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BY
Valdarnar Valerian
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M A T R I X I I I
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I n t r o d u c t i o n by Michael Topper............ i
Forward ................................... 1
CHAPTER 1: B A S I C SCIENTIFIC CONCEPTS AND KNOWLEDGE ...
Standing Waves and O s c i l l a t o r s ............
Resonant Systems ..........................
Rhythm Entrainment and Coherency ..........
Capacitance and A t t e n u a t i o n ...............
Free Radicals .............................
Chart: Physics o f Frequency and V i b r a t i o n .
Chart: Coherence and Incoherence ..........
Chart: Resonance Response Rate ............
..................
Human E t h e r i c S t r u c t u r e s
Chart: Human A u r i c Band S t r u c t u r e s........
Telepathic A c t i v i t y .......................
Mental Telepathy ..........................
I n t u i t i o n a l Telepathy .....................
Group Telepathic Work .....................
I n d u c t i o n of Telepathic States by Substance
Telepathic S e n s i t i v i t y ....................
Telepathic Receiving States ...............
Telepathic Reception ......................
Factors For Successful Telepathic Work ....
Physical Theories o f Telepathy ............
CHAPTER 2: NATURAL FIELDS AND PHYSICS ................ 24
Holographic F i e l d Aspects o f t h e Universe . 24
A Look a t Human Memory .................... 25
F o u r i e r Transformation o f B r a i n Waveforms . 28
The Visual System o f t h e B r a i n ............ 28
F o u r i e r Transformation Equations .......... 29
Other Physical Senses and F o u r i e r Trans ... 3 8
Holographic Aspects o f P a r t i c l e s and Waves . 38
Quantum Level Connectedness ............... 39'
The Concept o f Non-Locality ............... 39
The Concept o f Order ...................... 4 0
Holographic Aspects o f Consciousness ...... 4 0
Holographic Aspects o f Perception ......... 41
Range o f Body Frequencies ................. 41
Other Aspects o f t h e Human Energy F i e l d ... 42
...... 44
M u l t i p l e P e r s o n a l i t i e s and Holograms
Concept o f Holographic I n s e r t s ............ 44
Morphological F i e l d Dynamics .............. 45
Ionospheric C a v i t y Resonance Frequencies .. 47
Geomagnetic F i e l d C h a r a c t e r i s t i c s ......... 48
. 50
N a t u r a l E l e c t r i c F i e l d s and M i c r o p u l s a t i o n
Geomagnetic F i e l d V a r i a t i o n s .............. 50
Geomagnetic P o l a r i t y Reversals ............ 51
Magnetic Symmetry o f Organic L i f e Forms ... 52
C i r c a d i a n Rhythms ......................... 53
B i o l o g i c a l Enzymes and Magnetic F i e l d s .... 53
Magnetic F i e l d S h i e l d i n g .................. 55
Human B r a i n EEG S i g n a l s ................... 55
H A T ' R I X 1 1 1
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REPRODUCTION PROHIBITED
In the Presence of
The Elusive Paradigm
Presently we hear the call from many fronts; the synchronous conclusion emanating from all
the basic fields of human endeavor seems to proclaim with unanimous Voice: what is needed, what is
absolutely essential, is that nothing short of a New Paradigm be achieved.
In the exigent face of worldwide poverty, exploitation and widespread brutalism, in confron-
tation with the clutching need to effect a halt and even reversal of the fateful damage done the
earth-lungs of the rainforest and the atmospheric epidermis of the ozone layer, what can be so
"hold-the-presses" pressing about the requirements of an abstract consideration such as that of the
paradigm?
After all, what is a "paradigm"? Isn't it merely the remote requirement of updated theory,
sufficientlyall-purpose to loan itself to the obscure broodings of a variety of academic disciplines about
which the public couldn't be less concerned, except where it incidentally shows in some consumer good
or service?
Indeed when such an "academic" subject does manage to bleed into the peripheries of public
perception it tends to be interpreted, by "New Age" popularization, as a kind of Big Theory mystically
granting grand overviews and magic-carpet rides to the outskirts of the Possible. At the same time it
takes on a mythic cast, by virtue of that very flow-line *hereby the public acquires the notion obliquely
from the academic cloister; "paradigm" is always something that seems to beneeded, a goal of aspiration
like the grael-cup, and is never something which is conveniently present and accounted for (i.e. as
"theory" it retains an aura of remote abstraction, eternally over-the-horizon of those shared fields of
refractory experience).
Interestingly enough, it would seem that in the Strange Case of the Paradigm the dim and
dissolving lines actually obtaining between highbrow, lowbrow and lumpen have seen this popularized
interpretation (equating "paradigm" with "theory") leak right back into the academic and scientific
community thereby appreciably affecting the very grasp of those traditionally expected to be pollinators
of the paradigm.
Tap an academic on the shoulder these days, and he's quite liable to give the New Age
"definition" in response to the query "what k a paradigm?" "Why it's the Big Theory, the Grand
Viewpoint, the New Worldview-you know, like Darwinism, like relativity, like Freudianism. In the
one case the t h e o v s 'survival of the fittest', in the other ' E = M ~ ,and
' 'the Oedipal Complexi. It's a
great Idea in which facts that didn't fit well in the former context are made to feel at home, indeed may
be cordially considered essential." So our academic, our member-in-good-standing of the priesthood of
particle physicists or molecular biologists, takes up the torch of Paradigm with noblesse oblige on behalf
of the public scarcely noticing the flambeau has been returned to him considerably modified from its
short public loan. In falling absent-mindedly into conformance with the aggregate public (i.e. New Age)
notion, however, our academic is inadvertently committing a very fatefulpetitioprincipii.He is assuming
precisely what has to be proved; he's putting the proverbial cart before the proverbial horse. How so?
MT
(Michael Topper)
M A T R I X 1 1 1
FORWARD
Recent Developments
Chapter 1
Standing Waves
Rhythm Entrainment
Coherency
A c a p a c i t o r i s a device t h a t s t o r e s an e l e c t r i c a l
p o t e n t i a l o r charge. The a b i l i t y t o s t o r e an e l e c t r i c a l charge
i s capacitance,
Attenuation
A t t e n u a t i o n r e f e r s t o energy l o s s i n an electromagnetic
impulse. The f a r t h e r you get away from a r a d i o s t a t i o n , f o r
example, the more the s i g n a l i s attenuated.
0008
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Free Radicals
Free Radicals are not "unconfined political activistsn-
They are uncharged groups of atoms containing an unpaired
electron that are very reactive chemically, Living systems
need them to be able to use oxygen to get energy but have
devised ways of eliminating them when no longer required,
since they may be produced in the organism by chemical and
electrical processes. an excess of free radicals can give rise
to unwanted chemical reactions in the body which can lead to
disease conditions. Stress, physical trauma, chemical toxicity
and infection can cause an increase in free radical production
in the body and very often can overwhelm the antioxidant
defenses of the body. The long term consequences may include
any infammatory degenerative disease states which are often
associated with immune system supression or imune
dysregulation, and carcino-genesis.
Free radicals are particular atomic or molecular units
having a single unpaired electron in an outer energy level;
the total of the electrons an odd numbers. The presence of
free radicals are interactive with electromagnetic fields,
Free radicals are only destructive to the organism when they
get out of control.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
M A T R I X 1 1 1
VVVVVVbpJVVor-
1 cycle
-
Rise ~~Y
100%
o j u t ~ md ~ l u t l a lstow
I t ~ m econstant ;
I
I
I
I Q-numaer of c y c l e m 2s 1
tame constants
I
Human E t h e r i c S t r u c t u r e s
0014
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Telepathic Activity
T e l e p a t h i c a c t i v i t y a p p e a r s t o be p r e s e n t i n t h r e e modes
i n d e v e l o p i n g human b e i n g s . I n s t i n c t u a l t e l e p a t h y is b a s e d
u p o n t h o s e i m p a c t s of e n e r g y w h i c h come f r o m o n e e t h e r i c b o d y
a n d make a n i m p r e s s i o n u p o n a n o t h e r . T h e medium o f
c o m m u n i c a t i o n e m p l o y e d is t h e e t h e r i c s u b s t a n c e of a l l b o d i e s ,
w h i c h is n e c e s s a r i l y o n e w i t h t h e e t h e r i c s u b s t a n c e o f t h e
p l a n e t . The areas a r o u n d t h e Solar P l e x u s (SP) are s e n s i t i v e
t o t h e impact of e t h e r i c e n e r g y , f o r t h i s area i n t h e e t h e r i c
b o d y is i n d i r e c t " t o u c h " , a s i t were, w i t h t h e a s t r a l b o d y ,
t h e f e e l i n g b o d y . A l s o , close t o t h e s o l a r p l e x u s is f o u n d
t h a t c e n t e r n e a r t h e s p l e e n w h i c h is t h e d i r e c t i n s t r u m e n t f o r
t h e e n t r a n c e of p r a n a i n t o t h e human m e c h a n i s m . P r a n a m i g h t be
d e f i n e d as t h e l i f e - e s s e n c e - T h i s i n s t i n c t u a l r e s p o n s e t o
e t h e r i c c o n t a c t is s a i d t o be t h e mode o f c o m m u n i c a t i o n i n
L e m u r i a n t i m e s , a n d l a r g e l y t o o k t h e place of t h o u g h t a n d
s p e e c h . I t c o n c e r n e d i t s e l f p r i m a r i l y w i t h t w o t y p e s of
i m p r e s s i o n : t h a t w h i c h h a d t o do w i t h t h e i n s t i n c t of
s e l f - p r e s e r v a t i o n , a n d t h a t w h i c h h a d t o do w i t h s e l f -
r e p r o d u c t i o n . A h i g h e r form of t h i s i n s t i n c t u a l t e l e p a t h y h a s
been preserved f o r u s i n t h e e x p r e s s i o n w e so f r e q u e n t l y u s e ,
" I h a v e a f e e l i n g t h a t ..." a n d a l l i e d p h r a s e s . T h e s e a r e more
d e f i n i t e l y a s t r a l i n t h e i r i m p l i c a t i o n s a n d work t h r o u g h t h e
a s t r a l s u b s t a n c e , u s i n g t h e s o l a r p l e x u s area a s a s e n s i t i v e
plate f o r impact and impression. T h i s astral ( n o t e t h e r i c )
s e n s i t i v i t y , or " f e e l i n g t e l e p a t h y " also b a s i c a l l y t h e
A t l a n t e a n mode of c o m m u n i c a t i o n , a n d i n v o l v e d f i n a l l y t h e u s e
of t h e s o l a r p l e x u s c e n t e r i t s e l f a s t h e r e c e i v i n g a g e n t ; t h e
e m i t t i n g a g e n t w o r k e d , h o w e v e r , t h r o u g h t h e e n t i r e area o f t h e
d i a p h r a g m . I t w a s a s t h o u g h t h e r e a p p e a r e d a g a t h e r i n g of
o u t g o i n g w a v e f o r m s i n t h a t p a r t of t h e human v e h i c l e . T h e
r e l a t i v e l y w i d e area f r o m w h i c h t h e i n f o r m a t i o n w a s s e n t o u t
a c t e d a s a l a r g e g e n e r a l d i s t r i b u t o r ; t h e area w h i c h r e c e i v e d
t h e i m p r e s s i o n w a s more l o c a l i z e d , i n v o l v i n g o n l y t h e s o l a r
p l e x u s . T h e r e a s o n f o r t h i s c a n be f o u n d i n t h e f a c t t h a t i n
A t l a n t e a n d a y s t h e human b e i n g w a s s t i l l u n a b l e t o t h i n k , a s
w e u n d e r s t a n d t h i n k i n g . T h e w h o l e l o w e r p a r t of t h e b o d y , i n
s e n s e d i f f i c u l t f o r u s to grasp, w a s given up to f e e l i n g ; t h e
c o m m u n i c a t o r ' s o n e t h o u g h t - c o n t r i b u t i o n w a s t h e name o f t h e
r e c i p i e n t , p l u s t h e name o r n o u n f o r m of t h a t w h i c h w a s t h e
idea t o b e c o n v e y e d . T h i s e m b r y o n i c t h o u g h t w i n g e d i t s way t o
its g o a l , and t h e p o w e r f u l " f e e l i n g " a p p a r a t u s o f t h e s o l a r
p l e x u s r e c e i v e d i t a n d drew t h e " f e e l i n g i m p r e s s i o n " t h e r e ,
d r a w i n g o n t h e c o m m u n i c a t o r . I t is t h i s process w h i c h is
p u r s u e d when, f o r i n s t a n c e , some m o t h e r " f e e l s " t h a t some
d a n g e r t h r e a t e n s h e r c h i l d , o r t h a t s o m e t h i n g is t a k i n g place
i n connection with her child.
I n s t i n c t u a l t e l e p a t h y w i l l o f t e n m a n i f e s t i n t w o ways. I t
w i l l be f r o m s o l a r p l e x u s t o s o l a r p l e x u s b e t w e e n t w o p e o p l e
who a r e o r d i n a r y , e m o t i o n a l , g o v e r n e d b y d e s i r e a n d p r i m a r i l y
c e n t e r e d i n t h e a s t r a l a n d a n i m a l bodies. I n a d d i t i o n , i t w i l l
MATRIX 1 1 1
Mental TeleDathv
Intuitional T e l e ~ a t h v
I n t u i t i o n a l t e l e p a t h y is o n e of t h e d e v e l o p m e n t s u p o n t h e
p a t h of t h e I n i t i a t e . T h e area i n v o l v e d i s t h e h e a d a n d
t h r o a t , a n d t h e t h r e e c e n t e r s w h i c h w i l l be r e n d e r e d a c t i v e i n
t h e p r o c e s s a r e t h e h e a d c e n t e r , w h i c h is r e c e p t i v e t o
i m p r e s s i o n f r o m h i g h e r s o u r c e s , a n d w h a t is called t h e A j n a
C e n t e r , w h i c h is r e c e p t i v e t o i n t u i t i o n a l i m p r e s s i o n s ; t h i s
A j n a C e n t e r ( b e t w e e n t h e e y e b r o w s ) c a n t h e n "broadcast" w h a t
w h i c h is r e c e i v e d a n d r e c o g n i z e d , u s i n g t h e t h r o a t c e n t e r a s
t h e c r e a t i v e f o r m u l a t o r of t h o u g h t , and t h e f a c t o r which
embodies t h e s e n s e d o r i n t u i t e d i d e a . T h e t r u l y t e l e p a t h i c
i n d i v i d u a l is o n e who is r e s p o n s i v e t o i m p r e s s i o n s c o m i n g t o
him from a l l f o r m s o f l i f e .
I n t u i t i o n a l t e l e p a t h y begins to manifest i n c r e a s i n g l y
among a d v a n c e d human b e i n g s . T h i s i n d i c a t e s s o u l c o n t a c t a n d
t h e c o n s e q u e n t a w a k e n i n g of g r o u p c o n s c i o u s n e s s , f o r
s e n s i t i v i t y to i n t u i t i o n a l i m p r e s s i o n s h a s t o d o o n l y w i t h
group concerns.
G r o u p T e l e p a t h i c Work
S e c o n d l y , c o n s t a n t e f f o r t m u s t be c a r r i e d f o r t h t o b r i n g
a b o u t a g r o u p l o v e of s u c h s t r e n g t h t h a t n o t h i n g c a n b r e a k i t
a n d no barriers rise u p between you; to c u l t i v a t e a g r o u p
s e n s i t i v i t y o f s u c h a q u a l i t y t h a t y o u r d i a g n o s i s of
c o n d i t i o n s w i l l be r e l a t i v e l y a c c u r a t e ; t o d e v e l o p a n d u n f o l d
a g r o u p a b i l i t y t o w o r k a s a u n i t , s o t h a t t h e r e w i l l be
n o t h i n g i n t h e i n n e r a t t i t u d e s of g r o u p member w h i c h c o u l d
b r e a k i n t o t h e i r c a r e f u l l y e s t a b l i s h e d rhythm.
T h i r d l y , a n y g r o u p w o r k a l o n g t e l e p a t h i c l i n e s m u s t be
c a r e f u l l y c o n t r o l l e d ; a n y g r o u p e f f o r t which s e e k s t o i m p r e s s
t h e mind o f a n y s u b j e c t ( w h e t h e r a n i n d i v i d u a l or a g r o u p )
m u s t be g u a r d e d a s t o m o t i v e a n d m e t h o d ; a n y g r o u p e n d e a v o r
0017
M A T R I X 1 1 1
I n d u c t i o n o f T e l e ~ tah i c S t a t e s by I n a e s t i o n o f Substances
T e l e ~ tah i c Sensi t i v i t y
Telepathic Reception
0020
M A T R I X I I I
T h i s means t h a t we can t a p i n t o r e a l i t y i t s e l f t o g a i n
i n f o r m a t i o n . Consciousness pervades a l l m a t t e r , and "meaning"
has an a c t i v e presence i n b o t h mental and p h y s i c a l worlds.
Remote v i e w i n g can be looked a t as resonance o f meaning
conveyed from an o b j e c t t o mind. I n t h i s view, consciousness
comprises and i n c l u d e s a n y t h i n g t h a t can generate, r e c e i v e , o r
use i n f o r m a t i o n . Thus, animals, v i r u s e s , DNA, machines, and
s o - c a l l e d n o n - l i v i n g o b j e c t s may have a l l the p r e r e q u i s i t e
p r o p e r t i e s t o take p a r t i n the c r e a t i o n o f r e a l i t y .
Chapter 2
NATURAL F I E L D S AND P H Y S I C S
I. T h e H o l o u r a p h i c F i e l d A s p e c t s of t h e U n i v e r s e
A phenomena c a l l e d a hologram i s produced when a s i n g l e
beam o f l a s e r l i g h t i s s p l i t i n t o two separate beams. The
f i r s t beam i s bounced o f f the o b j e c t t o be photographed. The
second beam i s allowed t o c o l l i d e w i t h e t h e l i g h t o f t h e f i r s t
beam. When t h i s happens, an i n t e r f e r e n c e p a t t e r n i s created
and i s recorded o n - f i l m . To the naked eye, the i n t e r f e r e n c e
p a t t e r n recorded on the f i l m looks n o t h i n g l i k e t h e o r i g i n a l
o b j e c t - i t looks l i k e a s e r i e s o f c o n c e n t r i c r i n g s l i k e those
formed when a handful1 o f pebbles i s thrown i n t o a p o o l o f
water, As soon as another l a s e r beam o r another b r i g h t l i g h t
source i s focused on the f i l m , t h e image o f t h e o r i g i n a l
o b j e c t appears - i n 3-D. You can a c t u a l l y walk around a
holographic p r o j e c t i o n and view i t from d i f f e r e n t angles.
A Look A t Human M e m o r y
T h e h o l o g r a p h i c aspect o f f e r s a d d i t i o n a l u n d e r s t a n d i n g
a b o u t t h e a s s o c i a t i v e aspects o f memory. T h e r e is a n o t h e r t y p e
of h o l o g r a p h i c r e c o r d i n g t e c h n i q u e i n which t h e l i g h t of a
s i n g l e l a s e r beam is b o u n c e d o f f two o b j e c t s s i m u l t a n e o u s l y .
T h e l i g h t b o u n c e d o f f e a c h o b j e c t is allowed t o c o l l i d e a n d
t h e i n t e r f e r e n c e p a t t e r n is c a p t u r e d o n f i l m . Whenever o n e o f
t h e o b j e c t s is i l l u m i n a t e d w i t h l a s e r l i g h t , a n d t h i s l i g h t is
p a s s e d t h r o u g h t h e p h o t o g r a p h i c p l a t e , t h e image of t h e o t h e r
object w i l l a p p e a r . I f t h e human b r a i n f u n c t i o n is h o l o g r a p h i c
i n n a t u r e , a s i m i l a r p r o c e s s m i g h t e x p l a i n why c e r t a i n t h i n g s
e v o k e memories of o t h e r t h i n g s . O t h e r t y p e s of h o l o g r a p h y ,
s u c h as r e c o g n i t i o n holography a n d i n t e r f e r e n c e holography,
may e x p l a i n how w e c a n r e c o g n i z e f a m i l i a r t h i n g s a n d a l s o
r e c o g n i z e t h e f a c e of s o m e o n e w e h a v e n o t s e e n f o r y e a r s .
Conversion o f Waveform P a t t e r n s i n t h e B r a i n
BY t h e Use o f F o u r i e r T r a n s f o r m a t i o n s
R e s e a r c h seems t o i n d i c a t e t h a t i n t h e b r a i n , c o m p l e x
p a t t e r n s are c o n v e r t e d i n t o simple waveforms. D u r i n g t h e l a s t
c e n t u r y , a m a t h e m a t i c i a n named F o u r i e r e v o l v e d w h a t l a t e r
became known a s F o u r i e r T r a n s f o r m s w h i c h a c c o m p l i s h t h e same
t a s k - c o n v e r s i o n o f complex waveforms ( i n t e r f e r e n c e p a t t e r n s )
i n t o s i m p l e w a v e f o r m s o r c o n v e r s i o n of images t o w a v e f o r m s a n d
b a c k a g a i n . The "whole-in-every-part" a s p e c t of h o l o g r a m s is
o n e of t h e b y - p r o d u c t s t h a t o c c u r when i n t e r f e r e n c e p a t t e r n s
a r e t r a n s l a t e d i n t o t h e F o u r i e r l a n g u a g e of w a v e f o r m s -
I n t h e e a r l y 1970's r e s e a r c h e r s d i s c o v e r e d t h a t t h e v i s u a l
s y s t e m s i n t h e b r a i n f u n c t i o n e d as a k i n d o f f r e q u e n c y
a n a l y z e r . S i n c e f r e q u e n c y is a m e a s u r e of t h e n u m b e r o f
o s c i l l a t i o n s p e r u n i t of t i m e , i t s u g g e s t s a g a i n t h a t t h e
b r a i n f u n c t i o n s i n t h e same way t h a t a h o l o g r a m does. L a t e r ,
i n 1979, B e r k e l e y p h y s i c i s t s R u s s e l l a n d K a r e n D e V a l o i s
discovered t h a t i n v i s i o n , t h e b r a i n responds n o t t o t h e
p a t t e r n s o f w h a t a p e r s o n sees, b u t t o t h e F o u r i e r
t r a n s l a t i o n s of t h e p a t t e r n s . T h u s , t h e b r a i n d e f i n i t e l y is
m a k i n g u s e of F o u r i e r m a t h e m a t i c s t o c o n v e r t images i n t o
w a v e f o r m s . T h i s d i s c o v e r y w a s s u b s e q u e n t l y c o n f i r m e d by o t h e r
labs around t h e world.
A n o t h e r aspect o f t h e v i s u a l s y s t e m of t h e b r a i n is t h a t
t h e b r a i n is a c t u a l l y w h a t "sees". T h e e y e s o n l y c o n d u c t
s p e c i f i c f r e q u e n c i e s i n t o t h e b r a i n . S i n c e t h e r e is
considerable evidence to support t h e p r a c t i c e of "eyeless
s i g h t " , s e e i n g w h a t is a r o u n d y o u , i n c l u d i n g c o l o r s , w i t h o u t
t h e u s e of t h e e y e s , t h e b r a i n c a n b e s e e n as a r e c e i v e r ,
t r a n s l a t i n g f r e q u e n c i e s i m p a c t i n g i t from t h e e x t e r i o r i n t o
w a v e f o r m s o r images t h a t a r e p e r c e i v e d b y c o n s c i o u s n e s s .
M A T R I X I 1 1
FOURIER SERIES
(Also see Index for Cosiiie and Sine Tmnsfonns)
1. If j(r? is rr hounded periodic fullctioti of period 2 L (i.e.
j(x + 2L) = f ( z ) ) , and ciatisfies the Dirichlct conditions:
a) In ally pericd jir) is continuous, except possibly for a finite
n ~ l n ~ hof
e r ju tnp discont,it~uitics.
b) In any pcrioci j(z) hns orlly .z fiiiit,e riu~nberof ~llnxi~lia
nlid
~ninima.
Ihell j(r) 1 1 1 3 ~bc rcprcse~~ted I)y t11e Fourier series
2
+ 2
n-1
(a,,cos
9m:r
+ h. sin ?y
-),
a, = -
nrx
1 4 /I4- L
j(r) cos -I, dz, ?L = 0 , 1, 2, 3, . . . ;
j(z)si~~---rJz,n = 1, 2, 3, . ..
?ZZX
I,
M A T R I X 1 1 1
FOURIER S E R I E S (Continued)
we may also write
nrx nrx
f(x) cos -tlx and 6, = f(x) sin -dx,
L I,
FOUR1 ER S E R I E S (Contini~etl)
[.his case, 1 llc csparlsio~lreduces Lo
i'
m=l
at,-I cos
(211~- 1)r.r
1J
2
m=l
b2,,,-1
. (2tn
s11i
- 1)rx
I,
(The series i l l (4) and (5) are krlo11~11ns odd-harnrottic series, sillcc
orlly (.lie otltl 11nr111o11ic-s appear. Siuiilrrr r ~ ~ l niaye s be st,at.ed for
even-11xr111o11ic scrics, but when a series appeals in the even-har-
l~iorlicfortill i t ~ i i e a ~1.1131
i s 211 has r ~ o tbee11 t-akcn as the slllallest
period of /(x). S i l l ~ eally i ~ ~ l e g r anlult,iple
l of a period is also a
period, scrics ol)lairrcd it1 I.liis way will also work, b u t ill gerleral
~0111p11131.io1i is si~~~plific:d if 2IJ is I.akctt 1.0 bc tllc snlnllcsl period.)
6. If wc ivri1.c I l ~ oIColcr clelit~il.ionsfor c!os e arid sin 8, IVC obt.airl the
co~ilplexfor111of t.hc Il'ourier Scries ~ I I O I V I I cit.llcr as t.11~"Cor~~plex
I7onricr Scrics" or Ioha"Expo~~e~it.isl I'ourier Seric-s" of f(z). It, is
represell l,cd as
n=+c
f(s) = 1
1L
C
n- - c
cneiv-=,where
j ( ~ )= 7+ C
n-1
m
F O U R I E R S E R I E S (Continued)
I t cnli also be represerlted as
j(x) = %
2
+ 2 c,, vos (7+ Or,), wilere an = c,, cos +,,
1) (1 0
counr -1 +I +1
sln -;;- (-
- 1)(t8-1)~1 0 0
nr
*COS - (- 0 -1 +1
'2
llr
*sin - V ' Q( -~ ~ ) ( r r 2 + i m + 1 1 ) / 8 (- l)(m-2114 0
'2
ain
,tr
-
2
= -
(i)mtl
2
[(- 1)- - 11 a n d COB=
2
= (i).[(-I)-
2
+ 1). w l r e r e i a = -1.
f : ~
M A T R I X I I I
f (XI
ttn
71-1
-1
f (11
L 2L-c/22L
2 n'(1-20)
n-1.3.5. ... L
f (2)
Q)
-1
-icl--
f (I)
w
5L/3 2L I . ttw . 71-
0
91
2- 1 --$8ln~3lu~=
-1
I (11
w
7LI4 2L
-1
0
n -
f 1(0
ain ot T-tr/u
2 1 1
n - l ~ s n o ~
0
2r/u 1
n
n -2,4.6. ...
19. Expansion of Functions in Fourier Series. 'I'l~issc!c:tio~i
c * s i ~ ~ i i l ) l ( !(11'
c.otitui~isS O I I I C ill~istr;tt.i\~c. s c:sl)~ltlsio~~ o f f~~ric:tioris,
s:itisfyitig tlie I)il.ic.llic~tc:onilitio~~s i l l t i i t : i ~ l t ( ~ l . v i (-P,
ll P ) , in tlic
sl'rlos
m
(19-1)
Qu
--
2 + 2 (a,, e:os 11.c -k l,,, sill /,A:),
,I =1
( I !)-2) j ( ~ 1:os
) I11 ILL
:111cl
(19-3) I,, = 1
=.
f"- j ( . r ) sit1 1t.r ,/x.
Zll~tsfrativcEzaittple 1 . I ~ : S ~ : L I I ~ j(1)
I = it1 1?o11riers~:t.ie!s1 1 1
- P 5 x Iz.
1 . 1 1 ~ i~it.crv:~l (:alc~~ltit i ~ ~
t l i tg
: e:~n:Hic:i(:~its
(1,. ii1111
11, gi\,es
M A T R I X 1 1 1
fiS :1I 11 7'11R'lt A?'l('S 1;ON EN(;] NEEIIS ..I N I ) I'll 1-SICISl'S 819
:tnt l
a, = :I:*
- x e6ost1.r r/.r = 0,
I lt.llc~c*,
:j:.
I#, = -- :r silt 11.1- rlir = - -2I t ctos ~ r .
>
or
sin 2 . ~ sin 3t
T = 2
(S~IIZ --- 2
+ - -3 . . . -
In this ~)art.i('tlInr(::L~c, o111yt.11~ ~ c remain. I t may be
s i ~ tcn6s
notc?tl bltrrt \\~l~encvcr tllc*funct.ionj(x) is a11vdrl function, that is,
wltca j( -1) = -j (x), t11c11a, = 0, for n = 0, 1, 2 . , since, -
for srlc.lt :t function,
Si~~~il:~,rly,
if j(r) is :LII t-ve*~~
f t ~ ~ t e * t . ititat
c ~ ~ ~is,
, tvl~e-11
j(-x) = j(.r),
h , = 0, For I , = 1, 2, 3, . - . , sill(-c
t.11(*11
FOC'RfER S E R I E S
-.
X
l
t
AAAi'AA
-4a -3a1
I
I
-27r 1-7
I
I
14.1ti.
FIG.11.
10.
RI
I
I
ZIT 37~
I
I
4n
X
a. = -I T ros n r d r = 0,
=.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
gr:11)11 of j ( r ) f r o t ~-r
'L'llc! ~ to r ( ~ O I I S ~ X ~ of
M t.Il(- T-:,.xis fwll1
-r to 0,:l~nlt l ~ littc
r d B from 0 to r ( w e Fig. 12). Tllere is a
finite discontinuity for z = 0. For z = 0 the series reduces
The H o l o a r a ~ h i cAspects of P e r c e ~ t i o n
0 0 4 2
M A T R I X 1 1 1
I I . MORPHOLOGICAL F I E L D S
PROPOSED
S l a u c r u ~ E0 F
"One CeU G i n s /AIR> o/
C A L lvCU
morphic fields
-
r5
Norrrr riJ~onlri~rlor/
IU YIERARCHY
PASSED OF
ENERGY- ENERGY
+MASS.
THOT-TUUIFIEDFI'ELD (6th L)9
MASS (1st L). ~ia~rhaing~hcvnwr~o~thchccotlrrri.rlvraciannL*rr
pi";d-bY .on Fr-A, ego comoanncn: D. p".md ,
-
I
U c. pup
unnmian; D. u n +
d d LrF l u t i a u l unim vncomriaa ram- a 4
humuiq. amuiairg m i v n u l xclnypal ynmun. .a FML 19115)
M A T R I X I I I
I I I . NATURAL ELECTROMAGNETIC F I E L D S
I o n o s ~ h e r i cC a v i t v R e s o n a n c e F r e u u e n c i e s
The p l a n e t i s surrounded by a l a y e r o f e l e c t r i c a l l y
charged p a r t i c l e s , c a l l e d the ionosphere. The lower l a y e r o f
the ionosphere s t a r t s a t about 80km from the surface of t h e
earth. I t i s a charged l a y e r and i s known t o r e f l e c t r a d i o
M c l T R I X I I I
MAGNETIC
OflCiAN A N 0
PlNEAL GLAND
% *
..
1.
OC
ELEClnlCAL
CURnENrS IMPULSES
Natural E l e c t r i c F i e l d s
and M i c r o p u l s a t i o n s
N a t u r a l Maqnetic F i e l d s
and M i c r o p u l s a t i o n s
The V a r i a n t Geomaqnetic F i e l d
Magnetic storms a r e g e n e r a l l y c l a s s i f i e d a c c o r d i n g t o
t h e i r magnetic f i e l d s t r e n g t h . The average magnetic f i e l d
s t r e n g t h on E a r t h tends t o about 0.5 Gauss, a l t h o u g h the
a c t u a l value ranges between 0.35 and 0.70 Gauss. 1 Gauss
equals 100 nanotesla ( n t ) , which equals 100,000 gammas;
a l l d i f f e r e n t u n i t s measuring t h e same t h i n g . Strong magnetic
storms a r e c l a s s i f i e d as those o v e r - 2 0 0 gammas; weak storms
approximate 50 gammas-
There are r e l a t i o n s h i p s between some o f the surges i n
magnetic i n t e n s i t y from the sun and changes t h a t have been
observed i n human behavior. I t was found i n 1963 t h a t the
admissions t o mental h o s p i t a l s increased s i g n i f i c a n t l y d u r i n g
any week i n which a major magnetic storm occurred. Even the
day-to-day behavior of p s y c h i a t r i c p a t i e n t s was c o r r e l a t e d t o
small v a r i a t i o n s i n the geomagnetic f i e l d .
Research i n d i c a t e s t h a t d u r i n g a f i e l d reversal, t h e f i e l d
s t r e n g t h does not drop t o zero, b u t merely d e c l i n e s t o about
50% before b u i l d i n g back up again. I n 1971, a conference was
held on t h i s s u b j e c t a t Columbia U n i v e r s i t y , under the
d i r e c t i o n o f D r . James Hays. Hays found t h a t s i x o u t o f e i g h t
e x t i n c t i o n s o f r a d i o l a r i a , a p r i m a t i v e organism, had occurred
c o n c u r r e n t l y w i t h magnetic f i e l d reversals. A d d i t i o n a l work
l i n k e d other e x t i n c t i o n s t o the reversals.
C i r c a d i a n Rhythms
-
from s t r i n g s o f amino acids, s h o r t chains o f which a r e
r e f e r r e d t o as polypeptides; when the chains have a l e n g t h
exceeding 50 t o 100 amino acids, g i v i n g them molecualr weights
g r e a t e r than 500 t o 10,000, they a r e c a l l e d p r o t e i n s . The
chains take on a three-dimensional arrangement. Oddly, there
i s n o t h i n g i n the chemical s t r u c t u r e o f enzymes t o e x p l a i n
M A T R I X 1 1 1
i n f l u e n c e d by f i e l d s e x t e r n a l t o i t ,
Masnetic Field S h i e l d i n g
Human B r a i n EEG S i g n a l s
The EEG s i g n a l s which are recorded i n the human b r a i n a r e
thought t o be due t o c u r r e n t flow i n the c o r t e x where synch-
ronous i n t e r a c t i o n s y i e l d o s c i l l a t i o n s i n the frequency band
from 0.5 Hz t o 30 Hz. These frequency o s c i l l a t i o n s a s i m i l a r
t o the g e o - e l e c t r i c a l Schumann Waves generated i n the iono-
sphere, t o which a l l organisms have been exposed throughout
t h e i r p e r i o d o f e v o l u t i o n . For the purpose o f EEG a n a l y s i s and
c l i n i c a l d e s c r i p t i o n , the frequency band has been d i v i d e d i n t o
a number o f s o - c a l l e d rhythms. The m a j o r i t y o f normal a d u l t s
can produce the Alpha rhythm, which was, f i r s t described by
Berger i n 1929. This i s w i t h i n t h e range o f 8 Hz t o 13 Hz and
i s the normal b a s i c rhythm f o r a relaxed person w i t h t h e eyes
closed. The Beta frequencies are considered t o ne those from
14 Hz t o 22 Hz. The amplitude o f 'the beta waves i s g e n e r a l l y
l e s s than 20uV. D e l t a waves range from 0 . 5 Hz t o 4 Hz and
replace Alpha waves d u r i n g deep sleep, anesthesia, and a r e
a l s o present d u r i n g various m e d i t a t i v e s t a t e s i n v o l v i n g w i l l -
f u l conscious focus o f a t t e n t i o n i n the absense of o t h e r
sensory s t i m u l i . Theta waves range from 4 Hz t o 8Hz. They
appear t o be prominent i n the EEGs o f normal c h i l d r e n .
a
a s a Cellular Com~onent
One o f the most i n t e r e s t i n g d i s c o v e r i e s i n t h e l a s t t e n
years t h a t has profound i m p l i c a t i o n s of a b i o l o g i c a l nature is
t h a t water appears t o have a memory f o r past exposures t o
h i g h l y coherent frequencies. D r - C y r i l smith i n 1985 proposed
t h a t water might have a h e l i c a l s t r u c t u r e t h a t enables i t t o
"remember" frequ-encies. This c a p a c i t y o f water would e x p l a i n
how c l i n i c a l responses i n homeopathy can occur w i t h i n seconds.
Watterson i n 1982 considered the e f f e c t s o f s t r u c t u r e waves i n
water. I n order t o account f o r magnetic f i e l d e f f e c t s and a
M A T R I X 1 1 1
B r a i n waves
A s millions o f brain cells fire repeatedly many o f them
are combined i n one E C G wave trace. There are four
t y ~ e os f brain wave classified accord in^ t o frequency
and given the names o f Greek letters. -
6 delta waves (1-3 cycles per second) '
8 theta waves (4-7 cycles per second)
a alpha waves (8-13 cycles per second)
f? beta waves ( l 3 + cycles per second)
Sincc the hr:tin and its extension into the spin;ll cord are
connected dlrcctly t o all parts of the body hy the
nerves. are the nerve imoulses also part or this etheric
life force. and is i t the electrical chaiee from all oarts o f
the bcdy that produces the M y aurH? (Refer td: How
CY
far outside our skins (pp. 104-105) for det;~ilsabout the
body aura.) T o explore these questions. some
information ahout the nervous system is necessary. t -
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The central system consists o f the brain. together w i t h
There are two pans t o the human nervoussystem. the its extension the spinal cord, which receives and sends
central and the peripheral as shown i n the diagram messages, interprets. stores and coordinates those
(below). messages and makes decisions.
THE ~ nOFTHE
SYSTEM n ~PHYS'CAL Communication hetween the central nervoussystem
and all organs o f the M y is via the peripheral nervous
systcm. which consists o f nerve pathways specialized
for different purposes.
Brain and spinal cord The sonutic peripheral (body) system sends and
receives messages o f which we are conscious. For
+C example. we can notice the position o f the players and
o f ourselves i n relation t o the ball i n a game. Sensory
4 4 nerves i n the somatic swtem connected w i t h our eyes.
1- Somatic system
, ,
Autonomic system
,
c a n a n h u ~ l e =.end
s ihts tnformatton throuEh to.the
bratn i n the central nervous system and motor nerves
carry instant decisions back t b our eyes, cars and
muscles enahling us t o kick the ball i n the chosen
+ + ++
+ + + +
direction. Reflexes are messages that pass directly
through the sptnal cord without need for a decision
f from the brain.
The autonomic peripheral tulr-mgulatiwg) system sends
Sympathetic nerves and receives messages o f which we arc not aware, for
example the regulation o f heartbeat. emottons.
+ ++ +t ++++ f
dieestion etc. T h e autonomic svstem contains t w o
nerve systems which balance each other: the
sympathetic system is concerned with readiness for
action. and the parasvmpathettc is concerned with
readiness for relaxatiun. Too many messages passing to
and f r o along sympathetic nerves will automatically
alert the parasympathetic system and vice versa.
under voluntary under involuntary
control
II control
1 IThc a n t n l n e m qyslcm
2A Thc urmaltc pcnpheral systcm
2 1 The autonomx penphenlsystem
M A T R I X 1 x 1
DA TABASE: FREQUENCIES
Atnospheric El4 Pulses Also called Spherics. Have a determining effect on the weather.
Spectral maxima were found in narrow bands(HZ1: 4150.84, 6226.26,
8301.26,10377.10,12452~52,28018.17,49810,08
Bio-electrical Coherence Nature uses highly coherent electromagnetic signals between
living systems. The range of freq extends down from the UV, where
radiation becomes 'ionizing', through to the sub-Hz, (sec per cycle)
Bio-electrical Coherence Host e1e:tronagnetic frequencies in the nature are coherent
only over time intervals of less'than about io-8 s (spectral band-
widths of 10OHHz) due to the physical properties of emitting atoms
Bio-sensi tivity to ELF Fields According to studies done by Jacobi in 1919, it was found that
lOkHz modulated with ELF of lOHz effected thrombocytes in the blood;
a cover of copper gauze over the head stopped the effect.
Bioeffects of Uicrowaves Uirowaves can act as a carrier able to deposit the nuclear
magnetic resonance (NUR) frequency as the microwave modulation signal within the
tissue, where non-1 ineari ties demodulate it.
Biosensitivity to ELF Fields The Schumann resonance overs the 1Hz to 30Hz region (Konig,1979). The 8Hz region
is important and general 1y beneficial
to living systems, and coincides with the brains alpha (8-12Hz)
Brain Activity The brain 'talks' to itself constantly, with various oscillating domains
inducing vibrations in one another (entraining)
or remianing isolated in co~plexfluctuating patterns of activity
Brain Entrainment Externally Oscillating fields can resonantly entrain oscillating living tissue.
External wave systems can 'talk' to internal ones.
Brain Entrainment ELF fields can induce in the brain patterns of vibration similar to their own
Biain Frequencies If you go below lcps in brain activity, you go into the infinite, above the
speed of light, into higher dimensionality
Brain Frequencies In the gear 0 cps frequency, spontaneous expression can take place involving the
'paraconscious' of transpersonal activity in interaction with unknown energy
fields
Brain Frequencies Delta wave frequency 0-4 cps ray involve interaction with high
frequency domains at high amp1 i tude, measured in mi 1 1 ivolts
Brain Frequency Brainwave synchrony between people correlates with intense,
non-verbal feel ing states.
Brain Frequency The average frequency of brain waves during channeling type activity was found
by Or James Brown, a Fairfax California research
psycholcgist, to be around lOHz
Brain Frequency Elizabeth Rauscher, a Berkeley California research physicist,
speculates that current 1y unmeasureable EEG frequencies nay exceed
1OOOHz
Braln Frequency Increasing the energy while lengthening the wavelength of the brain waves can
act as both a magnifying lens and an amplifier, which
causes a narrgwlng of focus on high frequency info,
Brain Frequency A shlft in brain frequency involving the presence of EEG sych
between hemispheres precedes or accompanies non-ordinary states of
consciousness associated with meditation or trance channeling experience.
Brain Frequency Jhen an individual shifts focus of attention, the ent:re frequency pattern of
the brain shifts to different frequencies. This
shift is of interest when it invoives synch between hemispheres
Brain Frequency The abilities to focgs attention and to achieve flashes of insight have been
correlated with increased phase synchrony between
henispheres
M A T R I X 1 1 1
DATABASE: FREQUENCIES
Carbon Dioxide,Neural Effects Co2 Increases the frequency and decreases the amp1 i tude of cortical potentials
as noted in the human EEG and direct recordings from the cortex of animals.
There is an increase in cortical
strychnine spikes and subcortical discharge in the posterior
hypothalamus.
Electromagnetic Coherence Coherence: the existence of definite fixed relationships between the phases of
otherwise separate waves. Coherence makes inter ference effects
between waves possible
Human Body Internal Coherence The skeleton and all the inner organs move coherently at about
7 cps. The natural frequency of the normal body seems to lie in this
range.
I m ~ u n esystem and Brain Struct French investigators have been able to demonstrate an involvement of the left
cortical hemisphere of the brain in immune
function.
Iflmune system and Brain Struct. The structure and organization of the brain itself may influence immunity.
Clinicians have made the observation that left-handed people appear to have nore
developmental difficulties. Left handed people have higher rates of innune
disorders and migraine
headaches. In one London study of 253 lefties, the frequency of immune disorders
was found to be 2.7 tlnes higher, especially thyroid
and bowel disorders.
Nuclear Vibratory Rate The nucleus of an aton will vibrate at t O ( 2 2 ) HZ
Occular Registration Frequency The lowest frequencies that the eye will react to lie in the
region of 375 trillion Hz (red) and hlghest at 750 trillion Hz (blue)
Physio-Kundal ini Sequence stimulus loop. The pleasure centers of the brain are stimulated. When people are
exposed to frequencies of about 4 or 7Hz for prolonged periods of tine, the
cumulative effect may be able to trigger a spontaneoud physio-kundalini sequence
in susceptible people who have a particularly sensitive nervous system. Pg 119
Diagram
Protein reaction to frequency Research work carried out by Fritz Popp in West Germany and by
Wilfried Kruger confirmed the observations of Hans Baumer that protein compounds
react to certain frequencies
Pulse Manifestation We have a twin stream of consciousness on the anti-matter side
of the cycle, The frequency of manifestation of both streams of
consciousness would position our anareness of the illusion of reality at a
particular point in space-time.
REM Sleep, Dreams and Brain iunct?on REH sleep occurs for about 1 to 1.5 hours of the sleep cycle, alternating wl th
non-REH sleep, which takes place in four stages of increasing depth. Almost all
dreaming :s done during REH sleep. D u r ~ n gREH sleep, outside sencory inout ?s
largely excluded and the cortex and other forebrain areas are periodically and
widely stimulated by brain stem inpulses that work as #hat has been called a
'Dream state generator'.
REH Sleep, Dreams and irain Function Cr;ck and his associate Ficthison, of Cambridge, England, postulate that if it
were not for the clearing function of REH sleep, the cortex would have to be
tremendously larger, or would become inoperative with clutter and unwanted
connections. Most mammais, includi ng man, demonstrate REH sleep. The curious
exception is the
spiny anteater found in Australia which has a d'spropotionately huge, almost
unwieldy, cortex.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
DA TABASE: FREQUENCIES
RER Sleep, Dreams and Brain Function At the onset of REM sleep, cells in the lower brain stem, specifically the Pons,
begin sending signals to the higher brain centers which are ultinately widely
distributed over the cortex. According to Crick, these brain stem impulses are
random, unconscious, and non-speci f ic networks. In some unknown manner there is
a clearing -reverse learning- and weakening of these nore random, 'noisy' or
static cell connections, stengthening nore used assembl ies.
REM Sleep, Dreaas and Brain Function REU activity is more frequent in the fetus and the newborn than in the older
child and the adult. In caluculating Savants, REH sleep is at levels above
nornal, REH activity is generally lower in mentally defective persons. Savant
nemory may be due to a failure to forget, rather than a unique ability to store
and retrieve.
REU Sleep, Dreaas and Brain Function Francis Crick, Nobel laureate for his work on DNA, now with the Salk Institute,
propose that the function of REM/Drean sleep is 'reverse learning' in uhich sore
cell assemblies, the netwoks of memory, are strengthened (and thus savedl and
some are weakened (and thus erased). They propose that this is the brains method
of consolidating some daytiae impressions for retention, and fragmenting others
so they can be discarded.
Rhythm Entrainnent The resonant frequency of the earth- ionosphere cavity- is about 7 . 5 cps and the
aicro-motion of the body is from 6.8 to 7.5Hz
This suggests a tuned resonant system. In deep meditation, a
human being and the planet start resonating and transferring energy
at the very long wavelength of 40,000 km, the perimeter of the planet
Rhythm entrainment Nature finds it more economical in terns of energy to have
periodic events that are close enough in frequency to occur in phase
or in step with each other. Vibratory events that are close in freq
will entrain themselves to each other when in proxioity.
Sound Interference Properties ( 1 ) Constructive and Destructive Intereference
Builds up the Anplitude and Cancels Amplitude
(2) leat Frequencies-convert high f requencies to low frequency
If F1:IOHZ and F2:12HZ, then Beat Freq: 2HZ superimposed
on the other mixed frequencies,
M A T R I X I I I
Chapter 3
Neurological Brain Circuitry. Evolution,
and S t a t e s of C o n s c i o u s n e s s
I f e v e r y p e r s o n were l o o k e d a t a s a s i n g l e c e l l i n a
w o r l d w i d e b r a i n i n w h i c h t h e w h o l e of l i f e were reflected a s a
h o l o g r a m , t h e n t h e b r a i n i t s e l f c o u l d be s e e n a s a p a t t e r n o f
c r y s t a l l i z e d e v o l u t i o n a r y i n t e l l i g e n c e w h i c h is g r a d u a l l y
b u i l d i n g social s y s t e m s o v e r v a s t p e r i o d s of t i m e . The human
b r a i n h a s t a k e n a b o u t 5 b i l l i o n y e a r s t o d e v e l o p o n t h i s 10
b i l l i o n year o l d p l a n e t . B e s i d e s n a t u r a l e v o l u t i o n , t h e human
b r a i n a n d p h y s i o l o g i c a l s t r u c t u r e m i g h t h a v e b e e n affected b y
as many as 64 separate g e n e t i c m o d i f i c a t i o n s imposed o n t h e
d e v e l o p i n g human n e u r o l o g i c a l s t r u c t u r e . Some of t h e s e
m o d i f i c a t i o n s m i g h t h a v e b e e n performed t o d e l i b e r a t e l y l i m i t
t h e f u n c t i o n a l a b i l i t y of t h e human b e i n g ,
T h e b e h a v i o r of a l l o r g a n i s m s a n d e s p e c i a l l y t h e s o c i a l
o r g a n i z a t i o n of t h e d i f f e r e n t species of v e r t e b r a t e s
c o r r e s p o n d s t o a p r o g r e s s i v e i n c r e a s e i n t h e d e v e l o p m e n t of
t h e cerebral h e m i s p h e r e s a n d c e r e b e l l u m . C o n s c i o u s n e s s h a s
d e v e l o p e d , b y v i r t u e of d i f f e r e n t areas i n t h e s t r u c t u r e o f
t h e b r a i n , i n t o s e v e n d i s t i n c t areas; e a c h area is s a i d t o
r e s o n a t e w i t h a p a r t i c u l a r v i b r a t i o n a l f r e q u e n c y of t h e c o l o r
spectrum - red, o r a n g e , y e l l o w , g r e e n , b l u e , i n d i g o a n d
v i o l e t . O u r own c o n s c i o u s n e s s itself c o u l d be composed of t h e
same l i g h t h a v i n g t h e same s e v e n c o l o r s w i t h i n i t a n d s e v e n
d i f f e r e n t v i b r a t i o n a l f r e q u e n c i e s w h i c h s h a p e t h e q u a l i t y of
ou r a w a r e n e s s .
T h e human b r a i n is a l s o a prism a n d a r e c e i v e r , f i l t e r i n g
cosmic l i g h t i n t o a n o c t a v e t h r o u g h its v e h i c l e of e x p r e s s i o n ,
t h e human body, a n d r e s o n a t i n g w i t h t h e s e v e n basic c o l o r s ,
while t h e 8 t h l e v e l resonates with pure consciousness itself.
T h e b r a i n c a n be l i k e n e d t o a seed w h i c h u n f o l d s o n s e v e n
d i f f e r e n t v i b r a t o r y l e v e l s , O u r d i r e c t k n o w l e d g e of o u r own
b r a i n c o n s c i o u s n e s s d e t e r m i n e s o u r own l e v e l of e v o l u t i o n . T h e
b r a i n a s a p h y s i c a l m a n i f e s t a t i o n of t h e s e s t a g e s of d e v e l o p -
m e n t is a n e f f e c t , n o t a c a u s e , of t h e e v o l v i n g l e v e l s of
c o n s c i o u s n e s s . These l e v e l s p r e - e x i s t w i t h i n t h e b r a i n . Every
p e r s o n ' s l e v e l s of c o n s c i o u s n e s s a r e m i x e d , y e t t h e y separate
when p a s s i n g t h r o u g h d i f f e r e n t d e n s i t i e s a n d i n t e n s i t i e s t o
produce t h e t h r e s h o l d s w i t h i n t h e total e x p e r i e n c e of what o u r
b r a i n normally e x p e r i e n c e s as c o n s c i o u s n e s s .
A t e a c h s t a g e of e v o l u t i o n t h e g r o w t h of o r g a n i s m s h a s n o t
come from t h e d i f f e r e n c e s i n g e n e p r o d u c t s b u t f r o m t h e
complex r e g u l a t o r y c i r c u i t s which have u n l e a s h e d or r e s t r a i n e d
c e r t a i n a c t i v i t i e s of t h e o r g a n i s m , t h u s l e a d i n g t o t h e
s p e c i f i c g e n e t i c program w h i c h selects t h e q u a n t i t i e s of
b i o - c h e m i c a l p r o d u c t s f r o m its immediate e n v i r o n m e n t . T h i s
means i f you d i s c i p l i n e y o u r s e l f , you r e g u l a t e t h e s e c r e t i o n
o f b r a i n h o r m o n e s w h i c h create t h e c h e m i c a l c h a n g e s w h i c h
M A T R I X 1 1 1
THE BRAIN
W h i t e and G r e y Neural M a t t e r
T h e a l t e r a t i o n of w h i t e a n d g r e y matter i n t h e b r a i n a n d
t h e s p i n a l cord create a n a l t e r a t i o n of p o s i t i v e a n d n e g a t i v e
e l e c t r i c i t y , T h e t w o k i n d s of matter appear i n layers, a n d t h e
l a y e r s work much l i k e a capacitor i n e l e c t r o n i c s , B r a i n
s i g n a l s are e m i t t e d a l o n g c e r t a i n p a t h s w h i c h e x t e n d o u t from
t h e c e n t r a l m i d - b r a i n area t h r o u g h a large n u c l e u s of f i b e r s .
The s i g n a l s are m o d u l a t e d a n d t u n e d , n o t t o i n d i v i d u a l cells
b u t t o t h e whole b r a i n ' s a c t i v i t y , which r e s u l t s i n a
s e l e c t i o n among h u n d r e d s of t h o u s a n d s of p a t h s , s o t h a t t h e
s i g n a l s w i l l t r a v e l along s p e c i f i c a l l y chosen pathways to
c e r t a i n areas. The preferred c i r c u i t s a r e o f t e n h a b i t u a l a n d
a r e f o r m e d t h r o u g h t h e e m b r y o n i c d e v e l o p m e n t of t h e n e r v o u s
s y s t e m a n d t h e s u b s e q u e n t c o n s c i o u s d i s c i p l i n e of t h e
c h a n n e l s . I t is p o s s i b l e t o s h u t o f f p a r t s of t h e b r a i n o r t o
a m p l i f y o t h e r p a r t s a n d create large c h a r g e s . T h e e l e c t r i c a l
p o t e n t i a l s c a n be c o n s c i o u s l y c h a n g e d i n t h e b r a i n p a t h w a y s .
T h e r e is no h a b i t u a l t h o u g h t p a t t e r n o r e m o t i o n a l r e s p o n s e o r
t y p i c a l a c t i o n which w e c a n n o t change.
T h e t u n i n g of t h e b r a i n c i r c u i t s is c o n v e r t e d i n t o
l e a r n i n g a n d memory b y s e t t i n g u p stored p a t t e r n s of p o t e n t i a l
e n e r g y i n t h e c e l l s of t h e b r a i n t h r o u g h c h o o s i n g specific
c i r c u i t s . W e of t e n f u n c t i o n by h a b i t u a l r e s p o n s e s w h i c h a r e
s t o r e d a s a n e n e r g y i n t h e b r a i n , a n d w e c a l l t h i s a t y p e of
memory. T h i s k i n d of memory is l i k e a n u n c o n s c i o u s
c h o o s i n g process t h a t is h a p p e n i n g a u t o m a t i c a l l y . T h e h i g h e r
c o n s c i o u s s e l e c t i o n is made t h r o u g h t h e u s e of c o n s c i o u s w i l l .
Any u n c o n s c i o u s c h o o s i n g c a n become c o n s c i o u s c h o o s i n g o n c e w e
a r e aware t h a t c h o i c e s are h a p p e n i n g a n d w e b e g i n t o
d e l i b e r a t e l y i n t e r f e r e w i t h them,
P e o p l e who c a n s t o r e l a r g e a m o u n t s of e l e c t r i c i t y b y
r a i s i n g t h e i r v i t a l forces t o h i g h e r l a y e r s also i n c r e a s e
t h e i r t h i n k i n g c a p a c i t y , s i n c e t h e electrical c h a r g e i n t h e
b r a i n i o n i z e s more b r a i n f l u i d s , T h e i o n i z a t i o n of membranes
a n d f l u i d s i n t h e b r a i n is e q u i v a l e n t t o e x c i t i n g t h e atoms o f
o u r b r a i n cells t o a h i g h e r t h r e s h o l d .
T h e b o d y c a n be c h a n g e d by a n act of c o n s c i o u s n e s s , T h e
s e c r e t i o n of b r a i n c h e m i c a l s c a n be c o n t r o l l e d a t w i l l t o
a f f e c t o u r e m o t i o n s a n d l e v e l s of c o n s c i o u s n e s s s i m p l y by
r a i s i n g t h e s e electrical p o t e n t i a l s a n d awakening m i l l i o n s
more c e l l s t h a n is n o r m a l l y p o s s i b l e a n d g e t t i n g t h e m t o
s w i t c h o n . I n most people t h e y a r e s w i t c h e d off a n d l i e u n u s e d
throughout a n e n t i r e lifetime.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
STRUCTURAL
HIGHLIGHTS
OF THE
NERVOUS
GENERAL ARCHITECTURE
AND PHYSIOLOGY
The F i r s t B r a i n Area a n d I t s F u n c t i o n i n g
thalamus
M A T R I X 1 1 1
IMPRINTS
The b a s i c consciousness o f t h e 1 s t c i r c u i t i s
one-dimensional, and i s concerned w i t h "what i s safe" and
"what i s n o t safe". I n human s o c i e t y , MONEY i s t i e d purposely
t o s u r v i v a l and b i o - s e c u r i t y . Welfare systems, socialism, and
M A T R I X I 1 1
The Brainstem
The brainstem is the oldest part of the brain. It evolved more
than five hundred million years ago. Because it resembles the
entire brain of a reptile, it is often referred to as the reptilian
brain. It determines the general level of alertness and warns the
organism of important incoming information, as well as han-
dling basic bodily functions necessary for survival-breathing
and heart rate.
..
M A T R I X I 1 1
Very o f t e n , s i n c e the c i r c u i t r y o p e r a t i o n i n t h e 1 s t
c i r c u i t i s unconscious, people who have experiences i n v o l v i n g
apparent danger where they have performed more o r l e s s
automatic a c t i o n s come o u t o f i t s t a t i n g "I don't know what
happened - Ij u s t found myself doing i t ! "
F i r s t Circuit Dualities
Anxiety o r Self-Confidence
Rootedness o r Explorativeness
Dependency o r Independence
Refusal o r Anger when confronted w i t h a problem.
0067
M A T R I X 1 1 1
lateral ventricles
cerebral aqueduct
fourth ventricle
fornix
thalamus
hypothalamus
pituitary gland
M A T R I X 1 1 1
T h i s c i r c u i t i s a l s o responsible f o r the m a n i f e s t a t i o n o f
the f e a r o f not being i n the "in-crowd". There i s the f e a r
t h a t o t h e r s a r e g e t t i n g something you a r e n o t g e t t i n g , , the
f e e l i n g o f missing out, the need f o r c o n f i r m a t i o n and approval
from others, t h e need t o be accepted and t o belong. Rcceptance
g r a t i f i e s p r i d e , which a basic p s y c h o l o g i c a l a t t r i b u t e o f t h e
i n d i v i d u a l stuck i n a r e a l i t y tunnel centered around t h e 2nd
s t r u c t u r e o f the b r a i n .
0069
M A T R I X 1 1 1
w i l l i n g t o r e a c h o u t a n d a c k n o w l e d g e t h e b e i n g of
another.
The 2nd stage of b r a i n e v o l u t i o n w a s n e c e s s a r y as a
f o u n d a t i o n f o r t h a t u l t i m a t e t r a n s c e n d e n c e of t h e p h y s i c a l
world i n which w e e n t e r i n t o o n e n e s s w i t h t h e e n t i r e u n i v e r s e .
I t a l s o is r e s p o n s i b l e f o r t h e " i n s t i n c t t o s u r v i v e t h r o u g h
p o s t e r i t y " , a n d i t is a major i n f l u e n c e o n t h e u r g e t o pro-
create.
F u n c t i o n a l l y , t h e 2nd c i r c u i t c o u l d be called t h e Anal
based E m o t i o n a l T e r r i t o r i a l c i r c u i t . I t is i m p r i n t e d i n t h e
" t o d d l i n g " stage when t h e i n f a n t rises u p , w a l k s a r o u n d a n d
b e g i n s t o s t r u g g l e f o r power w i t h i n t h e f a m i l y s t r u c t u r e . T h i s
mostly mammalian c i r c u i t processes t e r r i t o r i a l r u l e s ,
e m o t i o n a l c o n s a n d games, p e c k i n g order, a n d r i t u a l s of
d o m i n a t i o n or s u b m i s s i o n . The 2nd c i r c u i t is c o n c e r n e d
w i t h power p o l i t i c s , a n d is triggered c h e m i c a l l y by a l c o h o l ,
which is why a l c o h o l is promoted i n human society. I t c a u s e s
f u r t h e r d i v i s i o n which promotes c o n t r o l of t h e human
population.
The 2nd c i r c u i t is 500 m i l l i o n t o 1 b i l l i o n years o l d a n d
is c e n t r a l i z e d i n t h e THALAMUS. I t is l i n k e d w i t h t h e m u s c l e s
a n d t h e v o l u n t a r y n e r v o u s s y s t e m . The c i r c u i t is c h i e f l y
i m p r i n t e d by t h e p e r c e p t i o n of t h e n e a r e s t a l p h a male, which
means t h e f i r s t p e r c e i v e d d o m i n a n t male f i g u r e . Sometimes, t h e
c i r c u i t is referred t o as t h e EGO, which is a b r a i n c i r c u i t
t h a t o f t e n m i s t a k e s itself f o r t h e whole SELF. The EGO is t h e
i m p r i n t f o r t h e t o d d l i n g a n d t o i l e t t r a i n i n g period. When you
h e a r someone d e s c r i b e d a s " a c t i n g l i k e a 2 y e a r - o l d " , t h e y are
t a l k i n g a b o u t someone who is f i r m l y rooted i n a r e a l i t y t u n n e l
o f t h e 2nd b r a i n a n d u n d e r t h e c o n t r o l of t h e c i r c u i t t h e r e i n .
The 2 n d c i r c u i t h a s a n Anal o r i e n t a t i o n , P e o p l e who are
s t u c k i n t h e 2nd b r a i n c i r c u i t s prefer t o u s e a n a l - o r i e n t e d
words i n t h e i r v o c a b u l a r y . E x p r e s s i o n s of t h i s l e v e l of
c o n s c i o u s n e s s c a n be s e e n e v e r y w h e r e , i n c l u d i n g i n t h e
m i l i t a r y , a n d e s p e c i a l l y i n boot-camp, where e v e r y o n e e x c e p t
t h e t r a i n i n g i n s t r u c t o r s is referred t o as a n " a s s - h o l e " .
The a c t i v i t i e s which are c e n t e r e d a r o u n d t h e 2nd c i r c u i t
are based o n t h e c o n c e p t o f p o s i t i v e f e e d b a c k -a n d attempts
t o m a i n t a i n a b a l a n c e . T h i s is why t h e r e is a n o v e r w h e l m i n g
desire t o please a n d p a c i f y t h e t r a i n i n g i n s t r u c t o r i n boot
camp. The same r e a l i t y s t r u c t u r e is u s e d i n p r i s o n s a n d is
g e n e r a l l y spread i n a t h i n layer o v e r t h e s t r u c t u r e of s o c i e t y
i n t h e U n i t e d States. F o r a p e r s o n s t u c k i n t h e 2nd c i r c u i t ,
c o n f r o n t i n g a problem b r i n g s o u t b o t h b u l l y i n g a n d
cowardliness.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
The
Second C i r c u i t I m ~ r i n t s
Dominance o r Submission
Self-Confidence o r Self-Doubt
Strong Ego o r Weak Ego
High Pack Status o r Low Pack Status
Giving Orders o r Taking Orders
F u n c t i o n a l l y , the 3 r d l e v e l o f b r a i n c i r c u i t r y c o u l d be
c a l l e d t h e Time-Binding Semantic C i r c u i t . I t i s i m p r i n t e d and
c o n d i t i o n e d by human a r t i f a c t s and symbol systems. I t
"handles" and "packages" the environment, c l a s s i f y i n g every-
t h i n g according t o the Local R e a l i t y Tunnel. T h i s i s what C a r l
Sagan views as t h e "human B r a i n " . This c i r c u i t , u n l i k e t h e 2nd
c i r c u i t based on p o s i t i v e feedback, i s based on negative
feedback, and seeks a higher l e v e l o f e q u i l i b r i u m . I t i s
very v u l n e r a b l e t o the i m p r i n t and c o n d i t i o n s i n t h e lower two
brains.
It brainstern
M A T R I X I I I
..
d e c e n c y " . Anyone who c h a l l e n g e s .them is b y d e f i n i t i o n a
"heretic", a " t r a i t o r " , o r an i r r e s p o n s i b l e nut".
D u a l i t i e s a r i s i n g from t h i s l e v e l of b r a i n s t r u c t u r e and
c i r c u i t r y are:
Fluency o r I n a r t i c u l a t e n e s s
Dexterity o r Clumsiness
"Good Mind" o r "Dumb Mind"
T h e r e s p o n s e t o a p r o b l e m , when v i e w e d b y s o m e o n e who h a s
d o m i n a n c e i n t h i s c i r c u i t , is t o " r e a s o n i t o u t " . I t is t h e
r e a l i t y t u n n e l o f t h e r a t i o n a l i s t , w h a t c o u l d be c a l l e d t h e
" T h i r d C i r c u i t Robot". F o r p e o p l e s t u c k i n t h i s c i r c u i t , t h e
rest o f t h e n e r v o u s s y s t e m h a s , f o r a l l i n t e n t s a n d p u r p o s e s ,
s t o p p e d g r o w i n g . T h i r d c i r c u i t p r o b l e m s o f t e n t a k e t h e form o f
perplexity.
P e o p l e i n t h e 3 r d c i r c u i t o f t e n t r y t o p r o v e t h a t much of
human e x p e r i e n c e is " d e l u s i o n " , " h a l l u c i n a t i o n " , " g r o u p
h a l l u c i n a t i o n " , "mere c o i n c i d e n c e " , " s h e e r c o i n c i d e n c e " , o r
" s l o p p y r e s e a r c h " . I t w o u l d appear t h a t C S I S O P a n d many of t h e
"UFO e x p e r t s " f a l l n e a t l y i n t o t h i s frame o f c o n s c i o u s n e s s .
A l l t h e s e c i r c u i t s h a v e e v o l v e d from t h e b e g i n n i n g t o t h e
p o i n t i n p r e s e n t s o c i e t y . Other c i r c u i t s have evolved i n t h e i r
u s e o n l y t o a small e x t e n t , a n d t h e h i g h e r c i r c u i t s a p p e a r t o
pre-capi t u l a t e f u t u r e evolution.
The F o u r t h B r a i n C i r c u i t and I t s F u n c t i o n i n q
T h e f o u r t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e is c o m p o s e d o f t h e M i d - B r a i n ,
t h e h y p o t h a l a m u s , t h e t h a l a m u s a n d t h e f l o o r s t r u c t u r e of t h e
inter-brain,
I t is i n t h e 4 t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e t h a t w e c a n best see t h e
close c o r r e l a t i o n b e t w e e n c o n s c i o u s n e s s a n d matter, b e c a u s e
t h e s e c r e t i o n o f h o r m o n e s i n t h i s b r a i n creates t h e e m o t i o n s
w e m o s t i d e n t i f y w i t h a s t h e idea o f " m e " . J u s t a b o v e t h e
Mid-brain t h e r e are i m p o r t a n t n u c l e i c o n c e r n e d w i t h t h e
r e g u l a t i o n o f b o d y t e m p e r a t u r e , metabolism, s e x u a l
development, s l e e p , endocrine s e c r e t i o n s and t h e i r e f f e c t on
t h e n e r v o u s s y s t e m a n d p e r s o n a l i t y . O u r w h o l e c h a r a c t e r c a n be
c h a n g e d b y hormone e x c h a n g e . Our e v o l u t i o n or s t a g n a t i o n
h i n g e s v e r y s t r o n g l y u p o n t h i s area of t h e M i d - B r a i n a n d i t s
control over our fluctuating identity.
E x p r e s s e d i n terms o f t h e c h a k r a e n e r g i e s , y o u c o u l d d a y
t h a t t h e 4 t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e r e g u l a t e s t h e e n e r g y or life-
f o r c e w h i c h c a n o n l y e x p r e s s i n t h e c h a k r a s when t h e y a r e
0075
M A T R I X 1 1 1
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M A T R I X I I I
The 4 t h b r a i n t r a n s f e r s i t s f e e l i n g s o f i n s e c u r i t y t o the
e n t i r e body and a l l other p a r t s o f t h e b r a i n because t h e 4 t h
l e v e l a t the center o f the b r a i n i s cross-referenced and wired
t o a l l other l e v e l s o f our brain, b o t h o l d and new p a r t s which
are a l l i n a s t a t e o f expectancy whenever we f a l l i n l o v e o r
become attached t o anything.
s e c u r i t y a n d c a u s e u s t o c h o o s e t h e o u t w a r d l y less h o s t i l e
r e s p o n s e to t h r e a t e v e n though i n w a r d l y w e are f e e l i n g l i k e
murder.
E a c h l e v e l h a s its own t y p e of f e e l i n g . One c a n f e e l
i n s e c u r e a t any l e v e l , y e t t h e 4 t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e s f e e l i n g
i n s e c u r i t y is u n i q u e t o i t s e l f . T h i s is why when a p e r s o n
t h i n k s t h a t t h e y a r e f e e l i n g t h i s o r t h a t , i t is h a r d t o
u n r a v e l t h e c o m p l e x i t y o f f e e l i n g s . T h e h e a r t c e n t e r is t h e
c e n t r a l f o c u s of o u r f e e l i n g of BEING, r a t h e r t h a n o u r
t h i n k i n g o r s e n s i n g o r s o c i a l i z i n g w h i c h o c c u r o n t h e lower
three levels.
F u n c t i o n a l l y , t h e 4 t h s t r u c t u r e c i r c u i t c o u l d be termed
t h e " S o c i o - S e x u a l C i r c u i t " . I t is i m p r i n t e d by t h e f i r s t
orgasm a n d m a t i n g e x p e r i e n c e s a t p u b e r t y a n d is c o n d i t i o n e d b y
taboos. I t processes s e x u a l p l e a s u r e , local r e a l i t y t u n n e l
d e f i n i t i o n s of " r i g h t a n d w r o n g " , r e p r o d u c t i o n , a d u l t - p a t e n t a l
r o l e s a n d s e x r o l e s , a n d n u r t u r i n g of t h e y o u n g . I n t h i s
s o c i e t y , t h e c i r c u i t c o n t a i n s a l o t of i n h e r e n t " g u i l t "
c o n c e p t s embedded i n t h e e m o t i o n a l m a t r i x . T h e r e is a n a c u t e
c o n s c i o u s n e s s o f T i m e , a n d t h e c i r c u i t loops b a c k i n t o T r i b a l
L i n e a r Time of t h e 2 n d c i r c u i t . T h e l o c a t i o n of t h e c i r c u i t is
i n t h e left Neo-cortex.
D u a l i t i e s p r e s e n t a s c o n c e p t s i n t h e c i r c u i t are:
O b e d i e n t or D i s o b e d i e n t
Solid C i t i z e n or S e x u a l Outlaw
P a r e n t or R n a r c h i s t
When people f i r m l y rooted i n a 4th c i r c u i t r e a l i t y tunnel
c o n f r o n t a problem, t h e problems o f t e n transmute i n t o g u i l t
a s s o c i a t i o n s and t h e i r s o l u t i o n s t o problems o f t e n w i l l
i n v o l v e a "moral" s o l u t i o n . T h i s a l s o r e f l e c t s a p a r t of t h e
p s y c h o l o g y o f t h e U.S. p o l i t i c a l system.
H a v i n g s e e n t h e i n t e r - c o n n e c t i o n s a n d o v e r l a p p i n g of t h e
c h e m i c a l e m o t i o n s , social e m o t i o n s , i n t e l l e c t u a l e m o t i o n s and
t h e e m o t i o n s of o u r b e i n g a t t h e 4 t h l e v e l , w e c a n now proceed
t o d i s c u s s t h e S t h , 6 t h and 7 t h Levels.
T h e 5 t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e is composed of t h e I n t e r - B r a i n ,
T h e T h i r d V e n t r i c l e a n d t h e h o l l o w area known a s t h e C a v e of
B rahma .
T h e r e g i o n o f t h e t h i r d v e n t r i c l e i n t h e 5 t h l e v e l of
f u n c t i o n i n g is t h e v e r y i m p o r t a n t c o n c e p t - m a k i n g a n d idea-
p r o d u c i n g d e v e l o p m e n t o f t h e b r a i n , a n d e v e r y t h i n g from h e r e
o n is b u i l t a r o u n d i t . I t is c o n n e c t e d w i t h t h e c e r e b r a l
h e m i s p h e r e s of t h e C e r e b r u m a b o v e , i n f r o n t , a n d b e h i n d , a n d
M A T R I X 111
I t i s t h i s c e n t r a l p a r t o f the b r a i n e v o l u t i o n which
enables us t o s t o r e up higher a b s t r a c t i o n s and thoughts i n our
memory and t o process new experiences. r e v i v e o l d emotional
scars, r e c a l l deep f e a r s and dreams. These higher c e n t e r s o f
c o n t r o l on the 5 t h l e v e l o f f u n c t i o n determine how we s h a l l
respond t o the s i g n a l s , f e e l i n g s , pains, and pleasures coming
t o us from the lower f o u r l e v e l s o f t h e b r a i n .
The 5 t h l e v e l i s an i n t e g r a t i v e f u n c t i o n , capable o f
b r i n g i n g together and comparing many concepts and p a t t e r n s o f
higher emotions, capable o f forming judgments o f how l i f e
ought t o be and making models and estimates o f r e a l i t y ,
Whereas the 4 t h b r a i n i s concerned w i t h e a t i n g t o o b t a i n v i t a l
force, the f u n c t i o n of the 5 t h l e v e l i s the d i g e s t i o n o f
emotional "food". W e take meaningful experiences o f p a t t e r n s
from t h e e x t e r n a l s i t u a t i o n and compare them w i t h what w e have
already i n t e r n a l l y s t o r e d i n memory. This i s the l e v e l o f the
M A T R I X 1 x 1
b r a i n which i n t e g r a t e s ideas.
T h e 6 t h e v o l u t i o n a r y s t a g e of t h e b r a i n m a k e s p o s s i b l e t w o
d i s t i n c t methods o f v i s u a l i z i n g , b o t h o f which are q u i t e
d i f f e r e n t f r o m t h e i m a g i n g o f t h e i m a g i n a t i o n o n l e v e l 7. The
o c c i p i t a l l o b e s make p o s s i b l e o u r s e n s e o f s i g h t i n t h e
e x t e r n a l e n v i r o n m e n t , w h e r e a s t h e p a r i e t a l s make p o s s i b l e t h e
i n n e r " s e e i n g " o f t h e i n t u i t i o n . T o g e t h e r t h e y make t h e
process of s e e i n g a n e n t i r e l y d i f f e r e n t e x p e r i e n c e from t h e
a n i m a l s . The u n d e r d e v e l o p e d p e r s o n who h a s n o t y e t s w i t c h e d o n
t h e c a p a c i t y o f t h e 6 t h l e v e l b r a i n s t r u c t u r e s sees o n l y w i t h
the outer vision, j u s t l i k e the animals-
I t is t h e p i t u i t a r y , c o n t a i n e d w i t h i n t h e 6 t h b r a i n ,
t r i g g e r e d b y t h e p a r i e t a l s , t h a t s w i t c h e s o n a s u p p l y of
e n d o c r i n e c h e m i c a l h o r m o n e s t o t h e areas i n t h e f r o n t a l l o b e s ,
rear l o b e s , t h r o u g h o u t t h e b r a i n , a n d t o t h e b l o o d stream
c o n s t a n t l y b a t h i n g t h e b r a i n cells, which triggers t h e 6 t h
l e v e l p e r c e p t i o n t h r o u g h o u t t h e b r a i n as a whole. T h e s e
hormones a c t i v a t e t h e i n t u i t i v e a w a r e n e s s t h a t c a n t r a n s f o r m
our brain function.
