961 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
961 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
_______________________________________________________________________________
|
|
| File Name : WHY_WW2.ASC | Online Date : 09/14/94 |
|
|
| Contributed by : Jerry Decker | Dir Category : UNCLASS |
|
|
| From : KeelyNet BBS | DataLine : (214) 324-3501 |
|
|
| KeelyNet * PO BOX 870716 * Mesquite, Texas * USA * 75187 |
|
|
| A FREE Alternative Sciences BBS sponsored by Vanguard Sciences |
|
|
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
|
File created by Linda Murphy (C) NEXUS June 18, 1989
|
|
Another Viewpoint: WHAT STARTED WORLD WAR II?
|
|
A response to the Fencwick interview.
|
|
|
|
In the FENWICK.TXT file, an Interview done by Tom Mickus last year, created
|
|
some rather unusual repercusions in the UFO community, Fenwick talks about
|
|
Hitler and WW 2. Let's look at a couple of excerpts from the lengthy interview.
|
|
|
|
1) "We talked about things other than UFOlogy for most of the time. As we left
|
|
the property...we were about 35-40 feet away from Bob, and he called out to
|
|
us. [and] he made this statement...and we wrote it down in the car, 'What
|
|
was the cause of WWII?' He had been told...,the classified information
|
|
about programming of Hitler..to cause WW II. And we did an article about
|
|
the case, with the exception of that statement. As we thought it didn't fit
|
|
in."
|
|
|
|
2) "We also discussed why the aliens view the human's as a "failed experiment".
|
|
|
|
3) "When referring to the programming of Hitler by the EBE's, which in effect
|
|
caused WW II (the decision of one man)...."
|
|
|
|
This, to this individual was a very deep statement -- and it was literally
|
|
glossed over, and I believe very few really looked at in in any great depth.
|
|
Why? Because it appeared to be so "off the wall". At certain intervals durring
|
|
the interveiw, Fenwick is having a difficult time attempting to express the
|
|
situation as he perceives it. My first impulse, prior to even being involved
|
|
with ParaNet was to get down to the heart of the matter, and challenge Fenwick
|
|
in the claims he made. But I didn't (Tom's board went down). Although his
|
|
interview seems so highly "unusual", I have perceived some things in the
|
|
interview which play a major undercurrent in the entire UFO scenario. There are
|
|
constant dredgings of the Hitler programming theme followed with various
|
|
religious implications. Yet nobody has offered to look directly into the
|
|
motivation behind Hitler, and the belief systems which pushed Hitler and other
|
|
Europeans onward.
|
|
|
|
In order to gain any benefit from this file, although their may be
|
|
mentionings of many things such as Judeo/Christians, Aryans, Nazi's, it is
|
|
important to view these things as a motivational factor which drive men to do
|
|
the things they do. There are tendencies towards "blind acceptance". The word
|
|
"acceptance" itself is indicative of belief. However, "understanding" indicates
|
|
knowledge of the mechanisms behind things. All of us, who are interested in
|
|
the phenomena itself, are trying to come to an understanding... As we attempt
|
|
to understand, we are then forced to look at things from various angles. This
|
|
file is not the sum total of angles, and is only offered in an attempt to
|
|
present a small facet of the phenomena itself.
|
|
|
|
Let's examine some interesting things about the Third Reich from non UFO
|
|
Sources --- and then ask ourselves, again, "WHAT Started World War II?"
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
"The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide"
|
|
|
|
by Robert J. Lifton (C) 1986
|
|
|
|
Extreme rumors spread through the camp about Block 10. Prisoners considered it
|
|
a "sinister place" of mysterious evil. There were widespread rumors that
|
|
Clauberg was conducting experiments in artificial insemination, and women were
|
|
terrified of having "monsters" implanted in their wombs. Some suriviors I spoke
|
|
to believed that those experiments actually occured. Another account had
|
|
Clauberg speaking of his intentions to carry out artificial-insemination
|
|
experiments in the future. There were also rumors of a "museum" on Block 10:
|
|
"Skulls, body parts, even mummies"; and one survivor insisted, "A friend...saw
|
|
... our Gymnasium [high school] teacher stuffed [mummified] on Block 10."
|
|
Again, anything was possible, and whatever occured there was likely to be a
|
|
manifestation of the Nazi racial claim.
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
-- page 271
|
|
|
|
* Himmler's vision had varying gradations of abusrdity and pesudo science. For
|
|
instance, he was an ardent believer (as were Hitler and Goring) in such
|
|
expressions of mystical racism as the idea that the lost continent of Atlantis
|
|
had been the original homeland of the Aryans, and that Aryans had not evolved
|
|
from monkeys or apes like the rest of mankind but had descended to earth from
|
|
the heavens where they had been preserved in ice from the beginning of time.
|
|
Himmler, in fact, in 1937 established a meteorological division in the
|
|
Ahnenerbe (see pages 284-87) to "prove" his "cosmic-ice" theory, though
|
|
publicly the purpose of the new division was announced as developing new
|
|
techniques for long-range weather preidiction. Sympathetic to nature healing
|
|
and equally ardent critic of traditionalism and "Christian" prejudices of
|
|
establishment doctors, he could view human experimentation in concentration
|
|
camps as a form of liberation from these constraints in the name of bold
|
|
scientific innovation.
|
|
|
|
-- footnote Page 279
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
AHNENERBE (pages 284-87)
|
|
|
|
Anthropological Research: Specimens for a Museum
|
|
|
|
Block 10 played an important part in a form of "anthropological research"
|
|
that was among the most grotesque expressions of the Nazi biomedical vision.
|
|
Dr. Marie L. tells of its Aushchwitz beginnings:
|
|
|
|
"There appeared [on block 10] a new protagonist of racial theories. He chose
|
|
his material by having naked women of all ages file ... in front of him. He
|
|
wanted to do anthropological measurements ... He had measurements of all the
|
|
parts of the body taken ad infinitum ... They were told that they had the
|
|
extraordinary good fortune to be selected, that they would leave Auscheitz to
|
|
go to an excellent camp, somewhere n Germany ... [where] they would be very
|
|
well treated, where they would be happy."
|
|
|
|
Dr. L. had seen enough of Auschwitz to suspect the terrible truth ("I told
|
|
myself immediately,..."They are going to a museum'"), though she and others
|
|
refrained from saying so because they "lacked the courage", felt it would be
|
|
more kind to remain silent, and could not in any case be certain of their
|
|
suspicion.
|
|
|
|
These women were taken to the concentration camp at Natzweiler, near
|
|
Strasbourg, which although not designated as an extermination camp, nonetheless
|
|
possessed its own gas chamber with the usual false showerheads as well as one
|
|
additional feature: a one-way mirror that allowed those on the outside of the
|
|
gas chamber to observe those inside. This mirror had been installed because
|
|
the gas chamber itself had been constructed as part of the necessary research
|
|
equipment.
