Nexus - 0220 - New Times Magazine

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LETIIERS TO THE EDITOR..~ GLOBAL NEWS

5 ANOTHER FREE ENERGY COVER-UPL By Alison David. The intriguing story of 6

A round-up of the news you probably did not see.

NEX-US NEWS UPDATES

12

Follow-up on several articles that have captured ongoing interest with readers. Topics include a translation of those mysterious Egyptian hieroglyphs found in the Hunter Valley, NSW

47

De,,~is

Lee, inventor and future thinker, who came up with

a Super Heat Pump, and other innovations, that he

claimed could provide free electricity.

NEW SCIENCE NEWS

.53

Contains the second part of Toby Grotz's 'round

the world' round-up of free energy researchers and

their work, plus some other titbits of interest.

THE MICROCHIP & fHE MARK OF liHE BEAST.........14

With Dr Carl W. Sanders. This is indeed a THE TWILIGHT IONE fascinating extract from an audiotape from one of the designers of the now-famous microchip, explaining its intended use in a new world order.

WACO: THE BIG LIE CONTINUES

16

From Samuel L. Blumenfeld. Two videos have been released, both with on-site footage, showing who the 'good guys" and who the 'bad guys' really were. This is a comprehensive review of the first.

THE SECR~TS OF DENTAL HEAtTHi 22 With Dr Robert O. Nara. Many years ago, Dr Nara embarked upon a campaign to educate people into preventive dentistry. His efforts cost the dental industry lost revenue, and resulted in his own loss of licence.

THE MILITARY LINK TO MODERN MEDICINE..........28

Dr Alan S. Levin is interviewed on a wide range of subjects surrounding the involvement of the military in modern medicine.

EXTRATERRESTRIAL ARCHAEOlOGY

35

By David Hatcher Childress. This article, extracted from his latest book, Extraterrestrial Archaeology, focusses on the mysteries of Mars and its moons, and the Russian probes sent to photograph them.

THE TERRORJIST FACTORY - Part 2

42

By Joe Vial/s. Continues the amazing tale of political manipulation, mind control and the intelligence community. Based on a true story!

JUNE - JULY 1994

59

A collection of strange and bizarre stories from

around (and 10ff) the world. Topics this issue

include sightings of monsters in the Yukon, and

more on the "Lost Land of the Lizard People",

tREVI EWS--Books

64

"Extraterrestrial Archaeology" by David Hatcher Childress

"Why Flying Endangers Your Health" by Farro! S. Kahn

"Space Aliens From The Pentagon" by William R. Lyne

"A Century Of War" by F. William Engdahl

"Extraterrestrial Friends And Foes" by George C. Andrews

·Project Seek" by Gerald A. Carroll

"The Thirteenlh Stone" by Reginald Lewis

"Trail Of The Octopus" by Donald Goddard with Lester K. Colema.n

"The Cancer Solution" by Robert E. Willner, M.D., Ph.D.

"The CanCell Controversy" by Louise B. Trull

"AIDS Control Diet" by Mark Konlee

"Natural Healing" by SoIuntra King

"TMJ-The Jaw Connection" by Greg Goddard, D.D.S.

REVIEWS--Video

70

"The Physics of Natural Health, Agriculture and Healing"

"The Physics of Natural Non- Toxic AgricultureP

"Waco: The Big Lie - Parts 1 & 2"

·UFOs: The Evidence"

REVIEWS--Audio

J •• _•••

71

"Playing In The RainboW" by Tarshito

"Heal Cavities, Grow New Gums" by Or Robert O. Nara, D.D.s.

DE-ClASSIFIED ADS

79

SUBSCR'PTIONiS & BACK ISSUES

80 NEXUS-'


Editorial Hello and welcome to the latest and greatest edition of NEXUS! I would like to extend a special welcome to all the new UK and European NEXUS rea_ders. We have just opened an-office in the UK for English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish readers, and also an office in The Netherlands servicing European countries. In faa, very soon we will be printing a European edition of NEXUS, as well as the current US and Australasian editions. I would like to make one point very clear, however: all the NEXUS editions are identical, except for some of the advertisements. There are lots of great articles in this issue, a favourite in our office being the very colourful interview with Dr Levin, on the military links with medicine. Believe me, we've had to delete many expletives from _ -~this int~rview. The other article which is generating much personal interest in our office is titled "Dental Health Secrets". It is well worth the read, espe­ cially if you are afraid of dentists! Other things in this issue which excite us are: the Waco video (you've just got to see this to believe it!) the new book out by David Childress called "Extraterrestrial Archaeologyl' (see article on page 35), and Part 2 of "The Terrorist Factory". Boy, we've had so many people wanting sneak previews of parts 2 and 3 of this series. Now a few other things to mention: • If you have a shop or clinic and you want to sell NEXUS, call us. This applies to any shop anywhere in Australia, New Zealand, USA, Canada, UK, or Europe. • We've got some great ideas for NEXUS T-shirt/bumper sticker designs and slogans, and we welcome your suggestions. Send all the material to our Australian office. • IWe are also looking for an advertising sales person to service the USA and Canada. This person must be experienced in sales and be computer/modem-literate. Contact our Australian office for more information. And last, but not least, is our announcement of NEXUS Online! Yes, thanks to the many email replies to the last editorial, we are setting up NEXUS on the computer networks. This will provide access to any­ body with a computer and modem. Amongst other things, you will now be able to subscribe to NEXUS electronically, i.e., every two months we will email NEXUS to subscribers over the networks. We will also be opening up discussion groups and making many of our information files available to those wishing to subcribe to NEXUS Online1 For more details, see our ad on page 15. In the meantime, happy reading! Duncan WARRANTY AND INDEMNITY Advertisers u/?On and by lodging material with the Publisher for publication OJ autborising or approving of the publication of any mate_dal INDEMNIFY the Publisher and its servants and agents against all liability daims or Iproceedings whatsoeve~ arising from the publication and without limiting the generality of the foregOing to indemnify each of tfiem in relation to defamation, slander of title, breach of copyright, infringement of trademadcs or names of publica­ tioo titles, u_nfair competit!on or t~ad~ pract_ices, rOy'altie~ or violati~ of righ~s or pri~acy.~N~ WARRAN! t/:lat .the materia! complies wjth.all rel~vant laws and regulations and tha~ Its publication will not give me to any rights allalnst or liabilities In the Publisher, Its servants or agents and In particular that nothing therein is capable of beingmisleading or aeceptive or otherwise In breach of the Part V of the Trade Practices Act 1974, All expressions of opin­ ion are published on thg bas is that they arc not to be regarded as expreSSing the opinion of the Publisher or its servants or agents. Editodal advice is not spe-cific and readers are advised (0 seek professional hel'p for individual problems. e NEXUS New Times 19~4

2·NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994




NB: Please keep let· ters to approx.l00.150' ! words in length. Ed.

; .. 1'

Re: Rare Informationl Dear NEXUS, I recently came across your astounding Feb-Mar 1994 issue. I am very impressed with the rare information you have presented, and the 'high calibre of authOFs who contribute to your mag­ azine. I am especially intrigued by the article on AIDS by Dr Robert Strecker, and the anicle on the Neurophone. What a terrific inven­ tion! I know of people who could really use an invention like that. As for Dr Strecker, he is doing the pub­ lic a great favour of exposing the hidden 'truths' about AIDS. Very few people in the medical communi­ ty have the courage to speak out on -AIDS, without fear of losing their jobs or being labelled a "homo­ phobe". I thank you for your wonderful magazine. I purchase it whenever I can. If possible, I would like to see what guidelines you have for sub­ mitting articles. I would appreciate the opportunity to write an article forNEXOS. I thank you for your time and look forward to your immediate reply. Live long and prosper, E. R. W., San Diego, USA.

Re: NWOI For Whom? Dear Sir, Are we really so stupid to think that we can maintain a world in which currently 30% of our population can look forward to more sewing machines, motor vehicles and vending machines, etc., that can talk LO us, plus computer shopping, more automatism ill a society satu­ rated wi th deodorants and after­ shave lotion, while the other 70% will continue to 'hope' for a better 'tomorrow' and, for some, a daily ration of clean water, equal to one flush of our modem toilet? Building one society based on unrestrained consumerism and com­ puter chips may temporarily hide the facts for some, but cannot solve the problems our world faces today, e.g.: o Balkan War, Bosnia-Europe cannot afford too many killed, for humanitarian reasons? Not so. It is because it is bad for the European economy, upsets trade and reduces profit. o Gulf War-hypocrisy at its worst. Retaliation for invasion of Kuwait? Not so. It is to protect Europe's and USA's oil interests­ could not allow Saddam Hussein 100 much power over petroleum produc-

JUNE - JULY 1994

tion. A few dead, so what-less important than oil profits. o Somalia-there is no point in really helping to feed starving peo­ ple; they have no money, so there is no profit. Imagine, though, if the same out­ standing effort and amazing organi­ sation were used to provide fertilis­ er, seed, machinery, water pumps and relief food to keep at ~east some aJjve-as was usedl to transport that vast United National military force to the deserts of Kuwait? But then, of course, there would be no anns industry profit Should we not stop to reassess our values and realise what is really missing and what we appear to have lost in our One World village? I believe it is Truth and Social Responsibility. I also believe it will take time, tmst, faith, patience and an inordinate determination to put back that which is missing and lost. Mankind has the capacity for all these things. My hope is 'that we have the courage. Jim H., Goonengerry, NSW.

Re: Everlasting Profits Dear Duncan, Regarding Ken McCaffery's letter in April-May '94 NEXUS, I remember my mother being given a pair of those same nylons during the war, made by Dupont. They soon discovered no one made money out of everlasting stockings because they were just that! So they lowered the quality (they did get rather rubbed up after a few years!). Re the overuse of antibiotics ('Global News'), people will at least have to start listening to Glen and Ian Dettman and Archie Kalokerinos's "Vitamin C: Nature's Miraculous Healing Missile", which you reviewed, and Irwin Stone's "Vitamin C: The Healing Factor". It really does work, without side­ effects. Yours sincerely, Pat c., Maldon, Vic.

Re: Different Subjects

ity, Mt Shasta, or anything else as long as, it's different, so shake thaL closet and see what falls out. By th.e way, wha.l happened to Volume 3? Volume 1 only went up to 10. Cheers, G. E., Apckland, NZ. (Dear G. E., ThanJcs for your lel­ ler. Your comments are no/ed, bUl we will Slick 10 our coverage of issues lhal lhe reSl of lhe media choose 10 ignore. Why nol buy one of lhe dozens of magazi-nes avail­ able already covering UFOs, crop circles and Ml Shas/a? Ed.)

Re: Brown's Gas Dear Folks at NEXUS, A quick correction to O)1e point in the article by Toby Gro.lZ in your April-May issue, regarding YuU Brown and Brown's Gas. Brown's Gas, made from water, was said to melt tungsten, the ele­ ment with the highest boiling point of all the elements. It will not just melt tungsten, it will boil it, or, more scientifically accurate, "subli­ mate" it, turning it from a solid into a gas, and instantly. In our world today, I find it incred­ ible that Yull Brown would have to be struggling along to promote this fantastic discovery of his, that investors would not be jumping at the chance to take part in a clean, brand new, proven technology that possesses a huge range of develop­ mental applications ripe for the picking. We are working with Brown's Gas at Horizon Technology, and wel­ come any enquiries from individuals interested in an investment relation­ ship to establish specific applica­ tions for it in the corporate arena. Kudos on your fine publication, and well be k.eeping in touch with you on results as they come along. Sincerely, Gary Hawkins Horizon Technology 2442 NW Market Street, #274 Seattle. WA 98107, USA.

Dear NEXUS, We have been II Re: Medical Malpractice reading your magazine for a few Dear Duncan and Team, Attached years now and have all the Volume is cheque for another year's sub­ 2 mag~great collector's items. scription for your eye-opening and However, it would seem of late mind-expanding magazine. Having that we can hardly tell one magazine also purchased all your available to the next-they seem to COver the previous publications of NEXUS, in same things over and over again. me you have a captive reader. May I suggest a good dose of castor My concern is the mammoth task oil and some new subjects? Like the aheadl of us, the manipulated popu­ latest on crop circles and UFO activ­ lation, to try and rectify the wrong

being done Ito us by the big rpowerful corporations. I guess the best way , to start is to become informed, and each of us in our own small way fol­ low our conscience, talki to our fami­ ly, friends and people in our work­ place. I particularly enjoy your book reviews and have purchased several of the books reviewed. "Male Practice" and "Confessions of a Medical Heretic" by MC!idekohn I found informative and most reassur­ ing, confirming my own beliefs and jus.tifying my reasons for refusing to take HRT and any drugs. The more I read of "Male Practice", the mad­ der I became at how women are manipulated by the medical profes­ sion ·playing on the emotive fears women have for their families. I strongly recommend that both male and female readers sho-uld get a copy of these books and read them. Sorry, I'm letting my feelings get in the way. In closing, I wish to inform you that] look forward to NEXUS lIIld would like to see publications monthly; however, I do realise that to maintain the q~ality and standards of your excellent magazine it requires time-so I curb my impa­ tience by re-reading previou~ publi­ cations. Keep up the good work M. M., Badgingarra, WA.

Re: Speed of Light Slowing? Dear Duncan, Some time ago I . was given a lend of a fascinating video Iby a Christian friend of mine. It was a well-documented and pr.e­ sented case for the creationist view­ poinL The scientific lynchpin of the argument was the assertion that the speed of light is in fact in decay, i.e., slowing down. According to Dr Barry Setterfield of South Australia, the speed of light is not a constant 186,000 m.p.s. but actually slowing down on a univer­ sal scale. The ramifications of UJjs are enormous. Everything we are taught by 'experts' may be wrOng and misleading. According to the video, Dr Setterfield has submitted scientific papers with evidence of this and they have been accepted and published 'by respected scientif­ ic journals. Can any NEXUS readers verify these claims? If this claim regard­ ing the speed of light is true, it would profoundly affect the hal­ lowed fields of cosmology, archaeContinued on a e 76

NEXUS·S


ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE

GAINING ACCEPTANCE

Kuwait's covert subsidies. It is claimed that the ruling family of Kuwait handed out "at least US$300 million [in] political pay­ ments"-that is, bribes to US and . European leaders in order to enlist their support for the military intef­ vention against Iraq now known as

According to a recent colwnn in The Los Angeles Times, one in three Americans seeks alter­ native health care each year, to the tune of US$13.7 billion. A whopping US$10.3 billion was paid by consumers out of pocket without reimbursement by insur­ ance providers, according to a recent study published in The

Operation Desert Storm.

New England Journal of Medicine. These 'unconventiollal thera­ pies', like acupuncture, natur­ opathy, herbs and massage, are used by people for chronic, not life-threatening illnesses. Eighty-three per cent had pre­ viously sought treatment from a medical doctor. American Western Life Insurance Co. based in Foster City, California, recently began offering coverage for alternative medical treatment. This is the first such insurance policy in the nation, but because of insurance industry regulations is present­ ly avaibble only to consumers in California, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah. To address the lack of scientific swdies, the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine plans to fund 20 preliminary research studies of unorthodox cures such as the use of shark cartilage to treat cancer, and bee pollen in treating allergies.

(Sourc.e: WjldfireMag,azine, Winter 1993)

SPANISH INVESTIGATION

REVEALS GULF WAR BRIBES

While conducting a detailed examination of financial records at Grupo Torras, a major holding corporation for Kuwaiti investments in Europe, Spanish authorities found hidden internal reports on the con­ duits used to pass around multimillion-dol­ lar payoffs among top government figures in Washington and other Western capitals. Although he has ordered the newly dis­ covered documents sealed, Spain's Attorney General, Eligio Hernandez, is under increasing pressure in parliament where opposition party leaders want to know whether any Spanish government officials were among the recipients of ____. . , . " . . , - . - .

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The documentation unearthed by Spanish investigators has revealed that the European branch offices of two major US money in~titutions, Chemical Bank and Bankers Trust Corporation, were the main conduits for the manipulation of Kuwait's overseas funds. According to Spanish investiga­ tive journalist Franconero Belmonte, "the Spanish government has imposed a strict cover-up on its probe of Kuwait influence-buying". "In February it secretly sent two high-rank­ ing officials to Washington to discuss how the scandal can be smothered without caus­ ing 'structural damage' to NATO."

(Source: ,The Spot(j~hJ, 28 March 1994)

TOBACCO COMPANY

SUPPRESSES RESEARCHI

A leading tobacco company in the US knew in 1983 from its own research that nicotine is highly addictive. But the com­ pany blocked publication of a paper based on the research, setting back other scien­ tists in the field at least six years, according to a US Congressman conducting hearings' into the addictiveness of nicotine. Henry Waxman, a Democrat from California, has released a draft of the paper which was submitted to the journal Psychopharmacology, but then withdrawn by its author, Victor DeNoble, at the insis­ tence of Philip Morris, the tobacco compa­ ny which employed him. This is the latest in the battle by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) to have tobacco cl.assified 'as an addictive drug. As one veteran FDA observer comment­ ed recently, "It looks like the pharmaceuti­ cal drug companies are going for the mar­ ket currently held by the tobacco compa­ nies!" This could certainly be the case. If the FDA is successful in classifying nicotine as an addictive drug, tobacco companies may end up handing over their products to phar­ maceutical drug companies to sell under prescription.

(Source: New Scientist. 9 April 1994)

6·NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


•••

Gt-$-BAl NEWS

FDA PRIORITIES Following are four quotes which clearly indicate that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is more concerned with protecting certain drug companies' profits, rather than looking out for the interests of the American people. • "It has become fashionable in some quarters to argue that women ought to be able to make [breast implant] decisions of their own. If members of our society were empowered to make their own decisions about the entire range of products for which the FDA has responsibility, howev­ er, the whole rationale for the agency would cease to exist." (Dr David! Kessler, FDA Commissioner, reported from The New England Journal of Medicine, in The Wall Street Journal, 24 June 1992.) • "Pay careful attention to what is hap­ pening [with dietary supplementsl in the legislative arena ... if these efforts are suc­ cessful, there could be created a class of products to compete with approved drugs that are subject to less regulation than approved drugs ... the establishment of a separate regulatory category for supple­ ments could undercut exclusivity rights enjoyed by the holders of approved drug applications." Adams, FDA Deputy . (David Commissioner for Policy, before the Drug Information Association Annual General Meeting, 12 July 1993.) • "... The task force considered many issues in its deliberations including; w ensure the existence of dietary supplements on the market does not act as a disincentive for drug development..."

• ••

(FDA Dietary Supplement Task Force Report, released 15 June 1993.)

despite their own growing awareness of the frequency of cosmic visitors, military • "The American public does !!lot have advisers still seem unable to discriminate the knowledge to make wise health care between incoming meteorites and nuclear . . decisions... FDA is the arbiter of truth... explosions. Satellite data released so far has revealed Trust us. We win tell you what's good for that the object, p.resumably a meteor, you." (Dr David Kessler, fDA Commissioner, turned into a glowing fireball as it entered speaking on the Larry King Live television the atmosphere, becoming almOs.t as bright· show, as reported in Well Being Journal, as the Sun and releasing about 10 terajoules March-April 1994, and The Leading Edge, of lwninous energy in about Ohe second. March 1994.) The aerodynamic stresses caused by its entry into the atmosphere at an ~stimated JAPAN BANS MEASLES·MUMPS· speed of 72,000 kilometres per hour, caused it to explode about 20 kilometres RUBELLA VACCINE The Japanese Ministry of Health and! above the sea, near the Pacific island of Welfare decided in April 1993 to discontin­ Tokelau. ue the use of the measles-mumps-rubella !Researchers at the Los Alamos National vaccine because of various problems asso­ Laboratories in New Mexico estimate that ciated with it. the meteor had an energy equivalent to a One of the interesting effects of this vac­ 100-kilOLOnne blast, and a mass of weir cine ban for children under two years of over 1000 tonnes. age is that cot deaths appear to have (Source: New Scientist, 2 ApriIl994) declined enormously since the ban.

(Source: What Doctors Don't Tell You (UK), vol. 4, no. 9, 1993)

MYSTERY METEOR STRIKES EARTH On 1st February the Earth's atmosphere was penetrated by an object so large that it was detected by six US spy satellites and, according to some reports, led to President Clinton being woken by his Defence staff. The incident, which happened over the western Pacific, is being greeted with both excitement and concern by astronomers. They are delighted at the speed with which the Pentagon has decided to release the satellite data, but they are concerned that,

SHADES OF THE PHOTON BELT In NEXUS 2{2 we reprinted a controver­ sial article about something called a Photon Bell. Two years later this artic'1e had done the rounds of America's new age and chan­ nelling networks and had been regurgitated in a barely recognisable 'end of the world' scenario which caused all sorts of hysteria, and even got mentioned on national TV shows across the US and Australia. Well, the Photon Belt believers who are still waiting may he interested in this piece of information.. Victor Clube from the University of Oxford! is suggesting that we are living in the aftermath of the breakup of a giant

VACCINE REACTION REPORTS CONTINUE TO

INCREASE

More than 17,000 adverse events following vaccination were reponed to the FDA fto have occurred in the US in a 20-month period ending in July 1992, including more than 2,000 serious reports and 360 deaths. However because the FDA estimates that only 10% of doctors repon adverse effects in the US, the real nwnbers could be as high adverse events including 20,000 serious injuries and as 3,600 deaths associated with vaccinations. If you think the FDA is extravagant by multiplying the reponed figure by a factor of 10 times to arrive at more realistic figures, then consider that Connaught laboratories, a vaccine manufactur­ er, estimates a 50-ford under-reporting of adverse events! That implies 850,000 adverse events, including 100,000 serious injuries and 18,000 deaths associated with vaccinations over one 20-month period!

no,ooo

(Source: NVICNews (US), o.ctober 1993) JUNE - JULY 1994

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•••

GL$BAIL NEWS

comet in the inner solar system. He sug­ gests that this event may hllYe heen associ­ ated with the most re.cent ice age, which began about 100,000 years ago. According to Clube, it produced a stream of material that orbifS the Sun and is liaked with the Taurid m~teor stream, which peaks around 30th June in daylight hours but is visible as 'shooting stars' in the night skies of November each year. Clube calculates that the Earth passes through the thickest part of this belt of debris every 3,000 years. This happened most recently in 500 AD and, lbefore thar, in 2,500 Be. (Source: New Scientist, 26 March 1994)

MOBILE SURVEIUANCE

CAMERAS

There recently appeared on Australian !television a documentary on the wonders of hidden video cameras. While the program did show several pos­ itive examples of hidden videos catching crooks and conupt politicians in the act, it wound up the show by saying, in effect, that video surveillance cameras are good, and only those with something to hide need worry about them. In other words, this was a blatant grab at convincing gullible TV watchers that hid­ den video surveillance cameras are good for them. Well, the next step in video surveillance has arrived. An Australian company, Trafalgar Security, has developed what it believes is

the world's first robot security camera, able to roam, witho'l!J being seen, about build­ ings, quietly watching staff and others at work. Known as Tracam, it consists of a colour television camera that runs at up to 8 km per hour on a rail inside a dark perspex tun­ nel fixed to the ceiling. Although the camera can see through the perspex, it is almost impossible for anyone to see into the tunnel. By adding infrared sensors, the robot camera could follow people anywhere witbjp. a building. PlUS, an electronic card which can be anached to visitor passes is under develop­ ment. The card would enablc the camera to find and pursue a particular person any­ where in a large office block or warehouse. About 80 Tracam systems are operating around the world. The first customer, British Post, began installing Tracam in ~992.

It is suggested that employers could use the mobile cameras to observe staff re~a­ tionships, who people talked to, and even monitor body language.

(Source: The Sydney Mornin~Bergld. 19 February 1994)

PROTECTING GOVERNMENT AGAINST THE PUBLIC

• ••

"It is desired .that no document be released which refers to experiment with humans and might have adverse effcct on public opinion or result in legal s.uits. Documents covering such work should be classified secret." Thus the true enemy is identified: public opinion. An"d the means to defeat the enemy? Classification! (Source.' Secm;y & Goyernment Bulletin.

#33, March 1994)

DRUGS COMPANIES AR-E'

BRIBING DOCTORS

A doctor who accepts money from a drug company to perform research or to attend or speak at a symposium is 19 times more likely to request a drug manufactured by that company than doctors who have not had contact with that company. In a recent issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, two researchers, Mary-Margaret Chren and Seth Landefeld of the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, reveal that doctors who tried to add to their hospital's stock were those wit!t the strongest links ItO drug companies.

(Source: N& Scientist. 12 March 1994)

BIG BROTHER FEARS OVER

One of the more remarkable documents HI-T£CH POLICE to emerge from the Energy Department's The New Zealand Police force is propos, openness initiative is a 1947 Atomic ing to buy a multi-million-dollar supercom­ Energy Commission memorandum on the puter which will give it the world's most classification of human radiation experi­ sophisticated intelligence system. If approved, the national Integrated' ments. It states: Crime Information System (INCIS) will lead the world. The proposed INOS system, estimated ~r..controlled traCk allows camera to be worth around NZ$80 million, is even to travel up to more powerful than one being installed by 8 kmI tiour New South Wales Police in Australia. The Australian system is able to cross­ reference names, places and dates, and identify "persons of interest" in, a street or locality where a crime has been committed. "Persons of interest" include any·one who has a criminal history, a warrant out against them, is the subject of 'an intelligence report or a domestic violence order, holds a gun licence, has a history of mental illness, is a crime victim or a crime suspect. Basically, this means ,that when the NSW Smoked police vjsit a crime scene, they can flash up Perspex tube conce_als camera as it on their computer everyone iliving in that travels around track district who is on their already substantially cross-referenced files.

HOW TRACAM WORKS

(Source: Sunday Star Time~ (NZ), 10 April 1994) 8·NEXUS

JUNE -JULY 1994


•••

GL$BA,L NEWS

•••

THE MORE flUORIDE, THE MORE CAVITIESl Fluoride is added to municipal drinking water supplies to (supposedly) prevent caries in y'oung children. However, a University of Arizona study, reponed in the 27 July 1992 Chemical & Engineering News, found that "the more fluoride a child drank, the more cavities appeared in the teeth".

(Source: Townsend Letter W:.!?octors. April 1994)

IS CLINTON'S IHEALTH PLAN A DE FACTO ID SYSTEM? several years ago in Australia we were presented with the Australia Card, an ID card that was rcjectw by the masses. We all went off to bed dutifully thinking ,that our ill card had been nailed. Not so! Australia has a de facto ID system, and the Medicare health care card we carry is an essentiaJ part of it. Now it seems that the same pattern is being adopted in overseas countries. The new Clinton propusal for the US health care system will issue every American with a Health Security card. Given ~he information that each card would carry, and die fact that virtually every single US citizen will be issued one, it is not surprising that US civil rights groups are voicing concern at possible mis­ use of the system. The Health Security card ,in conjunction with the US Social SecjJrity number is vir­ tually a complete ,Ib/surveillanc'e system. In Australia it is the Medicare card in con­ junction with me tax file number.