The p e p t i d e s w h i c h t r i g g e r t h e i n t u i t i v e a w a r e n e s s , called
e n k e p h a l i n s , become p s y c h o l o g i c a l l y a c t i v e when t h e y a r e
released i n t o t h e C a v e of Brahma f r o m t h e p i t u i t a r y a n d
h y p o t h a l a m u s . O n l y when t h i s o c c u r s do w e become aware t h a t w e
a r e aware., t h e s i g n i f i c a n t a c h i e v e m e n t of t h e 6 t h l e v e l o f
C O ~ ~ C ~ O U S ~ ~ S S ~
T h e v i s u a l c o r t e x a t t h e b a c k o f t h e b r a i n allows u s t o
f o c u s o n o b j e c t s a n d draws t h e s e n s a t i o n s f r o m t h e e y e b a c k
i n t o t h e h e a d t o t h e area of t h e o c c i p i t a l s , w h e r e w e
e x p e r i e n c e s h a p e a n d c o l o r . T h e s e n s e o f s e e i n g l i g h t , its
s h a p e s a n d f o r m s , is a l s o p r o c e s s e d s i m u l t a n e o u s l y b y t h e
v a r i o u s t h a l a m i s i t u a t e d a r o u n d t h e w a l l s o f t h e C a v e of
Bramha acted u p o n b y t h e p i t u i t a r y a n d p a r i e t a l f u n c t i o n s , T h e
e x t e r n a l and i n t e r n a l v i s u a l systems i n t e r a c t normally u n l e s s
y o u close y o u r e y e s o r h a v e b l i n d e r s o n a n d s h u t t h e m o f f .
When t h i s h a p p e n s , t h e i n n e r v i s i o n s y s t e m o p e r a t e s
independently from t h e v i s u a l c o r t e x which f o c u s e s l i g h t -
W i t h t h e i n n e r v i s i o n you see w i t h y o u r e n t i r e b e i n g , w i t h
e v e r y c e l l a n d a t o m o f y o u r b o d y . Your i n n e r v i s i o n is e v e n
c o u p l e d t o y o u r e a r s , w h i c h t a k e o v e r t o locate y o u r p o s i t i o n
unconsciously i n t h e environment.
T h e p u r p o s e o f v a r i o u s d i s c i p l i n e s is t h e w i t h d r a w a l o f
c o n s c i o u s n e s s f r o m t h e lower b r a i n s i n t o t h e h i g h e r t o
s t i m u l a t e t h e f u n c t i o n i n g of t h e p i t u i t a r y and t h e
0085
M h T R I X I I I
F u n c t i o n a l l y , the 6 t h b r a i n s t r u c t u r e c i r c u i t c o u l d be
c a l l e d t h e c o l l e c t i v e neurogenetic c i r c u i t . I t i s i m p r i n t e d by
b i o - e l e c t r i c a l stresses. I t i s concerned w i t h processing
DNA-RNA feedback systems and i s " c o l l e c t i v e " i n t h a t i t
contains-access t o the whole e v o l u t i o n a r y s c r i p t , past and
f u t u r e . The operation o f the 6 t h c i r c u i t i n d i c a t e s t h a t i t i s
r e c e i v i n g s i g n a l s from the neurons themselves. The Chinese
know t h i s area as the Great Tao. I n Theosophy, i t i s t h e
access p o i n t t o what they term the Akashic Records.
T h e f a c t t h a t o u r c o n s c i o u s n e s s c a n operate o n s e v e n
d i s t i n c t l e v e l s w i t h o u t o u r c o n s c i o u s l y knowing t h a t a l l
images a n d t h o u g h t s a r e u l t i m a t e l y a n n i h i l a t e d a f t e r t h e y
p a s s t h e 7 t h l e v e l , is a h u m i l i a t i n g t h o u g h t f o r most p e o p l e
who t h i n k t h e y h a v e t h i s w h o l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n t h i n g p r e t t y w e l l
w r a p p e d u p . To a c c e p t t h a t e a c h i n d i v i d u a l i n r e a l i t y passes
i n t o a b l a c k h o l e w o u l d be c o n s i d e r e d b y most p e o p l e a f i g m e n t
of t h e i m a g i n a t i o n . Y e t i f w e t h i n k a b o u t i t , t h a t is w h a t
h a p p e n s t o a l l of o u r t h o u g h t s - t h e y pass i n t o t h e b l a c k h o l e
of c o n s c i o u s n e s s i n w h i c h a l l t h i n g s i n t h e material world a n d
a l l t h e i r p a t t e r n s a n d images a r e u l t i m a t e l y e x p e r i e n c e d a n d
t h e n d i s a p p e a r , l e a v i n g o n l y a memory. You become t h e p a t h .
T h e c e n t e r o f y o u r b e i n g becomes t h e n u c l e u s , t h e S o u r c e
i t s e l f , r a d i a t i n g t o i t s e l f its own l i g h t - O n c e y o u j o i n t w i t h
t h e S o u r c e i n t h a t k i n d of f e e d b a c k , t h e n you become t h e
s o u r c e ; t h e r e is n o s e p a r a t i o n b e t w e e n t h e S o u r c e , t h e s i g n a l ,
t h e r e c e i v e r , a n d t h e s e n d e r . T h e o n l y way t o g e t t o t h a t
s p a c e is t o t u n e t o t h a t S o u r c e a n d w a i t f o r t h e a n s w e r i n g
b l e s s i n g . T h e S o u r c e is l o o k i n g f o r t h e c o n s c i o u s r e s p o n s e
from t h e c r e a t i o n , a r e s p o n s e i n w a r d t o t h e n u c l e u s , i n o r d e r
t o e s t a b l i s h a clear l i n e o f c o m m u n i c a t i o n ,
A Model of C o n s c i o u s a n d t h e S e v e n D i m e n s i o n a l P l a n e s
A c c o r d i n g to W i l l i a m T i l l e r
Recording t o W i l l i a m T i l l e r , a p h y s i c i s t a t S t a n f o r d
U n i v e r s i t y , t h e r e e x i s t s model of c o n s c i o u s n e s s w h i c h t a k e s
i n t o a c c o u n t t h e k n o w l e d g e o b t a i n e d t h r o u g h v a r i o u s Yogic
d i s c i p l i n e s , a s w e l l as t h e h o l o g r a p h i c a s p e c t s i n h e r e n t i n
t h e s t r u c t u r e of r e a l i t y . I t is a d i f f e r e n t , p e r h a p s a
t r a n s i t i o n a l , way of i l l u s t r a t i n g t h e m u l t i d i m e n s i o n a l a s p e c t s
of t h e u n i v e r s e as r e l a t e d t o human b e i n g s ,
I n T i l l e r ' s v i e w , humans a r e e s s e n t i a l l y t h e e l e m e n t s o f
S p i r i t t h a t are m u l t i p l e x e d t o a s p e c t s t h a t h e r e f e r s t o as
D i v i n e . H i s model of c o n s c i o u s n e s s h a s b e e n c a l l e d t h e L a t t i c e
Model of C o n s c i o u s n e s s . I n t h i s m o d e l t h e S p i r i t , i n order t o
h a v e a m e c h a n i s m f o r e x p e r i e n c i n g , h a s Mind e m b e d d e d w i t h i n
i t . Mind is s e e n a s t h e b u i l d e r , a n d i n order t o h a v e a
l e a r n i n g e x p e r i e n c e , Mind i m b e d d e d w i t h i n i t s e l f t w o i n t e r -
p e n e t r a t i n g c o n j u g a t e f r a m e s of r e f e r e n c e i n t h e u n i v e r s e
w h i c h h e c a l l s t h e p o s i t i v e a n d n e g a t i v e space/time f r a m e s .
S p r i n g i n g f r o m t h e s e is s u b s t a n c e , w h i c h t a k e s o n v a r i o u s
s t r u c t u r a l f o r m s which h a v e f u n c t i o n . S h e l d r a k e s work o n
m o r p h o g e n e t i c f i e l d s seems t o a p p l y t o t h i s model i n a
h o l i s t i c way.
From t h i s k i n d of m o d e l i n g , w e c a n see w h a t is m e a n t b y
t h e s t a t e m e n t t h a t t h e b r a i n "is i n " t h e m i n d b u t t h e m i n d
does n o t h a v e its o r i g i n i n t h e b r a i n , T h e m i n d is e v e r y w h e r e
( f r e q u e n c y r a t h e r t h a n d i s t a n c e is l o c a l i z e d ) a n d i n e v e r y -
0087
M A T R I X 1 1 1
t h i n g t o some degree o r a n o t h e r d e p e n d i n g on t h e d i m e n s i o n a l
n a t u r e o f t h e i n t e r a c t i o n . The b r a i n , i n t h i s view, is a
s p a c i a l l y localized o b j e c t t h a t o v e r l a p s c e r t a i n aspects of
t h e mind. H o w d o e s t h e b r a i n f u n c t i o n when w e do t h i n g s l i k e
remote viewing? C e r t a i n l y t h e h o l o g r a p h i c n a t u r e of r e a l i t y
e x p l a i n s a l o t ; a t t h e same t i m e o u r c o n s c i o u s n e s s is c e r t a i n
p o s i t i o n c o o r d i n a t e s w i t h i n t h e b r a i n , i t is a l s o i n i n t e r -
a c t i v e communication a t t h e n e g a t i v e space/time l e v e l w i t h
s o m e t h i n g a t a n o t h e r set of c o o r d i n a t e s . Everyone h a s t h i s
c a p a c i t y . I t is j u s t a g r i d c o r r e l a t i o n between f r e q u e n c y
i n f o r m a t i o n a n d d i s t a n c e infurmatiom. I t is n o t u n r e a s o n a b l e
b e c a u s e of t h e F o u r i e r Transform r e l a t i o n s h i p .
Take a l o o k a t t h e i l l u s t r a t i o n below:
The a b o v e i l l u s t r a t i o n is t h e k i n d of p i c t u r e t h a t would
a r i s e if w e e x p r e s s e d a r e p r e s e n t a t i o n of s e v e n d i m e n s i o n s of
r a d i a t i o n a c c o r d i n g t o T i l l e r ' s v i e w p o i n t . I n h i s view, t h e r e
is a temporal aspect, presumably bound t o a t i m e - t r a c k , a n d a n
i n d e s t r u c t a b l e aspect t o t h e human b e i n g . I n t h i s model,. t h e r e
is t h e S p i r i t , t h r e e l e v e l s o f mind ( i n s t i n c t u a l , i n t e l l e c t u a l
a n d s p i r i t u a l ) which relate l o o s e l y t o t h r e e s e c t i o n s of t h e
b r a i n ( t h e root b r a i n , t h e r i g h t a n d l e f t c o r t e x , a n d t h e
f r o n t a l lobes), e t h e r i c s u b s t a n c e , p h y s i c a l s u b s t a n c e , a n d t h e
a s t r a l l e v e l , which h e v i e w s a s a t r a n s i t i o n a l domain i n which
o u r B e i n g is c o n t a i n e d between periods of p h y s i c a l i t y , which
is u s u a l l y known a s " r e i n c a r n a t i o n " . I n t h i s system, t h e r e c a n
be e n e r g y i n t e r c a t i o n s between t h e s e d i f f e r e n t l e v e l s s o t h a t
i f o n e l e v e l is p e r t u r b e d , a r a t c h e t effect c a n c a u s e e n e r g y
t r a i n s to t r a v e l t o d i f f e r e n t dimensions and one can
e x p e r i e n c e phenomena d e v e l o p i n g a t d i f f e r e n t l o c a t i o n s ,
ficcording to T i l l e r , a t t h e three-dimensional l e v e l w e
t h i n k p r i m a r i l y i n terms of electrical a n d m a g n e t i c e n e r g i e s ,
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Space I Space I 1
I m p r i n t e d by f ir s t B r a i n Stem
Oral Bio-Survival mothering o b j e c t Autonomic System
Sucking,Feeding, Connected w i t h
C u d d l i n g and Body Endocrine and
Securi t y L i f e Support
E c s t a t i c experience R i g h t Cortex
H o l i s t i c Neurosomatic Sensory B l i s s
F e e l i n g "High" Linked t o Limbic
i n 1st c i r c u i t
Processes a feed- and g e n i t a l s
back t o c i r c u i t 1 .
C o n t r o l over a l l
lower c i r c u i t s
Time-Binding Semantic
Coffee, Speed Third Density
High-Protein Diet
Cocai ne
3rd to 4th
Holistic Neurosomatic Canni bis Acceleration
THC
Marijuana
Time-Binding Semantic
Promoted Euclidian
Focus on Outer
Technology
-- -
Euclidian
"Moral" Socio-Sexual Promoted
Focus on Outer
Technology
Forbidden
Inner Technology
Non-Local Quantum
Forbi dden
Inner Technology
I
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Detachment from
Holistic Neurosomatic " CAPT PICARD " Compulsives in
Circuits 1-4
Collective Neurogenetic
ALIEN INTELLIGENCE
Conscious choice
To Share Others I
Real i ty Exper i ence
Telepathi cs
" DATA " Multiple Choices
Relativity
Metaprogramming Interspecies
ALIEN INTELLIGENCE Symbiosis becomes
Consci ous
Genetic Archives
" GUYNAN " Activated by
Anti-Histone Prot
Time-Binding Semantic
False Intel lect Human
3rd Brain Circuit
Center Brain
Level 48
Holistic Neurosomatic Vibrational Ignored
5th Brain Circuit Level 24
Collective Neurogenetic
Vibration Ignored
6th Brain Circuit
Level 12
Metaprogramming
Vibration Ignored
7th Brain Circuit
Level 6
NOTES
7. D r C a r l Pribram o f Stanford U n i v e r s i t y :
" A hologram a r i s e s
i n any system, whether o p t i c a l , computer, o r neural."
9.Definitions: Holonomic -
i n the nature o f a hologram.
Holoid -
e n t i t y t h a t i s holonomic
Holonomy -
q u a l i t y o f being holonomic
M A T R I X I I I
Social Consciousness.
Government's fight to punish
wrongdoers
,-.I).9r is given by God
Somet~mes~tis debated, even in sword he must thus teaches violence.
religious circles, whether the State be slain." "Vengeance is mine. I will re-
has the right to impose capital pay," says the Lord. So when the
punishment This always amazes I m- State executes a criminal - say by
me. I\s someone thoroughly famil- marY, han 'ng, electric chair or injection
iar with the Scriptures, I know that
this is clearly and consistentiy
ing the
Sdptures* the
. , - $is should be seen a s Cod's
own action. He is working through
taught there. For example: murderer the State, His servant. The next
Genesis 9:6 - Whoever sheds be put time someone challen es you on
kve:2:4; i
-
the blood of men, by man shall his this issue, you might told out to
blood be shed." him or her the passages above. In
Numbers 35:16 - 'The mur-
derer shall be put to death" (re-
has been es-
tabjished by
my view, the Scri ture ou ht to
decide questions ofthis kin8 0th-
cod (thus, is erwise we are forever in a qwg-
peated six times in six verses). God's servant)
-YOne mire about what to do. And if
think the to aefub His PmwsPmp& therels anything b t the govern.
New Testament has any other at- wrath on the ment doesn't need more oZ it is a
titude, note the following:
Matthew 26:52 - Jesus said, W l
who take the sword will perish by
the sword."
wrongdoer. (It
has other du-
ties, ofcourse.) ,, g ,yu
Clearly, the government does
qwgmire!
The Rev
- the
of '
is the pastor
r
~-
Romans 13:4 - "If 0. do not lWVE to exercise capiW un-
wrong, be afmid. for g e er d ~ sishment but it has the nght fn a nated p e r s m t h ~ is coordi-
past,.sby bsociatd ~ in i ~ ~ &
not bur the sword In Vain: he !S democracy, this is decided by the
.the s e m t of God to execute HIS voter. But no voter who accepts c,j,mtim "th
are
m. Of the
wrath on the wrongdoer." the ofthe Scriptures can thor and are not necessarily en-
Revelations 13:lO - "If anyone argue that the State cannot do this; dcrrsedby ~~~~~~~~d~ ~ ~or i ~ t ~ i ~
slays with the sword, with the that it is itself vengeful, or that it T~~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Chapter 4
Belief S y s t e m s and P e r c e ~ t i o n
I t i s a major u n d e r t a k i n g t o e f f e c t i v e l y d e a l w i t h a
p o p u l a t i o n t h a t i s e s s e n t i a l l y o b l i v i o u s t o the s t r u c t u r e ,
b o t h p s y c h o l o g i c a l l y and s o c i a l l y , o f t h e s o c i e t y i n which
t h e y l i v e - There a r e many d i f f e r e n t aspects o f t h e s o c i e t y
t h a t need t o be reviewed, so l e t us s t a r t w i t h t h e concept
of b e l i e f . The w o r l d power s t r u c t u r e makes use o f b e l i e f
systems t o manipulate t h e p o p u l a t i o n .
1.The s t a t e o f b e l i e v i n g ; c o n v i c t i o n t h a t c e r t a i n
things are true; f a i t h , especially r e l i g i o u s f a i t h .
2.Trust o r confidence, as i n the b e l i e f i n a b i l i t y ,
3.Acceptance o f something as r e a l .
4.Anything b e l i e v e d o r accepted as t r u e -
5.An o p i n i o n ; e x p e c t a t i o n ; judgment
6.Creed o r d o c t r i n e .
I n a d d i t i o n , t h e d e f i n i t i o n o f t h e word b e l i e v e r e v e a l s
a d d i t i o n a l meanings:
1.To t a k e as r e a l o r t r u e .
2.To have confidence i n t h e promise o f another.
3.To suppose; t o expect; t o assume,
1 . A l l "whites" a r e i n f e r i o r
2 . B e l i e f s o f a Protestant R e l i g i o n
3,For a b o r t i o n and "pro-choice"
4.The "republican way"
0101
M A T R I X r r r
The I s - n e s s Aspect
The C o n c e ~ to f Premature C e r t a i n t y
A D i f f e r e n t L o o k a t Mu1 t i p l e P e r s o n a l i t i e s
0 1 0 4
M A T R I X I I I
1i tv
Pro-jectionand Res~onsibi
Humans are culturally conditioned to use various "ego-
defense mechanisms". One of the most used mechanisms is that
of projection. There are many examples that we could give that
illustrate how this is used, leading to the disempowerment of
the individual. The use of projection is one of the primary
psychological disorders in human society.
"When I went to the store, Joe said .... and I upset myself
because I reacted to what-he said in a certain way. Not
wanting to admit that it was my reaction, I projected the
responsibility for that reaction on Joe and said earlier
.
that "he" "made me mad", when i n fact I am responsible for
my own anger.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
P r o - j e c t i o n Encouraqed BY t h e Media
The B i o s o c i a l F i l t e r o f Consciousness
The e f f e c t o f s o c i e t y i s n o t o n l y t o f u n n e l f i c t i o n s i n t o
our consciousness, b u t a l s o t o p r e v e n t t h e awareness o f
r e a l i t y . Every s o c i e t y , by i t s own p r a c t i c e o f l i v i n g and by
the mode o f r e l a t e d n e s s , o f f e e l i n g , and p e r c e i v i n g , develops
M A T R I X I I I
DUALISMS W I T H I N SOCIETY
B e h a v i o r M o d i f i c a t i o n Throuqh
Educational Systems
D e s p i t e a l l t h i s l e g i s l a t i o n , t h e r e i s evidence t h a t i t i s
b e i n g a c t i v e l y circumvented i n a b l a t a n t a t t e m p t t o modify t h e
thoughts and f e e l i n g s o f c h i l d r e n a c c o r d i n g t o parameters s e t
b y t h e Carnegie Foundation, a R o c k e f e l l e r - b a s e d i n s t i t u t i o n .
Specifically, t h e r e i s evidence t h a t :
E n t i t i e s n o r m a l l y move f r e e l y i n non-physical e x i s t e n c e
from one " l o c u s o f f o c u s " t o another by d e s i r e / t h o u g h t / e m o t i o n
t h a t i s g i v e n " d i r e c t i o n " by w i l l , focused through conscious-
ness. The s i t u a t i o n i s r a d i c a l l y d i f f e r e n t when memory i s
b l o c k e d by n e u r o l o g i c a l f a c t o r s (and o t h e r f a c t o r s t o be
discussed l a t e r ) and t h e c o n s t r a i n t s o f b e i n g i n a body a r e
r e a l i z e d . Much o f e a r l y human e x i s t e n c e i s consumed by
f r u s t r a t i o n d u r i n g the e f f o r t t o o b t a i n c o n t r o l over t h e body;
t h i s , a l o n g w i t h the focus o f consciousness b e i n g p r o g r e s s i v e -
l y focussed through succeeding n e u r o l o g i c a l s t r u c t u r e s i n the
b r a i n as the p h y s i c a l organism develops, c o n t r i b u t e s t o
i n i t i a l and o f t e n permanent r e s t r i c t i o n o f the f o c u s o f
consciousness on the body. Add t h e requirement f o r p h y s i c a l
nourishment and t h e e m o t i o n a l h a b i t s t h a t r e s u l t from i t , and
you have an i n t e r e s t i n g s i t u a t i o n - I n a d d i t i o n , t h e p e r c e p t i o n
i s r e s t r i c t e d through t h e p h y s i c a l senses. Thus, t h e process
o f f o c u s o f conscious awareness i s t u r n e d t o t h e d u a l i t i e s o f
p a i n and p l e a s u r e ( t h r o u g h t h e r e p t i l i a n area o f t h e b r a i n ) ,
f l i g h t and f i g h t - e t c . A t t e n t i o n i s focused on t h e experienced
events and then t h e experience i s r e t a i n e d as a h a b i t u a l form
o f memory a l i g n e d i n a stimulus-response f a s h i o n . Emotion i s
an enhancer o f t h e s t o r a g e process f o r responses. A r e s u l t of
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Learning systems i n c u l t u r a l s e t t i n g s t y p i c a l l y f e a t u r e
s i t u a t i o n s where f l u c t u a t i n g a t t e n t i o n i s c a s t on low-order
r e p e t i t i v e tasks, such as r o t e memorizing, which d e n i g r a t e s
much o f the l e a r n i n g t h a t could p o t e n t i a l l y occur. These
methods o f " l e a r n i n g " (more l i k e c o n d i t i o n i n g ) a r e h e l d i n
h i g h esteem i n human existence; v i r t u a l l y a l l o f r e v o l v e s
around the knowledge, understanding, c o n t r o l and a p p l i c a t i o n
o f p h y s i c a l matter and energy systems generated t h e r e i n . T h i s
dominant y e t a r t i f i c i a l and l i m i t e d system o f l e a r n i n g
operates e n t i r e l y through i n p u t from f i v e p h y s i c a l senses; i t
has t h e e f f e c t o f e l i m i n a t i n g t h e l a s t v e s t i g e s o f i d e n t i t y
and s e l f - c o g n i t i o n from the i n d i v i d u a l .
One o f the a c t i v i t i e s t h a t w i l l c o n t r i b u t e t o q u i c k e r
passage through these lower v i b r a t i o n a l l e v e l s i s t o recognize
t h a t survival-based sexual t i e s must be addressed. Emotional
attachments t o i n d i v i d u a l s a r e based i n time-space r e a l i t i e s ,
and do n o t apply f u n c t i o n a l l y o u t s i d e t h e c o n s t r a i n t s o f these
l i m i t a t i o n s . No "male" o r "female" owes t h e o t h e r an
o b l i g a t i o n t o have sex - a survival-based a c t i v i t y . What i s
experienced i n t h e t h i r d d e n s i t y through sexual u n i o n i s a
f u n c t i o n o f t h e p s y c h o l o g i c a l d r i v e toward wholeness, which
i s motivated by t h e d u a l i s t i c fragmentation o f t h e psychic
whole by g e n e t i c and c u l t u r a l i n f l u e n c e s . Once i t i s
recognized f o r what i t t r u l y i s , t h e p a t t e r n s l o s e t h e i r
r e p e a t a b i l i t y and w i l l be released as b e h a v i o r a l c o n d i t i o n e r s .
On s t i l l a h i g h e r l e v e l o f examination, l e t us r e t u r n t o
t h e g e n e t i c programming which e x i s t s on a c e l l u l a r l e v e l w i t h -
i n t h e human b e i n g and examine some o f t h e areas o f i n t e r e s t
t h a t r e l a t e t o t h i s i s s u e . I n t h e human arena, the f a c t o r s o f
mass, energy, space and time p l a y an i m p o r t a n t p a r t . Humans
e x i s t as composite e n t i t i e s , i f you w i l l , because you have a
p h y s i c a l body ( a bio-chemical e l e c t r o n i c s t r u c t u r e made o f
mass which e x i s t s i n a t i m e - t r a c k , occupying space) which has
i t s own consciousness t h a t i s made up o f a h o l o g r a p h i c g e s t a l t
o f c e l l u l a r consciousness u l t i m a t e l y based on DNA s t r u c t u r e s
i n h e r i t e d from p r e v i o u s generations. The g e s t a l t consciousness
o f the body can be c a l l e d the g e n e t i c e n t i t y . I t appears t o
have t h e h i g h e s t d e n s i t y i n the middle o f t h e upper t o r s o o f
the p h y s i c a l body, which can be seen as a c o n t a i n e r o r v e s s e l
f o r t h e b e i n g which manipulates i t . As mentioned b e f o r e , any
event which i s experienced by a human b e i n g w i t h an emotional
component i s recorded on quantum l e v e l s w i t h i n t h e g e n e t i c
s t r u c t u r e on a c e l l u l a r l e v e l - i n t r u t h , experience i s
recorded, a l o n g w i t h emotional p a t t e r n s a s s o c i a t e d w i t h t h a t
experience, Mental p i c t u r e s a r e a l s o recorded. Many times,
experiences may i n c l u d e p e r i o d s o f p h y s i c a l p a i n o r p e r i o d s o f
unconsciousness a s s o c i a t e d w i t h p h y s i c a l i n j u r y o r emotional
trauma. These memory t r a c e s a r e v e r y o f t e n h e l d a t s p e c i f i c
p o i n t s on the t i m e - t r a c k o f t h e p h y s i o l o g i c a l s t r u c t u r e i n
which they occur - these p o i n t s can re-impress t h e memory and
a s s o c i a t e d emotional p a t t e r n s a l o n g harmonic increments o f
t h e t i m e - t r a c k i n which o t h e r p h y s i c a l bodies e x i s t t h a t a r e
g e n e t i c descendants o f t h e body o r i g i n a l l y impressed.
W i t h i n t h e t o t a l composite mental s t r u c t u r e , t h e r e i s an
area which i s based t o t a l l y i n stimulus-response, r e l a t i n g t o
s e v e r a l o f t h e lower b r a i n s t r u c t u r e s p r e v i o u s l y mentioned. I t
i s t h i s area where t h e composite g e n e t i c memory t r a c e s and
a s s o c i a t e d emotional r e a c t i v e p a t t e r n s appear t o be s t o r e d . I t
a l s o appears t o be t h e source of mental and e m o t i o n a l abbera-
t i o n and "psychosomatic" problems. T h i s r e a c t i v e mental area
a c t s below t h e l e v e l o f waking consciousness w i t h i n most human
beings, and a l s o r e t a i n s event t r a c e s t h a t occur d u r i n g
p e r i o d s when t h e human i s "unconscious". I n a c t u a l i t y , i t i s
an area i n t h e mind, as i t were, t h a t i s always conscious. I t
r e t a i n s t h e memory o f how many s t e p s you took t o t h e bathroom
t h i s morning. T h i s r e a c t i v e mind s t r u c t u r e can e x e r t i n f l u e n c e
on a sub-conscious b a s i s on human a c t i o n s , thoughts, and t h e
M A T R I X 1 1 1
r e q u i r e any s t r u c t u r e a t a l l t o e x i s t . I t u l t i m a t e l y e x i s t s i n
and i s d e r i v e d from a U n i v e r s a l I n t e l l i g e n t M a t r i x which i s
beyond t h e spectrum of v i s i b l e l i g h t ( w h i c h humans, u s i n g
d u a l i s t i c anthropomorphic p r o j e c t i o n , r e f e r t o as "God").
I t i s a p p a r e n t l y uncommon f o r a g e n e t i c e n t i t y t o h o s t t h e
same occupying s p i r i t u a l component t w i c e ; t h i s appears t o
r e f l e c t t h e o v e r a l l tendency w i t h i n t h e o p e r a t i v e m a n i f e s t a -
t i o n o f the Universal I n t e l l i g e n t M a t r i x f o r maximization o f
experiential d i f f e r e n t i a t i o n , allowing genetic structures a
p l e t h o r a o f c o n t r o l l i n g h o s t e n t i t i e s . I n o t h e r words, you
as t h e s p i r i t u a l occupying e n t i t y i n t h e s p e c i f i c body and
g e n e t i c l i n e you a r e i n , have never l i v e d b e f o r e t h i s l i f e -
time.
The g e n e t i c e n t i t y a p p a r e n t l y e n t e r s t h e p r o t o p l a s m l i n e
some two days t o a week p r i o r t o c o n c e p t i o n . Since t h e g e n e t i c
e n t i t y appears t o answer, i n p r e s e n t time, i n a d u a l manner
when q u e r i e d t h r o u g h muscle t e s t i n g and o t h e r methods, i t i s
suspected t h a t t h e g e n e t i c e n t i t y i s i n f a c t a "double e n t i t y "
where one " s i d e " e n t e r s v i a t h e p r o t o p l a s m i n t h e sperm and
t h e o t h e r " s i d e " t h r o u g h t h e p r o t o p l a s m i n t h e ovum.
An i n t e r e s t i n g aspect o f t h e c o m b i n a t i o n o f t h e g e n e t i c
e n t i t y and a occupying s p i r i t u a l e n t i t y i s t h a t t h e r e seems t o
be some evidence t h a t b o t h components o f t h e composite human
b e i n g c a r r y f a c s i m i l e s o f t h e memory o f each o t h e r , p r o d u c i n g
m u l t i p l e f a c s i m i l e s o f " p a s t " deaths f o r t h e same p e r i o d o f
l i n e a r time. The e x i s t e n c e o f f a c s i m i l e s i n e i t h e r t h e g e n e t i c
e n t i t y o r t h e occupying s p i r i t u a l e n t i t y has a tendency t o
r e s t i m u l a t e v i s u a l s which have t h e i r o r i g i n w i t h
former g e n e t i c e n t i t i e s o r occupying s p i r i t u a l e n t i t i e s .
01 18
M A T R I X 1 1 1
O U T S I D E THE S T R I C T L Y "HUMAN" E X P E R I E N C E
(Level Four)
F u r t h e r c o m p l i c a t i n g the human s i t u a t i o n , t h e r e a r e
e x t r a - t e r r e s t r i a l g e n e t i c e n t i t i e s t h a t might have been used
by occupying s p i r i t u a l e n t i t i e s t h a t have t h e i r own memory
s t r u c t u r e s which may have no reference p o i n t when compared t o
Earth-bound memory tracks; conversely, occupying s p i r i t u a l
e n t i t i e s may o r i g i n a t e e x t r a - t e r r e s t r i a l l y and occupy a E a r t h
bound g e n e t i c l i n e .
1. I n r e l a t i o n t o a p h y s i c a l body, a Being e x i s t s i n a
r e l a t i o n a l way as a i n t e l l i g e n t f i e l d s t r u c t u r e o f v a r y i n g
d e n s i t y t h a t i n t e r p e n e t r a t e s t h e body i n v a r y i n g degrees.
f l u c t u a t i n g f i e l d s which have an e f f e c t on t h e
motor c o n t r o l s on e i t h e r s i d e of the head.
Devices
The e x i s t e n c e o f v a r i o u s devices t h a t a r e i n s e r t e d i n t o
t h e p h y s i c a l body as i m p l a n t s i s commonly known, and much o f
t h a t i n f o r m a t i o n i s g e n e r a l l y discussed i n M a t r i x 11, w i t h
s p e c i a l emphasis on t h e r a t i o n a l e behind the p r a c t i c e . The
research t h a t has o c c u r r e d s i n c e M a t r i x I 1 was w r i t t e n seems
t o p o i n t t o t h e e x i s t e n c e o f v a r i o u s devices t h a t a r e a t t a c h e d
t o what a r e c o l l o q u i a l l y known as t h e e t h e r i c , emotional,
a s t r a l and mental " b o d i e s " ( o r f i e l d s t r u c t u r e s ) which i n t e r -
p e n e t r a t e t h e body. I t m i g h t be mentioned, i n t h i s c o n t e x t ,
t h a t t h e human body ( o f t e n r e f e r r e d t o as a " c o n t a i n e r " ) i s
seen as an a c t u a l " I D t a g " by some groups o f m a n i p u l a t i v e
e n t i t i e s , housing what amounts t o a " c a p t i v e amnesiac
consciousness o f another e n t i t y " . What b e t t e r way t o conquer
ones "enemies" than t o e l e c t r o n i c a l l y manipulate them, f o r c e
them i n t o p h y s i c a l bodies, induce amnesia, and program them
w i t h compulsions t o remain i n t h e c y c l e o f p h y s i c a l
i n c a r n a t i o n ? Sound f a r o u t ? I t i s , and t h e r e i s s i g n i f i c a n t
evidence t o i n d i c a t e t h a t t h i s p r a c t i c e i s o c c u r r i n g , a l t h o u g h
one s h o u l d be aware t h a t no process i s g e n e r a l l y a p p l i c a b l e t o
a l l Beings t h a t u t i l i z e bodies, f o r one must make allowance
0120
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Embedded E n t i t i e s
D i r e c t i v e E l e c t r o n i c R i d g e Implants
Chapter 5
The U s e of F l u o r i d e Compounds
I t i s c r u c i a l t o r e c o g n i z e from t h e o u t s e t t h a t
f l u o r i d e i s a h i g h l y t o x i c substance. A p p r e c i a t i o n o f t h i s
s i m p l e p o i n t makes i t e a s i e r t o understand t h e n a t u r a l
r e l u c t a n c e on t h e p a r t o f some t o accept w i t h o u t q u e s t i o n
t h e p o l i c y o f compulsory i n g e s t i o n o f a p o i s o n t o o b t a i n
what i s a l l e g e d t o be p a r t i a l c o n t r o l o f what would
g e n e r a l l y be regarded as a noncommunicable disease. The
p o t e n t t o x i c i t y o f f l u o r i d e and t h e narrow l i m i t s o f human
t o l e r a n c e (between 1-5ppm) make t h e q u e s t i o n o f optimum
c o n c e n t r a t i o n o f paramount importance.
E n v i ronment a l P o l l u t i o n By Fluorides
The F l u o r i d e Gambit
I t was i n 1933 t h a t t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s P u b l i c H e a l t h
S e r v i c e (USPHS) became p a r t i c u l a r l y concerned about t h e
p o i s o n i n g e f f e c t o f f l u o r i d e and i t s e f f e c t on t e e t h , and
t h e y determined t h a t d e n t a l f l u o r o s i s ( t e e t h m o t t l e d w i t h
y e l l o w , brown o r b l a c k s t a i n s ) o c c u r r e d among 25-30% o f
c h i l d r e n when j u s t over lppm o f f l u o r i d e was p r e s e n t i n
d r i n k i n g water.
I n 1939 t h e M e l l o n I n s t i t u t e employed a s c i e n t i s t ,
Dr. G e r a l d Cox, t o f i n d a v i a b l e m a r k e t f o r t h e i n d u s t r i a l
f l u o r i n e w a s t e s associated w i t h the production o f
aluminum. A t a meeting o f water e n g i n e e r s i n 1939, Cox
f i r s t p u t f o r w a r d h i s i d e a t o add f l u o r i d e t o t h e p u b l i c
water s u p p l i e s . By 1940, Cox had become a member o f t h e
Food and N u t r i t i o n Board o f t h e N a t i o n a l Research C o u n c i l ,
and he prepared f o r them a s e r i e s o f submissions s t r o n g l y
p r o m o t i n g t h e i d e a o f a r t i f i c i a l water f l u o r i d a t i o n as a
means o f r e d u c i n g t o o t h decay. H i s recommendation was
based on t h e f o l l o w i n g :
I n a w i d e l y c i r c u l a t e d r e p o r t i n 1941, a p o p u l a r
magazine r e p o r t e d t h e case o f D r . George Heard, a d e n t i s t
i n Deaf Smith County, Texas, who c l a i m e d t h a t he had no
b u s i n e s s because o f t h e n a t u r a l f l u o r i d e i n t h e water.
L a t e r , when D r . Heard found m o t t l e d t e e t h t o o b r i t t l e t o
f i l l and a r u s h i n g b u s i n e s s a f t e r supermarkets moved i n
w i t h processed foods, he t r i e d i n v a i n t o s e t t h e r e c o r d
s t r a i g h t . He c o u l d f i n d no p u b l i s h e r f o r h i s new
i n f o r m a t i o n . H i s o r i g i n a l a r t i c l e was e n t i t l e d "A Town
W i t h o u t a Toothachem- Since t h e use o f f l u o r i d e a c t u k l l y
i n c r e a s e s t h e p r o f i t s o f t h e d e n t a l i n d u s t r y , i t i s no
wonder t h a t t h e American D e n t a l A s s o c i a t i o n promotes t h e
use o f f l u o r i d e and f l u o r i d e t o o t h p a s t e s .
', \ 1
R i p p a c k e t ( a t n o t c h ) cross t l ~ clo11 r r c s T p a r k r t oprtl lrilo " V " ( I ~ o l d l n g E n ~ p t ypacket inlornoc#tha n d s u l s h
(holding packet uprlgllt). llpll~lll) v l ~ o r ~ u s l oy r 1 m l n u t c .
Or. cut w i t h s a l e t y sclssorr.
pdf '0.2%
.'
Hold nacbet upright and
cut acrorr top with scirrorr.
RX pdf 0.2%. NDC: 5 2 1 3 5 - 9 5 5 D e n t a l R i n s e o f Sodium F l u o r i d e .
DC5cn1Pr10U:
0.22 s o J i u r f l u o r i d e (:laf) i n a f l a v o r e d o r f l a v o r l c s s . n e u t r a l aqueous s o l u -
t i o n . F o r weekly ~ t s eas J c a r i e s p r e v e n t i v e i n c h i l d r e n and t o t r e a t d e n t a l c e r v i c a l h y p e r -
s e n t i v i t y . CLlfJlCAL PWAR;4ACOLOCY: T o p i c a l a p p l i c a t i o n o f sodium f l u o r i d e i n c r e a s e s t o o t h r e -
s i s t a n c e t o a c i d d i s s o l u t i o n . promotes r e * i n e r . ~ l i t ~ t i o n and.
. i n h i b i t s the cariogenic a i c r o -
b i a l process. When t o p i c a l f l u o r i d e i s a p p l i e d t o h y p e r s e n s i t i v e exposed d e n t i n e , i t r e s u l t s
i n t h e f o r m a t i o n o f i n s o l u b l e q a t e r i a l s w i t h i n t h e d e n t i n a l t u b u l e s and t h i s , i n t u r n , i s
b e l i e v e d t o b l o c k t h e t r a n s r i s s i o n o f o f f e n d i n ? s t i a u l i . IHDICAlIO!JS AN0 USAGE: I t has been
e s t a b l i s h e d t h a t weekly r i n 5 i n 9 ail11 n e u t r a l 0 . X sodium f l u o r i d e s o l u t i o n p r o t e c t s a g a i n s t
dcnl.31 c a r i e s i n c h i l d r e n . ?Or 0.2: Ucekly D e n t ~ R l i n s e i s ready-to-use. f l a v o r e d o r F l a -
vorless p r r p a r a t i o n Fsr convcnicnt adninistratinns.
COIJlRAIt~D1CAlIOIl.~:!lone. (:lay be used wheter d r i n k i n g w a l e r i s f l u o r i d a t e d o r not, s i n c e t o -
p i c a l canttot p r o d u c e s f l u o r o s i s . )
...-
wI*,,ll -:
-.
llll; 0 0 1101 SW:ILLOg. 110 N31 IJSE (5111 o r l O n i ) I N CllILDRfA UWOER AGE 5 SIllCE YOUllCER
cllllonl.rl rRfouE:lrLY CAI~:I~)T ~ C F F O R CI; ~ nrrlsE ruocrs: u r r t r o u i sIcrrrfic,trri swmLLnwrnc.
00 1101 USE (1031) 111 C;IlLDREtI III:DER hGE 5 .
As i n t h e case o f a l l r c d i c r t i o n s , KEEP OUI OF REACII Of CIIILOREII.
PRECAUTION: !lot f o r s y s t r i i c v r c .
A c
American
Dental
(;
Association
E I> 1:.
B o u c h c r v i 1l e ( O u i b e c )
Canada J~~B-SII3
FLUORIDE Weekly mouthrinsing with a
fluoride solution in school is
a desirable program because:
Protection
. effective.
Few materials are
needed.
Weekly mouthrinsing w i t h 0.2
percent neutral sodium fluoride:
For Children's Llttle time is requlred
for the procedure-only
requlres m~nlrnaltlme and
effort.
Teeth 3 minutes per week for
provldes effect~veprotectlon
an average class.
agalnst cavltles.
Mouthrlnslng is easy for
school chlldren of all IS well accepted.
ages to learn and to do
Non-dental personnel, For more ~nformationon how to
lncludlng classroom lnltlate a fluoride mouthrtnslng
teacners and parents. program In your school contact.
j ~ 0 0 t hdecay is t h e m o s t wlth mln~rnaltralnlng can DENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM
widespread, chronic disease easlly supervise the
school program of weekly Office of Parent-Child Health
of childhood and often
requires extensive and
costly repair. B u t effective
methods t o prevent i t a r e
rlnslng wlth a 0 2 percent
solut~onof neutral sod~um
fluor~de1s recommended for
protectlnrr agalnst cavltles
. procedure.
The procedure is well
accepted by part~cipants.
Services
Airdustrial P a r k , Building 3
LC-118
available. parents, and school Olympia, W A 9 8 5 0 4
Results of research done personnel. (206) 7 5 3 - 5 4 2 3
The best way t o prevent d u r ~ n gthe past 10 years
tooth decay 1s to adjust the have shown t h a t chlldren who More than 1 2 million
amount of fluor~de~n a use thls procedure will have school chlldren now
community's drlnklng water about 35 percent fewer participate in thls
Drrnkrng fluor~datedwater cavrtres than otherwise preventive procedure
from brrth reduces tooth expected
decay by as mush as 65 Results from a few studies
percent. However, one-s~xth suggest t h a t youngsters who
of all Americans cannot have are benefiting from
fluoridated water because comrnun~tywater fluoridation
they live in areas w ~ t h o u t may receive added protectlon
central water supplies. An from the use of a fluoride
addit~onalone-th~rdof the mouthrlnse.
U.S. population is not
recelvlng thls benefit because The procedure is simple. Once
thew comrnun~t~es have not a week, under supervision. #$EZF XX~AL
d HEALM
yet adopted water the students rinse the
fluor~dat~on. fluoride solution between
thew teeth for one rnlnute DENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM
For chlldren and youth 6 and then ~t is returned t o
through 78 who l ~ v e~n Office of Parent-Ch~ldHealth
the cup for proper dlspostng DSHS 2 2 - 4 5 4 1986
fluor~dedeflclent areas, a
School Dental Health Program
Fluaide Mouthrinse Program Infonnatioo and Consent Form
YOU c~us dass M I be given the oppomtnnVto p d d p m h o p r o ~ l o mthot has been shown to reduce tooth
decoybyupto35pucont. 0nceoweekthoughanthe~yeor.gotldpotlngchldrenwil~thek
mouthstor one mlnute wttb a fborldem o w . Thk procedue k safe and b endomd by the U S Publk
em sen~cetond by me Woshhgton ~ureouol parent and C N ~earm ~ ~upenrl~on by the
ctaraxxnteacher It to azwe that the rlns8 b not swallowed 01 swallowed. the rnouthrhw, could cause a mild
stomach upset).
W e M d e treatments ore among the most succeaN memods of pmanthg tooth decoy. bnnhlng teeth
and use of dental flossMI ako reduce tooth decay and should be anfed out to~emerwtm any nuodde
Irsdment. T h e r e t o r e . ~ W m t h e ~ r l d e ~ . ) r g y C M d w i l ~ a ~ ~ t e c t v
and dalW toothbmshhg rnoy be conducted inthe cbsroam.
The nuorlde hse used h thit program k neither a - M e forw nwrldes. such as drops or tablets, wMch
hove been pcetulbed by you dentkt or physldon. nor doer it npkce me need fa regukr can, by you
dentlst.
Y o u chlkj's partidpgtkn h this progmm k entirety voluntoy. Snald you dedde to wlh&aw your consent at a
kter date. you moy do so. W you would Mce addltknd lrdonnanar about ?henuorIde rhse progmm before you
dedde whether or not to glve y o u pecmkslbn.
The a d d i t i o n o f c h l o r i n e t o p u b l i c water s u p p l i e s i s
mandated by s t a t e law i n most areas, i n s u r i n g t h e r a p i d
r i s e of h e a r t problems and h i g h p r o f i t s i n medical areas.
The Use o f N i t r a t e s
01 37
M A T R I X 111
S o f t d r i n k s c o n t a i n l a r g e amounts of phosphoric
and c i t r i c a c i d s ( i n an aluminum can), which increases t h e
a c i d i t y l e v e l o f t h e e n t i r e body; r e s u l t s o f t e n m a n i f e s t
as mouth canker sores and duodenal u l c e r s . Cola d r i n k s
increase h e a r t a c t i o n , cause i r r i t a b i l i t y and r e s u l t i n g
insomnia, and can cause p a r a l y s i s o f t h e h e a r t . Beer
c o n t a i n s gypsum, b e t t e r known as P l a s t e r o f P a r i s . Hops i n
beer can cause a h y p n o t i c e f f e c t and can cause d e l i r i u m
tremens .
Caramel, a l s o w i d e l y used, i s prepared from ammonia;
i t i s suspected i n t h e m a n i f e s t a t i o n o f some mental
disorders i n children.
Bombardment of Food W i t h N u c l e a r R a d i a t i o n
A s w i t h a l l t h e o t h e r instances o f d e l i b e r a t e a d d i t i o n
o f harmful substances t o t h e f o o d and water, a s u r p l u s o f
m a t e r i a l s ( t h i s t i m e r a d i o a c t i v e ) prompted t h e " b r i l l i a n t "
idea o f i r r a d i a t i o n o f food. The most commonly used
substance f o r t h i s process i s Cobalt-60. The f i r s t
commercial i n s t a n c e o f food i r r a d i a t i o n took p l a c e i n 1957
i n Germany, where i t was used t o s t e r i l i z e spices. The
r e s u l t s were so d i s t u r b i n g t h e government banned t h e pro-
cedure t h e f o l l o w i n g year.
Environments 1 Chemica 1s
t h e phenomena o f autism, a b r a i n d i s o r d e r t h a t a f f e c t s
many c h i l d r e n . A f t e r a three-year study, many p a r e n t s o f
a u t i s t i c c h i l d r e n were found t o have l i v e d i n Leominster
Massachusetts across from where t h e o l d Foster Grant sun-
g l a s s p l a n t used t o be. High l e v e l s o f smoke c o n t a i n i n g
v i n y l c h l o r i d e t h a t would always envelope t h e neighborhood
a r e thought t o have wrought g e n e t i c changes t h a t produced
t h e autism i n t h e c h i l d r e n . More than 46 cases of c h i l d r e n
having autism were t r a c e d t o t h e two s t r e e t s across from
t h e p l a n t . The company has s i n c e gone bankrupt, and t h e
area i s c u r r e n t l y under an environmental cleanup program.
As i f t h e f l u o r i d e by-products o f t h e Aluminum
i n d u s t r y weren't bad enough, t h e use o f aluminum i n o u r
s o c i e t y (check your t o o t h p a s t e tube) d i r e c t l y causes t h e
disease known as Alzheimer's disease. Over 3 m i l l i o n
people i n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s a r e c u r r e n t l y a f f e c t e d w i t h
t h i s strange, i n c u r a b l e disease. I t s v i c t i m s b r i n g t h e
medical c a r t e l over $50 b i l l i o n each year. The presence o f
Aluminum, l i k e f l u o r i d e s , a f f e c t s t h e n e u r o t r a n s m i t t e r s i n
t h e b r a i n . The p r i n c i p a l agent seems t o be t h e
accumulation o f aluminum d e p o s i t s on t h e p r i n c i p a l nerves
o f t h e b r a i n . About 70% o f t h e c o s t s o f t h i s i l l n e s s i s
borne by t h e f a m i l i e s o f t h e a f f l i c t e d , as most Medicare
and p r i v a t e h e a l t h insurance programs r e f u s e t o pay i t .
Scmnlrsf5Avgvsf 1989
Nrw
Trace aluminium affects kidney patients
IDNEY patientsin Britain are aeain
the body. In
brain responds in patlents whose blood from the ntient passes through an artificial
dialys~s. blood
alum~niumis removed. Because the enzyme
niar-!
oisonin . Scientists have re ular dialysis to remove wastes and may provide a useful marker for what 1s
toxins t going on in the braln. says Altmann.
and the blood.
I
..
amount of .aluminium that enters a patlent7s mented. All appeared mentally well. Ilow- a higher rate of Alzheimer's than the
body. I t s c learlv a much more toxic ever. when he asked 21 patients to do general population. i t is interesting to ask
a."
I %E%n re
says varlnus compr~terisedpsycholo~caltests- whether our patients represent some sort of
such as matching shapes with tp~ts-tlie~r model for Alzhe~mer's."savsAlt~nann
Since the 1970s. researchers have known respvnscs were sipn~ficantlyless accurate
T. h...r
that. without careful monitorlnp, kitlney arid slower than tliose ol tlic control group.
pattents risk fatal brain damage aritl tlcmcn- I r i atld~tlon, tllc resc;irchcrs tested I 0 slrnllar to that Fcen
t ~ ; i . hone discase and anaemia hccause of patients hy measuring the elcctr~calactiv~rv w ~ t hAlzhcinier's
thc large amounts of alum~niumthat they o f t h c ~ rhra~liswhile thcv gave thc111visr~al Me;lnwh~lc. . Ackrill i o ~.........
.. r n ~ t r ....
.. .. ... ix ~h ....
~ nc t c tthr
can cri&unter. stlmr~lifrom fl;lzl~inglight; ant1 a reversing ~~sefulcness of Incarurlng alurn~niu~rl Ic\cl\
Kldney paticnrs arc cxpored to pilttcrn I h c ~ rrcsponscs to pattern wcrc ;IS in tlic hlootl nlo~lc lliic ~c hcc;iusr zo nruc.11
m two sources. First. people rapid as a normal person's, hut their of the tnctal may hc stored in tile tlscues.
a l u m ~ n ~ ufrom
whose kidneys malfunct~onoften need t o responses to the flash were sign~f~cantly only to bc mohil~sedat some later stape. I lc
take medicines which contaln aluminium in delayed compared w ~ t h those of the believes that researchers need a much hcttcr
order to blnd phosphates that they could not control group. way of rneazurlng total alumlnlum levels
otherwise excrete. In a day. a patlent may Another of Altmann's tests involved an before they can tell if someone is "overtly
take more than a gram of alumln~umIn enzyme called erythrocyte dihydropteridine 10x1~"or not
these medicines, whereas a normal diet rcductase m. D i s -ne- Both teams agree. however. that
contalns less than 2 milligrams a day. Some volved In the ~ r o d u c t l o no f certaln- the n o r ~ t i e s are l o find a satlsfactorv
of the metal in the medicines is in a soluble transniitters in the -b alter$at!ve lo nledlclnes that cvntalq
form and can. therefore, enter the can measure tt in theAltmann has aluni~n~um-at present. there 1s none-and
bloodstreqn. shown thatalumin~um~ n and to persuade m water companies t o stop treat-
Secondly. most kidney patients must that the enzyme becomes more active if ine water w ~ t ha l u m ~ n ~ usulphatc. m 0
-
M A T R I X 111
B.M.G.Pharmaceutical Products, I n c .
Boucherville, Quebec, Canada
The C I A and D r u g T r a f f i c k i n g
Tobacco: A Commentary
There i s a s p e c i f i c k i n d o f chemical r e a c t i o n t h a t
occurs when substances are combined and then burned,
c a l l e d a s y n e r g i s t i c reaction. Due t o t h i s k i n d o f heat
r e l a t e d reaction, these substances combine t o form cancer-
causing compounds. What are these substances?
Sugar
Acetone
0152
M A T R I X III
Methyl S a l i c y l a t e
Turpentine
Caramel
She1 l a c
Catechol
Acetyldehyde
Amino Acids
G l y c y r r h i z i c Acid
Because o f t h e opium a d d i t i v e , t h e a d d i c t i o n t o
c i g a r e t t e s would s t i m u l a t e t h e 1 s t area o f b r a i n
s t r u c t u r e ; people would be thrown i n t o a continuous round
o f s t r e s s t h a t i s r e l a t e d t o p r i m i t i v e areas o f t h e b r a i n
i n between c i g a r e t t e s .
L i k e a n y t h i n g e l s e i n t h i s s o c i e t y , what i s k e p t
s e c r e t from t h e p u b l i c always appears t o r e l a t e t o what i s
n o t good f o r them. Even t h e F O I A w i l l n o t breach t h i s
b a r r i e r . . ..yet.
o f a chemical, b a c t e r i o l o g i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c n a t u r e , t h a t
has as one o f i t s o b j e c t i v e s t h e s h u t t i n g down o f t h e
p h y s i o l o g i c a l systems o f t h e p o p u l a t i o n t o t h e p o i n t where
they e v e n t u a l l y w i l l be unable t o bear c h i l d r e n , o r t h e
c h i l d r e n w i l l be so deformed and r e t a r d e d i t might r e s u l t
i n l e g a l s t a t u t e s t h a t mandate t h a t i n d i v i d u a l s be
" t e s t e d " b e f o r e they w i l l be p e r m i t t e d t o have a c h i l d .
The usual modes o f p a r e n t i n g and conception by i n d i v i d u a l s
w i 11 be bypassed.
CUL o R / n ~ c/hl h4 q
.Dc/-rm70k/C
.WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1992 AS-'-
NI T RATES
IN SOIL AND WATER
Mike Saul1
C- - 8
I
ycar. lrvcn u ~ d cspring
r harlcy. wliicli Icavcs N lc175 thc EEC issuccl a "l)rinkiag Cicrmany around Ilan~hurgand Ilrcmcn.
the soil hare ant1 more prone l o nitrate Watcr Dircctivc". I t sct a lcg;~lliniit crf A study carried out for the French
leaching during the s u k q u c n t wet winter not more than 50 milligrams of nitrate Ministry of Puhlic Iicalth rcvcalcd that 2
months, thcy found that only 7 per cent of pcr litrc of drinkin* watcr. This fina!ly per ccnt of tlic population (1.2 niillion
thc 110 or 120 kilograms of nitrogcn lhcy had canlc into forcc in 1985. But almcat all LC pcoplc) cons~~nicd watcr with marc than
applied was kachcd. mc~nlrcrc o ~ m t r i afail t l r standard i n 50 inilipranrs of nitratc pcr litrc. and 0.6
l h c y conclude that i f a nitrogcn fertiliser some areas. per cent of the population consumcd water
is given i n the correct dosagc for a givcn crop I n 19% Britain's Dcpartment of the containing more than double the E C limit.
i t does not cause nitrate pollution. So where Environment did a survey which found A latcr inventory i n 1987 rcvcalcd that
dncs the nitrate. found i n increasing that 82 water supplies, scrving 2.5 million although fcwcr French p o p l e werc drink-
quantitites i n drinking water. m m e from? people. hrcachcd the E C limit on one or ing water with mnre than 100 milligrams
British researchers traced what happens In more days. L i t year, a nationwide survey nitrate per litre. mnre water contained
the nitrogen i n the fertiliser by labelling i t i n Britain showed that 74 watcr supplies. nitrate i n excess of 50 milligrams per litre.
with the isotnpc nitrogen-15. They found serving 1.6million pcopie.contained more The wetter. more fertile nonh o f France
that most nitrate i n water unna from vast than 50 milligrams of nitratc per litre o f has the mmt nitrate-rich drinkln#.watcr.
reserves o f nitrogen that were held naturally water, albeit not much more. H w e v c r . Affected areas indude the NorJ-Pas-de-
i n the dl before and while k r m c n in- the amount of nitrate by which supplies Calais. Brittany. the Paris Basin. the h i r e
troduced intensive practices. Rexarchcn i n exceed thc E C limit is increasing. This country. Poitou-Charentes a d Cham-
Sweden have confirmed the British results. is particularly so i n the main farming areas pagne-Ardcnnes.
They found that whether or not thcy applicd of Britain such as Norfolk, Camhridge- Drainage o f some Swedish wetlands has
spring fcniliser t o their experimental plots. shire. lincnlnshire and Hcreford and provided the country with some very
the snil still releascd nitratc. Wornstenhire. productive soils that are rich i n organic
Undisturbed soils under natural vepta- Five t o I 0 pcr cent o f West Germany's matter. About 10 per cent o f the arable
tion a n have nitrogen rcsems of as m i r h as drinking water-largely from bnrcholcs. areas have soils containing more than
H)OO kilograms pcr hectare. Most of tliis is rather than rivers as i n France and Brit- 20 pcr cent organic matter and thus
held as insoluble nitrogen and comes from ain--contain water with nitrates above 50 large reserves of nitrogen. Despite that-
d c m m p s c d organic matter. Microhes crm- milligrams pcr litre. Average mnccntra- hut only until recently-Swedish farmers
vcrt this nitrogen t o ammonium and then to tions, however. are rising by bctween 1 applied fertiliser t o soils i n which resenes
the mobile nitrate bnn. not when crops and 2 milligrams per litre cvcry year i n of nitrogen oftcn ejlceedcd the require-
nced it. hut when cnnditicwis suit. areas that arc a~ltivatcdintensively. The mcnts of the crops grown on them. One
Warm tcmperaturcs. moisture and acr- higlicst lcvcls arc fmm watcr bcnealh thc result was tlic eutrophication of surround-
ation dt~ringcultivation encourap micro- lighter soils. much as those of mrthern ing lakes and riven. 0
organisms t o make nitrates. Thcrc is no
evidence that fertilisers directly affect the
amount of nitrate i n water, hut Isritish watcr and air spaccc or p r c s make u p the tcmperate wils. Rcscarchcrs at the U n i w r -
researchers believe there are indirect cffecls. ~mn-livingand dead ingrcdientr of soil. The sity o f Reading calculate that i t takes up to
relatiw niix of sand, silt, clay and organc
l h e y think that adding nitrogen i n fertilisers fivc times more rain to Icach nitrate from a
stimulates micmhial activity. This. i n turn. matter detcrmines its texture and con- trnpical soil than frnm a tcmperate soil with
releases some o f the nitrogen that is hound scqucntlv the way i t behaves when watcr similar physical charactcristics. But leaching
onto organic matter and otherwise mrt avail- mows through the mil. is still important: reduced mobility o f nitrate
able for leaching. Clay particles are invisihle to the naked is trffset by more rain.
eye. They arc held together by strong chcmi-
How rrtuclr is leaclrccl? cal forces, which is why clay feels sticky. Silt
porticks a n smooth and silky, like talcum
The answer lies in the soil powder. l h c y rangc from 0.002 millimctrcs
to 0.M miliimctres i n diameter. Sand prti-
Feel the texture
TII E F A T E o f nitrate depends very much on cks are large enough t o see. Thcir sire C U L T I V A T I N G crops has an enormous
the type and state o f a soil, the influcncc of ranges frmn 0.06 millimelres l o 2.0 effca on nitratc Icaching. Growing plants
wgetatinn and the amnunt of rainfall infil- millimetres. Larger one. are classcd as take up water and nitrate. thus tending to
trating and percolating through the top stones. Organic matter in the soil is made up counteract leaching. However. at low tem-
lavers.
~, of the residues o f plant and animal rcmains. peratures i n wintcr. o r carly spring. bccausc
Soils are a mix o f differently sized mineral I t is usually amcentrated i n the top 10 they arc not growing and transpiring. plants
~articlcsand a rich diversity o f micronom ccnti~nctresof undisturbcd soils. or t o the cannot use nitrogcn. So. givcn sufficient
;nd fauna. Sand, silt. clay, organic matter, depth thcv arc cultivated by ploughs or n t l ~ c r rainfall. thc snil is likcly t o Insc niore nitratc.
equipment. I n contrast. frccring hinders the flow of
A wril that atntains sand. silt and clay i n watcr niovenicnt thrcrngli tlic soil and thus
equal proportions is callcd a loam. 7 h c tcmprrarilv prcvcnts Icacliing.
surfoccs of particles of clay arc ncgativcly I h c r c arc also hig diffcrcnccs i n how wcll
chargcd. 'l'hcy attract positively charged crops kccp n i l r a t a in soils. Potatoes. for
ccrmpcn~ndsand ions that mnve around i n thc cxaaiplc. have shallow rnnts and nced a lot
Ihcse positively charged spe-
soil wa,l~~lion. of fcrtiliscr. 1:arnicrs also nced to apply
c k s incltuk t l ~ cammonii~m ion. calci~tm r a t c r (irrigate) i f tlicy arc t o p r d u c c high
(Cay*). ~tassiuuat(K*) and hydropcn (11'). yiclds. So, givcn tlic right lypc o f soil.
Nitratc stays i n snlulion. free to mnve growing pflatncs could lead to Im.of much
arountl within the soil. nitratc through Icachiog.
Many tropical atils have a ncl positivc \\'kcat scwn i n thc wintcr i t s ~ ~ a l lpro- y
chargc which Iiolds much of the nitratc i c i tluccs pwtl dccp rcnlls acicl uses not only a lot
soil watcr. The amount of nitrate last aftcr of applied nitrogcn hut also much of t l ~ c
rainfall dcpcnds on the n u m k r of positively aitratc prcnluccd (luring !hc autunin hy
charged sites. the speed o f the reaction. tlie micrmrpanisms acting on nitrogcn rcscrvcs
Esrlrn8led mrounl d nllrogcn Icrllllser amount o f water and its rate o f movcnicnt. i n thc soil. Wintcr wl~catalso protccts tlic
M r ~ b b a k n h c d k ~ S O m m h ~ p a c MTropical
c mils o f the right texture and struc-. soil from k i n g washed away with the rains.
d s Mar lOOmm excess mlnhll lure can he less of a leaching risk than Soils vary i n their ahility chemically to
WINTER
CEREALS
POTATOES
Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July Aug Sep Od
t o the season
Leachlng i s influenced by the c r o p s g r o w n o n the l a n d a n d by the c l l m a l k condlllons, a n d ~ c o r d l n g
NCE
0 farmers know more about the
prclblems that nitrates can cause.
they are likely t o use fcrtiliscn
more wtscly. Fcrtilisers arc expensive. and
i t is In t l ~ cbest interests o f kirmcrs t o
crops to take u p nilrate produced i n the
autumn. The catch crops can t l ~ e n be
plougltcd under prior to planting the next
f t d crop i n the spring.
Leaving soil undisturbed prevents aer-
i n the nodules o n the roots. T h e farmers
then plough i n the legurnelgrass m i x before
they sow the next crop. to supply the crop
w i t h nitrates.
Uoth traditional and organic systems
reduce nitrate leaching. 1'0d o this. thcy atton and microbial activity that would supply plants w i t h the same f o r m o f nitro-
necd to know more accurately how much othcnvise encourage the release o f nitrates gen-ammonium a n d nitrate. B u t research
nitrogen individual crops need. i n the soil. A t Maryland University. tn the has shown that while farmyard manure is as
'I'hry should apply fcrtiliser only when US. researchers found that planling with- effective i n producing high yields. i t can
the crop IS most likely t o use the nitrate. I t out ploughing resulted i n less nltrate being give as much as 100 kilograms m o r e nitrate
makes more sense t o wait u n t i l soil warms available for leaching. British researchers per hectare t o the soil than anificial nitro-
I II~ n the spring, because th:~t is when crops have since confirmed tliosc findings. gen, and i t is often p u t o n land i n the
need nttrogen from the soil. Mixtng tn straw after harvesting instead autumn.
I h v i d i n g u p f e r t i l i x r between February. o f burning it provtdcs microhes w i t h a Farmers also tend t o m i x manure
hl:trch. April. M a y and occ;tsionally June source of food: the soil provtdcs them with containing ammonium nitrogen i n t o the soil
itl\o ntakes financial sense. A heavy down- the nttr:ltcs t l ~ c yneed t o make enzymes t o i n the autumn. l ' h e result is that microbes
pour 111the early spring. for example, would break down tllc straw. s t a n t o convert ammonium t o nitrate at a
lose only part o f the total. Organic farming. however wholesome its time when plant growth is slow and rainfall
Cultivating crops that arc sown i n image, could increase the amount o f nttratc is h i g h - m n d i t i o n s that encourage leach-
autumn would help t o keep soil covered as ava~lahlcfor leaching. Organic farming de- ing. T h e same applies t o ploughing i n
well as using somc o f the nitrate naturally mands traditional sources o f nutrients such legumes--once again. nitratc w i l l be re-
released i n the soil. Altern:ttivcly. farmers as farmyard manure. Organic farmers also leased i n a form more prone t o leaching.
can cultivate during the winter-and k t - grow lcgun~essuch as clover t o fix nitrogen Organic farmers must exercise skill and
ween main crops-quick-growing calch from the air w i ~ hthe help o f bacteria living care i f leaching is n o t to be increased. 0
hold different forms o f nitrogen. The I k a v y downpours can lead t o waterlog- nitrate than a sandy soil.
atnounts o f sand, silt and clay plus the effect ging, In w h ~ c hwatcr displaces air from the I t is difficult t o measure the effects o f
o f d~fferenttypes o f cultivation detcrmincs pores wtthin the soil. ' m e resulting lack o f different underlying rock types o n nitrate
the qotl structure. o r the sizc and shape o f the oxygen i n the soil encourages anaerobic leaching. but somc things are obvious. F o r
soil huilding blocks. The arrangement o f organisms to convert nitrates t o ammonium example. the sizc and shape o f pores and
such cltds tends t o determine how easily forms or to nttrogen gas. Clay soils hold fissures i n the rock govern the rate at whtch
water passes through the soil. taking nttratc watcr and offer less nitrate for leaching than water moves i n t o the zones o f ground water
tleel)er and deeper. d o sandy soils. I'rench researchers calcul:~tc from which i t is extracted. ( G r o u n d water is
Sandy soils, hecause thcy h;~vc little th:~t a clay soil loses seven to eight times less the source o f springs and wells. hence much
cltcrn~c:~lbonding. are ustt:~lly weitk. They ~ - -- o f o u r drinking water.)
are e:l\y to p u l l apart. tor dig. and their clods Nitrate levels i n ;ey3tc cottntrics
C;I be tirokcn down easily i n t o smaller unlts. FURTHER READING inclutling Britain. termany and
S;tntl p ; ~ i t ~ c l care s ratlier likc p i n g - p r i g halls Nilratrs: 7Bc 771rr.l l o Food a n d IValrr, Irrance. are increasing. Tempting tllollgh i t
tn ;I 1;11ik which itre clifftr~tlt t o sqrt;~slt hy Nigel 1)udlcy ((;rrrn I'rinl 1990) pro- niay I)e, we canmlt Iilame f c r t i l i x r s fcor all
t o g e t l ~ c rand are sepnr:~tcd Ipy I:~rgc gaps. vidcc u review o f the nitrates controversy. titr rate pollution. E v e n so. fears ahout the
W;ltcr cnn pass quickly t l r r t r u ~ ltlte ~ pps. f i r l i l i r c r s I d prnduction a n d the cnvi- adverse ltcalth effects o f consuming nitratcs
:tnd \o Ir:~chingis r;tliid i n s;tndy w t l s ronmrnt is o x h m l s ' guide f r o m the have prompted politicians t o restrict the
Clay soils :Ire tiplttly p;~ckccl : ~ n ddense. F e r t i l i u r htanufactarers Association (tel nttrate allowed i n drinking water. rather
likc c l ~ n n l t \o f jelly i n :I t;~nk Witter ntovcs 0733 3JIJUJ). l'wv features i n New Scicn- I l l a n w i ~ i t i n gfor conclusive evidence.
t l ~ r c r ~ ttgl llc~i t ~nn1t11rttorr slowly. Le:tcl~ingIs list ( A Octuher 1988 and 29 A p r i l IYXY)
rltcrefore slt)wrr ;tntl w;lter tritds to I~I~III prrsenl the latest research findings o f the
IWH)I'; (111 IIIC surf;~reo f cl;ty s ~ i l ' i .so nttr;1tes Wothamsted Experimental Station t r a m
o f t r n end u p i n surfitcc w;ltrrs r : ~ t l ~ cthan r in on nitrales and leaching.
prountl w;ttcrs.
Galioway was careful not to the market.
ray thc mcrcury vapor c m i t l d by '"L)cntal amalgam is a niajor
Uie amalgams (thc fillings are sollrcc of mercury i n lhc gcncral
made of a mercury and silvcr population." Lorscl~cidcrsaid.
Chapter 6
T h e C o n c e ~ to f " I n f e c t i o u s D i s e a s e "
P 7 e o m o r p h i c L i f e Forms
I n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s and many o t h e r c o u n t r i e s , t h e r e
a r e compulsory immunization programs f o r c h i l d r e n . Because
o f t h e f i n a n c i a l prospects, physicians are asking t h a t
c h i l d r e n be v a c c i n a t e d e a r l i e r i n t h e i r l i v e s . I t i s no
small c o i n c i d e n c e t h a t t h e agencies r e s p o n s i b l e f o r t h e
promotion o f immunizations, such as t h e CDC, FDA, AMA and
t h e WHO a r e a l s o i n v o l v e d w i t h t h e l a r g e drug f i r m s who. .
make i t t h e i r business t o t r e a t t h e diseases t h e vaccines
cause. I t i s a l s o these same agencies t h a t have d r a f t e d
t h e procedures which f o r c e d t h e s t a t e s t o enact compulsory
immunization l e g i s l a t i o n . I n t e r e s t i n g l y enough, i n t h e
e a r l y 1900's, p h y s i c i a n s were more v o c a l on t h e dangers o f
t h e immunization process.
T h e Sma 7 7pox G a m b i t
Po 7 i o Vacc ine
C u t t e r L a b o r a t o r i e s , a s u b s i d i a r y o f Bayer A.G. in
Germany ( a s p i n o f f from I.G.Farben), was a C a l i f o r n i a
f i r m which was s e t up t o produce p o l i o vaccine i n o r d e r
t o p r o t e c t t h e R o c k e f e l l e r c o n t r o l l e d drug f i r m s from
l a w s u i t s . Most o f t h e f a u l t y p o l i o vaccine was s a i d t o
be produced by C u t t e r .
I n f 7 uenza Vacc i n e
The V i r a l Cancer c o n t r a c t r a n c o n c u r r e n t l y w i t h t h e
Naval B i o s c i e n c e s L a b o r a t o r y ' s work on bubonic plague,
R i f t V a l l e y f e v e r , and m e n i n g i t i s . The NBL a l s o performed
much o f t h e o r i g i n a l research i n t o t h e plague d u r i n g World
War 11. I n r e t r o s p e c t , i t seems t h a t t h e Navy has had t o p
f u n d i n g f o r every f i e l d o f science, i n c l u d i n g r e s e a r c h i n
g r a v i t a t i o n and o t h e r areas i n p h y s i c s and b i o l o g y , s i n c e
i t has always been t h e key f a c t o r i n t h e defense o f t h e
U n i t e d S t a t e s s i n c e i t s v e r y i n c e p t i o n . You w i l l r e c a l l
t h a t t h e Navy has had apparent r o l e s i n t h e a l l e g e d work
a t Dreamland on a l i e n c r a f t and had an i m p o r t a n t p a r t i n
a l l t h e P r o j e c t Rainbow and Phoenix P r o j e c t s .
/
CT13 9NJ Tel 0304 678777
- Central Research
M A T R I X 1 1 1
The Olympian
Monday, March 2,1992
AIDS: Dr. Robert Gallo. the
American co-discoverer of the vi-
rus that causes AIDS and the sub-
ject of a federal Kquiry in .connec-
tion with that &scovery, ~sbeln
investigated once again. federal of
ficials say, this time on charges of
pejury and patent fraud.
At issue IS the patent covering
the test for detecting the virus, as
well as the scientific glory for the
remarkable research effort by
which the virus was discovered
and the detection test created.
and banking i n d u s t r i e s , as w e l l as a l l t h e a n c i l l a r y
support i n d u s t r i e s .
2. T h e o r e t i c a l l y reduce t h e general b i r t h r a t e .
BACTERIAL DISEASES
Anthrax + O % B a c i l l u s Anthacis
Brucellosis + % # Bruce1laMelitensis
Cholera + # V i b r i o Cholera
Glanders + % # Malleomyces M a l l e i
Melioidosis + % # Whitmorella Pseudomallei
Plague * % # Pasteurella P e s t i s
Tularsemia * % # Pasteurella Tularensis
M A T R I X 1 1 1
VIRAL DISEASES
Legend: + Transmissable from Animals % Inhaled
* Transmissable from Insects # Ingested
8 Transmissable By Contact
RICKETTSIAL DISEASES
FUNGAL DISEASES
TOXINS
Di sease Transmission Remarks
Botul i sm % # Clostridium Botulinum
V. Valerian
Leading Edge Research Group
~ . b .Box 481-MU58
Yelm, Washington 98587
Dear V. Valerian:
This correspondence is in response to your letter addressed to
the Federal Drug ~dministration,Center for Biologics, Evaluation
and Research. In your letter you request a variety of
information related to the influenza vaccine, and epidemiology of
the disease.
As your letter is subdivided into five sections, each with
different questions, I will structure my response in a similar
manner, first restating your question.
1. If the Office of Biologics makes this yearly
recommendation, from who or where do they get the data
in order to make the annual recommendation?
The Food and Drug Administration, Center for Biologics Evaluation
and Research (CBER) has the responsibility for regulating the
Influenza Virus Vaccine. The data used to determine which
strains of the virus will be deemed effective in providing
protection for the upcoming flu season is obtained from numerous
sources. The epidemiology of influenza viruses is based on the
isolation and identification of strains from infected people
throughout the world. These sources include, .but are not limited
to: the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease
Control, the United States Armed Forces, and the Food and Drug
Administration. CBER uses information on the most recent
epidemiology, strain variation and immunologic responses of
people to current vaccines in order to inform a panel of experts
for recommendations of the appropriate strain of the virus to be
included in the yearly formulation of the vaccine. This panel,
an Advisory Committee, meets in the late winter of each year to
review epidemiological evidence related to the prevalence of
influenza viruses. The epidemiological and serological evidence
is presented by scientists from the groups listed. I am
including the agenda from the January 30, 1992 meeting of the
Vaccines ~dvisoryCommittee meeting which considered the
selection of the influenza virus strains, and also a brief
document related to flu shots.
If you require more information related to the incidence of the
flu in the United States you may want to write to the Department
of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for
Disease Control, Atlanta, ~eorgia30333. They publish a weekly
publication the "~orbidityand Mortality Weekly Report". In the
April 12, 1992 and the May 11, 1992 reports the issue of flu is
dealt with extensively.
2. At which time period during the year is the recommendation
passed to the company who makes the influenza virus?
As I stated in my response to your first question, these ~dvisory
Committee Meetings generally occur in the late winter, allowing
the manufacturers sufficient start-up time to initiate the
culture of the virus strains. The manufacturers typically send a
representative to the meeting.
For the influenza virus~vaccine; there are five active
manufacturers with four different products. They are:
Enclosures
WWII Allies Had Planned to
Use Bacteriologzical Warfare
m . l m T W l T Y U r*nnW;lW
R\ MIKE RIAIR
IJ.S. P r r n ~ d r n tFranklin 1)elann
Ilm.evelt and British Primc Minir-
ter Winrtnn V h a r r h i l l drvrloped
plan- t n drnp hnmkn r n n t a i n i n g
deadly d l ~ ccrms n ~ nn mnjnr Grr-
man cities during Wurld War 11.
Having auffrrrd cnrualtics or mnrc
l l ~ n nhalf of a f n m I I 7.1)00
~ 14ritirh.
('nnadian nnd Amrrirnn n ~ n ~ m ~ ~ n d o a
i n n r e c n t ~ n n i r r a n r ci n fnrcr n t
Il~rppe.nlnng the Frrnch cnnrt. i n
Augunt. 1949.12and findinp the Allied
invasion of Italy i n the summer nf
1943 hnprlrrsly hnpgrd d~rwn.R m
r c v r l t and Churchill sought nther
mennn to win the wnr.
A plnn war ruhnrqurntiy devrl-
oped In drop h n m h mntaininp &ad-
l y 1l.S.-mnde nnthrnx spclrrr n n
mnjnr Gcrmnn citicr. inrluclinp
Berlin. Sluttuart. I l n n ~ h ~Aachen. ~r~.
FnnkRlrt and Wilhc.lmnhaftrn.
- WINSTON CllURCHlLL
Can bacteria direct their own evolution?