|
|
A prisoner doctor reported that the group of Auschwitz women (thirty - nine
|
|
of them according to their records) were given a sham phsycial examination for
|
|
reassurance, then gassed, and then the corpses were immediately transported to
|
|
the anatomy pavilion of the Strasbourg University Hospital. A French inmate,
|
|
who had to assist the project's director, SS Captain Dr. August Hirt, told how
|
|
"preservation began immediately" with the arrival of bodies that were "still
|
|
warm, the eye ... wide open and shining." There were two subsequent shipments
|
|
of men, from each of whom the left testicle had been removed and sent to Hirt's
|
|
anatomy lab.
|
|
|
|
Hirt, a professor of anatomy, had under Himmler's instructions prepared the
|
|
cyanide salts used to kill the Auschwitz prisoners in what was the inaugrural
|
|
use of the new gas chamber. He had originally advocated in a memo to Himmler
|
|
the securing of skulls of captured "Jewish-Bolshevik commissars." The goal at
|
|
that time was to "acquire tangible scientific research material" that would
|
|
"represent ... a repulsive but typical speices of subhumanity." The memo
|
|
recommended that a "junior phsycician attatched to the Wehrmacht" first take
|
|
photographs and perform various measurements and studies on subjects while
|
|
still alive, make sure that the head is not damaged in the killing, and then
|
|
take other specific measures for preserving the head and shipping it to the
|
|
designated research institute where various studies could be performed on the
|
|
skull and brain including those of "racial classification" and "pathological
|
|
features of the skull formation." In locating two ultimate evils (Jewish and
|
|
Bolshevik) in members of that group, and anticipating specific anatomical
|
|
findings in their skulls or brains, the Nazis were acting upon the most extreme
|
|
blend of racial-biomedical and political ideology.
|
|
|
|
But there were apparently difficulties in rounding up "Jewish-Bolshevik
|
|
commissars" and possibly in severing heads, so that it was decided to make use
|
|
of full skeletons rather than merely skulls and to collect specimens in the
|
|
place where any such task could be accomplished -- neamely, Aushwitz. It was
|
|
said that 115 people were victimized in this way, all Jews (79 men, 30 women)
|
|
with the exception of 2 Poles and 4 Central Asians. The relatively high
|
|
priority of the project is suggested by EIchmann's having been involved with
|
|
it's arrangements. The whole enterprise, bizarre even by Nazi standards, was
|
|
sponsored by the Ahnenerbe ("ancestral heritage") office of the SS, which
|
|
Himmler had created in 1939 to develop "historical" and "scientific" studies of
|
|
the "Nordic Indo-Germanic race." Ahnenerbe brought mystical concepts to science
|
|
("the unity of soul and body, mind and blood') and combined the Gestapo mission
|
|
of controlling Germany's intellectual life with Himmler's visionary ideas. It
|
|
supported projects in archeology, German racial consciousness outside of
|
|
Germany proper, and medical experiments in concentration camps. Under Himmler's
|
|
order, Ahnenerbe even came to sponsor a research program making use of Jewish
|
|
mathematicians in concentration camps to work out theoretical problems of
|
|
rocket production. Experiments in camps that it sponsored included Dr. Sigmund
|
|
Rascher's notorious research in Dachau on the effects of high altitude, in
|
|
which he wantonly killed experimantal subjects: and the still more murderous
|
|
work of Schuler in Buchenwald on typhus vaccines, in which six hundred people
|
|
were killed.
|
|
|
|
Hirt was said to have been brought into the Ahnenerbe by a man who became
|
|
his assistant in the Strasbourg project -- Bruno Beger, an SS officer on
|
|
Himmler's personal staff who had been sent to study anthropolgy in Berlin.
|
|
Beger tended to embrace Himmler's wildest theories, and it was Beger who made
|
|
the original arrangements in Auschwitz and perhpas worte under Hirt's name the
|
|
extraordinary memo I have just quoted.
|
|
|
|
A former ardent Nazi, who remembered Hirt as a good friend and colleague
|
|
during their days together as young instructors at a leading German medical
|
|
center, described him as originally Swiss but a naturalized German, "a Nordic
|
|
type with blue eyes and fair hair," an honorable and stable man even if at
|
|
times a "bit impulsive," and an excellent anatomist with a promising academic
|
|
career. A colleague of my own in the United States, however, who had studied
|
|
under Hirt, remembered him as a very arrogant and threatening Nazi. In any
|
|
case, there is no dout about either Hirt's passionate Nazi involvement or the
|
|
centrality of the Nazi biomedical vision in his participation in the "museum"
|
|
project, even if Beger was its driving force. (Pricesly that centrality was
|
|
what Hirt's old friend wished to deny in his insisence that Hirt's entire
|
|
behavior could be understood as an expression of the callouseness of the
|
|
anatomist.)
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of the war, there was apparently some confusion about
|
|
whether and how much to continue with research procedures, and eventually the
|
|
evidence was ordered to be destroyed. But that process could not be completed,
|
|
and French forces liberating Strasbourg found in Hirt's dissection room "many
|
|
wholly unprocessed corpses," many "partly-processed corpses," and a few that
|
|
had been "defleshed ... late in 1944," and their heads burned to avoid any
|
|
possibility of identification -- with "special care taken to remove the number
|
|
tattooed on the left forearm." Hirt himself disappeared at that time and is now
|
|
known to have killed himself shortly aferward.
|
|
|
|
This museum project is remarkable for its merging of Himmler's racial vision
|
|
with highly concrete, pseudo-scientific anthropoligical (Beger) and medical
|
|
(Hirt) participation -- all a logical outgrowth of the Nazi biological and
|
|
political mentality.
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
I ran across this book, just by chance at the local Mall. I happened to just
|
|
open the book up to the above chapter dealing with Ananarbe. It rather stuck in
|
|
my mind for several various reasons. First of all, the mood generated by the
|
|
accounts of what occured at the Museum reminded me of abductee horror stories
|
|
about body parts, examinations, genetic experiments.
|
|
|
|
Also, it appeared that the SS Museum was an inactment at the objective level of
|
|
the subjective experience that many abductees report. The "High Strangeness"
|
|
brought to a reality, in order to correct a "failed experiment" (inferior
|
|
humans, as viewed through the eyes of the Nazis). The "High Strangeness" is
|
|
brought out in numerous publications. Whitley Strieber had written about it in
|
|
his "Communion". Bud Hopkins utilizes it to demonstrate what he feels, to be
|
|
continual contact by alien intelligences. The Lear/Cooper camp creates the
|
|
scenarios of alien undergound bases, collection of human specimens,
|
|
mutilations, and the governments knowledge of these "secret pacts" and their
|
|
desire to hide them from American citizens. Invaribaly, something "spiritual"
|
|
always occur to these individuals who have had the experience. Then Fenwick and
|
|
prior to him, the JWHITE files were circulated. Check your "local" ParaNet
|
|
board for them, if you choose to research into this further.
|
|
|
|
Does this neccessarily, however, prove that Hitler was programmed by EBE's? If
|
|
we think along the lines in which Lear would like us to think, and Fenwick
|
|
expands upon, we could almost imagine that our government made a pact with
|
|
Lucifer in exchange for technology, and saw the error of their way too late.
