442 lines
34 KiB
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442 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT #2 IS UPLOADED HERE WITH THE PERMISSION OF THE
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AUTHOR GLENN CAMPBELL.
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THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
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Issue #2. Feb. 2, 1994.
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-----> "The Naked Truth from Open Sources." <-----
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AREA 51/NELLIS RANGE/TTR/NTS/S-4?/WEIRD STUFF/DESERT LORE
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Written, published, copyrighted and totally disavowed by
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psychospy, direct from the "UFO Capital," Rachel, Nevada.
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See bottom for subscription/copyright info.
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In this issue...
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CALIENTE LAND GRAB HEARING
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THROW THE BUMS OUT
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LAS VEGAS HEARING DATE SET
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TRESPASSERS' TRIAL RESCHEDULED
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AN AMBASSADORIAL VISIT
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RECENT ARTICLES
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"PARANOID NEWS" LAUNCHED
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[Note: This file ends with "####". Check for truncation.]
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----- CALIENTE LAND GRAB HEARING -----
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About forty-five people packed the tiny VFW Hall in Caliente on
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Feb. 1 for the first of two public hearings on the Groom land
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grab. As expected, the event was attended primarily by Lincoln
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County residents and Nevada land-use advocates with a variety of
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objections, mostly unrelated to the Groom Lake base itself.
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Curtis Tucker, Caliente Area Manager for the Bureau of Land
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Management (BLM), presided over the hearing with admirable
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restraint and professionalism. Nine civilians spoke at the
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podium, all opposing the withdrawal, and many others asked
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questions, which Mr. Tucker did his best to answer.
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Representing the Air Force were two Nellis public relations
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staffers and a stone jawed Colonel, who did most of what little
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talking there was. Even the staffers didn't seem to know much
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about the Colonel; when we asked one of them for the Colonel's
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first name, he didn't know and had to ask. The officer was
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finally identified as Col. Bud Bennett, Range Squadron Commander,
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and his appearance and bearing reminded us vaguely of General
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Jack D. Ripper in the movie "Dr. Strangelove."
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For most of the meeting, Colonel Bennett sat silently at the
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front taking copious notes. He spoke at length only at the
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beginning, reading from index cards in a practiced monotone and
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offering precious little information beyond the one-liner given
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in the withdrawal application: "to ensure the public safety and
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the safe and secure operation of activities in the Nellis Air
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Force Range Complex." The Colonel said from the outset that
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there would be many questions that he could not answer, and he
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skillfully avoided most. Here are some of his more lively
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comments...
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"The military lands withdrawal act of 1986, with an amendment in
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1988, withdrew the land currently in the Nellis Range Complex.
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Certain elevations on the east side of the range were not
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included in the withdrawn area. Due to the increasing visits by
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people to this area, the Air Force determined that something had
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to be done to ensure public safety and the safety and security of
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operations in the Nellis Range Complex.
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"When someone is on White Sides and other nearby areas, altitude
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and route changes have to be made by aircraft to avoid harming
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people and to prevent disclosure of operational matters. Some
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missions have to be delayed or canceled. This impacts the
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effective use of the Nellis Range Complex.
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"The area proposed to be withdrawn was looked at very carefully
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and, in discussions with BLM, we were told to keep the amount to
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be withdrawn to an absolute minimum. We eventually did so,
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selecting several thousand acres less than originally was roughed
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out."
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That was it for informational content. The only other data the
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Colonel leaked out was in response to a question at the end of
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the meeting. When did he first learn about the current
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withdrawal? He said he was first informed of it around August.
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How long before that had the withdrawal been in the works? He
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said he did not know exactly, but that it was at least a year.
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(It is unclear now whether he meant a year before now or a year
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before August.)
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Citizens were allowed five minutes each to voice their concerns,
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a restriction that some chose to flaunt in a show of civil
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disobedience heartily supported by the audience. Most of the
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expected angles were covered: A representative of the Shoshone
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Nation pointed out that this land and most of the Nellis Range
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was deeded to the tribe by treaty in the 1800s and that the
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government had taken it without permission. Sadly, we suspect
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that this argument won't go any further now than it has in the
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past. Other speakers were concerned that the AF had not kept the
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promises it made for the earlier Groom Range withdrawal, such as
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paving the road from Rachel into the Test Site. Mr. Tucker
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countered that most of the promises he knew about had indeed been
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met. He noted that although the road from Rachel was not paved,
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it had been considerably improved at AF expense.
