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(Conspiracy Nation, 4/17/05)
-- In March and April of 1945, US General George S. Patton (image,
left) and his Third Army were not racing towards Berlin, but across
southern Bavaria. They were, claims author Joseph P. Farrell, in his
book, Reich of the Black Sun,
making haste towards (1) the huge Skoda munitions works at Pilsen; (2)
Prague; and (3) a region of the Harz Mountains in Thuringia. Supposedly the maneuver was meant to stymie any attempted Nazi
last stand in their Alpine National Redoubt, a series of fortified
mountains stretching from the Alps to the Harz Mountains. The true
reason for Patton's haste, however, was to prevent Germany from
exploding an atomic bomb. Deep within his embattled Fuhrerbunker in Berlin, Adolph
Hitler had boasted that Germany was on the verge of using weapons that
would win the war for them at "five minutes past midnight." "The
desperate ravings of a lunatic" is history's too pat answer to Hitler's
intriguing claim. Yet Farrell, Nick Cook (author of The Hunt For Zero Point),
and others have argued that the Nazis indeed had developed amazing
technologies. Not only did General Patton and his Third Army stop an
atomic nightmare, they also secured the evidence of Germany's secret
scientific advances based upon bizarre physics. And that, suggests
Farrell, may be why Patton soon died thereafter. |
In 1939, Enrico Fermi met with the U.S. Navy Department and
discussed exploiting the newly recognized fission process for military
purposes. Albert Einstein was enlisted in the cause. He wrote a letter
to president Franklin Delano Roosevelt warning, in part, that German
scientists could be developing a devastating explosive device, an
atomic bomb. Unless the United States began a development program of
its own, Germany would have unique possession of the super-weapon. And
that, in turn, would mean defeat for the Allies.
Responding to the situation, the U.S. government launched the
Manhattan Project, to be under the direction of the Office of
Scientific Research and Development, headed by Vannevar Bush. To
maintain secrecy during World War II, the project was highly
compartmentalized: most of those involved had limited overall
information, on a "need to know" basis. This compartmentalization later
facilitated the transfer of secret Nazi technologies to the United
States following World War II.
Part of this secret transfer even occurred before World War II had
ended. Carter Plymton Hydrick is considered credible enough to have
been invited to speak at Los Alamos on February 15th of this year. An
item from the Los Alamos National Laboratory's web site (
http://www.lanl.gov ) dated Feb. 7, 2005 ("Carter Hydrick Returns to
the Bradbury Science Museum Feb. 15th") notes that Hydrick is "back by
popular demand." Hydrick's book, Critical Mass: How Nazi Germany
Surrendered Enriched Uranium for the United States' Atomic Bomb,
reportedly contains startling information related to the Manhattan
Project.
Currently, at the Amazon.com web site, Hydrick's book gets rave
reviews. One review, "All History Is Not In The Textbooks," gives Critical Mass five stars
and reports that Hydrick "tells us how the Germans developed the atomic
bomb." A pre-publication review of Hydrick's then-research ("Hydrick
U234 -- Rethinking the Manhattan Project") bases its synopsis on a web
site formerly maintained by the author.
The pre-publication review, "Hydrick U234," explains how Martin
Bormann, chief of the Nazi Party and Hitler's personal secretary, along
with Gestapo Chief Heinrich Mueller, may have escaped justice in the
closing days of World War II. A U-Boat, "U-234," the largest submarine
in the German navy, silently patrolled the North Sea in the waning days
of the war. Onboard was a special cargo: 1120 pounds of enriched
uranium stored in special cylinders lined with gold. The submarine
awaited orders from Admiral Karl Doenitz, commander of all German
U-Boats. Late at night on April 29, 1945, Hanna Reitsch, a famous
German aviatrix, flew a small plane carrying General Ritter von Greim,
Martin Bormann, and Heinrich Mueller out of Berlin. They landed in
Hamburg, where Bormann and Mueller boarded the now-waiting U-234.
A deal had allegedly been struck: in exchange for the badly-needed
uranium and secret devices such as infra-red bomb fuses, Bormann and
Mueller would be protected by the Allies. Bormann disembarked from the
U-234 off the coast of Axis-friendly Spain. Mueller and the U-234's
special cargo continued on, until it soon thereafter surrendered to
U.S. forces at sea.. "Mueller, Bormann and many other Nazis received
American protection for decades, and continue to receive such
protection even up to the present day," reports the pre-publication
synopsis.
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Viktor Schauberger (image, left) worked as a forester for the
Austrian government. One day he happened to be watching a trout
remaining stationary in the midst of a swiftly flowing stream. The fish
contended against a powerful force with little effort: a flick of a
fin; a small tail movement. "How could this be?" wondered Schauberger.