|
|
The exchange, would be the "souls" of American Citizens, and of course, with a
|
|
country which boasts of the Motto "In God We Trust", indeed would merit the
|
|
effort to coverup the situation at all costs. It would be rather embarrasing to
|
|
admit that a country which has such claims as The United States does, in
|
|
regards to it's relationship with it's God, that it could conceivably be so
|
|
decieved, as to imagine these "aliens" as being true representatives of God.
|
|
However, if one were to look at it from a logical point of view, if there were
|
|
to be influence exherted over the world, the United States would be the best
|
|
place to "set up reconnaissance" zones, as it does have the resources available
|
|
to achieve various ends, along with the afforded "freedoms" to allow the
|
|
operation to continue without notice. It would be ironic to discover that
|
|
these freedoms could very well be the tool which these "aliens" are utilizing
|
|
to gain a good grip in our social structures.
|
|
|
|
What I find highly interesting about what Fenwick has to say about Hitler, is
|
|
the programming of Hitler. Was Hitler programmed? Or could he have been
|
|
mesmerized by a belief system that was growing in great proportion durring that
|
|
era?
|
|
|
|
The 1800's had some rather intriguing events in it. Durring that era, fresh
|
|
from the termoil the "Middle Ages" spawned, with full emergence from control
|
|
over a ruling theocratic organization that did everything within it's power to
|
|
bring things under subjection in the "Name of God", politicaly, religiously,
|
|
and including the ability to freely exchange knowledge, what occured appears to
|
|
be somewhat natural, in regards to the emergance of "Freedom of Speech and
|
|
Expression of THoughts". Led to extremes, like children who are suddenly
|
|
released from two weeks of being grounded, what resulted? Confusion, chaos,
|
|
war, and bloodshed. Anger towards "god" (which in reality was earthly
|
|
institutions) Rebellion against this conflict inspired Marx. It also brought
|
|
"metaphysics" and "secret societies" more into the open. Men were once again
|
|
allowed the freedom to grow in the exchange of information, along with the
|
|
development of sciences without fear of being placed under an edict, or drug
|
|
before the Inquisitors for heretic behaviour. Many theologens, philosophers and
|
|
social psychologist look back upon this era as the "beginning of the end".
|
|
Theologins blame philosophy for the degredation of society, yet, on the other
|
|
hand, the philosophers blamed the theologins for suppression. These conflicts
|
|
continue today, just as they did then. Things have not changed.
|
|
|
|
In the United States, great religious revivals were spawned. Of these, most
|
|
noteably, was Brigham Young who led his followers through the wilderness to
|
|
Utah. Durring this era a group of Bible students were waiting for the physical
|
|
arrival of the "prophets" of old, (these later became the Jehovah's Witnesses).
|
|
The 7th day Adventist Movement begun, and Protestentism begun to flourish,
|
|
bringing with it Democracy, and it's economical and political way of life which
|
|
transformed the world into what it is today. Durring this era, the occult
|
|
explosion hit America, and durring this time, H.P. Blavasky organized the
|
|
Theosophical Society. Many could state that this is the beginning, but is it?
|
|
To look for absolutes would be an encyclopediac undertaking, and cannot be
|
|
achieved within a single file! So we will content ourselves with this era,
|
|
since it itself appears to play an important factor in the minds of many who
|
|
create the phenomena scenario we are presented with today. From LEAR in the
|
|
prelude to his file, to George Hunt Williamson who claimed the "Visitants"
|
|
had been attempting to indoctrinate the world to a new way of life since the
|
|
1800's. (Road In The Sky (C) 1959 p.246).
|
|
|
|
The curiosity of the world was limitless, as archeological digs begun, in
|
|
efforts to understand many mysteries that could otherwise not be explained. The
|
|
pyramids became popular durring that era, the phenomena of the South American
|
|
Empires, and the discovery that Europe, Africa, China and India where not the
|
|
sum total of what had been at one time great civilizations. Durring all of this
|
|
exploration, they discovered many common things which then created more wonder
|
|
as to wether or not the things they were led to believe in were actually true.
|
|
|
|
Old legends led many to wonder, just what occured in the past. Under Blavasky's
|
|
funding, a Mr. James Churchwald set out on a quest to discover just what the
|
|
"true religion" may have been. From here, tales of Mu, Lamaria, and Atlantis
|
|
came to the fore. These inquiries always led to some speculation that the
|
|
United States could very well have been the "Motherland" which was laid waiste
|
|
due to some ancient catastrophy.
|
|
|
|
We could, politicaly, and moraly, based upon our own standards, view the system
|
|
which motivated Hitler as brutal, barbaric, and uncalled for. Yet, we fail to
|
|
see that this very type of religious motivation is the medium which drives
|
|
the MidEastern terrorists in vindicating themselves in the name of Allah, their
|
|
God. This type of zeal pushed the Inquisitors foreward in mass killings in
|
|
order to purge the land of "infidels" -- the psychology of a Jihid is very
|
|
powerful and the Islamic Jihid is the very bases for the Dune science fiction
|
|
story. The power behind a drug, a belief system, and politics. All drawn into
|
|
one event, to drive the hearts of men onward to do deeds in the name of their
|
|
god. If we strip away the politics of WW II, and look at the mood of the era
|
|
which created the politics, one can wonder, just what started World War II? And
|
|
where is the blame? And can we safely assume that Hitler was the single
|
|
proginitor of the war? Close examination shows otherwise.
|
|
|
|
What is very interesting about this point in time in history (1800's), is the
|
|
open investigation of mesmerism, along with the rapid advance in electricity.
|
|
Durring this era, the usage of drugs was common. Many things were allowed due
|
|
to not fully knowing the full consequences of what could happen. These early
|
|
efforts could be equaited with irresponsible children playing with things they
|
|
ought not to because they didn't understand them. The cause and effect, were
|
|
still under investigation. Things were done, just to see what would happen.
|
|
Many things were attempted in efforts to understand something. However, this
|
|
does not mean that they did not realize the effect --- Durring this time, the
|
|
effect would be ignored usually with a motivation in order to understand.
|
|
Today, we can think in terms of "mad scientists" doing all kinds of crazy
|
|
experiments --- yet, these very things are the price we pay for advancement. We
|
|
can say that we owe much to science. A debt. It is, however, a point of view,
|
|
as to what this debt is and how it is being paid. The "Mad Scientists" of today
|
|
are not the Boris Karloff grade B 1950's type. Today, they could very well be
|
|
with us.... in the guise of "National Security", or perhaps "subversive
|
|
activists".
|
|
|
|
Today we have rumors and tales of Telsa, and his radio-magnetic energies.
|
|
Today, we have settled for the form of electricity which we use in our homes.
|
|
Today, we are being led to believe that Telsa's inventions were ridiculed and
|
|
set aside, but there could be another very real possibility in why Telsa's
|
|
achievments have never made it very far in the world of consumers. There is a
|
|
great possibility that Telsa's discoveries had unusual effects upon the human
|
|
mind, and with knowledge of this, kept "under wraps" and never made available
|
|
for the consumers of energy and power. We know electromagnetics exist, yet we
|
|
also know it is not utilized at the consumer level. My first question is, "What
|
|
happened with Telsa technology? And just how widely was it used? Many things
|
|
back in this era were utilized to "enhance" occult powers. There is a great
|
|
coincidence in the rise of electricity, preoccupation with "magnetics", and the
|
|
sudden increase in "occult" powers. Can we state that the "aliens" gave us our
|
|
technology? Or is there per chance that we created the situation due to our
|
|
technological advances? There is a tendency for all "contact" to be in
|
|
accordance with the advances of the decade.