(Source: Scientific American, February 1994)

COMET FRAGMENTS liO COLLIDE WITH fUPITER IN JULY It is being described as the solar system's biggest traffic accident for many' years: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 has split into 2,1 fragments which are due to collide with Jupiter between 16 and 22 July this year. The 21 pieces are due to drill into the frozen gas giant at a speed of 216,000 km/hr and each piece will yield an explo­ sion of energy equal <to 10 million Hiroshima atom bombs as it hits! The US government has two spacecraft, Voyager 2 and ,Galileo, in the vicinity, timed to obscrve this unusual event.

(Soy.rce: The Australian. 24 February 1994) JUNE-JULY1994

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Re: EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHS

IN AUSTRALIA

Dear NEXUS, I was posted a section of your magazine containing ancient Egyptian hier_oglyphs found inscribed upon a rock in Australia [see NEXUS 2{19]. I knew of an Egyptian expedition towards the directioJ1 of this land, under the leadership of Knem-Hotep. Knem-Ho.tep s_et sail with three ships under his command, and eventually returned to Egypt with only one ship and half a crew. What he described could only have been Australia, but this expeditioJ,l took place in Ithe second year of the King Nefer-Af-Re, which was ],,530 BC. The hieroglyphs carved OIl! ,the rock men­ tion King Khufu, who ruled Egypt from 2,779 to 2,748 BC, so would pre-date the expedition of Knem-Hotep. These carvings could not possibly be a hoax, as no one today would understand the peculiarities of the ancient Egyptian language of those times, Even I could nut understand the ancient saying, "My obelisk is overturned but not broken", as carved upon the rock. The rock teUs of a very tragic story, of men in a hopeless position in a strange and hostile land. Shipwrecked somewhere off the coast of Queensland, they make their way westward, perhaps to some pre­ arranged spot by other members of the expedition who are exploring anonher

region, or a main base where another ship is anchored and waiting. The leader of this expedition is named Nefer-Djeseb, along with his brother Nefer-Ru, who is some kind of priest from the House of dod. They carry with them a smaU statue of the god Suti, possibly called "Suti of the Way" (a protection for trav­ ellers). Nefer-Djeseb and Nefer-Ru ,are two of the many sons of King Khufu who, it is said, was beloved of Ptah (the god). His son goes on to describe him as "kind and benevolent, and a follower of the golden­ haired god, Ra-Heru". The journey is long and hard; the ordi­ nary members of the crew are wailing and crying out for Suti to help them in their plight. Nefer-Djeseb puts up a brave front for the benefit of his men, who are plagued by flies and mosquitoes, tired and hungry, and feel that the gods nave deserted them. Nefer-Djeseb prays to the gods and puts on a joyful face, making jokes as he swats the mossies. Nefer-Ru, a servant of ,the god, says that the god has brought the insects upon them (perhaps he feels that they have no right to be in this land). Nefer-Djeseb, reluctant to ask anything from the gods for himself ,as it perhaps would show a weakness to his men, cans out, "Protect the.se ordinary (fIen; they are thine (believers and followers of yours). I

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myself am hard as stone. I have been over hills and deserts, and through all kinds of weather and not complained." Water is getting low and they are having to ration; there are no Iialces at hand, and the heat of the 'sun beats down upon them. Night-time comes; ah, how blessed is the cool of the night. They hide ... buTying themselves out of reach of the ever-pester­ ing mosquitoes. Nefer-Djeseb has seen flocks of birds, and he prays, "Send us fow~ to cook, and send some rain." Something happ.ens, possibly climbing some place and slipping, or there's a rock­ slide. Nefer-Djeseb, who is carrying the Royal Standard of the Golden Falcon, injures his back, and this is possibly where his brother Nefer-Ru gelS killed. This smaU band of men, heading west­ ward, are carrying the dead body of the priest Nefer-Ru with them unJll they can fmd a suitable burial place for him. Passing along through hot, dry, arid counlry or desett, with no prospect of any other food, Nefer-Djeseb calls out to the gods, "Give me desert mice, and let me find pools of water." Then he laments, 'The plants are withered, the land is dead (all is in drought). Is this my lot from the god of the sacred Mer (lRa-Harakate)?" ~eing of the royal house and protected, his skin is more sensitive to the sun than those Of the fellaheen, and in misery with his back inj!Lry and also bad sunburn, he complains, "The sun shines d'own upon my back. Oh Khepera, this is not as the oracle said." Before leaving Egypt he would have bathed in the holy waters of the Mer, and then gone to consult the oracle at Noph. The oracle had! most likely promised him a safe journey. Now, with his brother dead, and all facing death themselves, ,he IS disil­ lusiolled and fu$1 of grief. He makes a statement of defiance to the effect that he is not brokeIl! yet: "My obelisk is overturned but not broken." At last they come Ito a place where they CIPl inter the body of his dead brother, and he says, "That royal person of the House of God, Nefer-Ru, son of Khufu, is laid to rest. May he have eternal life." When aI person left Egypt and then JUNE -JULY 1994


returned, they would gu and bathe in the holy waters of the sacred Mer. This was an act of thanks to the gods for a safe jour­ ney, and a thanks for all the benefits given to the land of Egypt-a kind of grateful­ ness at being home again. Nefer-Djeseb says, wShould I not go hack to the waters of the sacred Mer, then embrace my brother, oh father of the soul wil!hin the Earth ~Ra-Haralcate). Place his soul at thy side with love, oh holy one. He is not of this plaoe: his home is in the town of Penu. Return his spirit home again." The group of men have gathered some wild fruits which were growing round about. Nefer-Djeseb takes one-third of these meagre rations and places them beside the body of his dead brother. It is not much, but the spirit within the food will be enough to nourish his brother in his journey into the afterlife, and Nefer-Djeseb prays, "Let not worms eat this fruit nor the body of my brother." This tragic message was written out 4,750 years ago. There is more to this mes­ sage which is not yet deciphered. Leis hope that this gallant little band of men eventually made their way back to their beloved homeland, or perhaps were res­ cued and settled down with the natives of the land. Nefer-Djeseb, as one of the explorers of this land,. has earned and deserves a place in Australian history. Yours sincerely, Raymond Johnson.

the many stories of suppression, intimida­ Now the Cult Awareness Network !bas reached into Australia and several new­ tion and rejection of such treatments. We understand that videos of the April agey and religious groups have felt the '94 Congress are now being made ayail­ wrath of their media links. While NEXUS able, and we suggest you contact the organ­ does not ally itself with any new-age' or religious group, NEXUS does support the isers for a price list. Organiser Jennie Burke is planning to individual's right to choose what they' want hold the next Congress in Africa, and on to explore. """­ For more info on the conference write to: the subject of AIDS. Anyone interested in sponsorship or other information, please 'PO Box 1262, Maroubra NSW 2035, contact her at the following address: Australia. Australian Biologics, 2/235 Macquarie St, Sydney NSW 2000, Australia; phone Re: MEXICAN UFO SIGHTINGS +fil (02) 221 5488, fax: +61 (02) 2233356. Ever since the article on the mas-sive Mexican UFO sightings (NEXUS 2/12), we have received many calls enquiring as Re: ANOTHER CONFERENCE

to the current situation. OF INTEREST

I promised that I would 'plug' the upcom­ Briefly, the UFO sightings continue to ing conference on "The Suppression of this day, and still many sightings have hun­ Personal Development, Civil Liberties and dreds, even thousands of witnesses. The Minority Religions in Australia". presenter of 60 Minutes in Mexico City has It is being held in Sydney on the week­ co-produced a second video compilation of end of 3rd and 4th September 1994, and th-e sightings, drawn from several thousand dears primarily with the persecution of amateur videos of the UFOs over Mexico what the media call "cults" and other new­ City and environs. The video is titled Masters of the Stars, age or religious minorities. Many readers of our initiat article on and NEXUS will have it on sale in the next Waco (NEXUS 2/15) would have learned issue for $49.95 including postage. If you of the sinister role of the Cult Awareness want to order and pay now, we will dis­ Network (CAN). This is a shadowy group patch your video when it arrives in early which has clear links to the FBI, the CIA June. As yet, none of the major TV networks and Israeli intelligence. Several 'depro­ grammers' of the CAN have had extensive in the USA or Australia has used any of the CIA experience with mind control and 2,500 different home videos of the UFOs, which still appear on a regular basis. related areas of research.

Re: WORLD CONGRESS ON CANC~R

Despite the best efforts of the medical and cancer bureaucracies to stop it, the World Congress on Cancer was a smashing success. Well over a thousand people attended the Friday night public forum, and over 600 doctors and therapists attended the actual conference sessions. In fact there were quite a few doctors there who did not wish the AMA to iearn of their attendance because they feared harassment! It was heartening to see and hear evi­ dence of many successful treatments of cancer. It was a bit depressing to hear of

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NEXUS-13


r Carl W. Sanders is an electronics engineer, inventor, auth9r and consultant to various government organisations as well as IBM, General Electric, Honeywell and Teledyne. He is also a winner of the President's and Governor's Award for Design Excellence. . "Thirty-two years of my life was spent in design engineering and electronics­ designing microchips in the Bio-Med field. In 1968 I became involved, almost by accident, in a research and development pro­ ject in regard to a spinal bypass for a young lady who had severed her spine. They were looking at possibly being able to connect motor nerves, etc. It was a project we were all excited about. There were. 100 people involved and 1 was senior engineer in charge of the project. This project culminated in the microchip that we talk about now-a microchip that I believe is going to be the positive identifi­ cation and "the Mark of the Beast". This microchip is recharged by body temperature changes. Obviously you can't go in and have your battery ehanged every so often, so the microchip has a recharging circuit that changes based upon body temperature changes. Over one-and-a-haILmillion dol­ lars was spent finding out that the two places in the body that the temperature changes the mos~ rapidly are in the forehead (primary position), right below the hairline, and the back of the hand (alternative position). Working on the microchip, we had no idea about it even being an identification chip. We looked at it as being a very humanitarian thing to do. We were all excited about what we were doing. We were doing high-level integration for the very first rime. This team was made up of people out of San Jose, people out of Motorola, General Electric, Boston Medical Center-it was quite a group of people. My responsibility had to do with the design of the chip itself, not the medical side of it. As the chip began to evolve, there came a time in the project when they said that the fmancial return on bypassing severed spines is not a very lucrative thing for us to be into, so we really need to look at some other areas. We noticed that'lbe frequency of the chip had a great effect upon behaviour and so we began to branch off and look pos­ sibly at behaviour modification. The project almost turned into electronic acupuncture because what they ended up with was embedding a microchip to put out a signal which affected cert.ain areas. They were able to deten'iline that you could cause a behavioural change. One of the projects was called the Phoenix Project which had to do with Vietnam veterans. We had a chip that we called the Rambo Chip. This chip would actually cause extra adrenaline flow. I wonder how many of you know that if you can stop the OUtput of the pituitary gland (the signal from the pituitary gland that causes oestrogen flow), you can put a person into instant menopause and there is no conception. This was tested in India and other different parts of the world. So here you have got a birth control tool, based on a microchip. Microchips can also be used for migraine headaches, behaviour modification, as upper/downer, sexual stimulant and sexual depressant. This is nothing more than elec­ tronic aeupWlcture, foiks!

D

14·NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


GEORGE BUSH The Unauthorized Biography Read how the Bush family made its money promoting Hitler

and the Nazil war machine; George Bush's connections to

drug trafficking; the CIA; and th_e many stories behind the

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JUNE -JULY 1994

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n,

(Editor's Note: The fallowing extract isfrom B1wner.{eld$dl,tcation Lmer and is an excellent description afwhat is on the videp, Waco' The Big Lie.) ~·

-

T

he fust part of the video presents infonnation 'about the Branch Davidians which seems to contradict w1lat the media have wId us about them. The media gave the impression that the Branch Davidians were a bunch of suicidal apocalyptic psy­ chopaths. The Thompson video shows them as pretty nonnal human beings. seriously devoted to a charismatic teacher, Hving peacefully in communal style at their Mt Carmel centre. The sect, founded in 1935, is an offshoot of the Seventh Day Adventist church. There have been many such unorthodox religious sects 'and communities in America, none of whicb have ever suffered a military-style assault by the US government But what drew the ire of the federal government to the Branch Davidians was the facJ that they bought and sold guns, which is perfectly legal. Buying and selling guns in Texas and elsewhere is one way in which marry people earn money. None of the Branch Davidians had been convicted of a violation of any of the gun laws on the statute books. The second part of the video deals with the legal preparations made by the government to justify its planned assault on the Branch Davidians' compound. Mrs Thompson points out the blatant irregularities in the search warrant issued by the federal judge.

THE FIRST ASSAULT The ,third part ,shows the unprovoked military assault on the Branch Davidians on Sunday morning, 28th February 1993. ATF troops are shown firing at the front of the compound with automatic weapons with no fire being returned. In addition, it shows three helicop.ters flying overhead. It then shows two teams of A1F men in black uniforms at the side of the house with automatic weapons climbing onto the first-floor roof by lad­ ders. The group aLthe right is comprised of four men, three of whom smash their way into a second-floor window after throwing a smoke grenade into the room:. The fourth man OIl! the roof is lying prone with a machine gun. covering his buddies as they enter the building. No one is fu:ing at them. The fourth man then goes to the window and throws a grenade into the room his buddies have just entered!. He then fires the machine gun into the room. Why is he firing at his own men? As he fues into the room, we see three shots fued from inside the room piercing the outside wall. Did those shots come from the three ATF agents in the room who realised they were being shot at from the outside? Undaunted, the fourth man then rues into the room once more. A bulfet hits his helmet and the impact knocks him down, but he is unhurt. He scurries to the edge of the roof and quickly goes down the ladder to the ground. Who is that fourth man, and why did he fire into the room where he knew his. own men had entered? We are told that the ATF had rehearsed the attack over and over again. Had that fourth man been given special instructions? The three men who had entered that room were the three men killed in the assault'l and they have all been identified as Bill Clinton's bodyguards during the election campaign. Why was an investigation not made into the circumstaRccs of the deaths of the three ATF agents? Why was the blame immediately placed on the Branch Davidians wlto suf­ fered six deaths in the assault? The circumstances of the death of the fourth ATF man have never been satisfactorily explained. Supposedly he was killed before the shooting even started. Was it an accident? But if it is triie that one or more of the agents were 16·NEXUS

JUNE-JULY 1994


actually killed by the Branch Davidians, it should be noted that the attack by the ATF was unprovoked and unconstitutional. How can the government justify shooting its way into the house of a suspect, endangering the lives of over 80 innocent men, women and children who were in Ithe building at the time? No one in that house had! been convicted of a crime. The ATF spent months planning the attack. Was any attempt ever made to peacefully serve a search warrant? Who gave the authorisation to use deadly force before any attempt had been made for peaceful entry into the compound? The failure of the government's attack was attributed to the superior fire power of the Branch Davidians. Yet, the Branch Davidians suffered much higher casualties than the ATF. and thcre is good reason to Ibelieve that the ATf men in the building were killed by their own man on the roof. The whole episode cries out for a full, open Congressional investigation. But that's only the beginning.

ISOLATING THE VICTIMS The fourth part of the video deals with the 51-day period between the two assaults. After the failure of the initial attack, the Al'F and the FBI then engaged in psyc.hQlogical warfare against the hapless inhabitants of the compound. All of their utilities were shut off, their only communication with the out­ side world was through the ATF. Even close relatives on the outside were nut pennined communication with their loved ones inside the compound. Why not? Was the ATF afraid that those in the compoundl might reveal what actually happened during that attack? And why didn't ·the press complain about not being perfil ned to communicate iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ with the Davidians inside thc compound? At night the ATF played ear-splitting rccordings o~ rabbits being slaughtered, Tibetan monks chanting, and Nancy Sinatra singing: "Th-ese boots were made for walking ... they're gonna THE FINAL SOLUTION walk allover you." Also, the building was floodlit with stadium The fIfth part of the video deals withl the fmal assault that led to lights during the night to keep the inhabitants awake. What kind the total destruction of the compound! Iby fire and the death of vir­ of psychological advantage the government hoped to gain by these tually everyone inside. We do not know how the final assault was crude and ludicrous techniques has not been explained. But it planned. But we do know that the plan was approved by President would be interesting to listen to the ATF and FBI psychos explain before a Congressional committee where they, picked up these Clinton and his Attorney General, Janet Reno. The plan, as advertised to the public, was to use tanks with techniques of torment. From unemployed communist brainwash­ extended anns to punch holes in the walls of the compound, pump ers? CS gas into the building, and force the people inside to come out Also. a Branch Davidian who had been an work in town during the attack and wanted to get back into the building to be with his with their hands up. Janet Reno justified the use of these methods loved ones was shot to death by the ATF as he was climbing over in order to "save the children". Of course, had she really been the fence. Obviously, if the man had been out of the compound interested in saving the children, she would have simply called off the entire military operation and permitted anyone who wanted to during the raid, he could! not have been guilr.y of any crime against leave the compound to do so unhanned. That would have been the ATF. Nevertheless, the ATF executed him on the spot. Not since the Nazi occupation of Europe were innocent people subject­ the humane and sensible thing to do. It is wiser to let the guilty go free if that's what it takes to save the innocent. But she was IS.O ed to su·ch stark, lawless atrocities at the hands of government as those in Waco. intent Ion capturing the alleged killers of the ATfagents, that she It is also now known that the ATF and the FBI used the latesn was unwilling to spare the 85 innoc.ent men, women and children technology which permitted them to actually see and hear every~ in that building. If she was so intent on bringing the killer or thing going on in the compound. The whole sordid operation was killers of the ATF agents to justice, why didn't she start by ques­ based on the unwarranted assumption that everyone in that com­ tioning the ATF man who fired into the room where his buddies. Clinton's iformcr bodyguards, were? pound. including the children, were enemies of the United States and that the only way out of their predicament was unconditional What the Thompson video shows is that thc plan as dcs.crihed to the American people on television was quite different from what surrender. Yet, no one in that building had been convicted of a crime! actually happened on that tragic day, 19th April 1993, beginning

JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS·17


at 6.05 am. First, the Thompson video shows us a diagram of the compound and tthe two underground bunkers a few feet away from the main building which were accessible through a trapdoor in the house. It is speculated that many of the Davidians, particularly the women and children, were spending nights in the bunkers to escape the psychological torment aimed <tl them by their govern­ ment. And since the government knew where everyone was in that building at all times, what took place next is perhaps too grue­ some to be true but probably is. The fir,st thing we see is a large military tank manoeuvring directly over me bunker area at 6.00 am, moving back and forth. It is not clear what the tank is doing, but it seems to be destroying the building over the trapdoor leading to the bunkers, which would have made it impossibfe for anyone to get out. We then see smoke rising out of the ground where the bunkers are located. The bunkers are obviously on fife, and the people inside are trapped. They can't get out, and they are being burnt to death. The ATF has blocked their escape. All of this took place early in the assault, six. hours before the bigconfiagration that destroyed the entire complex. In fact, we sec no evidence of CS gas being pumped into the building. What we see are 58-ton converted MO tanks with ex.tended crane-like arms simply pushing in and destroying the building around the bunker entrance area as if to seal it off. The big fire is reported to have started at 12.05 pm at the very other end of the compound. It should be noted that during that entire

time, a good six hours after Ithe beginning of the operation, no ATF or FBI agent was shot at. Since many of the people who were iburned to death in the com­ pound were found in the underground bunkers, we have no choice but to assume that they were killed by. the government hours before the big fife. They were killed in the bunkers, probably between 6.00 and 8.00 am, well before the big fire broke out. Their murder had to be covered up, for they would not have peen !killed in the big fife had they been alive before the fIre at noon and . taken refuge in the bunkers. What about the CS gas? Was any of it actually pumped into the building, or was the CS gas idea simply invented as a pretex.t for using the tanks to demolish the buildings? We shall have to wait to hear ,the ~stimony of the Davidian smvivors who will stand trial for their 'crimes'. But what we then clearly see in the video is the US government starting the fIre at around noon, which reduced the entire-~tom­ pound to ashes. We clearly see a converted tank with a blowtorch pushing into the building and pulling out. Also, we see two ATF agents who probably started fires in the upper levels. One has leapt down OnLO a rank, the other we see jumping from the build­ ing, removing fire-repellent clothing and nonchalantly walking away from the building. Who were those two ATF agenrs? What were they doing on top of the building? Who gave them their instructions? Have they been questioned by anyone? Also, who was driving -the tank with the blowtorch? Who gave him his instructions, and what were th.ey?

DESTROYING THE" fYIDENC'E

Photograph of one of the A1F agenrs during the Waco siege. 18·NEXUS

We also know that Koresh made a desperate caU for help, but that the ATFI prevented any fife-fIghting apparatus from getting to the building untH it was burnt to the ground. We also know that the ATF pro­ ceeded to level everything in sight and destroy any evidence that would! have contradicted their story that the Branch Davidians had immolated! themselves in some sort of apocalyptic mass suicide. The truth is that the government is covering up mass murder by irs own agenrs. The sense of shock one feels after viewing that video is numbing. One asks how could the US gov­ ernment commit such an atrocity on 85 or so innocent men, women and children, none of whom had ,been convicted of a crime, and all of whom had been denied and deprived of their basic constitutional right to due process. Apparently, the Constitution no longer mell!ls llJlything to those who rule over us. And the myth that David Koresh and his followers committed mass suicide is still being drummed into the heads of the American people eight months later by the media, despite the existence of the Thompson video and! their own video files which contain the same footage. The government hopes that an indifferent and apa­ thetic public will let them get away with the Waco massacre. But what happenedl in Waco is far worse than what happenedl at My Lai, for in Vietnam our soldiers were fighting a war. There was no war in Waco, only sheer, unadlulterated tyranny by a lawless government that must be made accounrabfe for irs murderous actions. Some 85 individuals were killed by their government at Waco. The American pe'ople must not permit the murderers to go unpunished. JUNE -JULY 1994


LIES FROM THE MEDIA What is mcrst disturbing about this entire Waco episode is the utter complicity of the media in characterising Koresh and his fol­ lowers as suicidal apocalyptic psychopaths. For example, Steven V. Roberts, a senior writer a~ US News & World Report, wrote the foHowing commentary in its 3 May 1993 issue: ... .' "Waco and Bosnia. David Koresh . and Siobodan Milosevic. One driven"'"'' . w . , 1..1- u·u.·C. "'u''!''~. .. . .. ,.A·,,,., by religious zeal, the other by nation­ alist bloodlust. But these two places, and these two men, present civilised people with basically the same ques­ tion: How does society deal with a messianic personality who resists all attempts at persuasion and pressure?" How? In a country that believes in religious freedom, you leave him and his foIrowers alone, all 85 of them. That's how. Koresh represented no danger to anyone. The government's suspic,ions of illegalities were simply that. Suspicions founded .on hearsay, ''''''. :co. y," .. ":C.".:' .. '-:".' :'":'':C''':''.'':'':"'''",''' ,.. :,,,,.,~,,,.,:;(;-.'''''' "~"'"'.~.':' ';:,'", noises, and the tales of vindictive ' .-. individuals lllld cult deprogrammers. The question the writer should ask is how does an individual protect himself from false witnesses when the government has decided that it is out taget you? Mr Roberts continues: "As President Clinton put it, after Koresh and his followers burned themselves at the stake of Ranch Apocalypse, 'There is unfortunately a rise of this sort of fanaticism all across the world. We may have to confront it again.''' Whose fanaticism was more dangerous: the ATF's fanatic detennination to get its man no matter the cost, or Xoresh's belief in his own religious calling? The latteli claimed the loyalty of about no people, while the former represents a gross perversion of the American legal system. Were the technical gun violations the Branch Davidians were accused of worth the 8.5 lives d'estroyed by the government's relentless and merciless pursuit after an eccentric religious visionary? Why didn't the writer in US News question the government's wisdom and/or legality in Waco? He writes: "The most painful question is this: To stop insanity, do civilised NEW VIDEO fROM NEXUS people have to boe.come insane themselves? Do they ultimately have to kill and maim in order to thwart a greater evil? Finally, in Waea, the patience broke, and the result was tragedy." Obviously, the writer in US News hasn't the slightest idea how (includes The Big Lie - Part 2) to teU fact from fiction. Was it "civilised" to attack a compound (2hrs IPAL VHS) of 85 men, women and children with helicopters and automatic Attomey linda Thompson compilechhese two documentaries weapons for the purpose of serving a search warrant? Only an using footage from both satellite feeds to TV networks and from insane or evil government would do what was done in Waco. And videos takenl duri ng the siege itself. comparing David Koresh to Siobodan Milosevic is about the clos­ Most of this material was not made a~ailable to the public, and est thing to insanity I can think of. Koresh did not attack the ATF. when you see it you'll know why! They attacked Jilin first, killing six of the people in the compound. Price: $3.9.95 withio Australia During World War II, there were Germans who used tortured or A,UD$46.00 airmailltp NZ logic to justify what Hitler was doing to the Jews, and Mr Roberts is using the same strained logic to justify what this government did to the Davidians. Has Mr Roberts or any of his colleagues seen the Thompson PO Box 3D, Mapleton Ql'd 4560 video? Are !they even inte(es,ted in knowing the truth? Has anyone Phone: (074) 42 9200; Fax: (074) 42 9381 in Congress seen 'the video? At a speech Linda Thompson gave to MasterNisa/Bank Cards Accepted an audience of 3,000 in Milwaukee on 23rd October 1993, she said:

WACO: The ,Big Lie

NEXUS MAGAZINE

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(Editor's Note: T'his edited interview with dentist Dr Robert O. Nara was originally published in the March-April 1979 issue ofThe Mother Earth News. Followinglhilf tnter­ view extract, we have presented information takenfrom his newsletters ofthe mid-1980s.)

Discover what the dental • • assocIatIons don't want you to know about oral

hygiene!

