901 lines
47 KiB
Plaintext
901 lines
47 KiB
Plaintext
The following article should be supplied to ALL UW students in ALL UW
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courses in political science, history, economics, science, etc.:
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STS-1 DISASTER/COVERUP
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Dr. Beter AUDIO LETTER #64 of 80
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Digitized by Jon Volkoff, email address eidetics@cerf.net
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"AUDIO LETTER(R)" is a registered trademark of Audio Books,
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Inc., a Texas corporation, which originally produced this tape
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recording. Reproduced under open license granted by Audio
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Books, Inc.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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This is the Dr. Beter AUDIO LETTER(R), 1629 K Street N.W.,
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Washington, DC 20006
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Hello, my friends, this is Dr. Beter. Today is April 27,
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1981, and this is my AUDIO LETTER No. 64.
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"T minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4...We've gone for main engine
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start. We have main engine start." (Engine noise takes over for
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some two seconds) "...liftoff of America's first Space Shuttle,
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and the Shuttle has cleared the tower." (Then again the roaring
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noise on the AUDIO LETTER tape.)
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And that's how it all began, my friends, just two weeks
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ago--Sunday, April 12, 1981. After years of delay, America's
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first attempt to launch a space shuttle into orbit had finally
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begun.
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In days gone by, the voice of "Mission Control" has always
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been a familiar hallmark of American manned flights into space.
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In the early days, beginning with "PROJECT MERCURY", the voice
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was that of Col. John (Shorty) Powers. Later, during the
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"APOLLO" program there were other voices; but regardless of who
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it was, that familiar voice of "Mission Control" would always
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stay with us throughout each space flight--that is, until this
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time. This time the voice of Mission Control, up until the
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moment of launch, was that of NASA spokesman Hugh Harris. The
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last words Harris spoke as the voice of Mission Control were the
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words you just heard: "The Shuttle has cleared the tower."
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Television cameras followed the Shuttle as it climbed higher
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and higher on a column of steam and smoke. For another 30
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seconds or so, we were allowed to hear the slowly fading roar of
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the Shuttle's rocket engines. Then the sounds from Mission
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Control abruptly changed. Exactly 45 seconds after lift-off,
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"live" audio from Mission Control was terminated. In its place
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NASA began feeding the radio and television networks an elaborate
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tape recording, which had been prepared far ahead of time by
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NASA. The change-over from "live" audio to the NASA tape
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recording sounded like this: (First, loud roaring for 10 seconds,
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abruptly fading, then into a steadily increasing-in-loudness
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humming-roaring for some 10 seconds.) "4-34...?" "Roger."
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(More of the roaring sound.)
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Just 45 seconds after lift-off, the falsified NASA coverage of
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the flight of the "Columbia" began. We were still able to see
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the Columbia by way of long-distance television cameras for
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another minute and a half, but the sounds we were hearing were no
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longer "live." They were the sounds of the special NASA tape
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recording. For the first minute or so of the tape recording, we
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heard nothing but the sound effects simulating conversation
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between the Shuttle and NASA-Houston. Then, for the first time,
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we heard the anonymous new voice of Mission Control. It was no
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longer the familiar live voice of Hugh Harris, but the recorded
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voice of someone else. For added realism, the new voice was
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interrupted in turn by the recorded voice of the alleged capsule
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communicator Daniel Brandenstein. It sounded like this: (first a
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high-pitched screech followed by) "One minute 45 seconds, coming
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up on go-go-go." "Columbia, you're negative seats." "That
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call-up says that, Columbia, the altitude is too high for
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ejection seat use."
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By that point the shuttle Columbia was more than 20 miles
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high, and climbing fast. Everything was going according to plan
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so far, so the things we were hearing on the tape recording
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corresponded to what we were seeing. We could still see the
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Shuttle on our TV sets, but it had dwindled to nothing more than
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three bright spots dancing in the distant sky.
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The last thing that you and I were able to see and verify for
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ourselves about the Shuttle was the separation of those two giant
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solid-rocket boosters. A little over two minutes after liftoff,
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we were able to watch the boosters, two burning bright spots,
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break off to each side. That left only the single tiny flame of
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the Shuttle itself, gradually fading into invisibility. Several
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seconds later the NASA tape recording caught up with what we had
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already seen, and said the boosters had separated. Moments later
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the tiny bright dot of the Shuttle faded from our screens. It
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was too far away for the television cameras to follow any longer.
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We had had our last look at the real space shuttle Columbia!
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In AUDIO LETTER No. 62 two months ago, I gave an advance alert
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about the secret military mission of the space shuttle Columbia.
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At that time I made public what the mission was really all about.
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I was also able to reveal what to expect in the falsified NASA
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coverage of the mission.
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The falsified coverage was designed to accomplish two
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purposes. First, to completely hide the military nature of the
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mission; and second, to make sure the mission looked like a total
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success, no matter what might happen in secret. As I detailed in
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AUDIO LETTER No. 62, the Bolsheviks here in the federal
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government are depending heavily on the Space Shuttle Program to
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get ready for a nuclear war against Russia.
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The falsified NASA coverage of the mission of the space
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shuttle Columbia was carried out exactly according to plan. I
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revealed this plan two months ago. There were the standard brief
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cockpit scenes made by techniques which I will describe later.
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Just to make it look good, it was spiced up by telling us that a
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few non-critical tiles had fallen off. Otherwise we were told
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over and over how perfectly the Columbia was performing.
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Four days ago on April 23, a news conference about the flight
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was held in Houston, Texas, by the alleged two astronauts, John
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Young and Robert Crippen. The entity called John Young summed up
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the flight in words that were more meaningful than most people
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suspected. Referring to the falsified flight which we followed
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on television, he called it, quote: "...even better than normal."