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Techno Drugs?
|
|
|
|
In December 1988 issue of OMNI Magazine, the article entitled "Transending
|
|
Science" deals with investigation of the TM experience. One excerpt of the
|
|
article which was highly interesting, was Persingers work, in which he created
|
|
a helmet, in which a computer was utilized to "contour" the electromagnetic
|
|
forces which in turn manipulated the brain wave patterns of the temporal lobes.
|
|
With this experiment, he discovered that with little effort, the subjects in
|
|
the research could then be, with consistancy, brought into a subjective state
|
|
in which they were then experiencing the abductee scene. It also took very
|
|
little effort for Persinger to produce a UFO sighting.
|
|
|
|
To determin the consistancy of this effect, he determined that it was more
|
|
readily to occur while the individual was being subjected to the
|
|
electromagnetic influence of the helmet. He also discovered that the
|
|
participants found the experience highly pleasurable, and they wanted more. He
|
|
also found that with very little effort after several sessions, tonal sounds,
|
|
or various symbols would then put these subjects into the TM state without any
|
|
effort on their part. In other words, Persinger indicated that with
|
|
electromagnetics, it was possible to take different people and get them to see
|
|
similar things while in the TM state.
|
|
|
|
Is it possible, that these early 20th Century Scientists, still fresh from
|
|
metaphysical schools of thoughts (which are the precursor to applied sciences)
|
|
stumbled across the above experience and utilized it in their own occult
|
|
practices?
|
|
|
|
In another book, called "Mind Wars" (C) 1984 St. Martin's Press, Ron McRae
|
|
decided to look into the possibility of government use of "psychic powers" in
|
|
warfare. On Page 135-136, we find the following:
|
|
|
|
"The second stage of the present psychic old war, according to Swann, is, "the
|
|
many forms of external manipulations that are known to change the interior
|
|
psychic formation of any man or woman...the most gross of these techniques was
|
|
the early form of brainwashing, where subtle suggestion was enforced and
|
|
embedded along with vicious and violent physical trauma. Since that time,
|
|
however, we now have the refined techniques known as subliminal persuasion
|
|
behavior modification and various forms of covert mind control."
|
|
|
|
"Swann probably understates the second point. I have said little of these
|
|
techniques, in part because many are electronic and not "psychic" in the
|
|
gernerally understood sense, in part because little information is available,
|
|
and in part for another reason -- security.
|
|
|
|
"There is, according to the best sources, a real threat in the electronic
|
|
manipulation of the human mind. The possibility arose from research that
|
|
attempted to explain telepathy electrognetically. Unfortunately, although the
|
|
researchers did not discover, as they sought, that thoughts could influence
|
|
long-range electromagnetic radiation, they did discover that long-range
|
|
electromagnetic radiation might influence the mind."
|
|
|
|
"According to Barbara Honegger, "the fundamental reason for the increased
|
|
interest" in psychic warfare, and the area where the Pentagon spends most of
|
|
its estimated six-million-dollar annual budget for psychic or related research,
|
|
"is initial results coming out of laboratories in the United States and Canada
|
|
that certain amplitude and frequency combinations of external electromagnetic
|
|
radiation in the brain-wave frequency range are capable of bypasing the
|
|
external sensory mechanism of organisms, including humans, and directly
|
|
stimulating higher-level neuronal structures in the brain. This electronic
|
|
simulation is known to produce mental changes at a distance, including
|
|
hallucinations in various sensory modalities, particularly auditory."
|
|
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
When did these inquiries begin? As early as the 50's? 40's? 30's? Or should we
|
|
move it back even further? And, is there the slightest possibility that
|
|
electromagnetics in conjuntion with usage of drugs, noteably LSD, at some point
|
|
in time in the past, could be a factor in "highly strange" experiences? Along
|
|
with possible body chemistries?
|
|
|
|
A book called "The Time Tables of History: A Horizontal Linkage of People and
|
|
Events" by Bernard Grun, based upon Werner Stein's Kultufrahrplan, (C) 1982 has
|
|
some interesting "linear scientific" achievments. Including electricity.
|
|
|
|
1819 Danish physicist Hans C. Oersted (1977 -1851) discovers electromagnetism
|
|
1821 Faraday discovers funamentals of electromagnetic rotation.
|
|
1829 American physicist John Henry (1797-1878) constructs an early version of
|
|
the electromagnetic motor.
|
|
1831 Michael Faraday (1791 - 1867) carries out a series of experiments
|
|
demonstrating the discovery of electromagnetic induction.
|
|
1831 James Clark Maxwell, Scottish Chemist who theorized (1873) that light
|
|
and and electromagnetism have identical source, born (died 1879)
|
|
1832 Faraday proposes pictorial representation of electric and magnetic lines
|
|
of force.
|
|
1833 K.F. Gauss and Wilhelm E. Wever devise the electromagnetic telegraph which
|
|
funtions over a distance of 9,000 feet.
|
|
1851 Franz Neumann Law of electromagnetic induction.
|
|
1856 Nikola Telsa b. 1856 (d. 1943)
|
|
1865 Clerk Maxwell "Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism"
|
|
1873 James Clark Maxwell "Electricity and Magnetism"
|
|
1888 Heinrich Hertz and Olviver Lodge independently indentify radio waves as
|
|
belonging to same family as light waves.
|
|
1888 Nikola Telsa constructs electric motor (manufactured by Westinghouse)
|
|
1896 Ernest Rutherford megnetic detection of electrical waves.
|
|
1899 First magnetic recordings of sound.
|
|
1902 Oliver Heavside, English physicist, states the existence of an atmospheric
|
|
layer which aids the conduction of radio waves.
|
|
1904 Sir John Fleming uses thermoinic tube to gernerate radio waves.
|
|
1910 J.J. Thomsons work on deflection of "positive rays" in magnetic field.
|
|
|
|
(there are, of course, numerous mentionings of various works done in regards to
|
|
electricity -- these, I highlighted. Reference the book for complete linier
|
|
progress of technology durring the era).
|
|
|
|
Back in the 50's, when UFO invasion appeared absolute in the minds of millions
|
|
of Americans, there arose the UFO Prophets. Of the literature that I have read
|
|
about these prophets, the works of Howard Menger's "From Outer Space" (C) 1959,
|
|
and George Hunt Williamson's "Road In The Sky" (C) 1958, contain some
|
|
interesting information. Even though these were considered after the passage of
|
|
time a "hoax", there messages are thriving quite well these days. Menger,
|
|
specificaly brought some interesting points up durring a Question and Answer
|
|
session at the end of his book on Page 163. (For complete Question/Answer
|
|
session in Menger's book, refer to MENGER.)