22-NEXUS

PLOWBOY: Dr Nara, your ideas about preventive dentistry have, sp far, cost you your licence to practise, gotten you kicked out of the county, state and national dental organisations, and foreed you to face criminal charges. I know this situation didn't devel­ op overnight, so why don't we begin at the beginning? Can yOU tell me about your train­ ing and professional background? iNARA: Of course. I took my undergraduate degree at Michigan State University, in East Lansing, Michigan, in 1955. Immediately thereafter, i enrolled in the University of Michigan's denJal school. After graduation, I served in the Navy for two years, during which time I practised dentistry at the Pacific missile ,range headquarters in California. I returned to Houghton, Michigan, when my hitch was up and set myself up in private prac­ tice in 1961. PLOWBOY: How did it happen that your work turned toward preventive, rather than reparative, dentistry? NARA: Well, first of all, I was taught enough microbiology, oral physiology and bio­ chemistry in dental school to get a pretty fair understanding of the processes that con­ tribute to dental disease. This 'medical' material, however, was presented to us in a rather hit-or-miss pattern, with bits of infonnation dribbling in during one class or another. What my schooling really prepared me for, however~andi what any student in dental school is actually trained to do-was mechanics: drilling and filling. PLOWBOY: Don't the dental schools encourage preventive care? NARA: No, they don't encourage it at all! And there's another factor that contributes to the lack of preventive dentistry in the United States, too. You see, most young dentists upon graduation have a very substantial educational debt to take care of. Then, in order to get a practice started, these men and! women qave to go out and bqy more than $50,000 worth of equipment! So there is, as you can see, tremendous pressure put upon the begin­ ning dentist to get going and bring in some money. I believe that many of these people would like to be able to stan their practices by teaching folks how to clean their mouths, but the simple truth is that the big money is in reparative work. So, the new dentist-who, as I've said, is really under the economic gun-puts off his or her ideas about prevention until after the bills are paid, and once that pattern is established, it never really gets bro­ ken. PLOWBOY: Can you be more specific about that 'pattern'? NARA: Certainly. You see, after a beginning practitioner has become convinced that mechanical repair is the only way to get out of debt, he or she will usually spend a long period of time doing little else. Now, reparative dentistry is, for the most part, dull, tedious, and=in aU rbut a fmanciall sense unrewarding work. It doesn't take much of 'this. sort of drudgery to kill off any idealism that might have motivated the dentist to !try pre­ vention in the first place. It seems that many of these doctors eventually come to regard dental health from the same frame of reference as most of tfie American public does: that dental disease is inevitable and that everyone will lose his or her teeth sooner or later. Naturally, once this attitude takes over-and it may be a 'gut feeling' that's never actually spoken about or even consciously thought-the dentist begins to feel that prevention is a waste of time, and so the status quo perpetuates itself. JUNE - JULY 1994


PLOWBOY: But this common attitude didn't keep you from practising preventive therapy? NARA: No, it didn't, and 1 think there are several reasons why 1 was able to maintain my interest in prevention. For one thing, I'm a pretty stubborn individual. For another, 1 dislike even trying to treat a mouth that isn't clean. [mean, why go through the time and effort necessary to really remove d~ay and place nice fillings when you know~because the mouth itself is not being cared for-that the new work is going to be decayed all around its mar­ gins in six months or a year? There's simply not much job satis­ faction in enlarging the same filling, time after time, until the tooth has to come out So, early in my practice I tried to put together a plan that would motivate my patients, to ihelp'H HH'HHHH.' . them establish an eff.ective oral L ~,L. . ...c., ..· '.. . ..... .~ ..L hygiene program. I failed miser­ ably-as 1 should Ihave known I would because nobody wanted to listen. My patients at that time shared the common attitude: "Come on, Doc, just get that tooth filled, or gel this one pulled, and let me out of here." Because most folks don't want to spend any more time than is absolutely necessary in a dentist's office, they want to get away from that chair and away from those drills as quickly as possible. PLOWBOY: How did you manage to communicate the nec­ essary information to your patients, then? NARA: Well, I knew that most people avoid the dentist's office until they need work done usually either a filling or an extrac­ tion. And people rin pain aren't likely to be receptive to a cute story about preventing the disease. So, 1 had to design a system that would penetrate, first, the preoccupation with money worries and physical discomfort that most folks bring to the office with them. And I also had to figure out a way to change the preconcep­ tion that nothing can be done about tooth decay and gum disease anyway. With all of these cards stacked against me, 1 knew that] needed a very effective psychological delivery system. So, I spent a lot of time thinking about it, saying to myself, "How can 1 do this?" My goal was to stop disease, and I was sure that I could stop it=1 had all of the scientific evidence in the world to back me up~if 1 couId get the patients' help and cooperation. And that's what the 'method' that 1 came to call Oramedics does: it enables me to get the patients to cooperate, to ~e the control of their own oral environment into their own h.ands. And the system works! PLOWBOY: But as soon as you started practising this form of prevention, you began to encounter resistance from the dental establishment When did tthe first signs of your coming 'war' with organised dentistry show up? NARA: I began working, in 1968,lto bring about some changes in the outmoded dental laws that still exist in much of die US. At that point iI was mainly concerned with setting up a system ,that would help the dentist to be more effective in his or her job. Part 0f the problem, as I saw it, was that most dentists simply didn't have the time to handle health education effec,tively. I felt that < ....

JU N E - JU LY 1994

NEXUS. 23


(Editor's Note: The fol/owing was extracted from PDA Ne{workNews, nos. 7 and 9, Fall 1985.)

THE FACTS Carefully examine Figure I. It shows a cross section of a tooth. The spongy look­ ing material is the suppofltive bone that holds our teeth in place. The bone on the left of the tooth is shown as normal, on the right side it has deteriorated because of gum disease. The gum tissue covers the bone and a thin layer of tissue fibres surround the tooth and attach the tooth to the bone (a vel­ cro-like attachment). Early in life, when the teeth first grow into our mouths, a small crevice exists between the tooth and the gum tissue. In the healthy condition this crevice is about one mi~limetre deep. Figure I shows an instrument c.alled a pocket marker, inserted into the left-side crevice. The crevice on this side shows to be two ItO three millime­ tres deep, This condition is already unhealthy because bacterial waste products are causing inflammation of the Itissue. This leads to infection and deep bone dete­ rioration. This condition is shown on the ' right side of the tooth in Figure ~, The depth of the crevice or pocket on this side is seven or eight millimetres. This depth of pocket formation and bone loss is very severe, and if no~ arrested very soon will! undoubtedly cause the tooth to be lost. For many years dentists have been telling the public to brush twice a day, floss once a day, see them for scraping of the teeth every six months and everything will be all right. Millions of Americans have been following these orders, only to be told after a few years that NOW they have gum disease and need to see a gum speciali.st for surgery. This means cutting away the diseased gums so the process can start all over again. This is a painful, expensive, merry-go-round that leads to false teeth. This whole "personal and national tragedy" continues for only one reason: it's very profitable to 'the dental profession. A well-known Michigan gum specialist has bragged for years that he makes over a million dollars a year on gum surgery and related treatments. Since the automobile industry has instigated such elaborate dental insurance, his 'take' must have doubled or tripled by now! The irony of the whole situation is that if armed with the right ~owledge and iLmotivated to take action, with the proper instru­

24·NEXUS

ments anyone can simply rid the mouth of the offending micro­ scopic little bastards. An enthusiastic user of these methods recently wrote: "They told me my pockets would have to be cut out, but they hea'l'ed up by themselves." It's very simple: .the mouth routinely har­ bours about 300 different varieties of bacte­ ria. However, it has been scientifically proven that the troublemakers are spiro­ chetes, motile rods and cocci. Reduce these ,,.----l~ 'nasty' bugs below certain levels and THE BODY HEALS ITSELF! Once a person realises how easy it is to understand the cause of gum disease, a little additional thinking then allows one' to understand the decay process. The same mechanism applies here, only here it's the acid part of the toxic waste produets that eats holes in the teeth. The notches that 'many people have at the necks of some teeth are almost always caused by a build­ up of toxic waste products below the gum line before the gums recede. Dentists always want to blame the patients for improper toothbrushing. That's not true. The notches and the receding gums are both - ... - - - n!·" 1 caused by the same problem. , THE SOLUTIONI The bottom line on the problem of gum disease is simply that the neck of the tooth is not given proper attention. Dentists are directly to blame because they concentrate all of their efforts on the crowns of the teeth: they fill them, inlay them, bridge them, etc. That's where the big money is! Therefore the public never learns that the main 'trouble spot' is the crevice at the neck of the tooth. The solution lies in cleans.ing this crevice of the ilOxic waste products from harmful bacteria. Early in life this can be accomplished with a toothbrush and "Clean-Between", plus a device to flush out the crevice. Figure 2 shows a diagram of how this is easily accomplished. If some gum disease has set in so the crevice is rapidly becoming a crevasse,' then a "Special Tip" is required. The Special Tip squirts a stream of salt water that is much more directional than the ordinary tips. If the disease is even more advanced, then more sophisticated tips and methods and 'therapeutic rinses may be necessary. These stages of the disease and the corresponding treatment tips are illus­ trated in Figures 3 and 4. An enfarged view of the side-port tip is shown in Figure 5.

JUNE - JULY 1994


These self-help methods of controlling gum disease have been used successfuUy for nearly 30 years. The reason that the results are so dramatic is that ilhis approach is aimed at stopping the cause of the problem. Other methods are an attempt to control the symptoms. One should lbe cautious, ,however, in one's thinking about these methods. The more severe the gum disease, the more difficult these methods become. It may !be necessary to retain the help of a dentist who has been specifically trained in helping people to help themselves. Dactor-dependem treatment such as gum surgery is rapidly being replaced with self-help methods aimed at eliminat­ ing the cause.

INTRINSIC FACTOR

As a final consideration in unders.tanding the aetiology of gum disease, it is well to keep in mind that no two human beings are exactly alike. There is a wide variation of people's resistive ability when it comes to fighting off gum disease. In a large sample of people whose general health would be considered good, a few would have such strong resistance that their gums and supportive bone stays

tight to teeth and bone. Then a space develops between the neck of the tooth and encircling gum tissue. 'This 'abnormal' space is commonly called a poCket. As the space (pocket) deepens, it then erodes away the bone that holds the teeth in place. This is com monly referred to as pyorrhea. Mure teeth are lost due to pyorrhea than due to decay. About 98% of all Americans have at least some areas of diseased gum tissue in their mouths: over half of these are also experiencing a progressive bone loss. Fortunately, cavities and pyorrnea (gum disease and bone loss) are both 100% preventable and both are reversible! Most ilealth-oriented people these days know a good diet from a bad one. The so-called 'secrets of nutrition' are really NOT secret at all to the nutrition-conscious individuals who care about them-'" selves and their minds and bodies. The building blocks of 'all body tissues are similar, A diet lacking in e~entiall elements will suffer consequences throughout the body, not just in one organ or tissue. The building blocks of both teeth and bone are calCium and phosphorus, but shortages of these two ingredients will cause other problems as well. For years dentists and gum tissue specialists have recommended gum and bone surgery to cut away loose flabby gums and inf(lcted bone. Supposedly after healing,

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If they same condltlon In a very conscientIous. A large "'*' ,. tIme and are told that surgery IS group in the middle would suffer "~f"': ·.II·;~";· .,::;~,~Sjie~<':'>'.·t··\:;'~ , . :« ':~""."~~:h':"';;:.·ij'?:'<l,;"~:",q;",·,;,/, necessary again, and again. The . "~ 0 OWS<SUI·.:. .~: aCI\,<ne"hi~ .. what might be called typical gum ly;.:·:!1':V>.;", ' .<S.>;W'il:",::~,,\.pt~2 .• '~·<""q q.)~~'" I.t .i.:;.;. "'i)", > ••"~ ';j.,~:i'il~ reason for thIS IS that the real k "f:"':.'.:.:l~.l;.:~": .. ,. (:;">'*::U'~"" , ":";';J.j;JC<., ''''~';,' ~'I w,~"'~::. ~'f;'.~';:'.""''-l 'cause' of the problem I'S not disease ·%'?~~JJone,wllere.,;t!:$':; OSl::~~"l.li:~~ Also a certain number of peo-!~~,;~~",~, ' ..' . '~fP);'~;%';<1i;,,:{{:if:iV4~>:.'\;f k~,;.\~,;:t::;;'::~r!,;~;:$~!?~l* being attacked. A 'cut job' is not ... ,:~:<ID;;~ .:,~.,•~.,..",,..,.:,~, .". , ..;.~;~~~~;:~~~~~;~~._ ~ ,.~.,.,.:.,.c.~.'...):i'~.:.-:~.,:...~:!.f·.':.'.C'.Ii;.·' .'~~r:~<~:." o!:."" . . $,:;.i.,...%. ~'.:;:'_<.;.,:~~~~;1tt~@~~;'~ ·.~ .:i.k'.~;~,. il'.: .·.~·i.¥i.~i.:'.~ :'"~.>.'.i._".:J the solution to the problem. pIe will suffer from ,'~~.JJr%~··-~!:·, what could ".'::::Y\:"'~.;'\lf.·~j!l .•: .•.~".:t'l be called magmfied gum prob- <~;·~,¥i,"'1~~:II~it:'~"v:~;.:<;'\j,,~"'l~,: .,,'~.:>:~i~:'l·.~~~,,~;,',·.cW;·ik·:fli';:: 'i Once pockets form (98% of lems. Gum disease can be exac- . .. . . .. Americans hlj,ve early, moderate or severe PQcket fonnation), brushing and flossing alone cannot erbated by many conditions, including immunosuppression, malnutrition or other general debility, endocrine abnormalities, etc. remove toxic waste products froIll these below-the-gum-line Therefore anyone who has been using all the right methods of spaces. The only way known to accomplish this flushing away of eliminating the cause of gum disease but still having problems, the disease-producing toxins is by use of an oral irrigator. should analyse the possibility of some intrinsic factor that might When the toxic waste products than are being trapped in belowbe complicating the overall health picture. the-gum-line spaces are flushed out daily with warm salt water, Being treated medically for a variety of problems can also have the body's normal reparanive processes set in and heal the diseased gum tissue. In most cases, once the gum tissue begins to heal, the side-effects complicating the gum disease situation. For example, ahout 500 different commercially prepared drugs have side-effects bone follows suit, growing back new bone where it's been lost and tightening up loose wobbly teeth (self-help' healing of pyorrhea). that can cause a reduction Jin the amount of saliva flow. Reduced salivary flow can have an extremely damaging effect on the gums In mouths where bacterial toxins run high, the decay process is and supportive bone. Some of the most common drugs that proalso represented, so by eliminating the bacterial waste products from the teeth and gums the decay process stops and, as well, duce the dry mouth syndrome are: Actifed, Donnata, Benedryl, Librax, Chfortrimeton, Omade, Compazine, Sudafed, Dimetane, gums and bone start healing. Thorazine and Valium. The saliva can thcn return to its God-intended condition of healMany people simply do not know exactly how teeth and gums ing fluid rather than a sewage transmission fluid. Only when this 'healing fluid' state is achieved can cavities harden (remineralise). get into trouble, so if one lacks knowledge it's impossible to take corrective action. When toxic waste products abound, everything gets worse, not better. The human body normally produces approximately one Teeth and supportive jawbones are weakened by improper nutrltion, or by toxic waste produc_ts produced by bacterial colonies quart of saliva each day. When this saliva exists .under such envi­ collecting within the mouth. The toxic waste products raise havoc ronmental conditions to be in the 'healing fluid' state, then and only then will with the calcium and phosphorus of the teeth and they cause inflammation ,of the gums. Cavities appear in areas of greater con1) cavities heal (remineralise) centrations of the acid-like waste products, and if inflammatLon of 2) gums heal (rejuvenate) 3) bone heal (tightening up loose teeth). the gums is allowed to persist for any length of time it leads to When the saliva is not 'healing fluid ability', an interesting phe­ infection of the gums. Loose puffy gums that tend to bleed easily is the next step in the deterioration process. Prolonged loosening, Continued on page 73 flabby gums, destroy tthe connective fibres that hold our gums

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JUNE - JULY 19-94

NEXUS.. 2S




.

(Ediwr's Note: Claire W. Gilbert, PhD., Publisher of Blazia~ Tat(lCA newsletter, con­ ducted this interview with Alan S. Levin, M.D:, a brave medico an.d self-declared "quack". Dr Levin provides a rare insider's view and courageously speaks 'on the record'. This interview is a unique dDcument, clarifying some of the past few decades' little-known and little-understood bouts ofmilitary and medical madness.

FOR THE RECORD... Levin (L): You have my permission to use anything I say as long as you don't Uike what I say oU! of context. I won't deny anything I say. I don't have any problem backing up everything I say. We were discussing corruption in medicine. Gilbert (G): The question I asked you is why do you refer to yourself as a "quack"? L: If you look behind me you can see the coffee cup that the marines gave me. G: Oh, so you've been called "quack". L: r used to be called "Killer Quack". I used to work for Bechtel and Hughes people in covert operations. I was in the Marine Corps coven operations in Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. G: Can you cijscuss anything about the covert _operations or were you sworn to secre­ cy? L: No, I'm not sworn to anything because it was a chao.tic situation where they just kind of forced conscripts into working for them. No, I've written about it. Say, are we talking about medicine now, or do you want to talk about coven operations? G: I was interested in the Gulf War. That was my original reason for coming. I want­ ed to ask you about the vets. You were written up in the newspaper for treating the vets, but when you mention 'Bechtel I have my own ideas about their influence in the Gulf War. L: Right. G: And the lighting of the oil well fires. In one or two of my issues there are articles suggesting that our side might have ignited the fues. L: Oh, I don't know that that's true or not. G: Well, Bechtel got the contracts [for rebuilding Kuwait], so when you said "Bechtel"~whoosh!

L: Well, to put it sort of succinctly, Bechtel has been ,influencing this country since 1963-and influencing prior to that, I would imagine. But it became a major, if not ~ major influence in, ~s country in 1963, after President Kennedy was assassinated. At that tim-e, there is very good, solid evidence that the CIA was involved [in the assassination] and Ithe Chief ,of the CIA at that time was John McCone, who was one of the founders of Bechtel. Shortly thereafter, Bechtel got a contract to build Cam Ranh Bay, which was like US$12 billion (US$12,OOO,000,000). It would have been very disadvantageous economi­ cally for Bechtel if the Vietnam War sort of went away. So, it was very 'good' business judgment to do what Bechtel did. So, the same is true for the Gulf War. It was good for business. Let me go through this. The primary purpose of the American military is to consume the products of the con­ tractors. Combat efficacy is a secondary consideration and, in fact, in most cases it is bad for business. And the Gulf War was different only because the United States had a vested interest lin winning. Additionally, technically, they were very, very much helped, if not

28·NEXUS

JU N E - JULY 1994


,.

completely controlled by the Israelis, so they had competent mili­ Harvard Medical School, my last year of medical seh.ool, and then as an intern, and then as a pre-doc fellDw and a post-doc fellow. tary leadership to run the military operation and they had a vested So I was there whcn I got my draft notice, and everybody said: interest in winning, and 'therefore that's why we had the outcome "Go to the National Institutes of Health and go to Walter Reed and we had. do research in the service." And I thought.l knew better. the American Military is grossly incompetent, run by cowards, G: The right career path? and poorly equipped. Gilbcrt and Sullivan would have a wonder­ L: Right. And so I went to this Navy ,captain; I Walkedl into his ful time with the American Military. office, told him my name and that's all I llad to tell him. He knew In order to be promoted in the American Military you have to whcre I graduated, where I was, where all my friends were. The know the right people and do the right things and avoid combat. guy must have been a gellius, anyway. But he had all of us identi­ I'll tell you that right upfront. In th.e main, the academies- West fied, because apparently there were just a few docs, maybe twelve Point, Annapolis and the Air Force Academy-teach people how hundred, who hadn't followed the Berry Plan, who just absolutely to avoid combat. So if you get into ,combat, you are really a bad politician; you don't know how to deal with it right. Clearly, if got axed. G: You mean because they neededidoctors? you kind of peek your eye into combat and get yourself a Silver L: Yes, because they needed doctors because they were going Star or something, that's fllle-like Lyndon Johnson did. But to to have a war. TIlis was before the Gulf of Tonkin incident. be in there on a regular basis, that is, as a "grunt", means you don't Obviously, as we now know-it was kind of like the bumirtg of know very much about how to get out of it. G: Tell me about your experience in Vietnam and how you first the Reichstadt-they tooled up for the Vietnam War. They said, 'We need a war, and we'll hav·e it in Victnam, and we have to fill figured out the connection between the military lndu-.Stry, the drug these ranks before we decide to have the war because these guys industry and medicine. I mean, how did you get to be a "quack"? L: Well, it's a long story and I wrote a book on it, though it has­ may not want to come if we're having a war. So, in any case, even n't been published at all. I started out, kind of, as a very naive per­ then I didn't know exactly what was going on. You know, he said: "Well, what do IYou want to do, son?" son. I was an academic superstar, and I always thought that I So I said: "I want to fly." wanted Ito learn to fly. I wanted to fly, as He said: "Okay." you can see here in this office. And I said: "You Iknow, I like ·research." G: I saw the aviation magazines in And he said: "Well, we have an astronaut your waiting-room. program. Why don't you go ,into the astro­ L: I love airplanes. Anyway, so when naut program? We have slots. for doctors I was in college I dropped out to go to the there." Nav'al Air Cadet Program, and, you know, And I said: "Boy, that sounds great." everyone said: "Why is a nice Jewish lboy And he said: "All right. All you have to doing that?" And they talked me into do is sign on the do_tted line, and get your going !back to college. It was 1965. 1 got Navy wings, and we'll send you to the astro­ drafted. At that point they had the Berry Plan. Basically ,this was that the medical naut program." Well, to make a long story short, that did­ students wouM commit themselves to a n'thappen. branch of the Military-Army, Navy, Air G: Ypu mean, you signed and they didn't Force-and, in exchange for that commit­ ment, the branch of the Military would ~:;~:SiII ~""":""'P.",-= "W·3l:·'~·~'?J.' ~H&.:;;; send you? L: That'S right. Ehad "the wrong stUff", allow the medical student to continue his G: Did they test you? or her postgraduate !training to a specialty, and then promised the physician that he or she would practise in that particular specialty. L: No, no. When we got to carrier quals [qualifying tests for You know, we had a draft~therwise you would just get draft­ aircraft carrier duty], among other things, they just didn't like me. ed and randomly get stuck in whatever part of the military that just My personality was a bit irascible. For example, when we did the carrier qualifications in these little airplanes, the tradition is that happened tlO need doctors. So" it was a way of gUJlfanteeing your postgraduate education and delaying your draft time, and then also they lct the wives aboard the USS Lexington while you do your guaranteeing what you were going to do in the Military. For carrier qual, and they wo_uldn't let my wife aboard because I was a instance, if you were training in paediatrics you'd be in a paedi­ reservist. They would only let the regulars' w~ves aboard. And so atrics hospital, and if you were training in orthopaedic SJlrgery I called the Navy captain "a senile old bastard". G: Oh, great. you'd be an orthopaedic surgeon ,instead of just a general medical officer. L: Those were the kinds of things that didn',t make me pOllular My philosophy was: "Just ignore them. Don't let them know among the Military folks. So I got my wings and they shipped me who you are and maybe they'll just forget you." I called that 'The out to the Marine Corps. The funny part of it was, the truth of the matter was, that I didn't even know how to spell M-A-R-I-N-E. I Levin Plan', That was the wrong thing to do because of what they were doing. They were planning on having a war. And I didn't didn't even know what the Marines were. All I knew was John Wayne. know that. The only thing r thougi}t about the Navy was that I was gonna So when I got my draft notice, at that point I thought: "Gosh, be floatiJ!g off: even if we had a war, the worst thing tha~ could this is my licence to sow my wild oats; I can go out and team to fly and nO one can complain, because I had no choice in the mat­ happen was I'd be floating four or five miles off the CQast anell eat­ ter." Because I was supposed to be a professor at Harvard. I was ing till:ee meals a day, having hot s.bowers and a wonderful time at Harvard. aboard an aircraft carrier. Anell that's the worst that could happen tome. G: Harvard Medical School? L: Yes, I went to the University of Illinois and then I went to G: When you were drafted you thought you were going in the JUNE -JULY 1994

NEXUS·29


Navy and they put you in the Marines... L: Yeah! G: And you thought you were going to be an astronaut. But On the phone you were telling me what actually happened when you were in Vietnam, how you figured out the purpose of the Military. L: Well, basrcally what happened then, as the bae.kgroun.d, I started out as a very naive person, but at least I was an adult-27, 28. I guess I was 26 when I was drafted. And I was fully trained. [ was basically an adult. It was not like I was a brainwashed Military automaton :or that I was a young, impressionable boy. I was really an adult. And! being "the wrong kind" of person, I was disposable. '

L: Basically, it's a long story. In May of 1967-1 thinlc I've got the documentation on that-the Marines were issued a new com­ bat weapon in the field. It turns out that that particular weapon was rejected by the Army prior to the time it was given to the Marines, and it was rejected because it doesn't work. To give you an eXaInple to back it up, the American Milit!\l)' is run by the people who know nothing about combat, because if you know about combat you don't get into any operational jam. You've got to be able to avoid combat. Eisenhower was the world's best clerk. So when they procure weapons for combat troops, they don't know what they need. A gun means a gun, and so they figure that John Wayne used a

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are dIsposable. So I was one of the diSPOS- ,.:~it··'·'··"··t'· L;''''''.,.:t:e,...;...,..;::et''.'.'··'O-:-'·:·';-:::·'·'· e.; ",,:,.,:,:'t·:·;'."i,t t~: Q UP;; tWas:glVen~ OM) 'able types. ,~,·,:,:t-"""",,,,,,;~;,:,<,c""::;;<':"::'$";;";:"'· ":-:;;;:;':;;:::':'"';;;':_;''::«'~''' , So they shipped me out with a helicoPter4~1~)the'::Mafin~s.Ha.od'i~:\VaS:'·~~i:§:i s~~adron in the Marine COry's. Yo~ ~OW']~(~J~~tt~d,'~eal1~¢~:{it:,a()~~n~tr;; domg combat, Medevac, helIcopter mISSIons, '~':~""lf("~E~(~i~'::~:' --,:::i; .,d~~1ll;""~:~:<;?:":;:::;~

Jme..;:..

able to handle lots and lots of trauma. Th e Arnencan . M'I' d .1 nary cornman ers

know nothing about what it's like to be in combat ~eeause they've avoi.d~ it. So they don t know that you get dIrty.