T WO YEARS ago. John Cairns and
colleagues at the Harvard School of
Public Health. reported that the bacterium
hi Roger Lewin, Washington, DC transaiptw. thus fixing the mutant. Armed
with a metabolic mechanism of this sort. a
cell could respond to its environmental
Ercherichia coli appeared to generate muta- nutritional stress. not growing at all. "If we conditions, and effectively tailor its genes
tions that were beneficial to it. and were not want to understand mutation under natural to suit them.
simply random (Norun. vol335. p 142). This conditions. we have to study bacteria under However. Cairns has no notion of how a
violated one of the few fundamental l a m in these conditions," he says. This is precisely cell would "test" each protein variant. nor
biology: that mutations in a population arise what he and Cairns have done. how an optimum variant might be linked
by chance. and a? not influenced by the During the exponential growth phase. with the mRNA that generated it. Also. says
demands of the ennronment. Hall. "Cairns's xheme makes people
Now. after evolutionary biologists uncomfortable. because it involves
have produced swres of reasons why truly directed mutation."
cairns must be mistaken, that his Hall believes that there are ways
u p r i m e n t a l design must somehow be which you could get preferential muta-
at fault. B u y Hall of the University of tion. but with an underlying random
W e r is claiming that Cairns may mechanism. One such mechanism,
be closer to the truth than his critics proposed by Stahl. involves the DNA
would like to believe. In a pa r in the repair system.
amcat issue of Generics &I 126, Imagine a population of bacteria.
p 142). he says that spec if^ mutations in suffering nutritional depletion. and.
E. cdi "occur more frequently when therefore. not growing. From time to
advantageous than when neutral". time. mutations occur in temporarily
According to Franklin Stahl of the single-stranded DNA. which might
University of Oregon, Eugme. occur during transcription of RNA m a -
commenting in N o n w (vol346,p 791). sengers. - DNA repair mechanisms
"Hall's work extends and stren hens might be slow under these circum-
that of Cmrns [and his colleagues~ stances. but they would eventually do
~ o t cairns
h use strains i f E.
and HP~I the job.
cdi that are unabk to metabolkc a lmamne now that a mutant products
v---- ---
particular biochemical substrate, be- n e boaniwn EKherichia coli oppean to #enemre a -protein that allows the ' cell to
a u s e of a genetic defect. In Cairns's mYI(Uiomrhol on bm#lrdol rather fhnnsimply mndom metabolise a substrate that previously it
'
case. the substrate is lactose. and in could m t use. The cell would then be
Hall's it is tryptophan. They find that when DNA repliation in bacteria dominates a b k to grow. DNA repiiation wwld get
the E. wli am exposed to these substrata. metabolic activity. bcaw the cells grow under way and the new mutant would be
they appear preferentially to mutate the and divide rapidly. In non-growing populs- fixed in the chromosome before the repair
defective gems back to the functional state. tions. however. metabolism is just ticking w t e m could "corn*" it. In this way. the
'7hs is a highly specific process." ex- wer. with DNA synthesis principally con- environment would a p p u r to be tailoring
plains Hall. "You see an enhanced rate of fined to repair operations. The challenge is the mutations produced.
mutation in this single gene being selected to explain how the obsemtions of Cairns A second possible random mechanism.
for. not a general enhancement of mutation and Hall of the preferential production of suggested by HaII. f o c w s on fluctuations in
rate in all genes." The mutation rate in the beneficial mutations might come about the cells' wlmrability to mutation. Imagine
tryptophan-metabolising gene was about 30 under the latter conditions. that in a s t a m d bacterial colony. a small
times the normal rates. says Hall. Cairns suggested an ingenious scheme. fraction of the population become
Biologkts' idusabout the nature of muta- one that implied that the bacteria were "hypermutable"; that is. the overall mum-
tion in bacteria were developed in the 1940s actively directing the mutations. It relied on tion rate rising dramatially. Mosc of the
and 19% when reseatchefs asked the qucs- each p n i . during the synthesis of proteins, cells that pass into this state might soon die.
tion: "do mutations arise independently of producing not just o m messenger RNA However. some might include a mutation
sckction, o r in nsponre to s c k a i n ? " ( m R N A ) - a faithful copy of the information that, as before. allom the cell to metabolise
The overwhelming majority of experi- encoded in the gene--but several minor a previously inaccessible substrate. Such
ments seemed .to indicate that mutation variants. Cairns suggested that each protein cells will grow and thrive.
rate is indeed independent of the variant. translated from this range of mcs- One prediction here is that a thin spec-
environment. sages. would then somehow be "tested" trum of other mutants will be u n i e d along
"As so often happens in science. we set up against prevailing circumstances. Once the randomly with the successful mutant. "This
an artificial dichotomy." says Hall. "In this best variant is determined. the mRNA is what I see in my experiments." says Hall.
a s c it was. either mutations occur in the that produced it would then be copied back which leads him to prefer his explanation
absence of selection, or as a result of sclec- into the genome by the enzyme reverse over Stahl's. 0
tion. No middle ground." Beause some key
experiments showed that mutation occurred
independently of selection. says Hall. h o l e
gists assumed that all mutation was indepen-
dent of selection. According to Cairns. the
main rationale for his controversial paper in
1988 was that this assumption "has never
been properly put to the test".
Biologists may have been thrown off track
in elucidating the full range of biochemical
potential in bacteria bemuse their experi-
ments have typically k e n confined to rather
. artificial wnditions. Specifilly. researchers
bathe bacteria in an abundant growth
medium. so that the colony grows
exponentially.
According to Hall. bacteria in nature are
much more likely to be sitting around under
REPRINTED BY
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
FROM THE
MORBlDrrY AND MORTALITY WEEKLY REPORT
April 7, 1989 / Vol. 38 / No. 13
Pages 205-214.219-227
Dear Doctor:
Last fall, I notified you about the new Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting System (VAERS) of the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS). VAERS is designed to accept all reports of
suspected adverse events after administration of vaccine, in
-
a11 age groups, including but not limited to those mandated by
the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986.
Your fbll participation is essential in establishing an accurate
database of adverse events associated with vaccines. This
feedback helps to direct initiatives in developing and improving -
the safety and effectiveness of vaccines.
Whenever you report an adverse event to VAERS, you will receive
verification of receipt of your report. For certain serious
adverse events, you will be contacted regarding the patient's
condition at 60 days and again at 1 year.
I am pleased to report that your cooperation has contributed
greatly to the successful implementation of this new program.
since initiation of the program in November 1990, we have
received over 2,500 reports. We have already received many
requests for additional copies of the form, one of which is
enclosed.
Please call 1-800-82207967~if you have further questions
regarding the reporting requirements or completion of the report
form or if you need additional forms.
Your continued assistance in helping ensure the safety of
vaccines in use is greatly appreciated.
SinAr ly yours,
0. Mason, M. D., Dr.P.H.
Secretary for Health
Director, National Vaccine Program
Enclosure
+This is the national number. For reporting in the state of Washington,
please call 1-206-753-3495.
TABLE 1. Reportable events following vaccination
~ n d T o x o i d Event Interval from Vaccination
ow,P. A. Anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock 24 hours
DTPPolio 8. Encephalopathy (or encephalitis)* 7 days
Combined C. Shock-collapse or hypotonic- 7 days
hyporesponsive collapse*
0. Residual seizure disorder* (See Aids t o Interpretation*)
E. Any acute complication or sequela N o limit
(including death) of above events
F. Events i n vaccinees described i n (See package insert)
manufacturer's package insert
as contraindications t o additional
doses of vaccine' (such as convulsions)
TABLE 6. Guidelines for spacing the administration of immune globulin (IG) preparations and vaccines
Simutuneous administration:
lmmunobiologic combination Recommended minimum interval between doses
IG and killed antigen None. May be given simultaneously at different
sites or at any time between doses.
Nonsimukan~ousadministration:
lmmunobiologic administered
First Second Recommended minimum interval between doses
IG Killed antigen None
Killed antigen IG None
IG Live antigen 6 wks and preterably 3 mos*
Live antigen IG 2 wks
'The live-virus vaccines, oral polio and yellow fever, are exceptions to these recommendations. Either vaccine
may be administered simultaneously or at any time before or after IG without significantly decreasing the
antibody response (31.
- .
moderate doses of short-acting systemic steroids, and intra-articular, bursal, or tendon injection with
corticosteroids are not immunosuppressive in their usual doses and do not contraindicate live-virus
vaccine administration.
The growing number of infants and preschoolers infected with HIV has directed special attention to
the appropriate immunization of such children. The evaluation and testing for HIV infection of
asymptomatic children presenting for vaccines is not necessary before decisions concerning immu-
nization are made. The inactivated childhood vaccines (e.g., DTP or HbCV) should be given to
HIV-infected children regardless of whether HIV symptoms are present. Although OPV has not been
harmful when administered to asymptomatic HIV-infected children, IPV is the vaccine of choice if the
child is known to be infected. The use of IPV not only eliminates any theoretical risk t o the vaccinee but
also prevents the possibility of vaccine virus spread to immunocompromised close contacts. Asymp-
tomatically infected persons in need of MMR should receive it. Also, MMR should be considered for all
symptomatic HIV-infected children since measles disease can be severe i n symptomatic HIV-infected
children. Limited studies of MMR immunization i n both asymptomatic and symptomatic HIV-infected
patients have not documented serious or unusual adverse events. In addition, pneumococcal vaccine
is recommended for any child infected with HIV. Influenza vaccine i s recommended for children with
symptoms of HIV infection (Table 7).
FEBRILE ILLNESS
The decision to administer or delay vaccination because of a current or recent febrile illness depends
largely on the severity of symptoms and on the etiology of the disease.
Although a moderate or severe febrile illness is reason t o postpone immunizations, minor illnesses
such as mild upper-respiratory infections (URI) with or without low-grade fever are not contraindica-
tions for vaccination. In persons whose compliance with medical care cannot be assured, it is
particularly important to take every opportunity to provide appropriate vaccinations.
Children with moderate or severe febrile illnesses can be vaccinated as soon as the child has
recovered. This precaution to wait avoids superimposing adverse effects of the vaccine on the
underlying illness or mistakenly attributing a manifestation of the underlying illness t o the vaccine.
Routine physical examinations or measuring temperatures are not prerequisites for vaccinating
infants and children who appear to be in good health. Asking the parent or guardian if the child is ill,
postponing vaccination i n those with moderate or severe febrile illnesses, and immunizing those
without contraindications to vaccination are appropriate procedures in childhood immunization
programs.
.-
Event Frequency'
Local
Redness 113 doses
Swelling 215 doses
Pain 112 doses
Mild1moderate systemic
Fever 2 38 C (100.4 F) 112 doses
' Drowsiness 1/3 doses
Fretfulness 112 doses
Vomiting 1115 doses
Anorexia 1/5 doses
Rarely. an anaphylactic reaction (i.e.. hives, swelling of the mouth. difficulty breathing. hypotension. or shock)
has been reported after receiving preparations containing diphtheria. tetanus. and/or pertussis antigens. The
AClP finds no good evidence for a causal relationship between DTP and hemolytic anemia or thrombocytopenic
purpura.
Arthus-type hypersensitivity reactions. characterized' by severe local reactions (generally starting 2-8 hours
after an injection). may follow receipt of tetanus toxoid, particularly in adults w h o have received frequent (e.g..
annual) boosters of tetanus toxoid. A few cases of peripheral neuropathy have been reported following tetanus
toxoid administration, although a causal relationship has not been established.
Sudden infant death syndrome ISIDS) has occurred in infants following administration of DTP. A large case-
control study of SlOS in the United States showed that receipt of DTP was not causally related to SlDS ( 9 ) .It
should be recognized that the first three primary immunizing doses of DTP are usually administered to infants
2-6 months old and that approximately 85% of SlDS cases occur at ages 1-6 months. with the peak incidence
occurring at 6 w e e k s 4 months of age. By chance alone. some SlDS victims can be expected to have recently re-
ceived vaccine.
Onset of infantile spasms has occurred in infants who have recently received DTP or DT. Analysis of data
from the NCES on children with infantile spasms showed that receipt of DTP or DT was not causally related t o in-
fantile spasms 1101. The incidence of onset of infantile spasms increases at 3-9 months of age, the time period
in which the second and'third doses of DTP are generally given. Therefore. some cases of infantile spasms can
be expected t o be related by charrce alone t o recent receipt of DTP.
Reporting of Adverse Events
Reporting by parents and patients of all adverse events occurring within 4 weeks of antigen administration
should be encouraged. Adverse events that require a visit to a health-care provider should be reported by health-
care providers t o manufacturers and local or state health departments. The information will be forwarded t o an
appropriate federal agency Ithe Bureau of Biologics Research and Review, FDA,. or CDC).
COMMENTS O N USING REDUCED DOSAGE SCHEDULES OR MULTIPLE SMALL DOSES
The AClP recommends giving only the full dose of DTP; if a specific contraindication t o DTP exists, none
should be given. In the United States. the full course of primary immunization is considered t o be four 0.5-ml
doses of DTP.
SIDE EFFECTS AND ADVERSE REACTIONS
Local reactions. generally erythema and induration with or w~thouttenderness. are common after the adminis-
tration of vaccines containing diphtheria. tetanus, or pertqssis antigens. Occasionally. a nodule may be palpable
at the injection site of adsorbed products for several weeks. Abscesses at the site of injection have been reported
(6-10 per million doses). Mild systemic reactions. such as fever, drowsiness, fretfulness. and anorexia, occur
quite frequently. These reactions are significantly more common following DTP than following DT, are usually
self-limited, and need no therapy other than, perhaps. symptomatic treatment (e.g., antipyretics).
Moderate to severe systemic events, such as fever of 40.5 C (105 F) or higher, persistent. inconsolable crying
lasting 3 hours or more, unusual high-pitched crying, collapse, or convulsions. occur relatively infrequently.
Other more severe neurologic complications. such as a prolonged convulsion or an encephalopathy, occasionally
fatal, have been reported to be assoc~atedwith DTP administration, although rarely.
Approximate rates for adverse events following receipt of DTP vaccine (regardless of dose number in the
series) are indicated in Table 3 (5.6 1.
The frequency of local reactions and fever following DTP vaccination is significantly higher with ~ncreasing
numbers of doses of DTP, while other mild to moderate systemic reactions (e.g., fretfulness, vomiting) are signifi-
cantly less frequent ( 5 ) .If local redness of 2.5 cm or greater occurs. the likelihood of recurrence after another
DTP dose increases significantly ( 71.
In the National Childhood Encephalopathy Study (NCES), a large, case-control study in England ( 6 ) .children
2-35 months of age wlth serious, acute neurologic disorders, such as encephalopathy or complicated convul-
sion(~),were more likely to have received DTP in the 7 days preceding onset than their age-. sex-, and
neighborhood-matched controls. Among children known to be neurologically normal before entering the study.
the relative risks of a neurolpgic illness occurring within the 7-day period following receipt of DTP dose, com-
pared t o children not receiving DTP vaccine in the 7-day period before onset of their illness, was 3.3 (p <
0.001). Within this 7-day period. the risk was significantly increased for immunized children only within 3 days
of vaccination (relative risk 4.2, p < 0.001 I. The relative risk for illness occurring 4-7 days after vaccination was
2.1 (0.235 < p < 0.1 1. The attributable risk estimates for a serious acute neurologic disorder within 7 days after
DTP vaccine (regardless of outcome) was one in 1 10,000 doses of DTP, and for a permanent neurologic deficit,
one in 310,000 doses. No specific clinical syndrome was identified. Overall. DTP vaccine accounted for only a
small proportion of cases of serious neurologic disorders reported in the population studied.
Although there are uncertainties in the reported studies. recent data suggest that infants and young children
who have had previous convulsions (whether febrile or nonfebrile) are more likely to have seizures following DTP
than those without such histories ( 81.
M A T R I X X I 1
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These recommendations update information on the vaccine and antiviral agents available for
controlling influenza during the 1991-1992 influenza season (superseding both the MMWR 1990;39 (no.
RR-7): 1-15 and the clarification, MMWR 1990;39:469.) The primary changes include statements about
the influenza strains in the trivalent vaccine for 1991-1992.
INTRODUCTION
Influenza A viruses are classified into subtypes on the basis of two surface antigens: hemagglutinin
(H) and neuraminidase (N). Three subtypes of hemagglutinin (HI, H2, H3) and two subtypes of
neuraminidase (N1, N2) are recognized among influenza A viruses that have caused widespread
human disease. Immunity t o these antigens-especially to the hemagglutinin-reduces the likelihood
of infection and lessens the severity of disease if infection occurs. Infection with a virus of one subtype
confers little or no protection against viruses of other subtypes. Furthermore, over time, antigenic
variation (antigenic drift) within a subtype may be so marked that infection or vaccination with one
strain may not induce immunity to distantly related strains of the same subtype. Although influenza B
viruses have shown more antigenic stability than influenza A viruses, antigenic variation does occur.
For these reasons, major epidemics of respiratory disease caused by new variants of influenza
continue to occur. The antigenic characteristics of strains currently circulating 'provide the basis for
selecting virus strains to include i n each year's vaccine.
Typical influenza illness is characterized by abrupt onset of fever, myalgia, sore throat, and
nonproductive cough. Unlike other common respiratory infections, influenza can cause severe malaise
lasting several days. More severe illness can result if primary influenza pneumonia or secondary
bacterial pneumonia occur. During influenza epidemics, high attack rates of acute illness result in
increased numbers of visits to physicians' offices, walk-in clinics, and emergency rooms and increased
hospitalizations for management of lower-respiratory-tract complications.
Elderly persons and persons with underlying health problems are at increased risk for complications
of influenza infection. If infected, such high-risk persons or groups (listed as "groups at increased risk
for influenza-related complications" under Target Groups for Special Vaccination Programs) are more
likely than the general population to require hospitalization. During major epidemics, hospitalization
rates for high-risk persons may increase 2- to 5-fold, depending on the age group. Previously healthy
children and younger adults may also require hospitalization for influenza-related complications, but
the relative increase in their hospitalization rates is less than for persons who belong to high-risk
groups.
An increase in mortality further indicates the impact of influenza epidemics. Increased mortality
results not only from influenza and pneumonia but also from cardiopulmonary and other chronic
diseases that can be exacerbated by influenza infection. At least 10,000 excess deaths have been
documented i n each of 19 different U.S. epidemics in the period 1957-1986; more than 40,000 excess
deaths occurred in each of three of these epidemics. Approximately 80%-90% of the excess deaths
attributed to pneumonia and influenza were among persons 2 65 years of age.
Because the proportion of elderly persons i n the U.S. population is increasing and because age and
its associated chronic diseases are risk factors for severe influenza illness, the toll from influenza can
be expected to increase unless control measures are used more vigorously. The number of younger
persons at increased risk for influenza-related complications is also increasing for various reasons,
such as the success of neonatal intezsive care units, better management of diseases such as cystic
fibrosis and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and better survival rates for organ-
transplant recipients.
. TABLE 1. Influenza vaccine* dosage, by patient age - United States, 1991-92 season
Age group Productt Dosage No. doses Route'
Influenza
~ -- -
Smallpox Vaccine .
These revised ACIP recommendations on smellpox vaccine updste the previous rocommen-
dations (MMWR 1980;29:4 17-20] to include current infomation on the c h a ~ e in s the ln-
ternationel Health Reguletions end the ending of distribution of smellpox vaccine to civilians.
The basic recommendstion is unchanged- smallpox vaccine is only indicated for civilmns who
are laboratory workers occupstionslly exposed to smallpox or other closely rskted orthopox
viruses.
SMALLPOX VACCINE
Smallpox vaccine (vaccinia virus) is a highly effective immunizing agent against smallpox.
The judicious use of smallpox vaccine has eradicated smallpox. At the World Health Assembly
rn May 1980. the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the world free of smallpox ( 1 41.
Smallpox vaccination of civilians is now indicated only for laboratory workers directly involved
with smallpox (variola virus) or closely related orthopox viruses (e.g., monkeypox, vaccinia, and
others).
SURVEILLANCE OF SUSPECTED CASES OF SMALLPOX
There is no evidence of smallpox transmission anywhere in the world. WHO has coordina-
ted the investigation of 173 rumors of smallpox between 1 9 7 9 and 1 9 8 4 (5-7).All have
been diseases other than smallpox, most commonly chickenpox or other rash illnesses. Even
so, a suspected case of smallpox is a public health emergency and must be promptly inves-
tigated. Assistance in the clinical evaluation, collection of laboratory specimens, and prelimi-
nary laboratory diagnosis is available from state health departments and CDC (telephone:
(404) 329-3145 during the day and (404) 329-2888 outside usual working hours).
MISUSE OF SMALLPOX VACCINE
There is no evidence that smallpox vaccination has any value in the treatment or prevention
of recurrent herpes simplex infection, warts. or any disease other than those caused by ortho-
pox viruses ( 8 ) . Misuse of smallpox vaccine t o treat herpes infections has been associated
with severe complications (9-1I ): Smallpox vaccine should never be used therapeutically.
SMALLPOX VACCINATION NOT REQUIRED FOR INTERNATIONAL TRWEL
Smallpox vaccination is no longer required for international travel. In January 1982. the In-
ternational Health Regulations were changed deleting smallpox from the Regulations ( 1 2 1.
The International Certificates of Vaccination no longer include a smallpox vaccination
certificate.
S M ILLPOX VACCINE NO LONGER AVAILABL~FOR CIVILIANS
In May 1983, the only active. licensed producer of smallpox vaccine in the United States
e c s n t i n u e d distribution of smallpox vaccine t o civilians ( 13).As a result. smallpox vaccine is
no longer available to civilians.
0199
SOURCES OF VACCINE INFORMATION
In addition to these general recommendations, the practitioner can draw on a variety of sources for
specific data and updated informatipn including: ,
Official vaccine package circulars. Manufacturer-provided product-specific information approved by
the FDA with each vaccine. Some of these materials are reproduced in the Physician's Desk Ref :renee
(PDR 1.
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR 1. Published weekly by CDC, MMWR contains
regular and special AClP recommendations on vaccine use and statements of vaccine policy as they
are developed and reports of specific disease activity. Subscriptions are available through Superin-
tendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. Also available
through MMS Publications, C.S.P.O. Box 9120, Waltham, MA 02254.
Health Information for International Travel. Booklet published annually by CDC as a guide to
national requirements and with recommendations for specific immunizations and health practices for
travel to foreign countries. Purchase from the Superintendent of Documents (address above).
Advisory memoranda are published as needed by CDC to advise international travelers or persons
who provide information to travelers about specific outbreaks of communicable diseases abroad. They
include health information for prevention and specific recommendations for immunization. Memo-
randa andlor placement on mailing list are available from Division of Quarantine, Center for Prevention
Services (CPS), CDC, Atlanta, GA 30333.
The Repon of the Committee on Infectious Diseases of the American Academy of Pediatrics (Red
Book). This report, which contains recommendations on all licensed vaccines, is updated every 2-3
years, most recently i n 1988. Policy changes for individual recommendations for immunization
practices are published as needed by the American Academy of Pediatrics in the journal Pediatrics.
They are available from American Academy of Pediatrics, Publications Division, 141 Northwest Point
Blvd., P.O. Box 927, Elk Grove Village, IL 60009-0927.
Control of Communicable Diseases in Man is published by the American Public Health Association
every 5 years, most recently in 1985 (14th ed.) The manual contains informltion about infectious
diseases, their occurrence worldwide, diagnoses and therapy, and up-to-date recommendations on
isolation and other control measures for each disease presented. It is available from the American
Public Health Association, 1015 Fifteenth St. N.W., Washington, DC 20005.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
AN EXAMINATION OF RETROVIRUSES
- 6 @ * A clone v a r i e n t . o f HTLV-1.
0 2 0 0-c).
M A T R I X 1 1 1
P r e d i c t i o n o f t h e A I D S Epidemic
"We are i n f a c t e s t a b l i s h i n g c o n d i t i o n s f o r a p o s s i b l e
pandemic o f an oncogenic v i r u s v a r i e d on t h e scale o f
t h e i n f l u e n z a epidemic of 1918. I t i s p o s s i b l e t o v i s u a l -
i z e t h e mutation o f a v i r u s i n t o a v a r i e t y h i g h l y
contagious t o man, r e s u l t i n g i n a epidemic before we could
develop a vaccine."
The Request
Isolated cases go back to Greek times. Perhaps many were misdiagnosed a century ago, but
generally speaking cancer is a phenomena associated with the growth of elecmcal
industrialization.
Following this. the common sense approach has been to associate a 5 . . . with the
environment. with living styles, with diet, with some manner of abuse of Mother Nature.
Coincidentally, 1830-1840 was also the period when Michael Fanday, the father of electrical
-
engineering, worked on his famous DIARIES still the basis for electrical ideas.
This common sense approach has not been the road followed by the medical establishment
which has spent decades and billions on a fruitless search for m e s within an exmmelv narrow
This framework was shattered some weeks ago with publication by Office of Technology
Assessment (US Con,pss) of a three hundred page study UNCONVEhTONAL CANCER
TREATMENTS.For the first time wc have a detailed bibliography for illegal "quack" treatments
we have heard about over the yean.
OTA got into the act because Congress came under pressure from thousands of constituent's
I disillusioned with an orthodox search that goes nowhere. Even today pne half the cancer cases
/ diagnosed will die within a few years . . .orthodoxy has failed. patience among citizens has
failed.
,
I
I
So here we have a compendium of unconventional aeatments. shunned by the medical
I establishment. declxed illegal by Congress but identified and pursued by countless thousands of
i
I
desperate cancer victims. One can easily criticize the OTA study but it & one giant step forward:
a recognition that unconventional treatment exists, a guidebook to many (but not all) ueatmenrs.
i
!
How did we get ourselves into this illogical position? That politicians can tell patients and
doctors how to treat disease? And whar we can and cannot do in an attempt to cure the disease?
i --
I Suoromsm C y . 1406,bSb.7517
~ n m mar.
; SUM 1 1 6 ~ .*a17 urn s.wm. Bemas. MT slq
A1 a m moueln mnl m mcuo m In#o . n n u o I wnosmnmaa t
o 4 aamo 80w.r~
Our original interest in cancer was not medical . . . it was philosonhicd. By what right. by
what constitutional sanction or quirk did the American Medical Association and the National
Cancer institute working through Congress dictate to a citizen a cancer treatment? According to
philosophy, treatment is a matter for that person and God with the assistance. advice and
warnings of his personal doctor. The Sure is irrelevant. The State does not own human bodies.
However. this personal dogma is seen today as quaint and outdated. Indeed. it is rooted in
nineteenth century clnssicd liberalism (not the modem liberal perversion). This philosophy is
opposed to the rise of the Almighty Snte (that poiitical fiction which enables a few to dictate to
the many). It is also opposed to giving a license to government to run our lives. . . from when
we can send our kids to school. to what we eat and apparently how we die.
How the State Got Involved with Cancer
Medicine in the 19th century was very much a personal relationship between doctor and
patient. Up to the Food and Drug Act of 1906. medicine of vvying quality and efficacy was
freely available: this Act created 3 Food and Drug Administntion with a bureaucracy to
dererminlt whether specific drugs were "safe" and whether they should legally be offered to the
public.
Simuluneously. from the evly 1900's onwards. came :he rise of the American Medical
Association (AMA), the organizational leader of the medicai community. The AMA set up 3
hichi\* sm~cturedn n w h to r e. In cancer. the entire emphasis was placed on finding
cytotoxic against i.e. ueaunents that directly kill cancer cells. In practice, this evolved into
almost ton1 emphasis (at least until recent yeus) on drugs (chemo therapy) and surgical
techniques.
The structured research approach precluded investigation of dozens of other concepts and
the FDA's clout made sure that ueatments outside surgery and cytotoxic agents found no role . . .
,AMA and FD.4 have r o o , Yet even before 1906
..
alternate ncaanents were considered wonhy of scientific investigation . in 1904, for example,
it was found that the enzyme papain (from papaya) might have beneficial effect in cancer.
However. the AIMA especially under Monis Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American
Medicd Association from 1924 to 1949, conducted vicious crusades against treatment or .
procedure that did not come within the narrow guidelines laid down by AMA. Using a
Committee on Quackery and a D e p m e n t of Investigations (both eliminated in 1975) Fishbein
was the spearhead of atncks against any medical practice outside the AMA. The AMA worked
closely with FDA to close down, hanss and jail dissident medical practitioners . . .dozens of
doctors came under Fishbein's lash . ..Drown. Reich. are but two names out of dozens.
Probably most doctors in the period 1920 to 1970 were unaware that medicine was confined
to extremely n m w routes and that fundamentally different ways of looking at the human body
and its ills existed.
By the 1950's and 1960's medical specialists themselves began to question the onhodox
system and we had books like Dr. Robert Becker. THE BODY ELECTRIC, and Dr. Richard
Gerber, VIBRATIONAL MEDICINE.
More radically we had doctors developing cancer rreatments outside the cytotoxic agent-
surgery procedure. we had the rise of so-called unconventional practitioners, and a polarized war
over cancer therapies. The AMA and the FDA were backed by the legal power of the State under
the 1906 law while the alternate practitioners were hampered and huassed at every turn.
It was not medicine that failed. It was the-it-
. . that was the culprit and
rhe cause of failure. The finest, best uained doctors in the world arc in the United States . ..but
and so medical procedures are based on too narrow an information base.
The Failure of Orthodox Treatments
Orthodox medicine is no more successful in treating ills than is unconventional medicine. In
the 1970's, Dr. K m White estimated that ~ n l v10-20-D
. . roc-
w
oshunsiff-- bv m .
m i s is cited on page 5
of UNCONVENTIONAL CANCER TREATMENTS.]
In brief, conventional mainstream medicine is n o u n c o n v ~
l r e n t m e n t s & g c b a c k e d J i c e Douverof the St=. If a doctor uses drugs and surgery he
has no problems from the AMA and the Sutc. If a doctor uses, for example, vibrationaUndionics
. .
therapy he goes to jail. Yet onhodovv w v re- to u~-h on . . . or a nv
m e outside d m - - w r v unrticg. (Changing today a under outside prcssm.)
In the cancer thenpy war each side describes the other in terms of quacks preying on
credulous cancer victims for profit. Alternate therapists accuse orthodoxy of "cut. bum and
poison" techniques. While in turn. the alternate therapist is described by the orthodoxy as a
ruthless profit hun,gy quack gambling with people's lives.
In fact. there should be no "mainstream" and "unconventiond" treatments . ..only
treatments for cancer. The reason is politics. Political pmtecnon for the American Medical
Association made its word &. AMA. for its own reasons. wanted only a drug-surgical route to
cancer. ..it refused to recognize even diet thenpy as recently as the 1960's.
So what should have been a scientific medical discussion looking at possible thenpies
became a political battle. The report UNCONVENTIONAL CANCER TREATMENTS should
not be necessary and certainly should not come from Congress. The report should have been
issued by American Medical Association . . .b e c f i d w when the atatments first surfaced.
What has happened in medicine has happened to American science in general - s~nlnnaricrn
pow has to come before acccntancc. And in the case of cancer. it appears that even explanation is
not enough . . . the explanation must conform precisely to official discovered dogma or be
rejected. This is a noliticnl nrocest. not a scientific nmcess.
The crusading Dr. Morris Fishbein was intent on birilding monopoly power for il
conventional drug oriented medicine . . . and in so doing set back medicme 50 years. Half a
million new cases of cancer 31-e diagnosed each year. . . and half of these will d ~ within
e af e ~
years. The probability of getting cancer now rmost categories) is far greater than 5 0 or 100 ye:.
ago. Pro,qss? Of course not. C;~ncertrsnrrnent I F :! m i ~nn:icfniiurc. Xot because doctors xc
dumb or stupid but because cancer research is coniined to cytotosic agent5 tin tnc main].
H3s it never occurred to anyone in medical research that p e r v sinr!e noctibi!i!v needt tn 3e
checked out?
BristoLMyers AIDS Dmg, DDZ,&,pdb--
Or Tops Wellcome'sAZT, Study -
B~MAI~LYNCHASE However, no difference in d e a l me''
Staff Reporter of THC WAU. SIWIET JOVIIWAL
was noted among the three groups, he said.
WASHINGTON-An AIDS drug cleared
for market last year as fallback treatment
appears in a new study to be equal to or
better for certaln patients than the stan-
couldn't tolerate Its side effects. The ,AZT-resistant mutant viruses. the study
agency granted a provisional green light h a one major Duzzle: m's benefits
based on iirnlted data then availableand on didn't seem t o i n c ~ a s among
e tbe longest-
an unprecedented early peek at an unfln- term AZT users. Its effects were constant
ished study. "whether patienb wqe on AZT for 16
That study, released here yesterday. weeks or two ye-" Dr. Kaha said. 'We
may validate DDI as a standard frontline were surprised."
therapy that may be as good as AZT for Another crucial question. with far-
certain AIDS patients and posslbly supe- reaching implications for future AIDS
rior for many patients suffering from the drugs, Is whether DDI's clinical benefits
precursor conditionAIDS-related complex. were rellably predicted last fall by trends
or symptom-freeinfection with the human in certain lab tests. These lab tests. known
immunodeficiency vim. as "surrogate markers." include T-cell
If the findingsare accepted by the FDA. tests.They an critical because they may
they will open up new treatment options for serve as early predictors of patient sur-
patients and heighten market competition vival or death. and thus serve to hasten the
between Wellcome and Brtstol-Myers. DDI lengthy process of clinical trlals and regu-
sells for hundreds of dollars less than=. latory approval of new treatments.
which costs $2.000 for a year's treatment At an FDA advisory panel meeting last
Ftesearchers were cautious In interpret- summer. Dr. Kahn offered a prellmlnary
ing the study. "There's a lot more analysis look at his study, which seemed to support
that needs to be performed. Nevertheless the use of surrogate markers and the
we would recommend that people with ARC clinical benefits of the drug. Yesterday's
or asymptomatic infection.who have been presentation continues to support that but
on AZT for I four months 1should be allowed still is inconclustve. The FDA ultimately
to get DDI," said James Kahn, a re- will decide questlolls about the dntg's
searcher at the University ofCaliforniaand efficacy.
San Francisco General Hospital. "That's an unanswered qucstlon," Dr.
The study, led by Dr. Kahn. was con- Kahn said. But an early test of surrogate
ducted under sponsorshipof the AIDS CHni- markers may m e as early as next week,
cal Trlal Group of the NationaUJstitutes of when an FDA advisory panel considers the
Health from October 1989 to October 1991. market application ofathird new antiviral
-tors In 43 medical centers monitored drug forAIl)S, DDC by Hoffmann-La
913 patients classified as having AIDS or a unit of Roehe h o m g Ltd. 01
ARC, with fewer than onethird (about
300) the normal level of infection fighting
T-cells, or as having asymptomatic infec-
tion, with fewer than one-fifth the normal
level of T-cells. All the volunteers had
received at least four months of AZT ther- Firm Receives Right to Sell
aw .
The subjectswere randomly assigned to 'Orphan'Drug World-Wide
recelve 500 milligrams of DDI. 750 milli- Roberts Pharmacentlcal Corp.. of Ea-
grams of DDI or 500 milligrams of AZT a tontown. NJ.. said it received world-wlde
day. Then they were monitored for recur- commercial rights for a new Ortho Phar-
rence of AIDS-related infections such as maceutical Corp. drug that treats a rare
pneumonia or cancers such' as lymphoma. condition in young children known as pre-
"People on 500 milligrams of DDI dld cocious puberty. Roberts shares rose S1.875
better. and [theirdiiase was 1less likely to yesterday to a6 In New York Stock Ex-
progress than those who remained on change composite trading.
AZT." Dr. Kahn said. "ARC or asymptom- The drug Is a synthetic hormone called
atic [infected] patients benefited from histrelin acetate. which Ortho Pharmaceu-
switching to DDI at either dose from AZT. tical, a Johnson k JdmJoa subsldfary,
And for AIDS patients, DDI and AZT were sells under the brand name Supprelln.
equivalent." Roberts, which acquires and markets
Patients' T-cell levels were better on drugs. dldn't disclose the terms of the
DDI than on AZT. Dr. Kahn said. charac- licensing agreement. except to say that it
terizing the difference as "modest but will give Ortho Pharmaceutical an upfront
statisticallysignificant." payment and royalties.
0 2 0 3 -42
Did a Polio Vaccine lkperbmtU& AIDS mAfrica?
By Tan Cucia
S
cie#rhr,rcaptedtheposaithPt
the humM iumlde6ciaKy rinu
OUutcausesAXDShrcnrLntofr
vimsfouodinmoakeyad~But
~onelmarrhowitiumpdthe3pcicrbar-
r i a t o h u n r r n r I r m ~ i m ~ b y
criderrcthtAIDScm k b r c d t o o n e a r t g
= s r c i n e r , p r o d u a d t ~
~ofpoliovirurainprimatcalLio~
ntoria.areiaicctcdintoor~byh~
~'ibe~simrn~~ryrtcmmakea,
rntibodiertbrtrrnl&tberildpolio~
Hmdreds of t!uo polio. KopraLi recently told me his
rmm~rranyofthcotherdpolionc-
%fP--s--
pl
Tbe
halthcmaL
thrt
discovw p060 virus rod otha
dna.
a b l l a d a r a & e v n
.irUsesc#rldk~inprim?tccend YuwdtomrLchirhroCarrgo~He
t u r e a r r r r a b ~ i n p c n b p i n o 6 n t b l d w k h d w e d ~ ~ b u t
poliomd~eamdronrNobdprucin 1954 i n a h t c r ~ d t h t ~ h e
far mPrchar *F C. Robbias, cwldnotdoclrwntifkaupeaedtfrvhe
Tho~H.WdlaandJohDEEndt3arho had 6nt wed rbesw mo-which m't
uscdhummti~bwtheirabltudics rnrturPlbaabrSIV.Butheanadedthrt
P a c i 6 c M ~ t e r h a v c ~ a w , tbelridmysrmalradyrrmondrfKnhis
r ) c o d e d far
. . lab rcpuired them, rridnp the question of
in a k w
purnrl published b9 the F%ew Institute in
whether he could have h o r n the monkey
thcorisinn thaI M a ' s AIDS a i d e
rpe&a Recently he hiis been quoted as say
-
..
ing he i d SIV-kc monkeys kom the
%) in the kidnqs
scores of rimirn viruses 6 Phiiippiner
01 mwrcys commonh used to culhlrr mlio On ApJ 4.1961. Kopmwdci notc to the
House herttb and safety rubcommittee taking
tsw with r .S. h b k Health Scrv~
9uimnent thUY -=T+!
hC 00lio virus vaccine k
in monkey kkkys.
T ~ U l l t h ~ c t D ~ k w c d
iottcd.'hmlrlvykidneyculturrhbostto
--
innumerable simian vinucs the number
found wuyiag in rtktion to the amount of
wcuk expended to 6ad them. the problem p r e
s e n d to the rmnufrturrr h considen&, if
not insupmbk.' KopPwrki wrote. 'He is
.--. bad with the pmspect of hrvinn to dirrrd
moat of the nun- bb of-kccine. .. .
in 1957. Kopronld's Conno nc-
dries were the 6rst ones ahinhered to a As our technid methods improve we my
Lroc ~ o p l h t h n .spnyed into thebod~mdfewcrbtaofMinewhkhan
mouths of hundreds of thousands of w rkcaUedlinhmsimianvims~
?hm wrs wauny a0 f 0 U O ~ . IniWy, neither Kopwvski nor Sabin
b l u n a on.the &ought the u n h w n viruses hvmfuL But a
With the help of Blrine Etwood, r 4%ynr-. -al . t
kading vir~logirtof the time. Jovph Melnick
oldAIDSbertmeatwtivistinhFnndro. of Baybr College of Medicine. told me last hll
Ikfound many dues s u m such a that the dirovery of W40-whii caused
~.Elsrood'smearchhaskdmetoa 05 National Momtories, the chief f&d a- a m x ~in baby ham- 'rrred the
m n e s t d o s e early. acprimerrtal polio nc. hen out of us.'
cinrtionprooruninthefonnerBeIpLnCorr W e k one of the hio that won the Nokl
pp (now Zaire) b today dl but awgOtten After prLcfor~howtogmwpoliovirusin
hn l s t i o n pmgnm ended. he warned h e culturr. recently told me of the discw-
Conprcrrlboutthe~probItmofmob my of SV40: 'It [badly rylcdl dl of us. Here
key vLwcr contaminatingthe nccimr wrr r vinu--rc didn't how what it did in
Ibe dues include mrP-tht produced tumon in hamrtm'
Momwer, af kast one polio mvcher thclr switched monkey s#cies.
while discussinn a ~ o ,tharpht ~ 4 c i ' Cso w prepMtion was nrinued to put unknown mon4q,
demic caused by a live mtaminatd-though by what and to what rirusrsinto the h u m poprltion.
Wekr d he thought there ars a 'pretty
slim c h u m ' HIV or a related rrbovirus
would k found in old polio m i n e stocks
The vaccine theory T
hepoiDtof10of~uuutO~rcnsc
tkpoliocrraioedKoc7~socaethipp
tbrtwM)Srrrerrdwrhamr~
mainrained by the Food and DNg Adminish,
tion (FDA).Ibm. he said. %I science. wtb
depends on niiracles myrtcr).monkey m y i a g a hithato uolman
~dSIVthrt~mirrarHnr.1.SiDatbe
ing is 100prcmt I might rtD k wrong.' Watp h i t & didn't uw thir
Anthony FIuci chief federal AIDS m monkq,theunbrmnprimrrcmuldhrrMto
searcher. told me recently that my story of iafe~dUaarheauoraprrrnmo1eyromc
have not been keeping count But it is quite
Flswood's hypothesis in the Much 19 iuue
of Rolling Stone and a parallel theoy *Riaen I pormikhtthmucmmth&a+
ing the awe of AIDS than there are the dath
tiwkhceathejUppkmdhaviagibkidn9
. i a.d ~ l h i s p o i a t t h e t h c a L L m w l w ~
d
mthemmmonlreg-m
-
byWdkrS.KykintheMuch7issueofthe of John F. Kennedy. ~bldingm~arh~smonkeyduriog
British m e d i i jounul &ncet had unleashed ?hmisthemmhW~swnsinrho~
a 'mpr 6restormgof conwovemy. bat dioxin cnucsAIDS Thm is the f e a t wnbct
K y k theorized that the A& cDid& theow. rbc theor?,. the hhaps bammt
among American male homosexuals c o d I b e o r Y , t h e p e n e b c ~ t n m ~ ~ k ~ ,
have been accidmully u ~ e in d the mid- ~ - & ~ ~ s ' ~ ~ d
-
1970s by an wmimental tmmunt for her- - - NortberristheTomCurtisthLqthtrpa-
peS lesions used in o-mCofailnri m t r l batch of polio vrrine d m h i a e d to
h u n d r r d s o f ~ d ~ 3 0 ~ a g o
The trnbnent double doaes. twice u ohm was rddentally contaminad with a d e y
u u r c d f o r p o ~ ~ ~ o f t h e b b i n o r virus
d that lumed out to cause AIDS It is not m
i m p h s i i &a 7he immediate a
po"0
AIDS virus is in- a mo&eym
bdDevsracuudto&tbeAbu3n
*d P060-
cine. h l Ulc p b a and time of the mlio doa
&Itplrmsidoeswmuntruc~thedo+
a ooe boh at tbe Culrir theory the La aminc-
polio nccines since the mid-1970* told me ingit-
that since 1985, when snrsiDvc oer tcsrinp Curaskarmpk,makesitd+rifthac
pnxedure~mc insritutcd. Lcderk hu
somama found SIV in e ~ t yrtiym of its
~~woasa-rhetpokewlun
said arh conhminnrrrl rmtairt are climi-
whatrbout*#iEcproduadandrdminis
-tered before W15! 'ihe spokesman
. s thee,
said that if
you an1
*:
:zPde
Control has storcd samples of polio vacciae
since 1976. Fauci, dirraor of both the N b
d ~ t n 0 f ~ m d I a f ; e c t i w s ~
eases and NM's O h of A[DS Resew&, told
m e Ifthere are Ipolio vaccine siimplesj &om -
back then. it would snm rrrson?ble to go bag-
brkandtmttfiemurinqourmoderntech
~ ~ P c b ~ ~ ~ d p o p l e c m r m p c
niqua' bodthrt~morr*mrrthncarldaooccrr
~k~~(~tdnedhaIhgkQrdpoiioi~
ladin H e r l a FDA's w sdentitt WO. ~hesam&npoplcdaotget~h.om
vcnrrnt with the test in question, the poh- atmpmdqs.rowhy3houldtheyrirba~
mense duin -OD or PCR agmes &t dm?
such t&ng is ia orda and would be the best
rr~yt~rrrohretheququestioeMeInick~Rob
biiidsosaytestingtheaupctpoliostocIrs
muld be a good idea that could put the cur-
w t c o n ~ t o r c s t
of~Habh and
But IwisSullivm, x c r t t a ~
Hurmn Smites, FDA Commissioner Dnrid
BrkC~nontcp.'IbeWabrInrtihd+tbe
~ ~ w o t n t p t i o n ~ 3 0 ~
Whether or not the Wastar Institute itself ago~tbepolioWsominqucstion.ei-
therwedAsiaarbeJus~to&bpdio
evahuta the &+, the question c o d k cncdoeor~fmm~prrer!monlrcys.
settled by multiple PCR and other tests. ~narao'tdelennwrtucbButmbothu+
performed in independent labs by aCIIltbhrraprobkm
investigators of unquestioned integrity and Rheaumonkeysarent inEectcdrith SIVin bK
rildatdLkrdprrenmonkeys.rhichare.curya
stature outside the United Saks-prefenbb' ~ofSIVhtisr,~tfromHIV-1(ht
in England and Switzerland ¤ dcntisb say it b v b t d y tisbimporvi
to imagine
thtitcwldhaveno~mtothevirusreoor
Tom Curcis, form05 of Texas Monthb, is m q n k as OH cause of A D S within C d s hy-
~ h i s v l b j d f a R d l i n g S ( o n o n d ~ h r pothcbhl tlnth. GEAI
HoUsMn Pelt.
.-meed6 !
Tuberculosis is back ~ I
Wand IW-DWA
I W Z )1
m .
Into Uvlngllurn
m A new type of Consequently, Du Melle -said, Gmdiihath#rrarrharame-
"we . a w n turn to the' pbli
tuberculosis is of
particular danger
- to AIDS
arena to p-e 2
initiatives to
dress the resurgence of tubercu-
.J* beIbkcoprfmnWillmcbc
11-
. bl rnnl m b -
liomdcdbwing~dcvicc(hl&
m i l l i d DNA& pdlm~ l w -
patients. losis in the United States." ingtisu.'IhcDNAmd.nicrM-
/&3142- She said the number of cases
began to increase in 1985, for the
opatdla.nmyhmz
-8 -2
ThoAssOciatedPnns first time since national reporting
WASHINGTON - A new and
dangerous type of tuberculosis is
was h t required in 1953. From
bYimarimising~L*o~.
'Ihe dev*e d m t s rbouc 10p d l l i i
DNA baQ. e n g ~ p a x m m d y
1989 to 1990. the increase was 9
"out of cqntrol" the American 30~~.drrnly~(hcthar
percent, the biggest ever. The mIspcdrdI.rnfmperrsemd.
Lung Assoelation said Thursday. It number of cases was 25,701.
urged Congress to appropriate at
least $91 million to combat a dis-
ease once believed to have been
conquered
"Alas, TB is back," Dr. Lee B.
The new threat of
Reichman, presidentslect of the
association. said at a news confer-
P
ence. ublic health onicials have Dr. Charles ~ o l a ndirector
, of
F'ran Du Melle, deputy mana@ng expressed well-placed alarm Tuberculosis Control Programs
director of the assoaation, said it is over tile spread of a strain for the Seattle-King County
urging a p p d of a $66 million of tuberculosis in the U.S. that Department of Health.
appropriation recommended by seems resistant to. antibiotics. In Seattle-King County, the
Resident Bush in his budget. plus An immediate research eITort rate of TB has risen from an all-
$15 million to help states and ales niust be undertaken to develop
fight the disease and a minimum of time low in 1984 of 84 cases to
$10 million for federally funded rt drugs to deal with this emerging 107 now. From 5 to 10 percent of
search. threat to public health. those cases a r e in people with
Experts at the Centers for Dis-
ease Control in AUanta have said
that outbreaks of potentially dead&
. While it is unlikely anyone.; 0.e.
would catch TB from such casual
contact as sitting a t at1 adjacent.
- HIV infection. another 10 to 15
percent in drug abusers, 25
percent in either the homeless o r
and drug-resistant strains of tu- table in a restaurant or at an medically underserved and 50
berculosis could become inenas- adjoining desk at work, TB is percent in immigrant populations,
in& hard to combat as they spread by prolonged persorial
spread among AIDS victims and according to Nolan.
others with weakened immune contact, most typically among Because it was wrongly
systems. families livit~gin close quarters, assumed that the U.S.had the
Outbreaks already ha? oc- . according to medical experts.
'Most of the cases of drug-
disease permanently under
curred in New York C~ty,Mi* control, no new TB drugs have
Florida and the New York state resistant bacterium have been been bro ght to market in 22
found in New York City, where years a n 4 the tuberculosis
the TB epidemic has combined public health programs have
m o m division of the New Jersey ,with epidemics of HlV infection, been all but dismantled.
.Medical School in Begen, said intravet~ousdrug abuse and "It's almost criminal that this
HIV-infected people who d d o p hornelessness to create has been allowed to happen," says
latent tuberdo& have a 10 per- cohditiotis uiider which the Nolan, who sits on a national
cent chance of developing an active disease thrives.
case of the disease within a year. council whose charge is to
He said the drug-resistant ,While Seattle so far has seen eliminate TB in this country.
strains of the infectious disease only a handful of tuberculosis Meanwhile. 8 million new
can be read to health-
, caqes resistant to standard drug cases of TB occur annually
workers an?othor in hospitals. treatment, the deadly strain has worldwide, and a staggering 3
Reichman said 50 percent of tu- surfaced in 13 states and . n~illionpeople die from it each
berculosis patients once died, even generally "tuberculosis is out of year.
after treatment which often kept control in this couritry," It seems unlikely then, given
them in a hospital 6ve to 10 years. according to Dr. Dixie Snider, the
After the discovery of drugs to modern international
cure the disease, "society, keling chief expert ori tuberculosis at interdependency, that TB will be
that TB was comiog under control, the federal Centers of Disease eliminated in the United States
turned its attention to other Control. unless it's also eliminated in the
problems and priorities." "I think it's on~irious,"adds rest of the global village.
"But alas, TB is back" he said
"Front page articles and national
sound bites and talk shows re-
mind us that we have a new,
powerful and dangerous type of
TI3 that is out of control."
Super-TB bug-
- - ... -. . .-
Antibiotits and EMF
Researchers a t the University of
Texas Health Science Center in San
Antonio have found that low intensity
NEURAL FUNGUS
-
cnhmllsdtunnds.Noonwa tion was planned. The mould d
ried until train drivers, then be ausd by potiutanb from the
commuters, complained o f many factories in this highly-indu-
hedacha ud symptom that Ng- strididarea.
gnted poisoning. Scimti5ts British fungi expert Donald
v m d that the mould was poisonous MacKeuk said: "lhave m a hard
ud penetrated intarvl orgam ud d a mould poitonous as this. It is
bbod cdk. The min tunnels were very unusual for a mould to have
said to lie "on tk udent migntory such a severe effect on humam.
~ath of thc miawwd. W k Norndy. only popk with weak
& how they could know hL.1 immune zystems are at risk.. It
'It is even worse tiun Aids" said would be unusual for a speda of
Professor N. Dekhan-Khodrhm. mould to derive from industrial
'?his mould is wry aggresrive and effluent, but it would not be impou-
atlacks not only dl internal 0- ible." IR1 Houston (TX) Post,
but a h 9 blood Eellt" Doctors DMina. D M 30 Aug 1990.
examhd 32 victims and d i d
various typa d o w l d in 14 of thmL
Four w o r h from Chekaiov station
had a nw specia of mould in their
M A T R I X 1 1 1
From the May 6, 1991 Issue of Commerce Business Daily, subm itted
by a LER member from New York:
n
,
largest school system. officials have confirmed what the
If approved, condoms
would be available on request
at 120 schools that enroll
*
nation's belea ered hospitals al-
hew
an epidemic.
P;: flu tuts become tb,& pmj-
&-
arg62pcrant.mm'mdYld'W
2b.000 students, part of a Deaths ambuted to the fIu
reached idemic levels in the last
24.m -=
in the U.S. -
stepped up effort to fight week of %ember and m k
AIDS. of J-, according to the US Measles cases 6-91
Tarents' permission wou~d Centers for Disease ControL
not be required. and that was .On upswing in Urns..
the major sticking point for
the School Board. Several The flu epidemic, the nation's ATLANTA - urban children
getting measles and dying in
board members tried to ne- first since 1989, could gct worse. are
gotiate an "optout" clause, al- Febmary traditionally is the peak riumbers unthin-
morrth of the flu season ealth experts
lowing parents to write notes "It has filled our hospital to m -$ ~x~matim:
to exclude their children. overflowin " Orbenia Stewart. at Children are not getting vaccinat-
Schools Chancellor Joseph the DeKak Medid Center in ed.
A. Fernandez has insisted that suburban Atlanta. said yesterday. "From the publiclhealth t h .
no "opt-in" be required. He DeKalb is one of dozens of hospi- point of view, we really know
said that to make teens get tals nationwide reporting bed what the problem is," said Dr.
their parents' permission shortages because of the fhr. Roger Bemier of the federal
would scare them away from "Ibis week's been homndars, Centers for Disease Control.
the condom giveaways.
the hardest week 1 hbad h 23 "Infants are not being vaccinated
.
yeas them," she said. in time in our large urban ar-
Flu was linked to 7 2 percent of eas."
One solution is to make
the deaths in 121 cities in the m+ vaccinations more eaqily avail.
week period. said Dr. Lany Schob -.... ..I . ..
krger, of the CDC's viral d k a s s
Humans # ; .
ALTERING THE
AIDS VIRUS
to be new It is no secret that the AIDS virus is ;
formidable enemy: more than 6 millior
people haw already been infected. But
it came as a jolt when a recent micle irr
Science hinted that certain lab exptri-
ments might create even more danger-
Desperate to halt the spread ous variants. Admittedly the "note ol
of AIDS,officials plan to caution concerning. ..biosafety mea-
abandon trial tests on animals sum" was subtle, but considering that
and begin using experimental one of the authors was Robat Gallo.
vaccines on human subjects. codiscowrcr of the AIDS vim &re
was no way the note was going to
N.Y. Times News Service
// -N-q/ cape attention.
Discouraged by their inability to stem The arlick described how QUO'S team
the spread of AIDS, world health officials at the National Cancer Iditute had
are bypassing the usual animal trials and succeeded in infectinghuman ceih with
plan to begin testing in Brazil, Rwanda, both the AIDS v i ~ ands a mouse Icuke-
Thailand, and Uganda to find out whether mia virus. When the AIDS v h s repro-
experimental vaccines can prevent people duced in these doubly inltaed cells, its
from becoming infected. outer coat incorporated proleins from
The step reflects almost a complete re- the mouse virus. This altered A D S virus
versal in attitude. Until now, many ex- turned out to infect rills in the immune
perts had favored the traditional approach
of exhaustively testing vaccines on ani- system that the pure A D S virus nor-
mals. mally k a m alone. Moreover, it a h
The larger studies will involve a few ; infected tbe epithelial cells -hat line the
thousand volunteers. The first iniections 1993 respiratory w a n
are not due to be given for two veaD, and That's what set off alarm bells. Other
selection of the first vaccines has not been
made. viruses that infect epithelial cells-such
Countries that might have resented b e as influenza, cold, utd e s t d n - ~ u rvi-
ing guinea pigs in the past are eager to ruses-can spread throughfbLair. 7'he
take part in an AIDS vaccine trial. As the fear is that an a l m s v i m might
epidemic surges almost unchecked do the same Uung.
through many Asian and African coun- Cailo himself down~lawthis m s i .
tries, health officials have become des-
perate. biliiy. These viruses are only sum-
Eleven million people are already in- -changed, be notes, not genetically
altered. so they can't pass on thc changes
to their offspring. 'Theontidy, you
ple will soar Lo 40 million, including 10 could have a danger," he says of air-
million children, by the end of the decade. borne transmission, *'but it would be a
At a recent meeting on AIDS vaccines,
the feeling was "the trials may not work, onetime risk."
but try anyway)))said Dr. Dani Bolognesi, Other AIDS researchers think wen
an AIDS vaccine expert at Duke Univer- that's overstating things. The MIS virus
sity. . . . in mouse clothing is not the first mro-
- H
3 h e World . . virus-the family of virus that also in-
ndwo& for- - cludes those that cause Icukmia-to
&. Ueanda. and Thailan&
Arrnv officials from the U n incorporatethe proteins of anotba virus
and Thailand have started studies among into Ps coat. Mixed viruses have brm
the Thai military to determine whether to known lor more than two decades, and
do a large vacche trial there. And&&& "then's no evidence that they've m r
health officials are exploring the possibll- traveled through the air," says Howard
~ t vof vacclne studles m hlgh-nsk clvlllan Temin, a Nobel Prize winning virologist
groups In the Unlted States. The enor6
WII be c o o ~ n a t e d . at the University of Wiscoruin. 'The
while the first injections are not ex- enemy m know is bad enough without
pected for two years, safety tests of can- worrying about hobnoblins."
didate vaccines will continue in the United
States and other developed countries
where they are manufactured.
..
AIDS in U S An AlDS
~-fi-~= 'Judge orders
research
TheAssociatedPress
ATLANTA - It took eight years
for the first 100,000 AIDS cases to
appear in the United States. It took
AlDS paper
just a months for the next ioo,ooo,
a group including more hetero- kepf secret success
sexuals, women and minorities. The AsJocreted Press /-/o-*
The Centers for Disease Control STUART, Fla. - A research pa-
h r t e d that the nation's AU)S per that reportedly disputes the m A new vaccine seems to
count now stands at 206,392 cases, Centers for Disease Control's con- be protecting monkeys
with 133,232 deaths. It was August clusion that a dentist infected his
1989 when the 100,000th case was patients with AlDS must be kept h m a virus similar to the
reported; the next 100,000 came in wcmt fat now, a judge has ruled human AIDS virus,
just more than twoyears. The d c l e is b e i i reviewed for scientists say.
.
'The cumulative total . . em- publication by the journal Science
-a .-/YL . -
phasizes the rapidly increasing and would lose value if released
magnitude of the HIV (AIDS virus) before ublication, attorney Bill The Asociated Press
epidemic," the CDC said. Fink tok Circuit Judge Robert -
WASHINGTON Scientists said
Thursdav that for the first time
The second 100,000 AlDS cases they ha& successfully vaccinated
-red from the first 100,000: M a k & m s o E ~ ~ S ~ ~ ~ $DcnW "k
Health of Florida, the insurer of monkeys against an AIDSrelated
mSeven percent Of the newer dentist David Acer, who died h m virus by using bits of the virus'
AIDS cases were traced to h e t e d AIDS in 1990. c 1 m A hired Dr. outer coat - a method similar to
sexual transmission- up 44 Lionel Resnick, who has conducted one that has produced encouraging
percent with the first AIDS studies, to research the CDC preliminary results in humans.
100,000, 5 percent of which were hding that Acer infected five pa- A team headed by Dr. Shiu-Lok
heterosexual cases. tients with the HIV virus. Iiu of Bristol-Myem Squibb Phar-
More than 11,000 heterosexual The judge told CIGNA to give the maceutical Research Institute in
AIDS cases have been reported to attorneys for one of the Seattle vaccinated four macaque
andthatcountisexpctedtodou- patients, but said its con- monkeys against the simian m-
ble by 1995, said Dr. Larry Sluts- tents must be t secret. The pa- munodeficiency virus, which is re-
ker, a CDC AIDS epidemiologist.
m I v e percent of the second him to
"E:
tient is suing CI NA for dimctmg
to receive dental care.
lated to HIV, the human AIDS vi-
NS.
100,000 AIDS cases occurred in Scientists at the Atlanta-based The scientists report on their
women, compared with 9 percent Cm -4 DNA tests that study in the forthcoming issue of
of the first 100,000. g e n e t i d y linked Acer's strain of Science, the weekly jounral of the
m,AWty-one percent of the see- the HIV virus with those of five American Association for the Ad-
ondl ptienu bla4 m t s . One of those patients was vancement of Science.
compared with 27 percent earlier. rty Bergaiis, who died last Dr. Dani Bolognesi of the Center
month. for AIDS Research at Duke Uni-.
versity, which was inwlved in the
study, said it was "cleady support-
Second wave Dolphins are
ing evidence" that such a method
conid achieve success against the
HIV virus in humans.
of AlDS hits dying of AIDS
THOUSANDS OF dol-
Monkeys had been immunized
against SIV before, but it was done
with vaccines made from inacti-
LlPID MEMBRANE Two diagrams from Or. Callahan's papa. "Dielectric Antennae m, W
C o h e e ~ c .and a Possible Cure for AIOS." The large d ~ m mIka m
GP41 AIDS v i m . and notes the 13' spread between u c k plir of pomniom on
the vinl Mace-the GPIZO-GP4I didctrtc antennae. lha dk-
gnm shorn facornoarison an aboveground tophat antenna. Dr. Calk-
han's thwy for disabling the AlOS vlRn. is based uoon the insight that
the glycogmteins on the membraneof the virus resemble an antemu away,
and can be "jammed" in the same way.
t
11
+ + C +
rl
rcmaed k t u we&
The quartz window did allow trrnrmlrriw
or ~ l l m . i o ~Iam r ~ hh .a w ccllr
NEW PeDMULIST '
dlseuod when the ulb.ri0l.t r i a r l r amittod
bYthebntcaltumwmtnarnltt0dtoth.a
l unrmrr-ZG"::'
Tkrrcurmkanrr*c.
Althaoph M- ban mnd rclloM M l i i hmw bmr
sprn in md.CAN= still u i ~ ha tk a(u j m
rrm d dcrlb in Amerin.
l n i w m ...
8 Rtgutsru,... THE GROUP
1216 Wishire Blrd iar h g c k CA 90011
.
llmhgscbamda-
gnte litUe considaation to Uw ~.nbingrnmarmr
strange sensation Uut reminded .ndIrulnmws.
her of a limb Wling Asleep. R-
But over UK nerd 24 hap$ &oUlSp.ranld
UK lingling crept into her lower pIliwdsrx#mr
kgs and UM he? thighs. B an- .ompM.ncor-
otherday,Unmusdcwukrrss rY.
entered her jaw and face By
NcrYur'rEve,JrnncoJdwt ~ l m ~ T m O * n p n
.*lurk(wridc&me GuiW~~JIMjkrLykinssowwkma~~cwldnrbr~onhouun.smllowkod
bikeshermivcdatChnrtmu ordrinkmostqulds.
It took doctors over a mlt !a
-
.rulizethrtthcHnrloPrrim~ ' able to breathe on her own, swabv food J m retunnd home to l i with &
sas not suUeciq from rtro& but r orbinltmod~ Pucnk
rare neurolog~cal disorder called 4tvr~daeculttosprlrwithadM- I h e S s i n t M ~ ' s C o l l c g e ~ m
GuilLin-Burt. ing rnd.pumngm Juur s+d Brrrthia bnger arrlkeroraanetoget
and Whng at the same hmc s p t
h u l a e r g y . E v c n ~ asessions
-cl=
~ ~
slf
thm physcrl Lbcnm
a week w h m she doa
m1- m
i -e SPcngVHningbJumMdrcnroypr.
"f mn- mov* .t 2 aption=-
=.m.-Idtw=dno(kinl Som-*.~oune-bgets
oMctochogethc~"shecrid she'srtillrcconnngAsJrnnc0ntrnua
won. But after two mlein tbe hospit& sk to retun to mutine .*ivitia,induding
driving and soon a daily job, it's d m
~mporPypsrr)ydr. moYmwDt
JPW b p n eating *mush" ~ * f i i o d '' B u t a n . D ~ t w a o r
one-~thcOnsctOfk~ S opo n , s h e ~ w h e e l i n g b c + f a~+ u a r r m m d u t h a t t h e & a ~ d
~ J m - h O ~ M r t S t - tolhediningmomAnduntbtbehclpd Glllllrin-Burcaredillaround
Hospital in Olympia physical th- she began wrlldng "one moaning I aolrr up, felt full d
As Cuil*ipBpm nriFvrrs go. J a n v i a~ -. uwgV yrd g 0 t . W d kQ"wid
m@kroungShkcMnsod O n J a n Z 7 , r l i W e o w o n c m o n t h Jauq.wboxmthesscadcdinrthud'I
that tbe disorder sometimes Id! her un- afttr thc h t rim of Guill*- I d nght on my teem
proven that the source of the RadLtion from nucleur ~ S ~ W childhood leukaemia how there were less children than in
und N
disease is nuclear radiation. been hurd to link. An infmion m y connm the two the urban areas from which the
Kinlen believes that the in- new populations came. As a
cidence of childhood leukaemia can be ex- year period starting when the building of result, says Kinlen. there was no epidemic of
plained if a few children are heavily infected new towns began in 1946. Nine of the new leukaemia in the youngest children. Also,
and the m t are lightly infected by an as yet towns were ownpill towns, which were the numkr of eases in older children fell
unknown agent. Those children who do not designed to provide home and jobs for shon of what would have k e n expected.
develop the disease following' infection are people from London and Glasgow. while the again consistent with an immunising effect.
pro7ected against developing it later. Kinlen other five were rural new towns, built to Kinlen points out that the picture that
predicts. therefore, that an "epidemic" of increase the workforce in areas pinpointed emerges was rather like that seen in cats
leukaemia should be followed by low levels for industrial development. infected with feline leukaemia virus.
of disease. The populations of the rural group were Leukaemia is much more common among
The idea that leukaemia and its close dram from a much wider variety of places cats which live in households where there are
relations. the lymphomas, might have their than those of the ovenpill towns. According lots of them than among those of single cat
origin in infection is not new. Herpcs viruses to Kinlen. this partly explains differences households. Jobn Cdbway
HIV and African parasite may be linked
F RENCH scientists have discovered an
intriguing connection between a parr-
site and HIV. The parasite. which
tion is for the origins of HIV. and the
possible interactions between the two infcc-
tions. Some of the earliest evidence of HIV
causes schistosomiasis, a disease widespread of VIF and the similar protein in schis- comes from Zaire and Burundi. These coun-
in Africa, and HIV, the virus that causes tosomes. "Parasites express very highly con- tries also have the highest rates of schist*,
AIDS. appear to produce a similar protein. served functional proteins." says Capron. somiasis, which has been established among
The discovery. to be published in this That is, the proteins they express have humans in Africa for thousands of years.
month's Journal of Experimental Medicine. changed very little over evolution. The way according to Capron. Most people exposed
could give clues to the origin and epidemiol- in which the newly discovered surface pro- to HIV in Africa have already been exposed
-.of AIDS.
oev to schistosomes. and the results
Andre Capron, of the Pasteur suggest that they might. in con-
Institute in Lille, France, and his sequence, have some im-
colleagues, work on both schist* munological ability to recognisc
somiasis and HIV. Schistosomes HIV. Whether this reduces or
are tiny, multicellular parasites exacerbates HIV infection, says
that spend pan of their lives in Capron, can only be guessed at
snails. and are spread to humans without better epidemiological
in fresh water. Each year. data.
schistosomiasis. also called lt is possible that schiitosomes
bilhama. kills 800 000 people. haw only recently become in-
Two hundred million people are fected by HIV themselves, and
disabled because of the disease. a n merely expressing a viral pro-
Capron's team wanted to tein. Capron says m e n t work in
know which proteins on schis- Japan shows that schistosomcs
tosomes are recogniscd by anti- can incorporate genes from
bodies in the blood of animals retroviruses. But because anti-
with schistosomiasis. Thii would bodies against the protein can
show which surface proteins are block schistosome infection.
most effective in inducing immu- Caoron
r - ---
thinks the amtein
r------- h
-
nity to the parasite, an: which Schistosomcr, h y multiccUular pamites thor are spread to humans tikely to k native t o the parasite,
might work as vaccines. in water, share a surface protein wirh the AIDS v i m and have somc functional im-
As a control, to measure the ponana. It may ?Iso be spccu-
random binding of proteins to the anti- tein functions in rhistosomes may reveal laced that the virus picked up the gene for
bodies, the scientists exposed the anti-schis- how the same sequence regulates infection this particular infective protein from
tosome antibodies to a protein from HIV. by HIV. Such functions may be easier to schistosomes.
virion infective factor (VIF). They used this study in schistosomes. says Capron, because Thc protein has become a new candidate
panly because it would not be expected to they a n well undentood and easier to for a rhistosomiasis vaccine. alongside
bind specifically to the anti-schistosome anti- manipulate than retrovinrses. other proteins, for which Capron hopes to
bodies, and panly because Capron was The second and most intriguing implica- begin a series of trials in humans.
intrigued by similarities between schist*
somiasis and AIDS; he wanted to see if. by Gene could cause osteoarthritis
chance. there were molecular similarities.
The team was amazed to find that anti-
bodies from schistosome-infected animals A DEFECIIVE gene may be respon- gen in the weakened cartilage is defective.
sible for up to 30 per cent of cases of because some is made by the gene inherited
bind specifically to VIF. They went on to osteoanhritis, according to scientists in the by the mother and some by the gene from
find that antibodies to VIF recognised schis- US. The gene codes for collagen, a type of the father. People with the genetic defea
tosomes. A monoclonal antibody, directed !cue which holds together cartilage at a seem to have only 25 per a n t of their
specifically against one pan of VIF (the C- joint. Defective collagen is thought to collagen defective with the remaining 75 per
terminal). binds specifically t o a protein on weaken the canilage. whose job is to cushion cent quite normal.
schistosomes. Antibodies from humans with the bone. The defective collagen is like a bad brick
schistosomiasis. but without HIV. bind to Damin Pmckop and his colleagues at in a wall. says Prockop. "If you have 25 per
VIF in the t a t tube. Antibodies from Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia cent bad bricks the wall is not going to fall
humans with HIV, but no schiitosomiasis, and at Case Western Reserve University in down right away. but over time it is p i n g t o
bind to schistosomes. Cleveland studied one family. They found get weaker." Arthritis strikes most often
VIF is a regulatory protein produced by that nine memben of the family had a when people are over 50. he says.
HIV when it replicates in cells. It appean to mutation in a single amino acid of a gene for But most cases of osteoanhritis do not
be imponant for enabling the virus to infect a conneaive tissue called collagen I1 that seem to be caused by this genetic defect.
cells. The rhiitosome protein recogniscd caused osteoanhritis (Proceedings of the Pmckop says. However, out of nine other
by anti-V1F antibodies also appears to be National Academy of Sciences, vol 87. cases of osteoanhritis under study in the US
imponant for infection by schistosomes. p 6565). and Finland, two seem to be caused by this
Monoclonal antibodies against VIF pro- In osteoanhritis, the cartilage at joints genedefect.
tected rats against schistosomiasis. Gpron's wean or disappears altogether. The bones According to Rockop, the d i o v e r y will
group has now purified the protein from can then grind against each other, musing allow doctors to do a simple genetic test to
schistosoma that binds antibodies to VIF, inflammation and the growth of bone spun. detennine if children arc likely to have
and is sequencing the gene that codes for it. Some c y e s of osteoanhritis are caused by an osteoanhritis later in life. People may
to w e how similar the protein is to VIF. injury to the bone, but the cause of other then alter their diet or career in order
The discovery, says Capron. has two cases is unknown. to reduce their chance of getting
major implications. One is for the function The scientists found that not all the colla- the disease, he says.
r MAN C O W T R A ~ POLIO:
S A man descril?ed by his-doctor
Instant virus: Justadd RNA as "staggeringly unlucw was paalyzed by poho he contracted
from changing the dia r of hi nlece, who recently was immunized
Viruses are such primitive things that against the dsease. ~ G d r e nshed the lio virus in their feces for
many scientists don't consider them alive.
They cannot reproduce on their own;
instead. they must hijack the reproduc-
week gettin the vaccine said
rolog~stm n g for B
4t1-~ear-o1d man. / -<
g.
Louis Lawton. the neu-
-q>
tive machinery of living cells. Because of
this shortcoming, virologists must grow
their research subjects in dishes lined
with cultured cells. TECHNOLOGY & HEALTH
Now, scientists
- ah
technique for nrowlnn tens of thousands
07 wlio viruses at a time. In the Dec. 13 I scientists at Weapons Lab Develop I
$CIENCE. they say the new process will
allow insights into the life cycles of many
types of viruses and will yield a faster and
1Test for Detecting Salmon& in E' /,
easier way to screen potential antiviral BY Jcllrr E. Elsflor Whlch the eggshell mmatcs." the labom-
a 0 l I R n . r OITHC
W~~.Sm&Jourrrr tory said.
drugs. In a mr swords-ioplar- saga. The researchers found that normal, un.
The researchers. led by Mhteruzza- sckntlsts at om of the nabon's weapons contaminated eggs resonated at a slngle
man Molla from the State University of labontorks are dcvelopartg a cheap way to frequency of 830 hertz or cycles per ~ c c -
test eggs for contamlnatlon by JalmoncUa ond. whlch 1s a hlgh G.sharp. But If the
New Mrk at Stony Brook. isolated RNA bacletla. f+ggs rcrr infected with s a l m l h the
frompolio viruses and added this genetic Salmonella contamination of ls a shell also resonated at a second. hlgher
material to a slurry of human cells that rMesprrad publk health prnbkm. Con- frequency In addltton to the Gsharp.
sumptbn ol n w ar undercooked contaml- Success Rate of 25%
they had previously put through a nated eggs can kad to stomach ache,
blender and treated with several chemi- dlarrhcr. VmlUng and fever that can cn- So far, Ulc mcuthm have kcn able
cals. The mixture yielded intact polio danger the I l m of Infants. the elderly and tospotobautZS%oltheeggsthatnre
Mn. and disable the healthy b r a few containlnated by deliberately Injecting,
viruses that could go on to infect other drys. The 50.000 cpscJ of salmomlla pol- them rith salmonella. "We hope to flm-
cells, they report. sonlng reported each year are belkved to .tune our mewrrmcnts to pull out lmoof
*This is the first time researchers have provide a gross undemtlm?tc of the ex- thc Infectedeggs." saki Roger Johnston. a
tent of the salmonella prObkm. member of the rrsnrch team. who &
synthesized infectious viruses in a test At present. them ls no way to know If scribed the devke at a xkmc hir In
tube," Molla asserts. He says his team an egg Is eontamlnated short of breaklng it Santa Fe. N.M.. sponsored by the Im
open and culturing Its yoUt overntght tn see A m labwttory.
hopes to use the process to mass-pro-
* /?q/ If salmonelia multlply lo detectable The Idea of wing the aCOUJUcal detce-
duce other disease-causing virus&. 0 levels. tion technlqut for eggs stemmed fmn a
3'Ec'. f Researchers at the L s Almm Na- canversathm Dr. Johnston had rlth an ac-
Uonal LabOntory In New Mexico. where qualnl?lKe at the US. Food and Dmg ~ d .
SCIENCE NEWS, VOL. 140 the atomic bomb was developed. said they mlnbtmIoR. One d Dr. Johnston's job
had s u e l y detected salmonrlla.in. Wth the proces technology m p at Los
fectcd eggs udng a devlce deslgwd to de- Alamor ls to flnd blomedld appllutkns .
tect chemld and bbloglcal W n U in ar- for the lab's vast store d technology. The
tillery shells and other munltlons. The de- FDA sclentlst had asked If thc Lm Aim :
vke was devebped to help verlfy compli- researchers had anythlng rhat could deal
rtth Ulc salmonella probkm. Querlcs
Polio outbreak ance rtth arms control trestles.
The lmpectbn devke consists basically around the lab led Dr. Johnston to Mpen
of two small sound tnnsducers. each about Slnha of the electronla m n r c h group,
shakes Jordan : the ae of a qwner. One transducer who was dcvebplng the a c o w t d d e l e '
s e w s as a speaker that conwrts elrctn- .Urn method for weapons Inspection.
cal signals Into sound and the oUlrr as a "We are using very much the same
microphone that converts sounds back into type of equipment now to look at eggs," :
AMMAN, Jordan -Polio. a
dreaded killer and crippler of
ektncal signals. saM Dr. Sinha.