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And so it was, my friends. The Bolsheviks who now control NASA
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bent over backwards to paint the image of an abnormally perfect
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shuttle flight. Meanwhile the actual Shuttle mission, which was
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carried out in secret, did not go according to plan. After the
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Shuttle disappeared from our television screens, the flight
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continued for barely four more minutes before disaster struck.
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The Columbia never even reached earth orbit!
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My friends, I believe you have both the right and the need to
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know what happened to the space shuttle Columbia two weeks ago.
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I believe you deserve to know, in detail, how and why the truth
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was hidden from you. The stakes involve nothing less than the
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very survival of our land and our way of life.
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My three special topics for this AUDIO LETTER are:
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Topic #1--THE ADVANCE PREPARATIONS FOR THE SPACE SHUTTLE MISSION
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Topic #2--THE ABORTED FLIGHT OF THE SPACE SHUTTLE "COLUMBIA"
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Topic #3--THE NASA COVERUP OF THE "COLUMBIA" DISASTER.
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Topic #1--There is an old saying that "Seeing is believing." For
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that reason, television has become the No. 1 tool of deception in
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America today. Through television we are made to see things we
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do not understand so that we will believe things that are not
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true. If television were used honestly and constructively,
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television could be a great force for good. Instead, it's used
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continually to hoax, deceive, and mislead us. Video-taping makes
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events which took place weeks or months ago look as if they were
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taking place "live" right before our eyes. Computer editing
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enables scenes to be spliced together to create completely
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artificial images that look real. Special effects of all kinds
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enable these television hoaxes to be very convincing indeed.
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Two years ago I described one major television hoax in detail
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in AUDIO LETTER No. 44. That hoax involved no less than the NBC
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television news program "Meet the Press." Now we have been
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treated to another great television hoax, and this one was the
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granddaddy of them all. In terms of sheer deception, this was
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the "Meet the Press" hoax, "Guyana", and SKYLAB all rolled into
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one. This was the hoax coverage of the first flight of the space
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shuttle Columbia.
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To begin with, we were led to believe that until two weeks ago
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no space shuttle had ever left the earth's atmosphere and gone
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into space. We were also led to believe that the very first
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space flight by a shuttle had to be an orbital flight, instead of
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something less extreme. To make matters still worse, NASA swore
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up and down that this very first flight, pushing the Shuttle to
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its limits, just had to have men aboard. At one point even John
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Young himself was quoted to this effect very widely in the
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controlled major media. For example, two months ago on February
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15, the New York Times carried a big article about the Shuttle.
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Quoting from the article: "Mr. Young said, to have conducted an
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unmanned orbital flight of the Shuttle first would have added
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perhaps $500,000,000 to project costs, and meant another year's
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delay." Statements like that were cooked up purely to explain
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away the many things that did not add up about the announced
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plans for the Columbia's flight. Many people believe these
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explanations, but they were just a litany of lies.
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For example, time after time during the television coverage of
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the alleged flight this month, John Young's earlier statement was
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totally contradicted. Authoritative spokesmen pointed out over
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and over that the astronauts control the Shuttle by telling
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computers aboard the Shuttle what they want. The computers then
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do all the actual activation and control of the Shuttle--and, in
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an emergency, the Shuttle can fly itself into orbit, re-enter,
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and even land itself without help from the pilots. So much for
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all those lies NASA told us about an unmanned first flight being
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impossible.
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The real reason astronauts were aboard the first orbital
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flight was the one I revealed in AUDIO LETTER No. 62. It was a
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military mission, and the astronauts had to be aboard to carry it
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out. NASA told us that the flight this month was only a test
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flight with the cargo bay practically empty. But the cargo bay
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of the Columbia was not empty. It carried a laser-armed Spy
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Satellite equipped with special shields to protect it against
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Russian space weapons. "But wait a minute", you say. "They
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showed us live pictures from space and you could see that the bay
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was empty." No, my friends, not "live" pictures but video tapes.
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The pictures with the doors closed were taken inside a training
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mock-up of the shuttle that is carried inside a specially
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modified Boeing 747. The pictures with the doors open were taken
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on the ground inside a darkened hangar. Then these scenes were
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combined by video tape editing techniques with video tapes of the
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earth taken from orbit years ago. The final product was what you
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saw on television. It was not what it appeared to be, but
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"seeing is believing."
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My friends, the next time you see a replay of those scenes
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with the Shuttle doors open, supposedly in space, there is a
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telltale clue to look for. Look at the shadows visible inside
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the open cargo bay. Shadows in space tend to be sharp and harsh
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because there is no air to soften and diffuse them. The shadows
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we saw in the video tapes on television were softer because they
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were not made in space. Also, look at the angle of the shadows.
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The earth is shown floating straight overhead, and it is all in
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daylight. Look at the slant of the shadows inside the open cargo
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bay, then ask yourself: "Where is the light coming from to make
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shadows like that?"
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The impossible shadows which we saw in the Shuttle bay video
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tapes are just one small example of the many discrepancies in the
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NASA hoax. More to the point, NASA has pretended that the
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Columbia flight this month was the very first shuttle flight into
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space. We are supposed to believe that the only previous shuttle
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operations were a few gliding tests launched from mid air by
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another modified 747. Nothing could be more ridiculous or more
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untrue.
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There is one very obvious question about the Space Shuttle
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Program which NASA has always managed to side step. Somehow no
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one ever quite dares to ask it. The question is: Why wasn't the
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space shuttle "Enterprise" the first to be sent into orbit?
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After all, the Enterprise made its public debut nearly four years
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ago in the summer of 1977.