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This reporter exercised his five minutes standing in front of a
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big map of the area. He protested the vague reason the AF was
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giving for the withdrawal and said that the application could
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only be evaluated if the AF gave the real reason, which wasn't a
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national security issue in itself. He read a list of the major
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newspapers and defense publications [See below.] that had already
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reported on this land grab and described the Groom base as one of
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the best publicized defense installations in the world. Although
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acknowledging that some of the secrecy at Groom may be justified,
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he described the continued non-existence of the base as an
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absurdity.
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This speaker then noted that if the purpose of the withdrawal was
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to hide the base from public view, then the AF had failed once
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again. He pointed on the map to Tikaboo Peak and Badger Mtn.,
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which he said also offered a direct view of the base. He was
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concerned that, if the AF was allowed to take the current land
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for a vague reason like "the public safety," then it could come
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back later to take the other viewpoints for other vague reasons.
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Thereby, the AF could subvert the Engle Act, which requires
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withdrawals of more than 5000 acres to be reviewed by Congress.
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He concluded by warning the audience, "If we let this withdrawal
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go through for this vague reason, then they'll be able to take
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all of Nevada in little bitty pieces."
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Lincoln County Commissioner Eve Culverwell was mad as hell. (We
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wouldn't want her any other way.) She brought up some important
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points about mitigation and asked for the release of other lands
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in Lincoln County that the AF no longer needs. However, the
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focus of Culverwell's ire, and the principle target of many
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others in attendance, was not the AF but the BLM, which controls
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the vast majority of land in Nevada. Culverwell and other
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activists do not necessarily question the AF's right to take the
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land, but they say the AF should be dealing with the state and
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county, not BLM. They say the federal government has no real
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jurisdiction over public lands, based on statutes at the time of
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statehood. This rather radical approach throws a wild card into
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the land grab fight, and certainly adds some color to the
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proceedings. [More below.]
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In all, the hearing was lively but proceeded pretty much as
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anticipated. No one spoke in favor of the Air Force except for
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their hired representatives, but there was some pessimism among
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attendees as to whether even their near-total opposition made any
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difference. Several people voiced the concern that no matter
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what the citizens of Lincoln County said, their comments would
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simply be filed away and the AF was going to get the land anyway.
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We understand their pessimism but do not share it. The current
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battle is taking place on many different levels: in the media,
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along the border, within the BLM and inside the AF itself. The
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public hearings represent only the most obvious portion of a
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mostly subterranean conflict, but they are vital as a visible
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show of popular opposition and a preliminary step to future legal
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action. Remember that the land grab fight can be a powerful tool
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to achieve much larger goals. Our ultimate purpose is not so
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much to save the land but to expose the base, and that process
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seems to be marching ahead even more inexorably than the White
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Sides withdrawal.
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----- THROW THE BUMS OUT -----
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Speeches by Nevada "home-rule" activists greatly enlivened the
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Jan. 31 hearing. Seeing this land fight as a test case for their
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new ideas, several speakers drove hundreds of miles from other
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parts of Nevada to be in attendance. When a leader of the
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movement, Dick Carver, finally had his chance to speak, he
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announced that five minutes were not enough, and that he would go
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on as long as necessary. When the five-minute tone was sounded,
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the BLM moderator tried to interrupt but was rebuked by the
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audience, who unanimously demanded that Carver be allowed to
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continue. Carver thus walked away with about 15 minutes of air
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time and gave everyone in the audience the warm satisfaction of
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having beaten BLM into submission at least on that issue.