The researchem said they must stlll
Measuring Resonance prove the system in the field to m.akt sure
children. has struck Jordan. An egg ls placed between the two trans- It can detect eggs naturally conUmtMLcd
Health Ministry officials an- ducers. The speaker plnp It with a pulse wlth saln~onrlla.
nounced over the weekend. of sound of a spciflc frequency. The plng The dctectlon drvtce has been nduced
Tens of thousands of- fright- c a m the egg to monate llke a mtuical to flt In a briefcase and probably could be
ened mothers hauled thew ch~l- tuning fork. The mkrophone picks up t l r manufacturd for about LZOO. a labnratory
revcrkrallons and reveals the frquency spolteman saw. On a poultry-and-
dren to hospitals and clinics for at wlllch the e a h r l l ls resonatlnK. fann productton line It could screen an egg
vaccinations as word of the dis- "Thc e ~ h r l l ' natural
s resfmanee Is af- every few seconds. the labnratory sue
ease s~read.Jordan launched a ffftfd by conditions in the white md w e d . and probably could be adapted to
nationwide campaign yesterday to yolk." Ihe laboratory explained in an an. cklfft cracked eggs. c f f ~Wth ~ dwbk
immunize 600.000 children. noclncrmenl. "Change In lhe nsroslty. yolks and frrtillzed eggs.
density and olher p m r t i e s of thc e m The Lns Alamos Iabnratory said It has
white and yolk can alter the fnguency at applied for a patent an the device.
Individual Vulnerabili~y:
TheRIVvinm--acquired
immune deficiency eyndmme, is a die.
ease complex chruactvized by a col-
l a p of the body's natural immunity
against disease The collapse of the
immune system rendem the individual
vulnerable to infections and cancers
that urnzally pone little or no t&at
t e m What ahould have beem a theapz8addAII)S.AIDShaabecome to someone with an intact immune s y s
strictly scientific k u m e on the a p o l i t i c a l ~ w i t aaetdspecid
h tem. The m n y m AIDS was !%at used
population has instead become a dab 'Wghts" have p l e n t a d ,
threat that AIDS poets to the g e d "rightcl*' g n u h i its vietima These by the U.S Centen, for Dieease Con-
medical trol, CDC,in late 1982. The first atsea
sic example of the triumph of politic8 amamunity from-taking the atandad of what would come to be called AIDS
over science. publichealthmeammad y taken were reported in mid 1981.
The playus on this political batt- contad an epidemic AIDS is linked to (and mast leading
l e g n d are many.They includeAIDS A h on the: AIDS playing field are researchrm feel is c a d by) a retm
lob- who have endeavored to con- thevictimsThoclewhohavealnady virus now commonly known as H N
vincethe nation, indeed the world, that been diagnosed with HTV or full blown human immunodaciency virua HlV
literally everyone on the planet is at AIDS Overwhelmingly in the United has been found to have a number of
riBkofcontrachgAIDSIbthisend States, AIDS victims fall into groups mriants which have also been asso-
the AIDS lobby haa consistently and which are outaide the mainstraam of ciated with the development of AIDS
relenUeasly attemptedto portray AIDS 8ocietyl mostly intravenous drug HlV is a blood-borne virus This
as the biggest threat to the nqjority abuaem NaA4 and thau sesual par% means that it is transmitted from per-
community. (ie. non-intravenousdrug n e r s , a n d h o ~ a n dson ~ to p e m n through direct blood to
using hetemsexual) since the Black The overriding concern of the AIDS blood contact or *ugh bodily fluids
Death. victimaisthediecoverydamfor containingHN coming in contact with
Yet another player on this politid t h e ~ S a m c A I D S v i c t i m a h a v c the blood of a n o n - i n f d recipient.
battleground ie the medical commu- droscm to publicize their plight in ' h m m h i o n of HIV from one per-
nity. Epidemiologists and medical highly contnmmial waya ConhPnta- eon to another b, (in mlation to other
researchers have attempted to under- tional group such as ACT-UP, the viruses such as hepatitin-B)relatively
diflicult. When such transmission
arurs a concentrated mume ofthe HTV
virus, such as blood or semen. is almost
always involved. This means that while
the HIV virus has been found in such
bodily secretions ae tears and saliva
it is not concentrated enough in those
fluids to provide an eRicient means of
transmission. While theoretically pos-
sible, no cases or transmiasion from
tears or saliva have yet been discovered.
The most efficient methods of HIV
transmission are as follows 1)The use
of contaminated blood or blood products
for transhrsionor i-on. Befom 1985
when new blood screening procedures
were installed, an estimated 12.000
persons received HXV tainted blood.
More than 4,000 were subsequently
i n f 4 with the HIV virus Since 1985
there have been an estimated 15 to 20
million transfusions in the U S Out
of that number only 15 people were
i n f d 2) Use or sharing of contami-
natedsyringesorneedlesbyIVDAs. In males, 112.812 cases (58 percent) of undetermined cause
IVDAs are the -f grawing class attributed to hom06e~ualssx; 33,984 For some 2 perant of the total AIDS
of newly diagnosed AIDS eases 3) cases (17 percent)attributed to IV drug cases (3.312 cases)them was no infor-
Unprotected anal intercounre This has abuse; 12.580 cases (6 percent) attri- mation available The CDC also esti-
been the most dwcnnt risk k b r buted to combination homdbisexual mates that there are approximately 1
for HIv t r a n m h i o n among homosex- sex and IV drug abuse; 4321 cases (2 million Americans who are currently
ual men in the U.S (Hoamexuale perant) attributed bheterasexual sex; infected with the HN virun
accountfor 58 -nt ofthe US AIDS 2.592 cases (1 pertent) from tainted For the rest of the world statistics
infeeLed population). The reason is that blood transf* 1$84 caserr (less than from the N r l d H d t h Organization,
the r e d lining is particularly SBI 1percent) hPm tainted blood products WHO, indicate that there arc perhaps
ceptible to traumatic tearsand ulcer- used in treatment ofhemophilia; 5.737 5 million prmons currently infected
ations during anal intercourse Such cases (3 percent) undetermined causes with the HIV virua More than 1 mil-
trauma fadlitatss the pnssage of the In females, 10,044 cascci (5 percent) lion people worldwide have progressed
HIV virus to the receptive p t n e r
male or f e d 4) Heternsexual vagi-
- attributed to IV drug abuse; 6,668 auvs
(3 percent) attributed b hetercmexual
from HIV infection to full blown AIDS
Dr. Michael Meraon, director of the
nal intextours8 Despite the hysteria sex; 1.613 cases O e s ~than 1 percent) WHO'S Global Program on AIDS, saw
of recent headlines, punly h e m fmm tainted blood taansfusion; 38cases that according to WHO estimates, iy
sexual ebnt.net aea,unts for less than from tainted blood producks 1,433cases the year 2000 between 30 and 40 mil-
6pcnzntofAIDScat1esinthecountry.
There is no dispute that heterosexual
VaginalsexcantranamittheHIVvirue
between partners, hawwer the likeli-
hood of t r a d o n is vastly lower
in vaginal intercourse than it is in
and i n t e r c o m In cases of strictly
heterosexual t m i s s i o n it is know;
that HIV is more readily passed from
the male to the female It is theorized
that this i s m because there is a greater
concentration of the HN vim in a
male's ejaculate then there is in a
female's cervical-vaginalfluid. Fuxther.
semen remains in the vagina for days,
giving the HIV virus plenty of time
to find vulnerable cells to infect.
U S Htte-
-
-
How Red the
Threat? A story on AIDS in the
January 12,1987 edition of US News
and World Report said of the spread
of AIDS into the hetemserual popu-
lation. 'The diseaae of them suddenly
is the disease of us The slow death
presumed just a few years ago to be
lion adults and children, most in Africa mind that despite the publicity given confined to homosexuals, Haitians, and
and Asia, will have been infected with to AIDS it is by no means the world's hemophiliacs is now a plague in the
HIV. worst killer. Consider the follcrwing: mainstream, finding fertile gmwth
According to Dr. James Chin who Since the outbreak of AIDS in 1981, among h e t m w e x e
tracks and forecaststhe size and direc- close to t m t h i r d s of t h w diagnosed About the same time the above men-
tion d t h e AIDS epidemicfor the WHO. with AIDS in the US. some 126,000 tioned article appeared. a member of
the U S and Europe may see the growth people, have died. During that same h i d e n t Reagan's AIDS Commission,
rate of new AIDS cases begin to level 10-yeartime span more than 5 million Theresa Crenshaw, wrote this mind-
off in 1995. "By the mid 1990s annual Americans died fmm cancer. An addi- boggling paragraph in a report to a
new cases of AIDS will peak in the tional 6 million died from heart dis- House of Representatives subcommit-
developed world, but not until 2000 or ease In Africa alone, 1 million people tee, "If the -read of AIDS continues
beyond in Asia and Africa." die each year from malaria. 'Rn mil- at the same rate, in 1996 there could
At fvst glance the statistics for cur- lion others, including 4 million be 1 billion people infect& five yeam
rent and future AIDS cases seem over- children, die from acute ~spiratory later. hypothetically 10 billion;
whelming. Hawever one must keep in infections however, the population of the world
is onlv 5 billion. Could we be h c i m
hae moved. The infection has spread is so taboo,simply deny its existence
through Africa. like it ia spreading One Angolan diplomat mid, "the evil
through the U P of homosexuality does not exist in our
h t h m Michael Fumento has raiaed country, and it is consequently not
=now doubta as to the validity ofthat mentioned in our legielation."
figure on a number of p u n & First, Obviously such statements have l i t
saw Fumenta since the M c a n exam- tle factual basis, yet many AIDS
pl; is supposedly what the future pat- reseaadma accept them without ques-
tenur of trane+mimionin the U S will tion. Partly this is a cultural question.
look like, the African AIDS epidemic It is unlikely that a white Western phy-
must be older, or more mature, than sician or remmher, questioning an
the U S epidemic It ie not. AIDS was AIDS poeitive black African villager
recognizedon both continenb in 1981. about his possible homosexual exper-
Second, Fumento questions the imaa will get a truthful anmer,espe-
similarity of the AIDS epidemiologi- cially in a county where such exper-
cal pattern betwtcn the U S and ienas are criminal ack
"AhaStof~exisLinAfricathat Then simply is not enough npace in
do not exbt hem but that greatly facili- thia article to fully explore all of the
Ute the apmad of HIV in non-=ual reanom why the African expexience
wayIL" h e such lactor for example is . with AIDS ie unlike&to npdat itself
the availabilie of blood screening It intheWtst.Howwer,itirrin-
wan not until the lab 1980s that such b note that for thc maat part it is not
~bssmewidespleadinAdrica the scientifu community which is p m
In a CBS 60 Miautcs report on claiming the relcvanca dthe "African
AIDS in Africa, reporkr Diane Saw- analogue" to the U S model. Rather
yer visited a hwpital in Uganda that it is the AIDS activisb, and nome in
had one of the anmtty's five blood the press, who seek to use the African
example to fighten and temxize the to ask the following question, if I kncw
- ~ m a r n s t r u r m A m u i c a D c i ~that my partner was HIV infected,
would I still have aex with that part-
A host of factors -
The Condom Contmvemy Con- ner and trust my d e t y b a condom?
exist in Africa that QmusageQsenotguarantetdeaex. All epidemics reach a saturation
A more appropriate tum would be point past which they begin to reade
do not exist here "saf'er eexf' Condoms have a failure Some rwearchen~think that the U S
rate of10 to 17 penxmt. For anal aex has already reachedthat p i n + 0th-
the taiiure rate is even higher due to see it being mached in the mid 1990s
~ ~ ' T h e d a y ~ w the
e rphysical
e diffhnces betwen the Research should cerhinly continue
them (maid Sawyer,the hoepitall tested rectum and vagina. As Fumento pub on finding bath a cure and a vaccine
blood samples firom don- and the it 'The irony of condoms would pmrc f o r A l D S H o w e l e r t h a t ~ ~ u l d
d b nclr 28 percent @ti= But tobethatthyweredthegmlateat be in coqiunction with the &amlard
when the donors who tented positive efficiency to t h e who needed them public health meamm taken to con-
came to get their results,ifthey looked -
least aoyone engaging in oral aex trol any epidemic These meamma
and hetemeezuals engaging in vagi- should indude mandatory testing of
healthy, they umn't told t h y were
carrging the trirua The docbra aaid nal eex --and of the lea&cffciency to all newly admitted h q i t a l patients
there'a no point in giving smneone a th~~)awhoneudedthemm&-honm as well am health cam workers involved
paesible death lrentencewhen you have ecxuals engaging in anal intemnme in invasive produrea In addition all
no counselors to help them deal with Still, for hetaawruab engaghg in prbaers and people m m l l d in IV
the newa Even if it meam they qmead higherthan normalrbk activities(ia, drug rehabilitation -p should
thediseaaetoOthem,thedoebrssay, having oex with lVDAs, b i i be teated. For thoee who teat positive,
one cruelty doesn't ju&ify another." prosti- etc),or even aimp1y casunl nonnalcontact tracing of previous eex-
In addition the use and reuae of ~ b i t ~ p e r t n u a ~ h b a r e a o ual
t b partnen, and their tmting Aould
unsterilized needles, for drawing and lutalycertainthatbothareHIVfrec, abo be undertaken.
donating blood and for iqjections, is condom uaage is recommended. The. notion that an AIDS her's
widespad in Africa Mart Central and A note on condom usage Only LA- right to princy outweigh a society's
East African countries can amply not TEX condoms provide pmt&ion from right to pmtect itaelffrom an epidemic
afford to use the singleuse disposable HIV. Skin-bnsed condoms are porous i s a b d and must be challenged. As
syringes used in developed countries enough to allow the HIV virus to dip Michael Fumenb put it in the closing
One of the key elements in the dis- through. Alw only W-BASED page8 af T 'Mytb of Hekxusexual
pute about hetcrwatual AID5 trans lubricants should be used with um- AIDS. "If AIDS victims mnt to be
mission in Africa is the widaspread doma Retroleum besed lubricant8can treated as well M victims of other dia
African taboo against h o d i t y . dect the integrity d l a b condo=) eases, that ia their right. But they
The subject L simply not disussed or The AIDS activists b u t the condom have no right to be treated any better,
even acknowledged throughout much m a panacea to the problem of AIDS either. Thcn is not national guilt for
of Africa. Some African countries have It in not. Bef' payone hetenrwxual AIDSandthenisnoexmmforcon-
lawn which punish h o m d con- or homosexual, relies on a condom for denending to AIDS activists as if there
duct and others. because the subpct complete protection, it might be wise wen?."
Congress slams misconduct
~. - - Q
in medical research
- o
grants to limit their ownemhip of company cur& after treatment. He also front his accuse&.
stock. and their acceptance of consulting included control subjects in the The N I H is also implicated i n
fmand honoraria from industry. study who had previously had another lawsuit. A former Iab-
The N I H dloatcs almost $8 billion (some a n a r . contrary to the protocol. oratory technician. Thomas
ff billion) a year to mearch. mostly to says Carpenter. Hoover's paper Condie. is suing his former boss,
individuals and their institutions. But. says i n the journal-6nm. describing John Ninnemann. for allegedly
Cangressnun Tcd Weis. who directed the the treatment as effective. was falsifying research on how to
investigation. the N I H "provides few safe- incoma. say Grpentcr and col- treat people who arc badly
guards to make sure that the research is league Martyn Burlt. chief of burned. I t is the first lawsuit
a a u r a r and unbi&cd". cancer surgery at Stony Brook. . - under a 1987 law that allows
Weia's rrport cites several cases of al- TheCongfusionaI report says Webs: led inquiry atizcns to sue individuals they
k d or movcn misconduct. fraud. and that Hoovcr m o d to Haward believe arc defrauding the gov-
-nia of interestamong reseahers kceiv- where. i n 1989. an investigation into hi ernment. Condie says that Ninnemann
ing N I H grants. Om case involveda study to work begm. Om of Haward's reviewers wasted S1.3 million of N I H money.
m l u a t e the effectiwmss of tissue plasm~m- concluded that Hoovcr had performed Meanwhile. the universities are confused
p n activator. an agent for dissolving blood "exauivc interpretation" of the data. Har- w e r what ~ l e to s follow. "The standards on
clots i n papk who haw just had heart vard's final report said the research was conflict of interest are unclear." says Roben
attacks. A t l a s t 13 researchers owned or "flawed" and "not acceptable by the stan- Roxnzweig of the Association of American
had options to buy stock i n Gcnentcch. a dards of the four institutions" where he had Universities. "Idon't think [NIH'sJ perfor-
manufacturer of the d ~ g says. the report. worked. H a m r d found no misconduct or mance has been very impressiveso far."
The NIH does not bar amngements be- fraud, but said that Hoover's m a r c h I n a f m h twist to the issue. President
weat companies and grantees. Last year. should be dorcly monitored. The N I H is Geoge Bush thii week nominated
the government proposed la that would reviewingthe condusions. Bernadine Healy as the new director of the
haw limited such links. But i t backed dmn The N I H has abo k e n a c c u ~ dof being NIH. Healy. a cardiologrst at the Ckvchnd
after n c r m n g hand- of objcaiom from too Jow to rcsohe cases involving ethical Clinic i n Ohio. is an outspoken critic of
companiesand scientists. miscanduct. James Abb. a neurologist at biological researchers' industrial links. O
Another case mentioned m the Congres-
sional report involves a anar researcher.
Herben Hoovcr. Hoover conducted a
decade of experiments i n immunotherapy. i n Sand01 AG, Basel su&t fiir die Abt&
which he injeaed patients snffering from lung Agmtoxikoiogie a i m jiqwen
colon or 4cancer with their own tumour
Natur- rn
wmmhftler
biologiKhu Richtung fiir die ~lanurq.
Dbefwachungund AUIWCRU~ von vor
w-nd Q@-ri_nip fiefwp-ctrctrcncn
mwie fiir die ~ i t a r b a Eeihialunter-
z
archungen im Rahmenda uperimen-
tellan Priifung von kstizidm und che-
misctren Ncben- und Zwitchmpmduk-
ten.
D i w Aufgabe bedingt nebst einem-
abgdlossenen Studium Erfahrung
in Pknung und Statinik, Ersd2 a_m_
@sigfi _m& r i = g und lmcrcrte an
toxikologischen Problemen swie
Englischkenntnise. EDV-Erfahrung
m, edinscht.
~ e c u n e n twant-ad m Zurich's 'intellec-
tual" weekly, WeInuoche. in 1978. Sandor,
one of the Swiss drug giants. offers a job to a
young scientist Who finds pleasure in working
with animals in long-tcrm experiments." (Em-
phasis supplied).
Fungal warfare in the medicine chest
Gliotoxin belongs to a class of uuseless" chemicals produced by common fungi. But it may
provide a new way to safeguard transplanted organs and act as a model for anticancer drugs
-
Paul Waring and Arno Miillbacher
mitogens--chemicals used to mimic antigens. We learnt that neutralised in some way. then the body would not recognisc
gliotoxin particularly affects certain cells of the immune sys- the transplant as foreign. and this would do away with the need
tem. It poisoned other cells too, but only at much higher con- for immunosuppressive drugs. Could gliotoxin do the trick?
centrations. Gliotoxin and compounds related to it seem to be We tested this possibility by treating the thyroid glands of
immunotoxins. a name usually given to toxins specifically af- mice with gliotoxin and then transplanting them into mice of
fecting immune cells but often used to describe any compound a different strain. The tissue lost its ability to stimulate an
that suppresses the immune system. immune response in the host mice, even though it retained all
Such compounds are very important in medicine. People its other physiological functions. So it seems that gliotoxin or
who receive transplanted organs must take drugs to prevent some related compound might prove useful for treating organs
their immune system from rejecting the foreign tissue. and tissue for short periods before transplantation. This would
Cyclosporin is the most common leave the immune system of the
one but there arc other related person receiving the transplant
compounds. such as cyclo- working normally so that it
phosphamide. a nitmpn-con- could then cope with any com-
taining ring. All these immuno- mon infection. Once we have
suppressive d r u g are poisonous studied the natural compounds
to all the body's cells and they in detail, it should be possible to
have the extra disadvantage of design synthetic ones that are
making the person taking them even more selective. In our
susceptible to other infections. laboratory we hope to extend the
This can be devastating when the results of our work on mice
body is already weakened by the tissue to human cells.
transplant operation. Taking Bone marrow is also com-
the drugs for a long time, monly transplanted. as a treat-
usually years. can also increase ment for Ieukaemias. which are
the chance of cancer because cancers of the whke blood cells.
they reduce the immune Cyruiaric crlls errgulf foreign parrick+ iocludi~~g cells /rum Conventionally, doctors treat
system's natural surveillance and iratrsplaaied orguns. How does gliorarirr slop rlrcm? leukaemias by irradiating the
destruction of cancer cells. whole body. which kills all
A clever way round this problem would be to make the new white blood cells. including the cancerous ones. Then they
organ "immunologically invisible" before transplanting it. All must replace these cells with healthy ones, usually by trans-
cells have special molecuies on their surface called planting bone marrow from a suitable donor. The foreign bone
histocompatibility antigens. These enable the cells to distin- marrow contains immature cells frorn which all the blood cells
guish between "self" and "nonself'. But a second trigger is the recipient needs will eventually grow.
apparently needed to set off the rejection: a small number of But there are pmblems with this treatment. which in some
cells in the transplanted tissue. called passenger leukocytes or ways are the reverse of those associated with organ trans-
stimulator cells. These cells include macrophages and other plants. The foreign bone marrow also contains mature white
cells of the immune system and they are the only ones that can blood cells. If these are not removed, they will attack cells in
trigger the immune respon-sc. If- they could be killed or the tissues of the recipient, a serious condition known as graft
7
wm
the poscibility that gliotoxin may be pro- penicillin as a chemical defcna against
duccd in an animal during the course of the other organisms when food was in short
growth of the fungus. This is different supply: gliotoxin's original function may
breathing
from the in animal
the toxin
(or after i t has
human) eating
formed
or other
have been
organism
to keep
thatin live
check
byamoeba
engulfing
or
on mouldy food for example. particlcc. Such organisms in the.fonn of
i We already knew about the pronounced macmphagcs, now keep the vertebrate
affects of eliotoxin on the immune s v s a immune system running. 0
, Blratlring in
Aspergillus spores
(Ieb) cart cause
injection. Once
established in lung
8 fis.rue (riglrt), the
-
8 fungus produces
2
z
n
?
0
a
f
S*
versus host (GvH) disease. One way to remove these trouble- We discovered that this treatment prevented GvH disease. I t
some white blood cells is to attack them with monoclonal seems that. in mice at least. the mature white blood cells that
antibodies that have been designed specifically to recognise bring about GvH disease are more sensitive to gliotoxin than
these cells and neutralise them. This is a long. expensive and are the immature ones. David Haig at the Moredun Research
cumbenome process. I t also carries with i t the danger o f Institute in Edinburgh did similar work on sheep earlier this
infection by virus due to contamination of the antibodies. We year. He found a similar difference i n sensitivity to gliotoxin
wondered if gliotoxin could do the same job. between mature and immature cells o f the bone marrow.
I n 1988. we treated bone marrow from one strain of mice I t began to look as though gliotoxin would also be useful
with gliotoxin, then transplanted i t into a second strain of i n bone marrow transplantation in people. if human cells
mouse whose bone marrow had been destroyed with radiaticin. behave in the same way.
I n 1987 we decided to study the mechanism by which
gliotoxin modifies the function of immune cells such as
macrophages and T cells. T cells are an important set o f
immune cells. They include cytotoxic cells that can k i l l other
cells i n the body, such as tumour cells. or those infected with
a virus. We made isomers of gliotoxin-like molecules and
examined how they behaved towards cells of the immune
system. Isomers are compounds that have similar structures
but differ in the conformation or configuration of groups i n the
molecule. The use o f isomers or analogues can be a powerful
technique i n understanding what features of the molecule are
important in its biological activity.
Glioloxin and sporidesmin a n fungal toxins w i t similar chemical I t seems that gliotoxin may work by binding to the receptors
structures. But gliotoxin has unexpected benefits on the cell surface and inhibiting their normal function. This
that its cell membrane breaks down, often as a result o f
Gliorarin rriggers 'cell attack by toxins. I n apoptosis, one of the first signs is the
suicide" (below). TIte
mechonivn of this fragmentation of the cell's DNA. Activation of the nuclease
process could give us enzyme that brings about this breakup is the key to the whole
clues /or designing process. Some researchers, for example John Kerr and his
onriconcer drugs thof colleagues at the University of Queensland, think apoptosis
will kill selecred rumwr is a way o f getting rid of "rogue" cells whose D N A
cells in a similor way - -- ,.. has changed i n some way so that they multiply .-
uncontroll~bly,as in cancer. -
.. .
Gliotoxin is one of several poisonous compounds that brings
about apoptosis i n cells. I n 1988. for example, Sten Orrenius
-
and David M d o n k e y at the Karalinska Institute i n Sweden
. ,
,-.
,.
..-.'
'
reported that the environmental poison dioxin can also set o f f
apoptosis in immature cells i n the thymus gland. We do not
. 3 yet know i f there is a common mechanism to toxininduced
.. *.
. Iapoptosis. but in the same year we found that gliotoxin can
-
By Phiup J. Hilt. genetically engineered products are not it has taken many years up to five or
The New York Tknes s*s59Y inherently dangerous and should not get six in some cases to pass these
WASHINGTON - rn Qwg too much scrutiny from regulators. products from the first notification of the
The new statement is intended to spur government to their final approval.
the biotechnology industry and keep Even after some years of trying to
9. SayinE R V federal regulators from singling out these make the process quicker. the average
products a n not --I products for extra regulatory procedures time remains more than three years.
arp aed It would put the stamp of policy on Among the genetically engineered
practices that have been evolving in the products now coming along is a tomato
'
The new aollcr.b bo- federal agencies for years, assuring that plant with a special gene inserted; the
Pruident Dan fewer and fewer biotechnology products gene destroys one of the enzymes that
Corn- h ink&d. need special approval. to release new makes the plant ripen. so that although
mlutbcbi
organisms in the world. tomatoes can be matured on the vine.
Federal regulations. that govern ge- they will not soRen and shrivel until long
- It w d ~ p l i c y netically engineered pesticides and other a b r they are shipped to stores
on practices t h t have k e n eV*- toxic chemicals are being written. but . . Despite the promise of such products.
YIP - f have been stalled. at least partly because critics have worried about the dangers of
the overarching policy statement issued introducing novel olgsrnisms into the
yesterday was not final. environment arguing that some might
It contains few specifics but will serve fun not ~f unrestrained by natural ene-
--
- -- as guidance to regulatory agencies and mies. Defenders of the policy have coun-
And. ia dfccf- .- the basis for the Vice President's Council tered that adding a few genes of known
y e l i of muof awav from tbe C on Competitiveness to intercede if regu- purpose is unlikely.to change a familiar
ustry and mb federal agencies, lations of biotechnology companies get species into an Andromeda strain.
which would have to w v e a new,
emtlcallY ammeerd Dmduct ms-
& an eavimmenta~or h ~ t risk h . gene inserted. Tbe gene dutroya
o~coftkcnrywsthatmakatbe
tb0ritvs plant ripen. so that althougb tom-
''This S4 billion &iokcbnolppp) . toa can be mrtlvcd on the piDC,
.industq sbould &ow t o m ' they wiU not soften and shrivel
bytheddtbcdccr~-ifwe until long after they are shipped b
let it," Resident Bmb said ia pa- mns.
n o u n c i n i i w Another pmmiriag product b a
~ S t a t aleads the world in b i - cotton plant that is quipped with
nolom, and I intend to kcep it that its own natural pesticide by insert-
-- Jeffrey Nebit, a spokesman for ingabackrirlgcncth.tm?Lcsa
But while tbe tlcrr pdicy puts an the vice praidalt'a colmdl. said product toxic )o insects.
-
official end b the fcdupl debate theintentiaowubstreomLiatthe officials hf the ~ a v i ~
oa wbether bi-gy products rcgulntolT P- W-UY Rokctioo Agcncy who
need special ovedght, the debate
Dersists outside tbe aovemment.
. Illrtory agency.
.*
provide a "road amp" 'dhcting
biotech f i toward . dpht .
i : '
hg-
remvll unidentii~edsad'
L, licy was better tbPn '
which threatened t o ! 1
But Hoptim of the Eooimrrmclll current law -on
ti1 Defcnsc hmd dd,'i"lh.t rinlEI
~OIIOWto US bccptgc ns n . p t m -
lels between this tcchwlogy ind
other pwerft~lt e c b m 1 ~ which
bad rcpercassionr oa tbe cavirob
mcllf'mch u the chl+l:aad
' ~ a Mustriei" '. I '
n u c lp
they become mrmmeot, growing new -'all uses of
parts of i t genetic all^ altered orpanisms p~
"It's a little different from al-
- - - ~ - - --- - \ products, from crow to medicines.
lowing chemicob b escape," said In the put. it has taken many
D. Dough H - a scni~rlrw-
y u witb the Eovirommntrl Dc-
yean
cases
-- up to five or sir in some
to poss these produ*
fmre Fund "OrponisIlrs repro- through the unmarked and often
duce." shifting regulatory minefield.
Defcodtn of the poliq have' Among the geneUc8liy engi-
counted that adding a few genes neered products aow coming along
of known purpose is unlikely to is a tomato plant with a special
Prescribing all the way to the bank
Hard science and high capitalism meet in the pharmaceuticals industrv-creatin~a headv mix------ of
-- .
I
high-powered research, sophisticated sales techniques, creative accountancy andY takeover deals
-
Peter Marsh
This can be seen especially in the case of Britain, whose
H EALERS or bandits? Observers often seem unable to
decide which of these descriptions fits the inter-
national pharmaceuticals industry. The sector spends
prodigious sums of money unravelling highly complex aspects
of chemistry and biology in the cause of making people
pharmaceuticals industry employs 15 000 R&D workers. The
British drugs sector's sales account for only about 2 per cent of
Britain's gross domestic product. In R&D terms, however, the
sector is far more important: it spends £700 million a year,
healthier. Its products have undoubtedly played a b ~ gpart nearly a tenth of Britain's total R&D expenditure counting
over the past half century in increasing the life expectancy of both government and industry programmes.
the average person, in the developed world at least. Yet at the
same time a question mark remains in many people's minds
regarding the-activitiesof the international drugs companies,
the bieeest of which include Merck in the US. Britain's Glaxo.
~ o e c s in
t West Germany and ~witzerland'sciba-C3eigy:
These firms fight over the world drugs market totalling some
f70billion a year, most of which is accounted for by sales in
Western Europe, North America and Japan.
In the battle for the top places in the industry, hard science
plays an important part. So do razor-sharp accounting
practices, sophisticatedselling techhiquesand much corporate
wheeler-dealing. The corporate manoeuvring involves multi-
billion-dollar takeover battles and countless small and some-
times temporary liaisons between the leading pharmaceutical
players that sometimesend in tears. It is not surprisingthat the
public image of the drugs business emphasises not so much the
toiling whitecoated scientist as the ultra-slick salesman
extolling the virtues of the latest "Whiuo Drug".
The notion held by many that drug com anies are somehow
cashing in on people's illnesses is rein/'orced by the large
profits that many of the leaders in the industry make. Glaxo.
Britain's biggest drugs company, with its annual sales of about
£2-5 billion, is a good example. In recent years it has been
churning out pretax profits totalling a b u t 40 per cent of
annual saleofar above the rate for most other industrial
groups in areas such as engineeringand electronics. The drugs
groups themselves often add to the climate of suspicion by
revealing few of their activities to the public. partly because of
a fear of giving away secrets to rivals.
The commonly held views about the industry strike many
inside it as unfair. 'They point out that the sector i o
particularly in the US and much of Western Europe-a highly
successful business and a strong export earner. It has an
especially good record in West Germany. Switzerland and
Britain in turning scientific ideas into useful products. In
Britain the drugs sector, with annual sales of about f 4 billion
and a balance of payments surplus of fW million, is one of
the country's few strong science-based businesses. And
pharmaceuticals is one science and technology based industry
where the West has had a much stronger record, so far at least,
than Japan. Of the world's top'll drugs firms, only one.
Takeda. is Japanese (see Table).
The drugs companies are directly concerned with something
of burning interest to almost every individual-si~feguarding
and improving human health-and this is emphasised in how
they present themselves publicly. As well as this, a strong
strand of public responsibility runs through many of the
scientists and managers in the industry. The drive toshed light
on health problems can also be secn in the sector's spending on
research and development (R&D). Pharrnaccuticals compa-
nies commonly spend between 1 0 and 15 per cent of their
annual sales on R&D, far more than the average in other so-
called high-tech industries such as telecommunications and
electronics. In many countries, the drugs sector is among the
biggest civilian employers of scientists and technicians.
Throughout the world drugs business. there is some pride in electronics and engineering the dominant firm might expect to
the purely scientific achievements of the past 30 years. have a market share twice as high. That puts a lot of pressure
Examples include heart drugs such as beta blockers, which on the top 100 or so drugs companies, which between them
pe~mitpatients to "manage" cardiovascular disease with have about 80 per cent of world pharmaceuticals sales, to scrap
m~nimaldisruption to their lives. Another is the anti-AIDS
formulation Retrovir. made by the British drug company
Wellcome and without which the lot of the average AIDS
cr
for just a few rcentage points of extra market share in the
line-up behin Merck.
This is one reason for the industry's highly sophisticated-
suffererwould be even more depressing than it is now. Many some say ruthless-marketing techniques and the relentless
within the industry cannot understand the opposition that its drive to increase turnover and profits. One manifestation of
sector tends to stir up among outsiders. "We et criticised by this push has been the rash of mergers in recent months.
B
just about everyone," says one British rugs company
executive. "No one seems to understand how difficult life
mainly involving American companies that see joining up with
rivals as the most promising way to close the ap with Merck.
would be without us." Another goal is to provide what they see as t t economies of
In the drugs industry, though, social concern is only art of scale in both research and marketing which are re uired for
that the biggest company-Merc r
the story. Thesector is highly corn titive. obsessed by tRe fact
of the US-has just 4 per
cent of total world sales. In other sectors such as branches of
the increasin ly tough business battles of the 1 9 9 0 s . h e most
LS*~ f
rominent o these mergers have been the teaming up of the
SmithKline Beckman with Beecham of Britain and
b pressures suffered by people in drugs companies as a result employ between 1000 and 2000 sales people or "detail men"
of
- the
- -..-financial
- -. ~world's fierce interest in their activities. In wbo spend all their time talking to doctors or other medical
London, Tokyo and New York, stockbrokers and banks people. One result is that sometimesthe sales pressures smack
employ armies of analysts to pore over every utterance and of what might delicately be called over-exhortation.
research report emanating from the big drugs companies. The Cases in point are the stories of pharmaceuticals firms
sharp rises and falls in investors' confidence caused by real or inviting doctors to elaborate, all-expenses-paid "sales con-
ima inary "blockbusters" slidin in and out of the field of view ferences" to receive plugs for the latest wonder drugs. The
d
of tke financ~alanalysts can a d to the pressures on drugs drugs industry also hands out a range of free gifts-anything
from note pads to computers-to physicians as pan of the
company executives.
Competitive and financial forces are not the only issues to be drive to build up a good relationship.
botherine the drugs industry. Other factors which cause Such links between sales rep and customer are common
people &the busin& a great deal of worry-and can affect the enou h in many other industries. However, when it comes to
way the industry is viewed by the outside world-include h e a d care, high-pressure sales techniques and free ifts have
governments, ethics and the way the companies run their led to some sweeping criticisms of the industry. 'lPhe drugs
Ir
R&D. In many deveio d countries(especially in Europe) the
state foots the bill eit er directly or indirectly for the lion's
share of pharmaceutical spending. They are thus highly
business is like a jungle," says one prominent opponent of the
sector. In the wake of this kind of comment, in some countries,
Britain included, trade associations acting for the drug sector
important customers for drug firms. Secondly, government have drawn up codes of practice designed to curb the
bodies are vitally involved in testing new formulations for enthusiasms of the more imaginative reps. Every now and
safety. The result is that the drugs industry can easily be hit by again, however, excesses are brought to hght.
cost-cutting drives by its main state-owned customers;it is also R&D management
hemmed in by the safety regulations.
Over the past 10 years the safety rules have become more The new drugs which come on to the market emerge after up
onerous, driven by the public scares over "ro ue" drugs such to 10 years of carefully planned development. Their gestation
as thalidomideor Opren. That has pushed u
about a quarter of the drug industry's R ~ ABD
B costs; only
bill is accounted
for by ure research, with the rest covering the development
is in many ways as complex as big technology projects such as
space shuttles or nuclear power stations. The programme for a
typical new drug starts with pure research where a scientist
needelto drive new products through the regulations. It has m~ght try a new approach to altering the mechanisms
also lengthened the tlme it takes to get a new formulation on connected with. say, heart disease. After toxicity and animal
sale. While in the 1960s government approval for a new drug tests, it ends with massive trials on possibly tens of thousands
mi ht take just a few years the figure is now nearer 12 years. of patients to work out the details of the drug's effectiveness.
his link with government departments can cramp a
company's entre reneurial style. Some pharmaceuticals
Only after this will arelevant national health authority, such as
the Food and Drug Administration in the US or the
I'
researchers comp ain about the mountains of scientific data
which they have tosubmit to regulatory authoritiesbefore new
Department of Health in Britain, license the companies to sell
the drugs.
products can go on sale. The connectlons, however, can also Thergare some favourable trends in R&D. New techniques
work in a company's interests. This applies to the interactions in areas such as biotechnoloev and comDuter modelline of
between a medicines company and the state health agencies protein structures should hgip the industry to find -the
which are key purchasers of its products. In some countries- mechanisms behind important illnesses such as cancer and
France is a good example-a pharmaceuticals company can brain disorders. From this should follow, in theory, new
expect favours from the government on pricing issues if it money-spinning roducts. The downside, however, is the
proves itself a "good citizen". Thus if the company agrees to
Invest in a new factory or a research establishment, so
P
increasing cost o development, mainly due to the lengthier
and more complex tests that governments require. The result
providing jobs, it may be allowed to char e more for its latest is that drugs companies are having to run faster to stand still.
B
product. Such negotiations, in Western urope at least, are
often hi hly confidential. There is some hope, however, that
American pharmaceuticals companies now spend some
$5 billion a year on R&D, four times as much as a decade ago,
some o f these deals may be opened out to greater public but the rate of introduction of new products has remained
scrutinv. That could result from new rules that the European constant. In the past few years, many big harmaceuticals
Commission is drawing up to govern drug prices throughout firms are spendingas much as between 10and $0perhnt more
the Eurooean
~ --- Communitv in the run-UDto the Dianned
a on R&D a year-at a time when overall sales are growing by
abolition bf trade restrictidns after 1992. no more than 5 per cent a year in many countries.
The ethics of marketing The pace at which drugs companies pour resources into
R&D is a source of fascination, and worry, both inside and
The drugs industry is known for its highly creative sales and outside the industry. Merck. for instance, spends $700 million
marketing techniques generally aimed at doctors. Some 80 per a year on research and development and is alegend for the way
-
cent of the industry's sales come from prescriptions while the in which it has been able to translate this into dozens of hieh-
rest comes from products bought directly over-the-counter. selling products. The company is unusual in the pharmaceiti-
The big companiis employ a range of de4ces to win over the cals world for having as its chairman a scientist-Roy
doctors. They use computers to draw up lists of "innovatory" A
doctors who- stand a ood chance of being persuaded to
f
prescribe specific new ormulations, which command a high
rice and good profit margins. The sales force also tries to
The world's largest drug companies
-s (*)
Mefck (US) 5.02
[oms in on "opinion leaders9*in the medical community. BrWOl MyeWsQuibb(US) 3.78
In Britain, the companies place a special emphasis on Glaxo (UK) 3.62
winning the trust of hard-pressed general practitioners. These SmithKline becham (UK) 3.61
doctors, with only patients to talk to for most of the day, often Cit#-OeiW (Switzerland) 2.9 1
Hoechst' (We01G6fmany) 2.80
find themselves isolated from scientifically literate people. So T-!a'(Japan) 2.43
by engaging in scientific chit-chat and swapping technical us) . 235
literature the drug rep can win the doctor's trust. That may WUW' (US) 2.33
lead to more prescriptions for the company. This effort at Sandoz' (Switzerhnd) 2.31
Eli Lilly'(US) 2.27
cementing ties with doctors is highly expensive. To cover the 1 9 0 7 ~ . ~ F h u w * r T i
whole of Europe or the US, a big drugscompany might need to
Vagelos-rather than the usual marketing man or accountant. patient who uses a drug is different. Even though there are
Many, however, doubt that all the other top-flight dozens of heart drugs on the market, what works for one
pharmaceuticalscompaniescanmatch Merck's rate of Innova- non may be totally unsuitable for another. It is only by
tion. "They can't all carry on spending this amount of money cuing lots of 'me-too* products that a doctor can experiment
on research." says one drugs industry observer. "Something is to find out what is best for his patient."
going to have to give." Doubts. for instance. have been When bracketed with drugs companies. finance can pro-
expressed about Glaxo's scheme to build a £500 million voke either disquiet on the part of the industry's critics or
research centre in Stevena e. Hertfordshire, to act as a new subdued admiration from accountants. The companies are
i
focusfor its R&D efforts. T e centre, due to be finished by the
mid-1990s. may have to be scaled back, according to some in
adept at presenting profitability in the right light. In many
countries. the image of a drugs company may be harmed if it
the industry. looks as though it has been making too much money. Some
Apart from more mergers, in which rival groups assemble AIDS activists. for example, have criticised the Wellcome's
their research programmes with a certain amount of cost subsidiary in the US for charging some $8000 for a year's
cuttin the answer to the rising research bills may well be supply of Retrovir. And in some countries--Britain is the best
more gi~nelyhoned mana ement techniques within R&D. A example-the prices that companies are allowed to charge are
related problem with R&% is that few can agree on just how directly linked to rofits. Here again it may suit a company to
innovatlve the drugs industry reall is. Those inside the
i
business point to breakthroughs suc as Zantac, which has
?
minimlse the pro it which it shows in its accounts.
revolutionised the treatment of ulcers, and heart drugs such as Financial engineering
Merck's Vasotec, which has made the lives of people suffering The industry can also manipulate the profits which it shows
from cardiovascular disease far more bearable. in soecificcountries.It cando this both asa result of astructure
- - . - ..-.-
--
Critics, however, maintain that the enuine leaps are of ihe business and because of the way medicinces are made.
d
relatively rare. Many of the 50 or so new r u g which appear
on sale each vear are. according to this view. "me-too"
Many of the biggest dmgs grou are part of large multi-
national chemical companies. &a-~elgy and Sandoz of
products, siighGy im roved versiok of other medicines that a Switzerland,.ICIof Britain, Bayer and Hoechst of Germany,
K
rival In the bus~ness as already produced. Some backing for
this view comes in a recent r-e*rt from Scrip, a specialist
the US'S Merrell Dow and France's Rh6ne-Poulenc all fit into
this category. Many of the chemicals needed to make a drug
newsletter for the pharmaceuticals business, which says that of are quite cheap apart from a few key substances which are at
the 53 new medicines introduced worldwide in 1988, only four the centre of the production chain. These substances, called
can be regarded as "breakthrough products" in the sense of intermediates, are commonly manufactured by subsidiariesof
benefiting patients with hitherto untreatable diseases. the same company that sells the finished drug. A drugs
More ammunition for the critics came in recent findings company looking to depress its profit in one country can
from a US Senate inquiry. This said that of the 348 new drugs arrange to buy its intermediate from a subsidiary in another
introduced by big American manufacturers between 1981 and country at particularly high prices.
1988, 292 made "little or no" contribution to existing drug Patent law is among the most contentious subjects within
therapies. Only 12 were rated as showing an important the industry. More than virtually every other kind of science-
therapeutic gain. This hardly inspires confidence in the based product, drug depend on strong patent protection if
innovatory qualities of the industry as a whole. The me-too they are to produce large sales for their makers. A producer
products may also, so this argument goes, clog up regulatory can claim a patent on the basis of the drug's chemical formula.
agencies, cutting the time given to testing of more important The problem is that patents normally last for about 20 years.
dmgs. Such attitudes are rejected by people within the As it generally takes 10 to 12 years to push a drug through the
industry. "People talk about copycat products." says one R&D programme, many roducts have only 8 to 10 years of
penon dose to the drugs business. "But what they don't
r e a i i is that they might improve, even by an incremental
g
patent protection after t e formulation goes on sale. m e
company then has to fight to make a profit before the patent
amount, on what has gone before. Also don't forget that every runs out and competitors can copy it.
This is a major reason for the relentless efforts put into
boosting revenues in the first few years after a medicine is put
on the market. "In pharmaceuticals. much more so than in
other industries, it's no good waiting a few years to get your
earnings from a new product". explains a former chief
executive at a leading drugs company. "By then it will he too
late because your competitors will be ready to move in." This
is why drugs company chiefs around the world spend so much
time attempting to persuade legislators to give thcm a better
deal over patents.
A favourite idea is to change the patent laws with respect to
drugs so that a new drug is protected for a set period-say 16
years-after the date it is first sold rather than from the time of
the patent's issue. The industry has won some relief in the US.
where a patent's term can be extended if a new drug has taken
a particularly long time to develop. Com anies now want to
E
see similar measures enacted within the uropean Commu-
nity. "It is the one issue that unites us all." says one European
executive. In return some in the industry argue, it might be less
secretive. less feverish in sales and marketing and possibly
spend more of its research cash on the genuine breakthroughs
rather than the me-too products. Whether such a state of
affairs comes about will be one of the more interesting
industrial policy questions of the 1990s. 0
M A T R I X 1 1 1
In the al~senreof laws. patient conflden cludes about a.m. or roughly half of d l
Data Tap tiamy 1s lrlore prous than ever brlore. druptores.
Oklahoma. since last year. nqulm phar Joseph Mosso. a Latrobe. Pa.. p h a m
nlacrrs to report all PmcrIPtlons for 3 clst. two years ago a g m d to let his drug
Patients' Records range of pa~nklllersand other controlled wholesakr scoop up his mputerlvd p m
drup to the state Bureau of Narcotics. In scrlptlon Ilks once a week over telephone
l~ospitalsin Mlchlgan and New York. corn- Ilnes. In return. Un whoksller. FoxMepr
Are Treasure Trove puter hackers have into em,, ~ o r p-him
. week~yprim updatesat I
patlent records. Compank bent on cultlng dkountcd fee.
FOFBudding Industry md*al ~xwnsesare revMng their em. WIUstmiiar m u m to rnthan l a
- ploycps' medical mords more closely than other phannackg FoxMcycr ~clisall
ever. records It ~ U l c r toJ tbe tn,maln
Doctors'andPharmacies'Files Delicate situations datacolkctors: UIS lntcmallonal ud
Such trends partlcuhrly alarm patients W8bh Intenuuond Iac.. pflvate BrlUsh
Are Gathered and Mined n t h AIDS. mental 111- and other C O ~ ~ I n~mMcycr,s . mtRdnf mg,
tlons In whlch a breach of privacy can
For Use by Drug Makers hnvc hr.reachlng conquenm. "11 Wr- ~ Y J h h ~ p u ~ e X t ~ ~ l ~ p r o d ~ t 1 1 1 -
a-b7-42 nlann, rles ~ I I PI I ~ I out
I of me." says ~ m Burp k fomuon. not P t k a w namK. m t Mr.
mLh
-
FirmsSay Names AreDeleted successlully
a dlrector of Florida's mental-
*
health wrvlm agency. who hirs trkd un- you whether
-.
says. "I can't tell
do Or not m h t
S WR -.+
By Mrcrr~r.~ W. M r u a
o~TH.:W A L L J ~ ~ ~ O U ~ W A ~It. gets
z & m
to keep phatmacles from sell- WMSi'lhave nonyofknorln~e It'$
gp&krsrllla
ing their prescrlptlon f l k "Data is llke a
'Ioundfrom hand to
Mlchael Patmas, a Toms Rlwr. N.J.. In Of Ihe NIes" AppmWng the PromLFc
int~mia.says he would never d l s c h m. Last month, Ohlo jury found that mpralcs Uut Uthb Infor.
ndenud p a t k n ~ a hos~itrleln~lo~eedidn't violateany law' mation have become f a m i t e of wall
yet indlrrctly, dm It rwtlmly. when s k allW*lY dlsm~vereda mend's Street and corpora& inrrstors. z l t b ~ ~ @ ~
In his ofnce, ~ r Patmas
. keeps an 1RM AIDS d i a m l s in the h o ~ ~ l t m a lp u t e r total ~ v t n w In ~w ~ndlrstryISOIIIY
p-I computer in which he nom all and s h a d the other hosp~tal m t S~SOIIWMIa ynr.
patienu. -: Informallon a,,,,t workem. Dwgla A. Svtcnt. a Detrolt Infomath giant Dun P Bndshect,
their llln- and trpatnnnt. "nk-n to PsYchiatrlJt and IaWr. tells of a cllnl Gorp. IMS in 19118 and errr(cd an
the patkn& every wek or t m a company call^ d e p m patknt who waS ~ M network
c lbrt mccps In
dials Into the PC and fishes out all those flred after his employer learned of his con- more Uun m0 IIWMIm m l o r r s a m.
confknUal records. Wlth plans to reach ,mm an cornmy. TodaylMSsntlngsofdrugsrkspar- .
15.000 physicians within the next four Tkw aren't any repor% of patknts' lnflua~ch0W d q ~ 0 m p ~ kW S
years company Physician Computer names leaking Un mmerdal uw ket to p h y d c h
Net&k Inc., mlllng data b m Of their ncOrds In market m a r c h . which McdW ~ ~ I l W I l t InC.. Un
of patlent -rds could home a awn- IS a P h e m n o n . Speclalists In Pri- MtlOn'S biggest nllhmkr pmcrlpUon op
mrclal treasure. vacy ISSUQS say. however, that most viola- entlon. lpd ycor crroted a sub- to
Dr. p a l m s and p c are ~ part af an ex. tlmsofnldlcal confidentlalltym w r ~m RII its as tom^^' p m c r ~ p t i ~ream^^. n in
' plodlng but lnvtslble new traffic In
lhe attPntionof patients. And patients addltlon to pmcrlpUan data It buys fmm
tients' pdvate M i c a 1 p-rtptlon whO do bWome aware may Itlath to the A m c r l ASOdlUon~ oI Rctlrrd RP
records. Ph*lans and pharmaca WWS2 by m b l l c b g U p SOM. Medco Sorts e*cIYthi~bY the MmeS
tlnely open up their patient records to breach. of physldans and glva their addrrsscr
data-coltectors that sell them to pharma- What Really Interests CUents
ceutlcal companla hungry to know exactly Dr. Patmas. t k New J e m y Intemltt. * Drug canpanks love that extra feature
On physklm
-
how thelr products are sclllng. In all. . says he wasn't worricd about mnfidcntlal- most 'Ikely to for U1elrmalunp-
nearly half the 1.6 bllllon prescrlptlons Ity wkn k a@ to k t Physician Corn- loves It. too: Medical me*g
filled each year In the U.S. pass along this prter Network search hh patlent rrcords; Gmup wMlc last at s1250 a
chain. the company n r m him ~ Its software had share and shot to m.5on 0 Its nm
Namlng NO Names safeguards to krrp It from capturtng Its shares clascd mterday at meT5In
Physlclansand pharmaca say dls- tients' names. mir.he says. Jpeaktng tading. a 78
closum dm.t privacy. hYpothetically of a pbarmaceutlcol nnn- eStLmatcd pr-sbue emme
Investors are a h hot on another new
the dataeolkcton all insist they delete pa- If Mary Jones
B~~ crilla of thex ptac. : h a herps-Ul9 want to know If I prefer that uses p r r x r l m to
tlentss go after phyjldms: a W?lsbsplnoff called
thave
l m say the custodians of medical mords i MX Or Bumex'"
m, entrusting them. ,,,thout Dr. Patnras also had a potent Incentive P h a m ~ u ~ M a r k e u n ~ S c r v l Inc-It ces
patients' knowkdp or to an to sign up with PCN. The Laurence Har- went t b 1 k In -kr It sl4 s-
mte
rryhted Industry. And thv mrry that b r . N.J.. cnmpany offend to lease him a and*
tk collectors.
quate.
may be ade. tmf-theline lwrsonal computer md soft-
ware lor n h t one-thlrd what these wwld s193525.
* three -ght
Stock has C J h *
pars
m*y
OfioSSS
at
Physictans Computer Network ha. an
In fact. certain data.colleetors that ahQwiseCost' In three Offer
pledge total confldentialltysell drug cm has drawn nrore than 1.600 physlclans to -laily lmpmslve list Of invexom
'hQ PCN. the first cornpany to gather market Amo"g Ulcm: international Buslnm
sex-and an ID number- data by tapping direcuy into physicians' ChlIlt?SCofp., which OWIE a 23% stake. An-
for individual patlmts. other holder tdth a 4.7% stake 1 is Mac-
Fears a h ~the t sale of medical records c O ~ physician ~ ~ on tk
~ ,
a n causlng some physicians and pharma. D ~ mlllan~ . Inc.. pan of the bhxwell e k c t m ~ c -
to cnllecton. surveillance inic hlatzocchi of Point Pkasant. N.J.. information condomcnk.
effom. aw lor Ieglslatlon, notes that insurance companla already The compvlks all spPk e m p h a t l d l ~
,,,,tlng that privacy law coven videotap S C his ~ patients' records. He docs have om about patient PdPlcy. Walsh exercise "an
and cable-Tv but not lingering wtary. 'The only thlng that ~~~~~ amount of WmltlVlt~and
Irtnst mcdlral rrrorrls. would b~ a concern." he says. "Is 11[PCNI s ~ m b l l l t ~ to"malntaln prlvaey. says Its
tnok my financtal lnformatlon. B U ~ they weddent. DennIsNmer. Mcdtcal Market-
swear they haven't." Ing Grwp'sexrmUw vice pmidcnt. T M
The rr~edical-data network reaches, ' dore O h . calls ~atl~ntJ' nmKS"a Sacred
dcrprr into the natlon's phatmacks; it in-. area won't touch." IMS. llke other corn-
panles. says drus:-company cllents want to
know how their products a n rlllng. not had Idea." ~ ~ l r r m a mu
c y says it plvls 111. ) IS proposing a fedem law based on
who Is buylng them. to notlfy pharmacists before It raJcs thclr the Oklahoma pmcrlptlon repwting sys-
Hands Off data. and It won't collect patknt names. tem. The American Clvll Ukrtles Unlon Is
Patknt-prlvacy advocats contend S a n e Who do ~IIdcrStvldthc collectors' arguing that natlonwldc data bues llstlng
Industry should m w r w t tts hands on technology itre nbelllng yDlnn I(. Carl Users of controikd mcdkathS could eas-
medkaj records In the n r ~ tplrec. " ~ c - ChaMran. a pharmaclst In Anurma IlY m h m d bY emPloPrs and smmps.
gardks of her the -cM or phyd- Iowa. bought new software for hls dny- And the d n y canprnls thpt buy the
.clan leek about the dew&. It's not store PC last month and was surprised to collecton' data today are lWng new StCps
(their 4 1 . The patknt Is thc only om who read about a special feature c a k j "IMS to market dlmtly to paUmts. breaking a
hs thc to rekase thb lnformatlon U, Data Pragram." Slip Ln a diskette. md it long Industry taboo. MemU Dew
anyone." assem Mlchircl Iskll. star at- makes a copy of all the presalpmcrtptlonfiles. Inc.. for Instance, has UllPgCd Its mn
tormy In New York for the m M a Mr. Chalsrrom says UIS IntemaUorul of- dua bw d 350A00 heart pstknts who
Defense and Educatlan Fund. a ksbfvl kred hlm about $50 a month to run thc take Its drug Cardttrm. It sends them all
and C;IY WP. program and send It the diskette. ~ ' C P m newsletters
' about M t h y
The AIDS cpldcmk has made sucb or- ThesameLtlndoffeaturekbuUtLntoa Il*lng.rrrdItbs!udylrynewmystous
ganuaUons acutely aware of the conse. number of pharmacy software pack-. thc MmcJ.
quences at breachlng physlclan-pallcnt and It sends U(S a lusher d d a k Wt- All u e * PI*ntS like
conlldcntlallty. "Pcopk lose their frirn&, ware makers say these prgruns preserve Robert Boorstln. a New York writer. He
lasc thelr jobs. get klcked out of W r patknt privacy because they don't copy spcaksopnlyW t h b a msntcde~ms-
apartments." Mr. lsbell says. any names onto IMS's diskette. dve Illness but worrlcs about the prlvacy
The medtuidata buslmss may risk "We're damn careful that no gets a of oUnr paUents In a suppwt group he
Nnnlng afwl of state AIDS confldenttallty patient name anywhere." Says Ken Couch. runs.
hrs. onc of the few areas In whlch mcdl- dl- d naUonal mark- for QS/1 "For JOmCQM rlth an 11- INt? lhb
-
cal prlvacy b strlctly protected. New Data Systems of -burg. S.C.. whlcb you have a lot of pcoplc to truJL" he Says.
York. for IndYKc. specifically ltmlts hs 4.300 phmnacy customen tnciudhg "Yau have to trust &XUUS. yar have to
a c m s to AtDS.related records. If a physb Carl ChakWm. twt pbonnrdsts. yar haw to trust ynu
-
clan or phannacl should glve a market M~. m. - ~ l t brc- frLc"ds who a t have an Wb
rrscarcbcr records prtalnlng to AIDS. to complm n SO&. .
e w r k e r ~ . . Why to Lhe
"It's a food posslblllty" that lhb m u M vl-
o w the h ~ says . A n d m Stmi. deputy
,
, ,w
to urlly
ays. -yau
much rbout m p l t c r m p u r k s
Ilstt"
--- --
dl- of the NW York Sate h l t h dc- popk.5 m t ma
partmat's rpdrl lnvcstlmttcm unlt mew
& tu& tk fran
Industry pkdges of conlldentlallty have
JhrdcJ of m y . A hfcK- Cow. unit SO ,i~ K ~ U Ysty. o m r of the o~dc
called PCS loots at 120 million pmcrlp 7- ~hvmrcy w l m r l , vr -1
tlons a War. LO P r
O Cm PymCnB for have no clue rhot Ulcy're W n g my
Panics -1 dw their m m a PCS in- computer. and I don't t m r h ~ ~hey're
t
SIJmw card pment Pharma* telling me." she syr "I'm nat a cmnp~tcr
(b Jm C0.s p l b b r of thb e x m . I have pa&nts to prdcct a
paper. k one mch employer. I F c r of those bustna~to pm(crrw
e w l o y m know PCS Its rnure t dab *torn
~ u the am
data base to WaIsh IntrmPtlonnl. "Patlent cwnw sou- U, the
confldcntlrlity Is W l y ensurrd" a PCS 1- d - ~ ~ pvtks"
l ~ d rho
s~okesmansays '. confhkntlal prtknt records. For eumpk.
In frcf Uwush PCS dekta pattcnts' Health Infomution Tecbnobgks Inc. k
num.Itlncludcs~rage.sexandSodal onedaskrdmreampanks~
Sccurlty number, as well as thelr physl- up to aukmate W v a e phyrklms' insup
clam' fedenl ID numbers. ance elalms. Tbe Rincc(on. NJ.. company
WaWIdrop~theSalalSccurlt~ number outfits 5.m phydelans d t b spdrl
and replans It rlth a code number of Its "HcPlth Ualr"tenntnnls lor catering UMr
own.That my. It says. the drug.eompany patients' blllbg h f m .
cllent can track an Indiv~dull'sp m ~ r f p HlTnatolllyWesc8reoftbephysl-
tlon buying but won't know the patknt's cw p a y m t ~ but . ~fPLIO h p e ~ k-
name. tnmk copks of all the patknt records.
The medkrl.data colktors sweep upso Once Its data base gets r llttk m r . HFT
much information that some physlclva lntmds to start selling It to drug mar-
and pharmacists don't kmn exactly how keters. insurance reviwers and other
open to rka their fiks are. wmpanbs. says *kc prrsMcntCharles Rl-
Joseph Stalkr, pharmacist at the Red ccwto. He says the data mn't N u d e pa-
-
Oak Pharmacy In Houston. says he Is op mts' or -tins' nama
PO& to hn mm* to mark@ rr- ~ e a n r h ~ kVOICUIIC
. e b m In ~ the
searchers. "You want rvcrynn to know ~ m hedth- m s y maw -hg
what your dffs Wmgl" he a*. "Not ,pa m m for m w aat.
that they'd even hmk for that. but thew's u c to ~ patbtc
potential for oburc." Corporate costcutters exmlning their
But Mr. S U k r keeps all hb records in emploYees' mcdlul e x p n s c ~am paying
a personal computer connected by phone k and kss attentlm to privacy. A 1991
LLm to his software supplllcr. Pharmacy study by the Office Of Technology a-
Oat? Systems Inc. of Sm Antonlo. re=. mmt. a eangresslorul agency. concluded
For the past year. Pharmacy Data that t h m out Ol 10 MlployeTs allow man-
been tatlng a progmn It plans to k m n in agers to re* Wnplaym' mcd!d rec-
Much: to dial into its 200 customers' PCs ords withart thelr plrmlsskn.
every m k . copy thcir prescnptlon m- At the same tlm. the war aplnst drug
ords and $ell lhem to IMS and Walsh. abuse Is pressing lawmaken to make
Mr. Slalkr. told of the software .CIOII phannacy records even l a s prtntc thrn
pany's plan. says he Is flabkrgastd. -1 lhry alnady are. Rep. Pete !%ark (0..Ca-
M A T R I X 111
. .
No 116 Deatha and Death Rates, by Selected Caurec 1970 to 1989
[Ezcludm da8Hn o
-( ..
d Ih.U.S mc8@a nobd. 8.gimg 1979. d.8- chssihd mxofcbq to ninlh rsnvon 01
I n ~ n r u h o r u l ~ b a , o f ~.~
Ill md MtaxaI SObslica -1 .
. r (li aoy r. m , c f . g i ( * d K c a d n p l o r n n o o n m m 8 1 t h t b n e . S . e ~ A p p . n d n
T?mernD 19m 9 d U B 149160]
. . . . . . . 1.008.0 M.5 977.9 9894 934.3 4S.O W.4 409.6 394.4 376.4
&
-?
-??? . . . . . . . . 735.5
PUCWIWa( tow . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30.3
761.1
30.3
771.2
37.0
7652
35.3
735.5
34.1
362.0
38.3
336.0
38.3
323.0
37.0
311.3
35.3
2963
M.1
Rh.cNwkrrr.ndmurr(+
ban-- .............: 149 7.0 6.6 6.4 6.0 7.3 3.5 2.8 2.6 2.4
nypr(.nmf m U OiSWa03 . . . . . 15.0 24.8 23 7 23.2 23.2 7.4 10.9 99 9.5 94
I r b m i c but dw8r . . .,. . . . . . 666.7 565.8 5368 509.6 497.9 320.1 249.7 224.8 207.3 200.6
O m e a( 6.7 7.2 9.5 11.7 11.8 3.3 3.2 4.0 4.8 4.7
A U ~ ~ a ( M = ' : : : 32.3 155.5 1946 214.2 lS.6 15.9 60.7 81.5 87.1 79.2
Hypr(.nron . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3 7.8 7.8 8.5 8.5 4.1 3.5 3.2 3.4 3.4
C
W- -8- ......... 207.2 110.2 153.1 150.5 147.5 101.9 75.1 . 04 1 61.2 59.4
Athrorclroor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31.7 29.4 23.9 221 19.1 15.6 13.0 10.0 9.0 7.7
o(h.r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.3 20.0 22.0 23.2 23.8 12.5 8.8 9.2 9.4 9.6
w. .'. . . . . . .. ....... .. .. .. . . . . . .
c.n(o(t~W
01 1.rp.tCq md imma#c
330.7
172
416.5
20.9
461.6
22.1
485.0
22.4
497.2
23.1
162.8
17.2
183.9
20.9
193.3
22.1
197.3
22.4
200.3
23.1
.......... 69.5 14.5 127.3 138.3 141.6 34.2 47.9 53.3 56.2 57.0
.. 94.7 110.6 118.6 117.4 119.2 46.6 48.8 48.8 47.8 480
apna...............
a0 . " ~ 412 m.4 49.7 53.4 53.6 20.3 20.5 20.8 21.7 21.6
Olbnrr( . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.9 35.9 40.4 42.5 43.7 14.7 158 16.9 17.3 17.6
01 t # i m y ag8m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.5 17.8 18.9 19.5 20.1 7.6 7.9 7.9 7.9 8I
LW- .................... 14.5 16.5 17.3 176 18.9 7.1 7.3 7.3 7.2 7.6
Addmt~.nd.bnrw.)hctI. . . . . . . 114.6 105.7 935 97.1 8 56.4 46.7 39.1 39.5 30.2
-avohicia ................. 54.6 53.2 45.9 49.1 48.8 a.9 23.5 19.2 20.0 19.7
AM 0- ................... 60.0 52.5 47.6 48.0 0 29.5 23.3 19.9 19.5 16.5
-
-m
8
W
.li!8
ll y ."
. .-
. .-
... 30.9 I 74.7 82.9 4 152 24.7 31.3 33.7 34.0
Brm&I~S.chrorr.W ... 5.8 3.7 3.6 3.7 3.7 2.9 1.6 1.5 1.5 1.5
Emp)*anu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22.7 13.9 14.2 15.5 15.5 11.2 6.1 5.9 8.3 6.3
Asmnu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
OtMf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-andinfbalZ8 .......... 62.7
X 3 .
54.6
4:; 477.7. 275.2
67.6
.20 1.1
fi
309
13
15.7
24.1
1.6
22.2
26.3
1.9
24.0
316
2.1
24.2
30.3
R*unm. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59.0 51.9 65.6 75.7 73.9 29.0 22.9 27.5 30.8 29.8
n
I*rm
( ................... 3.7 2.7 2.1 1.9 1.4 1.8 1.2 0.9 0.8 0.6
mOSnw*ilur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 34.9 37.0 40.4 48.6 1.9 15.4 15.5 I 18.8
SMd.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
23.5 26.9 29.5 30.4 31.2 11.6 11.9 12.3 12.4 12.6
Charic Eurcheaa and mtpda. . . . . 31.4 30.6 26.8 26.4 26.4 15.5 13.5 11.2 10.7 10.6
O l h n n l a l h m 8 n d ~ d 1 ~ 0 .~. 0 ~ 6.9 5.1 8.1 24.0 29.5 3.4 2.2 3.4 9.7 11.9
rirrs (WV)
z b o n z ........ (7) ('1 (1 16.6 214 ) ) ) 6.8 86
16.8 2.1.3 19.9 22.0 23.0 8.3 10.7 8.3 9.0 9.3
WpWorn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 16.e 21.3 22.4 21.2 4.4 74 8.9 91 8.8
S.p(Cnns ., . ................. 3.5 9.4 17.2 20.9 19.1 1 4.2 7.2 8.5 7.7
CsnrnconrMmmag*umgmfM
pmnrlpl nod . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43.2 22.9 19.2 18.2 18.5 21.3 10.1 8.1 74 7.5
C ~ ~ g a n~W . .I ~. . . . . . . . . . .
~ I C I W I ~ 168 13.9 12.8 12.8 12.7 8.3 6.2 5.4 5.2 51
Bnrpnrnoplunn .............. 4.8 6.2 6.7 6.7 7.1 2.4 2.7 2.8 2.7 2.9
Ulcads(omKt, urdduodmm. . . . . . 8.6 6.1 6.6 6.4 6.6 4.2 27 2.8 2.6 2.7
~0l.Womnrluncv.nd
nmhul cbrkwbon9 . . . . . . . . . . . 7.2 5.4 5.4 5.6 5.4 3.6 2.4 2.2 2.3 2.2
Ammu ..................... 34 3.2 3.7 3.8 3.9 1.7 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.6
c.hOb!imuirmdomcrLtord.R~l
g8N wdd.r ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.0 3.3 3.0 3.1 3.0 2.0 1.5 12 1.3 1.2
N u h h a u l . .~. . . . . . . . . . . 25 2.4 2.9 3.0 3.1 1.2 1.0 1.2 12 12
Tub.rcJorn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2 20 1.8 1.9 1.8 2.6 09 0.7 0.8 0.7
Inlecimmolk&my . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 . 27 2.0 16 1.3 4.0 12 08 07 0.5
V i a w m n. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.0 0.8 0.9 1.3 14 0.5 04 0.4 0.5 0.6
Mamtgs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.7 14 1.2 1.2 10 0.8 06 0.5 05 04
A a 1 I e o d n l 1 ~ 8ndbr0ndi0lL1. . . . . . 1.3 06 0.6 06 0.5 0.6 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2
-dpast8la ........... 2.2 0.8 0.5 0.5 0.4 1.1 0.3 0.2 0:2 0.2
.
Svmptqmr pgn MII Ydhd
con&bms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 258 208 310 31.0 29.8 12.7 127 13.0 126 12.0
M o m a m. . . . . . . . . . . . ... lC8.8 120.0 153.0 171.7 175.6 53.5 53.0 04.4 69.8 70.4
' B a c d o n a l ~ p ~d..lm.lKludcswmro(pon.ydmtr
~ o l . '1970urdlSO~ydonrsrdmt~hon
a oI J d y 1.
n u n a t a d 8s 01 Agr . 1; 1985-1909 eabmlcd Wim a tmamuI rm eneaw. omcr types 01
myrunues not thorn ¶epu81+lv .
olha -." -.ble d8U mot n m zcpv8tety.
'
Ria to 1900 d r r~o r)pm t .
a bma*tn .mph*~nu Inchdq
MII as~iwm. -I
0818 r a nclud.d m w r 8 l other c8tagms.
.
m a11
mc~er
. ..
~Ofunp.ohed~h0O:b.pmng~#K)~~Wa*nu~
'wS' l~b
W .
Jl.E l l ( m d h c m
Sam:U.S. N8boml c.n(.r lor CMlh SU(abcr. Vd8lSU@I*s of- m S U ( r r nnul;Mmmty V d w I S u Rqmtr..
~
ad-dl m.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
.
No 122.Death Rates From Cancer. by a x . Age and S e k t e d Type: 1970 to 1988
( D . 8 t M p ~1 0 0 ~ 0 0 ~ l l o h..p.cmd.g.qou#S..huQM..
n k obY1211
.
MALE FEMME
AGE ATMATHANOSELECTED .
TYPE W CANCER 190 1UO 1- 1887 1- l8X 1UO 1886 1-7 1-
ToWUSnU' ............ 1821 205.3 212.8 214.8 215.5 111.4 163.6 l7S.l 1- 1-0
-
25.34- ................. 16.3 13.4 13.0 12.1 11.7 16.7 14.0 13.1 12.7 128
3544)rys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53.0 UO 42.3 39.1 3S.7 65.6 531 4.1 47.8 U s
45.54- .................. 183.5 100.7 174.5 169.1 166.3 181.5 171.8 164.0 159.7 1540
5 ~ y u . .n. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 511.8 520.8 531.1 m.4 526.7 343.2 361.7 379.1 374.5 37bo
65 yous o l Q d avu . . . . . . . . . . . . 1221.2 1.371.6 1.3W.6 1.397.1 l B . 6 706.3 767.8 813.6 W . 1 8U) s
65-74 ................. 1.006.8 l.OS3.2 1.005.6 1.084.0 1.0727 557.9 607.1 644.6 652.5 6591
75.84 yous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.500.3 1.7W.5 1.840.2 1.1)50.2 1 . W W1.9 903.1 948.3 967.4 W2b
85 yun d md ova . . . . . . . . . . 1.720.8 2369.5 2.413.7 2.474.8 2.527.9 1.086.7 1255.7 1.262.9 1.282 9 1.2Wa
.
PuwlU 35-44 y u s old:
~ . r p r . o l y . ~. *
. .~. .~. .r. 170 12.6 10.6 8.4 96 5 8.8 5.8 6.0 S*
-orgam.pn~um ..... 114 95 90 9.0 91 1.6 6.5 5.8 5.8 50
&mast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.1 . 0.1 0.1 0.1 20.4 17.9 17.5 17.5 110
G.nwap~ ............... 1.4 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.5 13.6 8.3 7.1 6.7 (Lm
Lmurdh.nuuula(r
.
0.d. h u k . ~. . . . . . 5.6 4.3 4.6 4.1 44 3.2 2.4 2.3 1.9 26
umuyorgms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.9 1.4 1.6 14 1.4 1.0 0.6 0.9 0.7 01
..ndp~yn. ...... 1.7 1.8 1.4 1.2 1.2 0.7 05 0.6 0.4 01
L.J.mu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4 3.2 30 2.8 3.0 2.8 .2.6 2.1 2.0 21
P~nrrS-54)u~old:
-8tq.mlu~tnuur ........ 72.1 IO.8 10.7 68.7 65.7 222 344 35.9 35.5 350
or- pumnum . . . . . 45.9 44.3 41.7 40.1 39.5 32.5 27.8 25.7 24.3 22 1
&ul( ................... 04 02 0.3 01 0.3 52.6 48.1 46.7 454 433
................ 34 3.4 3.1 3.0 3.1 34.4 24.1 20.4 19.6 185
.RQr..enUormunbllOZI0. ' ~ p a r o m u n b r 2 5 y w r o l r g . d ~ ~ d o h . r n d ~
utQ nY rha upu8WY.
Saru:U.S.N8~UnrlorHdU1SI.Pl(rr. ViWU.b~&sdOrUrildSU~~m:mdupublPh.dd.U
M A T R I X I I I
--
&a.Chonc
REGION.
DIVISION.
AND STATE
US..
TOW'
W
7
3 1 1 1 7
-81.2
(ell
. S
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l r *
FTTERIX-UtYBACTERIOLOGY
There are many diseases of animals that may be transmitted
directly or indirectly to man. These include a wide variety of bac-
terial infections as well as diseases caused by viruses, pathogenic
protozoa, and Rickettsia. The latter will be discussed in later c h a p
ten, and many of the bacterial infections will be described here.
-4mong the bacterial diseases are bovine tuberculosis (see Chapter
LXII), septic sore throat (see Chapter LT'III),anthrax, glanders,
contagious abortion of cattle. Jlalta fever. s>mptornatic anthrax,
malignant edema, and tularemia. Diseases of animals may be con-
tracted by man in Merent n-ays: 1. Through an insect vector, such
as lice, fleas, or ticks. 2. Through eating iood or drinking milk coming
irom diseased animals. 3. Through direct contact with animals that
are infected. Veterinary medicine and bacteriology, then, are closely
interrelated subjects and an integral part of medical bacteriology.
MYCOBACTERmM PARATUBERCULOSIS
Mycobacterium Paratuberculosis (Bacillus of Johne's Disease).
1. Group--acid-fast. 2. Family-Jlycobacteriaceae. 3. Habitat-
intestinal mucosa; cause of Johne's disease,
@
a chronic diarrhea of cattle. 4. Discoverers
-Johne and Frothingham, in 1895.
Morphological C h a r a c t e r i s t i c s .
1. Form-more or less pleomorphic rods.
2. Cell groupings--occurs singly, in pairs,
or in dumps. 3. S i e 4 . 5 ~broad and
1 to 2p long. 4. Staining properties-
usually stains uniformly, but the longer
FIG. 37. Mycobacknknum
forms show alternate stained and unstained +rolvbcrC in lymph.
segments. With Ziehl-Neelsen stain, it is
acid-fast. I t ois not stained by ordinary aniline dyes. 5. Gram-
pasitive. 6. Nonmotile. 7. Nonsporing.
Cultural Characteristics. The organism has been f i c u l t to culti-
vate and grows poorly on agar, potato, and gelatin stabs. Growth is
more profuse if killed cultures of other acid-fast bacteria are added.
1. Glycerol broth-grows in clumps, with sediment in bottom of tube
and clear liquid above; adapted cultures may produce a thin surface
pellicle which becomes wrinkled and thickened. 2. Dorset's glycerol
egg medium-after several days of incubation, v e j minute, slow-
growing, dry, ,gayish-wbite colonies appear; as colony grows older
and larger, it becomes winkled.
Physiological Characteristics. 1. Optimum temperature, 39' C.;
minimum, 27' C.; maximum, 43' C. 2. Gron-s best aerobically;
slight growth under anaerobic conditions. 3. Resistancethe organ-
isms mill resist desiccation. Direct sunlight kills them in a few
minutes. Disinfectants are effective in the usual dilutions, if the
organism is free from albuminous matter.
Pathogenicity. The disease affects cattle and, less frequently,
sheep and deer, folloning ingestion of fodder that has been soiled
with feces of infected animals. The disease is a chronic enteritis
characterized by gradual emaciation, running a long course extending
from a period of several months, h a l l y ending in death in practically
all cases. The incubation period may run up to 18 months. Aside
from evidence of emaciation, the post-mortem examination reveals no
specific lesions apart from those in the intestinal tract. The intestinal
mucosa, particularly that of the small intestine, is greatly thickened
and presents a marked, n*led, or corrugated appearance. On
the surface of the corrugations there are hemorrhages, and occa-
sionally smaU nodules are observed. The bacilli are usually found
in the mesenteric glands which are enlarged, edematous, and pig
mented.