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To all outward appearances, the Enterprise looks almost
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identical to its sister ship, the Columbia. The differences
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between the two are so subtle that you would never notice them
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unless you knew exactly what to look for. The engines of the
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Enterprise look just like the engines of the Columbia. The
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Enterprise is also covered with the same system of thermal tiles
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as the Columbia, so again, the question is: Why wasn't the
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Enterprise sent into orbit long ago? Why did NASA wait three
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years and more to launch the Columbia instead? The answer, my
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friends, is that the Enterprise was designed to be a training
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ship for shuttle astronauts. It is not meant for orbital flight.
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Instead, it is specially equipped to make shorter, suborbital
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flights into space. In effect, it can do everything short of
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going into earth orbit. It can climb to orbital altitudes as
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high as 125 miles before dropping back to earth. This enables
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astronauts to practice working in weightlessness for up to five
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and one-half minutes at a time. It also allows astronauts to
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practice landing the shuttle, slowing down from speeds of around
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5,000 miles per hour.
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The Enterprise is exactly like its sister ships in the crew
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compartment and cockpit. What makes the Enterprise radically
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different is the cargo bay area. The Enterprise cannot carry
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cargo because the bay area is taken up by rocket fuel tanks. The
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tanks of the Enterprise can hold well over 100,000 pounds of
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rocket fuel when fully loaded. To make a suborbital hop into
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space, the Enterprise is perched on top of a modified Boeing 747
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known as the "Launch Aircraft." Inside the 747 there are
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technicians with instruments and support equipment for the
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shuttle. The shuttle Enterprise is loaded with rocket fuel, and
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then the 747 takes off. At an altitude of around 40,000 feet,
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the shuttle is launched. The launch techniques are derived from
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the old days of the X-15 Research Airplane and others before it.
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The Enterprise is released from its mounts, rises up, and then
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falls back behind the 747. As soon as it is clear of the 747,
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the Enterprise starts its rocket engines and zooms upward at a
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steep angle. After a minute or so the rockets shut off, and the
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Enterprise is left to coast upward to its peak altitude and then
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drop back toward earth. From the moment the engines shut off
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until the shuttle begins re-entering the atmosphere five or six
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minutes later, the astronauts inside are weightless.
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Astronauts Young and Crippen made more than half a dozen
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training flights like this aboard the Enterprise before they
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lifted off aboard the Columbia at Cape Canaveral. That is why
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they were so ready to go all the way into orbit. They had
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already done everything else that was necessary to work their way
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up to it. Of course, other training was necessary to work their
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way up to those suborbital flights aboard the Enterprise. For
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one thing, they spent many hours in the detailed replica of the
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shuttle which is housed inside a modified Boeing 747. The
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"Flying Mock-Up", as it is called, is a simulator designed to
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acquaint astronauts with shuttle operation as realistically as
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possible. One of its advantages is that it can even provide
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periods of weightlessness of up to about 45 seconds. The 747
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pilot does this by flying a precise arc through the air called a
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"parabolic trajectory." It's an old technique developed a
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quarter century ago to help astronauts get accustomed to
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weightlessness.
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All of these things and more were originally conceived and
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developed for purely technical reasons, but they are being kept
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secret from you because the Bolsheviks who now control NASA have
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turned them into tools of deception against you and me. Lately,
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publicity about the Space Shuttle Program has been focused on
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three geographic locations. One is the launch site for orbital
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missions, Cape Canaveral, Florida. Another is Edwards Air Force
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Base, California. The third is that old stand-by, the NASA
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Manned Space Flight Center in Houston, Texas.
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As always, we are being distracted from paying serious
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attention to the one area that is most important of all. It is
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the missing link, the true nerve center of the entire Space
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Shuttle Program. My friends, I'm talking about the White Sands
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Missile Range in southern New Mexico.
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Most people today rarely give a second thought to White Sands.
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Few people remember that White Sands is where America's Space
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Program got its start after World War II. Captured German V-2
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rockets were taken to White Sands to be studied and test fired.
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After the V-2s, there were American rockets, the Navy's Viking
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series, and others. They were launched, rocketed upward into the
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fringes of space, and came back to earth--all within the
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boundaries of the vast White Sands Missile Range. One time a
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missile got out of control, veered south, and almost destroyed a
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small Mexican town when it crashed to earth; but that incident
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was a dramatic exception to the normal situation. Most of the
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time, no one outside White Sands even knew when rockets were
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launched. Recently the public has been made aware of the vast
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wide-open spaces that constitute Edwards Air Force Base in
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California. For comparison, White Sands is so huge that it would
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hold nearly 100 Edwards Air Force Bases!
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White Sands, my friends, is the training base for space
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shuttle pilots; and since late 1977 it has also become much more.
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It is the geographic key to the secret military missions which
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are now the central focus of the Space Shuttle Program. The
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Shuttle Program today is being managed in a way that is far
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different from the original plans. In August 1977 we were shown
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early gliding tests of the training shuttle Enterprise. The plan
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of NASA was to drum up public support for the Shuttle Program,
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just as they had done a decade earlier in the Moon Program.
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In AUDIO LETTER No. 26 I detailed how the Apollo Program, the
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biggest military program in American history, was disguised as a
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peaceful scientific venture. In the same way, the original plan
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was to bathe the military Shuttle Program in the glare of
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deceptive publicity. In the process we would have learned about
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the suborbital space capability of the Enterprise. Even the
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crucial White Sands would have received more publicity.
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What changed it all was the secret "Battle of the Harvest
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Moon" in space September 27, 1977. This secret space battle,
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which I made public that month in AUDIO LETTER No. 26, took place
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barely one month after the first gliding tests of the space
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shuttle Enterprise. Russia's military take-over of space was
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under way!