'"~t Fo:r%~~~~'t h~ly -_ftll1fI~~~;IBj~~~ar~~~~:;~~~~:::

uW will never know about what Medevac is. it had a very small entry wound and it G: You go out into the field and pick up the wounded with the would ,tumble, so when you opened the guy up, it was hamburger. So it was a very, very potent weapon. The difficulty was that it helicopter? L: Right. Basically it was absolutely asinine. You'd go out just didn't work. After you ~pped off about five or six rounds in rapid fIre, it would jam. after people in the middle of a fIrefight and, you know, the heli­ It was rejected not only by the Army but also by the local police copter is incredibly vulnerable. They'd shoot these guys up just so they'd bring the helicopters in, and fire them out of the sky. forces for that reas.on, and you can imagine Ithat a policeman is not going to be like a combat trooper in 'the boonies. But they gave it The Army was logical. The Marine Corps wasn't. The Marine to these kids, and it was me Third Marine Division, the First Corps are wonderful people and I love them dearly, and I'm glad I Battalion, Ninth Regiment, that was up there at the north-western was with them because [ wouldn't be alive without them" but they're nuts. I mean, they're just nuts. They die like flies. These comer of Vietnam. It's a very weli-doeumented story. Basically, they ran Into the fIrst group of the North Vietnamese guys will go into anything, anywhere, at any time. And if's just nuts. Regular Army. I think it was the 110th Division. It was a whole division, like 10,000 guys. And they ran into this division, with G: You told me on the phone about the weapons not being ade­ tanks and all that. They started with a patrol, then they went to a quate. _---.."...--...-....,r------r-r---.--,..---.--------,battalion, and then they went to larger groups, and what i-'­ i i . it· I iii I I was happening was that the weapon wasn't working. The kids were given the M-16, apd the M-14 was takel1l away from them. The M-14 was a pretty good rifle. It wasn't great, but it was good rifle. It was being used since the Korean War or shortly after the Korean War, and it was well worked out. , I I 1/ --. I -I... I II _ =' I ..;t; ~ These kids were inactive combat with~tfiis weapon that ~ .~ III~ didn't work. Basically, what they were given was some­ <;:,~ ~r9 <. ~ thing like a baseball bat. That's all they had. So the enemy would shoot 'em in the pelvis so they'd die slowly, or they'd shoot 'em in the !egs. You know, the kids were trying to drag a buddy out, so they'd shoot the buddies. A big joke was th'at one of the enemy stole one of the ~ ~ G$" -1.1 ~:·~.~'Il I~ I Marine'.s, rifles and got.into a spider hole; .be then ~ot up, I ' .. I 1 I Ir J 11 I. I, Ii " I ,I I and smIled, and then trIed to spray these kIds andl ~ gun jammed-and so they blew his head off with an M-79. So everyone was laughing because the "gook" got it because of Colt Industries' weapon. You know, they said, "The M­ 16 is our best weapon. Give them Jto the enemy and we're ~,t:t::=:::1 in great shape!" But, you know, this was absolute hell. G: Is that what made you pegin to think abOut how all , .,,, ~" [ I " ==--'. " .. • ??J;:! this system works?

.=

I

=

30-NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


L: Right. G: I mean, you went in naivc and you came out. .. L: Right. G: ... with a road map of how the Military works? L: Well, what happened then was thin at that point II just didn't understand what was going on. Why didn't they give these kids the M-I4 riDe? And I was the only doctor there that was process­ ing the bodies. I mean, there was no medicine at all. You just gave morphine to the guys who couldn't make it, or, YGU know, just pronounced guys dead. You stuck them at the side of the run­ way and left them there, because you had to get the wounded out of there as fast las you could-the ones that were salvageable. So there was no real medicine there. And the nrst doctor that was there went goofy, and actually he's still-hc's a urologist, interestingly enough, in the East Bay-but he went kind of bonkers, so thcy shipped me in and I went bonkers, but he was smart and I wasn't. He kinda got shipped out of Ithe country and spent the rest of his time out of combat, and r just went in deeper because basicalfy I wanted to get killed. G: Come on. L: No, I'm not kidding. I did. G: Bec.ause you were bonkers you wanted to get killed, because, it was so horrible? L: Most guys will tell you that ex.actly. The biggest tragedy of the Vietnam vet is sJJJViving. No ques­ tion, no doubt. In any case, I ran up to this colonel, and, you know, this was absolute chaos. You can't even begin to conceive of what it was like. G: No. L: I mean, you're talking about arms ,and legs and guts and shit on 'the floor and you're sloshing through clots of blood, and bodies coming in and out, and everybody is upset, and, you know, the biggest issue was that the weapon didn't work. And you're in a bunker, and there's shootipg going on, and it stinks like hen, and you're in there for thirty hours, you know, non-stop. You don't piss, you don'~ shit, you don't eat, you don'~ drink water. You just keep on going from one body to another. So, anyway, ,in the midst of this, I ran out to this colonel and I said: "Look, you gotta give these guys their M-14s back. The M­ 16s are not working." So he looks at me and says, "Doc, you are too close to this." He says, 'Tm a Colonel, the Marine Corps is my Ilife, l'm an Academy graduate, I'm up for General>, I don'~ give a shit about these kids." So I saluted and said: "God bless America and f- you," and ran back again. I did that. Okay. Well, that got me crazy, obviously. But then, after that, about three or four months later, we were operating, and at that point I didn't know where we were operating. I knew we were operating out in the boanies, and who in the hell knows where Laos slarts and Vietnam ends. One of our operations was to cover this-"Air America"-and they were flying these helo, "ouriers in and out of these remote patches. Actualrfy, these airplanes would l.and and take off ,in twenty yards. They were amazing machines. Our squadron would fly gun support for them, killing those who tried to kill the guys that were flying, and nobody really paid a heck of a lot of attention to what was going on.

JUNE-JULY1994

US GOVERNMENT RUNNING HEROIN So one of my friends, a very close friend', 'got ~t' and I had to go out and idcntify him, to see lif I could help him. There was no way I could help him-he was really gone. And it turns out he was in Laos, that he was mnning gun support and got hit, and Air America was running heroin, and I didn't know that. Everyone was laughing, and one said: "What do you think that Lady Bird Johnson does for a living?" One of the guys, an older guy, said: "We're running heroin. Our government." You know, he looked at me and said: "Kid, America was based on England, right? What the hell do you think that England did to build its empire? It sold opium. Why is that· surprising to you?" I said: "01'1, okay." . Yeah, so we were running heroin. At that point I wem absoJu.te­ ly bonkers because we were just getting done over. On top of it, my flrsLwjfe was not writing ine letters-it was pretty bad. So I volunteered for Operation Phoenix. G: Where was the heroin produced and where was it sent to? L: The only problem is, don't talk in past tense because it continues to go on, in a large scale. G: I -mean, in the Iran-Contra thing, it was a:nns one way and drugs the oth'er, according to a lot of people. L: What d0 you mean, according to a lot of people? G: Weill, I mean it is not the official view. L: Gee, whiz. Oh! Well, basically the heroin is grown in Burma and the prima­ ry resource, 60% of it, is Kuhmsah, who stm continues, r believe, to run the operation. His facility was set up by George Bush, just like Noriega's was. G: I've mever heard anyone connect Bush 10 the drugs, but I thought he was connected. L: Of course !he is! Again, why would you be surprised when America built its empire based upon hOw England buHt its empire? The primary difference between England and America is that America sells its dfugs to its own children, whereas England sold its drugs to other people's children. G: But this is done privately. L: No! It's done by the fed'eral governmcnt. It's part of "the black budget". G: I understand that. That's what I mean, it's not part of the public record. But I thought the money went into the politicians'... L: That's absolute bullshit, because if a thirteen-year-old can fmd coq.ine in high school, I think the sheriff can fmd it, I'm not sure. The average adult American knows full wen its government is 100% into drugs-it'S just that they won't admit it. G: No, they don'r know that. L: Bullshit, they don't. If they can find out who sclls their kids 10Hipops, they should be able to find out who s.clls their kids hero­ in and cocaine, right. I mean, it's absolutely bizarre for Americans to say they don't know where the drugs are coming from, or they don't know if ,their child is on drugs. I don't have kids, but I have dogs, and I 'know when my dog has a stomach ache. G: So tell me what happened when you found out our govern­ ment was in the drug business. You went bonkers. L: So I went bonkers, yeah. So, I wolunteered for this Op.eration Phoenix, which was a psychological operation. To cut

NEXUS·31


He would tie them with flimsy ropes. If the ropes broke, too bad, a long story short, it would make Charlie Manson look like Abigail van Buren. It was basjcally a psychological operation, the guys were dead. and it was very well done. Americans have done it many times G: So the b1>ats wouldn't go so far down in the water? before, and in essence we did it inadvcrtently in Libya. The theo­ L: That's what (Joe) Kennedy did. That's how the Kennedy empire was built, as is well documented. There is no question ry is you don't kill the leader, you kill his children or his family. G: Yeah, we did that in Libya. We got one of El Qaddafi's about it. So, that John F. was involved with the Mafia and dtiugs is not kids. L: It works perfectly. It works all of the time. We used to do it surprising. In fact, he owned a piece of a casino in Cuba. You with Indians all the time, too. know the CIA and the Mafia are very closely tied? Basically, what you do is you destroy the chiefs family very G: I don't know that. L: Bec.ause 'they dropped Lucky Luciano into Sicily for the igno'miniously, and I mean i.gnominiousJy. I mean, Charlie Manson would ~o.ok like a 'sweetie' compared to what this stuff Sicilian invasion. Yeah, the CIA and the Mafia have been 'like that', especially since World War n. was. And so when the guy comes back, he sees this mess-you know, his wife beheaded, her infant child stripped out of her G: I know just from reading "007" [James Bond) that they use abdomen and beheaded, and bleeding on her body, hung from a whomever dley nced to use. 1: The point is they are very close, and they should be, and rafter, shit allover the walls, those kind of things-thaL's how you do it. And when that happens, then these guys lose confidence in they are both very good organisations and they play hard 'ball. themselves, and the village loses confidence in them, bm they're They are very good organisations. So we don', re.ally want to play stupid games and say '''It's bad to do these kinds of dlings." That's not martyrs. So the whole operatioIl! Ibses its fighting will. And that's basically "The American what built America. If you think Way". .. . ~~¥i~!t1\lk :r~~5;~fu~~(~W:i~ktf%;~.~;~t~\~~~#.;;~:;~,:i~~~~W~ killing. wome~ ,an? children and M . ·:~. .".:.:·.';!'.:.".. ".~. ;:1.mi:::.. '.:.~.Ejl...i ~~ . :."1' destroymg famihes IS bad then you That's how they dId It WIth ~.~l~'.;.:::dN.:.}f.~.~J:r~~} . ~.(.W"':""."i".".' ..'.'.'~.'i: .:::..'''''."i"iii"1.''ji,r"·1~ Blacks, that's how they did it :~1t:~~t;~.~:~~\*1~'r~~; ii~~ll~i;~;~;.;~lM~t·~;m~R,o/~:~W::~:~' think Ame~ic~ is bad, right? with the Indians, and that's t~~i{:;*::JJSo .·tHat;!Jonnl7~'" ?~"::~" Because that's what America is how they did it in L.aos and Wh'f;'f;~,~~j/.:~i~ ;';' ~;; :"wi;.-ii'1:.;4~;i(:~'/':i;~,;f:":;:[hd':,;"· .·lWilli founded on. That's how we built Vietnam. !hal's 'good, pracli- ~~w.as>nivolv'ea~~wltHlhe"·Mafla~1; ourselves. If dm~s w:e bad,. then ",~",,,,,,," ..= ," .",. ,q~';'; ... '" ,""" .• ,. '... ·...J· .. 'v·"""""'~· . .., ""w.." England shouldn t eXIst • RIght?• cal warfare . :~"~f:.{;'''''~.''.::flS~''";?''''':i->'· ·~;'~'S,\;.Sijll <.;; '~;~.~Yo,::~;, $"",'.,' '''''''''':'..~~",;, •.z:" •. ,;,;",,,1,,'''' .""y.2.'.•~~;;-•'.•.~:. .•'. . • G: And you were involved i~tiialna rffp~fi~rrlht" ~·""fhri~in(J'i~:;!~; Hong Kong should not be there. in this operation? L: Yeah, yeah. 'BAD' MONEY IfUNDING G: And this is the one that MEDICAL SCHOOLS? Bechtel was invoived in? G: So, how did you get into L: Yeah, yeah. Bechtel and Hughes. were the major opera­ environmental medicine? This tions, yeah. And also Bechtel naive, medical draftee learned all was very instrumental in build­ about the or gani'sation of the ing air strips from which Military, of the Mafia, of the CIA, of Big Business-they're alli very cocaine is transported in Central and South America. wen-organised and they all play G: In .the Bus.h :<:-::"••,."wu ."" -'. Y ."" ··N.·'.. ; •..• ,••' .....'<N·X····..,· .• ...., :"v hard ball. L: Yeah, right. And that should Administration, some of his top people were Bechtef~former CEO and President~wasn't it not surprise you. Okay, so thcn I get back to the United States, Weinberger and Schultz? and I decide......among other things-I was realily badly treated. L: How do you think Johnson got his job? But one of the things that was going on, which blew my mind, G: He knocked off Kennedy, you mean? was--I sequestered myself as a cancer researcher in immunology L: Come on, none of us was born yesterday. It's all very logi­ at UCSFI when I came back and, 10 and behold! cal. You know, Kennedy wasn't a good guy, either. I am very, What was going on was that the chief of the Deparunent of very clo~ to Joe Bonanno, who is almost my father. He just gave Medicine was lobbying for Howard fIughes' funds, Hughes Industries! Now, the Hughcs Medical Foundation, andl I'll say me this book. In fact, he autographed it G: Who is Joe Bonanno? this: most of its funds come from Hughes' black budget, Hughes' L: My God! 10"e was-who's Joe Kennedy? [Joe Kennedy is CIA contract. I had worked with these guys in Operation the father of JFK, Bobby and Edward.1 Joe Bon-anno and Joe Phoenix, and here this very same money that was generated by that company was going to build this institute at the UCSF. Kennedy staned as partners. He outlines it in the book. G: Extreme Justice is Extreme Justice? He was your godfa­ G: Okay, what you call "the black budget"~that's the part that ther? isn't public=this is where the drug money goes, into the black budget, right? L: Yeah. A wonderful, wonderful man. He and I share a birth­ day. Anyway, so basically what happ:ened was Ithat America's L: Well, the drug money is part of it, but the drug money also goes into the pockets of the politicians. been in drugs cver since it started, obviously. Joe Kennedy started bootlegging Scorch, and Ithen he got into hcroin, -too. And 'so G: Wcll, r assumed as much, but it goes into the black Ibudget Bonanno split from Kennedy because Kennedy was a vicious mur­ which gives them more money to do more things that might not be derer. They used' to run Scotch from Canada to the United States, appropriated by Congress publicly? nd the yachts would run low in the water. Because the Coast L: Right, but most of the congressional people are either being paid from drugs, or know who is getting paid from drugs. That's Guard would llook for that, he would throw the crew off Cubans.

[Ke:hneay"].

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32·NEXUS

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JUNE -JULY 1994


....

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century of the munitions manufacturer, andl basically the defence contractors ran the world. G: That's wnat my parents used to tell me when I was a little kid, and they were not educated peDple. L: They were very bright! They were right on. And that's who runs the world. I guess the defence contractors learned that from the Nap_oleonic era when there were men building cannons. Defence contracting • was very profitable. The difficulty today is that in the past the defence contractors c_ou'ld sit back, comfortable in their own country, and have a war someplace else and really have no problems, but today the war woqId come home. So it's not quite as profitable. Also kids are getting smart~r. .,They don't want ItO fight. And you know, it's a pain in the neck to get some guy out there and strip 'the guts out of a enemy or to cut their head off. It's kind of ,tough to take a nice, sweet, elghteen-year-old boy and make him a: killer. It's no~ as easy as it used to be. An<l so, basically they decided they needed another industry, and medicine looked like thefllace to go. G: I never heard this before. L: Well, it's the truth. G: It's certainly an interesting idea and I'd like to h-ear about it. "'PH

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Continued in the ned issue of NEXUS...

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NEXUS·33



.. At most, terrestrial men fancied that there might be other men upon Mars, perhaps inferior to themselves and ready to welcome a missionary enterprise." -H. G. Wells, The 'War ofthe Worlds

PHOBOS: MALFUNCTION OR EARLY "STAR WARS" INCIDENT? hObOS, one of two moons of Mars, has itself always been considered a rathel mys­ terious object, as has its smaller twin, Deimos. Josef Shklovskii, noted member of the Soviet Academy of Science and co-writer with Dr Carr Sagan of Intelligent Life in the Universe, once calculated from the estimated density of the Martian atmosphere and the peculiar 'acceleration' 'Of Phobos, that the satellite' must be hollow. Could Phobos be a hollowed-out space station of huge proportions? In July 1988, the Russians laUl)chcd two unmanned satellite probes-PhQbos 1 and Phob:os 2-in the direction of Mars, with the primary inten.tion of investigating the. pllll).­ et's mysterious moon, Phobos. Phobos 1 was unfortunately lost en route two months Fater, reportedly because of a radio command error. Phobos 2 was also ultimately lost in most intriguing circumstances, but not before it had beamed back certain images and information from the planet Mars itself. Phobos 2 arrived safely at Mars in January 1989 and entered into orbit around Mars as the first step at its destination toward its ultimate goal: to transfer to an orbit that would make it fly almost in tandem with the Martian moonlet called Phobos (hence the space­ craft's name) and explore the mOOlllet with highly sophisticated equJpment that included two packages of instrumcnts n> be placed on the moonlet's surface·. All went well unti] Phobos 2 aligned itself with Phobos, the Martian rrioonlet. Then, on 28th March 1989, the Soviet mission control centre acknowledged sudden communication "problems" with the spacecraft; and Tass, the official Soviet news agency, reponed that "Phobos 2 failed to communicate with Earth as scheduled after completing an operation yesterday around the Martian moon Phobos, Scientists at mission control have been unable to establish stable radio contact." What had caused the Phobos 2 spacecraft to be lost? The answer came about three months later. Pressed by their international participants in the PhobQS missions to provide more definitive data, the Soviet authorities released the taped television transmission Phobos 2 sent in its last moments except for the last frames, taken just seconds before the spacecraft fell silent. The television clip was shown by some TV stations in Europe and Canada as part of weekly 'diary' programs, as a curiosity and not as a hot news item. The television sequence thus released focused on two anomalies. The first was a net­ work of straight lines in the area of the Martian equator; sQme of the lines were shon, some longer, some thin, sQme wide enough to look like rectangular shapes 'embossed' in the Martian surface. Arranged ~n rows parallel to each other, the pattern covered an a,rea of some six hundred square kilometers (more Ithan two hundred and thirty square miles). The 'anomaly' appeared to be far from a natural phenomenon. The television clip was accompanied by a live comment by Dr Iohn Becklake of the London Science Museum. He described the phenomenon as very puzzling, because the pattern seen on 'the surface of Mars was photographed not with the spacecraft's optical camera but with its infrared camera-a camera that takes pictl+res of objects u..sing the heat they radiate, and not by the play of light and shadow on them. In other words, the pattern

P

JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS • 35


The Last Photo of Phobos. This is the photo given by Dr Marina PopoviJ:h as the final transmission of the Russian probe Phobos 2 before it was 'shot out of orbit'. The photo apparently shows the Martian moon Phobos with a long cigar-shaped craft either coming from or going to the moon.

36路NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


of parallel lines and rectangles covering an area of almost two hundred and fifty square miles was a sourc.e of heat radiation. It is highly unlikely that a natural source of heat radiation (a geyser or a concentration of radioactive minerals under the surface, for example) would create such a perfect geometric pattern. When viewed over and over again, the panem defmitely looks artiJicial; but as for what it was, the scientist said, "I certainly don't know." According to Boris Bolitsky, science correspondent for Radio Moscow, just before contact was lost w,ith Pkobos 2, several unusual images were radioed back to Earth, des.cribed by the Russian as "quite remarkable features". A report taken from New Scientist of 8 April 1989, describes the followiIlg: "The features are either on the Martian surface or in the lower atmosphere. The features are between 20 and 25 kilometers wide and do not resem­ hIe any known geological formation. They are spindle-shaped and are proving to be intriguing and 'puzzling."

Since no coordinates for the precise location of this 'anomalous feature' have been released publicly, it is impossible to judge its ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=== relationship to another p.uzzling feature on the surface of Mars· that can be seen in Mariner 9 frame 4209-75. It is als.o Ilocated in the equatOF[al area (at longitude 186.4) and has been described as "unusual indentations with radial arms protruding from a central hub", caused (according to NASA scientists) by the melting and collapse of permafrost layers. The design of the features, bringing to mind the structure of a modem airport with a circular hub from which. the long structures housing the airplane gates radiate, can be better visualised when the photograph is reversed (showing depressions as protrusions).

A SHADOW ACROSS THE SURFACE OF MARS An unusual photo of a thin shadow across Mars was shown on the Russian televisio.D segIIlent. Seen on the surface of Mars was a dearly defined dark shape that could indeed be described, as it was in the initial dispatch from Moscow, as a "thin ellipse" (this photo is a still from the Soviet television clip). It was certainly different from the shadow of Phobos recorded eighteen years ear­ lier by Mariner 9. The latler cast a shadow that was a rounded I ellipse and fuzzy at th~ edges, as would be cast by the uneven sur­ face of the moonlet. The 'anomaly' seen in the Phobos 2 transmis­ sion was a thin ellipse with very sharp rather than rounded points (the shape is known in the diamond trade as a "marquise") and the edges, rather than being fuzzy, stood out sharply against a kind of halo on the Martian surface. Dr Becklake described it as "some­ thing that is between the spacecraft and Mars, because we can see the Martian surface below it," and, stressed that the object was seen both by the optical and the infrared (heat-seeking) camera. All these reasons explain why the Soviets have not suggested thaI the dark, "thin ellipse" might have been the shadow of the moonlet. While the image was held on the screen, Dr Becklake explained that it was taken as the spacecraft was aligning itself with Phobos (the moonlet). "As the last picture was halfway through," he said, "they [Soviets] saw something which should not be there." The Soviets, he went on to state, "have not yet released this last pic­ ture, and we won't speculate on what it shows." So what was it that collided or crashed into Phobos Z? Was the space probe shot out of space for 'seeing too much'? What does the last secret frame show? In his careful words to Aviation Week & Space Technology, the chairman of the Soviet equivalent of NASA, referred to that last frame, saying, "One image appears to include an.odd-shaped object between the spacecraft and Mars." This 'highly secret' photo was later given to the Western press by Colonel Dr Marina Popovich, a Russian astronaut and pilot who has long Ibeen interested in UFOs. At a UFO conference in Close-up view of Phobos, showing the grooved and cratered surface. 1991, Popovich gave to certain investigators some interesting Viking Orbiter photo 39884.

JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS-37


information that she 'smuggled'. . . out of the now ex-Soviet Union. Diagram showmg the RussU!Il probe Phobos 2 Part of the information was what has been called "the first ever leaked account of an ali'en moth­ ership in the solar system". The last transmission from Phobos 2 was a photograph of a Complement of scientific • instruments gigantic cylindrical spaceshipa huge, approx. 20 km long, 1.5 km diameter cigar-shaped 'moth­ \ ership', that was photographed on 25th March 1989 hanging or parked next to the Martian moon Phobos by the Soviet unmanned ~ S Jar . I sonde Phobos 2. After ,that last 0 pane s Toroidal equipment compartment:· ~",. frame was radio-transmitted back to Earth, the probe mysteri­ Fuel tarJ.l(; I ously disappeared; according to the Russians it was destroyedpossibly knocked out with an Liquid propellant rocket engine energy pulse beam. The cigar-shaped craft in Ithe INFRARED PHOTOS OF AN UNDERGROUND CITY? penultimate frame taken by Phobo.s 2 is apparently the object cast­

Another Phobos picture, released on Canadian TV, presents an

ing the oblong shadow on the surface of Mars in the earlier photo. Australian science writer arian Crowley says that because of the infrared scan radiometer image of the Martian surface ,that showed convex catseye shadow-which, because the overhead solar incli­ clearly defined rectangular areas. These were interconnected! with a fatticework of perfectly straight channels, much resembling a nation prevented shadow-casting by Martian surface features, implies a shadow thrown on the surface by something in orbit­ city block. There were no corresponding sUrface features taken by beyond the orbit of Phobos 2 itself. The shadow-spindle- or regular cameras. This suggests the heat signature of what may be cigar-shaped-is inconsistent with any possible shadow cast by a set of underground caverns and channels that are just too geo~ the moon Phobos, which is an irregular potato shape. One needs metrically regular to be formed naturally. According to Dr John little imagination to postulate a giant, hovering cigar-shaped moth­ Becklake of the London Science Museum, "The city-like pattern is 60 kilometers wide and could easjly be mistaken for an aerial view er craft similar to those documented down the years by UFO of UlS Angeles." investigators. Could there be an underground base on the smaU Martian moonlel? Is Phobos alll engineered asteroid, super-heated and then, like a glass­ blower blo'ws glass, the moon is inflated? Just who, or what, is occu- . pying Mars and its planets? The final picture taken by Phobos 2 before it was 'shot out of orbit' has never been publicly released. One report indicated that it was presented at a closed meeting with US and British officials. In the 19 October 1989 ~.-ssue of Nature, Soviet scientists published a s.eries of technical reports on the experiments Phobos 2 did manage to conduct: of the thirty-seven pages, a mere three paragraphs deal with the spacccraft1s loss. The report coufmns that the spaceuaft was spinning, either because of a computer mal­ function or because Phobos 2 was "impacted" by an unknown object. And! so we see that it is not only NASA that is apparently involved in suppressing photographs and knowl­ edge of other planets, but the Russian space program as well. Adramatic view of Phobos with Mars in the background.

38-NEXUS

JU N E - JU LY 1994


A Space Base on Mars? A blow-up of the unusuallinstallation' photographed on the Martian surface by Phobos 2.

Note the 'bays' similar to a modern airport, and other artificial-looking features.

CHAIN CRATERS ONPHOBOS In an interesting article in ,the January 1977 issue of Astronomy, entitled "Chain Craters on Phobos", the anonymous author dis­ cusses the strange grooves and craters on Phobos: "Viking has discovered another mystery in the most unexpected ,place---OrIJ one of the two smalF Martian moons. Mariner 9's map­ ping of both Phobos (12 x 14 x 17 miles, or 20 x 23 x 28 kilome­ ters)! and Deirnos (6 x 7 x 10 miles, or 10 x 12 x 16 kilometers) showed many craters, and left most investigators with the impres­ sion that they were merely rocky chunks that bore ,the scars of meteorite impacts. There was a puzzling feature on Phobos that a few analysts noticed but, without better data, could say little about. "At ,the limit of resolution were a few small crater pits that JUNE - JULY 1994

seemed to align in one or two chains. This was unusual, because crater chains on the moon are traditionally explained as volcanic pits-small eruption sites strung along fracture lines. Yet Phobos apparently is too small to generate heat and conventional volcanic activity. "Viking's high-resolution photos have revealed that the crater chains are real and part of an extensive system of parallel grooves, a few hundred yards wide. There may be a tendency for the grooves to lie parallel to the direction of the satellite's orbital motion, although there appear to he several swarms with some­ what different orientations. Scientists are at a loss to explain them. Theories being discussed incfude: grooves left by much smaller satellite debris also orbiting Mars (though the grooves seem to follow contours' of Phobos' surface too closely for this to NEXUS·39


be tenable); fractures radiating from an impact c~ater not yet recognised (perhaps on the side of Phobos still poorly pho­ tographed); or fractures created in the body of the Martian satellite when ,it was part of lli hypothetical larger body that spawned both Martian moons, perhaps during a catastrophic impact." In the latest effort to photograph Mars l!fid it!i moons, the NASA Mars Observer was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force base in Florida in late 1992, on a 337-day voyage to Mars. The Mars Observer initially was expected to arrive at Mars by 19th August . 1993, and enter a long, elliptical orbit over the poles. In mid­ November 1993 it was to begin its two-year mapping of the sur­ face of Mars. Then suddenly, on 22nd August 1993, it was announced that NASA had ~ost contact with the spacecraft. America and the world mowned the loss of a valuable scientific tool for understanding Mars. Taxpayers wondered if there was a better wa,y to spend their money than on expensive space probes that didn't work. A dark shield was going up on new information about Mars to the public at large...

fURTHER READING:

~

Close-up of the Martian satellite Phobos showing pecu.liar regolithic mark­ ings an<! pock-mark cratering. (NASA photo.)