Diagnosis. 1. A preparation,johnin, which is similar to tuber-
culin, has been made by growing Johne's bacillus in a special broth
medium containing dead Mycobactaium phlei bacilli. When 0.2 ml
of johnin is injected intradennally into an animal and 0.2 ml. is
injected 48 hours later into the site of the previous injection, a positive
reaction of m u s e swe,lling occurs in infected animalr. The injection
of avian tuberculin in large amounts may produce a reaction in animal!:
with Johne's disease. The test with johnin is believed to be specific
and of diagnostic value.
2. The organism may be cultivated on glycerin egg medium con-
taining dead tubercle bacilli, by inoculating the medium with intestinal
m u m washed in 20% antiformin.
3. A smear may be prepared using a piece of the intestid m u m
.
and staining by the Ziehl-Neeken method.
CLOSTRIDIUM SEPl'lcuM
Clostridium Septicurn (Vibrion Septique, Bacillus Septicus).
1. Groupanaerobic spore-bearers. 2. Family-Blrinlreae.
3. Habitat--soil, animal intestine, dust, and polluted water. 4. Dis-
coverers-Pasteur and Joubert, in 1877.
Morphological Characteristics. 1. Form-rods which are straight
or slightly curved. 2. Cell groupings-~curs singly, in pairs, or in
chains,and occasionally in long filaments. 3. S i 8 to lp by 3 to
8p. 4. Staining properties-dl~ stained by aniline dyes. 5. Gram
stain-young cultures are Gram-positive, but older ones may be
Gram-negative. 6. Motility-motile by four to sixteen peritrichous
wells. 7. Spores-oval, excentric to subtenninal, slightly wider
than the bacilli, and readily formed. 8. Pleomorphkm-the organ-
ism has a tendency toward marked pleomorphism in agar cultures
where it may vary in sue, shape, and dep* of staining; shadow forms
are seen.
Cultural Characteristics. 1. Agar cultures--spreading, h e n -
tous, translucent colonies which are irregularly round and are grayish in
color. 2. Agar slant--slight, spreading, translucent, glistening, gray-
ish-yellow growth, with smooth surface. 3. Deep glucose agar shake
tube-delicate, arborescent, and fiocculent colonies throughout the
medium, with abundant gas formation. 4. Gelatin stab-liquefaction
with gas bubbles. 3. Litmus milk-coagulation with forination of
x i d a?d gas. 6. Broth-slight turbidity with a powdery deposit.
7. Cooked meat medium--growth is moderate with slight turbidity
and gas formation, the meat turning pinliish in color without blacken-
ing or digestion.
Physiological Characteristics. I. Optimum temperature, 37' C.
2. Anaerobe. 3. Hydrogen sulfide is formed. 4. Acid.and gas are
formed in glucose, maltose, lactose, and salicin, but not in d t e or
sucrose. 5. Sitrates are reduced to nitrites. 6. Resistance-the
spores resist b o i i g for hours.
Toxic Products. A powerful exotoxin is produced by Clostridium
septhm. The injection of the tosin subcutaneously or intramuscu-
larly does not always produce a fatal reaction but produces local
necrosis. The toxin is prepared in a 0.2% glucose broth containing
10% horse serum,the broth being incubated for 24 to 48 hours after
inoculation. Clostridium septuum also produces a hemolysin which
causes hemolysis of human and sheep red blood cells.
Serological Reactions. Antitoxins against Clostridium septicurn
are prepared by injecting horses or sheep with the toxin. They are
s p d c against the organism and do not protect against Clostridiurn
nooyi. By means of agglutination tests, strains of Cbstridium septG
cum have been divided into four antigenic groups. There is no cross
agglutination between Clostridium septicum antiserum and Cbshidiurn
chauvoei.
Pathogenicity. Clostridium septicurn is the cause of malignant
edema, a fatal infection of horses following surgical or traumatic
wounds, and occasionally in cattle and sheep. Pathologically, the
disease is characterized by edematous, emphysematous swellings, and
ifitration of cellular tissues, in which lesions the bacillus is found.
In man the virulence of the organism varies greatly with the strain.
Some types are almost.or completely nonpathogenic. In infections of
man it is important as a cause of gas gangrene, although it is much less
commonly encountered than is Cbsthidium perfringens. The form of
gas gangrene due to thii organism diflers somewhat from that due to
Clostridium perfringtirs in that edema with blood-stained fluid is more
marked, and necrosis and gas production are less violent. Cbstridium
septkum is rarely found alone, but pure infections have been recorded.
Experimentally, the organism is pathogenic for guinea pig, mice,
rabbits, and pigeons. An intramuscular injection of 0.01 to 0.5 d.
of a 24 hour culture into guinea pigs produces death in 12 to 24 hours,
with edemii and gas production.
Prophylaxis. I'accination, using attenuated spores, has proved
dective in the hands of some workers. Various investigaton have
produced antitoxic and antibacterial sera for which both prophylactic
and therapeutic value are claimed in the early stages of gas gangrene.
-.
Related Organisms. The other members of the anaerobic spore-
bearing group of organisms, genus Clostridiam, are discussed in detail
in the chapter dealing with this group. These include: 1. Clostdium
leiani, 2. Clostridium q r ' , 3. Clostridium perjringens, 4. Clostridium
botulinurn, 5. Clostridium jalkrr, 6. C&tridium histolyticum, and
5. Clostridium kniopulrtscm.
Differentiation of Clostridium Septicurn from Clostridium
Chauvoei.
1. Clostridium septicurn frequently infects wounds in animals
and man, herea as Clostridium chauuoci has not been isolated from
wound cultures and has never been found in human infections.
2. Clostridium chauvoei ferments sucrose and not salidn, and
Clostridiurn septicurn ferments salicin and not s u m .
3. Clost~idiurnseptinrm is more pathogenic for laboratory ani-
mals and produces more gas in tissues than does CloMium h-.
4. Clostridium chuooei grows more .slowly than Clostridium
septicurn.
BRUCEtLIS GROUP
In the Brucella group are included four organisns, BmcdZu
m d h i s , B d h abortus, BrucJIa nris, and BrUGCU4 brdisepticcr.
All are nonmotile, nonsporing, Gram-negative rods which do not
liquefy gelatin, nor ferment carbohydrates. They are strict parasites,
producing infection of the genital tract, the mammary gland or the
lymphatic tissues, and the intestid ttaa.
A. Brucella Aborrus (Bacillus Aluligcnes A W ) .
1. Group--Brucella. 2. Family-Parvo- 3. Habitat-
prcscnt in milch cow and the caux of contagious abortion in cattle
and undulant fever in man, It also invades mares, sheep, rabbits,
and guinea pigs, producing contagious abortion. 4. Discovau-
Bang, in 1897.
Morphotogid CharacterWs. 1. ~o&ort, slender, p b
morphic rods with rounded ends. 2. Cell groupingsdccurs singly,
in pairs, or in small chains. 3. S i . 4 by lr. 4. Staining prop
erties--stains d y with ordinary aniline dyes. 5. Gram-negative.
6. Nonmotile. 7. Nonsporing.
Cultural Characteristics. Bruceila abortus is microaemphilic
It requires 25% COz on primary isolation and 10%C G on subsequent
transfers. After prolonged culture, however, the organism grows
freely under aerobic conditions. 1. Agar c u l t u r e ! s 4 , round
colonies with smooth, glistening surface and entire edge. 2. Agar
slant--slow grayish growth. 3. Gelatin stab-poor growth with no
liquefaction. 4. P o t a t v l i g h t grayish-brown growth. 5. Litmus
milk--the medium is rendered slightly all-aiine, with no coagulation.
6. Broth-slight turbidity.
Physiological Characteristics. 1. Optimum temperature, 37' C.
2. Aerobic, and facultative anaerobe. 3. Hydrogen sulfide is pro-
duced. 4. Sugars are not fermented. 5. Resistanctresists cold
and drying. Killed a t pasteurkiig temperatures.
Pathogeniaty. There are two organisms which ha\-e been
designated in the literature as BruceUII abortus. The porcine iariety
is now called Brucella suis. The bovine variety hasmtained the name
Brucella abortus. The two organisms are simiiar in most respects, ex-
cept that Brucclla suis requires no added COt for its growth. Both the
porcine and bovine types can cause undulant fever in man after an in-
cubation period of 1week to several m o n h . There is, typically, a long
continued pyrexia, often with remissions, which may be accompanied
by joint pains, skin rashes, sweating at night, and other symptoms.
Whether or not these organisms are related to cases of miscarriage in
human beings has not been determined. BncceUa abortus has been iso-
lated in several instanceswhere the diagnosisof endocarditis was made.
Epidemiology. Bruce& abortus may appear in the milk of cows
that have aborted and may aka appear in the milk of cows that are
carriers but have suffered no abortion themselves. Human infection
may result from attending to infected animals or, a t other times, from
handling the flesh or drinking raw milk of infected cows.
Serological Reactions. Agglutinins and complement-fixing anti-
bodies are produced in response to infection with Brucclla abortus, and
a diagnosis of the disease is often made by ascvtaining the aggluti-
nation titer of a patient's serum. The finding of an agglutinating
titer of 1:80 or 1:100 is usually considered signihnt. This is not
pathognomonic, however, since titers of this magnitude or higher are
often encountered in healthy human beings. Therefore, when blood
cultures are negative (the disease is one in which septicemia is often
present), a positive diagnoe should not be made unless the serum
agglutinin titer is a t least 1:500.
Immunity and Prophylaxis. Calves, nonpregnant cows, and
human bein& seem to have a high natural resktancc. One attack of
undulant fever protects against a second attack. It is a c u l t to
ascertain a cure, since remissions occur. Vaccines have been used in
cattle, and the results thus far have been inconclusive. Experiments
on active immunization of human b e i i have also given questionable
results. Thr: use of immune serum and brucellin has been advocated
by many workers, but here again most of the reports have been uncon-
vincing or negative. Recently, cures have been reported in cases
treated with sulfanilamide, aureomych, and chloromycetin.
B. BruceUa Melitensis (Bacillus Melitensis, Alcaligenes Meli-
tensis). 1. Group-Brucek 2. Family-Parvobacteriaceae.
3. Habitat--strict parasite of goats and cause of Malta fever in man
and contagious abortion in goats. 4. Discoverer-Bruce, in 1887.
Morphological Characteristics. 1. Form-short rods. 2. Cell
g r o u p i n g s e a r s singly, in pairs, or in short chains. 3. S i . 5
to 0.7~wide by 0.6 to 1.5 long. 4. - S properties-stains well
with ordinary aniline dyes. 5. Gram-negative and non-acid-fast.
6. ?ionmotile. 7. Pu'onsporing. 8. Xonencapsulated.
Cultural Characteristics. 1. Agar ~ultures-gra~vish-white,round
colonies about 0.5 ram. in diameter. 2. Gelatin stab--slow growth,
with no liquefaction. 3. Litmui milk-medium becomes alkaline.
4. Potato-slight grayish-brown to chocolatecolored growth.
\
5. Brothslight turbidity, with no peficle or depMit
Physiological Characteristics. 1. Optimum temperature, 37' C.,
Kith limits of 20' to 40' C. 2. Aerobic. 3. Pigment production-
brown pigment on potato and in old agar cultures. 4. No fermenta-
tion of carbohydrates. 3. hrltrates are occasionally reduced, with
disappearance of the nitrites formed. 6. Resistance-the organism
k U e d by moist heat at 60' C. in 10 minutes, a t GoC. in 5 minutes,
and by 0.5% phenol in 15 minutes. It has good keeping qualities.
In the dry state it may survive for 3 months, and hermeticalIy sealed
it may remain potent for 6 months at room temperature.
Serological Reactions. By agglutination two antigenic groups
an distinguishable, the melitensis (smooth) type and the parameli-
tensis (rough) type. Carriers of the disease and those who have re-
covered have agglutinins and c o m p l e m e n t - a antibodies in their
sera. Agglutinin absorption tests are necessary for diagnosis since
such antisera will moss agglutinate with Brucellu abortus and Brucda
suis. Agglutinins occur in serum about the tenth or twelfth day of
the fever. The titer rises to 1:100 and 1:300. Complement fixation
is positive in nearly all cases during the fever.
Pathogenicitp. Malta fever is spread to man by means of goat's
milk infected with Brucdla melit&. The disease in both goats and
man is a bacteremia, and the etiologic agent may be recovered from
the blood. In goats, the most obvious clinical symptom is abortion,
although this need not occur. Goats may have the disease with the
organism circulating in the blood and W i g escreted in the urine,
without the animal's showing signs of the infection. Many goats,
however, show evidences of infection by losing weight, developing a
cough, and in some instances developing mastitis and arthritis. In
man a blood culture is positive in about 80% of the cases after the
second day of the disease, which may prevail in the bacteremia form
for several months.
Control of Undulant Fever and Malta Fever. The pnve6tion of
the spread of these infections depends upon the following measures:
1. Eradication of the diseases in herds of cattle, goats, and swine.
2. Proper precautions in handling infected animals, and in so far
as possible avoiding contact with them.
3. Pasteurization of milk and milk products.
4 Disinfection and proper disposal of urine and feces of patients.
5. Treatment with the antibioticsaureomycin and chloromycetin
in human Wigs.
DBerentiation of Members of the Bnrcella Group. The follow-
ing table presents a scheme for dZerentiating B w d a abortus,
Brricella orris, and BrucJ14 mIitmis from each other.
s"
f.ot ~ U U C f-ti-
~ monin
1m.m
B.sk
PO*
13s.000
1:1oo.m
1. B . m d & mditmris and B~ycdZasvis arc more highly infective for guinea
p i g than is Brucdla abortus.
2. Bnu& abortus when first isolrted requires COI, but Brucdu mdikncit
and B r d suis may be cultivated under aerobic conditions.
3. Brucdk suis is the most active producer oi hydrogen d d e , and Bruc&
mditcnris may form this gas only slightly.
4. BrrrcdZa m d i h i s is not inhibited by either thionin, basic fuchsii, or
pyronin. Brucdla abortus is inhibited by thionin and g m well in m d i contain-
ing basic fuchsin and pyronin. Bruccllo suis grows well in the presence of thionin,
but its growth is deterred by basic fuchsin and pynmh.
THE RICKETTSLAE
.. . . . --. . - . . " . .
i ally by the rat flea. Thisis the
-. '..*<'
i . .
.- ;-.,. % ". I form that prevails in the south-
i' em United Statesand in Mexico,
,- it is h o r n as tabardillo.
.. : It has also been termed shop,
. , Toulon, Moscra, and Manchu-
'.'
c.'**
*:,
. .;-.,- .--::.;.:
k-
,
;
'
rian t~phus. I t appears spo-
radically and has a mortality
below 5%. (2) Human, Euro-
pean, or epidemic typhus, caused
by Ricketfsiu prowazeki var.
*.
prouaeki and spread from man
to 'man by the body louse and
possibly the head louse. I t is
highly communicable and has
a mortality of 20-70%. Brill's
disease is a mild type of louse-
- . . . borne European typhus:endernic
in Atlantic coast cities.
The disease is character-
, ized by initial violent headache,
nausea,dizziness, alternate chills
and fever, and a typical rash.
Compli~ti011~ indude typhus
gangrene, severe bronchopneu-
monia, otitis media, and typhus
encephalitis. Clinically the two
forms arc not very Merent;
both may exist in endemic and
epidemic form with correspond-
t h v u v ~ .W. B . . Co.
ing mildness and fatality.
m. 64. Rickettsiae in the erlh d lypbus PLO a dLoo of lice,
guinea pig. (Redrawn from Monteiro,
in ~ r r t i Frobisher,
n Jr., Fnfidonmrolr 4 them to sicken and die.
Bacdehdogy, 1949.) The organisms occur in the
cytoplasm but not the nucleus
of invaded cells. Blood of the patient is infectious, but organisms
have not been seen in the blood.
Weit-Felix Reaction. The serum of persons with typhus fever
contains agglutinins against certain Proteus strains, the most famous
of which is Proteus 0x19, isolated by Weil and Felix from the urine of
typhus fever patients. The agglutination reaction of the senun in
dilutions of 1:50 to 1:50,000 is diagnostic for typhus fwer. The
Proteus X strains are not related to typhus fwer in an etiologic sense,
for they are rarely found in cases of the disease and experimental inocu-
lation of these organisms does not produce the disease. Protets
strains do not immunize against Rickettsiae, nor does recovery from
rickettsia1 infection immunize against experimental Proteus infection.
Zinsser and associates have suggested that the rickettsia bodies and
certain Proteus strains contain a common antigen component
Prophylaxis. The prevention of typhus fever lies in the eradica-
tion of lice, especially when people are confined in dose quarters such
as jails and trenches,and particularly in keeping lice away from known
typhus cases. Cleanliness, repellents, and delousing procedures are
useful. DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-uichioroethane)appears promising.
(See following section on vaccines.)
Immunity and Therapy. Recovery from either form of typhus
fever results in lasting immunity to both. blassive doses of vacches
of killed organisms have been fairly successful in producing active
immunity. The vaccine, formerly prepared by growing the organisms
in lice and using the ground intestine by tissue culture in guinea pig
testes, or maae from the lungs of infected rats, has been recently pro-
duced from growth of the o q p k m in developing chick embryos. By
the latter means, Bengston and Dyer of the 'l'nited States Public
Health Senice have obtained a preparation free from bacteria and
insect material.
The serum of immunized goats or rabbits is being vied therapeu-
tically and may prove useful. Chloromycetin and aureomycin are
proving clinically effective according to widespread reports.
Diagnosis. The Weil-Felix reaction is the main diagnostic tool.
Complement hation is also used in Werentiating ~ p h u s especially
,
the murine type, from spotted fever. The V.S.S.R. Institute of
Experimental Medicine has recently reported a complement fixation
test claimed to be very sensitive, strain-spdc, and applicable as
early as the drst and second days of illness. Animal inoculation is
also employed.
SPOTTED FEVERS
The* are diseases similar to typhus fever and characterized by
petechial hemorrhages into the skin together with a rash and an incu-
bation period of 3 to 9 days. The disease is transmitted from tick to
tick hereditaxily and to man by the tick. I t is not transmitted from
nian to man,as is typhus fever (see p. 280). The disease is innocuous
for ticks. It is most prevaleat in the northwestern United States.
The causative agent, Rickettsia rickcUsi (alto known as..Rickeusia
dernurcnttroxenus), can be transmitted experimentally to monkeys,
guinea pigs, rabbits, and dogs. I t is found within the nucleus of the
invaded cell.
The disease has, with questionable correctness, usually been
W e d into three very closely related types, all immunologically
identi4 and caused by the same organism. One occurs in the eastern
states and is transmitted chiefly by the dog tick, Dcmurccntw 06
abilir; one in the western states, particularly Bitter Root Valley,
Montana, and transmitted by the sheep or wood tick, Drnmxntm
andcrsoni; and one in Brazil (typbex4nthnnrJico) transmitted by
Amblymnrcr cajmmnse. In the Cnited States, the disease is known
as Rocky bfouniuin spotted fnrr. The mortality is very variable but
runs nationally about 19%. The mortality in Brazil is about 707,
Other spotted fevers include Fiicre B o u t o n ~ e 6mya
, fw,S o d
Af k n tkk-bite fever, SZa Paoh typhus.
After the first week of the disease, the Weil-Felix agglutination
test is positive. The serum usually has a titer ranging from 1:20 to
1:200, not as high as in typhus fever.
Immunity and Prophylaxis. One attack of spotted fever usually
confers lifelong immunity. There is a slight cross protection between
typhus and spotted fevers. Immunization with massive doses of
vaccines of killed organisms has been iakly successful. .h Kith
typhus, these were formerly prepared from infected insects and now
from tissue cultures or preferably from chick embryos. Measures to
minimize contact with ticks are, of course, mandatory. These include
wearing of tick-proof clothing, eradication of ticks by brush clearing,
and removal of ticks from the body as quickly as possible.
MISCELLANEOUS DISEASES
Trench Fever. This disease, aLo known as WoIhynian fever,
is characterized by sudden o w t with fever, headache, and pains in
the mu& and bones, especially in the legs. Thve are frequent
remissions and relapses. The disease is caused by Rickc#sirr quintancr
(Rickettsia wolh~nku,Rick&& pcdiculi) and is traosmitted from
man to man by lice. I t is rarely fataL
Q Fever. This is caused by a filterable Co+iJb burndi (Rickct-
tsiu diapmiaz), with transmission possibly by tick or by air. T h is
high fever, no rash, no Weil-Felix reaction. Thm have been no
fatalities. The disease has been found especially in slaughterhouse
worken and dairy farm workers in Australia. A-ine-milc f e w , found
in Montana, is believed identical.
"Beartwater" Disease. Also known a s Veldt d i s w r , this is a
highly fatal, economically importaut, tick-borne disease of cattle,
sheep, and goats in South Africa. The causative organism is C d &
ruminantiurn.
Bullis Fever (Lone S b r or Tick Feva). This is a relatively mild,
Wd-Felix negative disease which has ban observed in soldien
stationed in Texas. I t is believed to be caused by Rickettsiae and
transmitted by ticks.
p-3
and history of the program.3
gI,m?SPki
in Moscow. The Umted States, which has long claimed that the
Soviet Union maintained a secret biolo 'cal wea ns pro
Russia to meet a Wednesday f e e
-1 7 - q : X cwrjrucl
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Immune System Enhancement Janice Kiecolt-Glaser and colleagues have found that relaxation training can
also enhance cellular immune function. Increases in NK
cell activity and decreases in antibodies to herpes simplex virus.
Immune Systen Enhancement Kathleen Dillon and her colleagues demonstrated a link between positive
emotional states and enhanced immune system function,
Immune syster Improvement There i s evidence that an individual can voluntarily irprove inrune functions.
ffoward Hall and colleagues a t Penn State University .
found increase in irnune systen response as a result of hypnosis and
visualization techniques dealing with lyrphocytes that focussed on the white
cells fighting disease* Nurbers of white cells increased in
easily hypnotised subjects.
Innune System Suppression McClelland has reported that college students who were high in power-related
l i f e stresses r e ~ o r t e dnore frequent and rore severe
illnesses, There are also indications that if a strong need for power
i s inhibited, there i s chronic overactivity of the sjnpatbetic nervous systen,
which supresses the imrune syster.
Kemory of the Irnune System The immune system can be trained tg defend more vigilantly or
to relax defense. That the inrune spsteo does behave and learn i s probably one
of the rajor discoveries in neuroscience of the 1910ts,
along with that of the endorphons.
- -. -
ple blood test that can tell whether you're ly-
Guilt ma;kers -
-- .- .
*
ing or not. :- '
- "If police apprehend dmg smug&rs or a suspect
The kchni& called blectric f ~ i . 0allom
, near a crime scene, they could immediately b+
technicians to identifg enzymes in the blood that blood and determine whether they had the guilty
show when someone is not t d b g tbc truth. prvtp or no+-
The revdutiamty technique was developedby d- Thc mu- blood test worka by isolating cer-
entiEb io Paris, France,and is now b e i itested be- tain ensymco or Y@t markera'' in the blood.
fom being intraduced into the American legal ~ g r - If a blood sample contains more than four Yguilt
tcla '''Raepossible uses of isolectric focusing are marker%*the person iti lying, the scientists say.
TYPES OF IJUILNITY
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Dubos, Rene J. The Buctmmd CJI. Cambridge, Jlass.: Harvard t'niversity
Press. 1945. 4.229-274.
Gershedeld, Louis. Bucrrridogy and Allied Subjects. Easton, Pa.: Mack Pub
lishing Company, 1945. 4.4&3+3,47 7-31.
Society of .imericm Bacteriologists. Jfanuol of Uefitodsfor Ptnc Cdtrrrc Sludy
of B~ctcria. Geneva. S . T.: Biotechnical Publiurions, 1949. Chap. \XI.
Strean, L. P. Old B M Infedionr. Brooklyn, S . T.: Denul Publishing
Company. 1949. 9. 160-171.
~~~~OLOGIC-IL REACTIONS
Parenteral introduction of foreign proteins, including micro-
organisms, into the animal body results in the production of specific
protective substances. These are termed antigens and antibodies
respectively.
An antigen is any substance which stimulates the production of
specific antibodies. Antigens are protein in nature, and practically
all proteins, except the incomplete ones such as gelatin, are antigenic.
Specificity of the antigen is determined by its chemical composition.
.ln untibody is formed by the &ma1 body in response to the
presence of antigen nith which it combines in a specific, antagonistic
manner. The antibodies are closely associated, and may be identiml,
with serum globulin. They may be separated from other serum con-
stituents by dilution with distilled water or more often by salting out.
Korthrop has prepared crystalline diphtheria antitoxin which appears
to be pure protein and contains 700,000 to 1,000,000antitoxic units
Per gram-
The five main types of antibodies, as determined by their action,
and the leading organisms stimulating their production are listed below.
1. A ntitozin-Cwyncbacteriz~m diphthmmac,Streptococcus scarla-
tinae, Shigella dyscntm'ac, Clostridium tetani, Clostridium pqfringm,
Clostridium fwcri.
2. Agglutinin-Diplococcus pncumoniac, Salmonella typhosa, S4L
d o paratyphi, S a l d l a schottmuc2lcri.
3. Precipitin-Diplococcus - m o n k , Bacillus anthacis.
4. Opsonin-Most microorganisms, Ncisscria intracclldaris, Dip-
lococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella typhosa.
5. Cytolysin-Treponema pdlidum, Hemophilus pertussis, Neis-
sm'a gonorrheae, ~Veisseriainfracdlularis.
Ablatins. (inhibiting reproduction) and neutrdizing antibodies,
two other types about which there is limited knowledge, may be pro-
visionaUy added.
Ehrlich believed that the diEerent demonstrable antibodies were
separate and distinct substances. Z i r and others, however, have
proposed a "unitarian" hypothesis-that the various antibodies stim-
ulated by a single antigen are essentially identical regardless of the
consequences of the antigen-antibodyunion. These are variable and
depend on the nature of the antigen and the conditions of the reaction.
Haptencs, or partial antigens, described by Landsteiner, are rela-
tively simple substances unable to stimulate antibody production
when injected by themselves but determining immunological sped-
bity when c o m b i i with antigenic protein. The spedic antibodies
produced react with the haptene alone or with the combined protein-
haptene, both in t h o and in d o . Not necessarily proteins, the
haptenes are exemplified by the polysaccharide Specific Soluble Sub-
stances (S.S.S.) found in the pneumococcus capsule.
A widely distributed hcterophile antigen, described by Forssmpnn.
stimulates production of hemolysin against sheep's red blood cells
when injected into rabbits. The antigen has been found in organs of
guinea pigs, horses, dogs, cats, mice, fowl, and tortoises, and in some
bacteria.
Ehrlich regarded toxin-antito-sin interaction as purely chemical
and equivalent to the neutralization of acids by alkalies. Thus, the
union was postulated to take place according to the law of multiple
proportions. Therefore, if one part of antitoxin neutralizes one part
of toxin, 500 parts of antitosin should neutralize 500 parts of toxin.
Danysz, however, observed that when toxin is added to antitoxin in
fractions after some lapse of time between additions, a mixture which
is nontoxic when toxin and antitoxin are added a t once, becomes toxic.
This is the Danysz phcnmmon. Bordet and Landsteiner believe that
the toxin-antitoxin reaction is an adsorption phenomenon, and there
is strong evidence to substantiate this view.
Toxoid. It has been observed that toxin,. when kept for a long
time, deteriorates, until it is no longer toxic Exposure of toxin to
0.4% formalin a t a temperature of 37" to 40' C. for about a month
produces a product ( t d or anatozin) which i s innocuous but is a t
the same time antigeqic and capable of producing a high titer of anti-
body. Such preparations have been made from the toxins of Cmync-
bacterium diphtheriae and Clostdivm tetuni and are used in immuniza-
tion against diphtheria and tetanus, respectively. ~lum-prcc~pitdcd
toroid is preferred by many because it is largely protein-free and be-
cause the antigenic stimulus is operative for a longer H od owing to
the slow liiiation of toxoid.
XMPORTANT TO=$*
Unit d Potency
Teuaus b
Ibmd I I
2% &wow 2 S g m .
@ pL
One U.LD. $ tbe sm+le! amount S u n d u d t i +
of tetanus +in tbat w W a 2 of !tunus ant!-
mi. munu PU on.tbe 4th day m tbe mnn. Lnmuru-
p m n c c of % U D I ~of S.S.H. urnd- ntion of bones.
Pmdlrct
! -.- I
3 unit of Potency
.btidyxnuric
I
Native antiserum
I n rirro t u t
I. In d m t u t
Potency pmvd by ,agglutination tap.
Each lot must rglutamte B. olrlvock m
1:Wdilution.
-~~
.*tipoeumococ-
I
?;atin antiunun
trom the hone
I I r dro tat
P a f n l d a pulk
+
Rabbit zed
&
-*
+
antirabbit
- Hemd~bocruscinthc.brmrx~f
d r i r c r thcomplement is left free to
ucinck~rrtr~~f~mroprodrv~
-*of tbcdbioodcdL
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Boyd, William C. FundumcntoLt ofZmmvndogy. X m Yo&: Intcmicnce Pub-
lishers, 1947.
Genhenfeld, Louis. BaddoZogy and AUid Subjcdr. Eastan, Pa.: Mack Pub-
lishing Company, 1945. Pp. 433448,451476.
M A T R I X 111
Predictions in Psychobiology
1. lmproved electrotherapy.
2. Better techniques for hypnosis.
3. Improved truth drugs.
4. Control of the sex drive. specifically by abolishing orgasm.
5. The ability to artificially inseminate.
6. Reconditioning by implosive therapy or flooding.
7. New fonns of physical and psychological torture.
8. A science of determining thoughts by facial expressions and grrtum.
9. Televised group therapy.
10. Subcortical psychosurgery.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
- -
In 1970, a Tokyo court found 3 drug manufacmms Takeda, Ciba-Gagy Japan,
and Tanabe Seijaku guilty of selling drugs containing Clioquinol which caused
roughly 30,000 cases of bhdness andlor paralysis and thousands of deaths. As is
customary, the manufacturns were permitted to stay out of jail, provided they pay
adequate indemnities to the victims or their sarvivon. Medical doctors at the aiai
testified that Clioquinol (sold under 168 different labels) was not meniy useless
against diarrhea, which it was advertised to h d , but that it could actually muse
diorrtico d e n taken pmentiveiy, as the marmfachrrrn rrcommended. The Health
authorities of Switzerland, where the drug originated, allowed it to remain on the
market although many other countries had ordered its withdrawal. Thus Qioquinol
kept being sold under wuioas labels, such as Mexafonn, Entcro-Vioform, Intesto-
pm, Sterosan, and othm. The manufactwen' profits keep increasing. So do the
diseases they produce.
Pricing Pressures and Politics Dog Successful Glaxo
As Danes a nd Others Assail New4 rug Costs, R& D Expen itures Soar
3 -a -'?a
By STSPHEND.Moo- Expenslve new product launches the
Speclal I o T n c W u ~ S m c rJormuu
r
LONDON-For years. Glaxo Holding
(iluo Holdings PLC :by the. Numbers
.,.' $
# , B~~ .?,
next two or three years also wlll balloon
Glaxo's marketlng tab. shaving proflts at
P K has been a model company In Eu- The Profit Picture least temporarily, analysts suggest. Still.
rope's drug Industry. Tho Fundamentals they expect Glaxo's pretax proflt growth to
Annual p n l u profit in m*mm of pounds
Although It may have acted a trifle too #/30/¶2 613W91 keep pace with sales. UBS/Phllllps &
aggressively for some, the Brltlsh drug SALE8 (C M ) 14.18 P340 Drew projects 12% annual earnings growth
maker has been deftly managed to pro- ?nEIAX PAORlS C ( ~II
) .ClAl E l 28 the next two years. Glaxo Amerlcan depos-
duce the Industry's fattest proflt margins.
And Claxo has been Immensely Inventive, A I O OUIUYS Ita~l) . a18 P415
ltary receipts were quoted yesterday at
01.15 a share. down 25 cents. In late New
cranking out a steady stream of ploneerlng CIVlTM WENOIN0 (CallI ' (I(( CQI York Stock Exchange composite trading.
medlclnes for such ailments as mlgralne lNOUSlRV ALNKINO: Some Bright Spots
and chemotherapy-related nausea. . The brightest spot In Glaxo's flscal Ilrst
"The best plpellne of blockbusters In no. 1 k bropc;no. 2 rwM-*idc Ma k.1
Europe, perhaps In the world." Duncan paw
In U.8. M t r BrbW Ycvn wiba half was surging demand for Zofran, used
Moore. a London-basedanalyst for Morgan "0"4!fJ@" , < . ' 3
to relleve nausea In cancer patlents under-
going chemotherapy. It's the flrst of
'Stanley & Co.. calls It.
But now Glaxo Is coming under Increase
MAJOR PROOUCT LINES: Glaxo's trio of blockbusters expected to
reach annual sales of more than a blllion
Ing flre for some of the very thlnp that AnnatdpIu-aukm-
have made It strong. Just last week, Wn- ~smnubk~krmdhrortkrltrod dollars. Glaxo researchers have reported
promisingdlxoverles uslng Zofran.related
mark asked the European Communlty q~w~Cor)*n~.z,3 compounds In treatment of schlzophrenla
Commlsslon to lnvestlgate Glaxo's prlclng MNOA COMPETITOAS: and ageassoelated memory Impairment.
of some of Its new drup. The Danlsh au- Some analysts thlnk central nervous sys-
thorltles speclflcally clted what they con- fattnlM#rd~~#~,kha,Muckmmd - tem appllcatlons eventually wlll dwarf the
slder outrageously hlgh prlces for Zofran. ~ m l ( ~ l~n ~rdcr u~gul . ~m&.h r & i * ' i current antl.nausea trealments.
lmlgran and Serevent. three blockbuster
drugs for prevlously untreatablemaladles,
whlch are reaching markets years ahead let1 iett iwe in, in1
iU*SJF~
#WWC~IU@, rwm S ~ I YCO.I
6 .,.*?
,(
Wlth Serevent. an anti-asthma medlca.
tlon. Glaxo's product development may
of rlval medlclnes. have been overtaken by changing medical
While even the Danes acknowledge that oplnlon. Serevent relleves asthma attacks
thelr complaint probably won't have much cessor as chlef exeeutlve, led Glaxo ample, olfered dlmunts to the U.S. Medle by openlng the vlctlm's always. But
lmmedlate Impact as It works Its way through that surge and continues as chair- ald system totallng $60 mllllon In the six crltlcs clalm thls approach leaves asth-
through the EC bureaucracy. Its flllng does man. In the company's latest annual re- months ended Dec. 31. Slmllar prlce con- matics vulnerable to assault from airborne
port. Sir Paul reminded shareholders that cessions have been extended to other U.S. allergens and pollutants, and perhaps even
reflect a growing threat for pharmaceutl- at an Increased risk of death. In place of
cal companles like Glaxo. From Rome to the daullng ascent was powered by a sln- health.care provlden.
gl'e product-Zantac, an antl-ulcer medl- such therapy, many speclallsts urge In.
Tokyo, lncreaslngly desperate govern- At the same tlme, Dr. Marlo estimates creased use of wcalled cortlco-sterolds
ments are struggling to brlng runaway clne that has been the world's biggest sell- that today I t costs $230 mllllon to get a new with antl.lnflammatory action that a p
health.care spendlng under control. Pre. Ing drug the past flve years. "But," he medlclne to market. And the odds against pears actually to heal asthma.
scrlptlon drugs typically represent only warned, "the dynamlcs of expanslonIn the success are dauntlng. Only one In 4.000
about 1070of total health-careoutlays. But years ahead wlll be dlflerent." Glaxo has the world's best selllng antl-
Dr. Mario. an Amerlcan who Is now 53 compounds wntheslzed In research labs asthma steriod and an even more promls-.
hugely profllable lnternatlonal drug pro- reaches the market.
ducers make attractive targets. years old, joined Glaxo'from Squlbb Corp. Ing product at an advanced stage of devel-
In 1986. Hired to run Glaxo's U.S. unlt. he Consequently, only huge International opment. So the company stands to beneflt
At the same tlme. Glaxo Is runnlng lnto companles with global sales forces stand regardless of how the asthma therapy d e
more conipetlng new drug theraples and was appointed group chlef exeeutlve In a
surprise topmanagement shuffle three much of a chance of earning back the costs bate Is resolved.
lnto stlffer competition from generlc and of developlnga drug before patents explre,
over.the-counter drugs. And new blotech. years later. He was promoted agaln to dep Wlth Serevent under a cloud. lmlgran
uty chairman late last year. analysts say. "Thls prlclng thlng Is not go- now looms as Glaxo's blggest potential
nology approaches are sending research Ing to go away." Dr. Marlo says. "Mld- blockbuster. Dr. Marlo expects formal
and development costs out of sight. I t all Industryanalysts expect the affable Dr.
Mario's lowkey approach and pollshed range drug companles are really golng to clearance of lmlgran In the U.S. sometlme
comes as Claxo Is making two transl. get squeezed; there Is golng to be a malor thls spring.
tlons-to the new leadershipof Chief Exec. public speaklng style to make him effec.
live in cruclal appearances before drug shakeout."
utlve Officer Ernest hlarlo, and away from lmlgran Is the flrst safe medlclne for
relylng on a single drug. regulators as well as In wooing Investors. More RPD Spendlng mlgralne, and one for whlch no competl.
Between 1981 and 1991. Claxo racid But hls main asset. the analysts add, Is his Glaxo Is spendlng more than ever on tion Is expected to surface for several
from obscurlty to the plnnacle of the f200 druglndustry acumen. R&D, Dr. Marlosays. The company's R&D moreyears. It's hard to gauge Imlgran's
bllllon.ayear global drug Industry. The Dr. Marlo will need plenty of savvy. He budget Is expected to cllmb 26% In the f l s sales potentlal. Yet conservatlve lmlgran
company's sales nearly quintupled. and has been outspoken In warning about a cal year endlng June 30, and probably 22% forecasts have been enough to alarm
pretax profit multlplled 14.lold. Today backlash lrom drug purchasers, especially more durlng flseal 1993. Dr. Marlo worrles health provlden around the world. Den.
Claxo is Europe's biggest drugmaker and staterun national health servlces across about the challenge of elfectlvely manag mark's mlnlster of health recently sald p
ranks second to Merck & Co. In annual Europe. Claxo and other major companles Ing such hefty R&D spendlng. But for tentlal demand for the new mlgralne drug
sales in the U.S. and world-wlde. are taklng voluntary steps In hopes of Claxo there Isn't any alternative, he In- could swallow one4hlrd of the country's
Sir Paul Cirolcrni. Dr. hfarlO'S prede avoiding tougher measures. Claxo, for ex- sists: "It's what got us here." annual budget for prescription drugs.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Chapter 7
t o dominate t h e f i e l d w i t h t h e i r view t h a t i o n i z i n g r a d i a t i o n
was t h e only dangerous r a d i a t i o n and t h a t there were no bio-
l o g i c a l e f f e c t s other than "thermal e f f e c t s " . However, some
"safety standard" had t o be developed f o r the thermal e f f e c t s .
D r . A r t h u r Guy, a former c o n s u l t a n t f o r A N S I , p a r t i c i p a t e d
i n a $5 m i l l i o n study a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Washington t h a t was
' funded by t h e U.S. A i r Force School o f Aerospace Medicine i n
t h e e a r l y 1980's. I t was a $5 m i l l i o n study t h a t b a c k f i r e d .
The study was t o determine i f t h e i r were p o t e n t i a l hazards t o
human beings from c h r o n i c exposure t o microwave r a d i a t i o n . ' I n
t h e study, Guy used g n o t o b i o t i c r a t s , meaning t h a t they were
considered germ and v i r u s f r e e . T h i s f a c t alone was one o f t h e
reasons f o r t h e excessive c o s t . A l l o f t h e animals use, b o t h
experimental and c o n t r o l animals, were g n o t o b i o t i c .
M A T R I X 1 1 1
An i n t e r e s t i n g p a r t o f t h i s p i c t u r e i s t h a t t h e govern-
ment c o n t i n u a l l y performs s t u d i e s about t h e e f f e c t s o f e l e c t r o
magnetic r a d i a t i o n exposure, discovers negative e f f e c t s , and
then ignores t h e r e s u l t s and denies t h e s t u d i e s were ever
done, which might be a f u r t h e r i n d i c a t i o n t h a t sometime way i n
t h e l a s t , t h e "powers-to-be" c a r e f u l l y guided t h e choice o f
these frequencies t o promote t h e decimation o f t h e p o p u l a t i o n .
Modulation i s t h e s e c r e t o f t r a n s m i t t i n g i n f o r m a t i o n by
means o f electromagnetic f i e l d s . I n microwaves, t h e high-
frequency s i g n a l i s modulated a t low frequencies. Microwaves
t h a t are un-modulated have no such e f f e c t . The two types o f
modulation t h a t are b i o l o g i c a l l y important are pulsed
modulation and amplitude modulation.
I n AM r a d i o , f o r example, t h e r a d i o r e c e i v e r "demodulates"
t h e s i g n a l , removing t h e " c a r r i e r " radio-frequency wave, which
preserves t h e modulation t h a t we perceive as voice o r music.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
It appears that the human body can also demodulate the signal
when exposed to modulated radio-frequency (RF) or microwave
fields; the biological effect is that of the low-frequency
vibration. All biological effects from electromagnetic
radiation are produced by ELF frequencies. The body systems
that pick u p the electromagnetic signal are "tuned" to the
natural frequencies between 0 Hz and 3 0 Hz. These systems will
sense abnormal fields that are close to this range (between
30 Hz and 500 Hz). The systems then produce an abnormal
effect. Microwave radar pulsed at SO Hz would have the same
biologicaleffect as a 60 Hz field alone, which explains the
identical effects seen at ELF and microwave frequencies. It
also indicates that all intervening frequencies (VLF, AM
radio, FM radio and television) will have the same biological
effects.
Generally speaking, the biological effects from all
man-made electromagnetic fields could be categorized as
follows:
* Effects on growing cells, such as increases in the
rate of cancer-cell division.
* Increases in the incidence of certain cancers.
* Developmental abnormalities in embryos
* Alterations in neurochemicals, resulting in behavioral
abnormalities, such as suicide, depression, etc.
* Alterations in biological cycles.
* Stress responses leading to depression in the human
immune system.
* Alterations in learning ability.
According to studies done at the University of Chicago
by Dr. Samuel Epstein, since 1975 there have been the follow-
ing increases in the incidence of specific types of cancers:
Lymphoma, Myeloma, Melanoma 100%
Breast Cancer 31%
Testicular Cancer 97%
Pancreatic Cancer 20%
Kidney Cancer 142%
Colon Cancer 63%
Analog LbduMkQ
-lel!er R
mow code o b l e code tetrprtntrr rode b h r y code
Pulse-Code ~lodutotlon'
-
lnfonnarion Transfer Modulanbn Oscillations and resonances
happen in any structure, like rattles in can. They only become useful when
they are interrupted in a coherent manner to convey information. This process
is called modulation. This figure shows the many ways in which the modulating
wave at the top, can be impressed on a carrier oscillation. The carrier must
be highly coherent so as not to change spontaneously during the longest
modulation period. A train of pulses can also acr as a carrier of modulation, .
-
and the pulses can be coded to transfer information.
/
0296
M A T R I X 1 1 1
b.
8
-
C.
0298
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Human E f f e c t s o f ELF/ULF
I n t h e presence of t h e p r o t e i n kinases i n t h e n u c l e i o f t h e
c e l l , t h e ELF i n t e r a c t s w i t h t h e DNA molecule i t s e l f . I t
can " t u r n on" o r " t u r n o f f " any gene, once t h e c o r r e c t f r e -
quency i s known. For example, one frequency can cause cancer
i n a r a t i n two days. Another can reverse t h e process. One
frequency can cause depression i n humans by causing t h e
release o f c h o l i n e r g i c neuropeptides i n t h e b r a i n . S t i l l
another frequency can cause anxiety; a t h i r d can motivate mob
behavior, and so f o r t h . I t can be done from any p o i n t on t h e
planet. The foundation o f how ELF can do what i t does i s t h a t
e x t e r n a l magnetic f i e l d s can c o n t r o l b i o l o g i c a l s p i n and
proton coupling constants i n DNA, RNA, RNA t r a n f e r a s e s and
hydrons (H20).
0300
M A T R I X I I I
2 . A l t e r a t i o n o f hormone l e v e l s .
3 . A l t e r a t i o n o f c e l l u l a r chemistry.
7 . I n h i b i t i o n o r enhancement o f c e l l d i f f e r e n t i a t i o n .
12.Destruction and r u p t u r e o f c e l l u l a r s t r u c t u r e .
16.Cause accelerated f e t a l m o r t a l i t y r a t e s .
#
17.Cause s t e r i l i t y .
20.Creation o f f a t i g u e s t a t e s .
21.Creation o f s t a t e o f depression.
24.General a l t e r a t i o n o f moods.
28.Creation o f f e a r and d i s o r i e n t a t i o n .
ELCCTROMALU~T~C/RF
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W A V E GRlD A C U O J S
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M A T R I X X I 1
A S h o r t I n v e n t o r y o f Freuuencv W e a ~ o n s
L i s t e d i n t h e B r i t i s h D e f e n c e E u u i ~ r n e n tC a t a l o g
f o r 1982
Cases o f D e l i b e r a t e E x ~ e r i m e n t a t i o n
on I n d i v i d u a 7s f o r Mi 7 i t a r y P u r ~ o s e s
Cross-Referencing
SCHOOL
R E / C H /A A? So- gl %wcxir err.^ rr in me SEXUAL C k m b l (DW 3,Sexu. 2,
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(513rnund FICvs) h( SEXUAL* . P F T ) S . 1 l B d f i punly slzua?. mdhv FanYe~re~
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(Car? tube J G ~ s SUM
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ADL ER / A Psvc~tcE N E Z ~dVe r i u s rorn Maws mnainsic &ot-' FaEriu o Power, h e r
( t#,d mr) 4
d i e a i Driws, &pewally e Dcirr Jot PWER. LOO&, M a k e s
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2K INAIEU PJYUI~ ENERGYis a. ~ A ~ R IFUUC~IOU M ~ at hrdurt dYpnoris, Suqguga
IB . F. b ~ i n n r r ) MIND Ciw~tprt i s n r i k C h i - , nor$&~iat ~ ) ugl,
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Suppression o f V i t a 7 Data i n P h y s i c s
r a d i c a l l y a l t e r t h e e n t i r e course o f our c i v i l i z a t i o n .
The H e r t z i a n Conspiracy
A l l orthodox e l e c t r o n i c and s c i e n t i f i c i n s t r u m e n t a t i o n
outside c l a s s i f i e d government l a b o r a t o r i e s has been designed
t o measure f o r c e , e l e c t r i c a l charge, and energy t h a t i s
coupled t o mass. Subtle energies where mass i s n o t i n v o l v e d
cannot be detected, much l e s s measured - hence i t doesn't
e x i s t . Even t h e hyperspacial components o f voltage, c u r r e n t ,
and power w i t h i n a l t e r n a t i n g c u r r e n t s cannot be measured by
standard instruments, y e t i t i s these very so-called
"imaginary components" o f voltage, c u r r e n t , and power t h a t co-
e x i s t w i t h t h e " r e a l " components and a f f e c t t h e psychic and
n e u r o l o g i c a l f u n c t i o n s o f biosystems. This i s (was) perhaps
one o f t h e best kept s e c r e t s o f t h e government. Now i t ' s
yours.
As a r e s u l t o f a l l t h i s , orthodox s c i e n t i s t s ,
academicians, and engineers continue t o sleep t o t h e
s t u p e f y i n g "song and dance tunes" o f t h e i r Nobel p r i z e
l a u r e l s , discovering man-made new sub-atomic p a r t i c l e s i n
t h e i r quantum mechanical "zoo o f confusion". Meanwhile,
r e l a t i v i s t i c physics, o r hyperphysics, remains o n l y a remote
p o s s i b i l i t y relegated t o imaginary o r mystic realms, which i s
where Prana, C ' h i , and s u b t l e energies e x i s t . Even such quan-
tum mechanical concepts, such as t h e zero-point energy o f
vacuum and t h e D i rac Sea, t h e source o f a1 1 v i r t u a l p a r t i c l e s
o f negative energy ( p a r t i c l e s t h a t do n o t y e t e x i s t i n mass
t h a t a r e t h e p o t e n t i a l source f o r a l l forms o f f r e e energy) do
not e x i s t f o r them. So much f o r todays orthodox science.
p o t e n t i a l s and/ f i e l d s under U n i f i e d F i e l d
conditions.
( L i t e r a l ) Multi-dimensional, multi-component f o r c e
having magnitude and d i r e c t i o n , representing a com-
plex s t a t e o f Forces, F i e l d s , Mass, Energy, Flow,
Stress,etc. The s t a t e s o f r e s t , motion and t h e
v i b r a t i o n s inherent i n a system can be completely
described by Tensors.
Tensor P o t e n t i a l F i e l d A c t i v a t i o n : Process i n v o l v i n g a
precise, y e t simple p r o t o c o l and formula v i a techniques of
consciousness t o create a U n i f i e d F i e l d energy f l o w / f l u x , o r
Fluxon.
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------------------ ----Aw----------------
The Olympia~~
Is there a Wednesday, Dcccniher 4, 1991
cellular phone
in your Mure?
Olympian news services
Cellular networks are planning a
big increase in capacity - and --.----- -- -
you're one of the people they want McCAW, ORRCI-E SIGN PACT: r,rc.c:;l\~C ~ ~ I I I I I ; I ~
to use il, says Kiplinger's Personal ( : ~ I I I I I I I I I I I ~ ~ . ; I ~ ~ I )l~ic.
I I S a1111 ~ ' o I ~II;I\*~*
01-:1(.1(* . SII:IIC-(I :IJ:I.(*~-PIIPII~Stn
Finance Magazine. The industry's joi~~llj tlc~clol)i111dtest it I I ~ * \ V1111*ll1od of Iiigh-..;l)ccvlcleclro~ticclnta
10-year goal is a 50-50 split in us- tt.;rnsn~issio~~ ovcr cell11l;rrlelcl)l~or~c* syslct~~s.
age among commercial and hdi- '1'11~cornpn~lirssaid l l ~ etcch11111rl~<v slloulrl ;~llotvcl~enl)r*r. ar~tl
vidual customers. It's how about 95 fastcr tl-~tatratisr~~insicrt~ tl1a11using lclcplior~cIi~wsei\cl co1i1ln11t.r
percent commercial. mcrtie~r~s. It \-.-otrltlallow ttansmission spc-etls to ;~~,pf-o:rci~ Illosc: of
Marketing plans include cheaper expc*trsivcsillellitc links :aid Iri!!lr-sl)ec*d leased pllur~elirrc-s. t.Ilt-y
phone sets, customized billing said. 'Tllc sclvicc could br. ).IsI-~ \)y t)clt11 I)rtsi~~csscs and i~~tIi\.idu;rls,
schemes and advertising that Lo tlistril?ltle srlcl~Lhin[:s as nt!ws. stock rluf)tcs,fa?<and electronic
stresses personal use: calling the mail, -. .
tlic co~~rpanies said.
police, summoning a tow truck,
alerting anxious family members to
trafic delays.
Analyst Martin Hyman, of Booz, Dstor
. Says Voice on 'TV.CausedSeizures
ma
-
Motorola System McCaw to Alter
To Be Employed Phone Network
BY US- Unit For Computers
West 4223-91
By MABYLv C*rurmu
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By G. PASCAL
ZACIIAIY
RR.Dortcr OfTrr wAU-S*ccT
ENGLEWOOD. ~010.-u s West Inc.'s
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Mcaw Ce,,ulPrCnnmu,,,catlna is
cellular subsidiary announced Plans to use
;tt;yb In;.: ~ ~ ~ ~ !: ~ r ~ ~
IIYPa n a t p s p
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cat o r ~ p ~ ~ ceel-~ ~can carw comwterlm data more elli-
I m i n Seattle. M ~ M B ~ I and IS
Denver with Motorola's, narrow-band Ad-
~ ~ ~ ~ $ ~ ~ & ~ ~ r s m f ~
expcted to assist Mcaw In the venture.
vanced Mobile Phone Service cguipmnt. said people familiar with Iht deal.
John DeFeo. presldent of S West New-
=. the cellular ;=
"* tusersh ~of dmabIe
~ ~ yc Lm ~,t c~r sa~waro Fto ~ ~ $ ~ ; f P ;
wi ft -e
-
stem wlll k a brM to a u
Yc
m o
at
'k
. transmit am among t emselves and to
n o l m rsn ma pa Ity
Lh Er :ent+ thelr home bases. The company's exlsting
~ , ~ t l ~ e , & n l t ~ h , l a w cellular network is poorly q u i p d to han-
wilE@?thls fall. IJ S Wrst NewVccmr, slon d* data- rcqulm dew Of pmi-
-
in mobile data ne is growing. fueled
7-I-F-
by c pro I erat on of notebook computers
and the promise of even smaller electronic
devlccs called p e m a l communications.
"It's gettlng the attention of all the blg
-
guys,'' sald Eric Arnum. editor of Elee
! West and h,otorola,
Ironic Mall & Microsystems. a New York
I Schailmburg. 111.. sald the upgnw s y ~ -
tem a l l w customers to ux thelr cellular L far. c m w i a have tried to UP de-
mms them when
mand for moblle data b~ forming &dl-
w,, voice mall is rrcclved w a
short text or a call.back nu,,. cated radio networks, which don't carry
wlce at all and rely on land-based recelv-
kr. ing ~ t i o n s Motorola
. Inc. and IBM have
7hc awmt marks Maamlass launched one such network called Ardis.
U.s. of the whlle RAM MoWe DPU a closely held
technology, whlch the company has keen
marketing for some t l m as a ste toward New -*, ls backing
work with finantid help from B~USOU~II
Cop., of Atlanta, and technical suppnrt
@ ~ i . e l l u l asystem r opntOrs from LM.Erlcuan Tekfonaktlcbola~etof
mwc tlm to Sweden and Genenl E k c t h Co. of Fair.
ogy to embrace.
The industry's trade aaoclatlon has
supported a dlgltal technology called Tlme
f*zlE$Eonlwk
haw k e n
such as MeCnw
busy satisfying demand from
Mvlsion Multlpk Access, TD~IA.he
other approach. C a k Divislon Multiple AP
ces. or CDMA. promlscs to offer far more
~~~t~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ & $ ~
g~;~b;~~;;;~;~y*e
wt Already
; ~ 1 2~ ~ T I y ~ ~ n Z Y S ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ K E t F E
Ceu,,larComm,,,,,cl. lar networks. which must switch a call
Cow. ind BFU Cwp..s among circuits in order to accolnodate
cellular unit have a n m l n r d plans to de-
tave'ers' Ire On a different ap
ploy TDMA. which expands calling capac- pmch than which send
ity and provides clearer volw t m k . data In bum at Once.
say and Other
sions and w a t e r security. Motorola Is
;;t;yw;rg;;e :a;z;r
systems
technology to upgrade their
; ; ; :c
with
zz;azhii$$
zza;;h;gz!;;
of a national network could be frustrated
by the Inability of diverse cellular carriers
Its interim analog technolgy. to adopt a single data standard.
DeCco said he bclltves the "Enthusiasm for data anlong cellular
torola technolw ..offers customers much companies 1s fuel* in pa* by a lack of un-
b t t e r g d i t y service in the next couple derstanding about how difficult the task
of until fumr pmgress is made on Is.' said 1" Ann. chief executive officer
dida At this r.nt. he dd. of RAM Mobile. "I don't see the cellular
CDku Is suprior, and not companln having an adrantwe In an area
mvvlng expdltiously to C D ~ A is (mllsh.v. where they have no experience-"
For customers. a big advantage Is that
by
Glen Rein, Ph. D.
ABSTRACT
This article will briefly review the evidence for a biological
role for non-~ertzian fields and present recent experimental
evidence (obtained by the author and other non-orthodox
scientists) to support the hypothesis that they are a likely
component of the bio-energy body and are involved with the body's
own intrinsic healing mechanisms. The crystalline transduction
theory is presented as a new theory to explain how exogenous non-
Hertzian fields are utilized by the body to bring about profound
changes at the cellular level resulting in facilitation of the
healing process. In addition, the Information Matrix Theory is
discussed as a mechanism to explain the interaction with non-
Hertzian fields with the atomic nucleus. These theories are
based on contemporary scientific research from quantum
electrodynamics, quantum chromodynamics and bioelectromagnetics.
This multidisciplinary approach may form the basis for a new
branch of science referred to as quantum biology.
NON-HERTZIAN FIELDS
The umbrella term non-Hertzian will be utilized here t o reference
a type of subtle energy which for the last ninety years has been
reported in the literature as radiant energy (Moray), morphogenic
fields, empty fields, motional fields (Hooper), time reversed
waves, longitudinal standing waves and ttscalarwwaves. Other
terms like chi, healing energy, bioplasma and orgone energy refer
to energy which may also be non-Hertzian or a mixture of subtle
and classical fields. The term non-Hertzian will be used here to
refer to this subtle energy in order to distinguish it from the
classical electromagnetic (EM) fields described by Hertz and
Maxwell and from quantum potential fields described in modern
quantum electrodynamics. Einstein used the term ttsubtlett to
refer to energy which could not be measured by ordinary
detectors. Eccles uses the term to define the probabilistic
analysis of quantum mechanical events in the brain. Bohm uses
the term to characterize layers in the infolded order.
Unlike EM fields and quantum fields, non-Hertzian fields cannot
be measured by conventional electronic equipment. It is proposed
that biological systems are sensitive to non-Hertzian energy and
therefore may be used as "bio-detectorsw. Although such energy
has not been measured in the body and is not being considered by
the bio-medical community (they barely recognize a functional
role for conventional EM fields), it is likely to be involved in
biological processes since quantum mechanical analyses of
biological systems has recently indicated their inherent
nonlinearity.
Classical electromagnetic field theory developed by Maxwell,
Faraday and Hertz describes the interaction of EM energy with
matter in terms of forces acting on elementary particles
(electrons, protons and neutrons).
The realization that accurate description of our three
dimensional (3D) universe requires the introduction of quantum
mechanics as well as classical EM field theory.
Experimentally observed anomalies, including the EPR paradox and
the Calcutta paradox are best explained by quantum mechanics.
Key concepts in quantum mechanics include unbroken wholeness,
non-locality, coordinated-organization, information in form,
higher dimensions of reality, independence of space and time and
a unified quantum field underlying all forces acting on matter.
Bohm8s theory of implicate orders infolded within our 3D
explicate reality forms the basis for understanding the
relationship between non-Hertzian fields and classical EM fields.
Bohm8s theory introduces the quantum potential as a ubiquitous
pool of information which coordinates higher degrees of
organization of a system whose distinct parts can communicate
non-locally. The importance of quantum potentials and their
associated quantum fields in our macroscopic 3D universe was
experimentally demonstrated by generating quantum fields in the
absence of classical EM fields and showing their ability to alter
the wave function of electrons. These results indicate that
quantum potentials are independent of classical EM fields and
that they do not obey the laws of classical EM field theory.
Bohm8s idea that potentials underlie fields is supported by the
mathematical demonstration that electric and magnetic fields are
derivatives of the magnetic vector potential and the
electrostatic scalar potential.
It is proposed here that non-Hertzian fields are fundamental
unified fields which underlie quantum potential fields. This
fundamental energy, which cannot be measured by conventional EM
field detectors, is referred to as non-Hertzian because it does
not obey the laws of classical electromagnetic field theory as
first outlined by Maxwell and Hertz. It is proposed that quantum
potential fields are mathematical derivates of this fundamental
subtle energy, analogous to the fact that conventional EM fields
are derivates of potential fields. It is possible that non-
Hertzian fields regulate the hidden variables which control the
seemingly random event of quantum mechanics. The properties of
non-Hertzian fields will be discussed from the perspective of
modern quantum electrodynamics.
Bearden has a slightly different interpretation of the
relationship between potential fields and non-Hertzian fields, or
scalar waves. Bearden has proposed the existence of artificial
potentials in contrast to Bohm's unstructured natural potentials.
According to Bearden, both the natural and artificial potentials
are composed of virtual particles, although only the latter is
organized into, a substructure. This organized structure can be
intentionally imposed on an artificial potential experimentally
using scalar electromagnetics. Scalar electromagnetics is based
on the presence of a scalar term in the original auarternrar
equations Maxwell used to describe
electromagnetic fields. According to the theory, a scalar wave
is generated by oscillations in the contraction and relaxation of
stationary electrons. Scalar waves are proposed to contain
conventional EM waves moving in positive time and contain
positive energy as well as a superimposed negative rime/~~egative
energy time wave. This positive energy wave interacts with
negatively charged electrons whereas negative energy waves
interact with the positively charged protons in the nucleus.
Scalar waves are believed to propagate/translate only if the
overall symmetry of a system is broken. Breaking of symmetry is
associated with local curvature of spaceltime and the conversion
of virtual particles into observable elementary particles.
Negative time, negative energy and negative entropy are all
associated with breaking symmetry and the generation of scalar
waves. In addition, scalar waves have other unusual properties,
including propagation at supraluminal velocities without loss of
energy, independence of the l/r2 fall off, convergence, anti-
gravity and the ability to carry information.
Bearden further proposed that the two types of energy waves can
be separated by canceling two EM vectors 180 degrees out of
phase. Mathematically, crossing two auarterntm
equations results in cancerlation of the vector
components with the scalar terms remaining intact.
Experimentally this can be done with a caduceus coil or with a
Hooper coil. In both cases a zero sum vector space is generated.
According to Bearden, artificial potentials would be generated in
this way.
The proposal that potentials are composed of virtual particles is
based on the idea that the vacuum (or spacetime) is not empty but
is also composed of a chaotic distribution of virtual particles.
The notion of an energy which exists in a vacuum in the absence
of motion, e.g. at zero degrees, suggested that the vacuum is not
empty. In fact, the term empty wave has been suggested to
describe this energy. A basic tenet of general relativity,
according to Einstein, is that local curvature of spacetime
&addition of time to the 3D universe) is not possible. Spacetime
has been mathematically modeled as a vacuum where the virtual
particle fluxes are constant and an equilibrium exists between
particles and anti-particles. It is proposed that the local
curvature of spacetime is possible and would result in changes in
the magnitude of the vacuum potential. These oscillations in the
virtual energy of the vacuum could therefore account for the
zero-point energy (ZPE). It has been proposed that higher
dimensions are contained within the vacuum. These
hyperdimensions of the vacuum are believed to be the source of
the ZPE. Thus, under certain situations, the random, incoherent '
ZPE can be *'brought down" into our 3D universe and made coherent.
The concept of higher dimensions is well established in quantum
electrodynamics and has recently been elaborated upon in
Everett's "Many Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics" which
proposes that hyperspace is composed of an infinite number of
dimensions.
An elegant description of how the ZPE can be cohered has been
presented in the Virtual Plasma Model (King) which explains how
the ZPE can manifest (cohere) in our 3D space. According to this
model, the ZPE normally passes through our 3D space randomly and
therefore does not interact with it. However, in certain
situations, the ZPE flux can be slightly t w i s t e d & - orthorotatea
into our 3D space, thereby generating virtual particles which in
turn generate elementary particles. Virtual particles can also
generate a virtual plasma, which, according to the theory, can
interact non-linearly with the ZPE. In this way a small amount
of the infinite ZPE can be tapped or made coherent and used t o
provide enough energy to form the macroscopic meta-stable objects
in our 3D space. Thus, the theory predicts that the ZPE can be
tapped and used to generate coherent, structured macroscopic
phenomenon in out 30 space. Although the theory contradicts the
third law of thermodynamics, it does offer an explanation for
experimentally observed vortex rings in plasma physics and the
anomalies associated with "free energyw devices.
King's model provides an elegant explanation of the scalar wave
in terms of quantum mechanics. According to King, scalar waves
propagate in hyperspace and are guided by vortex rings. Under
the proper conditions, the ZPE can be orthorotated into our 3D
space and manifest as a scalar wave with no net energy
propagating in our 3D universe. By confining the propagation of
the scalar wave to the higher dimensions, gauge theory invariance
is not contradicted. This also explains our inability to
directly measure scalar waves.
The possibility that non-Hertzian fields preferentially interact
with the nucleus would make them unique in comparison with EM
vectors, which preferentially effect electrons. The interaction
between non-Hertzian fields and electrons has been described as
incoherent and diffuse, whereas nuclear interactions are believed
t o be coherent, resulting in a "chargingw of the nucleus by
exciting it's protons (Bearden, Puharich). By acting as a
capacitor, the nucleus may be chargeable and dischargeable,
thereby accumulating non-Hertzian fields. This theory further
suggests that the addition of positive energy to the nucleus
would increase the mass of the atom, whereas negative energy
would decrease the mass (Bearden). Such nuclear interactions are
predicted to result in the emission of virtual particles
(Bearden) possibly originating from quarks contained within each
proton (Puharich). Virtual particles were first described by
Dirac, who postulated the existence of a virtual particle "sea"
from which elementary particles and anti-particles emerge. These
ideas suggest that protons from nuclei in different molecules can
transfer information to each other via long-range, macroscopic,
quantum communication channels. This type of non-Hertzian
interaction between nuclei in all atoms and molecules would not
be confined to the standard limitations of electromagnetic
forces, thereby explaining some of the paradoxes in modern
quantum physics.
The idea of long-range communication channels between nuclei has
been extended by the author and presented as the Intramolecular
-.
Mat.r.ix The theory proposes that communication exist3
between nucleons (protons and neutrons) within a nucleus, as well
as between nuclei within the same molecule. The local forces
within the nucleus are mediated by the ZPE, as dictated in
quantum electrodynamics, whereas medium-range channels are
postulated t o exist between nuclei with a molecule. It is
further proposed that the crossing channels within the nucleus
and within the atomic structure of each molecule form a complex
quantum information network (or matrix). The information which
characterizes the unique physical and chemical properties
associated with a given molecule is believed to be stored at the
intersection points between communication channels. Finally, the
theory predicts that the information matrix can be stimulated
(INSTEAD OFZIMULATED?) using the appropriate frequencies of
exogenous non-Hertzian fields. These fields would therefore
carry the quantum information associated with a given moleculers
matrix. As we shall see later in this report, the theory is
supported by direct experimental data.
BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE
Evidence exists which suggests that these non-Hertzian fields
will affect biological systems and may be involved in the natural
healing process. It has therefore been suggested that quantum
mechanical events mediated by non-Hertzian fields may link
chemical and EM events in biological systems. Furthermore,
theories suggest how subatomic quantum events can influence
macroscopic processes in biological systems. However, the exact
role and mechanism of action of quantum non-Hertzian fields in
biology will require further experimentation.
DelGuidice has mathematically characterized the quantum
mechanical propagation of EM fields in structured water and
referred to such propagation as non-Maxwellian. His studies
clearly support a role for non-Hertzian phenomenon in biological
systems and indicates a key role for water. The physiological
role of structured water surrounding biomolecules and at the
surface of the plasma membrane has received some attention from
the scientific community. Using proton Nuclear Magnetic
Resonance (NMR), this "interfacial" water has been shown to be
more structured and organized than bulk wateqwhere decreased
hydrogen bonding between individual water dipoles results in a
more random orientation. A functional role for structured water
is indicated by experiments where the hydrogen bonds are
intentionally broken, causing a shift in the orientation (or the
norder parameterm) of the biomolecules (e.g. glycoproteins on the
plasma membrane). Structured water in biological systems is
characterized by altered electrical properties (e.g. dielectric
constant and conductivity) and readily and reversibly converts to
random bulk water. Thus structured water and bulk water are in
equilibrium.
Although water is composed of hydrogen and.oxygen ions, the
hydrogen ion has been the focus of attention in terms of
understanding the role of non-Hertzian ZPE.. .Putho.ffconsidered
the ground state of the hydrogen atom aa.EPE determined state and
used quantum electrodynamics to calculate the amount of ZPE
absorbed and emitted by hydrogen. Puharich also uses the
hydrogen molecule in describing the subnuclear origin of scalar
energy. As previously discussed, Puharich has proposed that
scalar waves originate in the monopoles and anti-monopoles, which
are located within the protons. Puharich has extended these
ideas into the biological arena by proposing that non-Hertzian
fields are emitted from the body during the laying-on-of hands
healing and originate from the hydrogen bonds which hold DNA
strands together. -.
BIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE
Although there are several theories for the role of non-Hertzian
scalar energy in biological systems, there is relatively little
direct experimental evidence. Several different approaches give
indirect experimental evidence to support this hypothesis. One
line of research focusses on the biological role of light (or
biophotons). Popp discovered that biophotons are stored and
released from within the helical structure of-the DNA molecule
and observed that biophotons are coherent in nature. Popp
hypothesizes that the biophotons which he could measure originate
from a holographic virtual EM field which permeates the whole
body and is involved with the healing process. Although Poppts
biophotons are coherent and originate from DNA, the proposed
biological source of scalar waves, their non-Hertzian nature has
yet to be proved. Coherence may be either quantum mechanical or
non-quantum mechanical in nature.
Experimental data from scientific studies involving laying-on-of
hands healing, remote viewing and remote influencing of random
number generators may be interpreted as evidence that the body
generates non-Hertzian fields. Independence of time and distance
has been most convincingly demonstrated by Johnts extensive data
with random number generators. Similar phenomenon have been
observed with healers. Geller has apparently been able t o
redirect the growth of a sprouted kidney been back to its
original unsprouted state: a possible biological example of time
reversal. Manning was able to influence the adhesion of cultured
tumor cells and could focus his intention to only one petri dish
amidst a stack of four. This iscan example of convergence.
These phenomenon exhibit properties consistent with those
outlined above for non-Hertzian waves.
As an alternative to using biological tissues as a source for
quantum biological fields, a different approach would be to
generate them artificially (as discussed above) and study their
effects on biological systems. Although numerous studies
indicate that weak EM fields have a wide variety of biological
effects, similar experiments with non-Hertzian fields have not
been considered by bioelectromagnetic researchers. In the 1920's
and the 1930's several unorthodox EM field generators appeared
which may have also generated non-Hertzian fields. For example,
the plasma tube generator of Priore had profound biological
activity on the inhibition of tumor growth in animals. More
recently free energy devices, radionic devices and other
psychotronics devices have been built which may also generate
non-Hertzian waves. The ability of these devices to modify
biological systems has generally not been studied scientifically.
Although radionics and psychotronics devices like the Interro and
the SE-5 are effective c clinic ally", their circuitry does not
follow conventional engineering principals, and the quantum
physics described above cannot readily predict the nature of the
subtle energy that they generate.
Several years ago, the Teslar shielding device was introduced
which trapped EM fields inside a mobious strip and theoretically
generated a non-Hertzian field between 7 and 8 Hz. A decrease in
overall amplitude and shift toward lower frequencies in EEG
recordings from individuals exposed to this device has been
reported (Byrd). Following exposure to harmful environmental EM
fields, EM-sensitive individuals wearing the shielding device
showed normalized readings on E.A.V. electro-acupuncture and
Interro diagnostic devices.
Despite these encouraging preliminary results, the belief of the
individuals treated may also be a contributing factor. In order
to eliminate placebo effects and to determine whether the
presumed non-Hertzian fields emitted from the device might have
direct effects at the cellular level, the author designed a
series of in vitro experiments using nerve cells and immune cells
grown in tissue culture. Biological effects were measured in the
presence and absence of the mobius strip in order t o determine
the relative contributions of the EM and the non-Hertzian fields
to the biological response. In the presence of the mobius strip
both EM and non-Iiertzian fields would be present, whereas removal
of the mobius strip would generate only an EM field. Since it is
unknown to what extent the two fields couple, this approach does
not yield direct information about the effects of non-Hertzian
fields in the absence of an EM field, presumably of the same
frequency.
The PC12 neuronal cell line was chosen for initial studies since
the author had previously shown that the functional properties of
the neurotransmitters (e.g. norepinephrine) present in these
cells resemble those in the normal brain. It was further
demonstrated that norepinephrine release was increased and
norepinephrine uptake was inhibited when the cells were exposed
to weak EM fields. Norepinephrine uptake was reassessed, using
the same standard biochemical protocol, following a thirty (30)
minute exposure of the cells to the two shielding devices.
Results from six independent experiments indicated that both
devices caused a small inhibition of norepinephrine uptake. In
the presence of the mobius strip and additional 20% effect was
observed. The results therefore indicated for the first time
that non-Hertzian fields can have even more profound biological
effects than conventional EM fields.
Since the immune system is a key focal point for healing a wide
variety of diseases, additional experiments were done to
determine whether non-Hertzian fields could stimulate the growth
of T-cells or lymphocytes (critical white blood cells involved
with cellular immunity). Using standard biochemical techniques,
lymphocytes were isolated from the blood of healthy volunteers
and grown in a tissue culture for two days in the presence of
radioactive thymidine. The rate of thymidine incorporation into
replicating DNA is a quantitative measure of the amount of cell
division. Both shielding devices increased the growth of the
lymphocytes. As in the previous experiments with nerve cells,
the addition of the non-Hertzian field increased the biological
response, in this case by an additional 76%.
These initial studies were the first to demonstrate a direct
effect of non-Hertzian fields at the cellular level and indicated
that such effects could occur in the absence of placebo effects.
An additional direct effect of the shielding device on
stimulating the RAD-6 gene was subsequently reported (Puharich).
This gene codes for protein involved in DNA repair in response to
harmful W radiation. The shielding device may therefore
activate repair mechanisms following exposure to harmful EM
radiation.
The inability to adjust the output frequencies and amplitudes of
the shielding device is a severe limitation for further research.
Therefore, in collaboration with T. Gagnon, the author conducted
a more extensive study using a modified caduceus coil which
Gagnon had developed to treat cancer. The delivery system,
referred .tojStructured-Electromagnetic Quotient Stimuli (S-EMQS),
consists of two concentric windings within a coil carrying
current in opposite (anti-parallel) directions. The input
current (3 mA) consists of a series of S-EMQS envelopes repeated
at 5 psec intervals. Each envelope is composed-o.f 3=7
superimposed, computer generated, square waves varying in
frequency from 2 kHz to 6 kHz. Freshly isolated human
lymphocytes received four 15 minute treatments during a 12 hour
period and their growth rate was determined as described above
after an additional 12 hours. Control cells (those not subject
to the energy treatments) exhibited low growth rates (358 cpm/lo5
cells). S-EMQS generated non-Hertzian fields caused a 20-fold
stimulation of cell growth (6880 cpm/lo5 cells) in the absence of
chemical growth factors. EM fields are also known to stimulate
lymphocyte growth, although the magnitude of this response is
typically less than 1-fold. It was therefore of interest t o
determine whether the large effect observed here was due to the
non-Hertzian fields or to the specific and complex set of
frequencies used. The exact same frequency information was used
as input to a second coil with the same dimensions as the first
except that current flow in the two windings was parallel (i.e.
in the same direction). This coil arrangement, which would only
generate transverse EM fields, gave a 3-fold lower biological
effect. These results support the previous experiments with the
Teslar shielding device and indicate that the pronounced
biological effect observed here was only partially due to the
frequency information, and more largely due to the way in which
the information was delivered - via a non-Hertzian field.
Utilizing a slightly larger input current (9 m A ) , we determined
whether it was possible to transfer and store this frequency
information into the lattice structure of water. Water charged
with the non-Hertzian fields was then tested for biological
activity. Using a modified S-EMQS signal (which turned out to be
less biologically active than the original signal), direct
exposure of the cells to the coil stimulated cell growth by 8 7 2
(relative to the control group), whereas the charged water caused
a 612 stimulation. Although a detailed study to determine how
long the water would hold itts charge was not completed,
preliminary results indicated that the non-Hertzian frequency
information remained in the water for at least three weeks. We
were further able to demonstrate that the information pattern in
the water could be reconstructed by subsequent exposure to a
different non-Hertzian field. A second set.of S-EMQS signals
which were designed to inhibit lymphocyte growth were then
superimposed onto the original pattern that had enhanced cell
growth, thereby canceling the original stimulatory information
pattern.