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Only the next month, October 1977, a newly operational Russian
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Cosmos Interceptor shot down SKYLAB. SKYLAB, along with its crew
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of five American astronauts secretly aboard, died in a giant
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fireball over the United States. I reported on SKYLAB's fate
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that month in AUDIO LETTER No. 27, and also revealed that NASA
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was initiating a prolonged cover-up of what had happened. NASA
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wanted everyone to forget about that mysterious headline-making
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fireball, so they pretended that SKYLAB was still in orbit but
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sinking unexpectedly. NASA used stories about the space shuttle
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as part of their SKYLAB cover-up. They pretended that perhaps
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the shuttle would come along in time to save SKYLAB. As I
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reported then, that was a double lie by NASA. First, SKYLAB
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could never be saved because it had already been destroyed.
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Second, the United States was in no position at that time to
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launch the shuttle or anything else of a military nature into
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space. Russia was deploying her secret new Space Triad of
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advanced manned space weapons.
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America's previous military control of space had been totally
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shattered by Russia. Our military base on the moon had been put
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out of action in the "Battle of the Harvest Moon." Russian
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Cosmos Interceptors had started sweeping the skies clear of
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American Spy Satellites, and Russian hovering electrogravitic
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weapons platforms, the Cosmospheres, were making headlines by
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creating enormous air booms along the East Coast and elsewhere.
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All of these things took place just as America's Space Shuttle
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Program was getting off the ground.
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The result was a complete reorganization of the Shuttle
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Program. The old plans to bathe it in continuous publicity were
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thrown out. The Bolsheviks here, who have replaced the
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Rockefeller cartel in many areas of power, cast a net of secrecy
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over all these new military plans. We were never told about many
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of the capabilities of the training shuttle Enterprise, and we
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were never told about the many things which are going on at White
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Sands in the military Shuttle Program. By keeping these things
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secret from us, the Bolsheviks here have placed themselves in a
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powerful position to deceive us.
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We have never been told about the modified NASA 747 which
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carries a complete replica of the crew quarters and cargo bay of
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a shuttle. Therefore we are unaware that this airplane,
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originally intended for training, has become a Bolshevik tool of
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deception against us. When we saw video tapes of astronauts in
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the simulated Shuttle cockpit, we naturally thought it was the
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real thing. Seeing a notebook float in mid air for a few seconds
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next to the astronauts, we were supposed to think: "They are
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weightless because they are in orbit." We were given no clue
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that these moments of weightlessness had taken place months
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earlier in a 747 flying a controlled arc through the air.
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Likewise, we were shown one or two episodes of the astronauts
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moving around the cabin, obviously weightless for up to three or
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four minutes. What we were not told is that these scenes had
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been video-taped months earlier during suborbital space hops by
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the training shuttle Enterprise.
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Many of my listeners have called or written with the same
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observation about the first of these episodes shown the day of
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the launch. We heard the alleged "live" conversation of Young
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and Crippen, and yet, in the television picture, they were not
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moving their lips. They had merely posed for the camera during a
|
|
suborbital flight months earlier, and they recorded the sound
|
|
track we heard only days before the launch.
|
|
|
|
While NASA may have fooled you and me about the Space Shuttle,
|
|
they did not fool the new rulers of Russia. They learned last
|
|
fall what the flight of the Columbia was really all about; and,
|
|
my friends, when the Columbia was launched two weeks ago, the
|
|
Russians were ready and waiting!
|
|
|
|
Topic #2--A month before the shuttle "Columbia" blasted off from
|
|
Cape Canaveral, the two astronauts who were to ride in it held a
|
|
news conference in Houston. The day was March 9, 1981.
|
|
Astronaut Robert Crippen caught the attention of the reporters
|
|
when he said:
|
|
|
|
"I think the odds, with the way we've designed the mission
|
|
right now, are that we will probably come home early."
|
|
|
|
Then he added, quote:
|
|
|
|
"As far as John and I are concerned, if we get up and get down,
|
|
it's a success."
|
|
|
|
Those words of astronaut Crippen about a short mission were more
|
|
accurate than most people realized.
|
|
|
|
The real mission plan, which I had already made public in
|
|
AUDIO LETTER No. 62, was for a short mission. The astronauts
|
|
were supposed to get into orbit and deploy the military satellite
|
|
from the Columbia's cargo bay very quickly, then they were to
|
|
return to Earth--not aboard the Shuttle but in a special re-entry
|
|
capsule. Two days later they were supposed to land the disguised
|
|
shuttle "Enterprise" at Edwards Air Force Base as the final act
|
|
in the falsified drama staged for our benefit.
|
|
|
|
In AUDIO LETTER No. 62 I described the military purpose of the
|
|
mission in detail. For the first time in three years the
|
|
Pentagon was hoping to get a Spy Satellite into orbit that could
|
|
not be shot down immediately by Russia. I also outlined
|
|
important features of the flight plan which had been conceived
|
|
for the Columbia. Now I want to give you more details about that
|
|
and tell you how it turned out because, my friends, the
|
|
Bolsheviks here in the Government are now planning to try it
|
|
again with a second shuttle flight presently scheduled for the
|
|
fall of this year 1981.
|
|
|
|
Knowing what happened this time, I believe you will be far
|
|
better prepared to see through it all next time. If you can
|
|
think back to American space launches of the past, you may have
|
|
noticed something very unusual about the launch of the Columbia.
|
|
In the past, manned space launches from Cape Canaveral have
|
|
always been made toward the southeast, toward the equator, but
|
|
not this time. The Columbia was launched to the northeast, away
|
|
from the equator. The reason for this, my friends, was the
|
|
secret space reconnaissance mission of the Columbia.
|
|
|
|
In its public news releases, NASA told everyone that Columbia
|
|
was launched into a 44-degree orbit--that is, it would never go
|
|
further north or south than 44 degrees above and below the
|
|
equator. But the actual orbit chosen for the Columbia was a
|
|
69-degree orbit. A 69-degree orbit was chosen because it would
|
|
take the Columbia, and the Spy Satellite inside it, all the way
|
|
north to the Arctic Circle and beyond. That is the kind of orbit
|
|
that is necessary if a spy satellite is to fly reconnaissance
|
|
over Russia.
