer therapy, provide interim revenue streams. The December 2025 merger with TMTG, valued at over $6 billion, is set to close in mid-2026 and inject significant capital (including $200 million upfront from TMTG), enabling faster scaling. tae.com This positions TAE as one of the first publicly traded fusion companies, with a focus on powering AI data centers and grid infrastructure. Projected Timeline to Commercialization based on TAE's statements and third-party analyses, here's their outlined path: • 2026: Site Selection and Construction Start – Post-merger, the combined company plans to select a site and begin building the world's first utility-scale fusion power plant (50 megawatts electric, or MWe). This is targeted for some time in 2026, subject to regulatory approvals, incentives, and site negotiations (e.g., 20+ acres near grids, talent hubs, and supportive governments). tae.com Site scouting is underway, with potential locations like Texas (e.g., near the old Superconducting Super Collider site) being discussed in public forums. @smokyjinx777 Continued data from Norm will validate components for larger systems. • 2026–2028: Construction and Testing Phase – Building the initial 50 MWe plant could take 2–3 years, drawing parallels to other fusion prototypes. This era focuses on engineering integration, net energy gain demonstrations (where energy output exceeds input), and regulatory milestones. TAE's simplified design reduces complexity, potentially speeding this up. reddit.com Early 2030s: First Commercial Power Generation – TAE aims for net energy and initial power on the grid by around 2030–2031, with the 50 MWe plant as a pilot. Follow-on plants (350–500 MWe) could scale up shortly after, targeting full commercialization (revenue from electricity sales) by the early 2030s. tae.com Some sources project the first plant generating power by 2031, aligning with broader industry goals where competitors like Commonwealth Fusion Systems target similar timelines. businesscraft.se In optimistic scenarios, if Norm's efficiencies hold and funding flows uninterrupted, TAE could hit commercialization in 5–7 years from now (by 2031–2033). This is faster than their pre-2025 projections, which aimed for the mid-2030s. Potential Speed Bumps and Realism Check: • Technical Risks: Achieving sustained net energy gain at scale remains unproven for any fusion company. TAE's aneutronic approach (hydrogen-boron) requires extreme temperatures, adding challenges, though they have a "tritium parachute" fallback for easier fuels. futurumgroup.com Regulatory and Funding: Approvals from bodies like the NRC or DOE could delay construction. The merger provides capital, but the combined entity has no binding obligation to build, per SEC filings—it's forward-looking. enr.comIndustry-wide, timelines often slip (e.g., ITER's delays). • Comparisons: Peers like Helion aim for 2028 power delivery, but TAE's beam-driven FRC is seen as more de-risked for long-term scalability. neutronbytes.com Analysts call TAE's 2026 construction start "very ambitious." finance.yahoo.com Overall, TAE might achieve initial commercialization in the early 2030s if everything aligns, potentially 4–7 years from the merger close. This positions them as a leader in the race, fueled by AI-driven energy demand, but expect possible extensions given fusion's track record Critics of TAE Technologies (formerly Tri Alpha Energy) primarily focus on the company's long history, ambitious claims, technical challenges, and the recent high-profile merger with Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG). While TAE has credible backers (e.g., Google, Chevron) and published peer-reviewed work, skepticism persists in scientific, industry, and media circles. Here's a summary of the main lines of criticism as of mid-February 2026: Overhyped or Unrealistic Timelines TAE has been developing fusion since 1998, with repeated promises of breakthroughs and commercialization that have shifted over time. Critics point to a pattern of "ever-delaying timelines," with some calling it part of the broader fusion industry's joke that it's "always 30 years away." • Experts and commentators argue that claims like "first power in 2031" or a utility-scale plant starting construction in 2026 are overly optimistic or lack justification, given the unproven scale-up from experimental devices like Norman to full commercial reactors. • Retired physicist Daniel Jassby (formerly of Princeton Plasma Physics Lab) has broadly dismissed early-2030s grid power claims from fusion startups (including TAE) as having "no justification." • In fusion community discussions (e.g., on Reddit's r/fusion), users note TAE's history of abandoning or adjusting ambitious goals, like shifting from p-B11 fuel priorities or skipping planned machines, while still projecting rapid progress. Technical and Scientific Skepticism TAE's field-reversed configuration (FRC) approach and preference for aneutronic hydrogen-boron (p-B11) fusion are innovative but seen as more challenging than mainstream deuterium-tritium methods used by tokamaks or stellarators. • Some plasma physicists have long argued the approach faces fundamental hurdles in achieving the extreme conditions needed for net energy gain at scale, with performance lagging behind other designs in key metrics. • Competitors (e.g., in Washington state's fusion hub) have called CEO Michl Binderbauer's claim that "the science is solved" disingenuous, noting that while progress exists, the field remains far from solved. • Broader fusion experts highlight ongoing issues like plasma stability, confinement at high temperatures (>100 million °C), and engineering integration, which no company has fully overcome for sustained net-positive output. Concerns Over Hype and Distraction from Proven TechFusion advocates (including former officials like John Holdren, ex-Obama science adviser) warn that excessive hype around companies like TAE could be "dangerous," frustrating investors, creating false hope as a climate "silver bullet," and diverting resources from deployable renewables like wind and solar. Overall, while TAE is not dismissed as fraudulent (it's a legitimate, funded player with real R&D and spin-offs), critics portray it as emblematic of fusion's chronic optimism—bold claims backed by impressive but incremental progress, yet still facing massive hurdles to commercialization. Supporters counter that breakthroughs (e.g., simplified NBI, cost reductions) and new capital from the merger could finally accelerate things, but skeptics urge caution given the sector's history of overpromising. For deeper dives, check sources like GeekWire or fusion forums.