40·NEXUS

Mars, Robert Richardson and Chesley BonesteU (1964), Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., New York, USA. Return To Mars, Brian Crowley and Anthony PoUock (1989), Matchbooks, Melbourne, Australia. The McDaniel Report, Stanley V. McDaniel (1993), North Atlantic Books, Berkeley, California, USA. Mysterious Universe: A Handbook ofAstronomical Anomalies, William Corliss (1979), The Sourcebook Project, Glen Arm, Maryland, USA.

JUNE - JULY 1994



uua Long and two Marine Special Operations technicians stood in the centre of room 352 at the Ooeroi Grand Hotel in Calcutta, while obsequious hotel.~xecfitive I Ribnu Chattergee waited anxiously for approval. The room had been redesigned exactly to the new ,specification and Chattergee was eager to leave. The Yanks paid well but they were an odd bunch. The woman in particular made Chattergee's skin crawl. As if reading his thoughts, Julia turned on her heel and faced him: "You may go. :reU reception that rooms 350 and' 354 are also reserved ,for our use. No one is to enter them without my personal approval." As Chattergee scuttled gratefully through the door, Ifulia Long turned to the senior Marine technician: "Okay, Hank, unpack the gear and let's get started. The fIrst ELF gen­ erator goes in the air conditioning duct to the le(t of roe bed, and the sec.ond inside the wooden cabinet to the right. Then parasite-wire both ItO the hotel mains power and we'll calibrate to make sure we can entrain Otto's brain while he's lying in bed or sitting watch­ ing TV. We already have dir.ect control of his television video input connector from room 350. Come on, hurry it up." Hank looked up from the padded aluminium case he was carefully Wlpacking on the floor: "Yes Ma'am. How much time do we have before Otto gets back from the drilling rig siteT" "Don't worry about him, Hank. That man has so much work to do I doubt we'i! see him back here for two days at least. Gerald Smith from New Orlean.:; has s1lbotaged the fluid system but Ouo won't know what the hell is happc.ning WltiJ it's too late to do anything about it. The drifling rig will disintegrate when thc WldcrgroUIld pressures get out of con­ trol. Langley wants that to happen real fast. God knows how much oil and! gas is down there, but Langley doesn't wartt the Russians or Indian Commies to reach 20,000 feet at all. If they can't reach the oil and gas, the Russians and Indians won't challenge US supremacy in the Bay of Bengal. Remember Libya gentlemen, remember Libya! Look what happened there when Qadhafi found al~ that oil after he took control in 1969. Now the Arab sonofabitch thinks he can ignore US Qrders... We won't make the same mistake twice." Julia leaned down and picked up the first of the two small but powerful extra-low-fre­ quency generators. Both !had been disguised as normal electrical junction boxes that would attract no special attention if they were discovered by mistake. Holding one in her left hand, Julia Long walked towards the bed... Thousands of stars twinkled brightly in the jet-black night ~ky as Otto's ancient Austin limousine bounced along a rutted dirt track thirty miles to the south-east of Calcutta. The rusty springs groaned with agony as the Austin negotiated a sharp corner, before turning onto a raised gravel causeway that ran as straight as an arrow across the shadowed rice paddies. Far away in the distance Otto could see a tiny tree of light.:; that grew larger as his geri­ atric limousine bOWl.Ced in .and out of the potholes. Slowly bllt S!ll'ely the tree took shape until the stark outline of a huge drilling derrick was painted against the backdrop of the night sky. Reaching up ~o a height of more than one hun<\.red and fifty feet, it looked exactly what it was: the most powerful land drilling rig on the subcontinent, capabre of soaking up' the thousands of hors-epower needed to drill more than fOl)!" miles straight down into tb.e bowels of the Earth. Owned by the Indian Oil and Natural Gas Commission, the rig had already drilled to 12,400 feet, and it was Otto's job to switch over from the simple Indian drilling fluid to the imported high-performance American system designed to handle the tough drilling and exu:eme ll!ldergroWld pressures expected between 13,000 and 20,000 feet: a [task the

J

42·NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


American system could handle with consummate ease. Under for ,a dump gate to be opened at the side of the rig through which the old fluid would be bled to waste. The four mighty V12 diesels normal circumstances it was one of the best systems in the world. and easily the most expensive. started bellowing as power was fed to the fluid pumps and changeover to the high perfonnance fluid began. Thirty minutes The luminous hands on Otto's black-faced chronometcr showed 11 pm as his limousine swept onto the rig site, Ithrowing a cloud of later, the new fluid completed its trip down through the drill pipe and back up to surface-then everything started to go wrong. dust up in the.air as the driver screeched to an abrupt halt alongside the limousine of Otto's Russian opposite number, Mr Osimin. Instead of stabilising at the right thickness designed to hold the heavy mineral particles in perfect suspension, the high perfor­ As Otto got out and walked across to his small caravan to get cltanged, he could feel the ground vibrating slightly to the beat of mance fluid inexplicably started thinning. Osimin was as worried as Otto. The routine changeover had the VI2 rig diesels. growling softly as they ticked over slowly at turned into an instant major emergency. Without support from the the base of the drilling derrick. The big rig was capable of generfluid for the heavy weighting mineral particles, only the pressure ating enough power to light a small town. Entering the caravan, Otto was surprised to find his American of the pumps continually moving the fluid round the system was· effectively suspending them. If {or any reason the pumps failed, relief Gerald Smith immaculately dressed and holding a bag in his the mineral particles would slowly sink to the bottom of the hole. hand. Smith was not due to leave Calcutta until the next morning, well below a known high-pressure gas, zone at 11,000 feet, which a fact Otto reminded him of wi th considerable force. Gerald seemcd quite unconcerned at the pointed rebuke and said he had a would rapidly unload up the well bore with awesome spe¢. plane to catch. Assuring Otto the high-perfonnance fluid system A live high-pressure gas blowout was being prevented only by had been mixed to perfection and was ready for immediate the two huge fluid pumps, each the size of a small truck, and they could not keep working forever. changcover, Gerald strode 10 the ;; ,;; ,,,:(,n:",~ " ,\. Rapidly clearing all personnel waiting limousine and departed' I~" " . : . ,VYj~V from the rig danger zone, Otto immediately for Calcutta's Dum ~:i:<c:\~}iW:i.:'·~ ". and Osimin retained only a small Dum airport. . -- '..

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Otto, who was now faced WIth the complex task of changing systems at the dead of night ~ith.out being able to check the filUld hlffiself, as the test. equipment was loc~ed in the offIce. lit was annoymg of course, but no more than that. Otto

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the Amc~can drilling fluid syste~. "'J~y.in~bed:or:.sal:watcni,ijglIV., ~ake? Otto Jew~11 did indeed Changmg from one sort of f l U I d , . . . . . . >coo. have much to do and would be jo. :~:,' ,., "'. "",: ' " • , " : \ " unlikely to return to the Oberoi system to another is basically simpIe. When a rig is drilling, the ., ~ . , .' ", Grand Hotel for at least a week, fluid is pumped down the inside of . " , ': if ever... the hollow drill pipe to the 'bottom Julia Long sat on the couch in of the well, where it squirts out through three jet nozzles in the room 352 at ,the hotel and relaxed with a glass of iced lime juice while looking carefully fOli tell-tale signs of her Special drill bit ibefore coming back to surface in the space between the outside of the drill pipe and the walls of the hole. Once back at Operations 'modifications'. There were none at all Both ELF surface it flows through conditioning tanks then back down the generators were careful1y concealed, and had been calibrated so inside of the drill pipe again. Just like a car's cooling system, the that each would deliver an equal-strength electromagnetic field to drilling fluid system works in closed circuit. And jusu as a car each h.emisphere of Otto's brain as he lay in bed or sat watching owner periodically flushes out his cooling system to replace it TV. The resulting effect was similar to conventional stereo, with fresh fluid, Otto was about to do the same thing Ito the 60,000 though these powerful ELF generators emitted no audible sound. gallons of drilling fluid. with one important difference: the presThe ELF generators sent out fields only in the range of human brain activity, at frequencies between 0.1 and 25 cycles per secsure at the bottom of the Indian well was more than seven thousand pounds to the square inch. It was a delicate and very dangerond. By varying the output of the generators, Julia would be able ous operation requiring a high level of expertise. to introduce a 'binaural split' where the electromagnetic fields from each ELF stereo channel sent fractionally different signals to Both old and new fluid systems were already weighted with suspended heavy mineral particles to overbalance the underground each hemisphere, entraining Otto's brain with an electromagnetic pressure, One tiny mistake with fluid weights and the pressure beat frequency and rendering him powerless to resist conditioning. Julia would only use extra low frequency 2.5 to 1.2 cycle Delta would force its way up through the weighted Ouid. instantly hurling more than a quarter-million pounds of steel drill pipes out of fields on Otto initially, as the programme called for a shallow hyp­ the well with the velocity of a Saturn rocket leaving its pad. It had notic trance to be supplemented by drugs. Once he was under basic control the team would be able to enter the room at any time, happened all too often before, causing the deaths of many crew without Otto's knowledge, to physically condition him, after members unable to avoid the flying steel or escape the explosive gas cloud. which the Delta field pattern would continue to be used every Otto swiftly ordered the two huge fluid pumps lined-up on the night to stabilise his slecping pattern. A little later Alpha fields spare tanks holding the new American fluid system, then arranged would be introduced, forcing Otto into a relaxed, alert state while

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JUNE -JULY 1994

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NEXUS·43


subliminal data was fed to him v,ia the television. media had trashed every single one. Fortunately for Special Julia Long glanced across at the innocent-looking 22" Sony TV Operations, it was beyond the capability of Joe public to believe in its carved wooden cabinet. It was a state-of-the-art Trinitroft Ithat he or she could be influenced in this way, much less be model with a revolutionary tube providing far better resolution brought under total control within minutes. In fact, the ELF fields than other models, Resolution was very important because this were quite capable of killing unwitting victims by remote control, particular television would be displaying two entirely different as Special OperatiQns had proved on numerous occasions. pictures to Otto at the same time: the fust clearly visible to his There were politicians and scientists out there who peJ.sislendy refused to heed discreet intelligence conscious brain, with the second per­ ceived only by his subconscious. As with fu;",$~':;1%.~e::,,:::':;;::':;"':'"''''';''' ,,we.V' ".'. ",·".CF:.!8'~':": .... : community warnings about their . .. . . , . ~:*~~~;~v;;~~;~~~*~.~~~;~~~:.;~~~. ;~.;;~:":t~Wi;::::~;. ~-~:~~~"';t;;*-,~;.~~~.;:;;~ • •• mltial h,ypnotic mduction and post-hyp­ ~:*,kq~~.:, . . :.;·:.. 9,::"'r..~.t·:P,i"'.::;W'~.'k:::·.'::.:::;;i'.n'i;;(0~(:.;":' :;:··<jR . :)::>s.';»~.'k~;:~i; behavLQur, whIch m turn led to them ........,,,.~x. "·iB+'''\i!:· ,...y "j'f'''' ~' l'flK:<':!? .•. ",•.: .•,... ~~~.""."" n :t"':''':·.:.'t''c.~;'~f!t"f·'LI·.·c.· ;t,.::..;"".:,,;:,;;; T/o.~. ~,'.·~:;' being fo"..... d dead -in hotel rooms notic suggestion Special Operations was . ~4-1'0':::;,·.~.i.::<:t . ,. .' . 'l~ n ,laC'> liP:;' I';'. :;'f:"··"···' Ie·1 \ls·were"·~·r. ,. after . way ahead of the academics. Most visu­ ~m:.;;;~::,:.A,.,"h;:~\,.,c,::t"'.,.:.:;:':e'?:4"~~8 apparently indulging in bizarre sexual al-subliminal techniques used by academ­ ~~~~r-q."'iJit~Jcarl:abl~~ofi,killi'll;g·':~~~~it rituals or drinking themselves. to ic researchers and the media were based ~;~!':':~'i'~~, .. <m;tr:'·¥nrM:':;;;':';:";i''''>/1'::~:'::~ death. Too much of the same thmg on simpl'e 1/~Oth-second flashing J?~s- ~;JJ·hw.,Itfl."gi:Yft~I.h't§~6YJJ~rt1()J@::i~ ~nded to draw. attention, ~o the .rou­

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C ' ,,,,,'i·"vn~ . "II U n ,..lA·lOx;, SlOn . b'd . bUL 'ld'mgs at Speel'al O but far too crode lor peratlOns. if1~i%'"f1:"[;'~?4t8X;,';Y:;~:~;'{';'l§Ill~:f'':':~.i:;~;;:;:;l~~{~~':i!:} n ges, dr'lve mto Special Operations used fast, efficient :w.~~iC';~rium:eroi15'ocdlSIOhslt1).:~ high speed, or hook themselves up tlO

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the procooure Julia Long had a series of VHS video- ~~~w"'::;':':';~""~:";;"";:''F:';''~:A'':'R;;''::'ii~'',.,:%;:,"",,,'''",.....~;''''., was easy enough. When the ELF tapes that would! be used to interrupt tile normal video films fed to Otto via the in-house hotel video sys­ tem. They looked the same simply because they had the same film content as those shown in the hotel TV guide. Unfortunately for Otto, each of Julia's tapes had been subjected to a special editing process where u:ltra low-light images had been overlaid on the magnetic tape. Too dim to be detected 'by the conscious brain or by sophisticatoo ultraviolet analysis,every one of the thousands of imagcs would be readily absorbed by Otto's subconscious. The Alpha fields from the ELF generators would force Otto to remain alert but completely relaxed. Experiments had proved fu'll relax­ ation to be a critical requirement: a single stressful distraction lasting a millisecond could stop the subconscious 'seeing' any sub­ liminal input at alL A.s Julia Long finished her iced lime juice and walked out of room 352, she sm.irked to herself. Though dozens of earnest authors had warned of techniques Isuch as these, the mainstream

44·NEXUS

fields entrained the human brain with a binaural beat, h was standard procedure to ensure that the tar­ get's breathing was brought under control, If starting in high Beta, slower Delta fields were steadily 'introduced to decrease the rate of respiration prior to full electro-hypnotic induction. In order to kill a target, the silent ELF generators were turned up to full power in binaural mode. Completely at the mercy of the Special Operations contro'ller, the target's physiology would be manipulated until sys­ tolic and diastolic blood pressures bec.ame identical, at which point the heart ceased to function and the target died. There was one drawback: powerful ELF fields always increased the level of serum-triglycerides in the target, which could prove e-rrrbarrassing at post-mortem. It was a simple matter to splash alcohol into the mouth of the target after death, then throw a bottle of booze on his bed or into his car. Basic stuff indeed, out it was enough to f001 most pathologists... Otto Jewell stood in the office reading the chemical log, his lips compressed into a thin tight line. It was unbeli~vable! Gerald Smith had mixed ten times too much SA81, a chemical used to thiJl the drilling .fluid and coat the particles of heavy minerals used to control the underground pressures. Otto now knew the nature of the beast and it was frightening. The only way to cure the prob­ lem would be to add vast extra quantities of inert mineral particles until the massive chemical overdose was neutralised. Rapidly run­ ning some tests, Otto fowd he would need to add 2,500 x 100 Ib sacks of the powdered mineral before the fluid would rC"cover. It had never been done before and Otto wasn't ,even sure the pumps would hold out under the colossal load. It would stretch them to the limits and beyond. But what could possibly be worse than waiting for the inevitable blowout? It was crunch time, no doubt about that. Otto had a hurried con­ ference with Osimin and the driflers, who rapidly agreed to give it a try. There was nolhing else to do. Volunteer labourers were positioned at the hoppers to mix the sac,ks of minerals. while Ono and Osimin walkcd up the steps to the CODU'ol panel on the rig drilling floor. Someone had to operate the pump controls, a job far too dangerous to delegate to the juniors. If !he well blew out there would be scant chance of survival for those on the elevated rig floor. only feet from the mouth of the well. With an apologetic grin in Osimin's direction, Otto inched the JUNE-JULY 1994


silent beat, and in less than 60 seconds his brain was entrained at pump controls forward almost to the stops. Clouds of black the optimum somnambulistic hypnotic induction frequency of 1.2 smoke poured out of the diesel exhaust stacks as the generators cycles. Julia listened carefully to Otto's breathing, faithfully complied with the demand for an almost impossible increase in power. By the time 1,000 sacks had been mixed, the turbocharged relayed to her by the 'pinhole' audio bug drilled into the separating ­ diesels were screaming at full standard power and the pumps were wall between the two rooms. "Okay, you two," Julia tumed to her Marine technicians. "Use under enormous strain. Poker-faced, Otto and Osimin stood on the rig floor and gripped the hand rails as the entire derrick shud­ the pass key and start the prograrrrnre. Be sure to cough before you approach the bed so I can tum the fields off. We don't want to dered with. convulsions. Tentatively, Otto placed one hand gently on the pwnp controls again, looking at the last half inch of 'emer­ knock you out as well, now, do we?" It was a rhetorical question. The Marines had learned long ago gency' power available but unwilling to commit the rig's diesels to aimost certain desUllction. Osimin brushed Otto's hand out of the that Julia was' not given to idle backchat, so they quickly made way and forced both controls the extra distance. their way from room 350 to room 352, Hank switching on a small Another tense three hours passed more slowly than the mind battery-powered generator in his pocket, connected by concealed· wires to an insulated pad stuck to the palm of his right hand. As could imagine, with the diesels well across the 'never exceed' red they approached the foot of Otto's bed Hank coughed discreetiJ.y lines on their rev counters. The turbochargers were going wild and one second later unclenched his right hand, placing it flat on and spinning in the exhaust manifolds at over 25,000 r.p.m., their banshee wail making conversation impossible. The big pwnps the exposed skin of Otto's arm. Faster than a striking cobra, the were labouring under a shauering load and there were still another powerful zapper discharged a five-microsecond pulse which tem­ 800 sacks to mix. The giant rig was vibrating so violently thac porarily paralysed Otto's central nervous system, simultaneously Otto and Osimin's teeth started chattering uncontrollably. Then destroying his spatial and time orientation. suddenly, without warning, the pressure dropped and the fluid Not wasting a second, Hank's colleague wrapped a tourniquet around Otto's arm, exposed a vein returning to sIDface could be seen It had :; .... , >;:, .. "':""";.:'~ , ~. and swiftly injected sodium pen­ th,iekening rapidly.

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• Rus~ian wh.ile Otto shouted in ~ started.tdbuim'·a:.JaeC()~i"p., ~ sequence was complete in twelve ••.•. . ;:•...;.•. ':.,.....P".P ... seconds. Both had done the same English. Neither could understand . .....:...... '., the other but the ~essage was~lear hypnotit.;Jev~l,i.in,lQ;·.q'!10~~~~~IJ~~:/: job ~any t~es before. Minutes enough. The fig was safe the '.'1" . . ··t·..:. :..... ,'-<". ". "..... ···•· ..t < .. :;:, ••.. h " , later, Julia slipped through the door :< n,s or woweel\s . an. aIumlnIum .. bfie . fcase ­ · was sa£e.r WOrd SWI'ftly'."'" bl 00 dy ng carrYing .:.:'..sesslOnsover-: p...:. p.,.... :. "." ,,,,;.,;.'.' c;,.:,,~ •.• <.1I""•.... '.::P"':";',:' ~,. spread to the crews outsid~ the dan-'<::he·was.:Ualne'd to~fevertll:tol:'#" fr~m which she withdrew a sJ>e.Cial ger area, who carne rushmg back ,; "';', . ..•.•', .,.;..•. " .';.: ;. '''f,i-!::<.".\:).. : .. :"'~" .:.":. parr of headphones that the Mannes . hypnotrct.ranceonIY~lfigIX~f)t':"9:~ with. grins all over their faces. placed ove~ Otto's h~~d. The br~efLeavIng the crews to clean up and ". . ,. .. ···I; " •. t..·· ·•.··,··,,·.. :"'.' :.. ':;J'.,,,:... '>9.:15.: case contaIned. ll! mIniature versIOn 'll 0" ". -.', comp rlgger-worus. '''''''i': I ' . 0 f th e Ia b ora t ory equlpmen, . t ge t ready t0 dr_1_, SlmIn and Ott0 ......" ex .' '.' . ~.:.: ;; "":~~." climbed wearill'y into their respec'''''-. . '.' '\:?'";\~, 1h" designed to generate powerful elec­ tive geriatric limousines and headi.':""':"'" .:;,r,,,,~ ... ~.: tromagnetic fields in the immediate area of Ouo's head without endan­ ed towards Calcutta. gering the Special Operations team. Ouo strode purposefully up to the front desk at the Oberoi and And su it was that Julia Long started to build a 'decoy' hypnotic asked fOJ the key to room 326. Swiftly intervening, lobby manag­ er Cbaudri selected the key to room 352 instead, telling Ouo that level into Otto Jewell. In shon sessions over two weeks he was as a favoured long-term guest the hotel had to move him to a trained to reven to a hypnotic trance only if given two complex much nicer room at no extra charge. "Come," Chaudri said win­ trigger-words. Most evenings as Otto watched television he was ningly, "Let me Show you." unwittingly bombarded with subliminal films designed to enhance Leading the way into room 352, Chaudri pointed out the new American 'patriotism', desensitise him to violence and force him to white towels in the bathroom, and the brand new fridge. Then respond immediately to orders presented at the deep subliminal Chaudri turned with a flourish and opened the twin doors of what level. His handling by the Marine technicians was savage: Ouo was beaten under electro-hypnosis and the Marines warned him looked like a cocktail cabinet, revealing the Sony Trinitron televi­ sion set. Otto Jewell was suitably impressed. After Chaudri left, that if he failed to carry out their orders, his two young children would be sexually abused and killed. Slowly but surely, without Otto looked around him. The room was exceptionally quiet with his knowledge or consent, Ouo was forcibly recruited as a lifelong thick pile ca.IiPCts and heavy window drapes muffling all sound. The air conditioning ran with an almost silent low-pitched hum, member of Special Operations. unlike the unit in room 326. There was a marked similarity Once past the basic stage of induction, Julia Long left Otto in the care of her two Marine technicians, but continued to fly in between room 352 and a soundproof recording studio. occasionally from Morocco and Dakar to check on progress. On After supper in the hotel coffee shop, Otto returned to room 352, showered and then climbed wearily into bed. Within minutes one of her flying visits during March 1984, Julia received a couri­ he drifted off into whal seemed to be a natural, dreamless sleep. It er message to meet Louis McCaul at the US Consulate on Ho Chi Minh Street in Calcutta. With little ceremony, Louis ushered her was no such thing. Immediately Otto lay down, Julia Long in room 350 switched on the highly-directional ELF generators, into the bug-proof 'hard-room' in the Consulate basement: "We received a coded Cosmic International message by diplo­ selected Dclta band and flooded both hemispheres of Otto's brain matic courier. Take your time decoding it Julia, then I'll destroy with a powerful 2.5 cycle electromagnetic field. Switching to bin­ aural, Julia adjusted the power setting and slow Iy started to Continued on page 72 decrease thi: Delta field frequency. Otto's respiration followed the

,.:·,.:.X..

h' .

;.WE

JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS·45



,

n 1987 Dennis Lee discovered he could make free electricity-a rather astounding discovery for the son of two migrant farm workers. The possibilities this giscovery presented both elated him and frightened him. He was elated .that there was a simple solution to the pollution and energy problems that were destroying the balance of nature on our planet, and shaken at the size of the discovery he had made. Free, indep'en­ dently produced energy meant people no longer had! to be hooked up to the central power lines. It meant no more offshore drilling for oil, or oil spills that were killing the oceans. It meant no more dependence on foreign oil. It meant water could be pumped into desert lands dying of drought, and crops could be grown to eliminate famine. It meant no more electric line leakage that causes a general depletion in health as well as cancers; no more greenhouse effect, air pollution, toxic waste or water pollution. It meant the health of the pla.net and its people could be restored. It meant a boom for the economy and new jobs for millions of unemployed workers. Since everything runs on energy, the implications to Ithe economies of the developing as well as indlustrialised nations, of clean and simple, 'no­ cost-to-produce' energy was overwhelming. The responsibility of such a discovery was frightening. But, what was even more frightening was the response dIat Dennis Lee would encounter when he attempted to loring the technology that could accomplish alii this to the people. His story began in 1985 when Dennis Lee introduced his Super Heat Pump in his native state of Washington on a risk-free 'system-for-savIDgs' program. The heat pump was so efficient it could save 70-80% of heat and hot water costs, and when his marketing pro­ gram proved to be highly successful, the central utility was not pleased with the competi­ tion. They encouraged the Attorney General's Office to bring a suit against Lee's compa­ ny. The baseless lawsuit was an attempt to discredit him and the technology. Subsequently, his factory was broken into virtually every night, the media splashed bad publicity across the papers regularly, his fmancial backers were encouraged to pullout, and the Attorney General's Office encouraged his customers ro back out of the deal. Papers stolen from his factory turned up in the possession of the Deputy Oistricl Attorney. Although it was in no one's interest (except perhaps the utilities) to put his company out of business, the Attorney General's Office attempted to do just that. Dennis Lee's customers signed petitions asking the Attorney General's Office to stop 'protecting' them and dismiss the suit, or at the very least allow him to be able to perform on their contracts. Despite the ridiculous civil suit that required his company ilO do what it was already doing, and the overwhelming obstatles placed in .his way, Lee's company Ovcrcam.e. When it was obvious that the company could not be destroyed using these tac­ tics, other methods followed. A !hired plant solicited enough unrest to get an involuntary bankruptcy filed, although the compwy was in good financial shape at the time. When Lee proved he could still turn things around, the harassers arrl!Tlged a hostile takeover of the company, Lee, who once believed that fascist tactics belonged to other governments, discovered his first hard lesson in the 'just-us' system: that here in America, law enforce­ ment agencies are often used to protect powerful money interests and not the interests of the citizens. He quietly left to pick up the pieces elsewhere. He moved to .Boston to continue his efforts with a company associate. It was here, less than one year after the utilities first destroyed his effort..s, ,that he discovered he could m.ake 'free electricity' using the techIlOlogy of the Super Heat Pump. How ironic, after they had forcedl him out of business, that he would discover a technology that could put them out of business. He rSubstantiated the discovery with three scientists of tremendous experience. One was a professor at MIT, one was an ex-Department of Defense scientist

I

JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS • 47


and an inventor himself, and the other was an ex-Boeing plant himself. He tried to convince one of the scientists to move to supervisoF who had bcen an electrical engineer for 40 years. They Boston and work with him, but the man himself had been burned each independently confirmed that the concept was sound. A so badly by the government that he had to think long am~ hard about it. Finally the scientist agreed, but he insisted that if Lee demonstration was put together to prove the concept worked. wanted to work with him he would have to come to California. Dennis wrote letters to the Department of Energy a.nd every D~nnis Lee, more determined 'than ever, left for California, not Congressman in Washington to explain his discovery and invite knowing at Ithe time that Ventura, California, was big oil country. them to a demonstration of 'free electricity'. fte wrote a letter to President Carter, the 'environDennis set up a research lab in mental PlTesident' wh.o was '\$''''''~''::>;'<''::'':''::'''::<''':':;I,tu",.:i"":",,~,,,,:q:.: ...i;;.il:';'''~:''~ ~1:~$:;I:li\l!". \1/ Ventura, llnd the scientist he'd

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gy shortage looming ahead. He called newspapers magazines, ~~'~~'",x~t",:,·;",t:{ ·)"\i'~~:~$l:O:ii<·~:"':H.:;:::·:);}:;~:i"~:'>;i::&;l:}:;.;ff'<i{:?\.~ . ~lP!P·9flX:~$tg~Jf.~ radio stations, ni news pro-·,l~tftn!n,g,:~J:~[~:r,!rt~~}ii~H'I grams and invited them all to a :~:i.::,;;!l"'>"'tc•.''''''': '.. '~<W···::i.J·::t· ~··"W'·':'···;::::: .: >:·:·:'····h·\if···:"·:·:·r·~.t'··::~.~~ ' . . ,;¥*~uenu leS~ralueu;~ nerese,arc :' aCI I \f>~.~ de!Jlonstrauon of his technolo- '~:~:"\l- ,,!i.;l~'.~.. ~.;~ ';";'~'~(·;;@::<ii¥:2&:::~'~:·'®,~;:·:.~;.· '4:::':;::U~~;; gy. But no one came. And no i%~!"fu~ft!p'p;IDgctn~J.~~:~ifHjitlYi~gf~;~I1::lst§~'~~~ill:;r: one responded to the letters or ·ili.·:.;;:'~'.'t .~Y(...Y."'.... , 'I;~;' f.. "'"l.<'$i.q;t-·{6:·t.. ·,$;··~;,·,,:;:;·,,:X"'·~J:,~:!i<1:~:;''''i{;~::J'·:~.),'~s;.~ . ·;m~' eelJno ogvnro 0 ,vpes~anu recorUS;~~!':if~ phone calls. Here was a natlOn,L"~"~""~" :.': L'o;t:,',:ik "":jf;'.l> ".",.:.. "..,.",::", '!<i0\;": .".....w' ,,, ...:.,jf,j'.