The trout was using far less energy to remain motionless than
conventional physics would allow. |
Schauberger's amateur investigation of the puzzle eventually brought
him into the realm of unconventional vorticular physics, writes
Farrell. The Austrian forester contributed something more: the
discovery of spiraling motion toward the center of a vortex as part of
a previously unknown form of energy. Schauberger called this form of
motion "implosion." "By deliberately forcing matter into such a motion,
by deliberately compressing it via a spiral vorticular motion, matter
might reach such a state that particles in atoms become 'unglued' and
transform into a new form of energy."
Against his wishes, Schauberger was forced to work for the Kammlerstab, a secret group within
the Schutzstaffel (SS),
itself a secret state within the state of Nazi Germany. The Kammlerstab takes its name from SS Obergruppenfuher Hans Kammler, who
was centrally positioned within the Reich's secret weapons research and
development operations. One Kammlerstab
operation was at the I.G. Farben "Buna plant" near Auschwitz.
Supposedly a synthetic rubber producing operation, none was actually
produced there. Instead, demonstrates Farrell, the Buna plant was
actually a uranium enrichment facility. The selection of the site,
adjacent to Auschwitz, where hundreds of thousands of Jewish prisoners
were cruelly incarcerated, "makes strategic, if not gruesome, sense."
It was "a deliberate attempt to use 'human shields' to protect the
facility from Allied bombing."
Following the war, Schauberger, a humane man who detested Nazi
treatment of prisoners at Auschwitz, wound up in America, in Sherman,
Texas. There he continued working on his beloved vorticular physics.
Little is known, however, of his discoveries: his wartime German
patents have disappeared and his American work was swallowed by a
secretive consortium. Noteworthy is that during Schauberger's American
phase, all references to anti-gravity research began to disappear from
the British and American press.
There is the Ocean's Eleven and the Ocean's Twelve, and then again,
there is the Majestic 12. Questionable documents known as Majestic 12
(a.k.a. Majic 12) surfaced in December 1984 and again in 1992, writes
Farrell. They appeared to be official top secret memos dealing with
UFOs. The debate on Majestic 12 remains polarized: either you believe
them or you don't. But Farrell suggests a middle ground: that MJ-12
contains truth mixed with lies.
The lies are the mentions of EBEs: Extraterrestrial Biological
Entities. The true parts, guarded by the lies, are those dealing with
the mechanics of the "spacecraft." The core revelations in MJ-12 deal
with advanced foreign technology. Neither Soviet technology nor
extra-terrestrial technology, it is a discussion of Nazi technology,
masked by "little green men."
Then where is all this supposed advanced technology? Where has it
been hiding all these years? The answer, writes Nick Cook, is that it
has been hidden in plain sight -- behind the UFO
myth -- for the best part of 60 years. Edgar Allen Poe,
who attended West Point, reputedly worked as a counter-intelligence
agent for the United States. In his story, "The Purloined Letter," he
shows how the best place to hide something is out in the open, where
everyone can see it. The offspring of the secret Nazi technology are
witnessed constantly, then are just as constantly dismissed as
laughable.
Prominent in the names listed as overseeing Majestic 12 is none
other than Vannevar Bush, who had general oversight of the Manhattan
Project. That highly compartmentalized organization was already in
place when the German submarine U-234 transferred enriched uranium to
the United States. One of the compartments in the Chinese Box Manhattan
Project handled the secret transfer, and none of the rank-and-file in
the other compartments ever knew what had happened. Even the name
"Manhattan Project" is suggestive: MAnhattan proJECT, MAJECT
(Majestic), with 12 compartments. The twelve men who oversaw the twelve
compartments of the Manhattan Project shifted into a continuation of
the organization, after the war, and they became known as the Majestic
12.
General George S. Patton belongs to a special group: "The Olds."
Among the honored members of The Olds are, "Old Hickory" (Andrew
Jackson); "Old Rough and Ready" (Zachary Taylor); "Old Abe" (Abraham
Lincoln); and Patton himself: "Old Blood and Guts." The "old" does not
mean they were old in the physical sense, but old somehow in some other
way. (This is suggested in the film, "It's A Wonderful Life," when
George Bailey's father tells him he was "born older.") Patton perhaps
was wiser than his peers.
Patton was prone to occasional outbursts. After he and his Third
Army had secured the Thuringian area and retrieved the archives of the
German War Department, he knew plenty. In the photo which heads this
issue of Conspiracy Nation,
notice how, of those surrounding Patton, only one man looks directly at
the camera. All others, including the dog, are scrutinizing the
perimeter, as if wary of assassins.
General George S. Patton, "Old Blood and Guts," succeeded in his
race against time: he prevented a possible atom bomb counter-attack and
captured valuable scientific documents before the Soviets could get
their hands on them. Then he became outspokenly critical of Allied
postwar denazification policy and was removed from command. Two months
later, in December 1945, Patton died after a mysterious automobile
accident. In his race against time, he had reached the finish line
prematurely: "Old" Patton was just 60 years young when he died.
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Conspiracy Nation
http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html