|
|
|
|
The northeast launch of the Columbia was done in order to
|
|
enable the Spy Satellite to start gathering data over Russia only
|
|
minutes after the Columbia reached orbit. These days time is of
|
|
the essence in any attempt to spy on Russia. Every American spy
|
|
satellite launched at Russia during the past three years has been
|
|
blinded or shot down before gathering much data.
|
|
|
|
The secret flight plan for the Columbia was completely
|
|
different from what NASA claimed in public. The plan called for
|
|
Columbia to be launched on an initial northeast course in the
|
|
general direction of Bermuda, then roughly 2-1/2 minutes after
|
|
launch, Columbia was to begin an unorthodox course change--a wide
|
|
sweeping turn into the north. This unprecedented curving launch
|
|
was intended as an evasive maneuver. Planners of the Columbia
|
|
mission believed this would enable Columbia to sneak past any
|
|
Russian Cosmospheres that might be waiting overhead. Still
|
|
accelerating on its curving course, the Columbia was supposed to
|
|
pass about 100 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
|
|
Roughly 200 miles east of Washington, D.C., the Shuttle's main
|
|
engines were to cut off. After coasting in silence for a few
|
|
seconds, the fuel tank was scheduled to cut loose as the Columbia
|
|
passed 100 miles east of New Jersey. For the next two minutes
|
|
the Shuttle and its fuel tank were to be coasting onward past the
|
|
east tip of Long Island, over Boston, and onward toward Maine.
|
|
During that time the Shuttle was supposed to maneuver away from
|
|
the fuel tank, using small maneuvering jets. Finally, just as
|
|
the Columbia passed over New Brunswick, Canada, the flight plan
|
|
called for the orbital maneuvering engines to be fired.
|
|
Somewhere over the Labrador Sea, flying upside-down, the Columbia
|
|
was scheduled to reach earth orbit. As soon as it did so, the
|
|
flight plan called for astronauts Young and Crippen to go to work
|
|
fast. In less than 10 minutes time they were supposed to open up
|
|
the cargo bay doors and turn on the sensors of the Spy Satellite
|
|
resting inside. As they did these things, the Columbia was to be
|
|
racing over the south tip of Greenland, out over the middle of
|
|
the Denmark Strait between Greenland and Iceland, above the
|
|
Arctic Circle, and then dipping back southward toward northern
|
|
Norway, Finland, and Russia. According to the flight plan, the
|
|
Columbia was scheduled to cross the Russian border just south of
|
|
the strategic Kola Peninsula. The time: a mere 22 minutes, 42
|
|
seconds, after lift-off from Cape Canaveral. At that moment
|
|
initial reconnaissance over Russia was to be under way. The Spy
|
|
Satellite inside the cargo bay, even though not yet deployed,
|
|
would have had a perfect view downward through the open doors of
|
|
the upside-down Shuttle.
|
|
|
|
The Columbia was intended to fly over a course across Russia
|
|
that began just west of the strategic White Sea in extreme
|
|
northwestern Russia. From there the planned course of the
|
|
Columbia was to take it southeastward over some 2500 miles of
|
|
strategic Russian territory. During the first minute alone, the
|
|
Satellite was expected to see parts of the highly sensitive Kola
|
|
Peninsula, the White Sea, including the super secret submarine
|
|
yards at Archangel and the Plesetsk Cosmodrome. The Shuttle was
|
|
also to pass near Kazan, one of the bases of Russia's flying ABM
|
|
system. This system, as I revealed a year ago in AUDIO LETTER
|
|
No. 54, uses charged particle beams carried by supersonic TU-144
|
|
transports.
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of the first pass over Russia the Spy Satellite
|
|
was expected to gather data on two more of Russia's four
|
|
Cosmodromes--those of Baikonur and Tyura-Tam. In between,
|
|
numerous other war targets were also to come under scrutiny. The
|
|
Spy Satellite in the Columbia's cargo bay was expected to see all
|
|
that during its very first pass over Russian territory. It would
|
|
all take only 8-1/2 minutes! Then the Columbia would have
|
|
crossed the border with Afghanistan, heading toward India.
|
|
Barely 10 minutes later, the Spy Satellite was to be radioing its
|
|
data down to the American receivers at Diego Garcia in the Indian
|
|
Ocean.
|
|
|
|
That was the plan, my friends. The Bolshevik military
|
|
planners here were confident that their Spy Satellite would get
|
|
at least this planned first look at Russia. They were sure that
|
|
Columbia's curving launch and the short time involved would
|
|
prevent Russia from thwarting the mission. Columbia took off
|
|
from Cape Canaveral at 7:00 A.M. Eastern Time, that Sunday
|
|
morning. By 7:23 Columbia was expected to be over Russia
|
|
already. By 7:31 Columbia was expected to be leaving Russian
|
|
skies, and by 7:45 that Sunday morning the military planners
|
|
expected to have their first reconnaissance data from Russia.
|
|
|
|
The plan sounded plausible, my friends, but the Bolsheviks
|
|
here are falling victim to the very Intelligence gap which they
|
|
themselves created in America years ago. Russian Intelligence
|
|
agents were able to learn the general outlines of the Columbia
|
|
mission plan some six months ago. Fully one month before the
|
|
public roll-out of the Columbia at Cape Canaveral last November,
|
|
the Russian Space Command was studying the problem. There was no
|
|
question about one thing: The Columbia's mission could not be
|
|
allowed to succeed. Given even a shred of up-to-date
|
|
reconnaissance data, the Bolsheviks in America are determined to
|
|
set off nuclear war. Even so, there was a question about the
|
|
best way to spoil the Shuttle mission. Several possibilities
|
|
were considered, including sabotage or simply blasting the
|
|
Columbia out of the sky. All were rejected because they shared
|
|
one weakness. Each alternative would halt one shuttle mission,
|
|
but it would not stop the Shuttle Program as a whole, and
|
|
Russia's goal is to completely shut down the Space Shuttle
|
|
Program.