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dentials of the people were impressive: the man who was nick~amed "~he father of the Boemg 747" the man who ._ ' . deSigned the modern;-day sub­ marine hull and gave ~e Ides~gn to the Navy; a pno.r chIef . for Batelle, research engIneer

~:s:;~~:~ ~~1~~~:g;r~~~~1~~]0~tt&eil~lf'::~~j~~~~!~!~~~~~~~~~:!r-'~1~ti~~1~i;['l:~li~~e~~ ~a~~~:rt~~t~::~~

~::e~:~f~~:::ge;:::c~s~~~ .:~f1~::;'~:ii'~MW;~~i'!>T':::J!·.· ·;':'$!!:~~J~IW:;:;,~·:~~tt~~~.r~itMk:d\~ ~:~tb~:~~~~~:;%~S,~ec:~~~e:s no one hact the time to see a to provide safe, clean, cheap energy. Among the technologies were the Low Temperature demonstration of 'free eleeLIiicity'. This should have been the news Phase-Change Electric Generator, thc Fischel Heat lingine (an story of the century, bu~ not one reporter came! Not even a spark of interest! Not even a story on this 'con' who was trying to sell engine that runs with no condenser and no exhaust!), the Adiaba..tic the fact that he could make free electricity! Astonishing! Even Bicoannular Reactor that cOl/,ld burn black coal 90% efficient, and more astQnishing was the response he got from our elected reprethe fIot Box Thermal Storage Unit. A machine shop was set up so sematives in Washington when he called to follow up. Most were they could tool the parts for the technologies themselves. Dennis Lee was very outspoken about what he was doing. He simply not available. A few wrote letters thanking him for keeping them informed, and one responded angrily. A nation faced had heard too many stories about inventors with technologies that with a serious cnergy crisis was toid that the billions spent in enercould put big business out of business, either disappearing or gy research would not b.ring winding up dead. He believed res~lts for another 2~ year~, but 211~'~l.A{':""V:'~;;::":':~l~'"l'fr:";;'::~~:~~\;;l>:;; ;,*..:;,f,;:;:;~;:.,;':':!i:: ",@ !':illib;31::l:"" expo~yre and public ~upport would Itakmg one day to mvestlgate"B~::+ . B'::'.'~.;~",:F.. :'....,::~. . :.... ~: ~~'lii"y:,.,:~"',$~"'v.:; .:;.. ... ·.~'i<m~.i.M:',,;::'.:··.w.·:~.~;-ffl:!'.' ':~~:.'.~:. be hIS only protectlOn. He was ;;-:-:. r:i'I};.{~~::_ .. _:::?9'dt. ~~r. ':;:.($~'~·X:I;':~:X-":'~ '.. -:~:2~''''' _-~·x ~;:,~>...:~ .. >:~:<~i,x;.:;.~:,:~ ;.'1. ~._<:_:zen, who '.:f.:&;j:i~:::7:t';':;ifui· :.':!lii:i1">:l~M::":~:,., 'i~,·:~*<~~i~Mii"i8\f;,:",,:.:.;.·,x~~'i~~<'~;·'l'l: determined to fight big business '.~his American CI' ti' ,w··:'.i\'·ft 'l9'~ h··x":y.,, Lli'·, ..··'00,,"".5 ••, , "">' "f ..

wanted to provide free energy ~i~!~[~;,jS:;~:~~.t ~}t~~ :::;:_,,<l~:~.:·mU~lS~ .e~<5~~2,~Jc,<l i~terests and gover.nment suppres-

Ito the country seemed to be :.:,::::,•.:.. "'::::J.. ,... :.;:,;.. . . • ~ ~.""" :;:: ..'..' H~.,:.. :.:,,~'~:.:.:".' I··:~-n····:,··o";::··,,··,:'";-::,:··· ... d··· ."'::"." ':':f :\'.:: SlOn of technologIeS because the

. '1~i'Jlfuge·Hn?an:UnUsua.move,':·.or ereU)~ . as~g too much of our elected '.~~:,+::;;." .. :::t:j~S·".:ii::~~:!\;:l"::~~:-e,,:;:;::;)Ji;~}:::W~';'[:::"~i'(:J3/)ljiJ> ~orld badly needed the technolo­ offi_cIals'%Cf:lhe;tecords,;:tocthe.:c.ase.s:e·aled1~;;}::t&#. gles, and the peoFJle deserved to

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~:r:~~ ~~t~~~ :~1~:i~~~~.~~£~~~IR)~'~rt()f;rial,;b~il,:?elieaUl~f8t'.:the~~':~ :~:g~~~,~ government was 'pro­ ~ ,:::::,:.;<~;r.:~ ·;:-~;~t:r7::-_.:;::'::-: "':: . "," <::::?:~:~: :::~:~;:': :::;>::~.<~;~: ~.;-:~::> ':::~'_:': ;:_:~ ;:,;~~·.~~.:;~rt~~;.:~::::' ,

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had iL He would have to figh.tF.".,\;;i~~·.·;t"':;",:,:£ ~ :"'fL·l<·:·'I"~l'.::'·· f.;-;':~'/'''i?;:;;I-I'·'::lii :,~i~->; 'II"\~'" ;oii"'%.~.·~ Lee offered. them the pussibility of . . 5~"1'OU 'rageous~ual '0 'ami lon:~uo arsYt.< . .. . t~ brmg It to tlle peop!e. He ~~;~S:tt':,~~i~'i< :' ~J.t~~1j";:Illkf:Lr ~.-<ij~;":!lil\~i;~~W:;"~k": .• ~ havmg then I~venuons developed

t~~~v:;reedett,~a~~~~~l~~o/:~: v;~(~ri1';'* ~¥J\··@i~~~i:r;Jl:"lf":;'!t~:'f;·ilil~~i~l~tj,iii ~~:~::et~ ~e ~o:;~~:. s~

invested in utilities. After all, . -. ,. ...,....' '. . . . . , 'u was amazed at the scores of impor­ who didn't use energy? There tant inventions that couldn't get to were some heavy money interests involved, Oil and fossil fuels the marketplace because of big business's intervention. were big business and they wouldn't relinquish their control of the Lee also knew from his experience [n Washington that if these technologies were ever to get to the people, he could not have one nation without a fi-erce stroggle, The demonstration, called "The central distribution facility that would be an easy target. So, while Declaration of Energy Independence", took place anyway. It was appropriately presented at the Old South Meeting House in Boston technologies were being developed, Lee was also developing a where, two centuries e4l'lier, the seeds of America's Declaration of network of people to whom he sold information on the heat pump and who would eventually be involved in the distribution and Independence were planted, Thirty people witnessed history and manufacture of the products being developed. He thought having probably didn't even realise it. His faith a little further shaken in the government 'of, by and for hundreds of people involved in distribution would increase his the people', Dennis decided to develop and market a final product odds of success. But another course in the education of govem48-NEXUS

JU NE - JULY 1994


the California Civil Code 1812, S.A.M.P. Act, and nine counts of mem corruption was about to be offered. In January of 1988, without notice or warning, 13 armed, bullet­ 487, theft under false pretences (fraud) involving nine 'victims'. The normal bail schedule fOF the offence he was charged with proof-vested deputies raided the research facility, stripping the was $5,000, but Lee was held on Ithe outrageous bail of a million company of all its technology prototypes and records. They herd­ ed all the employees into the conference room, photographing and dollars. This sent a very clear message to ,those working with him identifying them against their win before letting them go. tltat s.ome huge power was being exercised here that wanted to take him out of the way and to stop the project. It also sent the Additionally, they took confidential papers on inventions sent in by outside inventors, none of which was authorised by the search message, "Look out, this could be you," Although he requested warrant. five hundred secret papers, including personal drawings numerous bail reviews, Lee was kept in county jail for 10 months awaiting trial. The investigating sergeant/arresting officer was of an invention the head of research was working on, were 'stolen' at this raid. Officials denied ever taking them. However, eyewit­ promoted to lieutenant not a month after his arrest, and put in charge of th'e jail Dennis was then in. While in jail, his company nesses at the scene of the raid observed both pictures being taken and a box of papers being removed before the search 'officially' was systematically destroyed by a group of men who appeared to be working with the sheriffs office. Jail personnel attempted' to began. These papers have never turned up. Since a search warrant requires suspicion of a crime being com­ tie Dennis's hands in preparing his case in every way possible. He miLLed on 'the premises to be issued, it was issued on the basis of had to take his captors to court numerous times for violating his suspicion of a SAMP violation. If you were to ask, "What is a constitutional rights, including his right to privacy with.his-a:ttor­ SAMP?", you would be in the very good company of 99% of ney an.d the reading of his legal mail. California lawyers, The S.A.M.P. Act-Seller's Assisted Unwilling ItO 'roll over', Dennis Lee entered thirteen pre-trial Marketing Plan Act-is a motions to dismiss the California civil code and is a ~:<>, o;~1i;kti,~:';.:;",:'i:j.:,::>,;~· y ,>3' ":,' ;!l« ';z':.o .'..; . llW.Adl: ',":':.,. '...;i'if..;;'·,i::: il:<,'. charges against him, among ' <;-~ ~:~~~~;'1 . ;-.?);( , ~~. . . . :.. ~- ~~::::~r:~.:s;~~~,;x/-:r· ~.·:~3 _ .~~~~:~$~~~:< . htde-known reglstratlon law, ,: ,i'~'%>::: ....."~M8W.i* ~1~ <t.'~ "i~~~:;,;,"~~·,~"'~'1:;3WL>,' :,*, ,"if< whIch was one for gross rarely used, which has had::-, 'l ' , ' '" !ie,.: ;" i: ,:~~"6~":~'"., prosecutorial misconduct", one conviction in its history, .' Almost~, hlsarrest,'~.clentlstsand, At this hearing it was It

Q;

.:,:tt ,'::; year 'after ~c~ca:li~~1:;=~a::~0~ ~ engin~ers'over,c~~.~ t.heJ~,!e~~s~n~.f~.n~IIX ~~~~~:a~~ft~~~rh~n~~~ ~e Attorney

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Genera.l's Office . :;,cam~forw~r.dtp t~~tlfy. [e~',~Ji~half.at In Sacramento admItted that t. P, rosecutoriaJ·Misco.ndu.~"l'!. c.:>t..·.·H.' there arc probably hundreds of *., ".. ". :.:. , . ;' ~':" :,X:,', ." ~; ': ',' thousan~s of unprosec~~ed :,' Jtley.testifi~d.that

he Gross

earing.

on:y

discrimin~torily

brought th~s prosecutIOn, but h~d faIled to preserve matenal witnesses, ~ad d~ectly tltreat­

thetf?chnQI(>gies" (:.ould:. ~e~~: rv:~::~~;s;f ~~ ~~~n~ iDpeed ;~Qw:H·~t 'Oenn,is h~~(.saJ.f!'Jh~y:'CaUld~.~; ~~u~~~~::~ ~:~;i~~: ~~~

~AMP is minimal. B~ttom "<";~, '~~" ""::';1' 'rI"," ~: ..:;, ;.:~ \~.;,':" ~>"'" ~: .~,,,,,,,:,;,, had lied to .'vict~s' to cre~te lIne, the SAMP Act IS an ' ,X'" ;,. ' , ',.'''':' ',i·' ',~, ::': .; ':'~' ",,,: ," a case agaInst hIm. WhIle .•', «~, ,',' obscure law in the arsenal of "0 <:;-: , they he'ld Lee in jail on corrupt government to prevent excessive bail, a concerted 'unfair competition' with the big boys, Its wording is vague effort to strip him of any support or witnesses ensued. The head research scientist had been threatened, as well as others, and had enough to be unconstitutional, but leaves law enforcement the lati­ tude to swing with it any way they choose. At the discretion of fled the area for fear of physical harm. or reprisal. Salespeople bad been tltreatened with as much as 60 years' imprisonmenl on the the judge it can have criminal sanctions (punishment). The nor­ mal procedure, if you are suspected of being a SAMP, is to receive SAMP violation. Employees--even mail clerks-were told they a warning letter to give you the opportunity to comply. It is obvi­ had better not work for the company any more or they would be ous that even the government recognises by the issuance of this considered accomplices to the 'crime'. 'warning letter' that it would be impossible for any normally con­ People who had posted their homes as collatera. for Lee's mil­ lion-dollar bail were lied to and threatened to get them to drop seientious citizen to even know of the existence of this law. How can someone be held responsible for a law they don't know exists? their collateral. The insurance company that would post the bond After the raid the municipal court judge, in an unusual move, for the large bail changed the rules tltree times, and when all of the ordered the records to the case scaled. This is normally reserved requirements were met anyway, the D.A. entered a motion to examine the source of bail. The motion was granted and Dennis for instances where an informant needs to be protected, for instance in a drug case. Apparently the judge felt the officer who Lee was not allowed to have any business associates pos~ his bail. requested the search warrant, and his affidavit in support of it, The lega] precedent used was that of a drug dealer who had sold needed to be hidden from public scrutiny. heroin to raise his bail. For six months they combed through ,the papers taken in the Almost a year after his arrest, scientists and engineers overcame raid. No charges were brought and no arrest seemed imminent. their fears and finally came forward to testify on Lee's behalf at Dennis did not flee, knowing he had committed no crime, but con­ the Gross Prosecutorial Misconduct Rcaring. Thcy testified that the technologies could indeed do what Dennis had said they could, tinued to work steadfastly on his project. Then in June 1988, when he planned to meet with his network in Los Angeles, and that they were the ones who had told him that. State witness­ California, to announce they were ready to market one of the prod­ es, called 'victims', came to testify that they did not consider them­ ucts, Ventura officers travelled out of jurisdiction to L.A. to arrest selves victims and they had told ,that to the sheriffs office when him. They couldn't wait any longer to strike. They knew if he they'd been questioned. One man made it clear that he hadn't wanted to be part of pressing any charges against Dennis and hadbegan to market his product(s) there'd be too much exposure-too much public knowledge-and there'd be no stopping him. He was n't even realised he was party to any charges brought. In addition to the 995 motion for gross prosecutorial misconduct, Dennis filed arrested in June of 1988 and charged with 38 counts of violating f

JUNE-JULY 1994

"

NEXUS·49


a 65-page lawsuit against Ventura officials in federal court It was dismissed without even a hearing. After the hearing, when it was obvious to all that there was no basis for a fraud case, the judge manipulated Lee into a position whcre he had to plea-bargain. They realised the on~y way they could convict Lee was on the SAMP registration viofation, and it wouldn't do for this to go to trial. During all this time the lid had been kept on the media, but 3l full-blown trial now would mean the scientist's testimony and knowledge of the technologies would be exposed to the public. The judge made it clear to Lee that tl this went to trial, the jury would nOl be allowed to decide if he had been operating a SAMP or not, o_nly if he had filed or not. The judge tricked him into believing that the only way to get a dccis_ion on whether he had operated a SAMP' was to have the appellate COUIitS decide, and !hat meant he would have to file a guilty plea fIrst The judge assurcd him th1 appeal courts would decide if he was a SAMP and if he was even subject to this law. Dennis pled guilty to eight SAMP violations with no intent. In American law, in order for there to be a crime, !here must be intent. Needless to say, Ithe California appellate courts never even heard the case: they merely ruled that Lee had no appeal rights since he had pled guilty. The superior court judge who handled the case, a young man as judges go (mid-forties to fifties), retired some time shortly after Dtnnis's case. California appeals were over in a few momhs. When Dennis filed a Writ of Certiorari with the US Supreme Court, the State of California never even filed a ,response. N'ormaHy that would mean the Court would hear the one side rep­ rcsented and then rule. But althOugh their time had expired to ~espond, the Court ordered the State of California to reply, and when they did, the Court decided it was not worthy of review. Dennis was free on bail during the appeal process. During this year and a half, he prepared a kit of information consisting of six Ihours of videotape and a ISO-page book, ,explaining and docu­ menting both his'technologies and his story. He believes that the American people need to know the Lruth about its govcrnmcnt, big business and technology supp.ression. Technofogy DOES exist right now to provide unlimited free electricity frum the air, power your prcsent car without gas or elect.ric, bum garbage at home with no smoke, eliminate acid rain, toxic waste and pollution, do away with fossi~ fuels completely, and remove the need for deadfy, dan­ gerous nudear power. Dennis was remanded to prisun to serve his sentence on 5th March 1993. Re.alising that he had been duped, he attempted to withdraw his plea. The new judge refused to let him withdraw his plea, stating that he hadn'lt reviewed the case and had no intention of doing so. Lee then filed motions to both withdraw his plea and to ihave the sentence reviewed. Both were denied withuut review. He is now serving a three-year four-month sentence in California for the violation of the SAMP civil code registration law, while California is going bankrupt because it can't afford to house its prisoners. Lee's wife and family, living in northern New Jersey, continue to carry the flame in trying to get the word Out. Those interested in receiving the Public Awareness Kit can do so on a free-look basis by sending a security deposit of USD$59.95 (postdated cheques are okay). You can view the materials for 14 days, and if you choose to send the materials back you will get your security deposit back uncashed. If you decide to keep the materials to help the cause, just keep the kit and your security deposit wW be for­ feited. To order, write to Better World Technology, PO IBox 653, McAfee, NJ 07428, USA.

50·NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994




Cf)

~ Z

The following report, continued from NEXUS 2/18, describes the state of the art in space power research around the world. The trip was made in November/December 1993 to researchers in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, ilndia, Austria, Switzerland and England. Its purpose: to find and encourage inventors and researchers Ito bring their hardware to the Second

International Symposium on New Energy (held 13th to 15th May '1994-for motc information, phone New Energy News, Salt Lake City, Utah, on (80l) 583 6232). The trip produced 13 rolls of fIlm and 15 hours of videotape. More of these inventors and researchers are listed below with a short description of their work.

HAROLD ASPDEN Dr Harold Aspden is explaining space powcr generation concepts from within and ,to the physics community. He has been a professor of physics, and was head of the patent department of IBM in Europe. He is using standard electromagnetics to explain the phenomenon and says the effects have always been there but either went unno­ ticed or were ignored. Expenise in mag­ netic fields and transformers gives him the background necessary to explain the over­ unity phenomena being produced in ferro­ magnetic devices. His book, Modern Aether Science (ISBN o 85056 0039, available from Sabberton Publications}, should be used as an intro~ duction to college physics, in the opinion of this writer. As described on the jacket, the book. is "an attack on those abstract philosophical dogma which are impeding the development of physics... The treat­ ment is deliberately non-mathematical inasmuch as a hasic comprehension of the JUNE-JULY 1994

z

I EN E ~

(j)

universe need not be founded in mathemat­ 35, Southampton, S09 7BU, UK. ics." As stated in ithe introduction to the METHERNITHA book, our problems with physics today are due to the fact that "Physicists have had Mr Francis Bosshard is public relations rather more to assimilate than has been manager for the Methernitha cQmmune. possible and have lapsed a little into a During the middle '80s a member of the world of abstraction... There was impa­ 'commune, Paul Bauman, builh a space tience at the difficulties of fathoming and power gem.erator which has been termed the charting that sea of energy permeating M-L Convener. The M-L Convener is an space-the aether. And so, many pretend­ electrostatic/magnetic machine that looks ed that the aether does not exist and did so like a Wimshurst generator. by abstract mathematical formulations.". Stefan Marinov, a member of the com­ Well, not only does the aether exist, but mune, escorted us to Switzerland and the Dr Aspden is using it to describe the Linden community where we were actions occurring in the Adams motor. He received as their guests for a two-day stay. is now working with Mr Robert Adams and Stefan was also one of the few who was helping to patent new embodiments to ~e able to test the M-L machines before all Adams motor. Not only has Harold left a contact with the public was withdrawn. legacy of astute theoretical considerations, Stefan reported that they were indeed per­ but he has hit the bench running and is petu~l motion machine,s and! that their rota­ experimenting with magnetic field! phe­ tion speed did not decrease under load. nomena and building devices based on his Several models have been built and tested. discoveries which we were able to photo­ The smallest that Marinov inspected was a graph and videotape during an interview. 200 watt model. The mid-range model had His recent article, "Three Experiments on a capacity of about 3 kW. A large 3Q kW Free Energy" (Space Energy Newsletter, machine was under construction at that vol. iv, no. iv, December 1993, reprinted in time Ibut has never heen .completed. The NEXUS 2/[8,19), provides grist for the first small prototypes used one rotating mill for any 'free energy enthusiast. wheel, the middle-size and larger machines' were designed with two counter-rotating ~: Dr Harold Aspden, Sabberton Research, Sabberton Rublications, PO Box wheels.

off

NEXUS-53


~~

NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCEN

Although they are not working on the M­ L Converter. the commune is still involved in alternative energy. They have recently installed a 750 kW heating ,plant that bums the waste scraps from their wood products division, in combination with woodchips from their forest products division, to pro­ vide hot water heat for the more than 200 residents that make up the community. The commune describes itself as a large spiritual community. It cannot be com­ pared with a sect or communilY with a per­ sonal religious opinion. Those who wish to know more about the commune or the M-t Converter can read the paper in the Proceedings of the 1989 Swiss Association for Free Energy (SAFE) Congress, held in Einsiedeln, Switzerfand (SAFE, PO Box 10, CH-5704 Egliswill, Switzerland). The paper in the Proceedings is the text from the video that has been in circulation dur­ lng the last five years. Because of that video, it is the opinion of this writer that 1,000 years from now the name of Methemitha will be 'known and ;people will visit the site of the first free eneFgy machine to be documented on videotape.

---_.

If no more is ever known about the device, it will have served its purpose. Conract: Mr Francis Bosshard, Methernitba, 3517 Linden, Switzerland.

BRUCE CATHIE Bruce Cathie is a retired airline pilot who

the Bulgarian Academy of Science from

1960 to 1974.

For the last ten years, Stefan has been building experimental devices to make use of effects which he believes can lead to the • production of what he terms the perpetuum mobile. He is using standard electrom~g­ netics to explain the phenomenon, and says the effects have always been there but. either went unnoticed or were ignored. During the First International Symposium on New Energy, Stefan announced that he would have a perpetuum mobil'e. worldng within several months. He has now stated 'to us that he was in error estimating the effect he was attempting -to utilise. He is now investigating the anti-Lenz effect and its relation to the Adams motor. Stefan has built a series of devices that have been described in his books-published as a series called "The Thorny Way of Truth"­ and in his experimental physics journal, Deutsche Physik, published four times a year. The newest of his books is called Divine Electromagnetism. h is this writer's opinion that his experimental devices sho)lld be a part of the standard physics curriculum, and that theory and lab work shoutd be compiled for each device. Stefan writes and experiments under the banner of the Institute for Fundamental Physics, his one-man research lab in Graz, Austria. He says this is a lot more fun than me compulsory psychiatric treatment he received as a political dissident in Bulgaria under Soviet rule in 1974 and 1977. Contact: Mr Stefan Marinov, Deutsche' Physik, MoreUenfefdgasse l6, A-80W Graz, Austria.

has written a number of books describing the energy grid that surrounds the Earth, and those who may be making use of it. The most well-known of his books, Harmonic 695, explains the grid network that seems to be an integral part of the Earth. Mr Cathie is an associate of Robert Adams Developments Ltd and is involved in the design of advanced Adams motors. These new motors make use of grid har­ monics and geometry to optimise and increase their efficiency. A new book describing research of the past several years and clarifying concepts presented in earlier works, is due out in the next few months [NEXUS is publishing this new title, The Harmonic Conquest of Space~stay tuned for details]. A software program has also been developed! that dis­ plays grid calculations and geometry overlaid on the Earth [Gridworks, also available through NEXUS]. We were fortunate to be able to visit and interview Bruce Cathie. He is asking space energy researchers to seriously consider using the mathematics and geometry that he has worked out over many years, in the design of space power generators. Contact: Captain Bruce CHRISTIAN MONSTEIN Cathie (Ret.), Quark Enterprises Ltd, 158 Shaw Christian Monstein is a systems engineer Road, Oratia, Auckland, with a~ high-tech electronics manufacturing New Zealand. company. Our visit with him was brief but, between a gracious me,al and a late arrival hack at our lakeside hotel, Christian STEFAN MARINOV demonstrated a number of scientific experi­ Stefan Marinov uses stan· ments that could only be done by a physi­ cist with an expertis.e in data acquisitiQn dan~ electromagnetism and experiments to point out the and C-Ianguage programming. Christian has experimented with cylin­ multiple discrepancies in relativity theory. He has drical N-Machines of unique design. been doing this for the last Present experiments are being conducted 30 years. During this time with rotating ste~el cylinders that develop a he was an assistant profes­ magnetic polarity dependant on the direc­ sor of physics at Sofia tion of rotation. The effect is proportional University and a researcher to linear rotational velocity, and is not pro­ at the Physical Institute of ponional to rotational velocity as presently -~

.