These results indicate that unlike conventional EM fields, which
possess a limited capacity to structure and transfer their energy
to water, non-Hertzian fields can store their frequency
information in the lattice structure of water. The results
further indicate that this frequency information can then be
liberated from the water assumedly unchanged and cause the same
biological effect as the original non-Hertzian field. These
findings offer direct experimental evidence in support of
.DelGuidicetstheory of non-Maxwellian propagation in water
rithout loss of energy. The data may also explain the anomalous
behavior of homeopathic remedies whicn have the ability to store
(for very long time periods) the energetic information matrix
associated with a chemical or drug. The fact that the stored
information in the water can have the opposite biological effect
as the original chemical or drug may offer a physical explanation
for homeopathy. These kinds of studies may be useful clinically
to generate a set of frequencies which can override the
information pattern associated with a disease and offer a novel
approach for treating a wide variety of diseases.
true, but it was based largely on Preston's information and AB: It very definitely was a set up. Right now it is very
his own expansion on it. definite. There was speculation a couple of months ago
Turns out that wasn't the case at ail. We did a 'cause some of the pieces were just beginning to come into
lecture in New York in 1989. Preston. Duncan and myself view. The whole thing was a setup.
were invited to talk about the Phoenix Project and the
Philadelphia Experiment, which we did. Officially it was not SS: What tipped you off that it was an alien setup?
video taped. but it privately it was. A copy of this thing
somehow wound up over in England and got to EM1 Thorn AB: Finally getting some data on Roosevelt's agreements,
and got to someone in archives. where he signed an agreement with the aliens in 1934. I
Well, thcy came to New York and looked up Presmh started looking in on this and it staned to make some kind of
T h 9 found Preston's address and came to his home one Sense.
evening and said. 'We've finally found you.' Preston says. The Pleiadians w e n turned down in 1953 again
'What do you mean?' He says, 'Well we've been looking for when they insisted one of the points they required if they
you for quite a while. You're the fourth man in the picture.' were lo work out a deal with the U.S. Government was that
Preston says, 'What picture are you talking about? He they must scrap all their nuclear weapons. Well the U.S.
showed him a photograph of a family portrait that was made government was just not ready to do that, not in 1953. So
in 1890 of the Thorn brothers of Thorn Industries. One of lheywere turned down politelyand along came the greysand
the backers of the organization was none other than Al- lhey made an agreement with them.
liester Crowley and this fourth person who was apparenllya But again, back in 1933- Roosevelt's agreement
bit older. The fourth person was identical to Preston except with the 'K's'and becauseof that in 1934 the Pleiadians went
he lookedapproximately 10years older than Preston looked. over to NaziGermany and worked something out with them.
say a year ago. And they knew that this fourth person was But there you hadacross 1heAtlantictwo powerswhich were
important and Crowley insisted at that time that this man getting ready to fight each other. There was one ET. group
was'not of their time. meaning the time of 18%). He was out on one side of the Atlantic passing us technical information,
of the future, and this guy gave him the whole history of the it's going to be fairly obvious that it's very likely that there's
boat experiment and it had been in the archives of EM1 going to be another one on the other side of the Atlantic
Thorn since 1890. feeding information to try and keep some kind of a balance,
It wassometime in the60'sor70's EM1Corporation particularly one of them was concerned with the survival of
and Thorn Industries merged and they d e d d d to do a a major segment of the human race.
movie.The decision to start it was in 1983and they came to I finally got confirmation from a number of people.
the U.S. to do the filming. But they said that they had the The original confirmation, I understand there are hard copy
actual record of the experiment in their archives since 1890. notes on this, comes from Billy Meyers in Switzerland.
SS: And you're saying Preston brought it back? 2 2
: What does E=MC C light reciprocal mean?
AB: Preston brought it back according to the statement
made by Crowley a1that time and according to the m ~ r d s :That would be C to the 4th. That does not have meaning
the archives. other than that would rotate you into one of these hyper-
spacial locations which is C to the 4th and you would be out
SS: We'd like to clarify some things from the presentation. he Electromagnetic and you would pass into one of the
How old are you now? etheric domains.
AB: By my birth certificate 63. By adding the additional Would it be accurate to say that when they made the
yearswhen Iwasactually born I wouldbe73. Intermsof real they do is just rotate it into another
time not counting age regression I'd be 63plus 30which is 93
plus the time I spent on various secret government projects
such as the Phoenix Project where they were doing the right AB: That'swhathap~enedbutthat's not what was intcndcd.
brain 1 left brain split type thing, a sort ofconjugate penon- What was intnded was to rotate the time field SO that thcre
ality thing. TW do this now to get you to work on two would be no r e f l e ~ t i o of
n ~either light energy o r electromag-
dinerent p r o j a at idential times P M ~ ~ I I Y RIO netic e n e r a which is ~ e I l t i a i I the
y P m e PI a matterof lhc
different people. frequenry.
SS: So you've lived over 93 years in a 63 year old body? TC: So they *elated the lime dimension.
AB: yes. AB: Yes,and rotated it and that was all lheywcre inlcnding
to do. But that of course is not all thal happened.
SS: Were you speculating that the Philadelphia Experiment
TC: They ended up rotating the entire,.
was a set up by the aliens?
M A T R I X
AB: ...localized field around the ship. AB: No. just the rotation of the field itselfwould not create ,
the problem. It was the fact that they locked up withanother
TC How can you begin to understand that? experiment which brought them far beyond the 6th level
which theywerecapableofgenerating on the Eldridge. They
AB: Bemuse I not only had all the physics training then but had to be capable of generating 6 levels in order to get 5, and
also the specialized training which came from Von Neu- 5 is what they had to have in order to rotate the time fields.
mann because he understood it. At the time when you Uh,you loseone in there,so tospeak. You manipulate from
graduate from thc standard physics course even at thc best the highest level what is below, that's why they had to go to
universities today,even a PhD, you don't really know what's 6 to get manipulation of the 5th. But that of itselfwould not
going on because that's information that's withheld. An have done what happened. You have to have additional
understanding comes later. All that is a basis for laying the orders and you have to have other factors which cause the
groundwork for understanding. The real understanding of lock up.
what's happening has to come from private tutoring. This is
why the Illuminati has survived so long because there is a DG: One of the things that's really interesting about this
hard basis of knowledge there, as well as ability. But Von video that we've seen is you and your brother's unique
Neumann had figured it out, along with Hilbert, and his approach to understanding time,since you have experienced
interface with Hilbert and perhaps Einstein and Levinson. time in a very non-linear fashion. When you've created a
loop like the loop that was created between 1943 and 1983
TC: What would you say to a person who had a physics with regards to locking up of the two different experiments,
background who wants to have a dceper understanding, how how does that loop ever break?
would they gain it?
AB: It doesn't. It is there and it remains there but after a
AB: How? Hmmm. Youwould havetostudycurrcntlysomc certain period of time it probably won't have any effect.
of the literature and information put out by Tom Bcardon, When you get 20 years past 1983 it's not likely to have any
for one example. But you have to be careful also about Tom problem at all anymore. You don't lose it, you don't remove
Beardon because healso puts outsomcdisinformation. You it. It just doesn't haveany effect anymore. It's already had its
have to filter it very carefully. He does put out some good effect by the transit and when you come back.
information but cvcry so oltcn hc puts a corkscrew in thcrc,
and that's particularly true in some of his rcfcrcncc to thc DG: Does it disperse?
weather control generated by the Russians. It's not. We have
our own. And some of the other things, some of the other AB: No, it's just something that stays thereand exists like a
basic physics which refers to the bouncing electron in the smoke trail in the sky. It's there and they slowly dissipate
atomic shell that's rcal for a period of time and thcn virtual over a long period of time.
for a period of time. Well that aspect's correct. But he says
when it becomes virtual, it gocs into a reverse time univcrse, (Regarding the boat experiment,) Nothingwas told
then it falls into the anti-matter universe. Anti-matter to us about travel, only what we were doing in terms of that
universe is NOT reverse time. There is a reverse time experiment. We had no expectation of anything like that
universe and there's a n anti-matter universe. So that is happening. It was neither planned and wanted, or expected.
disinformation right thcre. And what he describes is par- It just plain happened.
tially correct, but not fully correcL
1 don't regret that aspect. The only thing I have
TC: So where else would you Look for more information? sometimes thought about and question whether I have re-
grets about it is whether o r not we might have all been better
AB: Where else? I'd say look into some of Von Neuman's off if instead of letting Duncan go back to 1983,I'd held him
works. He has a list of 15 books and some of them are not at there on the ship so h e couldn't jump overboard the second
all relative to this. Hedoes havesome of the information and time, until the ship returned to normal spacehime. He
someoftheworkswhichdefinitely tie back to thetheoretical wouldn't have been back through that experience and dead.
approach which was made. Things would have been different. Whether o r not they
would have been better is a wild speculation, and strictly
TC: But there's no way we can get ahold of the time speculation. But it definitely would have been different. I
equations, is that correct? was not in a position to really anticipate what he was going
to do. H e gave no warning he was going to do it. The movie
AB: Most likely. no. It is highly classified. says otherwise, but of course the m w i e has a lot of specula-
tion in it that he planned to go back becauseof his girlfriend.
DG: Regarding the boat experiment, was it because they Well there was no girlfriend in the other end, in fact, it was
generated too much energy that it look them bcyond their a disaster for him.
anticipated results o r was there an alien manipulation that
actually generated the field in such a way that they went TC: Whal is your understanding of anti-matter?
beyond their expected results?
M A T R I X 1 1 1
AB: Oh, that comes out of Von ~ e u m a n n .Von Neumann have? In other words, who else...lets say, who else has more
wasvery much aware of it. And there isa lot ofworkdoneon free will than us?
it now. Today we deal in speculation in physics about anti-
matter. And, ofcourse, there is discussion, both in the realm TC: Back to this time limit, they isolated the time field with
of science fiction and in physics about what you could do to the Eldridge, would you agree with Bearden that the time
create energy from a matterlanti-matter interface without dimension is theconnection with other dimensions,with the
creating an unbelievably powerful bomb which could be hieher order dimensions?
"
very,very disasterous. But there'sa lot ofspeculation on that
now as to the two universes, and if you got matter from one AB: Yes, basically.
into the other what would happen? Can you control the
reaction and how much energy could it create? That is TC: How so?
speculative at the present time.
In addition to that. it's a little bit more than specu-
r
AB: T i e dimensions i m l v e the 4th and 5th dimensions
lative because you have theaspects of the U.F.O. ships that but your anti-matter universe is also locked in, but it's not
have been turned over to our government out in Nevada. locked in that way, it's locked in in the 6th dimensional level
That has been discussed. and also the 11th. And you get, through this whole, strange
Bob Lazar has discussed the business of the ele- arrangment, you get into, througb higher order time ma-
ment 115 and the fact that they use it to generate anti-matter nipulation,pu get into areas of other universes. Now that's
and the anti-matter generator source and from that they not completely aoswering your question in terms of what
amplifygravity waves and this is what they use for their drive Bearden is saying. But, like I say, he's c o r n at least as far
system. Now there's no technology like this on eanh. He as I understand what he's saying.and I'm not sure I under-
says that there's no way we can replicate it. He said furlher- stand all of what he's saying because I haven't read it all.
more, there's no way we can come up with atomic element Time is, in a larger sense, in reality, a dimension.
115 in any quantities because it requires a totally different B u t it is not something which we, in our level here, really
physical environment to produce it. Though he says our understand, and we ariainly don't see i t We only set the
government has perhaps some 500 pounds of the stuK And effects
it is incredibly powerful.
He said he was hired because of what they called an (Regarding Beardon) -his real job now is still
'unscheduled nuclear event', in which a number of scientists d e f e w analysis and strategy analysis the same thing he did
were vaporized. They had to go out and hire replacements in the militafy he's doing for private corporations. And he
for them. And he got the word. He was at Los Alamos also appears to be still connectedwith Intelligence. He says
working as a physicists. He heard about this and went down he's retired but I have my own personal doubts about that
and talked to EG and G and apparently he was accepted and becauseof certain things he says. But most of the research
then he was actually put on the Navy payroll, this is what he and he said this he has had to make clear at his public
says, then he went to Los Alamos and eventually wound up kaures, when he starts talkhg about the Russian work, the
working on the UFO's and UFO problems a d related UFO's and the weather modification and all of this he said,
this is my own research, it has not come out of government
thins
Hiscomment was that they don't haveenoughreally classified sources, it is not infringiog on government classi-
qualified people They don't understand what's going o n fied information or privileged information. Hesaid, this is
They don't rally understand what's going on with this, and myown research;it's totallyseperate. He'squite ckar about
hesays its also impossible to produce element 115on Earth. this and I'm sure he's quite correct becausehe would be in an
This had to have been brought in. Yet they have this awful pile of trouble.
technology them He says its definitely not built here. He There's only one area where he stuck his nose out
says he can say that very flatly as a physicist There's no way
and he's gotten himself in uouble, and that was when he
we can build this, not in this century. Soyears from now,who spokeout about AIDS, the causesandcures of AIDS. He has
Imows. Maybe 20 years from now.
his boolvllDS: B i d o g i d W(Uforc;and it's a bombshell. And
he got more than got his wrists slapped over that because he
(Regarding time tampering, its implications and stated very flatly the causes and the potential cures, (accu-
freewill:) ,.Things could be manipulated in our future bask rately,) for the most part. Healluded to the electromagnetic
to alter the time line, as it were. Again to alter it on a major cures but healso did not point out, though I haven't read the
basis, it would be a minor thing for an individual. If it be a book in full, he accurately stales there is no electromagnetic
major basis it would affact the whole planet, depending on conection. There certainly is in so far as the triggering
what effect it had. mechanisms are concerned.
Now free will still plays, then the (time) line shifts The virus gets into the body. The body, if it's
and the whole reality scenario changes, after it changes you working at all, and you're not already 314 dead, the immune
still have free will but, I understand the basis of your qua- system automatically puts up a defense to the virus and
tion: is it sort of like a higher order reality comingdown and isolates it. h d then it sits there in the body for 'umteen"
hitting you over the head and after the stroke is over you go periodsof time. It may run6 months, it may run 10years and
back to playing your little game of reality as you know it, or
as I h o w it or anybody else knows i t It does raise some
serious questions, yes. And how much free will d o we really
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Transfer o f Energy Through Time
and Coupling o f P a r a l l e l Universes
W e , i n o u r p r i v e l a g e d p o s i t i o n as s u p e r o b s e r v e r s
l o o k i n g i n from t h e o u t s i d e , c a n see t h a t e v e r y
p a r t i c l e of mass is really a n i n f i n i t e s i m a l l y
t h i n slice of a t h r e a d t h a t passes t h r o u g h a l l
t h e u n i v e r s e s . A s t h e u n i v e r s e moves a l o n g t h e
t h r e a d s i n some k i n d of s u p e r t i m e , t h e p a r t i c l e s
o r slices appear t o move t h r o u g h space. T h a t g i v e s
a v i s i b l e rate of c h a n g e t h a t is o b s e r v e d a s
"normal t i m e " w i t h i n t h e u n i v e r s e . From o u r p o s i t i o n
w e c a n see t h a t a l l t h e u n i v e r s e s are e q u a l l y real,
o n l y t h e o n e t h a t you happen t o be part of a n d
moving w i t h g i v e s t h e i l l u s i o n of a p p e a r i n g more
real t o you t h e n t h e rest of them.
V: So you would be able t o s e n d s i g n a l s or t r a n s p o r t
mass from o n e u n i v e r s e t o t h e o t h e r ,
H: Exactly.
V: If you s e n d a s i g n a l from o n e u n i v e r s e t o a n o t h e r
which c h a n g e s a n e v e n t p a t t e r n , I assume t h a t t h e
memory of h a v i n g a r e a s o n t o c h a n g e t h a t e v e n t is
erased a s s o o n as t h e e v e n t is changed?
H: Y e s , b e c a u s e o u r memories c o n s i s t o f e l e c t r o c h e m i c a l
a n d DNA p a t t e r n c h a n g e s . E v e r y t h i n g t h a t formed a n y
record of t h e o r i g i n a l p a t t e r n w a s reset. Hence, o u r
memories are c o n s i s t e n t w i t h the new p a t t e r n t h a t
now e x i s t s . I n a c t u a l i t y , causes and e f f e c t s e x i s t
not on a s e r i e s on a u n i d i r e c t i o n a l time l i n e , b u t
the system i s dynamic i n t h a t time loops e x i s t ,
and these loops make i t possible, i n e f f e c t , f o r
e f f e c t s t o be detected before the cause of t h e
effect exists-
*present Address: Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Southern California,
1333 San Pablo St., Los Angeles, CA 90033
Corresponding Author:
Joseph L. Kirschvink
Division of Geological & Planetary Sciences
The California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA 91 125
8 18-356-621 1 (0)
8 18-568-0935 (fax)
ABSTRACT
Backgroutzd. Although the mineral magnetite (Fe 0 ) is precipitated biochemically by
bacteria, protists, and a variety of animals. it has not be*cumented previously in human
-
tissue. Because it interacts over a. million times more strongly with external magnetic fields
than any other biologigl material, knowing whether humans precipitate magnetite is impo?tznt
lor assessing potential biohazards of magnetic fields.
Merhods atrd Rcsulrs. Using an ultrasensitive superconducting magnetometer in a clean-
lab environment, we have detected the presence of ferromagnetic materia1 in a variety of tissues
from the human brain. Magnetic particle extracts from solubilized brain tissues examined with
high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and EDAX analyses
further identify minerals in the magnetite-maghemite family, with many of the crystal mor-' .
phologies and structures resembling strongly those precipitated by magnetotactic bacteria and
fish.
Cortclusio~rs. These magnetic and HRTEM measurements imply the presence of a
minimum of 5 million single-domain crystals/g for most tissues in the brain, and more than 100
million crys;a%/n for pia and d u p . Magnetic property data indicate the crystals are i n s .
of between 50 and 100 particles. Biogenic magnetite in the human brain may account for high-
field saturation 'effects observed in the TI and T2 spin echoes of MRI, and perhaps for a varie-
ty of biological effects of low-frequency magnetic fields.
INTRODUCTION
In past studies of- iron storage and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), it .has been .
assumed universal1 that there are no permanently magnetized (ferromagnetic) materials present
in human t i a u a l * r . Similar assumptions have been made in virtually all biophysical assess-
ments of human risk associated with exposure to static and extremely low-frequency magnetic
fields3, and by critics4 of epidemiological studies vhic suggest links between weak, powi-.rline-
frequency magnetic fields and various human These analyses have focused on the
side effects of electrical induction, or possible diamagnetic and paramagnetic interactions.
However, the ferrimagnetic mineral magnetite (Fe304) is formed biochemically by many living
organisms. Because ferromagnetic crystals interact over a million times more strong!y with
external magnetic fields than do diamagnetic or paramagnetic materials of similar volume
earth-strength magnetic fields can yield many responses which stand above thermal noise lo .
Hence, the assumption implicit in past studies that human tissues are free of ferromagnetic
material needs to be reassessed critically and tested experimentally.
' Previous studies of ferromagnetic material in human tissues have not been conclusive 1 l -
13. Despite this, extensive research over the past 30 years has demonstrated that many organ-
s have the biochemi I ability to precipitate the ferrimagnetic minerals magnetite ( ~ e ~ 0 ~ ! ~ ~ -
Y\nd greigite (Fe3S4$'. In terms of its phyletic distribution, magnetite biomineralizatlon rs
p r e ~ ~ been c mented in 3 of the 5 Kingdoms of living organisms
p a r t i ~ u l a r l ~ ~ w i d e s having
(Monerans 1g-41),
Protists , and Animals with a fossil record
brian tirn 23* Within Kingdom ~ n i m a l i a ,it is known within the
chor acesF8-20,and is suspected in many more group2'. In the
fish2', lieear chains of membnne-bound crystals of magnetite (magnetosomes) form structures
best described as 'biological bar magnets'. These chains cause the individual dipole moments
from each crystal to add together vectorially, producing strong interactions with the Earth's
magnetic field. Although it is often present in small concentrations, magnetite is one
most commonly precipitated minerals when viewed in terms of its phyletic distributionoiqthe .
Hence, the assumption implicit in past studies that human tissues are free of ferromagnetic
material needs to be reassessed critically and tested experimentally.
We report here the first demonstration that human tissues possess similar crystals of
biogenic magnetite, with minimum estimates between 5 and 100 million single-domain crystals
per gram in the tissues of the human brain. Magnetic particle extracts from solubilized tissues
examined with high-resolution transmission electron microscopL and electron diffraction identi-
f y minerals in the magnetite-maghemite solid solution. with many 'crystal morphologies and
structures resembling those precipitated by magnetotactic bacteria and fish.
RESULTS
Magnetometry. ~ l ofl the tissues examined had isothermal remanent magnetizations
(IRM)which saturated in applied fields of about 300 mT, a characteristic property of t h e .
magnetite-maghemite series. TIie ability to gain a d lose remanertf rnagnerftorior~irt these ex-
periments is a defjnitlve characferistic of ferromagnefic materials. Table 1A shows the mean
values for each brain. T h e average magnetization indicates the equivalent of about 4 ng mag-
netite/ g tissue. In contrast, average values for the meninges from three brains (Table 18) are
nearly 20 times higher, o r about 70 ng/g. For comparbon, measurements of I R M from triple
distilled. deionized ice cubes yield a background 'noise' of about 0.5 ng/g.
There was remarkable consistency in the IRM measurements for both the brain t~ssue
and the meninges. There was little difference in I R M from one area of cerebral cortex to anoth-
er or in. the cerebral versus the cerebellar cortex. Differences between tissues from the normal
brains versus those suspected or confirmed to be Alzheimer's disease cases were negligible.
Areas of brain previously reported to h ve high iron content include the dentate nucleus, the
basal ganglia and areas of the midbrainf1. Samples of these areas had no greater content of'
magnetic particles than did the cerebellar or cerebra! cortex.
Figure J,shows magnetic properties for representative tissues, including coercivity
deierminations (Fig. I d ) and a test for inter-grain interaction effects using the anhysteretic
remanent magnetization (ARM, Fig. IB). Median coercivity values were about 30 mT, but
ranged from 12 (pia from cerebellum) to 50 (basal ganglia), well within the coercivity range for
single-domain magnetite. The shift in coercivity distributions as measured by IRM acquisition
and its demagnetization, and the relatively slow tendency to acquire an ARM, suggest that the
particles in silu are in small interacting clumps. Comparison with bacterial control samples
suggests between 50 and 100 particles per clump.
Extraction and electron microscopy. When viewed under low power through an optical
dissecting microscope, black strings of aggregated particles extracted from brain tissues are seen
collected at the focus of the magnetic finger device. In shape and morphology, these aggrega-
tions are indistinguishable from similar aggregates from the magnetotactic bacterial controls. No
magnetic aggregates were observed to collect in the blank, tissue-free control samples. Rough
volume estimates of the extracted material, made by measuring the length and width of the
aggregates and totaling for each chain, agree to within an order of magnitude with estimates
from the IRM measurements, implying that the extraction technique was reasonably efficient.
Figure 2 shows two representative crystal morphologies of the extracted magnetic parti-
cles. Grain sizes were bimodal, with 62 of the 70 measured crystals in the 10-70 nm range and
the remaining 8 with sizes ranging from 90 up to 200 nm. Measurements of the TEM shadows
from 62 of the smaller particles in one aggregate yielded an average size of 33.4 +/- 15.2 nm.
Note that this mean value must be biased towards larger sizes because the extraction procedure
will discriminate against very small particles which move more slowly through the liquid. Size
and shape relationships for alJpeasured particles fall within the single-domain and superpara-
magnetic fields for magnetite . Crystal volume estimates, done by assuming equant particle
shapes, imply that the larger particles compose a maximum of about 85% of the magnetite.
Using this distribution data, we estimate that brain tissues contain a minimum of about 5 mil-
-
lion crystals/g, distributed in SO 100~thousanddiscrete clusters. Similarly, the meninges con-
tain a minimum of I00 million crystals/g, in I to 2 million clusters.
Energy dispersive X-ray analyses of the crystals gave consistent peaks of Fe, with vari-
able Cu peaks (from the copper TEM grids) and minor Si, Ca and CI (probably contaminants
from the glassware). Mixed Fe-Ti oxides, which are usually present at least in trace amounts in
geologically-formed magnetic minerals, were not detected in any of the brain crystals examined.
Indexed electron microdiffraction patterns from individual crystals and particle aggregates yield
the d-spacings characteristic of magnetite (Fe304), with smaller particles showing variable
oxidation towards the ferrimagnetic solid-solution end .member, maghemite (7-Fe2O3). This
oxidation probably' ccurred during the extraction process, as is observed commonly rn very fine
grained magnetites28
Figure ZA is a TEM image of a clump of small particles from the cerebellum, and Fig.
2 8 shows a HRTEM image of a well-ordered single-domain maghemite crystal iniaged in the
[211] zone. It displays several intersecting sets of crystal lattice fringes which appear as fine
stripes which run across the image (and are viewed best at a low angle relative to the page).
The most prominent set, which runs across the width of the crystal, corresponds to the 4.858,
spacing of the ( I I I) plane; another set perpendicular to this, running the length of the crystal,
has the 2.95 aspacing of the (022) lanes. Note that the [I 1I ] direction of the crystal, which is
the easy direction of magnetizationfi, is paratkl to the particle length. and that the (1 11) fring-
es go completely across the width of the particle without disruption. A superimposed 'graini-
ness' is present, along with somewhat ill-defined edges. These are typical features of magnetite
crystals formed within magnetosome membranes 33-35, and are very similar to the single-d $vain
particles in the magnetosome chain structures present i n the dermethmoid tissues of salmon .
Figure 2C shows the indexed electron-diffraction spot pattern from this crystal.
Figure 2D shows one of the larger particles which is about 200 nm in size. Other parti-
cles range up to 600 nm in diameter. Electron microdiffraction indicates that these particles are
dominated by a single crystal, with occasional smaller particles adhering to t e'r surface. Their
measured size and shapes place them within the single-domain stability field". These particles
have magnetic orientation energies in the geomagnetic field 20 to 150 times higher than the
background thermal energy, kT.
DISCUSSION
Results from these studies indicate that human brain and meninges contain trace
amounts of ferromagnetic material. These magnetic particles in the human brain are diffusely
and homogeneously distributed over all cerebral lobes, the cerebellum and basal ganglia and
midbrain. The consistency of our magnetic property data from piece to piece of brain tissue
and from piece to piece of meninges suggests that the observed moments were not produced by
occasional contamination from the environmenl, bur were i n situ ferromagnetic materials dis-
tributed in a tissue-characteristic fashion. The magnetic material was in the tissues prior to the
chemical digestion steps which are of the most concern for potential contamination, An exter-
nal inorganic source is also unlikely because of the lack of particles containing mixed Fe-Ti
oxides, which are common in igneous and metamorphic magnetites. Surface textures and crys-
tallographic featur s fo the s m a w particles are remarkably similar to biogenic magnetites
studied in bacteria54v31 and fish . The ( I 11) crystal alignment has been interpreted as a
biological mechanism for maximizing the magnetic moment per particle, 1 direction
yields about 3% higher saturation magnetizations than do other directions B.rb.8.3Y
prismatic particle shape is also uncommon in geological magnetite crystals of this size, which are
usually octahedra. Hence, these magnetite crystals probably form within human tissues by a
similar, biologically-controlled process. Unfortunately, the tissue digestion and extraction
process destroys the cellular organization of the particles. Only the ARM results yield clues to
the in siru grouping in small clumps.
The present study provides the first evidence of magnetite biomineralization in human
tissues, based on both superconducting magnetometric and TEM techniques. Previous studies
did not identify the mineralogy of the magnetic materials, nor elimin e the possibility of
contamination as a source of the ferromagnetic material. Kirschvinka' noted the presence of
fine-grained ferromagnetic material in tissue from adrenal cortex which had a coercivity distri-
bution consistent with magnetite, but t c niques for extracting and characterizing the material
had not been developed. Baker et al. l r n attempted to measure the soft tissues of the brain,
but found they were not significantly more magnetic than the background noise of their magne-
tometer system. They did report, however, detecting magnetic material within the human
ethrnoid bone, as well as the presence of histologically stainable iron. However, the levels of
magnetite inferred to be present were surprisingly high, and a subsequent coercivity spectral
analysis ruled out m etite as the source with metallic sawblade contamination the most. . . . .
probable explanation? One other group38 extracted magnetic particles from digested lung
tissue, but the autjlors were unable to distinguish the exogenous particles inhaled from at-
mospheric dust from biochemical precipitates. Their extraction procedure, however, would only
be effective for the large (>> 1 um) particles most likely to be inorganic contaminants.
In recent years, several medical groups have claimed that MRI images weighted by the
TI and f2 spin ec o C rrelated with the observed distribution of stainable ferric iron in
human brain tissue2*5S*40. These anomalous spin echoes have been interpreted as arising from
irregular distributions of paramagnetic iron (deoxyhemoglobin, ferritin, and hemosiderin). Iron
'
distribut' ns measured in this fashion increased with age, as is known from extensive isrologi-
a 1 worky1. However, this interpretation was challenged subsequently by Chen et als4q who
fo d generally poor correlation between iron concentration and T2 relaxation, and by B i u i et
.IFq, who discovered that the iron-correlated spin echo effects did not have the quadratic
variation with increasing magnetic field strength predicted by the paramagnetic hypothesis.
~ I t h o u g hnot suggested by a n y of these authors. all of these results are compatible with the
presence of trace levels of magnetite. Unlike paramagnetic material magnetite saturates in
applied fields around 0.3 tesla. as did t h e soin echoes of Bizzi et al.22 .
The presence of magnetite in human tissues has potential implication for at least two
biomedical issues which have been discussed extensive1 in the literature; these include human
exposure to the strong static fields used in MRI studie3 and the much weaker 50 and 0 r
fields produced by the electric power system and appliances in industrialized countries elf .
First, MRI systems are now being used routinely in clinical applications which subject patients
to static background magnetic fields in excess of 1.5 tesla. 30.000 times stronger than typical
geomagnetic fields. Under these conditions the maximu? magnet static orientational potential
9
erlergies for the magnetic particle clumps are between 10 and 10 times higher than the ther-
mal energy, kT, at body temperature. Hence, the energies are much larger than the chemical
energies present in covalent bonds, which typically are on the order of 100 kT. Second. the
magnetic torque from external alternating fields will induce mechanical oscillations in the parti-
cles, and the potential exists for such motions to do things like opening trans-membrane ion
channels. Two separate analytical .approaches suggest that fields of 50 or 60 Hz with peak
intensities It tly stronger than that of the earth would be required to make these effects stand
above ' kT *61 Although peak alternating magnetic fields generated by most electr'c transmis-
sion lines are well below this level, some electric appliances produce stronger fieldJ4. Unfor-
tunately, without more knowledge of the cellular location. ultrastructure, or biological function
of these particles, it is impossible to predict whether magnetomechanical effects of this sort pose
a human health hazard.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.
We thank Dr. Carol Miller of the USC Medical School for providing access to brain
materials, Drs. Juan Diaz-Ricci, Derek H. Fender, and Leon T. Silver for helpful support and
oiscussions, and Dr. C.C. Patterson for ultrapure water. Dr. Brent Fultz and Ms. Carol Garland
of the Caltech Materials Research Center provided essential help with the high-voltage electron
microscopy. Drs. K.M. Towe and R.B. Frankel provided critical and useful reviews of the
manuscript. This work was supported by NIH grant GM-41635. and the Caltech Materials
Research Facility is supported by NSF grant DMR-8811795. Contribution #SO68 from the
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences of the California Institute of Technology.
REFERENCES.
1. Brittenham, G.M.,Farrell, D.E., Harris, J.W., et at. (1982) N. f r ~ g l J.
. M e d . 307, 1671-1675.
2 . Gomori, J.M.,Grossman, R.I., Gbldberg, H.I..Zimmerman, R.A.. Biianiuk, L.T. (1985)
Radiology 157, 87-93.
3. Tenforde, T.S., Budinger, T.F. (1986) in N M R irt nzedicirze: lrrsfruntertlatiort and clirtical
applicatiorrs. eds. Thomas, S.R. and Dixon. R.L. (American Asso. of Physicists in Medi-
cine, New York) pp. 493-548.
4. Adair, R.K. (1991) P h p . Rev. A. 43(2), 1039-48.
5. Wertheimer, N., Leeper. E. (1987) ~ m t a i sof the New York Acad. Sci. 502, 43-54.
6. Savitz, D.A., Wachtel. H., Barnes, F.A.. John. E.M.. Tvrdik, J.G. (1988) Am. J. Epidentiol.
128, 21-38;
7. London, S.J., Thomas, D.C.. Bowman. J.D..Sobel, E.. and Peters. J.M.(1991) Ant. J.
Epidemiol. 134, 923-937.
8. Savitz, D:A., Calle, E.E. (1987) J. Occup. Med. 29, 47-51. .
9. Savitz, D.A., John, E.M., Kleckner, R.C. (1988) Ant. J. Epidenz. 131(5), 763-73.
10. Kirschvink, J.L. (1992). Phys Rev A. jin press).
11. Kirschvink, J.L. (1981) J. f-xptl. Biol. 92, 333-5.
12. Baker, R.R., Mather, J.G., Kennaugh, J.H. (1983) Nature 301, 78-80.
13. Baker, R.R. ( 1985) in Mag~reiiieBiontineraliratio~arrd Magrteloreceptio~zin Arrintals: A Nen
Biomagrretisnr eds. Kirschvink, J.L., Jones, D.S.. MacFadden, B.J. (Plenum Press. New
York) pp. 537-562.
14. Frankel, R.B.,'Blakemore, R.P.. Wolfe. R.S. (1979) Scierrce 203. 1355- 1356.
.5 1.o 1.5 20
Peak Magnetic Reld (mT) ARM Bias Field (rnT)
Figure Captions:
Figure I. Rock magnetism of human brain tissues. In A, the curves labeled IRM acqui-
sition show the relative magnetic moments remaining in. the samples after a brief exposure to a
magnetic pulse of the indicated strength. The tendency of the curves to flatten at high field
levels is characteristic of the magnetite-maghemite solid solution series; most other ferromagnet-
ic iron minerals saturate in fields above 1 tesla. The curves labeled 'Af of sIRM* show the
progressive alternating-field
. . . demagnetization of the saturation IRM. Thc magnetic field value
at which these two .curves cross is the best measure of the average coercivity. The ordinate OF-
the intersection point for non-interacting particles occurs at the 50% value; a depression or shift
in this position is an indication of particle clumping effects. Fig. 0 shows the acquisition of
anhysteretic remanent magnetizations (ARM). The upper control curve shows data from a
sample of magnetotactic bacteria in which the magnetite crystals are aligned in linear chains and
have few interparticle interactions, whereas the lower control curve is from a sample of mag-
netite from chiton teeth which are single-domain crystals but are highly interacting. Solid
squares are data from pia from the frontal lobe, whereas the open circles show data from the
cerebellum. ..
Figure 2. TEM images and diffraction patterns of representative magnetite and maghe-
mite crystals from the human cerebellum. Fig. 2A shews a clump of small particles. The
HRTEM image of the maghemite crystal in Fig. 2B shows the pattern of intersecting (1 11) and
(022) fringes, with particle elongation in the [111] lattice direction. Although the (1 11) fringes
continue across the particle width continuously, the (022) fringes show a dislocation or possible
twin surface near one end of the particle. The (1 11) and (022) faces are shown. Figure 2C
shows the indexed selected-area electron diffraction pattern of this crystal, taken in the 4 1 1>
zone. (A few miscellaneous spots are alsp present from the adjacent crystals seen in Fig. 2A,
and the faint row of spots midway between the bright rows are [OlT] and equivalent reflections
which indicate the oxidation to maghemite.) The diffraction rings from an aggregate of small
crystals confirms the magnetite-maghemite identification. These measured values/7-Fe2O3
standards/ and [indexed] d-spacings for the rings are respectively: 4.0~4.18%[200],
4.8%4'.82%[1 I I], 3.2w . 4 11, 2.8%2.95% [220], 2.6w2.78%[221], 2.2w2.23% (3211.
154121
1.8%' 1.87% (4201, 1.7%'1.70%[422]. I .5?41.6 1% [5 11I, and 1.3w1.32% [620]. The tetagonal
reflections [211], (2211, and 13211 are present in maghemite, and not in magnetite, and the pat-
tern from the aggregate is a mixture of the two. One of the large magnetite particits is shown
in 2D (diffraction pattern not shown).
. . A
. .
Brain Nu- r sTRM (uAm2/K n\ C o n c e n t u n ) r of Sub--
I (Normal) 0.14 f .08 3.0 f 1.4 1 1.
2 (Normal) 0.18 ?: .I0 3.9 f 2.2 5
3 (Normal) 0.14 f -05 3.0 f 1.1 5
4 (Normal) 0.27 ?: .21 5.9 f 4.6 6
5 (Alzheimer's Disease) 0.20 .09+ 4.3 f 2.0 3
6 (Alzheimer's Disease) 0.19 4.1 1
7 (Suspected Alzheimer's) 0.33 f .19 7.2 f 4.1 2
BlLMahs
Brains
1 (Normal) 2.5 f 1.8 54 f -39. 8
2 (Normal)
6 (Alzheimer's Disease)
2.5
5 .O
+ 1.5 54
109
*
33 8
1
r
I ELECTRONIC
STIMULAnON
of the BRAIN
whcrc contact lcads wcrc locatcd in pleasure ccntcrs.
paticnts had the opporarnity to stimulate thcir own
brains by prcssing a button on a portable insvumcnt
(mad Physical Control of the Mind by Jose M.R.
Dcigado. M.D.). Thc fcclings of hcaven or hcll could
actually bc self- controlled by the simplc press of a
,
button!
by Today. tcchnology has gnduatcd from thc prirnitivc
M. D.Saunders
11 brain implants and subcutancous v~lsccivcnof the
C
Electromasnetic R a d i a t i o n E f f e c t s E x t r a c t s
A p r o p e r l y modulated s i g n a l can i n t e r f e r e w i t h b r a i n
a c t i v i t y . (S.M. Bawin, R.J. Gavalas-Medici, and W.R. Adey,
"Effects of Modulated UHF F i e l d s on S p e c i f i c B r a i n Rhythms*',
B r a i n Research, Vol 58, (1973): p365-384)
H I T recommendations: 1) E l i m i n a t e m i l i t a r y i n f l u e n c e on RF
b i o - e f f e c t s research, 2)Exercise conaressional r e s ~ o n s i b i l i t v
and 3) Encouraqe p u b l i c involvement (Steneck, p240-243)
Cesaro, as a r e s u l t o f P r o j e c t Pandora, s t a t e d t h a t s i n c e
e f f e c t s could be found a t exposure l e v e l s below 10mWcm2, there
was an obvious need t o "overhaul U.S. microwave r a d i a t i o n
standards ... t o take account o f the non-thermal damage
p o t e n t i a l . " (Cesaro, " I n i t i a l Test Results," December 20,
1966, pp2-3);
~ n t e r e s t i n g l y , / t h ef o l l o w i n g appeared i n an a r t i c l e
e n t i t l e d "Electromagnetic Radiation: A Growing Hazard", L e t ' s
L i v e Magazine, A p r i l 1986:
frequencies to 100 Hz and at lo-.ver frequencies to 3 Hertz. Unmodu- !he weak field over some distance, and would thus occur in the length
lated fields had no effect. Recovery of killing capacity occurred after ana area of the membrane surface, rather than in a transmembrane
12hours. axis (Adey, 1977). This problem has been addressed by Eino!f and
~arsten'sen(1971) in a study of the behavior of micro-sized resin
particles considered as porous particles with uniformly distributed.
11.1.3 Physiological Models of Weak RFEM- Field Interactions in fired-charge sites. Their model is an extension of an earlier formula-
Tissue tion by Schwan (196'1, which considered the movement of ions along
bio comprehensive models are yet available that adequately explaip the surface of solid (rather than porous) colloid particles. At the surface
all transductive coupling &enomma involving weak lields In tissue. of the particles, the boundary region is characterized by a very large,
However, it has become clear that many of these biological eifects in radially directed static field with a corresponding radial variation in
weak tields can only be understood in terms of cooperative processes the distribution of mobile ions. Maintaining this distribution has the
based on nonequilibrium, resonant. long-range interactions involving effect of requiring the ions in the boundary layer to move in a path
biological macromolecules (Xdey, 1975, 1977, 1981a; Frohlich, 1968b, tangent to the surface of the particle. Porous, charged panicles are
1975b; Kaiser, 1978a,b; Crodsky, 1976; Grundler et al., 1977; Kaczma- characterized by a low-frequency dielectric relaxation, leading to large
rek. 1976; Illinger, 1977). static dielectric constants. A final result is polarization of the ionic
A strongly presumptive site for these interactions, and one consid- atmosphere a t the surface of the particle in the presence of an external
ered as a substnntive aspect of virtually all these models is the surface electric field. This poiarization produces an additional apparent die-
of the cell membrane. The molecular biology of cell membranes is a lectric constant of the particles, exceeding the actual dielectric con-
topic of intense continuing research. It is now accepted that older stant by several orders of magnitude a t low frequencies. The magnitude
concepts of the membrane as a simple lipid bilayer must be replaced of the low-frequency dielectric constant is proponional to the size of
by the view that the lipid hilayer is tluid and encloses a considerable ;he particle and the square root of the fixed-.charge concentration in
number of "intran~embranousparticles? (IMPS), which have consid- the porous material. The relaxation frequency depends directly on
erable lateral mobility within the lipid hilayer. These concepts are counterion mobility and is inversely proportional to the square of the
suhsrrmed under the general title of the 'fluid mosaic model" (Singer particle size.
The effective dielectric constants of micrometer-sized, ion-exchange 11.1.3.1 Quantum ,%frchanicalModels o j Long-Qartge Interactions.
resin panicles are as high as 10d ~t frequencies below 1 kHz (Einolf There has been growing interest in models for predictive evaluation
and Carstensen, 1971). Similar properties may be expected at the of these unex~ectedbioloeical sensitivites. These mrwlels were nd-
surface of tubular structures with diameters in the micrometer range, vanced to resolve two of the more barninn ~roblemsof these effects:
including dendrites with polyanionic glycoprotein surface layers. This
model provides an avenue for future research into the biological effects F sDectrum below I
cited above in which it ap ears that thermal noise a t normal tissue & ~ h a s transitions
e
P
temperatures is substantial y larger than the tissue components of the a t extreme6 low frequencies: charge-pumping models. Lotka-Volterra
models of charge-population transitions, models of limit-cycle phe-
imposed electric fields. For typical conductors in the biological tem-
perature range, the Boltzmann k T noise is o i the order oi0.02 electron nomena, and models of tunneling effects.
volts. However, this expression gives little concept of the extent to 11.1.3.1.1 Models of Macromolecuhr Phase Transitions at ELF.
which electric gradients in tissue may be established by thermal, There are no known mechanisms to explain ELF biological effects on
atomic, or molecular perturbations, nor of the way in which compo- the basis of direct interactions with component dipoles of molecular
nents of this noise may be transferred to distant sites within tissue. systems that oscillate a t these low frequencies. Therefore. a structural
In metallic conductors, the transfer function for this noise energy has and functional basis must reside in properties of molecular systems.
an essentially infinite bandwidth, a condition that does not pertain in Crodsky (1974, 1976, 1977) has hypothesized that excitable mem-
tissue. The transfer function of thermoelectric noise in tissue has yet branes are energetically equivalent to sheets of giant dipoles bathed
to be studied. However, a tentative model does offer interesting points in controiled external electric fields. His model examines the role of
of resemblance LO observed neurochemical and behavioral thresholds long-range cooperative processes in latt~cedmosaic systems of the
(Barvin and Adey, 1976). Data from the Einolf and Carstensen study type first proposed by Ising (1925) to explain mechanisms of ferro-
indicate that ionic conductance along a membrane surface in the magnetism. Crodsky's model encompasses the concept of a "greater"
counterion layer will exhibit an inverse frequency dependence and membrane (see below), in which the cell membrane is conceived as
limited bandwidth due to the very high apparent dielectric constant extending beyond the phospholipid bilayer by the external protrusion
in this zone. The Boltzmann equation may be written in terms that of strongly polyanionic, sialic-acid side chains that are stranded ter-
model the tissue in this region as a low-pass filter: minals of glycoprotein and gangliosidc. intramembranous particles
(Schmitt and Samson, 1969; Singer and Nicolson. 1972).
In this model, the outer layer of phospholipid polar heads is repre-
where the transfer function for the root-mean-square noise voltage, e, sented bv a two-dimensional crystal mosaic of multipolar sites (p-
is n function of the temperature, T, the frequency bandwidth, 8, and sites), sprinkled with islands of glycoproteins. The "fuzzn of the outer
the specific resistance of the noise pathway, R. With a specific resist- membranes, above the p-sites, displays a mosaic of cationic binding
ance for brain tissue on the order of 300 R cm and an effective sites (c-sites). The c-sites are less densely packed and less tightly
frequency bandwidth from 0 to 100 Hz, the equivalent, noise voltage bound mechanicelly than are the p-sites, and their electric charge
gradient would be on the order of lo-' V/cm. This value is in close depends on local, external ionic contributions, which can vary quite
agreement with observed sensitivities of marine vertebrates, birds, and rapidly. The prediction of behavior from a knowledge of structure
mammals to certain low-frequency fields, and these thresholds are rests on the ability to identify the contributions of p-sites and c-sites
consistent with a thermal floor as the limiting factor. to the total energy of the system in the context of mutual interactions
Virtually all identified steps in these processes are known to be between the two sheets of charges. The p-sites are taken to be occupied
calcium-ion dependent. In all these events, the observations and by ideal dipoles. If the dipoles are densely pecked, neighboring inter-
models indicate that integrative processes in the coupling of these actions will tend to keep them oriented, on the average, perpendicular
surface interactions to intracellular mechanisms first occur in the to the sheet, so that the energy in the p-she$ can be expressed as a
length and area of the membrane, prior to communication of infor- Hamiltonian integral of the dipole fields. This field decreases a s the
mation to the interior of the cell. This, too, has been a significant new cube of distances between the sites. The c-sites are assumed to be
concept in models of tlie molecular biology of excitatory processes. variably occupied by divalent or monovalent cations, or to be unoc-
1.11pied.The charges interact with each other through Coulombic t'orces 'CABLZ 1.1- Frrqurncy hand of the R.FE!4 9pt.-urn'
in the c-sheet and via the dipoles in the p-sheet. Coupling hetween the Band Fnqvncy nnp
Murk
mbdivinioo A d ~ deuript~oa
d Acmnm
sheets falls off rapidly as the distance, r , between the sites increases. lwavm)
but the fields set up by the c-sites are of much longer range. falling off 1 Mto30Hz - Sub-tnremel? low SEW
as r-' instead of the dipolar r-3. frequency
The Hamiltonian expression of the membrane model then becomes 2 30 to 300 Hz Mqametric Extremely law ELF
mathematically equivalent to that describing the interactions of bands fnq.ney
of electrochemical quasiparticle excitations with each other and with
3 0.3 to 3 k H z - Voice frrqcency VF
I 3 to 30 kHz Mvriametric Very-low frequency VLF
a hand of phonons. via phonon exchanges, in a complicated combi- 5 30 to 300 kHz Kilometric Low frequency LF
nation of dipole rotations, ion exchanges, and mechanical vibrations. 6. 0.3 16 3 MHz Hectometric Medium frequency MF
The quasipanicle, phonon-coupling constants are negative, because 7 3 to 30 MHz ~ecametri; High h.cqucncy HF
enerby is dissipated in the interactions. Negative coupling gives rise 8 30to300 MHz Metric VeryAigh h- VHF
to the possibility of new bound states (altogether new bands of quasi- wncy
9 0.3 to 3 CHt Decimetric Ultra-high fre- UHF
panicles of higher frequency), but more importantly, negative coupling weney
always :owc.rs the frequency of the existing bands. The direct couplings 10 3 to 30 C H t Centimetric Supcrhigh f n - SHF
between the p- and the c-sheets produce strongly negative contribu- queney
tions to the energy, and are thus capable, under certain conditions, of 1I 30 to 300 CHz Millimetric Extremely h g h in- EHF
lowering the uncoupled p- and c-sheet frequency bands. Crodsky wncy
11 0.3 to 3 THz Decimillimetric Su~ra-extremelv SEHF
applied his theoretical model to a simplified system consisting of a high frrquencf
perfect two-dimensional lattice. At progressively increasing energy 'From Sam (19681, baaed on intemationd treaty involving panicipanu in the
levels, this system passes successively through antiferro-like, flop, and International Telecommunicationr Union (ITU. 1981).
para-like phases. 'Band 1 ia a deaignattd band with no ollicid adjmivd dcrcription and rymboL
Below a critical level of thermal energy (Nee1 temperature), at low Suggested entrier am a h o m for thir band
Band 12 h u no ofticid adjmivd darcription. A rly~cstcdentry ia ahown for thu
external field intensities, neighboring interactions and anisotropic
band
fields dominate in the sheet, and the dipoles assume a checkerhoard
configuration with each neighbor pointing oppositely, on the average,
in or out of the sheet; the system is in the antiferro-like phase. At ' P E A R L CHAIN'
FORMITION ORIENTATION
higher field intensities, but below the triple-point energy, the dipoles
flop over so that they are perpendicular to the field on the average,
but are still in an antiferro-like configuration within the sheet; the
system is in the flop phase. With increasingly intense fields below the
Neil energy, or a t temperatures greater than the critical point, the
external field overrides the sheet interactions. The dipoles then follow
any external field and the system is in the para-like phase. When the
system is in the antiferro-like phase and as the external electric field
increases from zero, two bands of oscillations emerge from the initial
"degeneraten hands of excitations, one increasing and the other de-
creasing, until the lowest frequency hand (longest w a v e l e n ~ h reaches
)
zero.
Fig. 2.6. Schematic presentation of some effectn of alternating electrical fiel& on
particle and cellular arrangements. (From Schwan, 1975.)
M A T R I X I I I
technology.
The a l i e n s use c r y s t a l s q u i t e a b i t .
I s t h e Navy t i e d i n w i t h t h e s e c r e t government?
0451
M A T R I X 111
exist.
Why?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
0453
M A T R I X I I I
No data on t h a t one.
Absolutely.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
0457
M A T R I X 1 1 1
How do a l i e n s r e f e r t o r e l i g i o u s concepts?
I t w i l l survive.
Yes.
I t i s not known t o i n t e r l o c k .
Have you seen t h e movie Milleneum? What can you say about
t h e concepts p o r t r a y e d there?
How i s t h e government i n v o l v e d i n c a t t l e m u t i l a t i o n s ?
Human s c i e n t i s t s a r e i n v o l v e d w i t h longevi t y s t u d i e s u s i n g
adrenalyn. They have developed a l t e r e d adrenlyn, and drugs
c a l l e d c o r d r a z i n e , c o r t r o p i n e x , formazine, and h y r o n a l i x . A l l
o f them have an adrenalyn base. The o n l y way t o get t h e l a r g e
q u a n t i t i t e s o f adrenalyn i s t o get them from c a t t l e . Some o f
the substances they develop a f f e c t psychic development. Other
drugs have physical r e s t o r a t i o n p r o p e r t i e s . A l i e n s use c a t t l e
f o r the b i o l o g i c a l m a t e r i a l s as w e l l - They use t h e m a t e r i a l s
i n t h e i r breeding program and f o r the c o n s t r u c t i o n o f cloned
individuals.
What about t h e S i r i a n s ?
W e l l , H i t l e r spend a l o t o f time i n l i b r a r i e s b e f o r e h i s
mother d i e d , and he was convinced t h a t t h e w h i t e race was
going t o be squeezed out o f e x i s t e n c e i n another 75 years. He
decided t h a t he das going t o be the .defender o f t h e Aryan
race. T h i s was back b e f o r e World War One. He was a l s o
r e l a t i n g t h i s t o the P r o t o c o l s o f t h e Learned Elders o f Z i o n ,
M A T R I X I I I
destroyed by g e n e t i c i n t e r - m a r r i a g e . He wanted t o s t o p t h e
trend. He became i n t e r e s ted i n metaphysics . The Dark Side
involvement began a f t e r a bout w i t h peyote b e f o r e World War
One and h i s involvement w i t h the Thule S o c i e t y , which was
connected t o A l e i s t e r Crowley and the Order o f the Golden Dawn
i n England. H i t l e r a l s o adopted t h e idea of f i g h t i n g t h e
communists, because the communists were j u s t about ready t o
take over Germany. There were not Greys around i n l a r g e
numbers b u t they were t h e r e . The Germans were i n v o l v e d w i t h
a1 i e n technology. They had one v e r s i o n w i t h electromagnetic
d r i v e . They had j e t a i r c r a f t i n 1943- They had nuclear weapons
b u t H i t l e r d i d not use them. Mind c o n t r o l research was on-
going.
Yes.
W e l l , a s o c i a l complex c o n s i s t i n g o f i n d i v i d u a l e n t i t i e s
becomes a s o c i a l memory complex when i t adopts one o r i e n t a t i o n
o r seeking i n a s p e c i f i c d i r e c t i o n . When t h i s happens, t h e
group memory t h a t was not a v a i l a b l e t o i n d i v i d u a l s becomes
known. The advantage o f a s o c i a l memory complex i s t h e
r e l a t i v e lack o f d i s t o r t i o n .
G e n e r a l l y , e n t i t i e s can have l i t t l e o r no p o l a r i z a t i o n ,
p o s i t i v e p o l a r i z a t i o n o r negative p o l a r i z a t i o n . A p o s i t i v e l y
p o l a r i z e d e n t i t y w i l l s e l e c t a p a t h embodying s e r v i c e t o
o t h e r s . An e n t i t y choosing negative p o l a r i z a t i o n would focus
on s e r v i c e t o s e l f . A negative p o l a r i z a t i o n i n v o l v e s the
elements o f c o n t r o l and repression. For example, a n e g a t i v e l y
p o l a r i z e d e n t i t y would s c s k s e p a r a t i o n from and c o n t r o l over
o t h e r s by sexual means and have t h e idea o f power as an end.
The n e g a t i v e l y o r i e n t e d e n t i t y w i l l program f o r maximum
s e p a r a t i o n from and c o n t r l over a l l e n t i t i e s which i t
perceives as being o t h e r than i t s e l f .
W e l l , yes. E n t i t i e s w i l l e v e n t u a l l y r e a l i z e t h a t t h e i r
a c t i o n s on other selves a r e a c t u a l l y being done t o themselves,
s i n c e t h e consciousness present i n each e n t i t y i s a v a r i a t i o n
on the same t h i n g . The i n d i v i d u a t i o n i s present t o a l l o w
maximum d i f f e r e n t i a t i o n o f p o t e n t i a l i t y and c r e a t i o n .
B a s i c a l l y another general v i b r a t o r y r a t e . I t a l s o r e l a t e s
t o the r e a l i z a t i o n t h a t one i s not separate from the c r e a t o r .
I t i s t h a t k i n d o f spectrum which has been c a l l e d by t h e
C h r i s t i a n s as t h e "second coming". The second coming i s a
s t a t e o f being, not an i n d i v i d u a l a r r i v i n g and e s t a b l i s h i n g a
power h i e r a r c h y .
When w i l l t h i s be completed?
Does densi t y l e v e l r e f e r t o p o l a r i z a t i o n ?
An e n t i t y can be n e g a t i v e l y p o l a r i z e d and i n f o u r t h
d e n s i t y , b u t i t i s an i n t e n s e s t r u g g l e because o f t h e
development o f t e l e p a t h i c f u n c t i o n s . I f t h e r e i s a p l a c e i n
which f o u r t h d e n s i t y negative e n t i t i e s have e s t a b l i s h e d a
power s t r u c t u r e , then t h e r e i s more use of t h e concept o f mind
c o n t r o l i n order t o keep t h e negative s t r u c t u r e from
conversion t o posi t i v e o r i e n t a t i o n .
c o l l e c t i v e thoughtforms o f the p o p u l a t i o n a l s o d i s t u r b t h e
energy p a t t e r n s o f the p l a n e t . Geological changes accompany
t r a n s i t i o n between d e n s i t i e s . A t t h i s p o i n t we a r e i n t h e l a s t
20 years a t t h e end o f a c y c l e which has l a s t e d 75,000 years.
The m a j o r i t y o f t h e O r i o n group a r e o f f o u r t h d e n s i t y .
Some a r e p o s i t i v e l y o r i e n t e d toward s e r v i c e t o o t h e r s , b u t
most t h a t a r e concerned w i t h the c u r r e n t s i t u a t i o n a r e
n e g a t i v e l y p o l a r i z e d and p l a y i n g t h e domination game. E n t i t i e s
on E a r t h f o l l o w i n g any r e l i g i o n o r no r e l i g i o n a t a l l w i l l
move i n t o f o u r t h d e n s i t y i f they a r e t h a t v i b r a t i o n . E n t i t i e s
not a t f o u r t h d e n s i t y v i b r a t i o n w i l l remain a t t h i r d d e n s i t y
v i b r a t i o n and w i l l move t o other l o c a t i o n s t o c o n t i n u e t h i r d
densi t y l i f e u n t i l t h e i r v i - b r a t i o n a l l e v e l increases and
p o l a r i z e s i n time w i t h a c y c l e o f d e n s i t y movement. The
p o l a r i z a t i o n can be p o s i t i v e o r negative.
W e l l , s t a r t w i t h t h e prime f a c t o r o f body i d e n t i f i c a t i o n .
The s o c i e t y promotes t h e concept o f "you a r e your body",
which r e s u l t s i n f e a r , e s p e c i a l l y f e a r of " d e a t h " , which i s
t i e d i n w i t h the idea o f p h y s i c a l p a i n . Combine t h i s w i t h
M A T R I X I I I
D C = Duncan Cameron
PN = Preston Nichols
SS = Swereign Scribe
tonotice hereL.ifwc lookatall thcxdilfercnt dcviccr.Ihcyallhrvcr b a l k om hipychic unu,ulted to saneme in one of the higher donuins, and
sh8pc on the bottom- thn's the transmitter. And you notice they hm hevidwewrnted lobuildawilmuudl. IAWtnar" kanylhingthtwwld
roughly the umc shape up at the top. 'Ibis says thal there is romeching a n y the vibntiomol the thing or w n l tolcnvor-tact, such
c here in the upper pan of the unit. which* don't undasund to
~ l c r i up u.clothin; or a parariMwould k witnsr to a penon.] How do we p
thii d?y. about doing it? And he dunaekd the whok daign d this dcvicc M d m g
Now i f you look here, you'll see this u the modulator coil as thevcll rrcciva, the circuit boud and we mde this input well. ?hiinput
outltyedinthe digram. It's g a theume moduhtaeoilinsidethis hcusing well turns out to be vastly superior l o the input dlof the Kelly box or an
hm. .
H~bCuor8nydlbaedevim
Nawrrhn thirrilldo foryourimply you plugthewireintothe
SS: What's the paws source? Inmutitter. Whatmryou dumpin here linputrrdl] tho 8ryofcoik.ad
r r c c i m w i l l pick uptheekIro-nugne~iccmnponentjw mtbeduiipicks
PN. In this cuc.it's bntaia. I n the Q i c it's AC. up Dunan's ekccrwugael~ mmponenl. 8ndwill tnmduceit to be tnmd-
crud by the trmrmittcr. ' h i s is asentially a miniature Monuur Not ol
SS: How long could they slay up t h m ? thepowerthatthey hd. And ifyou put your handin thewell.turn the@
on, ~twwld urn buildingup pur
PN: ~ e ~ u p k o f & ymaybe.
s Thy71 float around until the balloonb u m Haw you use W i i c r equipment. there ue t h e wyr Yar
and they had a parachute that slowly a m c d them back to anh. w a n a n &a diilplakwitha ndiioaicrtunerwhaeyoug~lthenta.tha1 where
only tnnrma forabout3lo4houn. Youcouldprrrru~thebalbonsothat you put thewitom in the witneoW,you ~b the ~b phte and pu tune
it rivr t o r point and breaks and comadom. Or you could prawizc it tktuoauntilpu b u m U i c k . [hpuI u r n a t u ~ k W b w i t h ~ ~
where it woaM float for drys. had. you .rr rubbing8 d lpblcwith the O l k r b8Dd; wbea @a
f d ~atirkinen d oo the plate the tuner is at the fight a t i n & ] All that's
SS: k that an mu81ogne detector instrument? t d i n g p u i s w b a M p u ' Z e m u a l b i l y inyav mindrurr fmca bwr
t o h i g h m l h e d L l h m ~ w h m y o u ~ l h e ~ Yougclrmnl Wr.
PN. Well the thing is, the orgoneand DOR output oft* thmg is in the m e numkrsyslmrryou'~ &ng,yougCI the n t a [fmm the pailiondthe
s u b t k ~ m l m I.don'l knowofanyreccivcrthalan &a tberaurl tlmalnob).youptothe~bodrdnta,~itupand~e[uhtIbe
energetic fuoclion that is awing out of here. the m u a l madWiaa. You digmsis h]
I'itmlothiiyouonlyhcuagmupdimpulra n K D O R u d a r p a c n Nowcmrmaaothacdumnt h q l l be ronning n t s theanti-
inridclhae ~mpukcsand how todetect what's insidelheimpuba- 1dmir nta.So you u l t k device lo those nta, pu lhmw the milch thrl nyr
IdodtknrwhowtoQit. Iluven'thadaduncetoanrlyrcitknlpca %madas*, and what it doa it fecdr tbe thing back so it a d l l a t e and
R 8 d M e Reccpor whicb is a rccciwr built to rreeivc tbse t h i i It's tnmmiumthcpau#thecmnenta
a m y s t n n p circuit. l h a- may be there, how to d c l a what this i
s NOW&I isaaually happeninghac? W tbedcviahdoiy, i l k
sending, but I don't undmund it at thii point. ao o n a ~ t n t i w point that's mnncclingyau the opcntorto the mindd the
subject. & p u g ~ r c m n i n gtbmugh,pu'~eintarq.tmg Ihesubjea'smind
SS: But it's detming what's there. ~ t b w b t ' s n o n g w i t hthebody. 'Ibenwba,youQIhe tmtmeot,pu'rr
rawUy brnrwling the penoa's subeomciour mindr b r t to do. -. .
h-u ..- nU
-
PN: You're ulking about the actual detector ilulf. know, ikrubcoardanmind iswhatd i l y coatmblhe phy*crlbojy,ad
iIour~mindadrubcoardoclrminduryrinlwchwith~otk.
SS: Y a I t [ o g n e ] errku. The government hasn't nid that it crku rubamciow mind ha a foahold in the reality that a n r r y l r t e thc
-- - ---- --
bodvaarrclly. Aahrwytmorr~&andmmupec8ndmmbmtml -
PN: No, they haven't. In R a d i i e circles thii I L t plate with the black ~ [ & ~ l a d m a e & , t k - w b m w o w m i a d k o a t o c u h w i t h the
stuNanit.tbyalla humidilydetmor. Ihiiswhatdececutheorpne Ihh amdow mid, I t wrm n m the rukoclviwsmind bcsa iufootbdd
little white rod here, this is a tempmture sensing m&w, it detects the in* mliy. h Qan?know haw lo d m the body- Thrl's when
D O R But a& thiiwilldac* humiJiqchn)+r. nK problmwith thisis wewridr 'Ibbisandtheuuprthawia .
as you dampen the thin& dry it, dampen it, it p o o u t dd i b n t i o n A f t a Na*.ifcontmnca~maouaandhiupurkgwilh asledge
about 10 minutes of night these thing are urelcrs 'Ihae thinpwill hdd hammerit'sp i n g to kerkyour leg. 'Ibn'sna a u s d by lherubcohviw
their alibrrlion for mayk weeks at a time. mind laming to& wilb maw. But d i r a s a that dcvdop fmm outside
But stiu i t was lucky that I h C y ~ nthiiupsoIOmeOne
l picked up influencessuch u germs and such, a n be trmd, it's bckved by thii gmup
oneolthac thing that amedownon theground. Theywouldsecthewhite d poplz to the subconrdour mind noc running the immune system
lhcnnisler bet- these two thing-8-ma-bobs hem and this plate down poperly w, elimirule Uut irriunl, 8nd you ga sick.
here. Now the platesitiktuen thesetwoclipand t k a l u m i n u m e o ~ n Sowhat they try to do is find out, k inlmpyting the subcon-
go over it. If you follow Reichiin technology, aluminum tends to hmg rciourmind.what iswlongandtellingt h e s u m m i n d howtohalthe
tocuscrfworgone S o t h e y h w + ~ h e ~ s r n u ~ R a c w i t h ~ h e . l u m i n u m body. n K d e v i a i t d Q c r o ' t h a l . ?hiss nocahdingmrchinc.thbisiust . ,
plate m r it. the aluminium plate will help pull the orgone to the orpnc a b&dcaster;whalmryou put in thewdl forthe priuuywitnar.youern
umnr. Copper focuses DO1C This iswhy Ileich made the originalorgonc put any agent, thought form or what- in the dljust nyou would with
boxesout dsteel or aluminum foil. but nol copper. the ndioniadevice. memergetic compomnt of thal stuff thal you pnin
Now t h i dcvia bere is a tnnsmilta. After DuMn did his will u g alongwith the witness to the pnon and you a n aawlly u l k to the
d i n g on thac thing. Ir a l iwhat Ihd was a d itnrumitur. pcnon'r subcomciousmind through t h k
Whatcm Iput in would be sent out. Any d y o u popk maitivc? All you --
Haw you I r a 1people t h m are t h e means srentially. The
& is uk thii and hold it. You11fed your energiesb u i i up in it. It might mort common means is the m m i n g nte. which mtb psymially. by the
get warm or it might get cool to you. Ihrl's -tially a -lor ol popwhdaigmdthequipment. Tbt'swhyyou gel thelarge bookwith
hyperzpocirl energies. the psychic mrrgr. And I h t design a n be tnccd all the n t a and rmne n t a in it.
right to Wilhelm Rcich through Brookhaven Natiorul l a b o n t o r i s Amherwry is throughmgenlcsuch uhomcqmthic rrmcdia.
~ ~ t a R e i e h d e v e l o p a l t h i p r c l o p . h e a l k d u p I h e p m n - h ~ a c w h i c h w o r f r o n t h e s u ~ m i n d a Q t h e s u b t k D d yIf.the
mmt and tohi than that he hd a dcvia ttut could M the- OUI herbor ragen1is purelyanm ~ i c e f f c c i . l h i i w i l tnmmit
l t h e c ~ k
of thundc~sIormrand uked ift h y were interated. The p n r n m m t &id. ellea to the pnonwithout using up the rcrgent.
Yes. We're intmued!' ?hy requested Mr. Rcich to mila pol- to Another mode t h y wwudcrigncd by klrlcdm b y in Briuin.
Bmd;hmn on Long Irlmnd.
S o t h y w r i t e d l o r a t h u n d m c o r m t o a ~ a n d t h yit~up t
-
He made bax with two w e b the rugcnt gees in one and diitilkd wlla
intheother. H e h dcardsthat had ~ r i c p n t c m r o r m e y . ~ them. on
into the clods As it applo.dud. Ihe thundaberd kdre up .nd 'Ihecudrwouldwnuin thought IolnuA n d m q lkwdfmm onerrdl
around Brooldwm. A1 Bmokhaven there was a nice gcntk sunlit to theaherwell, it would imprar the thought formson the wcU. The
while theam amund was havinga thundastorm. Sod- t h y were welld40mthingwithtbcwritingortheinkontheprpcr,bulitpiCkSupand
VWy inlmrted. -worked with Mr. Rekh to r c p l i i l e the thing. sensesthethought that you putonthe ppcrand tnnrmiutkthoclght tothe
subconrrious mind.
M A T R I X I I I
PN: Ithinkweshould a h s a y about Ramtha.. what's thewomm'shme? Now Ib c l h dclinitdy lhal the p a n m c n t hu thaoughly
1.2. Knight...e+rcnliallywhat is k i n g wid hmis1.Z Knight istheonlyonc resadmi thiq probablyyan ago, like 10,lS yan ago, maybe20. T k y
that Ramthac o m a to but i f you're the kind of pryehii that a n projen WI knaw what it's all about. t h y h o w how to eoalrol it and they're just sitting
youan pto Ramtha and Ramtha, S0/50chancc. m y still u l k t o you. HI. back lettingthis bconeofthenAltenutiveIh~"rcnrrioideerofrrducing
[Duncan] cm p to w h m Ramtha is. 1.2is probably theonly one where the populationand that Ihy'releltingit run iucouneandwhen it'sgonebr
Ramthawillcome to her. RUI many other psychirs havc talked to Ramtha mough they're p i n g to introduce the cure. Ibelieve the cure is purely
beyondanother plane. lfyoucanm yourrclfpsychicallyraised lrigl~ enough electromagnetic Ihc reason Isay lhii is the declromagnaia that are
whmpuanactually l w c y o u r bodyandp t o l h e ~ o ~ h e r r c a l m
thenyou
s around my pmpeny spread out farenough a d t h e hu ban rumon. I'm
a n m a k i t to the realm that Ramtha is onwhich is thermnlh l c ~orthe l able to tnce thcm d m , that when t h y mand into the Eur blip (N.Y.)
fourth. you a n find Ramtlu and all who are his inads. There's a whole a m t h y had AlDS and the whole AlDS thing subsided when t h y lived in
number of them up t k . Ramtha's not the only one. 'here's lorJr of Emt blip for about a- from 2 months to 6 months.
entities in the ruth and ~ n l realm h d domain. Ih.1'~ mentially what Isaid about AIDS yesterday [in the
kaure]. And thal k my k l i on AIDS. Ido not klim it was a
DC: Of mnc i f they're Irigher evolvd t h y would havc... mmufactufrd d i i Ithink it's being used opponunirticrlly.
SS. You mentionedin your u l k about Montauk and the old univasr,
W i inlcrvierw pmvdcdmunery of
O U A N l U M COMMUNICATIONS.
SS: Haw? Wbn & pura?
SS: When yar say attrchment, dar that m a n it's just on om area?
DC- L's wkhin the auric uruaure a d thae's alto atlachmcnts that go
outside It'r abo associated u r i n g attached to the pcoplc as the prychi
type aurg,functions that are in ruociation with a pcmmand outride All
un'tsd ug-8bng am .trocLled toil.
SS: We'n heard of putting magnccr &your body to incmuc the enew.
&e thereways to do this by magnaicsk r iby usins eknronic devim?
Interview with A1 Bielek
Al Bielek, noted lecturer on the famous "Philadelphia Experiment" and dcnser than ours. It was worth an unbelievablefortune. W h m i t went
the time travellmind control aperiments of the "Montauk Project," we havc no idca, hut it was returned to Montauk and from there it went
recently spoke with The Scribe interview t a m in Yelm. somewhere. Therewercsevcral authorized trip. h d Duncanand 1 got
the bright idea sinceeverythingwas in the computer let's take a tripor
Biekk gave an updateon the current rw of mind control and psychic two on our own and do our own aploring. So wc did. After the second
warfare, and also offered a moredetailedaccount of hisaperience in the one it was found out and we were stopped. That was when he got into the
Montauk Project. Montauk also known as the Phoenix Project. used archives and bundenormous rrcordsof the civilizationwhich was buried
Bielek and hi brother Duncan Cameron, to aplore the underground dcnvn thcrc.
cities of Man.
SS: Wholdklyoujhiau?
SS: Sovereign S c r i k AB: AI Bielek
A B He as the one that read them. Icouldn't read them.
hv
SS: R ~ g y o c r r ~ a o n M ~ y a r w a kuk
d theh
aamd,pumkeosqmdpukonM~Wlvndidyouxc7 ', ss: Ife d a 'Ircllpu?
Well, Iwas not on thesurfaceof Man. We were in theunderground. AB: No. Well he did at the time but 1can't remember any of it now. It's
The stov goes back to the Alternative 3 book, the TV production in a wry strange memory. On again, off again, and that part of it was n m r
England outlining the faa that we havc M a n basu, one or omre. made clear to me as to what he m l l y found. Right after that we were
pmvided by a joint operation with the U.S.gavcnrment. Ido not know removed.
-
if the Russiansareinon it and aliens. T h y areon thesurfacebases... It's
a World Government operation really, that's not strictly the United Rut I do remember some of the other installationswe saw down thm.
Slates government. T h y had wry odd. large generators of some typc. I f you did not see it,
Irecommendthat you psee the movie Total Recall. In fact it wasseeing
After t h y were on the surface which was about 1969, t h y found that that movie that reminded me o( the fact that Ihad been there. Not the
therewere entrances to the undergroundsealed and t h y knew them was colonia but the shots ofthe undergroundwheretheyshowed these large,
something down there. The rumon were that there was probably round canistenwhere the d i m o r said these were probably for oxygen
artifacts from an ancient civilization buried underground because genention. I'm not quitesure but we thinkw. Ilooltcd at them and said.
there were a lot of m a i n s above ground, ruined cities that haw b a n "Thy're not round. They're hexagonal." And Iasked myself. "Haw the
there by NASA's estimates maybt300.000 years.250.000ycars. But they helldid Iknow that?" Sothat was ourviearof Mars from the underground.
found the entrances all blocked. all sealed off to any undergrounda m . We didn't see hardly a thing of it from the surface.
So the word went tack through communications (in the late 70'r) to
whomem back to the Montauk and Phoenix proiea. "Can mu do
anythingabout this for us? We can't get into the i n d k r o u n d of Mars."
T h y said. "Ya. Ithinkwe can. Give us somecoordinataon thesurface Alk Ice? No.
of the planet. We'll havc to run a s t ~ i c acomputation.''
l Which
they did and plugged these all into the computer. They wanted two ss: I f I m n r m k r i n r h r ~ P h m ' r * l h r y ~ ~ a & o / i c c & ~
people to go and i t happened to k Duncan and myself. *-
ss: Wlryhcro7 AB: It was not ice under there. There were oxygen generators and they
also had some storage. There was a generatingsystem which apparently
AB:Tocorroboratewhattheotheronesawandalsoincyc thmwas any theancients had kft. Idon't reallyknow muchabut it. but it wasanivated
problems in the underground. T h y didn't really know what was down More t h y moved the surface colonia in. They also melted down the
there. p l a r caps. I h e rumorsare that t h y used a hydrogen lxnnb or two for
that. Idon't know if that's true. But t h y did melt d a m a lot d t h e p l a r
So t h y sent us and we went up there in the underground. [using the ice so thcywould have some water. It's still sparse hut they have it. ' h e
Montauk Time-Space "Tunnel" device, developed as a result of the atmosphere is thin but t h y haw atmosphere. And the temperature
Philadelphia Experiment. (See Scribe issua 9.13 and 14.)17hm was a iswannenough. In thequatorial regionthy havcno problem surviving.
probkmwith light. We had to take lightingwith usat the time. later on, It runs a h t 500 and of course the astronomers have k n m this for
if Iremember. we found some of their light sources and turned those on. about 50 ycan or more It's quite livable in terms of temperature.
We found mntually that the last remnants of the Martians. if you wish
t o a l l them Ihat.died in the underground kcmen loand 20.000 yean
ago by estimate, and t h y left everything t h y had of their civilition
underground. We found enormous amounls of statuay which AR: Unknownfonn of illumination, afterwc found out haw to turn i t on.
appea& to k religious. Some of the power generators are still working. After m turned on the
undergroundlightingwehad no lack of light. Othemise we had to c a m
SS: Whcu did dry look Iik? IIow big w e Jly? o u r m and portablelightingwas not all that effective bemuse we were
dealing with larger underground chambers. scveral hundred feet across.
high ceilingand portable lightsarenotvery good fora large chamkr like
AB: Typically 6.7.8 loot tall, stone, gems embedded in them and so forth.
that. Eventuallywe found where they had their own lighting. It was wry
bright.
SS: 7ha*Imofhumm-likpmpk?
SS: I I o w yar oy injmmbn on d u Face on Me37
AB: Yes. T h y were quite well prrrerved. Then we found archives.
We found a lot ofscientific quipment. We found ekctronicquipment
I\R: Not that Iremember in the undcrground. There's more than onc
down there; tom and tons of stuff. And the rumor was also later that ...I
face on Man, by the way. Thy found several. But Iremember the
didn't recall until Duncan reminded me of it ahout a m k ago. he wid.
NASA announcementssome yean ago. aboul2 years ago lhat thy'lc
"Don't forget the 17,000 metric tom of Manian gold they t d out.
receivinga low frequencyradio transmission from Mas. I t was about 50
According to his recollectionof it. itwasvcystrangepld. It was 5 l i m a
kilohenz, if Im e m b e r correctly. Quite a low level indicating the q u i p tie goes aver a d hands him the file a d the film and telb him the story
ment o r w h a t m it wasthat wasgenerating the RFsignal.and itwascoded. about his father and the govcmment agents and so fmh. Preston says.
was quite old and probablyncarlywornout. so they were amazed there was "Well what am Igoing to do with it?" He ycr, "Idon't know. It's your
anything still coming out of it but it was enough ofa signal' that t h y could
problem now. The gcwmmentagenlsareabout two houn k h i n dme." He
pickit upandput it throughthecomputerand transcribeit. Itwasawarning.
taka Prentmout and shoun him his carwith bullet holain thedoorand he
warni in^ message to humans not i o repeat the mistakes t h y made.
say. "I'm getting out of here." And he left.