|
|
|
|
At last they hit upon the solution. What was needed was a
|
|
Space Age version of the famous U-2 incident of two decades ago.
|
|
In the waning days of the Eisenhower Administration, Russia had
|
|
publicly accused the United States of invading its air space with
|
|
spy flights. That was before the era of Spy Satellites, and
|
|
invading other countries' air space was a serious charge in the
|
|
eyes of the world. American spokesmen tried to defuse the
|
|
growing furor while carefully avoiding a definitive denial of the
|
|
charges; but the Russians kept it up. Finally President
|
|
Eisenhower became so exasperated that he flatly denied, in
|
|
public, that America was flying spy planes over Russia. That was
|
|
exactly what the Russians were waiting for. The Russians
|
|
promptly did what American Intelligence specialists thought they
|
|
could not do--they shot down a high-flying U-2 on a flight over
|
|
Russia. The name of the CIA pilot, the late Francis Gary Powers,
|
|
filled the headlines world-wide overnight. The Russians had made
|
|
a liar of the President of the United States! A summit had been
|
|
scheduled between President Eisenhower and Nikita Khrushchev, but
|
|
the Russians icily called it off.
|
|
|
|
The Russian Space Command proposed to the Kremlin that the
|
|
shuttle Columbia be made the focus of a similar incident. All
|
|
that was necessary was that the Columbia be made to crash land in
|
|
Russia reasonably intact. Having protested continuously about
|
|
the military nature of the Shuttle Program, Russia would be able
|
|
to stun the world by proving it. They would put the crashed
|
|
Shuttle on public display together with its nuclear-powered,
|
|
laser-firing Spy Satellite. The Kremlin liked the plan, and
|
|
agreed to it. To further emphasize the parallels with the 1960
|
|
U-2 incident, Russia has recently proposed a summit with the
|
|
United States. The plan was to withdraw the summit proposal in
|
|
protest after shooting down the Columbia.
|
|
|
|
The Russian Space Command went to work several months ago to
|
|
get ready. They were faced with a tall order to bring down the
|
|
Columbia on Russian territory without totally destroying it. As
|
|
recently as a year ago it would have been an impossible task, but
|
|
now Russia has a new space tool to do the job. It is a third
|
|
version of the Russian levitating weapons platform, the
|
|
Cosmosphere. They are called "Super Heavies" by the Russian
|
|
Space Command.
|
|
|
|
The Russian Super Heavy Cosmospheres are still considered
|
|
experimental. Even so, the Russians have already built seven of
|
|
them. They are mammoth machines, the largest flying machines
|
|
ever built. In terms of volume, they are even bigger than the
|
|
biggest zeppelins of the 1930's. They can carry a pay load of
|
|
more than 50 tons, far more than our own space shuttle; and they
|
|
are equipped with powerful electromagnetic propulsion which can
|
|
take the Cosmosphere all the way to orbital speed. In short, my
|
|
friends, the jumbo Cosmosphere is Russia's space shuttle. It is
|
|
still experimental, but it is operating already.
|
|
|
|
In order to carry out their attack on the space shuttle
|
|
Columbia, Russia's entire fleet of seven jumbo Cosmospheres were
|
|
made ready. Five were outfitted with special grappling equipment
|
|
to enable them to seize a very large object in space. The other
|
|
two were outfitted with neutron particle beam weapons. These
|
|
weapons are the same type as were used in the "Battle of the
|
|
Harvest Moon" in September 1977.
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 7:00 A.M. Sunday morning, April 12, the rocket engines of
|
|
the space shuttle Columbia roared to life. Moments later the
|
|
giant solid boosters were fired, and the Columbia took off fast.
|
|
As it climbed, it rolled around and started leaning into its
|
|
flight path toward space. As we watched on our television sets,
|
|
it rapidly dwindled off into the northeast. We watched as the
|
|
solid boosters separated and peeled away to each side. Moments
|
|
later the Columbia vanished from the screen.
|
|
|
|
The television scene shifted to the alleged Mission Control in
|
|
Houston. It was the old familiar scene with rows of Mission
|
|
Controllers intent on their consoles. Up in front the NASA
|
|
computer-controlled map started tracing the alleged course of the
|
|
Columbia. According to the map, Columbia was heading out over
|
|
the Atlantic toward Bermuda; but at that moment, free of the
|
|
solid boosters, Columbia was already starting its long sweeping
|
|
curve to the north. One-hundred-fifty miles east of Charleston,
|
|
South Carolina, Russia's fleet of 7 jumbo Cosmospheres were
|
|
hovering high over the ocean. As the space shuttle approached on
|
|
its elaborate curving path, the Cosmospheres started speeding up
|
|
to intercept it. The Shuttle was already flying upside-down with
|
|
the huge fuel tank on top. The two Cosmospheres armed with
|
|
neutron beams closed in on the Columbia from below and slightly
|
|
behind, where they could not be seen by Young and Crippen. The
|
|
other five jumbo Cosmospheres with their grappling equipment flew
|
|
in formation above and well behind the fuel tank to be out of the
|
|
line of fire. The Cosmospheres paced the Shuttle until it
|
|
reached a predetermined altitude and speed.