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54-NEXUS

JUNE - JULY 1994


NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCEN

expected by accepted physics. Using mea­ surements from this experiment allows the calculation of the Earth's magnetic field given the size and rotational velocity of the Earth. Thus this experiment provides an explanation for the origin of the Earth's field. Funher information can be obtained in Christian Monstein's paper, "Symmetric Inertia of Rotating Cylindrical Magnets", in De.utsche Physik, voL 3, no. 9, p. 47. Another experiment, when rbtating a cylin­ drical magnet on its axis, shows that the coast-down time varies depending on the direction of rotation. Contact: Mr Christian Monstein, Weisenstrasse 13, CH-8807 Freienbach, Switzerland.

Wr-RNER RUSTERHOlZ Werner Rusterholz is a networker and one of the organisers of the International Congress for Free Energy held in Einsiedeln, Switzerland, in 1989. This was a very successful conference with an atten­ dance of over 900, indicating there is a great deal of interest in free energy in Europe. The Swiss Association for Free Energy (SAFE) was founded! in 1988 by active members of the German Association of Gravity Field Research. Their goal is to explore "free of field energy" and its con­ version into utilisable energy in coopera­ tion with national and international organi­ sations. We met with Wcrner over break­ fast in order to develop mutually beneficial relations, and agreed to work together keeping each other informed as to new developments in the space energy field. ~: Mr WeI]lcr Rusterholz, Swiss Association for Free Energy, 8733 Eschenbach, Postfach 2142, CH-8645 Jona, Switzedand.

he has created a device that uses no exter­ nal power but shows a weight loss when the Mobius coils are connected. The monopole magnets are the same polarity at the poles, with the opposite pole being in the centre. In the anti-gravi~y device, Mobius coils are wound around approxi­ mately inch-and-one-half washer-shaped assemblies made up of three sections of monopolar magnets. A full description 'of his work and this recent lexperiment with anti-gravity appears in the 12th edition of his book, The Principles of Ultrare1ativity, available from the Space Research 'i[nstitute. Write for details; as the last word we had was that the book was at the print­ ers, the supply of previous editions having been exhausted. Although we hope to see Seike-san at the next conference, his busy schedule may not allow his presence. He did, however, ofrer to provide models of his devices for our examination_. SHINICHI SElKE Shinichi Seike is a graduate of the Shinichi Seike, like John Searl, has made University of Tokyo with a degree in maths new energy research a lifetime project. A and physics, and wants to create paradise prolific experimenter, writer and builder of on Earth with new energy technology. He hardware, Mr Seike has built a theoretical began his work after extraterrestrial con­ base around the geometry of the Klein bot­ tact, during which aliens told him to study tle and the M5bius strip. Using a Mobiu..s anti-gravity. The subject having been wound coil h.e creates monopole magnets raised here, it is interesting to note that, to a as shown and described on the video taken man, space energy researchers contacted on on this trip at his research lab in Uwajima. this trip accept the possibility of extrater­ It is his contention that the MObius coils, in restriallife. Contact: MF Shinichi Seike, Space conjunction with monopole magnets, create negative time and induce anti-gravitational Reseacch Institute, Box 33, Uwajima, effects. In order to prove this contention, Ehime 79, Japan. tions. Those wishing to obtain any of ,these materials may contact his agent in the US, Mr John Thomas, Jr, Visions Unlimited, at 373 Rock Beach Road, Rochester, NY 14617, USA, phone (716) 4672694. Although we were aware of the levitation aspeCt of John's work, we were surprised to lca.m that the technology also incorporated free electrical en~rgy generators as well as the anti-gravity phenomenon. The inner mechanisms of the Searl device incorporate multiple sets of rotating magnets machined to very close tolerances. John has pursued his technology since 1957, though it had its origin in a series of dreams during his childhood. This led to experimental hard­ ware that was filmed extensively by the media during the late '60s and early '70s. Contact": Prof. John R. R. Searl, 13 Blackburn, Lower Strand, Graham Park Estate, London, MW9 5NG, UK.

'--''L.L.0",II,.G Fo~ .....FLA.T.. 0"', TAX-WAG~ "f"1It~"-O"'''S A""D e.XCHJI' ... Ge IlI'a8 ~LUe'T'\lJ'.T\O"'S X. ~ GR.!V'T yo~ -093 o f 0 .... & ""'ISH ...

JOHN SEARL Most of us who have studied new sci­ ence have run across the name John Searl in the '70s or early '80s. Little information aboutt his flying discs could be found. Our visit with John Searl was most rewarding. Although he has had considerable problems with government agencies in the past, he's back and ready to go to work. In fact, he has been working. He !:las just finished the sixth book in a series describing the mathe­ ma'tics of his flying discs and ihts life's work and observations. A four-hour video­ tape is also available describing his inven-

JUNE-JULY 1994

I

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N EWSCI ENCEN EWSCI ENCEN

OPEN LETTER FROM SAM FAILE have found something extremely simple that produces a field effect that can be felt Iby most people and can not be shielded against like ordinary EM fields. The device will alter the bio­ logical effects of water or carbonat­ ed beverage in a week's time with­ out using external power or direct contact of the sealed containers of liquid wiJh the electrical condu"Ctors. The device is nothing more than a two-dollar extension cord config­ ured in a knotted array where adja­ cent knots are mirror images of each other. Included is a picture of pan of models A and B. Device A involves only itwo knots but each knot has about 43 turns. Device B involves about 36 knots where each knot has three loops. The initial test would involve an active circuit rather than a passive one by plug­ ging it into a house current and) connecting a l50 watt incandes_cent lamp for half an hour. People should experience effects

I

JUNE· JULY 1994

such as lethargy, tingling and alteration of perception of colours. Please indicate your interest and I will be glad to send you, free of charge, one of the models with the

understanding I will not be held liable for death or injury resulting from use of the device, or be billed for any expenses you incur to run the tests. Feel free to publish the resuits of your studies or send the results to me. This work represents a new embodiment of the earlier research involv­

ing coils, "Twisted. Coil Produces Strange Effects", by S. P. Faile, published in New Energy News, Yol 1, no 2, June 1993. Please indicate which model you prefer. t believe a phenomenon is being produced of fundamental importance that needs to be undcrslood to revise theory and produce engineering appli­ cations in the various fields such as. new energy. Any questions? Feel) free to write or call. I am a technical correspondent for Fusion Facts" and have lit degreed background in. chemi­ cal engineering and solid-state sci­ ence, having worked fOJ" many physi­ cists during my career. Best Regards, Samuel P. Faile 4002 Sharon Park Lane, #13 Cincinnati, Ohio 45241 USA Phone: (513) 5634953. Extracted from the September 1993 issue (vol. 1 no. 5) of

New Energy News PO Box 58639

Sail lake Cily, UT 84158-8639, USA

NEXUS-57



TH! MYSURIOUS TAOS HUM The town of Taos, New Mexico, is hum­ ming, but not everyone can hear it. A team of scientists and engineers spent a week in Taos not long ago to measure acoustic and seismic sounds, but found no direct cause. Some of the team heard it too, miles away in Albuquerque. At first, Representative Bill Richardson (Dem., NM) wanted to write it off to "some of my more colourful constituents", mean­

no

ing alternative lifestyle seekers, offbeats, artists and UFO enthusiasts. Now he's con­ vinced the problem is real aIld bas asked someone from the House Select Committee to investigate. The noise, which causes dizziness, short­ ness of breath, headaches, anxiety and sleeplessness, .is thought by some to be from a secret defence-related project. The US Department of Defense denies it.

(Source: WikJ.fire Magazine. Winter 1993)

t&.~ e0'

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JUNE-JULY 1994

LIZARD PEOPLE UPDATE Dear Duncan, Here is a reptilian relic that was found in Los Angeles in 1954 that neatly fits into the "Lost Land of the Lizard People" article [see NEXUS 2/19]. Enclosed is a phoro of an artifact that is definitely very old, depicting a full-bodied dragon. The upper section of the medallion is made of pure silver that was somehow fused to a copper­ alloy base which is composed of over 40 different types of metal. The medallion's actual dimensions are 7/8" (width) x 1/4" (len~th) x 1/16" (depth). The man who found it, Mr G., was an aerospace engineer who lived and worked for 'the US Government in Chatsworth, California. The arltifact was found while Mr G. was helping a frie.nd, who ilived on the northern shore of Lake Chatsworth, repair the wooden stairway to the front pOrch. Mr G. dropped his hammer, which feHI into a soft sandy area, and when he reached to pull his hammer out he noticed tfris small metal medallion. Mr G. still has the artifact in his posses­ sion, and after much research feels that it belonged to an ancient race of space people named ALTEC, who left behind their influ­ ence on this world long ago. The Friendly or Sleeping Dra,gon i_s a very old symbol, NEXUS-59


iii

THE TWILIGHT ZONE

one wtlich has definite connections to UFOs. I once had the opportunity to show a picture of a Pleiadian-style UFO to a man from Bhutan (near Tibet) and asked if he had' ever seen such a thing. He replied that yes, they did see them often and that they were cal'led "Friendly Dragon". Chatsworth is located in Los Angeles County near the north-west border of the city and county lines. It is likely that a Chinese labourer lost ,this artifact while working in Chatsworth on lrailroad con­ struction, around the turn of the century. There is a railroad ronnel that was cut by the Chinese wough a solid red rock ridge called the Santa Suzana Pass near the Chatsworth Lake. Old Chinatown is located in downtown Los Angeles and was built where the new rail-yard now sits. New Chinatown is built over much 0] the old tunnel systems ,that the rirst Chinese lead.ers had constructed for their 'safety' when they first arrived in the area. It is IPossibJe that engineer/inven­ tor G. W. Shufelt did not know what he had stumbled onto electronically, and it is also

GO-NEXUS

logical that Chinese people would not admit to the existence of a securc system of tunnels and rooms they had worked so hard to build in secret. There may even have existed a series of older tunnels and rooms that the Chillese discovered dllri,ng their own excavations and construction. However, the Federal Government definite­ ly stepped in during the '50s and took con­ trol of the entire ,underground tunnel sys­ tem for their Cold War operations, adding many new paranoid-influenced improve­ ments over the years that followed. In the '90s, suspicious arson fifes prevented well­ equipped ONI intelligence operatives from gaining access to the secret entrance that was located in the basement of the so­ called 'public' library. There is more to this story than can be told at this time. Take care, and lkeep up the great work with NEXUS. Sincerely, Robert Stanley Editor, Unicus Magazine 1142 Manhattan Avenue, Suite 43 Manhattan Beacb, CA 90266, GSA.

TALES FROM THE YUKON

TERRITORY

By Harold T. Wilkins In the Supai canyon of Arizona, an American scientific expedition discovered, in 1924, remarkable pictographs of unknown and extremely ancient origin, cut through the iron scale on red sandstone, which depicted the most dreadful of all the dinosaurs: the terrible camivorOlis tyrin­ nosaurus. All this leads us, by way of,pref­ ace, to certain queer stories told by trappers in northern British Columbia,· gold prospectors and old sourdoughs in the Yukon territory of Canada's North-West, and AlaSKa. As llong ago as 1887, an American engi­ neer from Washington, DC, Mr H. von Beyer, was staying at Port TowIl.send, Puget SoundJ, Washington territory, when a mysterious rurnour spread around about a monstrous animal seen in the interior of Alaska. The story had probably reachedr Puget Sound from some trading steamship arrived from Sitka. White folk at Port Townsend told von Beyer that ilndians had gone into Alaska and had taken the trail up the Yukon River. At a point a great way up into the interior, the Indians had seen strange tracks on the ground. They fol­ lowed this spoor for many miles, and final­ ly came in sight of strange hairy animals of immense size and unknown species. The Indians were scared at the enormo.us girth of these animals whose tracks were described as following a circular route. The story had passed through many mouths' and von Beyer doubted it. He suspected it had come from some Vancouver Island Indians who had taken a long journey north by sea. (It may here be noted that the Iroquois Indians of New York state and of eastern Canada have old traditions ahout a huge animal that travelled in circles in days llong before white men discovered Canada). However, in 1905, another and remark­ able story appeared in the scientific journal published in Paris, France. It purported to relate the adventures of one Georges Dupuy, a French traveller, a banker of San Francisco, a French-Canadian mission priest, and an Amerkan gold hunter and fossicker at an indian village called Armstrong Creek, located near the McQuesten River in the Yukon territQry. This river flows through marshy tundras and alongside hills located between the 138 and 136 meridians, some 100 miles east of JUNE - jlJLY 1994


THE TWILIGHT ZONE

Dawson City as the crow flies. Here, in the meighbourhood of Partridge Creek, the party encountered a terrible monster that seems to hav'e been an Arctic dinosaur. One Buttler, an American, and another prospector were one day hunting three large moose at the mouth of Clear Creek when, all of a sudden, as they were stalking the moose downwind, they saw a huge bull moose raise his head from the moss and lichens where he had been quietly brows­ ing, and give three bounds. Another moose uttered a loud bellow-given only when a monal enemy is near, or when the moose is badly wounded-and the three moose set off at a frantic gallop to the south. The men cautiousry approached the spot, which was partly screened by pines and undergrowth, when they saw in the snow the imprint of the body of some monstrous animal whose bel1y had left in the slime of the riverbank an impression two feet deep, 30 feet long and 12 feet wide! Four gigan­ tic paws, deeply impressed in the muck, had left prints five feet long and two-and-a­ half feet wide. There were also the prints of sharp claws which measured one foot long, and were deeply embedded in the mud. The men measured the impression of a tail 10 feet long and 16 inches wide at the middle! They trailed the monster's uacks up a valley until, after about six miles, they entered a ravine called Partridge Creek. Here, the tracks abruptly and unaccount­ ably ended. It looked as if the monster had given a tremendous bound up the cliff of the ravine. Deciding that the location was unhealthy, the men made tracks for an out­ post. Dupuy, when he was told the story, laughed and joked at Buttler. "Say," he said, "but you ain't half wetted your whis­ tle! Tell us what trading guy sold you that Bourbon. He must have a rare powerful brand ofkill-'em-at-40-rods hooch!" Buttler angrily retoned that he and his pal were more sober than most judges when they trailed that monster's tracks. It was arranged that Buttler should guide Dupuy, the French priest, Padre Pierre Lavagneux, a Yukon sourdough, and half a dozen Indians to the spot. For a whole day the party searched the banks of the McQuesten, the flats of Partridge Creek, and the whole countryside between the lit­ tle township of Barlow, on the embouchure @f the McQuesten with the Stewart River which flows into the Yukon, and a lofty snow-covered range which numbers Mt

JUNE-JULY 1994

Haldane among its most valiant peaks. They found nothing unu.$ual and reponed the 'facts to a sergeant of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who, though sceptical and humorous, agreedl to join them in the hunt for the monster. One evening, tired out after wading through sloughs and frozen tundras, they pulled up near the summit of a rock gulch and lit a campfire, as evening was coming on. The pine logs blazed brightly and there

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was the pleasant odour of turpentine and balsam mingling with the more pleasant smell of bacon and porky beans cooking at the fire. The red sun had his olb about level with the top of the divide. Dupuy later wrote: "We lay by the fire, relaxed our aching limbs, and let our eyes roam over the marsh, glittering with icicles and hoar frost crystals, that we had just crossed. The tea was steaming ready in the pail when, all of a sudden, we were startled by the sound of falling stone tumbling down into the bot­ tom of the ravine, followed by larger boul­ ders. Then carne a harsh and appalling roar. We sprang to our feet, and I don't

mind saying my teeth chattered and it was not with cold, either! R~ght across the ravine, on the side opposite to that where we were camped, the lboulders were rolling heavily into the bottom, as a gigantic black and hairy animal slowly and heavily ascended the grade. "From the comer of its mouth, a blood­ stained frothy slime dripped. Its horrid jaws were munching, munching, munching. The priest, the sourdough and Buttler unconsciously clasped each other by the arms and tried to shout, but could. not utter a sound. And weH for us was it that they were stricken dumb! Our Indians crouched on the ground, their faces ashy and their bodies trembling like aspen leaves. They pressed their faces on the ground to shut out the sight. Buttler suddenly got up and tore down the hill... "Luckily, the monster had not sighted us! He stopped barely 100 paces from us. Then, propping his huge belly OIlt a big flat rock, he stood motionless, gazing into the glaring eye of the red and setting sun! It was a sight thal may have been not unfa­ miliar to our giant forefathers in a remote age. The monsteF stood still for 10 min­ utes, as did we. He actually swivelled round his huge neck, and still did not see us. "I calculated he was around 50 feet long. He had a son of rhinoceros hom on top of his jaws and his carcass was covered with black stiff bristles like those of a wild boar. The hair was plastered with mud and frozen muck. I'd put his weight at all 50 . tons, As we watched, a sound like the crunching of bones came from his dripping jaws, Then he reared on his hind legs,

NEXUS·61


THE TWILIGHT ZONEm_.. emitted a h.orribly hollow roar, gave a ter­ rific kap, and v!Ulis.hed up the ravine., We made no anempt to follow him!" Dupuy and ,the party went to Dawson City and asked the governor to send out 50 a(Il1ed men and mules, though it seems to me that a battery of howitzers would not have been amiss. The Dawson City Daily Nugget got hold of the story and likened Dupuy and party to Baron von Miinchausen, Ananias, Barnum and Louis de Rougemont aU rolled into one. Perhaps the governor of the North-West ,territories suspected a hoax, for he never gave the aid asked by Dupuy. Yet the monster was seen again. About five years later, wben Dupuy was back in France, he had a letter from Pere Lavagneux, who wrote: "Ten of my Indians and myself have again seen that horrible beast of Partridge Creek. It was on Chrisunas Eve, and the monster was passing like a whirlwind over the frozen surface of the river, breaking off with his hind feet enormous blocks of ice from the frozen surface. His fur was cov­ ered with hoar frost and his little eyes­ that was why he probably did nOl see us when we met him, some five years back whcn you were here, my son-glittered like fire in the dusk. He had in his jaws something which looked to me like a cari­ bou. He moved at the rate of more than 30 miles an hour. The temperature stood at 45 degrees below zero. At the comer of the cut-off, the monster vanished. "It is evidently the same monster we saw before. Together with the Chief Stinehane and his two sons, I followed up the trail of the horrid beast. They were exactly like the tracks you and I and the ,rest saw when you were here. Then, they were embedded

mnnn . _ n

in the muck of the moose lick. Eight times ESP-NOT JUST IN THE MIND? on the snow we measured the prints. They Extrasensory perception-ESP­ were the same and so was the enormous almost certainly exists according to body. Not the twentieth of an inch differ­ Britain's most respected scientific ence! We trailed them to Stewart, fully researcher into the paranormal. three miles, when snow fell and obliterated Professor Robert Morris of Edinburgh the tracks." University, who has spent almost a Of course, readers may, like the Dawson decade investigating claims of telepathy, City Daily Nugget, deem such a story all ctairvoyance and pre-cognition, says he hooey, if not a hoax. Or they may ask: is "now ninety per cent certain" that ESP "Where are the fathers, mothers, sisters, is real. brothers, sons and daughters of these mon­ In 1985 Professor Morris became the sters?" They cannot live in vacuo, nor first holder of Edinburgh's Koestler Chair were they unbegotten, uncreated, nor can of Parapsychology, established under a live eternally," To which one may reply, 'million-pound bequest following the with a shrug: "Quien sabe?" death of writer Arthur Koestler two years Scientists and zoologists and palaeontol­ earlier. ogists ridicule these stories just as they Until recently, Professor Morris and derided Sir Harry Johnston's account of the his team had focussed on finding ways in central African Okapi, until presently a which researchers can fool themselves specimen was found. Others may dismiss into believing that ESP exists. the stories as [egends, or subjects for the However, now they've beg\Ul experi­ psychologist rather than the biologist How ments-and have turned up powerful did such monsters escape the fate that support for a paranormal phenomenon befell their ancestors millions of years ago, that most scientists reject. when the oncoming of glaciation and the In a study of 32 people, 13 managed to secular rise in the elevation of land masses identify correctly a film clip seen by spelled their doom? In the djsappearance someone in another room. The odds of of lush vegetation and hot, steamy swamps so high a success rate being achieved by and plains where the sun shone ever hot chance are about 50 to 1. and bright from a cobalt sky, and rain fell Professor Morris and his team believe as it seems to do on Venus nearer ,the Sun. that these kinds of experiments constitute only in warm showers in the night, how did important evidence that some people they survive? really do have paranormal abilities. Did the dinosaur or the Pleistocene mam­ They have now gone on to develop a moths and mastodons leave no descendants test for predicting who will do well in behind them to inhabit lonely enclaves of ESP tests. Candidates have to stare at a ' lost worlds where climate and zoogeo­ faint image which is steadily brightened graphical and geological conditions by a computer. Those who can make out favoured their survival? the image more quickly appear to be par­ (Source: Would You Believe? Spring 1994) ticularly "receptive" in ESP tests.

(Source: Weekly Tele2raph, 12-18 January 1994)

VAMPIRE REMOVAL AT STAKE An unidentified telephone bidder paid A$17,437 at a Sotheby's auction yester­ ~y for a "Vampire Kming Set". The kit comprised garlic powder, an ivory­ mounted crucifix incorporating a con­ cealed pistOl, a Bible, a telescope to spot airborne vampires, a wooden stake, and moulds for making silver bullets. While the kit's creator is unknown, Sotheby's estimate the set was assembled in 20th century America, not 19th centu­ ry Europe. Indeed, the perfect gift for the man who fears everything! •

62·NEXUS

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(Sources: Sunshine Coast Daily, 13 January 1994; The Gate. April 1994) JUNE -JULY 1994



REVI.EWS BOOKS

EXTRATIERRESTRIAt ARCHAEOLOGY Incredible Proof We Are Not Alone by David Hatcher Childress Published by Adventures Unlimited Press (1994), PO Box 74, Kempton IL 60946, USA; phone (815) 253 6390, fax (815) 2536300 ISBN 0-932813-21-6 Price: AUD$35,00 {J01 PoP pb) Available: NEXUS Magazine, PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560; phone 1(074) 42 9280, fax (074) 42 9381. Hopefully by now you will have read the article in this issue titled Extraterrestrial Archaeology, which was 'a reprint of Chapter 7. titled "The Moons of Mars". David Childress has again presented an impressive range of material, ,in the form of photographs, drawings and maps, that allows the reader to view the evidence showing that many of our p[anets were not only inhabited in the past, but continue to be inhabited today. Journey to the strange and fascinating worlds of Mars, our Moon, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and beyond, in a visual search for ancient structures, unusual surface features and other evidence that we are not alone. There is a lot of material here which will surprise many readers. I was amazed at the sheer extent of unusual informa.tion that David has fished out

64·NEXUS

~ ~

NEXUS is proud Ito carry this book, and we recommend it as a worthy addition to your library.

WHY FLYING ENDANGERS YOUR HEALTH Hidden Health Hazards of Air Travel by Farrol S, Kahn Published by Aurora Press, Box 573,

Santa Fe, NM 87504, USA; phone (50S)

989 9804, fax (505) 989 7804

ISBN 0-943358-36-1

Price: AUD$28.00 (286pp pb)

Available: Sydney Esoteric Bookshop

.-

(see ad on page 63). This book is about part of the downside of aviation, and so possibly is not desir­ able reading for in-flight or transit-lounge situations. Ittcontains information about the health dangers of flying that many of us would rather not be concerned with amidst the usual stress"Cs and Istrains ofgettLng from A to B by plane as quickly as possible. But this is just as the aviation/a~pspace medical industry would have it, where .information about the true health hazards of the in-flight environment is used to maintain military pilots' fitness over and above promoting the well-being of fare­ paying passengers. Indeed, it is estimated that perhaps ten per cent of passengers aren't fit enough to fly due to the health-risk conditions. Flying is comparable with mountaineer­ ing: there's the atmospheric pressure and composition to be considered, the psy­ chology, and physiological considerations such blood oxygenation variation. Rather than scare the passenger off fly­ ing forever, the book indudes two health checklists so one can easily determine which diseases or conditions are contra­ indicative to flight, and which preventive measures to take. Those wanting to be better informed about legal rights in flight-related medical incidents, or standards that the airlines are meant to adhere to, will also find some enlightening data in this bo_ok.

.,

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JUNE - JULY 1994


I

~ R,EVI'EWS

BOOKS SPACE ALIENS FROM liHE PENTAGON Flying Saucers are Man-Made Electrical Machines by William R. Lyne Published by Creatopia productions (1993), Lamy NM 87540, USA; phone (505) 983 3022 ISBN 0-9637467-0-7 Price: AlJD$50.GO (244pp pbl Available: Sydney Esoteric Bookshop (see ad on page 63). What a fasclnating book! I know it won't go down all that well with believers in aliens, but it does contain information which needs considering and including in any conclusions to do with flying saucers. It is the author's contention that our own Earth governments, especially fue USA, has had advanced propulsion technology for several decades, and have kept it hid!den from the masses. He further coneludes that security and intelligence services have actually created the 'alien visitors in UFOs' scenario to confuse and distract researchers from finding out 'the truth', He presents a lot of information on mind control which leads one to consider the possibility that abduction experiences can be 'implanted' from a distance using more of the advanced! technology developed in secret and funded by drug money. Is it trUe? Does the CIA have man-made flying_saucers? Are they able to zap you

with a device thal will make you 'remem­ ber an abd_uction-by-an-alien' experience? Whatever the case this book presents information worth considering if you want to get a fuller picture,

A CENTURY OF WAR Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order by F. William Engdahl Published by Dr Bottinger Veriags-GmbH (1992), Germany .ISBN 3-925725-19-9 Price: AUD$40.00 (282pp pb) Available: Sydney Esoteric Bookshop (see ad on page 63), There are many growing and diverse viewpoints on the role of behind-thescenes groups of power brokers through the ages.

I often think the discovery of oil and the resulting scramble for control of oil and gas deposits has been overlooked as a contributing factor in the shaping of our current social and political scenario. I am sure many NEXUS readers don't need a lot of convincing that big business pulls most of socieIY'S strings, ithus this ' book serves well as a pointer to many of the hidden players within the corridors of power. ~"_~ After reading this book you will sudden­ ly see the last two hundred years through very different eyes. It is a well-researched book and, though hard to get, is highly recommended. EXTRA·TERRESTRIAL FRI'ENDS AN D FOES by George C. Andrews Published by 1IlumiNet Press (1993), PO Box 2808, Lilburn GA 30226, USA; phone (404) 279 2.745 ISBN 0-9626534-8-9 Price: AU D$30.00 (3S9pp pb) Available: Sydney Esotefic Bookshop (see ad on page 63). ] have to admit this lis a very intriguing book!' It is basically an appraisal of heaps of diverse information, with an air of determining whether alien visitors are friendly or not. It even goes so far as to present information surmising which alien species are the 'good' guys, and which aren't. Needless to say the 'Greys' are classified as 'foes', at least if the examples listed are anything to go o_n_, _


~ REVIEWS

BOOKS

There is a lot of subsidiary material also presented in this book. Allegations of secret high-tech research projects imply a vast amount of money is being spent, and thus it is coming from somewhere. It is clear that the official "black budget" , i.e., the money allocated by the US govern­ ment on behalf of its taxpayers to secret and covert projects, is not enough to finance and maintain the many rumoured 'secret underground bases', so many researchers are concluding that the CIA and similar organisations are funding these bases using drug trafficking money. This is but one of many examples of what I call subsidiary infonnation to be found in this book. Above aU, it is an inviting overview of the whole UFO phenomenon, with many possible conclusions being offered. I know that I end virtually every review with a 'must read' or a 'highly recom­ mended', but folks, I gotta tell you: this is another 'mus~ read'.