Preston in a panic tried togel a hold of anybody he knew that day. including
myself. Iwas not reachable. Duncan. previous in that morning, got wind
of something. due to his psychicteruitivity,somethingveryheavycoming
AB: We were digging in the remains of an old civiliution that pmcded dawn. He took off from Preston's. went home, went into h u bedroom,
oun and i t felt very pculiar. To look at what was left at what was once a
locked the door and crawled under the bedsheets until about 5:W thal
great civilbotion and m l i that t h y litmlly died there and left
afternoon. This is a fact. He panicked. Hewould not cven answer the
everything behind and thatcvcntually the thing shutdam. I t was in the
undergrounddtliberatclyapparentlya~survival heuusethecirckcities had phone. He shut o l i his answering machine.
long since been destmycd and t h y lived down there and stayed there.
So this comes down. Preston can't get a hold of me. Finallv when he did
From what Iunderstandofit. a number of the Martiam survivedwhatever get through (I calledhim) hesaid, "Well Icalled up NSAandt h them Ihad
the atuck was on the surfret eventually took ON for Earth and When some wry hot materialh m that Idon't want." Thev asked "Whnt is it?"
decided to s u y behind on Man in the underground. And quite litmlly And he t d d them. 'Ihy said. "Well we d d t want it.:' He sap "I've got to
their progeny cvcntlully dicd out and the whde mce that was left behind get rid of IhitstufCit's + k a r d d c m n c e W : So he said. "Alrightwell
on Mars died wL It's rather a strangefeeling to m l ithat the remnants send some F.B.I. agents to pick i t up. So t b y cvcntually arrived and he
of a race died out in the undagound totally. nKy just k f t all their turned it over the them a8er verifying that t h y were F.B.I. He lpc rid of
hardware behind. thewhde business. Then 1calledafter that. and Istill haven't forgiven him
lor it. But the interesting mnmxtion ro get back to ywr question a b u t
SS: I n R o d S ~ s b o d r h e q a k e o f M d I E d r h c n d 1 % 19W.m behg the Psi-Corps. is that wc finally put together the fact thal with the new
inlpatmidrrrainduhianyofdu Ai-Capr l l a a d a f n g k d ~ equipment i h y w e r e a ~ etoid&iifya pkmgraph i f it's in somebody's file
and apparently t h y havestandingorders to find any infonnationw h a t ~ r
dcaliniwith the Philadelphia ~ q k m e nand t snake damn sure 1 didn't gc~
it. And tbeyspotted somethingand foundout whothisguywasandtheysent
M: Well. basicallywhathad happemdwnraverystnnp st-. InJanuary out the government agents and thu whoIe story ensued about this man
1990 Psi-Carps rrceivcd some new hardmre kclw NSA has ken who's fathawas the seniorscientist. And we don't knowwhat happenedto
working on this for yean; piocli-type hardware that boaauthe mind and it. We never sm it again.
its capabilitia of people who already haw a great dal of capability it
kcom quite formidable. In a y cuc,the n a t day. from infonrution I had. t h m wat a big ~ m b l e
in the Psi-Corps,and thevwerrwa~ledbvromebodv on the ouUidewhowa8
T h y found thenuek. after that infusion of new equipment, after a little friedtito w 10 sthe ~ l out&
w the~.th;tallofvourinstallations
learning how to use it. with the capability of locating a picture buried in arc goingl o k meliddown, literally. ~ n t hd& c r c w a m e dto get out. All
someone's filaanywhereor tracking a missing file or missinginformation of them walked out except ten w h o m brand new remuitswho had been
that t h y had instructions to rrcoveror locate. T h y didn't do the rrcomy told to defend the machimrwith their lives and they did literally. Thcy
lhcy merely located it. And how wc found out about this u m a vy d i d , thc r a t walked out, out of thc pmrnment's service and
interestingstory. disappeared. 'lhmwas a panic meetingwith the President...
They can do this to anyone theywant. T h y grab them physially and late 0
P BOX 350
them off to one of the hospitals. The law is that any hospital or institution
in the iJ.S. that accepts federal funding must by law hnvc cme d these 1 Year (10 issues):
machines on their premises m d there must be m a i n pmonnel, w y
limited. trained in its use. NOWi t can k used for "nonruil" ekctro-shock USA $19
therapy in the nonnal mode whiih doctors w, though it's mud, mon.
sophisticated now and kudamaging. O r t h y a n use it for rcprognm- Canada $21 (US Funds)
ming. the same piaeofquipmmt. But to do thercprogrammingrcquim Foreign $34 (US Funds)
aspccirlfloppydisl.whichirkepcunderkckand key and can only be used
by -in gcnnmmmt pnonnd. Notc: WA residents add
When they do this number of the q m p m m i n g it's done by government $ 1.45 sales tax
personnel. I t is not normally shown [in] their records and t h e is mer per subscription
a charge made back to a hospital organizationor to a h a p i t a l i t i o n fund
or medical fund of any kind. That is paid for 10096 by the federal
government and the rrcord's ncpt under the rug. . THE SOVEREIGN SCRIBE
0481 P.O.Box 350
T h y put i t once on Duncan and thy tried to do i t again. McKenna, WA 98558
RADIOSONDES
By Preston Nichols
ABSTRACT- INTRODUCTION
Everybody talks about the weather, but does nothing about it; this is often said. Actually, in the 1950's
and 1960's the United States Government tried to do something about the weather. from cloud seeding
to use of electromagnetics. This report will cover one of the largest weather control projects, the
Radiosonde. which can trace its roots back to the 1940's from Wi;';elm Riech. The Radiosonde was
reportedly a balloon carried instrument package for measuringweather data, with a transmitter that sent
the data back to the ground. Investigations show that this is not so, and it was an attempt to control
the weather. This report will discuss the background, the theory of operation, and the security measures
taken about the Radiosonde. - .__
BACKGROUND OF THE.RADIOSONDE- -. .-
- - -
-
It is well known that for yeas Wilhelm R i h was experimentingwith his orgone concept for modifying
the weather, using OOR busting (dead orgone-the bad %tuff")to Wuce the Violence of ~ ~ O I C M among
,
other things. He found that the more W R . in the storm system, the mom violent the-storm. He
experimented with many forms of DOR busting, and came up with a v ~ interesting.y simple eletctrcb --
magnetic method which was adopted for use bj the Gmmment to reduce the violence d.storms.
By interviewing a retired person from the Brookhaven Qational Lab in Upton, Longwand. New Vork -?,-
(my back yard). I learned of the Riech connecfian to the early Phoonhc Project, which was the carry
dn d the Rainbow Project (fhe famous Philadelphia Experiment), which was done at Brookhaven from . -- :
approximately 1948 to 1968. One of the interesting outgrowths of this projed war -the Radiosonde,
. which A
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
Since these things went up in balloons, and could not come down hard enough to destroy themselves
because of safety considerations,'the actual units could not be secret, this would arouse suspicion. They
publicized the apparent purpose of taking data, which uninformed examination would back up. The real
purpose is not that obvious. If someone tuned into one of these packages, with normal type radio equip
ment the signal would not appear that unusual. SO FAR SO GOOD! They showed the public a data
receiving station, all set up to receive the inaccurate, unusable data, had small production runs of this
equipment. The launching personnel would laboriously calibrate b told t h ~someone l else h;cld. In
the 1950's and 1960'sthese sondes wen launched from all over: ships. airports, weather centers: Through
this period of time there were hundreds in the air every day. The radio range of these things was very
limited. to maybe 100 miles. This says that there should have been a 'pile" of receivers known as
Radiosonde receptor, and they should have been very common. Isn't it strange that myself, a surplus
. radio collector 'nut: knowingmany others have n m r seen a R a d i i receiver or the other paraphernalia
that went with them. I have only heard of them on rare occasions. This says that the Gwernment did
not use receivers. That's unusual, to have a data transmitter with no receiver to pick it up. HMMM! The
next thing to look at is the specification sheet for the tube, which emphatically says that the life expectancy
is only several hours. (See figure 3).
From examining the data sheet, it is obvious that they are telling you that the tube will run for a few
hours. I have had a tube on the air for ovbr 2000 hours, and at this time have built twenty units with
a failure of only one, which is a good industrial failure rate. So the tube will bum out in bnly a few hours''
HMMM! Of course if your local amateur radio operator finds one or buys one surplus he will mad the
data, get mislead and not build a circuit that will run bnly a few hours". He will use another tube. Hence
it appears that the Gwemment does not want the public using these tubes and finding something unusual,
and their secret is blown. This misinformation will preserve the secret. T h y are not actually telling a
lie; because of the design of the battery pack, the tube will bum out after thrw hours or so because
of back bombardment of the cathode as it cools slowly, which will destroy the cathode.
When these things hit the ground they were dead, which says that the Government does not want
the public to pick up live units. Considering that the Government wanted you to send them back, in
the 1950's and 1960's, for reuse, why would they design the battery to burn out a 320 t u b ($IS today)
which would have to be replaced. This means that they were hiding something-HMMM! By packing
the sensors in little sealed vials intimates that upon exposure to the air the sensors are also short lived,
thls IS more m~sinformat~on. By following these precautionsthe secret was maintained for over 40 years.
whlch says the security was good. If it was not for my collecting interest, and the PSY abilities of my
associates we still would not know.
0 4 8 5
CONCLUSION
This is an informational paper and is meant for you to draw your own conclusions; it is recommended
that you "THINK" (I know this is hard for a large segment of the public, since TV and the couch potato)
and come up with your own conclusion; then read on!
OED!
In my conclusion, we have two types of data, hard and soft. The security data is hard and can be
proven. This says that there is more than meets the eye here. They were doing something that was
secret; and gathering weather data was secret? I do not think so. This backs up the soft data which
is the PSY read, and the interview which talked of the Riech weather control function. In the second
half of the 20th Century, a lot of weather tnodification procedures were attempted. you have only heard
of the failures such as cloud seeding. For legal liability it was judged by the Government that officially
the weather should be left up to God. Someone loses money because of what they did with the weather.
it would be law suits galore. This also is an example of why the Government is doing all it can to suppress
the use of PSY. it can blow a lot of cover ups. My message is-
KEEP
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M A T R I X 1 1 1
Chapter 8
Sweet Setup
In T~~ he recounts the otherworldly interdiction
whereby a "Mice" bade him refrain forever &om swats, hisone true
via. Addied as he was. stritbcr couldnl sop, Hm UKwgh the
"beingr" enginmtd circumstances so as to bornbard him with dire
PART TWO, impkations. As a result, one m n i n g he is visited by a makvdent
presence which he himself-as alwqs4ieSQibes best, i.e. as
'monstrously ugly, so filthyand dark andsinister. Of cbumthey-
demons Tby had to be." Again, ''the sense of being ~ e s t e dwas
pcnverfulandawfuLItwasasifthewholehoruewerrfuUoffilthy,
Love stinkiag ~MCCIS the size of tigers." The entity, rising up beride his bed
likc a 'huge, predatory spider", places something at his 'forehead"
Was All He Said (LC. the Third Eye) and with an electric tingle he is "transported" to
a dungeon-likc place where his attention is thed upon a scene of
The alternate c m n t i o n to which a certain 'New Age" men- excruciating torture. The victim, a wrrmrl-looking though quite
tality turns whenever the possible existence of an actual, deliberate naked man, is being whipped to shreds amidst ago& snearns by
negativity approaches the unimpeachable, is that of the vaguely a cowled figure. His"entity" cxphhsto him that 'he failed to pt you
'Christian" taaie: love-bomb the blighters until they sec the error of toobey him and now he must bear thecoascqueam". ' h i s d i r e
their ways, by the point-scoring Good EQmple set. Such cheek-turn- is followed by a vny hemsing and s i p j 5 ~ 'asurana"~1 that 'it
ing is in practice of course a very selective espwsal, since it rarely isn't real, Whitty, it iwr't reaL" As Striek npons,such an 'admis-
secms to amfitute the day-byday husk attitude of the verysame sion" did nothing to mollify his bomx.
proponent. Even in the case however that this recommendation The assurance was indetd an oMiaue reference to the actual
& i n n t outright hypocrisy, it would remainfatally fatuous; for, as the taaic being used by his tomenton; the ;vbok scene, Like so much
Ra entity proclaims toone of the questionerswhoprrscntedjust such UFOabduaion data, is a projected rhargh-form. Such thought-
a tidy 'solution", they (the Orions) 'do not want +r love". forms an generated nor in a through our ordinary 3rddensityn
This rebuff clearly meant that any "love-rays" d i e d toward plane, but arc manufactured in the medium proper to them, i.e. the
the zones of Conscious or Spiritual Negativity would find nothing k r a i . The subject, then, is either spirited to ihe;librato!y frrquen-
reaptive on which to fall, no substance upon which to work The cy" of that density through dissociation of the astral vehicle from the
inescapable implication was that aty such p r o p l . suitable enough physical, or, as in certain accounts passessinga component of 'high
perhaps for beings of a straight 3rd-duuy anxiousness not strangeness" the 4thdensity menstruum is tuned into place by a
decisivelypolarized and t h m f m still possesing a 'recessed trait" of vertical adjustment and wholesale realignment of the nested
potential goodness able to be aaed upon, when applied toward 'bodies", in such a way that the subjea doesn't dissuciare from the
Spiritual Negativity of the Higher Densities simply servcd as clear integument of "touch" (and thus, from the physicalclectric grid) but
indication that its proponent hadn't understood the point. rather undergoes the rotation of the coordinates of that grid so that
The ~e~at6ity'of the Higher Densities is ipzd faem awake; it t h y line up in conductive relation to the informing geometries of
has chosen the rejection of other-love as a whole-being orientation, astroctheric patterning which otherwbe are obliquely scmncd-
and therefon has nosubconscious residuum of receptivity that might thus affording a d i m continuity of perception surcharging the a p
secretly 'respond" to the good intentions of a pasitivelydircucd parcntly 'prrservcd", familiar feld of physical fonu with imposible
bcam (even if such a bcam proceeded from a sinare resolve which Whitky-in-Wonderland elements.
consiskntly applied its ~amaritancounsel in all other avenues of life). The purpase of soothing Strieber with such assurance as to
Indeed there isdee~erim~licationthan this In the faceofsuch the ultimate unreality of the convincingsceae experienced,should be
~mcomrnonor trulyspirin'mln&ivity the presumption of such con- familiar to anyone who's heard of the torture tacticsemployed in any
ventional counsel (applicable enoughat theordh&level) might well good Banana Republic (i.e. thaEe in which the victim is subjected to
result in consequences wone than simple 'lack of success". It has to excruciatingpain on the om hand while being simultaneouslystroked
be understood-that spiritual principl& and religious precepts, even and nassurcd on the other, ohen by the same party). The object is
those cherished from long use and universal recommendation are at to elicit the hrll cooperation of the victim under duress, by making
best optimum advice for the given systemof funaion;at the transition him instinctively gravitate toward the implicit salvation anended
through the "motherly" touch demonstrated in that schizoid Grasp, a proportional loss of negative pdarity to the aggrrsor, a situation
feeling some surcease and thus even affectional Gratitude with ' which the entity must then attempt to rectify. In this way we sce that,
respect to that one factor in the whole horrible stew that seems to in terms of the higher densities not only are "thoughts things", but
proffer kindness and a relieving recourse. the metaphorical relations characterizing the order as which kings
Indeed, Striekr proves himself the compliant guinea pig; functionallyinteract possess distinct energy values, and have a d i m
even under the intelligena that it's all a thought-form, his compas- bearing on degree and intensity of po-iion-alignment. TO poses
sion for the (imagistic& dramatized) unsua&ful "bidder" pe&ts, a legion of "~er~ants" in these subtle regionsis an actual nourishment
obviously in thorough confusionwith his own selfcommiseration, so to the centers and systems, a kind of s i c "foodchain mmid".
that finally he collapses upon a repentant love for the very roaches At this point a pure bolt of recognition shouldallay any further
that bedevil him. "Again, though, I felt love. Despite all the ugliness doubts, either of the type which question the factuality of Strieber's
and the terrible things that had k e n done, I found myself longing for accounts or the kind that quiMcate as to the actual nature of the
them, missing them! How was this possible?". Again, "I regretted the entitiesimroW, for we find the Striekrentity virtually paraphrasing
contempt I had shown for its [the ofher "reality's"] needs and its laws the earlier Rn recitation re the modus o~erandithat identifies the
and felt a desperate desire to make amends." "I had felt a paingreater Negative polarity, in itssuggestion that the failure toagct obediena
than the pain of punishment. It was the pain of their love.-.I had the on the part of the imagizcd "Crusader" bears punishable ame-
sense that they had on my behalf turned away from perfect love, and quencc. Not only n this "narration" of the v i u r a l i scene an ade-
that they had done this to help me." "I suspect that the ugliness I had quategdmission of the terminvolved, for thosewith prior knowledge
seen last night was not them, but me. I was so ashamed of myself that as is supplied by the I& dewrim it is a amtinuing illruhation of
I almost retched." the way in which the Negative polarity extorts the desired
In this wdv we mav clearly see the baited hook that awaits obedience--and thus soul capture-through maoipulation of the
within a context inclurivc iflife in;he higher densities, with respect to Love value belonging impartially to the psychic plane through whiih
the word of universal-indiminate love. The effort to oDerate such this largely takes plaa.
low according to a literal interpretation of the word, d ripe to be What then arc we to "do" with the counsel of the general
employed as a real booby trap for any form of consciousness having Teaching thus far delivered to this density,such as that of "bethine
as yet no pcrical gnup of the Whok, and so by virtue of standard enemy?" How are we to interpret such a precept or indeed under-
habits of identification chronically confounding the Whde and the stand the prinapk of Love altogether, when its application seem so
pan (as is the typical pattern of 3rd density mind). Unable to "sce" susceptible to a sticky, spider web ambush horn plams of reality
the Whole whiih nonetheless directly infuws and undersares the actually eager with invitation for so innocent an approach?
negative entities as their very medium, clinging to their foulness like
a sweet masking scent, the mind used to dealing only in terms of the Love Was Ail He Said
representative part is unusually open to making just that identity- At this point it's important to understand the way in which a
quation in which the incidental-on of a F ~ l dis presumed to spiritual truth is necessarily rcjkcred into zones of adaptation Prin-
contain that field, or is taken as one-to-one equivalent of the quality ciplesappliibk toone density o f ~ - a m ' l just outmoded
belonging to the field as a whole. Conversely, the nnrm of the and put aside upon 'stepping up" to another density. It may however
Love-value toward any king of such a field itokurd ow of the canrm k ncasary to identify the form in which such a principle is recast,
of llrr Wlrofe, tends-to the mind chmnically focused only on the according to requirements of a density nearer in direct spirit to the
complex relation of panto psycholopal part and nevCr on the Whole Truth which it express. In this sense, from a perspective that may
itself--to be but a yieldingor Mock submivion to the othcfs q u k - be characterized as "4th density", the appqniate d i i t i o n of the
menu as means of overcoming the rcsistana of "identitimion". Love-nature w h i i serves it most perfectly on all occaskmis that of
whole-heed Low of the "OneInjinite &tator".
To the Highest Bidder We may of course readily recognize this "higher truth"; it is
Should there remain a reluctance to grasp this point, or same none other than the Shema of Israel, which Jesus identified with !he
desire to axnerve the liberal-hummisticwoPasal to which SPiekr heart oithe Law. If then the fust spiritual precept to "Love God with
often turns (i.e.. to call such things truly ~ e b t i v or
e Evil is "simplis- all y w r heart" is a familiar reference of 3nf dendy consci-,
tic", you know) we need merely rrso* to the Rn material once mon, how is it that such a framework possesses it? And how does such a
wherein we find a passage-first published in 1981, don't forget- reference cccxist with corollarycommandments and enmmiums, i.e.
that anticipates Striekr's account by years and furnishes a precisely those such as 'love thine enemies", "love your neighbor as
framework before 111efact which not only fits the Striekrcntities' yourself", etc?
behaviors like a key a lock but gives us a needed perspective of The general rule, "Love God", reaches alike to every density,
evolrmlion. for it is in its essential character the spontaneous outpouring of the
On page 21 of Volume 111. The t o w OjOnr, the Ra entity Truth of Life apan from any formulation or customized tailoring.
characterizes a prototypical tactic of the Orion Crusaders, that of Thus the 3rd density fmly receives it, just as any other, regardless
"bidding"; "bidding" is described in such a way as to make it clear that the functional state of understanding. At the 3rd-stage level of egoic
Striekr's experience represents a concrete instance of the self-reference, such a rule incarnates through abstract conceptual
phenomenon, a factual case history with which to footnote Ra's distortions practically screening d i m cognit& of that Whole which
words. "Bidding" is a contest of will, serviceable in determining the is the real referent of the ruk. In order that such a rule be functionally
pecking order of the social-memory.complat of the Crusaders, and operative and l i d according to its spirit, a level of mind-body
in rendering the general run of conxiouJness enslaved through integrationand harmony is required that abuts the threshold integrity
intimidated compliance of its own f m wiU. It is a c o d of of a '4th density"; for such a (minimal) state of unitive coherence is
obedience, such as that issued without explanation against able to surpass identified aUegianee to the egodivisive verbal mind.
Striekr's lust for sweets. Its sole purpase is to bend the subiecl into thereby settling into c o n p e n a with the actual holism that informs
accepting the command, the actui~cdntenroftheorder beinglargely it as reflective expression of the Holism of the Creator.
beside the point (other than the d e g m of difficulty invohhd for the It is through such holistic grasp that the undivided Love of the
subject aocording to the strength of the tendency to be o v e r m e , a Creator is received as the constitutor of all centrist reference, so that
factor which redounds to the polarization of the "bidder"). We find such a corn@ selfcenter may in full awareness ascribe that
further that anyfailrvc to exact conformana in 'bidding%ults in Love-value to its true Giver, faithfully returning the Gift. Where-as
in the ordinary state of 3rddensity consciouyes-this cannot be spring irrepressibly forward, thus in a sense atmast re#g a
done diictly owing to the prohibitively low level of mind-body in- tremendous expenditure of energy and time toward bullying some
tegration and harmony,Compassion-incarnate adjusts the means to interpretation that klies the painfully obvious. The answer to this,
suit the available materiaL Thus a relatively indiuect instruction is also shows succinctly the real nature of the phenomenon with which
necessarily given, one which compassionately takes into considera- wc are dealing.
tion the aaual compass of comprehension practically available. The origin and informing character of these entities is,selfcvi-
The 'holism" of Self and Creator is functionallymasked at 3rd dently, that of the density corruponding to (what esotericism k n w
density Iml by the compulsive allegiance of the (potential) whole- as) the amol plane; and what esotericism knows of the astral plane
value of identity in one-toom e W m of idenfificntion with the clearly accounts for the nwpnnnq of their basic presentation,
preferential profile of the ego-inventory, thus the advia! to 'love which, as wc'w noted, calls for an overlay of psychic subterfuge. The
thine enemy" may be understood as very practical strategy meant to Law governing astral existence, requires the exteriorization of basic
mend the ID. beyond its contractile, lopsided selftndosure into a character in identifiable symbolic ten= All 'fonn" in itsastral origin
more wrifed nroluiun recognizably encompassing polar t e r n as wears its heart symbolically on its slcevc. It is for this mason that a
facets of a single Being. It's suited strictly to a level of functioning physical object of apparently neutral character such as a knife, when
which is not able to proceed directlyfrom a grasp of the Whole, but perceived astrally may d i m in dream-fashion into a recognizably
must attempt tooppwrh the Whole throughcomparative inference. malevoknt entity, a~suminga diiina persona in the manner of
Such a compromise adaptation of the primary rule, while it anthropomorphii objects in a S i Symphony.
may serve well enough at its levtl as a rehearsal, shows precisely why The Striekr entities give the overpowering impression of
it was a stopgap measure propssivcly leu viable in very p d c d malignancy, because that is their charaaer; and by extending their
as consciousaeu approaches the plane at which the Law essentially psychic, 4thdensity being into physically perceptible
operates through self-evident values range, t h y are merely spreading the
and d i m qualities. compulsive 'honesty" of the self-
When the general level is symbolizing Astral medium into
raixd at which the Love-teaching is twilight stnraurcs visible to yes of
received, the relative inefficiency of flesh. (Sum spontanum, symbolic
its previous level of reception be- exteriorhation functioningmuch like
comes apparent; the passibk pitfalls the Portrait of Dorian Gray, be-
and mental snares of that reflected, comes progmsively lea, reliable as
steppcddowr~viewpoint emerge like an indtx of 'moral valuation" the
serpents and spiders from the racks higher up the scale of densities we
when the open invitation to take on ascend; thus thc lumioous, angelic
the higher mponsibiiity of a mon white entity Striebere m n t e r s as a
profound level of existence at the kind of harbinger of death in Tiorrr-
same time discloses conditions /&muah does not qualify by a p
revealing the defect of k s c r adapta- prance as a positive manifestation.
tions, and making mortal the dangers It isof the Negative abagwith all the
of penisting to identify a whde and others; but it is a relatively rare
indivisible Value with fragmentary presence in the corpus of the
phases or preferred pans. Strickr account, sina it emanates
When (in adaptation to the from the Srh density of creative
more diict Influence orZiuth infus- Mind. Thus it represents in its a p
ing the higher densities) we learn the pearana the power to conceive and
whole-king of LOW as govern whole patterns of a a e r i h -
that spontaneous Love of the One tion. l b Ra
~ m a t e r b k d i i just
~njiniiCrcatar, the very &ncc of thisca~acityof the 5th density Neea-
L& tends to emanate impersonally m a global value, sprcadiig tive adepts to asume so fair a shapi; and in fact the l i k e l i i i i s
without effon or special address to all quarters where it's receivedor altogether greater that higherdensity entities either positivt or nega-
not accordingto the smcwill of cvny fonn. In thiswayits Presence tive who manifest in more 'pleasing" human tenns arc 5th &miry
doesn't become confused with the conditional presence of the myriad beings able to modulate the matter of visible appearance according
beings 'positive" a 'negative". Nor does its Presence become con- to inner conceptual requirements, rather than merely being able to
founded with the mechani of 'give and take", which are all relative regulate it from a point pact its primary patterning and projection).
identifications of the mind (lookagain at what befalls Strieber in hi
mental effons tospcrifi the love-value he felt lurking in the wont of Speaking With Forked Tongue
circumstances; notice the manner--common to the complex of 3rd-
stage psychology that accepts the teaching of Love according to its It is for this reason of direct symbolic d i r e that the
lights--in which he winds the skein of complicated love-strands Negative hierarchy often finds more e f f ~ e nmeans
t of dissimulation
through a conceptual miasma of 'owes" and 'oughts", bewildered by in the c-hg phenomenon; for here, there is no direct encounter
just those ordinary t e r n of psythlc bookkeeping). or condensation to "visible appearance*, but only the medium of the
wwd to be interpreted according to the recipient's lights. m e mode
The Portrait of Dorian's Grays of arprrssionis by that measure indirer and the Negative beings
- have
When amsidering the extraordinary deception woven about thmfapt a greater latitude of deception at their d3posa1.
the circumstances of such abductions as Striebds, wc may wonder Since the Negative is altogether, in one sense. an inverse
hav it is that the entities i m k d don't simply use their obvious reflectionof the Positive arTrue Creative L o m a paraiielconfigura-
powersof illusion to mask their awful character; for in all the captious tion bormwing all its components by simple rmrsal and distortion,
playaf-mirrors produced in relation to the principle of love, the it pmcccds by the method of imitation. It apes the of the
actual ferocity and venomous character of the Crusaders seems to pasitive, the more meticulously where it wishes to be mistaken al-
together for the positive so as to subvert the message for those who Wolfcn taken from W71ifleyStn'cbcr's book of the same name, the
tend to abide by it. Its typical strategy is to adhere so closely to the behavior of the predatory CrcaturCS is rationalized in pcckc?, rhc
letter of the positive as to be virtually indistinguishable to all but same way, i.e. that they are simply weeding out the rccrement of
initiated awareness, installing itself through the rhythmic lull of mankind thereby ultimately strengthening the total stock (the fact
entrainment so as to catch the "congregation" totally off guard when that one of the "good guys" who evensubscribcsto thts interpretation
it diverges slightly or greatly from pattern and so pulls a portion of and is in no way depicted as "defective", is nonethelss wantonly
the positive track along with it. massacred by the creatures, attests to Striekr's early powers of
The voia of the Negative is of course the more ingratiatingly schizophrenic dissociation, and gives us as well certain cause to look
imitative where the inclination of the recipient is already to the more deeply into the character of the Hihrion idea).
pitive; a negative receptacle requires no such precaution.
Even in the case of channeling, however, the character of the Too Many Plots Spoil the Cooke
Astral origin compels the insinuation of a sign, a kind of confessional When we read on that the Dark Brothen are allawed to 'test"
sienature
" no matter how subtle. Indeed this trait of the communica- a channel such as Cook (apparently alluding to an early channeling
tion is often accepted as a device of mockery suited to the character incident that must haw been a source of some distress) by making
of the source; it is played with as a defmnt means of assertingthe true an apcmcnf of ahange with the "White Brotherhood", each bar-
identity of the Signal, hiding it in plain symbolicsight in confonnana gaining some 'deal" or concession hwn the other, m a n squarely
with "astral" requirements. on Donald Trumo t e m t m and about as far awav from the facu of
This law which insistsevcn the physical fonn exhibit "some sign the polaritiesarid ;he densi;iaswecan passibly b;.(The 'Ililorion"
or characteristic which identifies" the 'true essenan, is indeed rationalization here is almost selfekkntk a mvtr story. meant to
remarked upon byonesuch channeledsource,the Hibrion Material. assuage Cooke more than anything else; f& initiated u&rstanding
Hihrion is an entity identified in both the 'Christ" materials of V. does recognize that a Negative source, having attached to a positive-
bsene and the Ra channeling, as a being of the positive Hierarchy. lydisposcd channel, will pusb the negative hypothesis into increasing-
Thus when we see boob on the shelf bearing the Hilarion moniker ly more overt cxpr&ns in order to determine how much the
we automatically respond with a beam of recognition. Hilorion's malleability of the subject will yield to directly negative propaganda.
"channel" (Maurice 0. Cooke) seems decisively predispoxd to the Apparently at one point Cooke must have been pushed too far, and
Christian stream of positive teaching, so we are not particularly this absurd scenariowas manufactured to explain the cordiallyadver-
surprised when the second half of Ihe Nature of Rraliry (which had sarial relations whereby the Pasitive and Negative players of the
up to then been a so-so account of "esoteric physics") breaks into a higher realms use the channeler's "inner insuument" like a Border-
frenzied description of the imminent apocalypse. Indeed, the book land parimutuel window).
ends with a graphic account of destruction and the final torment of W n we read further along how to identily the interference
souls as they are beatento their knees in extortion of a "repentance" of the "Dark Brotherhood", we presently realm we arc being dii-
and 'turning to God"which they'd apparently been reluctant to make abused of the S d i teaching (although of course that teaching isn't
even when melting into one another. specificallynamed due to the punctilious o b s c ~ ~ t i ofnthat 'Mi
This uomachchurning peroration was no accident, for in Law governing the operation of t h a e testing faam");IIilorion's
another Hilorion volume, the source prodaims that the structure of objection, revealingly enough, has to do with the "impropriety" of
the book had been delikratelydesigmd with the"Armageddonn 1 s t atplainingcwmic truths of simultaneityand probability to the anthill
so as to attract a particular type of "select" readership. focus of physical consciousness, which should be properly stuck with
the mca culpa considerations of kannic consequences; thus
My, What Big Eyes You Have- UHilarion"neatly pivots us buck into proper alignment with all those
With an eye, then, to the Ra account re the way in which the conventionsof cultural cc+itioning that chronically lock us in plaa
Orions have tnditiona~lysw~bt tosubvert the positivemessagesand as a mechanical unit of cause and effect, and away from the elastic
meanings of persons or events through emphasizing mmds of doom efficacy of thepuemf poised at the juncture of potential change.
and destruction, making such negativity a tend feanm of the Fmlly, Hilarion regales uswith theawrrana that all "galactic
communication thus deflecting attention into brooding byways of obscrven" within the 'region of Earlh" an neassarily friendly,
despair, we may turn to the Hi- account of the existena of contrary to the misleading teachings which would have us believe
Negative Beings (or the Dark Brotherhood, in the terms of this otherwise. "There is the suggestion that some are distinctly alien and
source). According to Ililorionb account, the Negative is allawed to evcn hastile, and that a n a i n of these beings kidnap humansand kill
exist because its minions act in the ultimately helpful and healthy animal life for experimental purposes". To disabuse us of this base-
olpacitvof predatorsthat onlvdccimate the'diseased" ranb,i.e. like less notion, YfIilarion" resorts to no less than the old canard about
&lf ati&ing the sick or &ngenitally weak specimens of kribou the inability of any cmlition in the galaxy to devclop interstellar
(IIihrioa9sanalogy). "?he wolf attacks these defective caribou, and technology until such time as it decisively overcomes all ncga~ive
would never think of wasting its energy trying to chase or bring down inclination (!). Thus any close encounten, sightings. landink or
healthy specimens. By weeding out the weaker ones, the wolf ensures interactions of a third or fourth kind are necessarily conducted only
that the healthy mn&ns stron? With this edifying version of Chris- with the kindliest and most positive of beings
tian Darwinism. &c are comforted into the notion of our conuitution-
al safety (considering the readership of such a work to be ipso fact0 Flying With Expired License
amongst the Elect, an a Y u n n a %en were already given in the It is precisely here that those most glaring of contradictions
gross-out d i i o n of Armageddon). indicative of the channeling phenomenon become inflamed, and
This encouraging information hardly tallies with the outright virtuallyfmethemsehes uponour notia...rightalong wit ha viriually
attack which the Orions launch upon the Ra channelers in the very stlfdii1osinp. hwothcsis that acrounts for them. For the Rn material
midst of their activity (see books 11,111and IV,Thekrwof One);nor spccificafly && that Confedention souras (with very few a c c p
does it square well with what initiated knowledge otherwise knows tions) refrain from any but longdiiancc exposures, generally only in
about the effort of the Negative to attack, d i e d i t or physically order to mend the range of mankind's inquiry toward renewed
eliminn~ct h a who~ a n qrirc pifive& polarized and in no way consideration of the Unknown, and almost never effect that kind of
"defective" in the arrogant sense that the IIilarion material propasu. encounter known as 'landing". Landing has become the almost
It is also more than pasingly interesting to note that in the film exclusive resort of the Orions, the Negative Beings. Thus, virtually all
'clase enmunten", reports of abduction e t c are of the manifestly that such media any their infectious messages Everyone reading
negative type. Despite his composed rationalizations, Striekr's ' this review section should take to heart the real leson contained in
emotional declarations continue to ring in our ears; and the material the incident reported by Strieber in Thmjbmariorr, LC. that of the
gathered into such sources as those of Budd Hopkins, artainly have psychiatrist who upon seeing the c o w of the book felt compcued
little of the aura of "good will" about them. without hawing itscontents to purchase it, the next day beinggreatly
Then just what could this 'counsel" of the IIilnrion material surprised to hear a number ofparrem report dreams of UFO abduc-
pasibly mean? It seems only too evident from this as well as other tions for the very first time. It is =ling that the covers of both
"revelationsn of the teaching. that the UHilnrionnsource conforms Strieber's booksdepict the alien countenance of his abductor; for in
to the methodology of the Crusaders asdisclosed in the Rn Mnterinl, Communion we karn that the entity actuallymodcled for Strieber at
i.e. that of dose adherence to the style, thought and content of the interior space ofhii "third eyc",spccifyhg that it m t e d the artist
p i t i v e sourcesso as to sneak in "undercover" as it wen, and at the who would transcribe the d&pti& to@ 5 ngh.
point of greatest vulnerability-when the subject isset at hisease and To initiated understanding thisclearlyshw that the accurate-
off guard--pour the venom of disinfonnation in the audim channeL ly-rendered image was to be used as a kindof talisman, or a material
(We should be interested to know that 'fake teachers" can be basis for the manifestation of that force-influence to which it cor-
identified by their appearance, whether they're too fat or too thin, responded.
whether they look as if they can be trusted 8n-h yes, whether Strieber gives vent once u twia in Tmwfonnation to the
they've " m r been hounded through the courts, or banned from any sentiment that, if he really thought the creatures with which he was
countyn--an interesting criterion, amsidering such an astensibly dealing were negative or bannful be could not in all conscience
'Qlristian" source. Perhapa the governmental perseartion of true expose pcopk to what was clearly a powerful and unpredictably
Teachers is a phenomenon confined to the old Roman part.) commanding influence. He should have held on to that thought. He
Taking all this together, we may now identify the very em- should haw made every e m to penetrate tbe shallow rationah-
phasited oratory of the H i e n material on page 26 of Dork Rob- lion by which he "forgives himself" for his reallkd participation, in
lhwk B m h m "SpcdftcaUy, by asserting that one should love one's youth, as the apparent ringleader of the 'children's circle" whose job
enemies, Christ presented the single mast effective way to overcome it apparently was to lure acquaint- out into the haunted wmds
the temotations of Earth life and to confound the whis~erinerof the of nigh1 where presently, amidst the honified shrieks of many, they
ark ~ktherhood."~nterestin~ that of all the possible ;ea&ogsand would find themselves face to face with something unspeakable.. .
enlighteningwordsof the Christ, this materialshould goout of its way In addition to Striebefs books, there is a motion p l a u n of
to emphasize the one expression which is mast subject, in such a G m m m h soon to be released, as m U as a spate of other movies
context, to the diionions of 3rd density thinking patterns. For of all already primed for the annpetitim that purpat to depia true-lifc
the possible teachings that might effectively have ken drawn upon, alien encounters. 'Lhese should not be considmd o r d i i modes of
the one which lends itself most readily to the snarcs of the Negative entertainment Thy must be undentood as vehicles, very potent
p o a c h is precisely thin precept, presumed by a mind-body complex types of imagistic 'talisman" supplyingthe material basis for a mass
insuffidently unified in congruence with the consciousaxis to make manifestation of unpnccdmted character. We need to listen more
the nmssary 4thdensity transferena from the pydmiogid sttuc- closcly than ever n&, to a channeled source that dates back to 1957;
turn where &ch impera;i come to lodge, to d k c t alignment with for in l%eSumtoflheAndeswe finda corroborationof the Ra source
the unitive Ground of Being from which lavt streams naturally- in all which predates that communication by many yeas, in which it is
directionswithout entrapping concern for 'friend ck foe". specified by name that we are under invaJionby the Orion Empire.
It is neccssory to understand this forwhat it is, and not treat it
I'm Sorry.,Do You Have Any Credit Cards? as a removed spectator witnessing another phenomenon of mass
Fmlly, there was the case of a student of the initiated tcacbing e a t m m e n t . Everyone is W,and there are children present.
who, finding the cow signature on the Hilorion bcmks quite intrigu- As was indicated, in last month's review titled Movie d h a m ; llre
ing byvirtue of its consistent entwining of the heels of the letters 'L" Qabahh ofSm Wiars,motion pictures have a profound corwpon-
aid 'A", decided to apply a ~ a b a l ohumbers
a whereby, load-be- dena with and influence upan the dream--, owing to the
hold he determined that the deliberately emphasized letters clearly structure of the medium 'Ibat harbinger of the 'Freddie" films, in
spelt 'IA" which in Hebrew means 'nothing" or "zeron.Sia Zcro w h i i there arises an incursion into waking amsciousncss of the
is alphabetically an "On,his eyes automaticallytransposed that letter tenible content of dream and nightmare such that theyarc *ntly
over the "LA" on the cover signature and, much to his amazement, confounded and inextricably entwined, is pohed to take p b a "in
one of those clever "astral" disdosurcs sprang folward, of the type reality" the same as it was prefigured on f i h In the specifc instance
that s h w the natural compulsion of the medium to rrveal its of tbe Striekr books it is very advisableto neither buy nor read them.
character symbolically (as well as the pcnmse delight taken by the and this isnot the arprrssion of some "ansonhip of content". There
Negative in coding its identity in plain sight): HI ONON. (Some of issomethingelse going on altogether, something for whm i the public,
the book covers indeed ~ l y s e p t the e letters H and I from the in its wildest dreams, isscarcely pnparrd.It is a W M e that the new
rest, which are arranged-to touch one another so as to group the films such as Striekr's dealing with UFO abduction etc. be given a
"LARION" with its entwined L and A in om bundle). Indeed the wide berth, and artainly children should be kept away from them.
contents of "Dnrk Robesn etc. (a book, remember, &tt the nega- T h y are not just "spooky" movies,good for Halloween-type thrills.
tive beings) pointed to its own clue in declaring that even all physic;ll This is not an easy month for your reviewer. The decision to
things bore the symbolicsignature of their particular source. advance thin discussionand extend such difficult, goblin-ridden coun-
sel& not betnmade lightly. But the truthshouldat least be put out,
This Is Not the Behavior out on the bookstall floor or streetmmer along with every other
Of an Ordinary Kitchen Appliance conaivable kind of information in the endless bid for the ephemeral
It is necessary to note that the growing public presence of attention of this place. What people choose to do with it, is a whole
"negative" literature (i.e. booksovertly or unknowingly inspired from other column.
spiritually-negative sources) is not just the mild circumstance of a But do it we must, and did This is the ghastbuuers boys; your
'democratic distribution" of d i m information. The presmce of a M r is Mown and your time's at hand
such material is not innocuous; nor is its active component confined ET., go bome.
to the personal imbibition of content. It is not in the cootents nlonc
Ra Material (collected works) .......................++++* PART THREE
Seth Material (collected works) ........................... **++
Communwn and Tmnsformnrion............ Z
Will, Being and Well-Being
0 s is an instance in which a Z recipient actually exhibits
emotional and intellectual power, and even occasionalsparks of real
Gong Fu. Strieber is an excellent writer, but thew books have the In Parts I and 11of CIuuvleling. UFOsAnd The Positiw/Ncga-
beauty of the molecular structure making up the substance ofstrych- rive R e a h Beyond nlis WorM, we discovered through such prof-
nine.) fered channeling sources as the Ra material that "graduation"
beyond this threshold 3rddensity existence holds ambivalent implica-
Hilnrion Material (collected works) .....................Z tion, of a disconarting type, for many who'd assumed that only the
Don't miss Part T h m of Channeling UFOs and rile Posi- "positive" alignment pmsejsed a p u r c k on integration adequate
tiveINegatita R e a h Bcyond 771bWorld in our November issue. to make the advance in required spiritual coherence. & it turns out,
(Oh, yeah, did you hear the one about the UFO that crashed in New
negative orientation of a virtually exclusive, self-senring type is
Mexico in '47 tbat tbe military recovered--) capilble of commanding a coherence and sufficient systemic integra-
lion to "make the grade" as wen; as far as the necmary techniil
degree of mind-body organization and thmhold intensity (or pur-
posive unity) is concerned, the negative polarization can exhibit a
Rating system for all book, " ~ t a b i i t y equivalent
" to that of the Wtive.
This is where the comparison ends, of c o u r s e , b beyond this
film, tape and video reviews: admixed 3rd density plane (where such decisive polariation is still
k i n g determined) th; astrally inclusive, biopsychic fields of an overt
void-nature obediently factor out into discrete realms Of qualitative
***** organization spun resCSpectively about the poles of either positive or
Has Gong Fu; has technical and negative orientation. In this way the km, of that level is exhibited
intellectual/emotional power. whereby correlated properties formally c o m b i i %to the unific
presentation--or cohesive arteriorhation-of the Symbolic value
**** functioning as common d~ominalor.Tbus idmitks, on the ag-
Has Gong Fu; has a measure of both technical gregate, c&mpose worlds of a basically astral character, and even th;
and intellectual/emotional power. "materializing" property of the informing, focalcoordinate lockin
whereby that group psyche incarnates exists structurally as a system
*** of mutually reinforcing parallelisms, of a uniform or consistent grain,
as distinguished from the earth/physical structures integrated
May or may not have Gong Fu; has a measure of through magneticopposites.
technical and intellectuaVemotiona1 power. 'Ihe idea that negativity or "evil" orientation not only survives
(Since Gong Fu is the principle that sets a this plane of blindered ignorance but is capable of holding its own and
work on fire, intensifies it to the degree of boil- advancing througb the higher s p h m s of more overtly spiritualized
ing, then a 3 or 3 1/2 that has Gong Fu posses- substance, is not only a distressing notion to many; it is difficult for
some to acrrpt on philmophical grounds due to the conventional
ses It to the extent that the work, at least in understanding that "negativity" is inherently s e l f d i i and there-
part, exhibits first signs of real kindling; it fore ultimately dirhcgmn'w, so that the requisite unity consistent
strikes a genuine spark of combustion, at least with Being through the higher plants is by nature kyond its grasp.
in places. If a 3 has no real Gong Fu, it must Andof course this'understandiing" holds, in an ultimate sense;
still have a good degree of technical, intellec- as the Ra m a l d explains, spiritual advana through the Negative
Hierarchy reaches the pons asinorum at the mid-point of the 6th
tuaUemotiona1 power.) densiry, the cutting-off h c e just before consdousness merges into
** unity with the so-called Oversoul or Higher Self. Anywhere prior to
that point the inherent defiaencywith respect to negative orientation
Has no Gong Fu; may have technical o r intellec- may have become apparent to the ongoing focus of coosciousms
tuaUemotiona1 magnitude. assaying an 'ascent" by that mode; the upper limit of friction,diion
andihis inonition (or-unasimila~een&&) may have k e n grasped
* as the inbuilt barrier to perfect resolution with the Whole in terms of
Has no Gong Fu; has little, though possibly some, the Negative tactic
technical or intellectual/emotional magnitude. 6ut in any case such recognition is inescapable at the threshold
of m i d a h density, where the necessary magnitude of W i as it
z is made impartially available disclose. the structural impasse auto-
May have any of the above, including (sometimes matically defining the upper limit of compatibility between the
"unity" of negative orientation secreted around the false granule of
but not often) Gong Fu, but still deserves to the illusory ego-self, and the uncompromising Unity of Absolute to
have the Marx of Zeppo swiftly etched across which that imitative parallelism aspires.
the designer label of the smug-fitting back It's imponant to nMe however that such inescapable conccs-
pocket. sion, rnrrcnvnlly i m p M at the d e g m of conscious intensity cor-
responding to "middth", indeed o a r s at a relatively 'late" or
advanced poinl. T h s indicates that the stress of riIrimate incom-
patibility is not a sufficiently imposing factor through any of the
previous stages as to comprise an Imperative. There's no obligution .
to confront its ~romsitionuntil the brink of O\ienoul consciousness
is met. Thus the h o l e hierarchy of spiritual strata preceding thii
point, is capable of king strewn with the litter of relative negative
"waste" without obligation on the pan of that poisonous processing
to d i k e . The Great Orion Gang
When we turn, puzzled, to ask how this may be, we need look
no funher than our own 3rd density backyard. Here recent research (GOG)
has found,on behalf of the general Novwck-consciousness, a mcdi-
cal evidence not only tending to substantiate aspects of the perennial
~ e a c h i regardingthe
n~ relation of mind and body, but ripe 4 t h other
implication. Scientific investigation into the "mental" influence on
health now documents that thase athibiting strong positive comla-
tion with values of will. confidence and self-motivation tend to dis~lav
pmponionately strengthened immunological response. Just as iiha;
been establied for some time that protracted stress of an internal-
ized type (manifesting as "anxiety") as well as prolonged periods of
grief, depression and boredom predictably comlate with depressed.
immunologicalfunction, so converselyit's k e n found that the highly
purposive, selfconfident psyche literally tends to amplify the avail-
able leukocytes and in general enjoys a m m resilient mind-body
vehicle-and this independenf of whether the personality is altruisti-
cally oriented, a self-giving soul of beneficent motivation or on the
contrary a narcissiistic and manipulative power-bmker out in full-
f0rtc K W ~ U 10self!
Thin should be very instructive, for thost who can read the
implication. From this interesting data, m can locate the mechanirm
behind the otherwise perplexing intelligence that kings of a com-
mitted, threshold d e g m of inner unification whether positively or
negatively oriented may qually advance to the higher ground, where
their respective intentiom are granted more potent subslance with Sought by Law Enforcement Officials in all
which toexpcriment. known Galaxies. On 6 counts of violating the
The m m o n key of such advance is not the chamcter of the Man Act; 66 counts of infringement of Civil
motivation per se; it is not a mom1jiufgmnf that draws the S i . at
any threshold gate of props. m e common key is identifiable here Liberties; 333 counts of Psychic Burglary and
as will, and its closely eonelated value confidence. Aggravated Mayhem. The Sloeeyed Vixen in
WU is medically associated with the cerebrospinal system, the center is their reported leader. If you see
knownas the VdirionaluriJ;voluntary behaviors and consdousdeter- these notorious cosmic banditos, do not at-
minations are connected to lobes and amits of this central nervous tempt to subdue as they are armed and
netwwk. A highly integrated and purpmiK will would in effm %ke
command" of the whole being much more thoroughly, as that chan- ...
dangerous Call FBI (Free Being Intelligence)
nel through which consciousness acts and with which it's aligned for immediate Protection.
comprisesthe locus of organization for the total mind-body complex
Thmugh v o l i t i i l unity all instruments, facullits and functions of of ~ p o n d c n c withe inherent Unity impartially authorizes the
the being @rocmed by autonomic currents of the subconsdous behavior of wbconsdws response-patterns in bithful transcription
systems associated with the extended line, or frontal axis, flowering of the character of the command.
with its glandular "points" from the central column) tend to be In thii framework there are really only rvo lrinds of mental
harmonbed, set to mutually cooperative smricc in a mart efficient contents and feelings with which the value of identity can become
manner than is characteristicof the average of those same pnxxses imrdved, LC. those which rcfkct and enforce the reality of the voli-
taking their 'annmands" h m rlfcont~dictrnyprokra& of men- tional directive of the mind-body whole, or those which belie it. In
tal quandary or mutuallyconfliaing intents, indicativeof the ordinary either case the subconscious systems proccss the mind-body pattern
3rd stage psyche adrift in the chopof indirection. and its em field in conformance to the internal implication of the
It's axiomatic that those functioning thmugh a senre of "con- identity-content. 'Thus it's mver a matter of whether there exists
trol", whether control over some precious little a m of their private some impanial gauge of being from which a "tealbti aYcssment
world or apparent control over the fate of natiom, infuse a kind of can be made regarding the actual proportion of our 'control" or
concord through all the coordinate proa~sesof the mind-body 'helplessnus* as subjective centers of the universe, or objective bits
whole; such agreement of intent amongst contributingaspecu of the of flotsamin the buffeting cosmic tides; there is only the impct whiih
king promotes a high harmonization of pan lo wbcoosciws pan such estimates, infused with the committed force of identity and
expediting the emdent issue of every order. W t i o n a l subscription", may make in their rrspective values on the
Converselv. those with a comparative sense of helplmnm, of n e m systems that encode their implications in the cells and
lacking control &the capacity for direction and wbo thirefm
cumb more readily to despair, equally "program" the subconscious
sue- bibchemical functions of the mind-bodyvthiie.
S i there is only one orientation (between these two posJibk
processesthrough volition& c u ~ n t s a n d i n l c n there
q is no escaping positions) which conformably refkcts the turirive mu/# of the very
the order of inflience which always, in will-positive manner, pr~&e& proass of which it's a function, there is only om orientation which
from the implicit 'command" contained in the aggregate of intimate- can effcakly serve to advance the k i n g into deeper amgruencc
ly-held conaptsand feelings,of which the relativecongruenceor lack with the ground of that truth; for the oppaslte orientatlondcnies the
validity of its function in the very p r o a s of implementing it (as an encounten with the specter of negativity are purely self-created.
inevitability of the structural correlation between the mind-body Ignore the fact that the exception of m n one all-but-mgligibk
system and Whole-conscious Being) thereby ~ r n d m i ! i n gthe inner percentage point changes the picturedramaticallyfrom thewhoksale
instrument of its potential self-focus and adjustive resolution. Ergo, authorship otherwise espousebignore all that but for the 1-
either positively.orientedornegativelyaiented kings of a sufficient, issue as to how it is that Voices speak to us from an apparently
threshold value of volitional unity are candidate for advance to the Homogenous Beyond, in tones of supreme confidence allowing no
"4th stag" in the developmentalsaga of consciousness As far as the room for reservation and still manage to contradict each other as
practical mechanics are conarned, it's equally pasible to create a flatly as spokesmen of competing political parties? How is it, we may
strong integral system in orientation about the axis of an insight well ask, that one Voice lulb us with the glamor of a world in which
inspired by the spiritual Onencs of being, or around the illusory core all "evil" is reduced toa subjective ignorance that can't withstand the
of a persistent self-hypothesis to which the m d i t of Onenev is all-absorptive Good composing the inner planes; and another is
extended. equally sanguine that the Negative comprises a whole Ontological
This brings us, in turn, face to face once more with a problem Orientation, a basically~dintcrprctation of Being adsting inde-
we'd commonly assumed was surpascd once we'd c r a s ~ dto the pendent of the projection-screens of our privately enveloping auric
comparatively "foolproof" ground of channeling. wall,vouchsafed validity asa polarized univme of implicationextend-
ing a particularhypothesis of "unity" to its logical extreme?
Crossing the Channel And how may we, in our apparently inferior position, posibly
Channeling, after all, seemed to pcsscss a timely-inbuilt sol- discriminate between the two?
vent to a difficulty just recently experienced, LC. the troubles en- The usual new-age aft!atus to the effect that both may k
countered when in our dawning ecumenicalism we'd presumed the "quallyvalid in their ownspace", just doesn't sit well, It's for thiswry
Eastern attitude and opened oursctwJ to the possibility of embodied reason that we turn again to the Ra mamid, as per our method of
enlightenment (therefore necessarily exemplified in k m e current, last month in w h i i we "play by Quetnsbeny rules" and consult the
incarnate beinn Who could act as the exhibition and dcmonstrabk i n t d mM&meat its highest available source in order to find some
forerunner of-our own imminent awakening). What was rapidly resolving principle.
discovered, (as a genuine or apparent d i o s u r e in any particular In this case, it's mcmary to note the distinction w h i i Rn
instance) was that whoever dccfured himself enlightened was not by makes between the orders of q~~celritne and of rimcJspe (all the
the sheer magnitude of such announcement necevarily or automat- densities from RagsPerspective downward are organized in these
ically enlightened. compkmentafy ways). Aithwgh the Ra rrrmaiol d-m't detail the
This of course led to c o r m s k distrust regarding the possible, significanceof these organizatioas beyondcertain preliminary points,
lurking presence of ego behind any agent occupying the same they are cited as categories of amideratian because of what they
(notoriously ego-riddled) plane as ourself. ncccssarily imply.
Embodied, walking-talking Enlightenment was a novelty
devoutly to be wished by those whose cultural instruction confined Through the Looking Glass:
the benefiu of spirituality to an afterlife, and to one historical per- The TimelSpace of Our Spaflime
sonage posessing exclusive proprietary rights to the genre; but the We may understand "spacehime", first of all, in the tenns
barrier to locating the living address of such a sublime state of we're familiar with We occupy the system of our space/time as a
consciousncv seemed proportionately insurmountable, since the vehicle, (or axial, mind-body locus)through which the coordiites of
very factor making it so attractive (i.e. the passibility such a Freedom that system mccsarily arrange all featum according to the require-
could arise precisely in the heart of ego-territory) was also the factor menu of siam.md@. We are kuted, vehicularly, at and ar a
making its identification lhmrrgh that agency and in that milieu particularjuncture of time andspaa,so that t h e ~ l u a o"near"
f and
terminally ambiguous. 'far" acquire functional importance. In this amten, our limitations
It's for this reason that the phenomenon of channeling, young are our opportunities; what is filtered through the bottleneck of
and marginal in the 7Ck heyday of Esalen, human-potentials, est and spacc/time becomesthe focwofwr conccrn,and the material of our
Dmne Light Mission inevitably flowered as that hrst hope waned. resourcefulnessin operating through finitizingfaculties. Because our
The prasptct of channeling seemed suddenly made to order. condition is one of centrist peqxctive and therefore discriminative
If the Catch-22 of locating Enlightenment-incarnatein "3rd density" m'gnrion, the order of spicehime comprises the context in which
hinged on the common presence of ego belonging to so low a plane progress is passible through situational doing. We learn by acting
(permitting sheer chicanery to cloud perception) then the obvious through defining conditions, from which an order of consequence
answer was to inquire after that Enlightened status only through develops whereby to gauge allA d j u n m .
planes or states of being intrinsically ego fnc,and thus patently w e may have heard that at death, the limits of the localized
safe-by definition-from the subterfuge of self-sewing. The bodydissolve,and we move through a lighter material into conjunc-
presumption underlying this, of course, took background from our tion with a display of space and time that's comparatively plastic. It's
very cultural conditioning through which we'd long learned to make here that, in the unity of a presiding Light, we may review all the
the conventional equation between "spiritual" existence and innate features belonging to our personal past without regard for the usual
beneficence. Naturally we were more than delighted when (ignoring measure of sequence, or apportionment of priorities. Everything
our own new, highly-touted occult discovery re "like attracting like") appears equally available, in the manner of a deck of cards fanned
we began apparently receiving 'objective" comboration of this out in panoramic d i p b y or as simultaneous images shining in a
equation from our contacts with the Other Side. reflective flotilla of bubbles. Here there is no "rmednes" at an
For yes indeed, Seth Spoke and many more followed suit to enclosing, defining spacehime juncture similar to that wh~chwas
the effect that "negativity" is a subjective mispemption, brought experienced in physical life. The "vehicle" (or axial locus) of the
about by the masking opacities of our 3rd density camouflage world mind-body being which may be identified as operating in the new
and therefore-like a deepsea fish--unable to survive the transition state, gives no impression of imploding on a contained self-sense but
tothe "upper atmapheres". Ignore for a moment that Seth actually rather has more the feeling of an acceleration constantly surpassing
qualified what was othcnvisc a very emphatic and consistent teaching itself, expanding through Space of stany n e m c l u s t m in a range
about the formative p w c r of thought, in a minute passage from embracing thc soul-remd to the finest pan of the life last r i d . This
Unknown Rrolify in which he proclaimed that "90% of the time", is the complementary frcldof timelspacc belonging to the innerplanes
of 3rd density existence. The ticks of time are indeed spnhdly ex- effect nucleates thesubtle, radiant-psychicethers refkctingthe given
hibited, in a kind of interior hallof-records where a life-review may (operative) Typologies so that mind and idea seem to occupy a
be conducted and all the 'masked" elements unveiled for a kind of position of faint interiority with respect 10 the fued 'physical" en-
global consideration. velope of structural consistency and inertial repetition, into which
This is an i n r d in the pattern of soul-progression, usually those psychic coordinates are aligned.
conducted as a kind of protracted sleep-anddrearnstate wherein In the condition of 4th density, Such incarnative focal lockin
acperiena may be assimilated, distilled, and the various steps of formulates a functional Specification of time and place in the same
"dissociation" rehearsed whereby the heart is ferried-0~ the im- general manner, producing a kind of "materializationwof the Astral
placable subconsciouscunmt-through the underworld ordeal of a field into a similar, situational centrism. There exists the same type
purify~ngdk-identification from cvcry attachment and lingering fm- of vehicular contingency which makes 'trawl" in the Astral 4th
tion of form-summing in the Amenta of the psyche's recuperative density f ~ l dof
s space/time a matter of actual s p a 'ships" (albeit of
rest what must eventually take place as a y o l i t i d wark of conscious the biomechanical type described in last month's issue, consistent
~ u u i e r s t d in
g the context of spacehime limit. with the psychic level at which material is generally organized in such
This timclspoce framework of the inner planes is inferentially a framewopk); whereas we are familiar, if only by hearsay, with the
sealed up, selftnclaKd for purposes of such souleamination; for fiotational mode of conveyance wholly fkeof any mcchanical-
here the most important determinationsmust be made as towhat the vehicular requirement in the context of Astral or innerglane, 3rd
soullr~rwithin it, and this proassnecessarily goes on without distur- density rimebpace frameworks. This aaMlnu for the apparent dii
bance. , . nepancy, LC. the 'difference between what we hear in terms of the
Such a state is a kind of clearinghouse for the assignation of "Roberr Monroenstyle of inner-plane astral travel conduaed strictly
souls. each accordingto the quality dii?led in the process of 'becom- in the Soul-vehicle, and those repons of astral-We entities anainly
ing" the sum-total of what, vicwed in the com~lementawspacehime functioning from the plane of a 'psychic^ milieu that nonetheless
frame, is spread out pie&meal as, a sequentially shift& pattern require physical-mechanical vehicles of some type to comq them
From this timehpace antechamber, where the soul aligns p r o p s - from place to place: the non-mechanical flights of astral transport
sively with the non-local character of the compositional coordinates through unencumbered agency of the Soul-vehicle in general belong
subtendig all 'local" clusters bf physical adstena, the distillate of to orders of timelspce, which have a specific and very different
psychic f& comprising the latent penonalitynpnsion may be function from spacehime in uny given d e t y ; conversely, thase
transferred to the s ~ e l t b n framework
e mast consistent with its net modesof travel through astral, astral-ethericor etheric-physical fields
value; t h a e worlds of spacehime organization may indeed. beyond manifestly requiring a kind of mechanical or 'hardware" vehicle,
the admked education of 3rd density, polarize to the emphatically belong to W i m e orders of organization.
p i t i v e or decisively negative. Eithir type of vehicle. proceeding from spacehime or
The complementary timekpace frameworks of the 'inner timwkpu framcumks, may intrude upon famihat speehimc +-
planes" of each succccdiig density, function very much on the same cal reality.
principle of review, analysis, attunrment, adjustment according to In the higher densities the frameworks of spacehime and
sum-volitionalinclination, and further assignment ofspcehrime fields timehpace an equally disnrte, since they save separate purpases;
in which the relative "localhation" of vehiculamcd consciousness yet the mom translucent modes of organization belonging to those
furnishesconditionsof real, developmentalfurtherance and learning. densities a m a permeability which makes the fields and informing
The 'division" between the contractile, self-enfolded patterns of timehpace more readily acccsdbk to the vehicularized
spoceItrimc vehicle and its expansive (self-surpassing) timclspoce 'localism" of incarnative, spacehime agency.
counterpart seems much more d i d and impemcable in the 3rd Thus to 4th density "embodied" entities, the whole history of
density *framework owing to the general saking-dcvia of that a li-system is ahashieally availabk though in praaical tmns
realm. in which the interior order of things is specifically rotated at tby're functioning at a particular noss-Jeaion in the span of that
mutually filtering angles to the physical field of exprrsion.It's forthis history. Siilariy, in 5th density the totality of cosmic pattems com-
reason that there's no direct knowledge of or recognition re an prising the infrastructurr of all times and places is theoretically
'afterlife", for the mast part, at the 3rd stage icvcl of consciotsnaq availabk, cvcn though the 'incarnative" pattern of the particular
ail such matters king contined to speculation, rumor and culturally s p a M i e agent functions from the pmpectiveof a situational locus
modified myth. In the higher densities the 'division" k t m e n the immcdiitely mponsk to cmoin worlds, space/tirnc frames and
given spacehime and timelspace organizations at each kvel is kss patterns.
w e r e ; there is aprnncabiliry'ktwccn the two orders in the higher In cvcry case, the juncture of 'meeting" k t M e n the Pasitive
densities, greater or lesser depending on the refinement of the den- and Negative realm and/or the Pasitive and Negative Beings is
sity. generallyreserved forthespcehimc frameworksof any given density,
Each higher density has a spnceltime framework wherein the since the timehpace frames (serving amnher function) are hrgcly
soul 'contraa&llyn alig&witha n& of embodyingvehicles, through self-scaled as the souls 'isolation-tank", where it may take stock--as
which the comuound focal mttems of spccific level-identification it were-of the potential mows of further piogrm through its
produce an in&rnating eversh~of the c u k n u organizing the locus chasm polarity.
of aassaurelation and perceptual synthesis This 'invagination" of This accounts for some of the channeled information we
the participatingplanes of the &rrent-field (through ideofonn lockii receive to the effect that the Negative is jusf a chimera, a 'projection
of the focalcoordinate line) faes the Jtreams of multidimensional, of our own subconscious fears and primal doubts", etc.; the other
patterning geometries intoastabilhingstructural hold,conccntnting sources of such information luc Negative propaganda, proceeding
a waaical station of soacehime 'points" of coherent comcrgcna - so from the Negative planes themselves
as' to formulate a reaipsition of ;rue situationality.
The process is much the same throughout the densities. The "Axial" Alliance: The Return of Tokyo Rose
extreme invagination or turning-inside-out that comprises the physi- As to the latter,.we refer you to the dirussion of the m l l e d
cal 3rddensity frame of locus, is represented in familiarterms by the Hihrion material of Mruuin B. b& in last month's issue. In this
polarized loc& of the kmddini, ihe enerrnails of which seein to particular case the misleading counsel did not proclilim upon the
settle the multidimensionalturns or Moebius twistsof the composing 'unreality" of the Negative; instead, it took an alternative tack by
current-fields in inverse order of desant around each other;lhii recounting the ancient moment of our cokaive 'fall" into material
0 5 08
consciousnessas a temptation by negative inner-plane powers which , firma sense of proprietary righu
subsequently, so the tale goes, imparted a spmk of that negativity to ~t this point we hear the common plaint: what about the
the "veiled" soul along with the counterpart spark of goodness "goodness" of the medium? Doesn't the "right intention" and p i -
furnished from the angelic side. Ths tale subtly installsa vcry d e a p tive expectation of the c t m e l e r tend to ensure the benign intent of
live and subvcrsivc notion; for if there is an increment of truth in the the Received Signal? Doesn't the occult proposition pertaining to the
time/space asseverations counseling to law of the psychic plane wherein "like
the effect that we "create our own attracts like", serve a s sufficient
reality" (and that as a consequence safeguard so that we may ruume our
negativity is but a phantasm of our own basic confidena in the integrity of the
mental selfatimtes), such truth m y Higher Ground granted thisone proviso
be located in the correspond'ingimplica- of appropriate alignment?
tion that any term of "negativityn is, Overlooking for now that this still
necessarily, wholly self-appropriated. . leaves us with the pedtio prlncipii of
This is precisely the case, and is the pan having to aulw just the egoic
of such timelspaa counsel which has a equanimity on the part of the channeler
legitimate purchase on the "psychic that's as problematic as the question of
facts" of our experiential self-patterning. any 'guru's" ego, and that in fact has yet
And it is exactly the personal to be proved.wcJhwld go to the antral
responsibility, the ultimate soul-account- consideration in the whok question of
ability contained in this interpretation which the uIIilarion" counsel any invited intercourse between planes.
slyly subverts, through the tactic of conaptuallyreifig the influence
of negativity making it in effect a "thing" which is lodged within, an The “Good" 01' Boys
alien presence interiorly importuning over-and-against the volitional Channeling is worted to in the first pba in order to obtain
consciousnev Of the soul in which it ostensibly inheres (rather than what one manifestly doesn't have; and despite tangential issues, this
a potenfinl, approached in the freedom of the determining psyche means most critically artain V d u r of Being. Indeed, the devia of
rquiring the active appropriation-and introjection--of the con- "meditationn From which those values are traditionally thought to
sciousness in question in order to posses any penonal force at all). proceed, b e m e s the agency of acquiring i n f m ' o n more cdor-
In this way we can see that Negativity is not a phantasm of fully descriptive of those values, in the m t m of channeling.
pemnal fear and trepidatious projection which "doesn't actually opcmiw plane From which all of this takes plaa, isas a consequence
exist" (an understandable if obliquely skewed counsel from the self- maintainedat the ordinary low level of mind-body integration char-
sealed planes of timebpaa); but rather, we can accept it as a p e n - acteristic of 3rd density wmioums as a whole. Indeed, the chan-
rid, as r e a l - i i that sense-as any "goodneu" or "positivity" neler takes pride in the preservation of just that humble
(whether as aligned with the ultimate charaaer of things or not) and "ordinariness",displacing aU claim to the attraordiinary upon the
constituting a Philosophical proposition that springs internally from received Source. In thin way, we're supposed to take comfon in the
artain considerationsof the general terms of atistena. It is not an fact that the channeler lays claim to no pauurrrl merit in terms of
"independent entity" or alien prcsena that, like an ensouled parasite. Tra~FormativeRealization; he's not purporting to be the s o u m of
whisperssubvcrJivclyfrom within (implyinga pasivc,dependent and such fascination but only the indifferent medium, thereby retaining
thus ultimately estranged and helpless relation to it), but a general his warmly assuring identity in ingratiating commonality with us.
Propmition rcqrtiring an mtcrpctiw orientafion (always uldmately Thn shouldn't be a matter of such congratulatory assurance.
made through the inherent freedom of the determiningvoid-psyche The implicit confession is that the channeler, no matter how personal-
of the soul). ly oriented to the "good" he may be (and &NCT that may be in hi
Two tricks of the dedicatedly Negative arc (1) to appropriate terms) is functionally established at the same, essentially non-trans-
the short-sighted counselof 3rd density timepace (or the rrvivifying formed level of mind-body harmony and integration characteristicof
afterlife of this dimension) in "confirmation" of the nonatistena of the mean average with which he takes such proud identity. He is, by
the Negative exapt as a subconscious tendency; and (2) to endow inference,only as integrated and properly aligned with respect to the
the idea of the negative (as in the Hilarion recitation of the "fall") volitional axis, as everyone who goes to consult him.
with an alien and antithetical formalism that, in essence, imposes Hi very method of 'reaivaln may be t r a a d back as an m e n -
upon us a 'forced" or inoculated kinship rendering us all that much sion of the initial way in which the whole 'foreignn theme of medifa-
more powerless and ineffecnal in relation to its invasivc presence. tion first i n t e r n e d the framework of the Western Psyche. Acouple
(The fact that in thisaccount wearealso 'imrmlatednwith the Good, decades ago the debilitating tension of Western-technological living
only makes that value-potential an equally alien and invasive ksued an implicit call to alternative "technologiesn able lo solve for
presence contending for the soul in virtual independence of its pas- that specif= problem. And if we remember, it was the "Mtaherishi"
sivc-battlegroundcondition. The soul, in such a ose,simply becomes styk of uTmnsrcndental Meditation" that answered to such a call.
an incidental "site", and is reduced to the stature of hou-organ.) Thus we get our impression to this day as to what "meditation"
In this way we came to see that, even in relation to the alleged amounts to, through the ripples issuing from impact of that first
rescue-operationsof channeling, we haven't succeeded in surpassing imported influence. All those subsequent, bandwagon techniques
the original problem at all. We find there is nodevia to which we can either.borroweda domestically developed look their acccptability-
havc recourse, that servesas proof against the possibilityof deception and measured their "correctness"--from that original template.
and illusion. We find o n a again that we are thrown back uldmately Meditation as understood in the Iniriufed Tradition is a tech-
on our own resoum,stuck after all with the responsibility of develop- nical means of augmenting a g e n d p ~ l c f i c of
e spin'n~alorientation
ing our own discriminative faculty, our own will, our own spiritual and whole, mind-body intent whereby the subconscious systems are
intelligenaable to act asa gyroscopicmonitor of information-signals. integrated with coordinate intensificationalong the consciousAxis to
For it kcomesine~capbtyevidentthat,regardlevthesubtletyofthe the degree of producing a combrution lighting the filament of that
originating plane or quality of the formal Ground, the win of VolitionalLine, and "turning on" the spirit-lampof direct Awareness.
Self-serving can Speak from the Other Side with as great an case as The hallmark of such Meditation is a poked, almf mepivity that
any other orientation, and indeed takes up Residency there with as carries through all actions. Meditation as understood through
franchise-versions of the Maharishi-styled technique, is a means of scious processes themselves (in displacement from its central, axial
rendering the mind-body systempivcly quiescent. It is relaxative, locus) loaning them its integrative light to be used at their ordinary.
to be sure; and that answers adequately to what was, in the aggregate, low-level of interaction until it's altogether extinguished in the slum-
a rather shallow "call". ber of their depths. 'Ihishas the effect of temporarily 'unifymg" the
Such a trance-like state of semidrowsypatsivify,however, has subconscious processes so as to make them a suitably S p t i v e
come to constitute the stundad of all that we think of and accept as vehicle only deprived of the spark of comciousncss belonging to their
belonging to the subject of Meditation. Any number of such methods own central axis, putting them inferentiallyin a position prime for the
are bandied about on daytime talk shows, and consumerconscious- structural invitation of a "Conscious Light" not pan of the specific
ness now k n w howto'count backward and loweryourself with ycs integrity of that axis but finding an adequately airtight vessel, accom-
closed into the deep well of your inner self" as well as it knows how modatingly empty of "driver"!
to measure out soapflakesin the washercup. (It is more than telling Thus the 'goodness" of the personality is, at such a common
that the 'Ililarion" material, in contradistinctionto the overwhelm- level of mind-body integration, strictly subject to the specific toleran-
ing body of channeled material the sources of which specifically
abjure giving technical instruction, blithely proffered just such a
'countdown" method of meditation inducing the typc of vulnerable
*
ces of the axial harmony thus h r established through the conscious-
ness-systems. It is strictly a function of hubit, not the condition
of a realized integral ground.The shallowstate of mind-body integra-
contingency-and entranced pasivity4ptimum for establishing tion from which the channel-meditator assumes the 'appropriate"
the invitational configurationof 'horse and rider".) passivity to r e e k , functions through a volitional axis that b effec-
' h e West has accepted the technology of meditation from its tually empy, the value of conscioruness-in-itself being chronically
angk as a relurative, and has exploited it extensivelyalongsuch iincs. .diilaced into the subconscious habitchanmls of the frontal or
In the pmces it's come to fmd out that such techniques can indeed vagus-curnnt. ' h e ugoodnejJ" which may seem to fonnally extend
induce a deeper state of 'rut";they are, on the pattern of the the invitation is a shifting, unstable value based on egoic estimate
Maharishi-method, abk to establish a kind of minimal, quasi- rather than unitive congruence with the D i n e Order, the rtal
meditative harmony and integration at the ordituuy, lowlevel of constant presiding over any such invitation is the effectual em*
common functioning. lhs becomes the sum of what we tend to know of the Conscious axis displaced into refkctive, subcolucious habit
or expect from the category of meditation. We tend to know nothing channels, that would otherwise sem as illuminated instrument of
of a mind-body integration and harmony established at a higher that Order. The response which is elicited from such a pmsivcly
functional kvel than that which characterizes the norm, in deeper oriented invitation therefore answersto the real constant, the ocmdy
congruenceand alignmentthrough the unitivevalueof the Conscious consiuent factor prrsidmg over the whok proposition. The real
Axis itself. invitation doesn't inrue from any well-meaning aaialdc based on
personalself-estimate but from the operative emptinesof the (nla-
Leaky Submarine tively unintegrated) axis of will implicitly requesting a replacement-
With the subject of meditation as we've accepted it and tend fhment of volition from a Swrce supmeding its own technical kveL
to know it,'there is no basic reorientation that would belie the Such assumed psivify as preparation for the receipt of an
sfnndard orientation (in which the self-lumining 'light" of the con- anticipated,Otherworldly Beneficma, thus amounts toan invitation
scious axis is chronically displaced, through its d i i conceptual for that empty volitional channel to befillcd. 'lhis is, in fact,a very
categories, as 'focal reflectionn scanning the mxzurnal fields of sub- contingent and vulnerable orientation. Any Intelligence of high in-
conscious identity-patternsand vital-survivalist imperatives). Rather, tegration and proportionately powerful Will functioning through the
through the accepted, passivityaiented meditative methods it's the deeper densities, whetherpmifive wnepive, is in perfect pasition to
autonomic system which is set in ascendancy as the result of effectual infuse that vacuum of the volitional axiswithout challenge. Nor is the
submission to the murmur of subconscious proayes; the sub- common counsel (cited even by the 'human" authon of the Ra
sequent, diffused focus lowers the light of consciousnessgentlydown rnafcrinr) to the effect that om can invoke the protection of the
to certain, subconsciousdepths so that t h w kvels and spontaneous Positive God-light under such drcumsranas so as to ensure the
springs may be refreshed at the expense of the consciousor volitional alignment, any sufficient corrective in itself; f a in order that such an
system. Rather than kaving the subcombus processes to their imrocation carry practical weight, it's necessary that there already 6e
uninterrupted businessas in sleep, here t h w processes benefit from a sufficiencyof corresponding substance in the channeler. The per-
a slightly different order as cmschmcss
slips sikntly into their field and 'loans"
them a certain value of implicit unity in pasitive integration and alignment
(borrowed from the conscious axis) congnunf with h e value of Light c&d
which they may momentarily a p upon, in order for that Call to have any
propriate in more direct manner. Since basis for effective Response. Othenvise
however those subconscious procmcs it's an empty invocation, and needn't
are never by this means oriented and have anything of automatic 'expectancy"
aligned with mprct to the conscious about it at all Here we may note the
channel and thus the awakened value of Gaspel account in which an Apastle, pur-
mind-body unity, they necessarily slip poning to cast out a demon in the name
back from their 'optimized" d e g m of of auist, receivedthe reton of that very
meditative rest under strain of compul- demon: "Him I know, but who are you?"
sive ego-resurgence, bounding back This same basic passivity as the
from the ordinary (non-transformed)
level of habitual functioning. . -
It's as if, rather thanlthe subconscious p r o c e ~ being
~ s inten- c&cter of material coming from the same+xtensible-Source. It
tionally turned in integrative amplification toward the Spark of con- may well be that a channeler om day receives a truly positive com-
sciousnessabidingin the 'central channel", soas to kindle it with their munication, and the next a communiquC which though superficially
combined energies of ambl intensification to fuU Ilame, that con- similar is arpoxd to subtle detection as a specificallynegative source.
scious spark is instead lowered down into the well of those subam- It's as if, in other words,the channeler had glided imperceptiblyover
an invisible broadcast band, shifting from one station to another and is reminiscent of another curious allegation found in the Caanic
never noticing the differena. ('Positive" sourcesdo not, incidentally. Kevehria, book, ie. that the type of &iSite interdependena char-
interfere as a rule with this negative drift as they must honor the acteristic of our planetary life is expression of some unique design
implicationsof free will in every cast.) involving free will and is not indicative of other planetary-lifc in the
Even more to the point in a a n a i n sense, we must ask oursel- galaxies(!). What can we make of such remarks? other than resorting
ves ultimately just Who is interested in establishing such Com- to the weak excuse that the "channelers" may be imperfectly inter-
munications with us in the first place! Beyond tven the valuation of preting the communicated impmions in oKrsimplificd tenns of
Positive or Negative in relation to these sources, we ought to be their own cosmically-parochialpsychCS....while 115may be in a n a i n
asking the more antral question as to what order of W i g , what class instances, there's too consistent a thematic reinforcement
of intelligence or spiritual development seeks to respond to the throughout the material to allow us safely to ascribe the whole
inquiry of 3rd density consciousness through these specific means. business to randomly-bad interpretation. There seems to be a con-
Here we may reaive a surprise; for, even amongst those a n d effort to imp= us with the spcidquality, the wholly unique
Sources which we can identify as safely "positiven in the sense that character of our situation as 'caretakerndenizens of C-ton (the
they communicate in conformana to the essential harmlessness of cosmic name for Earth, we're helpfully informed) even to the d e g m
Cosmic Law, there is that formerly noted, by-now-notoriousk k of that such patently fatuous statemenu court the danger of screening
concord as to the most basic tenets of cenain.foundational poinu. out any but the most gullible, u n t h i i g or unreflective.