|
|
|
|
Then the armed Cosmospheres opened up with their neutron
|
|
beams. Firing at point-blank range, each Cosmosphere fired just
|
|
two bursts from its beam weapon. The first salvo flooded the
|
|
cockpit area and an area near the engines in the rear. Young and
|
|
Crippen died instantly, the neutron radiation having totally
|
|
disrupted all activity of their nervous systems, brains, eyes,
|
|
and hearts. At the same time the Shuttle's engines shut down. A
|
|
fraction of a second later, the second salvo flooded neutron
|
|
radiation into the nose and an area beneath the cargo bay. These
|
|
shots were calculated to derange and shut down the Columbia's
|
|
flight computers--that is, all the computers except one. The
|
|
Russians wanted the backup computer to take over and do its
|
|
job--that is, make an emergency automatic re-entry and crash
|
|
landing in Russia. They anticipated that it would do so because
|
|
the backup computer is heavily shielded against radiation. The
|
|
shielding is a material more efficient than lead. It is gold!
|
|
The Russians expected that the "Gold Computer", as it is known in
|
|
certain circles, would take over after the engines shut down.
|
|
Sure enough, within 10 seconds after the engines shut down, the
|
|
fuel tank, still a third full, was automatically cast loose. The
|
|
Gold Computer was now flying the Shuttle. The five jumbo
|
|
Cosmospheres with grappling equipment fastened onto the fuel
|
|
tank. Then, using their powerful electromagnetic propulsion,
|
|
they veered away with the tank. From its northeasterly course,
|
|
the tank was swerved around over the North Atlantic in a great
|
|
arc until it was heading southeast instead. The Cosmospheres
|
|
then accelerated to orbital speed and cast the fuel tank loose.
|
|
|
|
Three years ago the first Cosmospheres had sent a message by
|
|
way of enormous air booms along America's East Coast. Now
|
|
Russia's newest Cosmospheres were using the Shuttle fuel tank to
|
|
send a chilling new message to America's Bolshevik war planners.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile the armed Cosmospheres followed the Columbia itself.
|
|
Having had its engines shut down prematurely, the Columbia was
|
|
well below orbital speed. Instead it was following a ballistic
|
|
path, just like an ICBM, into the heart of Russia. It looked as
|
|
though the Russian plan was going to work, but then the
|
|
unexpected happened!
|
|
|
|
One of Columbia's deranged computers apparently started
|
|
working again. The brief shut-down had thrown it out of
|
|
synchronization with the Gold Computer, so the two computers
|
|
apparently did not communicate with one another. As the Columbia
|
|
passed over the border of Russia, it was flying right-side-up
|
|
instead of upside-down under control of the Gold Computer. But
|
|
the other computer opened up the cargo bay doors right on
|
|
schedule. As the Shuttle began to re-enter over Russia, hot air
|
|
flooded the cargo bay. Heat sensors in the Spy Satellite
|
|
detected the heat build-up, which was programmed into the
|
|
Satellite's computer as a sign of "attack damage." Finally, the
|
|
temperature built up to a critical point, activating a
|
|
self-destruct circuit in the Satellite. The Spy Satellite
|
|
exploded, blowing the Columbia apart.
|
|
|
|
The Russians had hoped for a crash landing in recognizable
|
|
form. Instead, the Columbia ended up in wreckage strewn along a
|
|
line some 85 miles long in central Russia southeast of the City
|
|
of Kazan. As it turned out, neither the Bolsheviks here nor the
|
|
Russians got what they wanted. The Bolsheviks did not get their
|
|
reconnaissance data, and the Russians did not get a recognizable
|
|
space shuttle to show the world. That leaves the stage set for
|
|
another "try" by both sides later this year.
|
|
|
|
Topic #3--Sunday, April 12, 1981, was the 20th anniversary of the
|
|
first manned flight into space. It was the anniversary of the
|
|
first orbital flight by a Russian cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin. It
|
|
was also a day of total disarray among the Bolshevik masters of
|
|
America's Space Shuttle Program.
|
|
|
|
Less than eight minutes after launch that Sunday morning they
|
|
knew something had happened to the Columbia. You and I were
|
|
still hearing the sound effects of a seemingly successful flight,
|
|
courtesy of the NASA tape recording from Houston. But the
|
|
military controllers at White Sands, who were following the real
|
|
flight, were hearing nothing at all. Columbia had suddenly gone
|
|
totally silent.
|
|
|
|
At 7:45 A.M. the news got worse. Columbia had failed to
|
|
arrive over the Indian Ocean on schedule.
|
|
|
|
Before the morning was out, there was still more bad news.
|
|
NORAD was tracking the fuel tank of the Shuttle. It was not
|
|
supposed to be in orbit at all--but there it was, in an orbit
|
|
that looked impossible.
|
|
|
|
That evening, Sunday April 12, the Shuttle's fuel tank
|
|
re-entered over the Gulf of Mexico just south of Louisiana. The
|
|
tank had ruptured but there was still a sizeable amount of liquid
|
|
hydrogen and oxygen inside. When the tank re-entered it heated
|
|
up and set off an enormous explosion, creating a giant cloud at
|
|
the fringes of space. Gold plating, which is used extensively in
|
|
the shuttle fuel tank because of its heat transfer properties,
|
|
was vaporized and scattered through the cloud. The result was
|
|
the same as when gold is added in tiny quantities to stained
|
|
window glass--a brilliant pinkish-red color. The giant pink
|
|
cloud, with chunks of the ruined fuel tank flashing in the sun,
|
|
created headlines as it passed to the northeast over Louisiana
|
|
and Mississippi. Meanwhile, Government spokesmen tried to
|
|
pooh-pooh it all as, quote "a natural phenomenon."
