Georgia Retiree Pays $14/Month for Electricity While Neighbors Pay $200+ — His Secret Is Out

His Neighbor Gary Pays $14 a Month for Electricity.
Michael Garnett — Same Street, Same House — Pays $230.
He Finally Knocked on Gary's Door.

Gary is a 61-year-old retired schoolteacher from Georgia. No solar panels. No special utility rate. No engineering degree. He built a quiet, compact device in his backyard for around $200 and one Saturday afternoon — and has paid almost nothing for electricity in four consecutive years.

"I stood on the sidewalk staring at that $14 bill like an idiot. My bill the month before had been $230." — Michael Garnett, Augusta, GA
Watch the Free Presentation Now

Free to watch. No sign-up needed. This video has been targeted for removal before.

The $14 Bill in the Recycling Bin That Changed the Way 102,000 Americans Think About Electricity

Michael's monthly bill
$230
Same Georgia summer.
Same air conditioner running flat out.
Gary's monthly bill
$14
4 years straight.
Retired schoolteacher, age 61.

It was not supposed to be visible. Gary had left his recycling bin at the end of the driveway and his electric bill was sitting right on top — unfolded, face up, readable from the sidewalk. Michael Garnett saw it on his way back from his own mailbox. He told himself he must have misread it. He had not misread it.

Three weeks later, he knocked on Gary's door. Gary led him through the back gate. Against the wall of the garage, tucked out of sight, was a device. Not solar panels. Not a wind turbine. Nothing Michael recognized. Compact. Quiet. Completely unremarkable to look at.

Do You Recognize Any of These?
Check the situations that describe your own electricity bills. Your score will reveal how urgent your situation is.
Mild Frustration (1 pt each)
Getting Worse (2 pts each)
Urgent Situation (3 pts each)
Score: 0 / 32

"Built it myself," Gary said. "Parts cost me about $200. Took one Saturday afternoon."

— Gary, 61-year-old retired schoolteacher, Augusta, Georgia

Gary was not an engineer. He was not a survivalist or a tech enthusiast. He liked woodworking and grew tomatoes in the summer. And he had been paying $14 a month for electricity — for four years in a row — while Michael had been paying $230 or more every single month without once questioning it.

Michael did the math on the drive home. Four years at roughly $210 less per month than Gary. The gap between Gary's household budget and his own was close to $10,000. Ten thousand dollars that Gary had kept. That Michael had sent directly to the power company. And all Gary had done was spend $200 and one afternoon.

What Michael learned over the following weeks — about the technology, about where it came from, about why almost no one had ever heard of it — was not what he expected. The story reaches back over 130 years, to a laboratory fire on Fifth Avenue in New York City that destroyed an inventor's life work almost overnight. The people who benefited from that fire knew exactly what they were doing.

Gary built his device using plans based on a patent that was filed in 1894, then buried. The inventor was left with nothing. Over 102,000 families now know how to build the same device themselves — and their electricity bills tell the same story Gary's does. In the presentation below, you will learn exactly what Gary showed Michael in that backyard — and why the energy companies have worked for decades to make sure you never do.

Watch the Full Presentation Now

Free to watch. The presentation has been targeted for removal. Watch while it is still available.