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Readers who live outside the western U.S. may have never even
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heard of BLM, never mind grasping the boundless animosity it
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often enjoys among locals. The vast majority of land in Lincoln
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County is "public," that is, owned equally by all U.S. citizens,
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and is currently managed as a public trust by the federal
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government. A significant portion of the economic activities in
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the county have to go through the BLM. It leases grazing and
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mineral rights and enforces many despised environmental
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regulations, thus placing it in the role of evil landlord who
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everyone loves to hate. Local sentiments are elegantly expressed
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by one resident's well-trained dog who stays, sits and lies down
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on command. The dog will also "kill" on command, but only on
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special key word. Give him a old shoe, say "BLM," and it's
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rendered to shreds instantly.
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The position of the revolutionaries is that the federal
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government has no right to manage public lands within the state
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and that it does so only by default. The activists cite statutes
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dating back to Nevada's founding which they contend give the
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state the sole authority to manage public lands. BLM, they say,
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has no real delegated authority to do anything, and they are
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trying to prove this by a series of Freedom of Information
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requests. Whenever an interesting legal case comes up in which
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BLM is the enforcer, they demand that BLM turn over documents to
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prove that they indeed have that authority. According to the
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activists, BLM is inherently unable to supply those documents and
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thus can be forced to back down from whatever action they were
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attempting.
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We are pleased that the rebels have adopted the Groom land grab
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as a cause celebre. Without them, there might have been only
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half as many people at the Caliente hearing. At the same time,
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we are a little confused on what the end result of this rebellion
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is supposed to be, and we are mildly skeptical about whether it
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can succeed.
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The current anti-BLM movement reminds us of a number of radical
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females we have known who would just as soon eliminate the male
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gender altogether. On the surface, we can understand the
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sentiments. Males must account for 85% of the violent acts in
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this country and easily 99% of the female grief and pain.
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They're aggressive, suppressive, insensitive and demand too much.
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Give them an inch and they'll take a mile. WHO NEEDS THEM
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ANYWAY? "Just say No," is the best solution. If you excise them
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definitively from your life then all your problems will be
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solved.
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Okay, so maybe that's a bad example. The point is, although such
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dramatic plans to "Throw the Bums Out" may seem solid in theory,
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they usually get tripped up somewhere in the implementation. We
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march into the battle with high idealistic hopes but a few years
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later usually find ourselves living with the bums anyway. Given
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this typical outcome, one wonders if it would be more productive
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to take a less combative approach that might be more likely to
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succeed in the long term. Instead of expending all our resources
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in an attempt to totally annihilate the enemy, we could take the
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time to understand him, learn his fears and vulnerabilities and
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the kind of leverage we have over him, then take him by the balls
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and turn him into our slave.
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No, wait, never mind. BAD example.
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----- LAS VEGAS HEARING DATE SET -----
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The Las Vegas hearing on the Groom land grab has been officially
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set for Weds., March 2, 1994 from 5-7 pm at the Cashman Field
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House, rooms 203-204. (Cashman Field House is a stadium complex
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on Las Vegas Blvd. just north of Downtown.)
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This is the BIG ONE. (Caliente was only 4.0.) Everyone's
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invited! More info will be provided in Desert Rat #3, which will
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be issued at least a couple of weeks before then.
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----- TRESPASSERS' TRIAL DELAYED -----
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In Desert Rat #1, we reported the case of the seven Las Vegans
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who stumbled across the military border while visiting the
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Tikaboo Valley. Due to their lawyer's schedule conflicts, their
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trial, originally scheduled for Mar. 2, has been delayed to a
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later date. (We'll publish the date when we know it.) The
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location will be Alamo Justice Court in the County Annex Building
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in Alamo, 90 miles north of Las Vegas. Come one, come all!
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The change of date is providential because it means that the
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trial will not compete with the Las Vegas hearing.
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----- AN AMBASSADORIAL VISIT -----
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On Jan. 28 at our psychospy headquarters in Rachel, we were
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pleased to receive a surprise visit from the Ambassador Merlyn
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Merlin II from the planet Draconis. He had taken human form,
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resembling to us a bearded Abe Lincoln or Amish farmer, and was
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driving a 10-year-old brown Monte Carlo. When he first appeared
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at our door, he was holding a small black book in front of him in
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both hands. In an impulsive attempt at humor, we blurted out,
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"Oh, a Bible salesman!" He smiled at that and showed us that it
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was only a notebook. The bible, it seems, was out in the car.