|
|
|
|
The Bolsheviks here still are not quite sure what happened to
|
|
the Columbia, but they do know that as far as Space is concerned,
|
|
the Shuttle Program is their only hope. They have three more
|
|
orbital shuttles hidden away at White Sands, and they intend to
|
|
launch them all no matter what the odds may be, so the NASA
|
|
cover-up of the Columbia disaster went right on according to
|
|
plan.
|
|
|
|
Two years ago I first revealed the existence of man-made
|
|
genetic replicas of human beings. I was widely disbelieved and
|
|
condemned at the time, just as I knew I would be. But they do
|
|
exist, and once again they have been pressed into service before
|
|
our eyes.
|
|
|
|
Tuesday morning, April 14, genetic replicas called
|
|
"Synthetics" of the late astronauts John Young and Robert Crippen
|
|
were readied at White Sands. They were programmed to take a
|
|
computerized ride on the training shuttle "Enterprise." The
|
|
Young and Crippen entities boarded the Enterprise, which was
|
|
mounted on top of the launch 747. After rocket fuel was loaded
|
|
for the shuttle, the 747 took off and headed west, avoiding
|
|
commercial air traffic. The launch 747 headed out over the
|
|
Pacific until it was several hundred miles west of Los Angeles.
|
|
Then it turned back toward the east toward the California coast.
|
|
On television we were told that the non-existent Columbia was
|
|
re-entering from orbit. Meanwhile the "Enterprise", re-labeled
|
|
"Columbia", cut loose from the 747 and fired its rockets. It
|
|
sped up to a speed of nearly 6,000 miles per hour, then we
|
|
watched it as it made that dramatic race in from the sea to a
|
|
precise computer landing at Edwards Air Force Base. It was all
|
|
timed to agree as closely as possible with the official NASA
|
|
timetable.
|
|
|
|
Even so, a technical mistake was made that morning and as a
|
|
result we were told that the Shuttle would land six minutes
|
|
early. My friends, in space flight, six minutes might as well be
|
|
a year. Six minutes in orbit corresponds to nearly a 2,000 mile
|
|
error in the location of the Shuttle, but on TV nobody bothered
|
|
to question it. They all just smiled and said, "Isn't it a
|
|
lovely day to watch the Shuttle."
|
|
|
|
After the dramatic Shuttle landing, former astronaut Gene
|
|
Cernan expressed surprise on ABC television. He said the Shuttle
|
|
simply did not look scorched enough for a ship that had
|
|
re-entered from orbit. Likewise, when the synthetics called
|
|
Young and Crippen emerged, they did not act like men who had been
|
|
weightless for two days. Instead they bounded down the access
|
|
steps and pranced around with restless energy, but no one
|
|
questioned it. After all, we had seen the Shuttle landing for
|
|
ourselves; and as that old saying goes, "Seeing is believing."
|
|
|
|
Now it's time for my Last Minute Summary.
|
|
|
|
My friends, the score in America's Space Shuttle Program is
|
|
now "One down and three to go." Three more shuttles like the
|
|
Columbia are waiting their turn in the desert at White Sands.
|
|
Each will have the name "Columbia" painted on its side. The real
|
|
Columbia is now dead, along with its crew; but thanks to these
|
|
mechanical clones, the Columbia will live again in the public
|
|
eye.
|
|
|
|
I have given you as many details as time will allow about the
|
|
Columbia disaster and its cover-up by NASA. The point of it all
|
|
is not whether Russia is ahead or America is ahead in the Space
|
|
race. The point is that we are being deceived. We are being
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given a false sense of security and a false sense of confidence.
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We are being led like sheep to slaughter into nuclear war and
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Bolshevik dictatorship.
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If we choose to believe their lies, then they will succeed,
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they will destroy our way of life, and enslave the few of us who
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survive their war. OR, we can learn to do as our Lord Jesus
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Christ taught us to do long ago. We can learn to look for the
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truth, cherish the truth, and believe the Truth. If we do that,
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my friends, then we will always be free.
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Until next month, God willing, this is Dr. Beter. Thank you,
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and may God bless each and every one of you.
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____________________________________________________________________________
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>From uwm.edu!spool.mu.edu!uunet!decwrl!netcomsv!netcom.com!nagle Wed Mar 31 16:30:11 1993
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Newsgroups: uwisc.general
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Path: uwm.edu!spool.mu.edu!uunet!decwrl!netcomsv!netcom.com!nagle
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From: nagle@netcom.com (John Nagle)
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Subject: Re: STS-1 DISASTER/COVERUP
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Message-ID: <nagleC4pq5n.7DA@netcom.com>
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Organization: Netcom - Online Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest)
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References: <1993Mar29.175837.5443@cnsvax.uwec.edu>
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Date: Tue, 30 Mar 1993 17:34:35 GMT
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Lines: 18
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> The Russian Super Heavy Cosmospheres are still considered
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> experimental. Even so, the Russians have already built seven of
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> them. They are mammoth machines, the largest flying machines
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> ever built. In terms of volume, they are even bigger than the
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> biggest zeppelins of the 1930's. They can carry a pay load of
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> more than 50 tons, far more than our own space shuttle; and they
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> are equipped with powerful electromagnetic propulsion which can
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> take the Cosmosphere all the way to orbital speed. In short, my
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> friends, the jumbo Cosmosphere is Russia's space shuttle. It is
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> still experimental, but it is operating already.
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It's been twelve years since this was published. Where are these now?
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What's left of the USSR is offering to sell everything they've got in
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space hardware: their shuttle, Buran; their space station, Mir, and their
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big booster, Proton. Nobody is that interested. But this technology
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has real export possibilities. Who do we contact for licencing?
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John Nagle
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apprentice deconstructionist - musician
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raver - political scientist - cyberspatial wanderer
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No, I'm just Steve.
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aragorn@convex.csd.uwm.edu
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The style of discourse ... it's in the asthetic!
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