|
|
|
|
The question is:
|
|
|
|
"How are the visitors trying to raise the mass consciousness of the people?"
|
|
|
|
Menger answers with:
|
|
|
|
A. By various methods such as:
|
|
a. Dissemination of saucer research data.
|
|
b. Stories of contacts with their own.
|
|
c. Their signs in the sky.
|
|
d. Mechanically by means of mental capsulation and machines.
|
|
|
|
Mental capsulation can be projected by sound, color, vibration. A
|
|
high-frequency sound can be a mental capsulation; a song or a selection of
|
|
music can be a mental capsulation.
|
|
|
|
The machines which send out super-sonic high frequency sounds use a man's
|
|
body as a terminal in conjunction with the mental capsulation. Ther are three
|
|
terminal bodies in each state, The machines now operate on a silent carrier
|
|
wave.
|
|
---------------
|
|
Now, let's skip back a few pages and review Mengers reactions when he was
|
|
given these "devices" by the "Space Brothers". On page 62 Menger writes:
|
|
|
|
"Then they talked further of their many contacts all over the world and my
|
|
job in particular."
|
|
|
|
"One of my tasks was the mental assistance of individuals often without
|
|
their knowledge. Such could be accomplished by soun-frequency waves, light
|
|
waves, the use of colors and other physical means. I had alays thought of such
|
|
matters as being accomplished in some supernatural manner; but I was rapidly
|
|
learning that the Infinite Creator accomplished all purposes by natural laws."
|
|
|
|
"'Do not think of this as some artificial control of the human brain,' one of
|
|
the men said, "as you may see in some of those horrifying science-fiction
|
|
pictures -- though I must confess that he (and he indicated the other man) and
|
|
I aw two of them on a double picture (I assume he meant to say 'double
|
|
feature') and rather enjoyed them. We do not control the brain. Such an action
|
|
is not in keeping with the laws of the Infinite Creator. Instead, with
|
|
theproper instruments and techniques, you can accomplish a much larger purpose:
|
|
YOU CAN RELEASE SOMTHING IN THE BRAIN WHICH IS ALREADY THERE.''
|
|
|
|
"The instruments in the car accomplished such tasks. I would be asked to
|
|
place them in four states: New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland.
|
|
With each intrusment would be aman or woman who would act as a human terminal
|
|
in conjunction with the machine. These people would react according to their
|
|
own individual brain development with the assistance of the impulses received
|
|
by the machines."
|
|
|
|
"I didn't quite understand how it was to work, but it seemed they were
|
|
trying to get across that it was necessary to have both the machine and the
|
|
human mind working in conjunction to accomplish such a purpose."
|
|
|
|
"'A central location will be established for each instrusment. The range of
|
|
each instrument is about 25 miles.'"
|
|
|
|
"'After you place these instruments, Howard, you will notice an immediate
|
|
and obvious effect. People within a raius of 25 miles of each instrument will
|
|
automatically become more aware of and conscious of their interest in space
|
|
travel and in our space crage. They will see more of our craft because they
|
|
will be loOking up. Then when these people hear of your experiences, they will
|
|
be inspired to come to you and offer to help you in any way they can."
|
|
|
|
"They had already established many bases. The one in New Jersey was, they
|
|
said, within 15 miles of my home, totally unknown to anyone, except, of course,
|
|
those of this planet who had been working with the space people for many
|
|
years."
|
|
------------
|
|
Points to ponder. In the OMNI article on Persinger's work, it demonstrates
|
|
that their are particular images which are consistant in the laboratory when
|
|
exposed to electromagnetics. Is there a slight possibility, that perhaps an
|
|
early form of electromagnetics was utilized to influence these individuals?
|
|
Today, it is said, these "beams" are coming from outer space. Then, they were
|
|
down on earth. They appear to be proportional to the technological advances of
|
|
the day. Remember, Menger utilized BOLD CAPS himself, within his book when he
|
|
said
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
"YOU CAN RELEASE SOMETHING IN THE BRAIN WHICH IS ALREADY THERE"
|
|
|
|
Of interest also, in Persingers research, is the ability to get people to
|
|
see UFO's while under the influence of the electromagnetic helmet.
|
|
|
|
In the book "Flying Saucers: Serious Business", (C) 1966 Frank Edwards has
|
|
as a preface the following quote:
|
|
|
|
"Flying Saucers exist only in the imaginations of the viewers."
|
|
|
|
-- President Dwight D. Eisenhower
|
|
December 16, 1954
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
I ask, could this be literaly true? In light of possibilities in which such
|
|
objects can be conjured from the dark recesses of the subjective mind on a
|
|
consistant bases from the volunteers in research clinics, could we dismiss the
|
|
possibility that Eisenhower was telling the truth? And could it be possible
|
|
that the use of "imaginary" means the Government knew that they were not real?
|
|
Could it possibily be true that the Condon report was true? Can it be, we are
|
|
looking in the wrong place for the answers. And possibly the Government feels
|
|
more comfortable with us thinking UFO's and aliens are responsible for the
|
|
"intrusions"? If so, why would they wish to hide it?
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
In the book "Mind Wars" McRea then writes, on pages 116-117:
|
|
|
|
"According to Langley-Porter's Alan Gevins, who is generally cautious and
|
|
skeptical of psychic claims, the reality may be worse. Extremely low frequency
|
|
radiation (ELF), which the navy has proposed as a submarine communication
|
|
system because the thousand-mile long wave forms are unobstructed by water,
|
|
might be capable of shutting off the brain, killing everyone in 10 thousand
|
|
square mile or larger target area. 'No one paid any attention to the biological
|
|
effects of ELF for years," says Gevins, "because the power levels are so low.
|
|
Then we realized that because the power levels are so low, the brain could
|
|
mistake the outside signal for its own, mimic it [a process known as
|
|
bioelectric entrainment], and respond when it changes.'"
|
|
|
|
"It is possible the Soviets have actually tested this technique. The microwaves
|
|
beamed at the U.S. embassy in Moscow might have been a test. The navy is still
|
|
investigating an even more ominous possibility -- a rash of aircraft carrier
|
|
crashes in 1980 and 1981 might have been caused by electromagnetic waves beamed
|
|
at incoming pilots from the Soviet spy ships tha shadow the U.S. fleet. Even a
|
|
tiny uncertainty, electronically induced at the last critical second before an
|
|
aircraft touches down on the pitching deck of a carrier, might cause disaster."
|
|
|
|
"I must stress that these results and speculations are tentative. Ther is no
|
|
reason for panic, and the United States has INVESTED adequate resources to
|
|
INVESTIGATION OF THE PROBLEM. There is no need for a psychic Manhatten
|
|
Project." [bold caps inserted].
|
|
---------------
|
|
Here we are told the United States has invested adequate resources to
|
|
investigate the problem. In other words, can we then assume that a problem has
|
|
been noted? At what level of investigation has the government undertaken in
|
|
looking into the problem, and is it dealing with just the ELF situation? Or is
|
|
there more? And what is the problem? Which agency, then, would be utilized?