Howard Hughes. There is much in this book that has been published before, but there is much more which has not. I found it fascinating reading with many interesting titbits of infonnation on subjects such as Waco being a deep-cover mind control project, and on PROMIS, Danny Casolaro, . Giinther Russbacher and more. If you recognise those names, this book is definitely for youl

PROJECT SEEK Onassis, Kennedy and the Gemstone Thesis by Gerald A. Carroll Published by Bridger House IPubJishers, Inc. (1994), PO Box 2208, Carson City NV 89702, USA ISBN 0-9640104-0-2

Price: AUD$34.00 (388pp pb)

Available: Sydney Esoteric tBookshop

(see ad on page 63).

Ask any veteran conspiracy researcher about the Gemstone Files. You'll see the eyes glaze as the mind boggks, overload­ ing with the memory recall of names, dates, times and places-all listed in this now infamous document. Project Seek is dedicated to and about the events and people mentioned in the

Gemstone Files. Aussie and Kiwi readers need not despair as this book also contains our own version of the Gemstone Files, which many of us 'down under' refer to as the Opal Files. For the uninitiated, the Gemstone Files are a conspiracy theory history of tile 20th century, and feature such characters as Onassis, the Kermedys, the Rockefellers, the Mafia, the CIA and 66- NEXUS

THE THIRTEENTH STONE by Reginald Lewis Published by Fountainhead Press (1994),

PB 5033, Fremantle WA 6160, Australia;

phone (09) 4304345, fax (09) 4307439

ISBN 0-64616626-3

Price: AUD$18.95 f332pp pb)

Available: Fountainhead Press (see ad

on page 52).

This is a radical book! It certainly chal­ lenges the major religions and our under­ standing of history as no book has done for a long time. It is a culmination of years of research on the Dead Sea Scrolls and other ancient writings. The Scrolls have given rise ItO a wide range of theories and speculations, not least from Australia's Barbara Thiering. The author moves on from Professor Thomas Thompson's shattering claim that the first 10 books of the Bible are mytho­ logical, to argue that all of its 66 books are myths! JUNE - JULY 1994


REVIEWS BOOKS

He fmds that most religions have in common the expression of a collective dream: that an entity is to arrive on Earth to reveal the absolute IIUth. Christianity states that this person, in the form of Jesus, has arrived; Judaism holds that the Messiah is yet to come. The author's proposal is that the Scrolls say this entity, who win rev~l the 'hidden mysteries', will appear at the end of the Piscean/dawn of the Aquarian Age-in other words, very soon. He goes on to identify Israel not as an ethnic 'chosen people' but as a community to form as a result of spiritual evolution.

~

Middle East heroin traffickers, Coleman is the victim of one of the biggest interna­ tiona] cover-ups in modem times. In the spring of 1988 Coleman was on a mission for the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Coleman had beeR ordered to spy on the DEA in Cyprus which, along with the CIA, was running heroin through the airports of Frankfurt and London en route to the USA. Coleman discovered tbat the security of this 'sting' operation had been breached, and warned the US embassy that a disaster • was waiting to happen. He was ignored. Several months later, Pan Am Flight 103 exploded over Lockerbie. ,Among the dead was a DEA drug courier. Over the past four years Washlilgton has ensured that the blame for the bombing rests with Libyan terrorists and negligent Pan Am officials. Trail of the Octopus is a gripping inves­ tigation into the causes of the Lockerbie disaster and the subsequent manipulation of the evidence. It is a revelatory insight into the rival American intelligence agen­ cies and their use of Middle Eastern drug traffIckers and terrorists. And it is the story of a man who' became a prisoner of his own knowledge. An expensive book, but worth it!

,~\ j'

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THE CANCER SOLUTION by Robert E. Willner, M.D., Ph.D. Published by,peltec Publishing Co., Inc. (994),4400 North Federa'l Hwy, Suite 210, Boca Raton FL 33431 USA; phone (407) 75'0 0428 Price: AUD$45,OO + $4.50 p&h (296pp hcl Available: Natural Therapy Products (se-e ad on pages 26-27); and Sydney Esoteric Bookshop (see ad on page 63l. 1

TRAIL OF TIHE OCTOPUS From Beirut to Lod<erbie=-Inside the DIA by Donald Goddard with Lester K. Coleman Published by Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd (11993), 2 Soho Square, London Wl V 50E, UK

ISBN 0-7475-1562-X Price: AUD$39.95 (326pp hcl Available: Sydney Esoteric Bookshop (see ad on page 63).

Lester Kriox Coleman is the fIrst American citizen since the Vietnam War to seek p,oliticat asylum in another coun­ try. Hounded by the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and JUNE -JULY 1994

,

This is probably the best book on alter­ native treatments for cancer that I have ever come across. It covers everything, and in depth too. Not only that, but it has a 73-page appendix: full of listings of alternative can­ cer clinics, doctors us.ing alternative can­ cer treatments, companies supplying alter­ native remedies, reading material and more. Everything is there: names, addresses, phone numbers for US, European and other cOUDtries also! Regular readers of NEXUS will have noted the many articles we have run on alternative treatments for can.ce]" and AIDS. This book has got all w'e've pub­ NEXUS.67


REVIEWS BOOKS

lished and much more. Nearly every alternative treatment for cancer I have ever heard of is covered in this book, inclUding where to get it! Subjects include causes of cancer, o~y­ gen therapy, chelation, cell therapy, lin­ seed oil, Budwig therapy, Garlic, DMSO, enzymes, vitamins and minerals. Gaston Naessens, elec.tro-acupuncture, electro­ magnetic therapies. bee pollen, chlorella. spirulina. herbs, Chinese herbs. Ayurvcdic medicines, CanCell, Hoxsey, macrobi­ otics, colon cleansing. Gerson therapy, shark cartilage, dJiugs, all the different kinds of caJlcers, dental amalgam, and dozens more! What can I say? If you or a loved one has cancer, or if you are a! health practi­ tioner. you owe it to yourself to read this book.

~

Many readers will remember (hopefully) an article on what many people say is a suppressed cancer cure. called CanCell. This was published ,in NEXUS 2/17. and attracted a lot of interest. We spotted this book and decided to review a copy for the benefit of people interested in cancer cures and vibrational medicine in general. To recap. CanCell is a substance which thousands of people claim has cured them of cancer. It has been produced and dis­ tributed since the 1'940s free of charge. It has been ignored by scientists and attacked by the FDA through the US fed­

TH E CanCel! CONTROVERSY Why Is A Possible Cure For Cancer Being Suppressed? by Louise B. Trull Published by Hampton Roads Publishing Company, Inc. (19931), 891 Norfolk Square, Norfolk VA 23502, USA; phone (804) 459 2453, fax (804) 45'5 8907 ISB N 1-8789Q11-76-1 Price: AUD$20.00 (150pp pb) Available: Sydney Esoteric IBookshop (see ad on page 63).

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68-NEXUS

eral courts. This book provides all the known,evi­ dence for CanCell's efficacy. so the reader can make informed decisions about CanCell and how best to use it There is much scientific. technical and documentary information included, to enable most people to pick up ttheir own' research trail on this very intriguing sub­ stance. AIDS CONTROL DIET

A Nutrition ManDai for HIV,

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,

Candidiasis and other Immune­

Related Disorders

by Mark Konlee

Published by Keep Hope Alive (1994, 6th ed.l, PO Box 27041, West Allis WI, 53227, USA; phone (414l548 4344 Price: AUD$ 25.00 + AUD$4.50 p&h (89pp sb) Available: Natural Therapy Products, 17 Blytheswood Avenue, Warrawee, NSW 2074; phone/fax (02) 44 7552. "There is evidence. based on patient experience, that certain dietary measures and non-toxic therapies can alter some of the harmful effects of mv and other opportunistic mfections. as well as the horrendous side-effects of conventional drugs now recommended for AIDS. Mark Konlee's AIDS Control Diet is one of the very ,best guides to holistic and natural treatment therapies that I have read. It is simple to rcad, entirely practical in its

A

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JUNE -JULY 19~


~ REVI,EWS

BOOKS

approach, beau1ifully organised and con· cise, updated annually and well-refer­ enced. For those HIV-infected individuals who want to explore treatment methods fOJ AIDS other than AZT, 1would recom­ mend the information contained in this book." -Alan Cantwell, Jr, MD "I have .read your AIDS Control Diet with great interest. The book is a verita­ ble gold-mine of information about the management of HlV/AlDS Syndrome. There is a awful amount of serious misin­ formation floating around. The HIV/AIDS patient, in his desperate state, not infrequently latches on to serious mis­ information. This infrequently hastens his demise. The AIDS Control Diet has per­ formed a monwnental public service by a winnowing process, whereby the kernels of truth are separated from the chaff and garbage floating around." -Robert. S. Carson, M.D., FL, USA. NATURAL HEALING

by Soluntra King Published by Evenstar Creations, PO Box 46, Kin Kin Qld 4571, Australia; phone (074) 86 7138 Price: AUD$9.95 + p&h (106pp pbl Available: Evenstar Creations (see ad on page 65).

This book: is a local Queensland publica­ tion. It's an excellent do-it-yourself manu­

al for health and healing at borne, by naturopath and teacher Sollilltra King. Carrying 23 different sections assisting you to health through over one dozen techniques, it would 'be a great addition to any home health kit. Soluntra explains with the aid of diagrams such techniques as shiatsl!, acupressure, reflexology, am­ matherapy, muscle testing, homoeopathy, flower essences and more. In addition, she covers the use of colour in healing, spiritual healing, food combin­ ing, allergies and detoxification diets. There is also a guide to herbs and a sec­ tion on naturopathic first aid. With her quick guide to common conditions, you can deal with many illnesses naturally. Natural Healing is recommended as an essential addition to any household whose members want to do things using natural healing methods. Ten out of ten!

the jaw joint. You have lwo TMJs-one in front of each ear connected to the horseshoe-shaped jawbone that has your lower teeth in it. A TMJ problem used to mean that a patient was headed for numer­ ous conflicting professional opinions and! treatment plans. The controversy over treating TMJ dls~ orders was evident at a workshop of the American ))ental Association in late 1989. A lawsuit had been filed to stop eJeven experts from djscussing the treatment and ·diagnosis of TMJ disorders, but it was not successful, and 700 dentists signed up for this workshop that had originally been scheduled for a 225-person auditorium. The main source of conflic~ over TMJ disorders in the dental profession is the role of bad bite. A large segment of the dental profession believes that bad bites cause TMJ disorders, and therefore the treatment is bite correction at prices that TMJ-THE JAW CONNECTION can range from a few thousand dollars up The Overlooked Diagnosis to US$15,000 or US$20,000 if every tooth by Greg Goddard, D.D.S. has to be capped. Published by Aurora Press (1991), PO However, the accwnulated scientific evi­ Box 573, Santa Fe NM 87504, USA; dence favours a more conservative and phone (505) 989 9804 cost-efficient therapy that includes a soft diet, use of heat and ice, medications, ISBN 0-943358-35-3 Price: AUD$24.95 (174pp pb) stress management and splint therapy. Available: Banyan Tree Book The author fe.els that patient education is Distributors, PO Box 148, North Adelaide necessary for TMJ disorders. So he has SA 5006; phone (08) 388 5354, fax (08) put down ali the information about the 3885365. diagnosis, causes an.d treatment for TMJ TMJ is the abbreviation for temporo­ disorders in a concise. simple presentation mandibular joint, or in simple language, i.e., in a way that patients can understand!

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JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS"69


REVIEWS VIDEOS

PHYSICS OF NATURAL HEALTH, AGRICULTURE AND HEALING A South Australian Public Lecture with Professor Philip S. Callahan Produced by ECO (1994), 54 Yarmouth Street, Brighton SA 5048; phone (08) 296 8848 Price: AUD$25.00 (130mins PAL VHS) Available: ECO (Educational Concern for Oxygenation).

THE PHYSICS OF NATURAL NON­ TOXIC AGRICULTURE South Australian Seminars with Professor Philip S. Ca'lIahan Produced by ECO (1994), 54 Yarmouth Street, Brighton SA 5048; phone (08) 296 8848 Price: AUD$25.00 (115mins [PAL VHS) Available: ECO.

Ever wondered about the scientific explanation for ancient shamanic prac­ tices? Those weird antics that medicine-men perfonn? Well, it appears that many ancient rituals may have had a rational scientific basis after all. With O\if increasing knowledge of the effects of cosmic rays and radiation upon living systems, we are only now learning that our ancient forefathers were miles ahead of us in the understanding and application of such energies.

70·NEXUS

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Professor Philip S. Callahan is one of the few scientists dedicated to uncovering these connections, and on these tapes he is seen speaking to students and the public while on a lecture tour of Australia in October 1993. Professor Callahan is the author of Ancient Mysteries. Modern Visions (avail­ able for $18.00 inc. p&h from NEXUS Magazine), plus another 14 books on sci­ ence, and 135 scientific papers. Topics such as the paramagnetic proper­ ties of soil, how towers and dolmens act as antennae for natural radiation, the effects of various £requencies upon living organisms are all addressed in his lectures and book. Be warned, however, that the sound quality is not brilliant, but the infonnation is of great value and importance.

unaffected after seeing it. It is contagious, so beware! For more information on this video, I refer you to the article on pages 16 to 19. Be aware that this article only refers 10 Part 1; Part 2 drops even more bomb­ shells!

WAC,0

WACO: THE BIG LIE - Parts 1 & 2 Produced by Linda Thompson (1993/94), American Justice Federation 3850 S. Emerson Avenue, Indianapolis IN 46203, USA; phone (317) 780 5204, fax (317) 780 5209 Price: AUD$39.95 (120mins PAL VHS) Available: NEXUS MagaZine, PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560; phone (074) 42 9280, fax (074) 429381.

There is a very big underground move­ ment building up in the United States at the moment. Every night somewhere in the USA, someone is showing this video to a bunch of friends. Nobody remains

+ THE BIG LIE 2 by Linda Thompson UFOs: THE EVIDENCE Produced by Magazin 2000 Worringer Strasse 1, 0-40211 Dusseldorf, Germany; phone +49 (211) 35 4893 price: AUD$49.95 (110 mins PAL VHS) Available: NEXUS Magazine, PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld14560; phone (074) 42 9280, fax (074) 429381.

JUNE - JULY 1994


~ REVIEWS

VIDEOS

One of the very best UFO documentaries I have ever seen! It is very up to date, and covers the whole gamut of UFO related phenomena, such as crop circles, cattle mutilations, abductions, and technological coverups. This video has been put together by Michael Hesemann, the dynamic editor/publisher of Magazin 2000, which is one of Gemlany's leading 'alternative" magazines. Michael is also the organiser of most of Europe's big UFO conferences. As a result of his intimate involvement in the UFO fiel'd he has researched many interesting cases, and thus some new and largely unseen material is presented. The video is very clear, well produced and is of excellent quality. If you can't afford to buy this yourself, tell your local video hire store to buy it from us so that you can rent it instead. It is worth it!

deserved them. This is music that is recommended for use with earphones, for visi<ming inside yourself. And it's also great simply for relaxed i1istening.

~'... "";'$­

AUDIO

PILAYING IN THE RAINBOW

by Tarshito Produced by Tarshito/Knerbles Music (1994) Price: AUD$25.00 (CD), AUD$15.00 (cassette) + $AUD2.00 p&h Available: Kittani Music, PO Box 794, Mullumbimby NSW 2482; phone (066) 842350.

HEAL CAVITIIES, GROW NEW GUMS

by Dr Robert O. Nara, D.D.S. Price: AUD$25.00 (CD), AUD$15.00 (cassette) + $AU D2 .00 p&h Available: G. Park, PO Box 7372, Toowoomba MC, Qld 4352; phnne (076) 357248.

Local musician Tarshito has done it again with another top release. He has ten A wonderful audio release! This tape is other productions behind him and Playing a recording of a talk given by dentist Dr in the Rainbow is up to the same high Roben O. Nara some years ago now. standards. Inspired by working with Janet Heal Cavities, Grow New Gums Goodrich of Natural Vision Improvement, informs as to how each individual can it's a journey through the rainbow colours. take responsibility for his or her own oral Each colour also relates to the relevant hygiene. Best of all, it takes away all the chakra and he says Ithat the tempo, mode medical mystery about the mouth and and timing of each piece are expressions reduces it to very understandable infonna­ tion-in other words, you do not have to of their colour. be a dentist to understand it. There are seven tracks named (you guessed it) after the colours of the rain­ If you, like me, are too scared to go to bow. The music has samples of jazz, the dentist, get this tape-it will give you Latin, traditional, relaxation and indige­ new hope in being able to repair your own nous, each colour expressing its feel. The problems from horne, and without trauma! album won two music awards in 1993 for For more infonnation we suggest you Best Production and Ambient Music. It re-read the article on pages 22-25. JUNE - JULY 1994

NEXUS·71


_.. ..­ ,

... ,

THE TERRORIST FACTORY Continued from page 45

the original and your translation." Julia sat down at the table and decoded the message swiftly using a one-lime-only pad. All Cosmic International messages were considered so sensitive they were never transmitted by electronic means; not even on the most secure cypher mac,hines. The coded message she held in her hand had arrived that morning, carried personal­ ly by a first secretary from the US Embassy in New Delhi. Julia fmished decoding and looked at her neat but short ttanslation. Gordon Nobel was economical with words,: "Your client required Moroccan facility latest 0600 hrs 1'0 April 1984. Operational designator Mike-Alpha-Delta-3. Get American Express to fix his route. You return independently. Ends." Julia gave the original, her translation and the used-one-time-only decoding coupon to Louis McCaul, who promptly sealed them inside a small container. He pressed a switch and the papers were immediately incinerated in a flash of sear­ ing heat. Julia Long lit a cigarette and leaned back comfortably in ner chair. Otto Jewell, now 'Mike-Alpha-De~t'a-3', was

72·NEXUS

going operational. As she walked 'slowly back towards the Oberoi Grand Hotel, Julia wondered about the extreme level of security. In the past it had meant only one thing: a high proflle close-in assassination of a political target. No mattcr what, the forthcoming mission had to be very dangerous for Mike-Alpha­ Delta-3. Standard assassinations Were nor­ mally carried out by American 'patriots' or hired assassins for a fee ranging from $50,000 to $500,000 depending on the dif­ ficulty of ithe shot and the overall impor­ tance of the target-the latter factor also reflecting the added level of risk to the assassin from the political target's body­ guards. But there came a point where no matter how patriotic or greedy the assassin, the risk of death or capture was so high that all refused the contract. Killing a politician from 500 yards with a rifle, then spending the $500,000 fee in the Caribbean was fair game for most patriotic mercenaries, but shooting 31 high-profile political target from less than 100 yards was attractive to no one. There was little point hav ing $500,000 in a Swiss bank if you wcrc lying six feet under.ground, unable to spend it.

This was where Julia's Special Operations group was normally called in. A conditioned S~ial Operations assassin was trained to believe he could not fail in his mission; that he w,as in vincible. Because of the exaggerated self-confidence built in by electro':hypnotic programming, a conditioned assassin was the obvious choice for close-in work. As she walked through the opulent foyer of the Oberoi Grand Hotel, Julia nodded her head deci­ sively: Otto had obviously been selected for a high-profile close-in assassination. But who had to die, and where? Based on the Special OperatioDs.adage, "in Cairo use an Egyptian, and in Tel Aviv an Israeli", everything pointed to Englishman 'Mike-Alpha-Delta-3' being used in London or another British city. As the waiter showcd her to a dinner table in the Oberoi Grand's Polynesian restaurant, shc shrugged off the problem. In less than three weeks' time, Julia would learn the truth in Morocco.

Part 3 will appear in the next edition of NEXUS Magazine.

JUNE - JULY 1994


Dental Health Secrets Continued from page 25 nomenon occurs: the calculus or tartar that builds up on teeth (deposited) is slowly dis­ solved, eliminating the need for painful and expensive scraping of the teeth by the den­ tist or dental hygienist Purifying the saliva and mouth can be speeded up today with new state-of-the-art products. A rinse of a solution of highly concentrated calcium and phosphorus ions (with a remineralising catalyst) has recent­ ly been developed by a biochemical com­ pany here in this country. To combat the build-up of bacterial colonies (producers of toxic waste products), a new teeth-cleaning substance has been developed to retard the bacterial colonies from growing in the first place. Yet another rinse is available to kill off high concentrations of bacteria when a saliva test has shown them to be excessive­ ly high. It is important to note here that the 2% of the pubhc who are immune to cavi­ ties and gum problems do not need these produNs, and diligent and effective removal of all bacterial colonies will, in time, produce thc same beneficial effects. These products are only ,intended to hasten the process in cases where conditions are considered moderate to severe.

JUNE-JULY 1994

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NEXUS·73


Ie

The Dennis Lee Story Continued from page 50

Low-t"emperature phase chil.nge can operate all the time. The heat engine that was devel­ oped .is another simple, yet incredi­ bly inventive technology. It ope~­ ates with no condenser and no exhaust! Imagine being able to replace the engine in your car, for instance, with an 18 Ib engine that did not spew pollutants into the air. The heat engine works on the rela­ tionship between pressure, volume and temperature. You can change' the boiling point of ,fluids by chang­ ing the pressure. This 'heat engine 'phase-ehanges' in the 'work cycle'. It changes from a fluid to a gas, back to a fluid again, all within the work cycle, so there is no need for a condenser (to cool the gas back to a liquid again) and there is no exhaust since nothing is burned. This unique cycle engine is actu­ ally history-making. It can obtain efficiencies much greater than a regUlar ste·am or Rankine cycle engine, since there is no loss of latent heat in changing the vapour back to a liquid, which accounts for

over 50% of the losses in a Rankine cycle or regular steam engine. Tbus a quiet, closed-loop engine canl be used ooywhere, for any purpose, in any sized engi~, with no exhaust and no impractical condensing requirements. Another device, called the ABR, will bum green gus's, newspapers and even toxic waste without nox­ ious oxides. It breaks down the chemicals of substances. It can even bum black coal over 90% effi­ cient, while the utilities gel: around 60%. These and other technologies can provide no- or low-co·st energy 'independence', not only for this country but also for its indi yiduals. Producing 'free' or 'no-cost' energy can mean the ability to bring water Ito drought-ridden lands, renewed life to the small fl\ITIlcr and even to our economy by helping business and industry cut major energy costs. With these tecnnologies, we can work in harmony with nature to produce our energy without de~troying our planet, or ourselves.

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JUNE - JULY 1994



Letters to the Editor (continued) Continued from page 5 ology, astronomy, physics, etc. The universe would not be as big or as old as previously thought, the Earth would not be anywhere near as old, physics wouid radically change, the list goes on. Is it possible the 'straight' scientific establishmem has closed ranks and denied this radical claim to support their "Darwinian dogma", hence their social and academic standing? Surely something as fundamental as this can easily be proven in a well-equipped science laboratory? I would welcome some feedback to this very interesting subject. Sincerely, GeofH3., Yandina, Qld.

Re: NEXUS Readers Groups Dear Dlmcan, Eureka! An idea is born! Get on your thinking cap and pen. It started like this. I went to look fQr a small TV to replace my bedroom set. Somehow, 'accidentally', NEXUS crept into the conversation. Bob. the young salesman, complained! of the lack of interest shown among his friends about the various topics NEXUS is full 6f, and was Itluilled that finally he had found sO'meone with similar interests. We ~ed for at least an hour

76-NEXUS

and I offered to lend him some of my videos and related lit~ratlUe. Bottom line: there is a dire need in our (and possibly alI) community for like-min.ded people to me-et, exchange ideil~, form discussion/ action groups, workshops, projects or whatever. I'd like to give it a 'kick-start', be the facilitator and see what happens! IMI you have to do is write an Editorial, a small article about my intention and put Newcastle on the map as the 'starter off-er' in this 'innovative venture'. Let's say. "NEXUS readers in the NewcastlelHunter Valley area are forming .(or wish to fonn) a discussion group, with videos/book's exchange co-op, speakers, workshops, projects, etc., etc., in mind, based on the variety of topics and in the spirit found in. NEXUS. Free, occasion.aI/incidental expenses shared..." You do not !:l;lve to g~ involved at all (unless you wish, of course). The readers themselves should and hopefully will run it. During my long life I was involved with various groups and still involved, e.g., inventors, radionics associations including, in the 70s, the "Forum" readers discussion groups, similar to what I am proposing now...except

for the topics, of course! This 路should cover it. I hope you get my drift. Your readers will appreciate the opportunity, I guess. Let's fmd out! For contact, put PO box no. and phone 0.0., and, say, "Phone between W ap1 to 12 noon". and I could 'organise' the first inaugural meeting in my place provided enough people show interest. I, personally, have no desire, energy or skill to run it: it ought to evolve from the input of interested parties, ...or not. YOUI} sincerely, Anon., Newcastle, NSW. '(I notice that a couple of similar concepts have been advertised in the De路Clas.sifieds of late. We will be happy to provide a free ad to people willing to set up NEXUS discussion groups. Ed.)

Re: Media Manipulation Dear Sir, I fully concur with yo.ur editorial of February-March '94-in particular, your reference to mainstream media collusion and its manipulation of the masses. A couple of examples spring to mind. 1 was staggered at how CNN and other networks were able to take over local television stations during their despicable coverage of Schwarzkopfs tour of the Middle

East. Their sanitised video-game war coverage apparently convinced 'nonnal' Americans and Australians that filthy rich Kuwait was worth sacrificing thousands of young lives for. War mania seemed to grip the mass media with hardly a dissenting .. voice to be heard. Another disturbing a'1d current fiasco is the apparent reverence shown by the media and public alike to these so-called credit rating agencies. How can US-based agencies dictate policy to foreign governments, including Is,tate governments, when America itself is deeply indebted financially to Japan? Yet state governments in Australia sack teachers and health workers andl ,raise charges to satiate these COWboys, and 'nonnal' people suspect nothing untoward. Hardly an establishment voice is raised against this shonky system of rat路 ings. Ordinary. people pay the price for this game. In closing, let me say thanks for your magazine, which is one small ray of llight in this dark time. M. R., Vermont, Vic. PS: Thanks for sending me the excellent video. "Messengers of Destiny"=well WQrth viewing, andl a credit to its makers. 00

JUNE - JULY 1994


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