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Later, he went to fetch it and read to us some lengthy passages.
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Three aviation watchers from the Bay Area happened to be visiting
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our headquarters at the time, and we were all quite fascinated
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with the Ambassador. He was a "Being of Light," he said,
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although we touched him and found him to be quite solid. He was
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on a mission to promote the coming "Golden Age," when the aliens
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would be integrated into our society and we humans would evolve
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into a higher form. This transformation, he said, would take
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place within the next five years.
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The Ambassador did not always know that he was a Draconian. He
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had thought he was an ordinary human for most of his time on
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earth until he began to experience some revelations in 1986.
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Even now, he has no direct memories of Draconis, although he is
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certain that that is his origin. He said that another part of
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him was on Draconis even as he was speaking to us. He suspected
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that he was also simultaneously a Venusian and that part of his
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being was currently at home on Venus.
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He was proud of his role as Ambassador to Earth and was
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especially pleased to be officially recognized in that capacity
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by the State of Nevada. He gave us a xeroxed letter to prove his
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status. It was on official state letterhead from the Secretary
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of State in Carson City. The letter was dated March 31, 1993,
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and was signed by the secretary herself. It read:
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Ambassador Merlyn Merlin II
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The Embassy of Christ
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Dear Mr. Ambassador:
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Thank you for your invitation; however, I will not be able
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to be in California. Thank you for your consideration.
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Sincerely,
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Cheryl A. Lau
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We wish the Ambassador the best of luck in his mission and urge
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the Federal government to accord him similar recognition.
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----- RECENT ARTICLES -----
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Following are recent articles on Groom Lake in the major media.
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Each article is available from psychospy
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for 25c each (to cover
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copying and postage).
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5/93: On-Site Inspection Agency: Fact Sheet on Open Skies
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Treaty [which allows foreign overflights of Groom Lake].
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9/93: Intl. Defense Review: "Groom Lake's secret revealed?"
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[Mothership theories, by Sweetman.]
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10/19/93: L.V. Review-Journal: "State to examine Stealth base
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for toxic fumes." [Hazardous waste dump at Groom base.]
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10/17/93: Salt Lake Tribune: "No peeking from peak: Air force
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wants to seize mountain to protect secret base."
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10/18/93: Federal Register "Notice of proposed withdrawal and
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opportunity for public meeting."
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10/21/93, Aerospace Daily: "Air Force tries to plug 37-year-old
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leak with Groom Lake Land Grab."
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10/23/93, L.V. Review-Journal: "Air Force promises openness" [in
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open-pit burning case].
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10/23/93, Scripps Howard Service: "Mountain 'spying' upsets AF at
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secret Nevada base."
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10/25/93, Defense Week: "Air Force land grab eclipses view of
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'UFOs'."
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10/29/93, Inside the Air Force: "USAF seeks to keep unwanted eyes
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from watching secret Nevada base."
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11/1/83, Newsweek: "The Mystery at Groom Lake."
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11/1/93, Testor Corp.: Announcement to dealers of June 94 release
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of Lazar saucer model.
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11/1/93, Aviation Week: "No more peeks." [one paragraph]
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11/5/93, CBS affiliates: Report on Testors Aurora & Mothership
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models. [transcript]
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12/93, Intercepts Newsletter: "Dispatches from the front." [Road
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sensors found on public land]
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11/6/93, L.V. Review-Journal: "State seeks evidence of burn pits"
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[at Groom base].
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12/5/93, L.V. Review-Journal: "'Spy' turns focus on buffer area."
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[Campbell]
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12/5/93, L.V. Review-Journal: "Budget for hypersonic spy plane
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rivals Nevada Test Site."
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12/7/93: L.V. Review-Journal: Editorial cartoon. [Prospector
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chased by security goons.]
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12/27/93, High Country News: "How military secrecy zones out
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Nevada." [Oct. camp-out]
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11/11/93, CBS Evening News: Report on Testors Aurora model and
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Groom Lake. [transcript]
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12/28/93, Wall Street Journal: "'Earthlings Welcome' in tiny NV
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town where mysterious aircraft often fly overhead."