|
|
Could it possibly be HEW? (Health, Education and Welfare). In the past, the
|
|
record of HEW's involvment with past experimentation seems to have been more
|
|
then just lightly involved. By 1971 the court dockets were crowded with
|
|
lawsuits filed on behalf of the "human guinea pigs" who were victims of
|
|
research.
|
|
|
|
The U.S. Congress, Senate, The Staff of the Subcommittee on Constitutional
|
|
Rights, Committee on the Judiciary, "Individual RIghts and the Federal ROle in
|
|
Behavior Modification", 93rd Congress, 2nd Session, Novemeber, 1974 was chaired
|
|
by Senator Sam Ervin. It was largely ignored by the press, yet it revealed some
|
|
interesting information. The report disclosed that thirteen projects were run
|
|
by the Defense Department; the Department of Labor had conducted several
|
|
experiments; the National Science Foundation conducted a "substantial amount of
|
|
research dealing with understanding of human behavior"; even the Vetrens'
|
|
Administration participated in psychosurgery experiments, which, in many cases,
|
|
were nothing more than an advanced form of lobotomy.
|
|
|
|
One of the largest supporter of "behaior research" was the Department of
|
|
Health, Education and Welfare, and its subagency the National Insitute of
|
|
Mental Health. The subcommittee said that HEW had participated in a "very large
|
|
number of projects dealing with the control and alteration of human behavior."
|
|
Largest of all the supporters of behavior modification was the Law Enforcement
|
|
Assistance Administration (LEAA) which, under the Department of Justice, funded
|
|
hundreds of behavior modification experiments.
|
|
|
|
In 1975 the Rockefeller Report to the President on CIA Activities was released.
|
|
Shortly there after, the Olsen family were informed that their father Dr. Frank
|
|
Olsen did not die of suicide, in 1953, but that he had been administered LSD
|
|
without his knowledge, and his death was concealed due to "National Security".
|
|
The Rockefeller Report also contains information which, in 1973, a total of 152
|
|
seperate files were ordered destroyed by the CIA. It is rather interesting, as
|
|
the type of death that Ownes suffered, is high in similarity to the death of
|
|
General James V. Forrestal, who also jumped to his death from a 16th story
|
|
hospital window. It is said that Truman had quickly put the lid on the secret
|
|
and turned the screws so tight that the general public still thinks that flying
|
|
saucers are a joke. Lear then claims that Forrester's medical records are
|
|
sealed to this day. Is there a possibility that Forrester could have been one
|
|
of these "earlier" victims? Is it possible that due to this, Forrester's
|
|
records are sealed? Why would they be sealed to this day, if it was "just a
|
|
suicide"? Unless, of course, there is a need to coverup what CAUSED the
|
|
suicide. Simple statements about "alien invasions" should NOT be accepted as
|
|
being something that needs to be sealed, unless there was is a desire to hide
|
|
the cause of death due to the interest of "National Security".
|
|
|
|
(The Olsen settlement can be found in Senate S.B. 3035)
|
|
|
|
With the possibility of LSD the cause of Forrester's death, some may think it
|
|
may have not been manufactured early enough to effect the era we are
|
|
considering. However, it was being manufactured by Sandoz Laboratories since
|
|
1938, and accidently ingested by Hoffman in 1943. In 1950 it was introduced to
|
|
American Psychiatrists. These things are being brought up in order to
|
|
demonstrate that there have been capabilities on the Government's part to
|
|
coverup. To some, this may appear to be unrelated and very disjointed, but it
|
|
is being related to make a point. There is a slight possibility that some of
|
|
the things that have been "uncovered" in the past could be directly related to
|
|
things we are trying to "uncover today".
|
|
|
|
Remember what the OMNI article states about how easy it is to utilize tonal
|
|
sounds, symbols or colors to put one back into such a state? How then, does
|
|
Menger describe the encapsulation method? Is there some fact in what Menger
|
|
states in light of current clinical research?
|
|
|
|
In the OMNI article, and other articles dealing with the abductee scenario,
|
|
great care and concern are utilized to determin just how the experience is
|
|
affected by audio/visual material, such as TV, the media, reading material,
|
|
etc. But then, if we reflect upon what Menger states, what if the dissimination
|
|
of information of contact with "our kind" has some merit? Is there some truth
|
|
in this, and can we look at it as LEAR would like to have us believe, that we
|
|
are being fed propoganda from various levels in order to solidify this
|
|
acceptance? The same line of thinking which begun in the 50's continues with us
|
|
today. Look at the following paragraphs garnered from Brad Steigers book
|
|
"Fellowship" (C) 1988, Ivy Books, and see if the "thread" still holds true
|
|
today, as it did back in the 50's.
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Page 85 (From Mark-Age Channeling Session)
|
|
|
|
Each one is assigned, in a sense, to a certain individual upon the Earth planet
|
|
at this time. We are alerted by the various methods we have of mind control in
|
|
electonics and magnetic equipment -- terms which we use for your convenience
|
|
which really do not explain our equipment -- and through these means, we know
|
|
your present development.
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Page 98 (From Space Being OX-HO)
|
|
|
|
"America right now is feeling the effect of the Karmic pattern of the Atlantean
|
|
culture. Your young people are Atlanteans reborn to once again work out their
|
|
Karma. They are filled to overflowing with the knowledge of the great
|
|
civilization of Atlantis. Their arts and their scientific technology is greater
|
|
than ever before, and you will begin to see this more and more distinctly."
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Page 52 PRINCIPLES OF THE SOLAR LIGHT CENTER
|
|
|
|
1. Belief in an Infinite Creator (the All-Knowing-One, of the Space Beings) and
|
|
in the Cosmic Christ, the Spritual heirarchy, and the Great White Brotherhood.
|
|
|
|
The message today, is the same as yesterday. Are we being fooled by the
|
|
government itself, or some belief system which transends our political systems?
|
|
And are these really spiritual entities, human agencies, or combination of
|
|
both?
|
|
|
|
As of late, certain groups have been complaining that the United States has
|
|
been "jamming their transmissions". If this is true, then the government is
|
|
well aware of some type of influence being exerted over our airwaves and are
|
|
attempting to stop it. If this is true, and due to the nature of such
|
|
possibilities, they would not wish to have the American citizens know that such
|
|
a thing would exist. And so, they would then attempt to "jam" the frequencies
|
|
in an effort to counteract the effect. In fact, there were, in some circles,
|
|
threats issued, that if the government did NOT stop the "war would begin". What
|
|
would this entail? Short circuiting of brainwave patterns to create utter
|
|
chaos? It is indeed rather ominous to think, that such a war could be fought
|
|
with such intensity without our even knowing what on earth is going on.
|
|
|
|
If we are being "manipulated" in any manner, is our government aware of it?
|
|
Sometimes I wonder, although we may look back at the extremes of the McCarthy
|
|
era, and the blacklisting of entertainers, screewriters and etc., if there
|
|
could have been real reasoning behind the power of the media? We can now think
|
|
of it as extremes, today, but then could there have been "hints" of concerns
|
|
we are not aware of?