With AI datacenters popping up all over the place, there will be a very huge advantage to the civilization that unlocks near-free electricity production. No time for leftist "green energy" bullshit because if we sit on the road and refuse to innovate, then China will do it for us and leave us in the dust.
Can't wait!
Would he use Tesla’s science?
Don't know if Tesla did nuclear fusion specifically, I don't think so, but it's hard to do anything with electricity without tripping over some of Tesla's patents!
There is so much free energy tech, I'm not sure it really matters. I'm sure one will prove superior, but just cold fusion is enough and well established.
Wasn't his uncle a professor at MIT? I remember there being some kind of connection there with Tesla.
Yes
Doesn't look like it,but who knows what he had in his notes......
I hope to pick up some more shares soon.
This technology is the fulfillment of Einstein's E=MC².
What do you think this will do for the DJT shares I have been holding. To the moon?
🚀👨🚀 And all us early anons get a window seat!
I'm not sure the merger will be allowed to happen.
DJT just did a shareholder count and is issuing a loyalty token, think of it like a crypto rewards program, noncash value, and can't be transferred. IE not a securities....
They're they are issuing this token to expose the shorts on DJT. I think once the shorts are exposed Trump will be allowed to go after them. But I think the only reason that's going to be the case is because the fusion company is going to say we don't want to merge with a stock that's got illegal activity from The brokerages and the dtcc and hedge funds on it. Then Trump can go in and clean up the shorts because National Security was hurt.
I put a lot of thought into this and I think this is the way it's going to go down. I mean think about it this way. How does it look politically if Trump's company merges with a fusion company that was funded by the department of energy? But if the merger isn't allowed to happen because of the shorts well then Trump looks better.
I could be wrong but I still think this thing's going to squeeze. And that squeeze is probably going to cause gme to squeeze as well.
Very interesting theory and I like it. I thought it was a rather strange merger.
Yes, but also DJT is a Holding Company now like Berkshire Hathaway, so it's not as odd on its face. Plus the second T in TMTG stands for technology. If we just think of it as a Twitter clone merging with a fusion company it is odd tho.
BTW GME and DJT are both holding companies and that have been heavily shorted. They have shares to sell into a squeeze. When the big squeeze happens and margin calls happen then Hedge Funds Longs get liquidated and there will be a fire sale.
I think they will both be close to Berkshire Hathaway in size after the squeeze.
Which lead me to wondering how/if I sell. Do I sell some on the way up and hold some or do I sell it all and wait for the price to come back down.
I wish Q had a post for this topic....
as the dark Eps. details reached the news., this topic of fusion will be a good one for me to talk with my retired physicist, Uncle, front door light
Even though I have limited information on the TAE system, I believe it is an excellent approach. The thermal to electric energy conversion efficiency is my primary information desire. What is significant to me is that Wall Street is constantly driving down the price of Trump Media to mess with the deal. That shows me how scared they are of it.
A bit sliding the subject, but if you like nerdy techy stuff I just read this article about how a Dutch company is experimenting with using atoms and wave frequencies to build microchips, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiUHjLxm3V0&t=1319s
This is great. I knew they were way more significant than most people realize. It is amazing what they went through.
There is a Wardencllffe tower in Texas and another near Moscow, this tech was proved to work but was stopped when JP Morgan realised it couldn't be metered. All it would need is another 3 of 4 towers around the world and we have free energy forever.
This is the company behind the Texas Tower. https://www.quantumwave.com/
The Company that was behind the Moscow tower is not there anymore, it was sold to a US buyer. https://web.archive.org/web/20140620093523/http://globalenergytransmission.com/index.php/en/vtem-home
We'd also need mass creation and adoption of receivers. Do you think that the fusion reactor is a bridge technology, to fill the gap by using existing wired infrastructure, before homes and cars etc are ready for wireless?
The recivers are easy enough. Hammer some iron or steel poles as far into the earth as you can, attach a specialised electro magnetic box to the top of the steel rod and up comes power. I belive it will be DC but thats why inverters exist.
If you need more power hammer some more rods into the ground and connect them together in either series or parrallel .As to the techicalities of this box I don't know, my assumption is that they are easy enough for a qualified electrician to build. I think people are confused by the word wireless and think it will be like wifi insted of earth energy
And then there is the tech of Tom Beardens Miotionless Electromagnetic Generator (MEG) This has been replicated by J Laudin but is a puzzle to most, myself included. Ignore the videos about this on youtube.
Love the idea. The website talks about wireless transmission to power cars and other forms of transportation, so stationary ground-embedded rods aren't the ticket, at least not for transportation. Guess I'll have to wait for now.
There have been many free energy inventions, my favorite is Viktor Schauberger.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yXPrLGUGZsw
Thanks! I'll check it out.