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1/2/94, Washington Post: "The Pentagon's Secret Garden." [by
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Sweetman]
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1/3/94, Aviation Week: Letter by John Andrews protesting land
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grab.
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1/5/94, L.V. Review-Journal: "Seven people arrested in Groom Lake
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incident." [Trespassers]
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1/29/94, L.V. Review-Journal: Editorial re: Lazar and Knapp
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[dismissive].
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1/30/94, L.V. Review-Journal: "Air Force buffer zone for Groom
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Lake base to be discussed." [Hearings]
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2/94: Wired Magazine: "A Visit to Dreamland." [2-page photo of
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Groom base]
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----- "PARANOID NEWS" LAUNCHED -----
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Pleased with the instant success of The Groom Lake Desert Rat,
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|
psychospy has launched yet another free on-line newsletter--this
|
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|
one on an unrelated subject. THE PARANOID NEWS will explore
|
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|
psychospy's favorite mental disorder, paranoia, and show how it
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|
effects the thoughts and behavior of all of us.
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|
Paranoia is a fascinating mechanism by which a person tends to
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|
bring about the very thing he most fears. If he is terrified
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|
enough of failure, then he will often create it for himself by
|
||
|
his own hand. Paranoia is more pervasive than we might suppose,
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||
|
and there is not one of us who isn't touched. Paranoia effects
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|
our every decision, especially our most important ones, so don't
|
||
|
read this newsletter unless you are prepared to question your
|
||
|
past choices or the wisdom of your current circumstances. This
|
||
|
is not a pretty newsletter. There are a lot of icky things
|
||
|
inside our minds, and THE PARANOID NEWS will delight in exposing
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Issue #1 will be available within the next few days. Email
|
||
|
subscriptions are free of charge to internet users. Send your
|
||
|
request to psychospy@aol.com. Hard copy subscriptions are
|
||
|
available for $1.50 per issue, mailed anywhere in the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----- SUBSCRIPTION AND COPYWRITE INFO -----
|
||
|
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|
(c) Glenn Campbell, 1994. (psychospy@aol.com)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The entire contents of this on-line newsletter are copyrighted
|
||
|
and may not be reproduced in any form without permission, EXCEPT
|
||
|
FOR THE FOLLOWING: For six months following the date of
|
||
|
publication, you may photocopy this text or send this document
|
||
|
electronically to anyone who you think might be interested,
|
||
|
provided you do it without charge. You may only copy or send
|
||
|
this document in unaltered form and in its entirety, not as
|
||
|
partial excerpts. After six months, no further reproduction of
|
||
|
this document is allowed without permission.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This newsletter is published on an irregular basis whenever
|
||
|
conditions warrant. Email subscriptions are currently available
|
||
|
free of charge to any internet user. To subscribe (or
|
||
|
unsubscribe) to current and future editions of THE GROOM LAKE
|
||
|
DESERT RAT, send a message to psychospy@aol.com. We will
|
||
|
acknowledge your request within a few days; if you receive no
|
||
|
reply it may indicate an addressing problem. In that case, call
|
||
|
the human at 702-729-2648. Hard copy subscriptions to this
|
||
|
newsletter are available for $1.50 per issue, ordered from the
|
||
|
address below. (e.g. $15 for the next 10 issues, mailed anywhere
|
||
|
in the world.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a free catalog of documents and products relating to Groom
|
||
|
Lake and government secrecy, send us your US mail address. An
|
||
|
email version of the catalog is also available (no pictures, size
|
||
|
13K). Among the documents available is the "Area 51 Viewer's
|
||
|
Guide," the definitive 110-page visitors and reference guide to
|
||
|
the border and its lore. (Available for $15 plus $3.50 postage.)
|
||
|
Also available is the popular Groom Lake cloth patch. ($8, plus
|
||
|
$1 postage if ordered separately.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The US mail address for psychospy, Glenn Campbell, Secrecy
|
||
|
Oversight Council, Area 51 Research Center, Groom Lake Desert Rat
|
||
|
and countless other ephemeral entities is:
|
||
|
HCR Box 38
|
||
|
Rachel, NV 89001 USA
|
||
|
|
||
|
####
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