|
|
|
|
Were there or are their indications that the idealisms which "created and
|
|
programmed" Hitler spread beyond Europe? Various writers have brought out that
|
|
yes, indeed these thoughts were not confined to Germany and the surrounding
|
|
immediate areas.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
"The Legacy of The Gods"
|
|
Robert Charroux
|
|
Translated into english (C) 1974 by Berkley Publishing Corporation
|
|
Original (C) 1964 by Robert Laffont, Inc.
|
|
|
|
After their defeat in 1918 a few Germans, initiated into infernal occultism and
|
|
intoxicated with racist pretensions, reorganized the Aryan society that became
|
|
all the more secret becuase it was outside the law in all parts of the world.
|
|
Their goal was to create a superior race; that is, a privelaged people who
|
|
would subjegate and rule the rest of the world.
|
|
|
|
In his successful book, "The Myth of The Twentieth Century", published in 1930,
|
|
the talented writer Alfred Rosenberg stated the laws and philosophy of the
|
|
Aryan champions. "To rule the world," he said, "it is enough to have pure
|
|
blood."
|
|
|
|
This new charter of the Aryan world was to be illustrated by rivers of blood,
|
|
countless massacres, and mountains of corpses.
|
|
|
|
Actually, however, Rosenberg had not invented anything. Identical ideas had
|
|
been professed earlier by George Grant, Gobineau, Houston, Chamberlain, and
|
|
later, the German Ludwig Wilset, in "Origin and Prehistory of The Aryans". And
|
|
the French historian A. Pictet, in a work titled "Migrations Primitives des
|
|
Aryas" had announced the advent of the master race: "In an era before any
|
|
historical record, lost in the mists of time, a race destined by Provedence to
|
|
dominate the entire world grew little by little in its primeval cradle,
|
|
privileged above all others by beauty of blood and gifts of intelligence."
|
|
|
|
The Thule Group was founded in 1910 by Professor Felix Niedner. Beginning in
|
|
1919, some outstanding adepts -- Baron Ungern von Sternberg, Karl Haushofer, a
|
|
disciple of Guderjieff, the writer Deitrich Eckart -- gave it a new impetus
|
|
and an emblem: the swastika, symbol of evolution, the rotation of the stars
|
|
around the pole, and the creation of fire among the Hindus. (The swastika is
|
|
actually a universal sign found amoung all peoples. It is carved on a stone
|
|
lamp in the Madeleine cave, the tablets of Glozel, the stones of Moulin Piat,
|
|
and the prehistoric ramparts of Mississippi, and it appears in the inscription
|
|
on the Newton Stone in Scotland.)
|
|
|
|
In his book L'Europe Paienne du Vingtieme Siecle," the historian Pierre Mariel
|
|
writes that Deitrich Echart was Adolf Hitler's initiator and brought him into
|
|
the Thule group in 1922.
|
|
|
|
Hitler was in great financial difficulties and may even have been a homeless
|
|
vagrant, but he was consumed with ambition, rancor, and sincere, frenzied
|
|
idalism. He was also somewhat clairvoyant; he served as a medium for the
|
|
conspiracy, which bacame increasingly enveloped in the mists of a dubious
|
|
occultism.
|
|
|
|
At the same time, similar movements were devloping on the European continent.
|
|
In London, Paris, Berlin, and Rome there was clandestine publications
|
|
containing an odd mixture of anarchism, spiritualism, "traditional research,"
|
|
and eroticism.
|
|
|
|
In about 1920 the Revue Balitque appeared in France. It examined the problem
|
|
of the direct descendants of the Hyperborean ancestors: the Lithuanians, whose
|
|
writing has so many points in common with Sanskrit.
|
|
|
|
The magazine Les Polaires (Paris, 1921) had the ambition of resucitating the
|
|
old myth of Hyperborea, but this kind of writing floursihed above all in
|
|
Germany, with Niedner's "Altnordische Dichtung und Pros," Dietrich Echart's
|
|
"Auf gut Deutch," and "Die Hanuseen Zeitung," published by the magician Eric
|
|
Jan Van Hanussen, the man who is said to have replaced Hitler as the medium of
|
|
the Thule Group, and who later became his semiofficial astrologer.
|
|
|
|
The ORDENSBURGER
|
|
|
|
Beginning in 1934, the Thule Group became a powerful secret society whose name
|
|
was not to be known to the public or even candidates for admission. The latter,
|
|
before their intiation, were given to understand that the organization was the
|
|
secret Teutonic Order.
|
|
|
|
This secret order had, of course, no connection with the real Teutonic Order,
|
|
which still exists in Portugal and the Netherlands. Under the name of the
|
|
Knights of Poseidon (still the ideas of knighthood and the western ocean of
|
|
Atlantis), it has devoted itself to underseas adventure, and is surely in
|
|
comunication with the THule Group. It has been said the Knights of Poseidon
|
|
reprenst the temporal power of the German secret army, while the Thule Group is
|
|
its spiritual power. This may be true.
|
|
|
|
There were three aspects of the education given in the Ordensburger: military,
|
|
similar to modern military and police academies; political; and occult, similar
|
|
to the doctines of Gurdjieff. (George Ivanovich Gurdjieff [1868-1949], born in
|
|
the Caucasus, was both an adventurer and an enlightened occultist. Whether he
|
|
was a miracle-worker, a secret agent, or simply a charlatan, he proagated in
|
|
Europe and America strange, murky, and fascinating doctrines that troubled many
|
|
weak minds. Perhaps he had a certain genious, but if so he was never able to
|
|
express it in his books, which are unreadable, inane, and incomprehensible. He
|
|
did, however, influence certain spiritualistic sects.)
|
|
|
|
In a Rhineland forest, amid tall firs, stands the white impressive Vogelsang
|
|
castle which was the Ordensburg No. 1 of the THule Goup, with the main bureau
|
|
of what would now be called psychological warfare.
|
|
-------------
|
|
The THULE Group itself, was rather active in world political affairs also.
|
|
Below is a small excerpt to demonstrate this from a recognized writter outside
|
|
of the UFO circls.
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
"The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler"
|
|
by Robert Payne
|
|
Popular Library Paper Back Edition
|
|
(C) 1973 Page 125
|
|
|
|
The reaction set in swiftly, as the extreme right gatherd its forces. The
|
|
headquarers of the reaction was the Hotel Vierjahreszeiten, where several
|
|
floors were given over to the THule Society, ostensibly a literary club devoted
|
|
to the study of Nordic culture but in fact a secret political organization
|
|
devoted to violent anti-Semitism and rule by an aristocratic elite. The name of
|
|
the organization derived from ultima THule, the unknonw northern land believed
|
|
to be the original home of the German race. The society had been founded during
|
|
the war by Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff, whose aristocratic prensions reposed
|
|
on imaginary foundations. His real name was Rudolf Glauer, and he was the son
|
|
of a railroad engineer: he was more aristocratic than the aristocrats. He had
|
|
ingratiated himself into Munich society, large sums of monery were at this
|
|
disposal, and many of the most influential people in Munich were his disciples.
|
|
The symbol of the Thule Society was a swastika with a dagger enclosed in laurel
|
|
leaves.
|
|
|
|
Thule agents had penetrated the government; they were especially adept at
|
|
foriegn documents and assembling cashes of arms and ammunition; they had
|
|
powerful ties with the Freikorps, or Free Corps, the private armies led by
|
|
rabid rightists, usually army officers supported by rich industrailists and
|
|
they had begun to work among the industrial proletariat, especially among the
|
|
railwaymen, because they realized that a successful counterrevolution could be
|
|
brought about only by controling the means of transportaion. They were also
|
|
working without much success on the Munich garrison troops, who continued to
|
|
sit on the fence, observing the turmoil around them with extraordinary
|
|
indifference.
|
|
|
|
And here, a glimps at early beginnings in creating a "perfect race".
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
From Page 23 , Footnote, The Nazi Doctors (C) 1986 by Robert Jay Lifton
|
|
|
|
Fritz Lenz, a German physician-geneticist advocate of sterilization (later a
|
|
leading idealogue in the Nazi progrom of "racial hygiene"), could, in 1923,
|
|
berate his countrymen for thier backwardness in the domain of sterilzation as
|
|
compared with the United States. Lenz complained that provisions in the Weimar
|
|
Constitution (prohibiting the infliction of bodily alterations on human beings)
|
|
prevented widespread use of vasectomy techniques; that Germany had nothing to
|
|
match the eugenics research institutions in England and the United States (for
|
|
instance, that at Cold SPring Harbor, New York, led by Charles B. Davenport and
|
|
funded by the Carnegie Instituion in Washington and by Mary Harriman); and that
|
|
Germany had no equivalent to the American laws prohibiting marriage both for
|
|
people suffering from such conditions as epilepsy or mental retardation, and
|
|
between people of different races. Lenz criticized America only for focusing
|
|
too generally on preserving the "white race" instead of specifically on the
|
|
"Nordic race" -- yet was convinced that the "next round in the thousand year
|
|
fight for the life of the Nordic race will probably be fought in America." That
|
|
single reservation suggests the early German focus on a specific racial entity,
|
|
the "Nordic" or "Aryan race," however unsupported by existing knowledge.
|
|
|
|
There had been plenty of racial-eugenic passion in the United States, impulses
|
|
to sterilize large numbers of criminals and mental patients out of fear of
|
|
"national degenration" and of threat to the health of "the civilized races,"
|
|
who were seen to be "biologically plunging downward." Associated with the
|
|
American eugenics movemnet was a biomedical vision whose exten is suggested by
|
|
the following quotation from a 1923 book by A. E. Wiggam: "The first warning
|
|
which biology gives to statesmanship is that the advanced races of mankind are
|
|
going backward; ... that civilization, as you have so far administered it, is
|
|
self-destructive; that civilization always destroyst the man that builds it;
|
|
that your vast efforts to improve man's lot, instead of imporving man, are
|
|
hastening the hour of his destruction". *
|
|
|
|
* Footnote: In a 1932 study of the sterilization movements in the United
|
|
States, J.P. Landman spoke of "alarmist eugenics" and of "over zealous and over
|
|
ardent eugenicists" who "regard the socially inadequate persons, i.e., the
|
|
feeble-minded, the epileptics, the meantally diseased, the blind, the deformed
|
|
and the crminals as inimical to the human race ... [because] these peoples
|
|
perpetuate their deficiencies and thus threaten the quality of the ensuing
|
|
generations. It should be our aim to exterminate these undesirables, they
|
|
contend, since a nation must defend itself against national degeneration as
|
|
much as against the external foreign enemy."
|
|
-------------
|
|
Can we assume that these influences are truly "alien" or "supernatural
|
|
intelligences"? Or can we really, and with great dare, question if in fact it
|
|
is a resurected belief which is posing itself for a final strike? If we can
|
|
remove the politics of the situation, and reflect upon the zeal in which
|
|
religion has moved the political formations of the world we live in, reflect
|
|
upon the many mysteries that concluded with the end of World War II, and can
|
|
look beyond Hitler, maybe something is their "in the air" waging war over the
|
|
minds of men. One can disolve political institutions, but as various belief
|
|
systems in the world have proven time immorial, it is difficult to destroy the
|
|
belief in and the practice of it. The belief itself can still survive
|
|
irregardless of what political boundries it may reside in. Including the USSR.
|
|
|
|
There is a great trend in regards to world viewpoints of Hitler, and the
|
|
stigmatism of World War II. We cannot believe that such an individual was
|
|
spawned naturally from the genetic pools of humanity. We cannot believe that he
|
|
did not accomplish all these things alone. And we cannot dare believe that the
|
|
thinking patterns of that era were also revelent here in the United States.
|
|
Theologins would prefer to claim Hitler was Demon possessed, not laying claim
|
|
to the errors of prior religious influences which spawned the rebellion. And
|
|
could it be due to this, we skirt around valid questions? Nearly every book
|
|
written about in regards to UFO's, at some point mention the Nazi's and their
|
|
going "underground" to continue on. To think of the possibilities of this being
|
|
so, one must remove the viewpoint of a political column, and think about the
|
|
belief system which drove these onwards. These things just do not die. It may
|
|
make us feel uncomfortable to think that during the 20's, the United States was
|
|
the "leader" in eugenics which inspired Germany to increase it's own efforts
|
|
until it reached the point of biological experimental sciences, eugenics and
|
|
genocide. It may also make us feel uncomfortable to think that the "next
|
|
struggle" could be here in the United States. But do we have the courage to
|
|
examine it carefully?
|
|
|
|
To what extent did this belief infiltrate other parts of the world? Could
|
|
there have possibly been some measure of truth in Menger's claims? Or is this
|
|
all just fabrication? He cut there hair, got them prepared to send out
|
|
into the world. He would show them where the water supplies were, where the
|
|
schools were. He said they didn't need any legal documents to remain in the
|
|
country. This took up so much of his time, he couldn't keep up with his
|
|
signpainter's business.
|
|
|
|
Could there have been Ahnenerbe type experimentation in other parts of the
|
|
world, including the United States? What is so special about the ages of 30-40
|
|
years old? And why has it been said more then once that the "children are very
|
|
important"? Was there an actual attempt to extend the "national heritage" to
|
|
Germans outside of Germany and Europe? We, perhaps cannot rationalize the use
|
|
of science to further a belief system. The intellect, however exists, and has
|
|
existed for centuries, in which reasoning can lead men to do these things in
|
|
order to appease their god.
|
|
|
|
These are but a small portion of the various questions that arrise. Perhaps,
|
|
these "threads" have very little real meaning. Yet, on the other hand, they
|
|
could have real meaning. The complexities which could be built out of this, are
|
|
indeed great. But, as with all things, they must be viewed with balance.
|
|
|
|
If there is interest in this, perhaps I will create another file. Please take
|
|
note, however, if indeed we are now being put to the test, today as it was
|
|
yesterday, it is imperative to test all "spirits" (or, things in the air).
|
|
------------------
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|