And it is in just this lack of concord that we may be able to disam
the giveaway signature, the real hallmark that diiinguishes the
majority of "channelingn whether positive w negative. . '
In the old Saturday matinee serials, rather extensive ?his standard type of practice, (mast recognizable to people
synopses were furnished at intervals where the chapters built up to when speaking of spiritual seardl or metaphysical discipline) even-
quite lengthy continuities, it seems only appropriate at ths point to tually reacbed a saturation-point at which a peaaful qujescence. a
furnish some such synopsis for the readers of the T-Bird Mccrr the kindof p l a b n t ifprrgnant~usprnsioninstalled ifself. After the often
Pltoenir episodes, &nce our 'plot" is by now not only strewn over turbulent character of pursuing the spiritual Gold Ring, a tumul-
several co&cutive issues of the piece in question, but is implicitly tuous and even magical odyssey that nonetheless saw AAA m i MT
contained as well in some of the earlier and separate features of the split apart and reteamed more than once, a sense of unmistaltable
T-Bird enjoying no such specifc continuity with our present artide bansition was jointly reached. Without any fanEdre at all, with no
but nonethelm bearing deep relevance to its contents. portents, m a or guidelines from an 'inner plane Master" or from
We kgin our synopsis, then, with a time period and cast of one of the several ' ~ e m a l " adepts to whom they'd had limited
characters o u t l i d not in the T-BirdIPhocnir articles fm of all, but recourse, they nonetheless plainly knew that a j m M of some
in our May 1990issue featuring Whnr Is The Mother Cuwent? . fateful type was upon them. Everything seemed to stop; the 'time"
In late 79fearly '80 (you'll recall-?-) MTand AAA along with in which everyom unconsdously hurried seemed sweetly to end, all
their two children were summarily sequestered in an apartment of drives and inesdvable tensions Looked to give up the ghat without
ghetto-like districtingin La Mesa, California, backed into ihe prover- requiring the denouement they'd adto demand
bial corner by ckar communications of the transdimensional tvPc At thii halcyon point, the only "pointn in the framework of
that a hasty hermitage of the least maintenanceobligatioas witid existence that could with real validity be tenned 'contentmentn, (in
have to be extemporized. j o b abandoned. transmnation sold for reconcilement with life, the world, one another, and all friends or
scrap and the b e s k d e ofan impossible situation'whilean impend- acquaintances who in this very, brief interval of time seemed
ing Processofindetenninatespiritualmagnitude readied itsclf to take rnyileriously to show up, reconwining a i if for a su&ry/ensemble
root-primarily in the perso" of AAA ai its exponent and ultimate Act of existence from the far corners where in the meanwbiie thev'd
incarnation. been distributed) there was nothing to want, nothing to strive for,'no
'Ihefirst half of their spiritual odyssey together, from the early point in striving, M)percentage in questioning so chat both AAA and
yeanof the 70slo this present moment circa Christmas 79, had been MT were perfectly willing to l i out the remainder of their l i in
characterized by the usual type of seeking and series of practices quiet anendana of the natural matters of daily life. For that one
known to the majority, at least in terms of general otientafion; the moment in the mutuality of their lives, there came a true surcease;
fmt half of their developmental saga was conducted as a deliberate yet, as has been characterized, that surcease had the value of a
Search, an effort of personal will deriving benefits and spiritual susprnsion, a long deep p a u s e 4 rapt cessation of the breath at
"emoluments" in proportion as that will was applied. It consisted of Infinity. Like all pauses, like all extremes in the oscillating balance of
standard kinds of spirituaVmetaphysicaI practices and their varia- a pendulum motion, the resultant interregnum f Infinity
tions, and even though such work -precipitated
- the relatively ullcorn- i s . s h o r t l i . Deep and absolute as it may be. it is a nanosecond of
mon climax of securing communicationwith and tutelage through an history-and p-ntly there is an unmitakible sense of wheels
"inner plane Master", the overall orientation remained the common- starting up, ratchets and tie-rods being geared into motion and all the
ly ideniifiable one of personal effort, continuous pracda of the leads cylindenonce again engaged only thii time with a net thrust proacd-
provided and 'psychic" cuts given-all in upwardly-aspiringorienta- ing from some other and unfamiliar angle, a kind of higherdimm-
tion toward the 'positive" or "heavenly" polarity of the mindbody sional ocruve over the usual sense of precipitating impulse.
complex physical$ paralleled by the int&&l cephalic mid-point of th; A preemplive commrurication arises, an abrupt Intelligna
third eye, and the "subtle region" situated analogically through the blown in from the Lovely suspended Vacuum of Infinitysothat where,
space above the head. but a moment before, there presided a peaaful Void without content
or specific intent, that very Void discloses itself as the enabling , Wben Christmas Is Really X-mas
occasion or specific medium through which comes barnling the
cosmic Train of a s u p o p r r s d I n t e n t 4 fulsome Wisdom-power For hours, even days at a time, one or both of them would be
infdling and thus wholly amunting for it, as the Charleston Expres Charged with the intelligent energy of a Proccss so intense and
accounts for the existence of the Charleston Tunnel. uncompmmised that the walls would palpably crack, electrical equip
men1 would fail or fuse, and the body playing host to that primary
Lateo Dei gratia degree of Intensity would rigidify to a tine prolonged reuury,a perfea
Such communication rushed in swiftly, and caught them up in paralysis where consciousness remained and indeed magnified, but
an instant; it was not a communicationoriginatingfrom any being or through eyes that wouldn't-couldn't-mc~e.
compkx of beings, no off-planet saucer-scndiags or broadcasts from MTwould watch-often in dismay,and in basic inamprehen-
the "spaccbmhers" e m AAq as the principal recipient of such sion that would onlydisohe in lime--9sAA~wassuddenly reduced
communication identified it immediately as the aamm iuclf, the from nonnal animated vigor to virtual catatonia, seeming to e n t a a
creative totality or Logoic intent without mediating vehicle or vocal- near-death state leaving her body even afterwards so weak as to be
box agency, yet its communication was as distinct and compellingly immobile, and lips so parched that only moirture imparted through
pclwerful as the stormwarnings of a lowering Slry. get indoon, nail a sponge could a m the mast wager relief. Agaul, there were
~ V h i n down,
g cover up the windows, dig in and get ready for a intervals in these high-intensity tides that her body wouldseem to be
hard-buffeted stay of indeterminate duration. seized by impossible-but quite beautiful and hannonious-undula-
So it was, with a preemptive Onrush that left no room for . lions, selling, cootractin&distortingthe kngth of her tarso, thmugh
anythingbut A f t can~~mical preparation (in the same way that one arms, kg,f a and hands, changing her features with subtk dream-
doesn't waste lime in the face of, a Ueshifuall the while her yes burned
argue with, the onslaught of a tomado), bright, &xed in fierce focus upon Io-
AAA and MT droppedvirtuallyall con- finity.
nection with the workaday world that As a veritabk byproduct of
comprises everyone elsc's most virnl such inpouring Graa, MT would ac-
life-support system; and with the re- casionally be struck by just a wave of
quirements of rent, food and utilities overspill sufficieat to halt what he
like everyone eke along with the con- 'may have been trying t o m i n i i i n
tinuing responsibility of hvo children, the way of help, persuading a lockin
they sumndered all such requiremeats half-lotus right on the couch and the
to the care of that very Imperative now riveting of attention to a point ahead,
demanding so much from them. e.g. the lightswitch or nailhole in the
Witheut t v t i o n , located wall--om particularly eventhrl early-
a block and a half away from the morning vigil, upon the starry r e k -
relevant school and a coupk walking tion in the sihrn of a Christmas t m
miles to a shopping center, a few inter- ornament,
mitten1 external sources serving to Alert with moveless posture in
supply ad hoc (last-minute) rent saves, the livingroom (while some
phone taken right out of the wall, AAA monumentally-more complete
and MT were then kft in an upstain Power of the process surged in
apartment of La Mesa with poor nn- renovative tide of Cosmic change
tilalion, no airconditioner and temperatures w h i i (even oprrrr from through AAAin the sanctuaryof a prepared "temple" down the hall),
heat corneaion) routinelyhit 115degrees in the summer and seldom intent without d i c t i o n on the Yuleride morningstar levitated,just
got below 95 d e p c s , even in the winter. And it was there that c&y at eyelevel, through dense suspension of an . m e s s abruptly
were reduced to ash, the internal Fa of the Proass in its fuUncs comuuive with the space in w h i i all farmal objeas floated, MT
first ofallsearing into AAA through thesduofIterfeu, (theadusive would be palpablyemprird of any senseof the compressive"centrism"
entranceway of the absolute creative D i iuelf, cf. confirmation of regularly committing the ordinary force of identification to the con-
this exceptional fact in the Ra material) and distributing iuelf as an trauive coordinates and proprioccptive cues of an enclosed con-
implacable,transformative Heat meeting and even ovend~lningthe sciousnm, and, aligned along the arrow of this latterday "Bo",
merior swelter that oppressed their bodily king oa a continuous attentively congruent with the trunk of that meditative world-tm
basis. hung with stars, MT felt a definitive falling-away as if the floor was
Thus for t h m ymrs there would surge in and out a varying dropped from the sensibly-stabilid universe, supportbe slats of
intensity of tidal energies, Intelligently conducting the thomugh frontal focus removed from the peripheral wingef-vision like the
tnindlbody ~ o m r a r i that o ~ effectually took the subject of walls of the p r b i a l magician's box torn away to reveal a VMithed
spiritual development beyond the comenlional arena of personal content, where but a moment before the charming adslant should
aspintion,and the effort of individuatedwill.l'hissecond p a t phase have k e n coiled with blades faed fmnr and ba&..voiU the mystic
of their spiritual development complemented and completed the trick acmmplied, the perennially m t e d object of all spiritual
first, in the sense that their fusc phase of upward aspiration saw done aspiration as some incidental of what was wking place
~ r y t h i n which
g could possibly be done by the ordinary means of through AAA in the 'othern room!--complete subject-
"private effort". Now, in response primarily to AAAesunsurpassed dematerializationwith Naught m i n i n g as the k f t o ~signature
r of
desire for the Truth that would redeem humanity's heart, the trans- P r a t n a save the Chcshii smile of Co-sr
formative fin of the Cfcativediie Ilsclf bridged the humanly-un-
bridgeable gap of suspension by passing "down" to meet and match Over the Rainbow-bridge
that solitary flame of undisJuadable love. All thesc occumnccs, taking place off and on for a period of
At the high tide of that aamic surge, either AAA or MT or three and a half years-most intensely experienced the first sk
both would be takcn by the absolute d e w of her creative Wave months of the process, in intervals scarcely allowing for a breath--
working all the transformations suitable 16 their rtspmive systems though certainly rare enough in terms of the rc+ed range of
experience for this "sphere" were still idenrifinblc; they could be paratively rare processes of higherdimensional adjustment. The
located with respect to a real spiritual heritage, and while not easily Charioteer at the reins of the mindlbody Chariot in this case was the
paralleled in handy referena guides they were nonethelev com- whole-being Mlue of c3mciousncsshaloed aver the Yhcadsnof one
patible-if research enough was done--with things previously and all, variabiy c l a e to. and drawn into conjunction with, the
rewrted from Javambati or Dalrshineswar, the annals of alchemical cerebrospinal anent of the individuated-incarnate axis according to
rebordkeeping in some Persian chancery or even the occasional the specific degree of compibi&y between the framework of pl&i-
embarrassmentof quite Western'Christian mysticismnetc.; yet h m cally-focused ego organization, and that unqualified Canopy--
of star-
time to time, these marginally identifiable processes were punctuated reate luminance Itself.
by quite discontinuous events, seemingly without prefaa or after- So it was Bearded Manoprosopus, the Person of the Supernal
word yet very emphatic and "consistent" after their own fashion, Triad took them up or 'turned them on" occasionally at these
within the range of comparative internal contents. unannounced intervals,and furnishedsuch unexplained arpasures to
At times such events would distinguish themselves from the various kinds of 'being" and 'Mnt"-which, on the aggregate,
ordinary material of dreams by erupting quite vividly ascarryover into always took on a very specific and identihbk feeling-ronc: LC. such
waking consciousness-indeed often providing one of those aucial places and entities seemed either distinctly 'positive", or diiinaly
overlapping bridges which /.nc~ional&served to weld the 'twon "negative"; through the electrification of the necessary, hi&
realms into a seamless continuum; alternatively, they would arise dimensional faculties these apparently random and heterownous
right in the state of waking consciousness, generally in one of two atpcricna~sorted themselvei-into things that were 4 1 1 right" or
ways either as distinct Knowledge drawn d i m l y from-what has to congruent with whole-bciig (soul) value, and those which were
kcalkd-Whole-being intuition, a sudden unkpeachable imighf distinctly not.
into artain ineffabk truths and/or domains unaccompanied by- my-
representative impression, sense-product etc=, or, as the arprrsion . . h d the Positive/Negatiw Realms
of a peremptory 'plungen through magnified instruments of some Beyond This World
fuel-injected psychiism shongiy accompanied by impression, subtle For some, of course, hearing of this higher-dimensional
sense- data or perceptual intersection augmenting the same intuitive eitherlor outcome there may be lingering doubts as to whether the
Pr- participants were truly able to dissociate their third-ty, lower
Soit wasthat AAA, MTorsometimeseven both-at-ona,were terrestrial faculties of discriminative dualism from the integral
drawn through the dream-field or straight out of the body of waking domains of astral, mental and soul bodies involved in such 'infonna-
life into realms n e w before seen, in conjunction with dimensions tion-gathering". To this query one can really only rejoin "you have to
never before known to exist. They were "shown" by an overarching be t h m " (an opportunity made good in the offing since the T-Bird
Guidance, ushered by an invisible hand into doorways damped to began the presentation of taped kssons, d i Initiations into the
m
ordinary sight yet situated right in the midst of the "ordinaryn, Mothercurrent etc); yet some provisional assurance can be ad-
taken-for-granted world; strange landscapesof heretofm-unknown mad in the explanation that whole #hophical universes of in-
worlds were'shown them in aerial overweep, or inescapable imps- sight and understanding were also to aawnpany these experiential
siom of such presencesand suchworldswere alternatively drawn into passesor intuitive glipses,which in the unexpected richamof their
congruence with the normally-opaque physical f ~ l (thereby
d magi- development fumkihed clear reasoning as to why the progrrssion
callyviolatingthe local rule of thumb regarding the mutual exclusivity toward higher and more unitive densities of conriouJmsbeyond
of separate objects with respm to the 'same" space). They were the third necessarily involved a more unifWundiluted annmitmmt
temporarily heliponed at times through the lingmurim (for the t o eirhrr an orientation identifiable as dear H n ' f y , or dear
Theosophically-hii) or astral body, set down into unmistakaMe if
brief coprescna with beings, creatures, intelligences and situations
sharing very little reference with what they 'knew" or understood in PART I
terms of their conventionallearning.
A Word from Our Sponsor
They found that they were either in, or intuitively aligned with,
other inhabitableworlds, indeed conjunct with experiencesbelonging Precis on the Good,
to whole other denshies and dimensions of being (which however
yielded to corresponding mindbody adjustments and intensified the Bad and What
Curls Up Under a Rock
-
alignments undergone, first-of-all, as prerequisite qualification).
It was as if. since the hipherdimensional mtential of these
mindbody magazines had been &vcloped theywe~egoingfobe wed. 'I have a problem with this positivehegative business,
Pan ofthe functionalbenefit of such renovated alignmentsand Colonel to as the subjen veerrd
bioclectric balances was immediately understood, by both AAA and that incvitaMe pass (ef.our iDteNiclvPrithWendelk Stevells
MT, as the intuitive ability to rcceze the origin and nature of the begun in 3, ,oL 2m. ,,It that thesubject
'guidana system" periodically interposing its special circumstances: down at this point in just the kind of ambiguous 'moralis that
bccameimmed'n~~reatthcve~~tofsuch~hmomena
that the Guide of t h s c spiritdomains was neither 'inner p h c CharactC- *andad religious attitude on the sublea, and
therefa inoritablyleads to tnw of intokranas-of-interpntation
-
Master" or UFO occupant, neither member of 'spiritual hierarchy" that brook no o p p o s i t w haw?"'
dark or light nor emissary of Sngelicn realms, but was rather their 'Well." MT said, 'it certainly cun if there's a component of
own higher Spirit-consciotuncu, the Source-value common to self-righteous identification involved; that hawever is prrcSly why
- v n e , shred uniformly with all of humanity but only known truespiritualdevelopmMt in the esoreric of higher
directly and specifielly identified in its quickened Guidance by com- interntion and alignme?[ )ICC- to a un-
1 Tk following is an expandedvenioa of r m u d briefer c r t i o m renrlly Wd *ribCol ! h m s , w b u@ during t k corm of Ilw -tiom h a t IL
nrpiautions given him re Poritivcand Nrgaliw kiags, spiaitual dewlopmeat cce ought W be wrillem a d publikkdin detail li.ato Lim i t cLrifkd rLr ubjw mom
deeply than a.ylhing he'd heard prcviouly. Tbc converucioul lomat has M f o m bm mined, u it loans i w l f to ILe ti& ofamprekuiocld m omt tborgb
derstanding of these things, and why it can't be left in the hands of ' s e w . Owing to progressive learning and development through the
standard W-kwlego consciousness now backed by 'godly' justifica- higherdensity energy fields, and in 'tutelage' h.om higherdensity
tions--certainly, chat just leads to the Inquisition." Negative overlords, the Negatively-polarized king in bct picks up
"Right! I've heard the more 'new age' attempts to explain the many faculties, manages to Solve many of the mechanical knots
distinction, you knw, like PMce-t~self'and 'se~ce-to-othm'; making certain supeqxnvers and anmordinary forces d i m l y avail-
those categ&es are m n supposed to begiven by higherdimensional able in amplification of the overall repertoire; over 'time' in terms of
beings for our further clarification,but it seems to me it just replaces the densities of negative development, the-astute negative being
one dualisticformulawith an equivalent that begs the question rather manages to commandeer a ran= of multidimensional abilities that
than answers it!" seems-superficially the 'rivaleof t h t belongingto O v e ~ umnrious-
l
'Of counc you have a point insofar as'self' and 'others' aren't ness on the amuponding, p t i v e side of the ledger.
absolute categori+s; I've had early difficulty offandon myself in 'Of course the deeply independent and self-isolating ego
accepting them as adequate arplanitory to& But I think it's simply nucleation which serves to practically orgut& the negative
r#ohrtd if we acceot them not as absolute but as 'rounh-and-readv' rnindbodybpirit alignment, sets a real upper limit to the total range
categories; ctrtainiy the 'dividing'-line beovccn selfand other n and power at the negatives' disposal n K r e is an inbuilt faaor of
ambiguousand shifting, more a function of the elasticflowof Identity attrition resulting hwn M t a b k e g o - M i , and a net value of
than rigid real borders. continuous hnifion or unrcamrable energy-lasr due to imperfect
"But when you think of it, the categoriesretain theirfrm.0~1 assimilation at the higher levels, which prevents attainment of the
validity. For instance, when we think of what might be required to true magnitude of OKMUI consciouu~gaad keeps it at a merely
authenticate a 'sewkc-to-self orientation, we see that an easy means imitative, proximal k K S for there's an innate conmdiction ktmn
of acapting thc distinction ccvohes around the d e p c to which any the unitivevaluesanddeeply integralstatesof the highcr4imcmimal
given psyche iswilling to attain its end by uny meam in practical fact, energydomains,and t h e s ~ ~ m ~ m e r a ~ e ~ ~ ego ~se~f~ted
it takes a w y diinct type to persist in the pursuit of its self-aggran- consciousness marking the minimum requirement of Ulat class of
d i n g object regardless what must be raped, plundered, pillaged and polarization.
destroyed in the process" "Such a basic contradiction cm'f be f#x)ndled within the
'I see what you mean." negative framework it's for this reason that sour= such as the Ra
'When we -get to the higherdimensional kveb of distinct material rightly affirm that at a certain 'degnc' the only chance of
polarization, that kind of nosuarter commitment to the sunrivalkt real pmgression in the resolution df amsbiu Being Lics in the
&d self-aggrandiig end simply receives the imprimatur of fully- wisdomaw~rsioaof the negative being to pmitivc polarization
conscious dedication. It becomes an authentic ongoing decision, alignment."
rather than inclinationor tendency. In its arm way it requircsas much 'HoWfar' then can the 'negative' being ultimately advance?"
single-minded devotion. strict relentless dedication and unwavering " S i it can acver attain to rut1 Oversoul congruity under
commitmenr as does any pmitive counterpart committed to rmcdcol negatively-aligned stress, the negativedensity prop& mcssariiy
progress, and it entails the same ultimate d e g m of mindbody stopsat mid&hdensity, just be& the dividingLineof realresolution
coherence, ego-integration and coordinate alignment of each pan with oversoul consciousness (presiding as the Macroprasopus or
with evcry other part resulting in a kind of similar, cerebrospinal Higher Countenance of 6th density)."
Iwmogene*, and that congruence, internal commame or awarr "So the 'negative' beinp can deddc to switch polarities? What
sellagreement commands the same automatic alignment with the happens when that decision is made?"
aaxkrated rrsourcesof Intelligent Inlinityas isgranied Iberesultant "Iheoretically such a dcdrioa can be made by any negative
'structure' of positive-polarization. The only critical d i r m a that entity at any d e p of development of the higher densities. As a
wr'w determined by &riena, is that thcnegurive polarization to practical matter though, it isn't likely to be a scrioustycntenaincd
higherdensity alignment d i i itself, neces&ily, from the Over- option until the perceivable limits of the higher-density levckare met
soul totality ultimately superintendingall personality-projectionsand in -me and understood on an immediate basis. Also on a
incarnative phases through the levels and dimension+" practical Iml, such a 'choice' &-while ao aprrssion of the con-
'What dou the negative polarity align with, then, in terms of served value of volition and therefore of innate f r c r d o v n ~
Intelligent Infinity?" Coionel S t m n s asked, clearly readjusted and bilaterally f m to implement itself any time; the negative realms are
gathered up in the explanation. highly regimented, monitored, jealously guarded since their con-
"It polarizes into basic congruence with the higherdimen- scious 'resources' are scarcer in terms of competition with the posi-
sional cnqpficIdc, through which the pogMYning of Intelligent tive, so 'defection' at the level of Uie subaltern r a n k is not viewed
Infinityflaws but no longer-in the negativecas-throughwhich the indifferently. It's a punishableoffense; therefore on a purely practical
Self-refleaive intelligence of O v e r s o u l ~ o u s n e s sdirectly func- bask such a choice generally can't be made and implemented arapc
tions and communicates. m e higherdensity urrrgyficld is open to by a whole group pryrhc, a social/memory/compkx of the negative
entrance, then, as a result of a m p e n t polaka~ion,constituting a densities taking its point of lcvcrage from the decision of its very
kind of 'indifferent' matrix of potential that may be used, inax- Cammnndrr. .Therefon such polarization-switch is nor, for both
prated and exploited according to 'personal' ingenuity, pclc~icaUy reasons cited, a common occurrence and seldom takes place sooner
speaking, the soul which has newly polamcd negatively finQ iwlf in than the approach of middth density."
functional subordination to a deeply individuated ego-soul Intel- 'And then what happens?" the Colonel asked. "Do the
ligence of m n higherdensity development, having in effect sub- 'reformed' negatives have to inamale in the bwer d i again
stinucd itself for multidimensional Oversoul Intelligena as incvitabk and pay for aU the karma they've incurred before t h y can mow up
consequence of the irolating or self-nucleating requirement of the once more on the positive side of the ladder?"
Negative realm 'Actually not--or they'd never make the decision to polarize
"It is this n ~ t ovcnoul
e quality, in fact, which the newly- positively! No, the pdarization, once assumed, is virtually instan-
polarized negative k i n g is implicitly moving toward; for all such taneous and involves a d i m exchange for its equivalent on the
negatively-polarized beings are ultimately attempting to substitute 'posi~ivt'side of the ledger. It's the product of cumulative wiufum, in
themselves for God, to wholly replace and in effect ovcrride the keeping with the general 6th density level, so it understands the sort
all-accommodating Individuality of Ovcrsoul coruciousncss har- of yielding that's required and performs it."
riIOniOusly coordinating all its projective componena and angular "Oh oh. That's not going to sit well with those who're bound
to fecl-me, for one--that all the negative sufferingsuch kings have can see the 'positive' object, since 1- is present in the higher
inflicted doesn't have to be paid back!" 'positive' densities of polarization. But the negative can't be looking
'Oh but it does, Mr. Stmns," AAA explained. "It's paid back for Love.-"
through the works that are performed once in higherdensity positive 'It's own version of Love," MT replied. "It's still M ~ t e d by
alignment. And t h y are able to be paid off more effectively because t h e ~ l u that
e constitutes love, since it's negativelydefined in the first
of the superior powers at their d i i l on the 'positive' or whole- place by its functional k k . The whole-king unity and definitive
a i g side: - Selfcongruence that, emotionally, is identified as the value of Love,
"Yet t h y don't seem to have to 'pay back' in terms of 'their' is sought in simulncnun by the negative king as a form of inclusive
own suffering-maybe that's just a punitive thought generated from stability, a kind of omnivorous homeostasis where nothing is really
this eye-for-an- kvel of consciousness however, a kind of J u d m 'external' to its inrernal equipoise."
Christian hangover that isn't relevant in the higher planes.," 'And it seeks to do thk..how?"
"In a sense that's true," AAA continued. 'At the same time "The simplest way to understand it, is to see it as a cosmic
though,you haw to understand that the matter of'karma' is basically extrapolationof the ordinary, easily-identifiabk ego project common
d i i r e n t at the higherdensity lmls beyond 3rd. 'Karma* is indeed to 3rd density. As you can see by just a little selfaramination, the
instantaneous in higherdimensional tenns-not so much in the ordinary ego-project is a continuous if unrecognized attempt to
sense of the mirroring mechanicsof as in the cucnce that's render the essentialconfingency and interdependenceof existence, as
ultimately relevant as a amcious value. a fantastical one-way flow of order fnwn the selfdefining format of
"You Imow we think of 'karma', in thin plam of focus, as the ego to the refractory 'otherness' of the world.
sufferingthe identicalqerimce that we infliaedon another. But the "The ego first of all defims itself as an idcd amstant, a model
'object' of any such experiential pendulum is ahvays the impmskm if of Being or perfect stabilityinsulated from the 'change' equated with
mrrkrson CONC~U- in any case. 'Ibeonly reason it takes the form death, in the very midsf of the c u m n u of change. l h a t model'.
of ~e~ kick-back in our 3rd density frame of reference is whether positive or negative, ckar or muddy, selfaralting or self-
because here, consdwJnessis largely asleep. It can't experience the deprecating isjust an empty abstraction, a d j idea which k gsto k
u~ncc of a thing, the distilled vlrluc, direct& so it has to be 'shocked' 'filled inS-sumrted and completed by the utter conformance
out of its slumber by some mirroring mechanism of experience. toward it, of ttk world of chan&he &ld of resistive 'othernes'
'In the higha, unveiled levels or densities, however, con- through which penonal 'will' is continuouslydinplaccd. So ego works
sciousness icn? asleep, neither in the positive or negative realms to elicu the conformance of the world of change in support and
Therefore the nHve choice of alignment itself is iuown knrmrr. substantiation of the ego-project. It seek the coofinnatay reaction,
While it inflicts pain and suffering on others, this is d k t qmssion not necessarily the 'nod of approval* but simply the gesture a
of its immediate and consdous condition--which is acutely that of response-witternthat conforms to, and reinforces in objcaii reflec-
unlovr. The negative W i g polarks that way in the first place tion, the ego's self-model It seeksthe sense of gbbal suhuantiation,
because the.decision's k e n made to take the shortcut of byprusing complete universal reinforcement without a kaL It wishes to defini-
the heart. So it shrinks the MIJIafa to the proponions of a real tively & through the very pattern of 'becoming', or change, out of
fly-heart; but in so doing, it suffers the very comcious and definitive whii its centralizing self-sense is amdinately aligned."
kkoflow. And this is crucial even to the dedicatedly negative being, 'I see; the ego's project is mtcrnally selfcontradictory and
because love is one of the indivisible Divinc atfributes along with therefore impossible!"
SeIfness and Void. 'Yes; and that is definitively realized, and correspondingly
"rhc negative king can appropriate the Sclfnca of absolute- adjusted-to, in the higher density p c u h framework At the same
being to its own Sclf-aggrandiig ego vcnion; and it can appropriate time though, by the insistent clinging to it as the premise of higher-
the Void-& of absolute W i g to its functional repmoire so as to dens* devclopnt it becomes the occasion of the 'old college try'
glide diabolically b e m the spaces of filtrate satening ctc. But it negative style. So the negatively-polarized bemg indeed enters into
can?,owstitutionally,profit by thevalue of Lovewhichit hascxplicit- the university milieu of the higher densities, but parlays the ordinary
ly u r h ~ d e das a condition of its particular @ariation Love eludes 3rd density-level ego aim into a full-blown, Faustian project."
it; it docs the negative king 'no good', so it becomes the dapucd "Ah! Comes the light."
aspect of the Divine reality. But since the negative Wing ncces?arily 'Yes, of a soft-for in the Comciom domain of the higher
pmi~ipesin the Divine reality the same as everything eke, it suffers densities, Light indeed becomes the mrt mediating term, the com-
an acute deprivation of a very integral factor of its own nature. mon coinane and efficient aim--and that both for positive md
Because it is by definition a Consciousking at this kvel, its suffering negative rea-lm Yet whereas in the positive realms the Whole-king
remains acute. value taking its'coinage' in the medium of light necessarily draws the
"That suffering is itself the instantaneous'karrna' of its choke, developing soul toward deep degrees of yiekiing and cq&sion into
as well as the propelling motivator of its malevolent 'compensatory' light, in the corresponding negative realms the objm is, rather, a
activity, for, participating in and through the very Dcing of Love progressive determination and development of appropriate
nonetheles, the negative entity evokes a dirtmion of that principle mindlbody mechanical means of dcyowng mom light, stuffing the
(in that it corns to 'love', and takes great pleasure from, inflicting light+mergY-~l~#asit were into the voracious hole or mrruitutional
that same suffering-and haunting deprivation, 'lack' or nodtine void of emotional lock comprising the negative state of the ego-soul
"Ss-upon orhas)." altogether.
'Isee," the Colonelsaid. "Ihn isvery fascinating. I must admit %e work of the negative being is to detmnine the formhe,
thin is the best dircusJion of the problem of 'evil' I've yet heard, and exton and coax the technical keys of force-oping the internal
makes the subject much more plausible than its usual Judeo-Chris- mindbody centers and corresponding energy fieldswith their rrspec-
tian context. You planning onwriting thiiout, putting it in book form tive, guardian gatekeepers The negative's bushes is to plunder the
or something?" rich W o f energy-nutriment, the various treasure-troves of thevast
"Maybe," MT smiled, instantly conceiving the conversational creative domains where 'loash' or psychii energy food is manufac-
fonnat in which the annmunication now resides tured in abundance. For, king nonetheless a amstitutionalty confin-
genf-Wig, a coordinate locus of mutually dependent states and
Here Comes the Night-Light functions, the ideally 'self-insular' ego-being if still definable as
"But what is the negative objm, tben?" the Colonel asked. hcm,asactiviti+sof interchange,reciprocalcowmiom and linked
metabolisms; it is, and participates in, the domain of Food. It is a reproduction arcjust saturated withsubtle energychargc,and on top
function of ingestion, assimilation and elimination, and as such it of that, the male seed carries a cluu-light unit of awareness that
defines the fetding p& in tenns of its own negoriveprejec~:ic. to comprises the usual parentdonor to the fertiliztd matrix prepared
eat rather than to be eaten, to devour pmgreskely large chunks of for incarnating consciousness
king until, ideally, thevery universe isswaUaMd and soincorporated "There are in fact multiple uses to which t h e 'natural
into the ultimate justification and definitive aggrandizement of its rrsourccs' of the human system may be put. As grim as it might seem,
own-arbitrarily circumsaibcd-'StIP. the 'aliens' perceived to indulge that hormonal baptism arc generalb
"Rather than the ultimate molun'onwith Whole-kingvalue biobot replicants, hybrid forms created from genetic tissue of
through p r o p s i v e conversion of lighttnergy units (as is charac- humans, animals and even plants; they have vestigial digestive sys-
teristic of higherdensity pasitive development), the negative version tems, virtually inoperative becausek e types of biobot-fonn follow
p o s i u u l t i G t e o ~ & m r n t i n p m a U ~ l & ~ ~ ~ aoffi~ahno l e - k i n g the general template of the higher dimensional negative beings only
value throupb maximum incorporation of available radiance." in more grounded and stabilii, physical tenns.
"llmftswhyit'ssaid that iucifer's Legionscan appear asangels 'The hiaherdimensiwal bcimes in their own context bave
of light!" subtle, vertical-filamental axes on t h t ~ a n - l i k emodel, because the
'Exactly. In fact, Lucifer mans Light-bearer, bringer of the general formula Man (iusivc of wonan) presides clver the present
Light. Light isn't &cd to the negative orientation, as is portrayed Woic pattern; but, whereas thc digestive system of ~mh-based
in our superstitions and fdklorr; like its positive counterpart, the mankind is pmportionatelythe alrgcsoif the physical complex, having
negative recognizes and overtly values light as suslenana, enabling anabsorptivcsurface-areathat can be stretched for square m i l e the
food for producing integral reactions toward progc&ely higher higher-dimensional k m g of both p a t h and nega& variety bavc
alignments Just as all matter--the 'food' of this dimmskm4s intcl- largely replaced the cellular-tisue digwive uau with subtle nerve-
Iectuaily underslandable as a kind of packaged 'light-value' wwcn in networks (comspoading to the simpler regulatory structures of the
phosphates of the ATP mdeark, so light is o m & valued as the autonomic planrscj in 3rd&nsity human form). Those subtk nerve-
encrgy(ZECncenunchbaxof the higher densities--coded as potential networks processradiantenergy values, draw in through the etheric
to be unlocked and rcs~orcdto overall availability of the mind-body 'chakras'of the h i g h e r d i m c ~ ~ e mthenocdcvaluesinform-
t;
axis or radiant 'line' of s~11unm." ing a given emrgyoomplar or ambient field-pattern determine Ule
camspondmg center through which the energy duster will be ab-
A Very Light Eater sorkdandproasred
'So whereas higher-deasity positive entitits might be con- Translating the higherdensity alittl structures into synlhctic,
sidered Light Wigs, higher density negatives arc more likeAght- &skd m u t e d rmnr so that the bioboC product may constitute a
caters" stable physical representation (manipulabk like a mariomtte
%y mr the lightcaters, the devourers of light. That's why thraugh the ulbtkawncctivecaQof the pladform anten), w l u
they're associatedwith 'darkness', because the fight is lapped up into in a virtually dysfuoaional, vegetative 'uaa' bomobgou4y ax-
the cavernous 'black hok' of their congenital emptiness, their per&- rspondmg to tbe solid-food system of ternstrial being but super-
ent lack. Light is sucked into the abyss where their hean should be, fluouswith rrJpcct to that fuoaioo; Lhcsdid-fannbasisof the biobot
in order to try to compensate or fill-in for the Low that isn't there. 'parallel' to tEc alien structure, rrquira direct absorptiDn of light-
'All the massive, cosmic extension of the ordinary e p p f o j e t energy values, to be arsimilated and pnrcscd by the appropriate
that t h y perform in full c0-e~ and on the grand scale, is centmand n~networls;and,whcrraotheethericarpcasof those
ultimatelya meansof'cormringthe market'on energy, mo~opolizing centers absorb and proccs ctheriomatcriel energies much in the
all the knam f~ldsof light or light potential. The cxpandimg order maaaer conducted through the e a n h k i n g ' chakra system, the
they attempt to i m p , the totalitarian amud over m g l y - tisue-structureof the biobot form has toaslmilete nutriment at and
large numbers t h y attempt to exert, is the fanmica1 and internally through its specific, flesh-bornk L
selfcontradictory project of coercing Mlyrhing in creation to work "Lhat function is of course performed inmon by the cumber-
for them, to cultivate and keep the fields of their energy-mcms and some and really outdated agency of the matrive physical digeuive
to furnish self-replenishing 'herds' of emotional sourceautrimcat tract, generally at the expense of certain subtle potentials and e m -
which can be convened into useful energy or lightcapital. Sia the g y ~ o t h c r w i savailable
c that arc cooped tothernojar physi-
negative beings can't generate an important lighttnergy source cal spacetime work of solid digestion; in the case of the biobols,
themselves, i.e. the emotional range of energy-values belonging to thwgh, the digestive 'tube' is faked, a mere vegetative sketch; the
the 'heart', t h y can borrow against the manipulated and a r t i f i more 'efficient' economy for the absorption and assimilation of
regulated emotional reserves of the beings effectually harmscd in radiantenergy and light values in the hybrid biobot form, is directly
thrall to them Since the values of light energy the negative beings through the pores The highest concentrations of thc radiiulight
fmd useful to them and compatible with their systems arc of Light values required, are locked into the physical structures of human
gathered from negariw mmfionalsfufes, it is in the 'best-interests' of emymes and harmones, so that's what t h y go for; t h y imbibe
the negative k i n k to promote a continuum of inmasingly negative energy-rich extraas of the human reproductive and glandular struc-
emotionsand response patterns, it.thoseof fearandamdety, hatred, tures whdeJak through the high-saturation surface a m of the skin
tenor and despair." itself."
'Maybe this has something to do, then, with the rumon cir- "Then that whole business of the alien hell-soup-has a basis
culating around a b w t the underground Dulce fadlitieswhere aliens in fact." Present company was now turning gncn about the gills
have been reported to lake infernal 'baths' in vats of liquid m v c d "Unfortunately, initiated understanding has to confirm very
with human and animal pans, a kind of diabolic broth of cnymes and much of this," MT continued *Tremendous concentrations of
hormones they're supposed to absorb for nuviment through theu desirable energy-values, laced with the emotional juice that pacrates
skim" them, are involved in neurotransmitters such as serotonin and
"Well,yes," MTreplied,'there issomethingto this, hotmanes dopamine, and in epinephrinehorepinephrinehormonesof the sym-
of the human d u a l a s systems and various kinds of human and pathetic systems. Agents of psychic stress am always mast suitable,
animal enzymes, neurotransmitten, lymphocytes and mraa of and very charged.
digestivechyle fumishesvariable measuresof a radiant energy-value; 'A very potent extract of the excitatory processes is
especially the human reproductive system-the specifs cells of u c f m w h , which in minute amounts packs a tcrrifii jolt; micro-
scopic quantities of the live substance directly ingested can be falal
to humans; but the aliencoosdousncv (connected up by astro-
etheric threads and plariform webs of marionette energy-signals to
its biibot comspondent on the physical kvel) getsoff on it, the more
the better. Adrenochrome is generated through the psychic pattern
of terror, principally, and its anract can only be catalytically effective
when obtained from a still-living subject. I leave the rest of the ugly
picture to your imagination."
"My god..."
"God doesn't seem to have much to do with it. At the same
time," MT continued. 'it is very probable that much of the marc
horrific stuff-reported through the 'underground'-regarding
places like Level 7 in 'Dreamland', Nevada and so forth are calcu- the uncommon condition of the o p e d 3 r d y ~ n c w l experienced
y
latedly projected and controlled thought forms impressed upon the by the initiate of the above instructions-yet who definneb utilize
'captive audience' of a human consciousness, that, in fact, has been that power to a negative purpase, magnifying the efficacy of the
more or lessselectedto'erapePorbe returned to theworkadayworld imagination by those means to produce a contrary world of t e r n
so as to begin circulating the fearful and depressing rumom" and impedances to the positive progress.
'You mean the stuff about people being kept in cagcswith the 'Then the UFO kings that are reportedas having k e n seen
ap-l or cooperation of the military/CIA in those underground at the physical kvel are,."
facilities,and the ghastly hybrid experimentsthat have been glrmpsd 'Generally, they're biobofs, biological robots 'viewed
by abductees like same nightmarish magnt!ication of xrncs from through'--like remote t.v. quipment-and manipulated long&
"Ihe Island of Dr. Morcau',?" t a n a by the 'real' aliens invisibly paralkl our rralitywithin their own
'Yes We can be pretty confident that at least some of that is psycho-phyycal alignments corresponding to 4th or 5th density;
thought-form induction directly into the memory-banks of the ab- they're usually identified by thew s h e character. They seem
ductee, rather than literal reporting of things seen; the effect of COmparativcly lethargic and unresponsive, and each of their adions
course is to begin the circulation of horrific rumors so as to generate seems arduous as if performed underwater.
an atmosphere of terror, the cumulative energies of which will of 'In comparison, the 'real' greys or negative aliens, while they
course serve admirably as food for the negative beings--another aim can appear in an EarU~-physlcaIcontaa, ate in-aadof-themschrcs
is to instill an overall atmosphere of depresion, despair and ultimale unstabk; t h y don't as a ruk stay b a g (whereas the positive entities
defeatism before 'they' even surface on any large scale to the daylight like the Pleiadearu of your M e k mate* being more intrhsblly
of general mas perception, so as to have satisfactorilydevitalizedany 'human' in structure canstay much longer); instead thy sbow upj&
potential nsistana or aggreJsive anger before-the-fact." long enough tosvike qulddywith theupakhlar aim, kua@that of
%en you don't think there are r r d y many-legged octopus- snatching some targeted 'abduaee'-and then the rest of the
men and mutant furry creatures that cry like human babies.." abduaee'sarperien& of them is within their own environment.either
'Well, there is a tendency with the negative being, and the homebase planer or UFO vehicle. Just cornpanthe Whitly Striebcr
negative reality altogether, to continuously mwe in relentless reports of the behavior-patterns of his alien beings. 'lhy're swift.
'materialiition' from the playful nightmare planning boards of the almost discontinuouslyrapid and flickeringin their movements,strik-
'dream-psyche'. (out of which they derive the shapes of mankind's ing with cobra speed before a wink of Mnive thought can intervene
common fears and through which they imprint and reinfowe the or inltrpet."
sense of their impending mlolirotion) inro daylight waking reality 'I suppose the Andruuson greys are b i then,"
with flesh and blood counterparts of the most hellish nocturnal 'No, not really. They're clones,which is somethint a littk
impression&w n though a large part of these more lurid reports diirent. They belong to a 'hive' or g & soul, ~ ~and are reghentally
(always taken from codkd-en- settings such as enckscd designed for specific function&They have real, muinsic intelligena
underground rooms,when the psychic and brain-wavcambiena can and annciousness, though they mc nry much like worker-bees. Tbc
be rigorously regulated to alien design) may be inittally same arpres- Andrrasson 'dorks' are technically not negative being, but have
sion of a seeded ri~~~~gtu-form, the tendency of the malevolent aliens developed along a kind of mechanically positive wave-kngth which
is to use such though~f&astempr~le forthe moldingof b i i e t i c they're now trying to adjust with the marc elastic fmdom and
materials, productivc-ultimately-of real phantasmagoric 'beings' emotional sensitivity of their human 'awnterpm'."
corresponding to the most oneiric horrors." 'Counterpart?"
Indeed this fact wasn't unknown to the medieval alchemists, 'Yes. Mast of the $WucteesDof this typc of alien, actually
who warned of the dangers of the path of internal spiritual transfor- come from a biogenetic background originating from the alien
mation when it was written of the "mountains of the mmn" (esoteri- soura-planet. ?hey were 'seeded', ancestrally, to interblend with the
cally, the interior site of the 3rd eye): specific values indicative of E a r t h d o u s n e s s so as to come to
genetically incorporatesome of those Wues'. That'swhy, in the case
of the types of aliinm call the 'spaa dorks', abduction tends to'run
'Go. my son, to the Mwntaim of I d i s . and to their
quarries or rrvcms. and take thence our pmious stones, in the family'. It's actually generational, though that fact is usually
which d i or melt in water, when t h y arc mingkd them- only specifally subject to hypnotic memory retricval"
with. Much indeed might k spoken mnrcrning t h e moun-
tains, if it n m lawful to publish their mysteries, but one thing Interference Signals in tbe Spacetime Tmtlic
I shall not forbear to tell you.Thy arc very dangerourplaces 'You krmw now that you mention it, the surfaced reports and
after night, for t h y arc haunted with firc and other s t n n p eye-witness testimonies regarding the 'lii-alien capture' by the
apparitions, occasioned (as 1 am told by the Magi) by nnain military during that initial Rosmll-Aztec span of time in '47-'48
spirits, which dabbk lrviviously with Ihe sperm of the wrld
and imprint their imaginations in, producing nu9 times fan-
describes the EBE as having very sluggrrh behavior-patterns. Ihe
tastic and monstrarr generation&" live-spccimen aliens that 'stayed around' in containment f a a while,
all seemed to have that characteristic sbvncs and.very delayed
reaction timc"
"Biobou. The military was being 'entertained', through the stake in its negative premise, as well as much less knowledge regard-
entrapment of Stalking (cf. issue 4, Vd. 2 TNTC) by a traveling ing the overall 'plot'."
roadshow of handpuppas and diabolical marionettes." "So, uh, which is it?"
"Ihen the idea was to demonstrate.," L"Ihe determining factor h m is the ncd alien agenda. If the
"Vulnerability. Vulnerability through apparent suscepbili~ true alien intent is to mount an imgsionor occupation force. then the
of vehicle-malfunctioningin the vicinity of Earth-radar, and the idea dctecrion of that intent by members of the secret governmentwould
that at Iwt under Earth conditions the EBEs were fatefully slow in constitute grounds for a scenario of basic antagonism; the deepest
response time. The governmentwould be very reluctant to e a e r into levels of the s m e t government would be looking for ways to adapt
treaty with any tuknown dicnpowcr it didn't at l w t suspect had an the superior alien technology to availabk ternstrial means, and
... acploitable vulnerability. would be in the process of continuous 'scouting', sending out coded
'Whm you think about it, how many times would such an S.OS. signals thrwgh various media, intentional 'leaks' etc designed
intellmually and technologically advanced culture fun afoul of our to attract the attention and cooperation of thase in the populace at
parochial radar nets before they figured out the probkm and com- random who might actually have types of knowledge, insight or even
pensated for it? Yet time and again alien vehicles came crashing 'contacts' that they could use. '2hiJ could account in part for the
accommodatinglyon our doontep, always with the same covcr-story peculiar' Jolicitation of 'psychics' and so fonh by the CIA; the idea
that 'thy couldn't deal with the unexpected problem of our radar- that such tactics are attempts to keepup with Russianactivity in that
systems'!" field in case it happens to contain anything krorthwhile', might be
"Son of like the covestory about why their digestivetrans are camouflage rationale--that could accwnt for the circumJtanocthat
atrophied--atomic wars and nuclear genetic mutations on their Science D i e even p u b l i i matteraf-fact material several years
home planets, all that stuK." ago about-&3k&pionage research of the CIA under the &r-
"Exaaly. Vaguely plausible ntionalitionr stated in 'our' stmy of keeping up with the Savict 'Jane'."
tenns, term Enrth- muld relate ~ r that didn't
s know one - V R K the~ is trying to break away from its earlier
thing about the various densities of existence, the vat'iabk require- 'commitment',"
menu of mindlbody polarization alignment, inner adjustmentsof the "No, not cxaaly. That would be the case,we could legitimately
vehicles and facultative 'fields'-" i n t e r p ~the
t soft signals we're receiving ia that way- ifthe
. actual alien
"SO we 'invited them in', so to speak, believing initially that it sdKduk was just that, LC. to mount omt invasion force with a
was easier to have an overt diplomatic relation with their presences gradual underground 'troop' buildup tcrward sufMcnt, transplanted
so that thcy'd be more easy to monitor, and at the same time so that numerical strength to be able to wage a successful, 'local' planemy
we cwld learn enough from them regarding advanced- t war. Truth to tell, whm the Wisdom ye is open it's percuved that
to be able to hold our own eventually in the face of ks cordial this isn't the real alien scenario, but their cumoum stxnaria You
developments, or against more bluntly bellicose visitors from other really have to understand their Intent from the hlgherdiimiwal
zones of Jpaa and time we were beginning to realize actually filled perspective fromwhich it actually emanates,"
out the 'empty' intervals between Earth and the fanhest star."
"Ihat seems to be the general amsensus sifted out of the The Name of the Game, All Languages
collected data and 'inside' s t o r k " "In the higher densities, the Name of the Game is Comciuu-
Initiated insight knewatstractly,from many years back-cina nas. Tbii simply means that the higher densities of existence,
the beginning months of the Proceu as described abcwc-about the whether @live or negative in Mientation, uniformly ncognicc that
upbuildingalien presence,the gemral patterns their diierent civilha- thebusioesofdbtingand&+naeveyJvhcrriSalwaysthatof
tioas and polarizationalkgianas described with respectto t e r n r i a l Consciousness, even in our own '3rd deasity' where that Caa is
interactionetc; Initiated undemanding also knew by observation of generally disguised in symbolic or substitutive tenns. h the higher
subtle facultiesthe charaaerof the -rt &gun on the basis densitkabove 3rd there isno longwanydelusion about the ultimate
of tha! interaction, the world-government coalitions m n at the raison d'ttre of existence. It is k $ and directly understood as
height of the camouflage "coldwar" preparing underground and Absolute Consciousness, whether in the positive or negative
interplanetaryescape routes e t c The specific details as to how these frameworlt
thing initially developed, necessarily sorted themelves by sub- "Ibe difference is that the positive framewrk rrcogaizcs the
sequent report of real witnesses and participants in the mts them- . homogenousbushesof life as being that of irrrqdng the functional
s e h , and-in the case of initiated wisdom--by further am- and ego of self-reflective cognition into balanced, congruent alignment
comparison in the optimum light of Intuitive alignment soas to filter with the whole-being value of Absdute Consciousnes.The negutiw
bands of probability and high potential accuracy from striations of f r a m ~ othe f higher densities, on the other hand, pasitsthe game
misinformation, muddle and even disinfonnation, in terms of the ultimate ~ ~ of ego as then funaional f
"What happened after that, however," MT continued, @volmt of Absdute Consciousness,exalting ego to the nth degree
"doesn't seem to be at all dear to those even mast aware of the of total creativeubso'pion and subordinative control/domincc. In
situation; after that initial Event of interaction the flow-lines begin to all cases, Consciousness is overtly identified as the common
become ambiguous and seem to describe bewildering crisscmas denominator, the standard and coveted value; and that makes the
patterns.," ncaf business of the negative fundamentallydifferent hmn the a M r -
"That's for certain. It's all a mess, with people running about story carefully set into plaa with the rrcognizable cdon and at-
alternatelyclaimingthat the gavmumnt isin leaguewith the negative tributes ofour own 'IoCaI', planemy terms."
aliens, that the government is trying sumptitiously to get itself "Then they don't intend to lired& take aver-"
dintangled from the committing 'devil's pact' it got itself into..." "Ihy do; but in a very specific way. To the higherdensity
"Actually both of thme 'signals*have some tfuth to them. The negative beings thase Ruby Slippers have to k obtained vay e m -
really critical thing in all of this is to determine the spcdf~lrvrkfrom fuuy.Thycan't jw be arbitrarilyyanked off the feet towhich they're
which those apparently contradictory signals emanate. It makes a provisionally fitted. 'Gathering the essence' is in this case a decided
m a t deal of difference whether the subliminal calk for help and m."
distress messages are issuing from the deepest parts of the '&adow "You see," AAA continued the explanation, Yhe negative
government'or from more peripheral 'service* I m h that ncajsarily 'plan*is only cmarfrclge-invasive as a direct matter. It's not SO much
interact with that covert reality but which have much lessof a central a function of military takeover in our familiar sense as it is of staking,
05
an a n with which this density is all but compiete& unfamiliar. on."
'Stalking in this case builds up the subtle, cumulative i m p s - T h e n there's no direct, one-twne conspiratorial internion
sion of militaristic-style infiltration and takeover, made all-the-more between the 'shadow' world-government and the negative aliens.."
cleverly convincing because it allows itself to seem ' d i i r e d ' as if "Oh there is, but mainly at the deepest lml. This is partly
by the ingenuity of our spy network e t c The aim of Stalking, by those because the most central aims of the real power structure at the vtry
means, is to m a t e a completely controlled artificial environment 'heart' of terrestrial 'darkness' are closely compatiblewith alien aims;
composed of thoroughly predictable human behavior+mde so the most entrenched members of the Bildcrberger~nternational
because they've been programmed to respond tocues of conditioning bankocracy complex are virtual graduates to negative polarization
revolving around a 'story' that is actually rmnue, and wholly mis- themselves.
*. .
representative of the real negative aim. 'This can be viewed as the two-part poduct of the act of
'Behaviors of our military and government personnel clltF- Stalking itself; by first of all stampeding the power structure and its
cia& conditioned by the habits of their response- various military enforccment-arms into consolidat-
patterns, are in fact eminently predictable and sub- ing under adoption of the negativealien mood,
ject to extensive, engineered manipulation---you mode and approach, the power elite is in effect
know, getting everyone to act appropriately and in squeezed h o alignment with the negative mold.
confident coordination at just the precisely-timed Fitted more precisely into that mold, it can be
moments In this way they a t a t e invisible c o w , proqcdurally 'taken over' directly, body-mindand-
and generate an anificial stampede in the formative soul; so that, whereas it was initidly moved at its
ranks of the world-wide power e l i t e 4 stampede coie by self-protective instincts, it has long since
taking its momentum from mind's omr charac- transformed into covcrt congruence with the nega-
teristic impulses and dimtion. So they herd them tive alien Intent
into a rapid, tight consolidation along the lines they "At the deepest levels, the powerstructure
were heading in any cast. and its Nazi-recruited espionage agencics can't be
"In fact for centuries they've been giving the distinguished from the alien dynamic itself. They
power-structure its suggestive influences from are 'in league'; they're at unholy Oneness It's only
'long-range'. The early Tesla electronic d i i r i e s the intermediate and 'service: kveb of the power
of this antury, for example, were swiftly shunted structure that may still klim thy're playing w t
into the exclusive privilege of private hands and kept the basic 'antagonism' and 'self-protection' roles.
from the public; negative 'long range' influence en- At the same time, the conspiratorial consistmcy
couraged the beginning of an intensified aploita- and unification at the higher levels is partly the
tion of alternative energies by the power structure right there. ?he product of negative cloning, implant technology and direct takeover
financialhnilltaryempires of the planet began their several lines of of a n a i n terrestrial seats of power."
development on antigravity and ray technology at a time when that 'You mean a n & members of the 'elite' might be directly
had no mom 'official' reality than the old Flash Gordon serials Yet cloned, genetic carbon copies pulled by invisible suings of the ex-
it wasn't till the mid-to-late '40s that the current era of rapid, forced tradimensional aliens,"
consolidation began as a direct result of the sudden 'alien invasion' 'Some yes: where it was deemed strategically ncas~ary.Num-
scenario." bers of the elite, the various spy agencies e t c arc often implanted,
'You Icnow." the Colonel said, "some feel that the whole 'alien and influenced by low-frequency programs.
invasion scenario' was an anifice concoaed by the government and "Yet, although extensive implant technology may be used in
newly-crystallized espionage agencies with autonomies beyond the that way to ensure influenced obedience, a degree of technical
Constitution, that simply used the s e a t Tesla-based technologies freedom is often conserved through the of certain
and pharmacological advances to enforce the imprcsion-through central members of the power elite; for, don't forget, the commodity
the subliminal psyche of the general publi-that therewas avaguely valued at a real premium in this scenario is c e u r , and a
forming 'threat', an unsettling undercurrent of 'alien presences'." totally drugged, surgically altered and thoroughly programmed
"Yes, some people go by that theory," MT rejoined, 'but it's psyche isonlygood for roboticslave-servia,ie. dispatchingmechani-
based on a mispcrception; the manifesting fact of various, 'advanced' cal secondary functions. Thepimmy object of Negative stalking is to
kinds of drug-and-implant technology in the hands of espionage proccdurally persuade, through strongly influenced but not roboti-
agencies is the mult of an original intenshied interaction with alien a l l y *lilorrd behavior-patterns, the ultimate polarization of con-
empires, not the source of subliminal impurianr regarding the sciousness to negative higherdensity alignment. This is kcause, in
existence of those empires. the long run, the object is the addition of functioning units of real
'Certainly the CIA and NSA e t c have wide use of manipula- wnsciousness to the negative hierarchy,withvditional prerogative-
tive kinds of technology scarcely known to exist at any level; but the indicating the prrscna of real, conserved cmschsncss-intact.
derivation of those technologies is a compkx genesis between T h i s conserved element of me consciouurm is the ir-
'homegrown' discoveries which were often themselves the results of reducible value that dows polarizationalignment to the positive or
influence flawing from the various class of 'space-brothers', and negative in the first plaa. Insofar as it is nor chemically cocrad and
scientificadvanaments strategically parcelled out in direct manner 'boxed' into internal electro-magnetic traps of the brainlobes effec-
from 'landed' aliens themselves. Those s c a t manipulative tech- tually curtailing real exercise of d i i i t o r y volition (and thus
nologies are variously used by various coven agencies; there isn't so consciousness), to that degree the mind of the subject retains the
much of a unified conspiratorialprogram as several,concomitantand all-important value of the indeterminate twiable distinguishing con-
often overlapping 'conspiratorial programs' peraiving their respec- sciousness and the volitional axis us such.
tive activities according to different levels of function and a c a s %us real negative polarization as a prrogaiw of that in-
"This blurred-focus use of the techndogits by the several, deterininate variable, is achieved in the case of the given subject. Yet
mutually-screened levelsof government agency activity suits t he alien that subject becomes an immediate functiionol dependent of the
purposes just fine--in fact, it's all consistent with their program of higher-dimensional entity (or 'commander') efficiently rcsponsibk
Stalking, in which confusion and rrms-purpose prevents a clear for havinginducedthe negative-polarization alignment of the subjm
peraption on the pan of the Stalked subject as to just what's going in the first plaa regardless the deceptive means employed, the
persuasive misrepresentations marshaled in conditioning the tmnr "It all takes place in and 'sprrads out throunh' that chiif
through which that fateful value of %olitional indeterminacy' would Being's basic ~ ~ o - ~ u r v i by
e wthe
; system of pJychic e&ivalencies at
be exercised. the higher densities, the symbolic subordinath Of everything and all
%ere's an immediate prychic bond of hierarchical relation- souls encompassed by the Plan of that purview means thc aukmatic
ship; at the higherdensity level it's directly apparent and unarguable. subsumption of all participating encigy-forms to the mrarrhing
The newly reauited 'souls' to negative4th density take their place Form of the Commander's commsha Consci-.
automatically in the pecking order, after a preliminary 'battle' "That oonriousness is lit;rally f;d and magnified by the num-
a m o n g 1hemselveJ. ber and relative strengths of the subordinate souls 'voluntarily'c a p
"Because the name of the game is Consciousneu, the p r o p - t u r d by, and incorporated into, the commander's wldespnad Net
siuly higher stations of the negative hierarchy are proportionately along with their specific, expanded 'siddhis' and developing psychic
--. enhanced with every 'induction ceremony' of additional members; functions. The greater the overt development or 'extrarcnion' of
owing to the nmsarily amserved value of real cmnsckmness and those psychic potentials belongmg to the chalua-compkrcj of the
the all imponant void-value of v d i r o d indctemhcy in the case of individual souls, the more available energy-values may be con-
negative remits, the apprenticeship of the latter in the negative tributed to the sum psyaucaates making up the effective Canrious-
hierarchy necessarily entails the arpansicm--if controlled and care- nessquotient of the Commander at the pyramidal top. The more
fully regimented cxpnsbn--of conscious&@ic potentialsthrough pJyduc energycapital is effectivelyavailable to boast that conrious-
the higher negative densities. mssquotient, the greater the effccfivepwrof the Commandant of
%us all 'initiates' to the higher negative densities nccesarily the Ggative ego-tiicrarchy to amsume more potent and *difficulte
learn the development and exploitation of their own con- food sources-the m t e r Potential emdenlkavailaMe toeomcrt to
sciouJlpsychc potentials as do all'initiates of the higher positive buccaneer ventu& in plundering the keys, f&ng the locks of even
densities;yet in the case of the former, that development is regimen- higher-density energy sources those beds of inconaivably-magical
rally oversten by the negative hiirarchy and very sharply pmuibcd nutriment yet kept from practical grasp in probationary ignoranceof
in amfonnana with the austere requirements of the particular 'plaa the 'formula' to the next-deeper dimemion.
occupied' and 'function performed' by the soulhubjea. considera- 'Since the flow of respective 'mtributions' describes a mi-
tions of innatecrrative tendemies and potentialsof development arc cally-hierarchicpattern, it may be seen that all the mechanical func-
on the negative side of the ledger. Thus higher integration tions and tedlnical pnxrssesserved by opening and development of
and mindlbody development of psychic/consciorupotential on the the vital-* powers of the field-lroop contribute cnwpsums
negative side is basically a n t i ~ ~ ~ t iThia
v e .is an important factor to u-yl to the 'cortical' station occupied by the Canmaadcr,and
note." . soseruto literally amplifythe coefficient of Intelligcm, the effective
~rrscncc of W- (negatively-intkncd, in this&). The Grnaab
The "Desolate One" Is Just an Old G h of the negative hierarchy, are really something to be rrctlmdwilb
"Just a second. I'm kt sure I ste how the development of the (and so aiw a n the 'gritnu', of course, to the general Iml of 3rd
consdous/p3ychicpotentials of the 'new recruits', as you say, d i m l y density consdournaswhich thcy seek to subdue--but it hascertainly
enhances Ule c r m c h m r n of the higher members of the negative been noticed, by abduct#s and others wbdvt had any intercourse
polarity. I can see how it helps them h d k t l y , by giving them a with the lower done-rank of the negative himvthy, that the k s e r
broader psychic 'spy' base and more sheer members of subordinate troops and foomldiirs don't seem to have as ckar access or 'right'
troops 4 t h 'psy&kinetic ptnurs' and so forth for conquest pur- to independent, spontaneous decision-making faculties is
poses. But the actual enhancement of the highernegative's con- evidenced by the commanders-end that of course makes theu
sciorunes..." responses slower, their extemporized reactions t o anything
"Well, you havt to understand that in the higher densities, 'unexpected' cripplingly restricted)."
positive or negative, there is progrcssiuly less 'absolute'dernarcation 'Yes,I've heard of reports where potential abductees a p
betmcn one subject~ouland another. It's more like rrll partiapate parcntly 'threw the little Greys a cum', did soaxthing against pat-
in a fcidcontinuum, and so thcy collectively take the form of what terns of programmed expectation; it seems to put them into such a
thcy call a 'social-memory-complex'.Thwgh the focal ego-function stew of indecision that their closely regimented r a n k begin to break
remains, it tends by virtue of the dellser-richer medium to be and t h y bump into om another like windup taya"
transparently participating in a grouppsychic function, through a *If you look at the whok pattern of the negative hiirchy
unified Geld. through all the passible densities and I m L . e , up to middth
"Owing to the d i m and immcdiite, e n f d of sym- density as previously explained--you11 see m y much a pyramidal
bolic relationships ia the Psychic medium (ie. 4th density astm sttucture; in fact it's a kind of spiritual Pyramidal foodchain' of the
material etc), the amcrpual Eact of a soul having been efficiently negative realms; the very narmw,sharply drawn apex of the pyramid
persuaded to polarize negatively by a particular Commander of the is comprised of the m a t persistent of negative graduates, the very
negative hierarchy translates immediately into a hrnctionally valid few (ultimately only one at the wry fop) who% stuck it out mtran-
and formally operative prychic bonding. There's an instanlantOUJ sigmtly against every evidence of pfopsivelydiminiing returns,
linkage and interpenetration through the densified psychic medium to ultimately constitute the logicul conclusion of the Negative
or unified fieldumtinuum; the newiy pdaritcd subject inheres as a Premise altogether.
real, psychic fact through the gemralibody' of the g&por collective *Thintopmost would be the 'desolate om',Luafcr as-it-were,
Consciousmv of the commander-and-fleet. the One who mast directly embodies and promotes the rrltirmue
"'i%at 'midv,in the negative case, is not an egalitarianmedium negutiw object. And all of that which fans out under this Om as the
or pattern of value-parities. On the contrary it configurn a distinct staggered 'trunk' of the pyramidal structure comprises the subor-
verticalorder of control; and while the network of the negative 'Ikct' dinate ranks, the sixth and fifth stage commandmand generals, then
extends in myriad psychic webs of specialized powers, forces and the fourth stage sergeants, corporals and recruits e t c All of that
functions like a voriiious Net flung across the heaven of uars, the widening aneiiion t&rd the +pulous pyramidal base at earty4th
sum energy comprising the groupcaslsdousness of that net redounds density may be considered the 'body' of the negative Being, the Head
to the basic benefit of the Being at the apex of the control pyramid of which is the pymmidal Point-locus of m i d a h density (negative).
and is only variably parcelled out to secondary benefit of coimrohred All the subordinative 'stones' inlaid along the tien of that immcnre
beings, proportional to their respective 'Stations' in the hierarchy. structure, are entities funaioning as regimented extensions and
m i n d m y 'parts' of the Owrarching, Luciferian cz@stone, organs business of the Negative objective, how in the hell dots the topman
and procases prosecuting the negative premise from their respective perspective of the pynmidchain perceive it?"
levels at relatively indimt angles-but all such activity-regardless 'Good question. And the answer to that question involves
the emdent 'motive'of the level-feeding into the ultimate and most precisely the reason why, on the negarive side of the density-ledger,
direct Wisdom-knowledge, negative-style, of the Top." the higher tiers of the negative overlords seek to deliberately distort
"You mean the motivcs of the different levels of the negative and mask the character of their own objectivesfrom that of the lower
hierarchyaredifferem, or effectkly divergent from the highest level? planes of 'subordinate functionaries'.
I thought you said it was uniformly apparent through the higher "Consider this: for the minions of the 4th density 'invasion'
densitiespmitiveornegativebeginningwith the 4th, that the ultimate force-or more properly, the Stalkingf o r c e 4 delicate line has to be
... aim was absolute consciousness?" tred; for, while it's true that the negatives literally feed on destructive
'And it is; but that aim is identified and interpreted differently, pattern that generate the highenirgy propertiis of pain, fear, t e r n
not only b'ewen positive and negative contexts but Mlong the etc, they realizeas apracticulmatter that an overzealous rosec cut ion
various hierarchic leveb of either positive or negative orientation." of the taik is quite Liable togenerate a runaway mornentu;no~its[~.
'So a negative 4th density being wouldn't necessarily perceive establishing a negative snowball toward ultimate d e s t r u c t i o ~ h e
the object of hi activity in the same way a 5th density being would pushing of the verboten 'red button', for arampk-which would for
perceive his own, or a 6th?" them be the equivalent of killing the goare that was disgorging those
"True; and on top of that, the higherdensity being--say6th- gorgeous, golden eggs they could continually break i n t o A other
doesn't perceive the object of a 4th density being's activity the same words, what's the point of pillage and rape if nothing is kft as booty
as would that 4th dcnsity being; the higherdensity being wouldn't but an homogenized mist of radioactive partides expanding through
describe it in the same terms at all because from his vantage he space?
perceives it in the larger and more compassing context. 'Ihi is even 'At the 4th and even 5th density-levels, the pyramidal hierar-
more acutely true, and the distinctions are even more acutely chy of interlocked functions--psychic and psychokinetic powers
marked, in the Negative framework than in the Positive, because it's etc.-operatesasan immense coordinatenet, collectivelysprcadover
an indigenous characteristicof theneMve framework to delibrrcue& and subsuming all possible 'refractory' elements of tbe exterior
musk and dinon that which is higher and mom comprehensive,from universe (conaived as the problematic 'otothemcss*of k m g ov#-
that which is lower and more Specialized'. In thepirive higherden- against the sovereign subjcct/absuaction of the Egoelf);that hierar-
sity frameworks it's more intrinsically possible for the 'earlier' levels chy is viewed as a regimented machinay of k i n g serving as
to perceive the object of the 'later' l m b with minimum distortion arpendable cogs in an Engine of Conquest which pmgrrsively en-
(emanating only from the inevitable Wmsity' of the functional velops the features of a aeativetv-rcsistive world,subduine them and
medium itself)." in&ratinh them intemdv as-swallowed.- dinested
" and k m i l a t e d
" l k n what's the differencebetween the way the 'lower'orders matt& of a A t i n u o u ~ G l l i n homeostasis
g of the Ego. The more
of the negatlvc hierarchy perceive their business, and the way rne all far-flung elements are gathered in through the castings of thii
highest perspective of that hierarchy peraives it?" diabolical net, broken into domesticated manipulable coda by the
juggernaut grinding machimry of the Negative power, the more all
Food lor 7'hought things b c a m e prcdictablyconIrollable and regulated matter of the
'Lmk at it thii way. The most immediate level at which w can 'ultimate' Ego-project (perceived from the particular, overlord level)
grasp the Negative plan--when we have initiated insight into it--is contributing to the conformal hornemtaris and self-supportive En-
also the Iml at which its operatives most ~mcientlygrasp it. As far vironment of the aggrandizing comcbtmess in question.
as they're concerned, the immediate busines of their activity of 'At these levek, the 'object' is to convert all energies and
Stalking is to crystallize under attitidal pressure a global powcrtlite specialized powm of the negative troops into pub& informdon-
of indigenousd alien being to completely dominate the Earth and p l
cn u of a far-flung Network contributing to the knowledge-
its inhabitantsas a captured negative resource; thew functional target amplificationand awarenessof the pyramidal generals, commanders,
is ahvays that of poI&izing just so many mom soub and emironmg overlordse t c The fnuuof those energies and powen of the 'pawns'
matrices toward inteml reinforcement and hierarchical attachment in terms of actual ground gained, real elements subdued, contributes
to the Negative ~cacty." to the progrrJsivt vertical compounding of highly integral coruml-
'You mean not only individual souls, but whde planemy ~ I I Q for the negative CO's, expanding the field that comes under
enfi!ies can be induced to polarize negatively?" their regulatory jurisdiction and thesfore ensuing p q m i v e l y
'A 'planetary entity' is the focalooordinate medium of a mon-wlwninour 'farms' of cnerm-nutriment on which to vampiri-
specific &miy of mindbody interaction and ratiwf-function. At ally suckle. The expanding orbitif their control that comes urider
the cosmic 'moment' such an entity is scheduled to pdarizt into the the far-flung net (drawing in elements to be computed and
state of a higher density, the opportunity is considered ripe to indua programmcdinto their regulatory Machine) is equal, then, to an
that polarization to take place negatively, so that the 'planetary enlarging multidimensionalsphere of energy-rich food, to be intro-
consciousness'comesto participate in the Negufiw 441 density reality jccted and converted directly to magnitudes of enriched Comcio~rr-
rather than Positive 4th density reality. Negatively polarized being ness, ie. Icnowkdge-power, in their direct equations.
require negatively polarized planetary bases through which to func- "There's a consequence to this onesided intake of Lightener-
tion, just as higherdensity positive k i n g need positively-polarized gy resources within the negative framework, and that consequence is
planetary bates. What psee now in terms of the diminishingoxygen progressively manifest in the higher densities"
content and intensified ultraviolet bombardment of our atmaphere 'What's that?"
is not an 'accident', an unfortunate but inevitable byproduct of
industrialization; it'ssign of thedeliknte (if, of course, covert) effort Periodic Light Flow
of the Negative hierarchy to prepare the biochemical and electrical "Before anything, we have to understand that light is the 'first
composition of this planet for negative polarization. m e r e rn such matter' of consciousness
things as 'evil planets', dark stars...and the real, pending question is "Lightenergy values are constantly circulating through pat-
whether Mother Earth is about to become one of them, twinkling terning coordinates of the mindlbody b.That axis isn't ultimately
with firefly allure in the Sinister firmament..." just another objective 'md' in a field of equivalent, cmwding stalks
'If this is the way the 'rank-and-file' immcdiitely grasps the but the special muse-the universal juncture or vertically folded
Common Denominator around which all the geometries of light chronic mindbody functioning--passing back into nature with a
(comprising the grid-patterns of peraption) convene, and resolve to characteristic psychic 'charge' encoding typal values of various,
voidequivalencies as the universal Medium of Consciousness. vitalistic identity-imprrssions, imbalanced mcdes of overall selfap-
"Such filtrate grid-patterns, you sce, are ordinarily w k s of prehension efficiently organizing the phases and incorporative
that ultimate resolution; the W e - k i n g value of Consciousness processes of the lifecurrent."
itself is chronically displaced, at 'our' level, through multidimensional "But then there must be higher-order adaptations to this
focal alignments in implicit adjustment to standard @wIogies com- general process of circulating and incorporating the List."
prising the current 'ailing' to the pupletax of delimiting identifica- "Yes,that's what we were getting to. To understand the con-
tion-lhe present functional horizon circumscribing the polar terms sequence involved in the negative extraction of lighttnergy values, it
..- of provisional self-recognition" helps considerably to understand first what the optimum paritiw
"...Which is reflected over, and imnsted in, a whole cognitive form of management is.
panorama of symbolic or substitutive identityequatiom," AAA "In the higherdensitypaitiiw alignments the integral unity of
added the life-processes is optimized in QMeSpondena to a deep, unitive
"Within such displacing proayes, 'light' functions as the in- selfapprehension of consciwsnm. In this case, rather than simply
definitely reflective medium kaleidoscopically polarizing the created flowing out horizontally into the nature-field again (where they in-
fields rhto~lgfrwhich the whole-king value of Idenuty becomes form and promote the same,repetitive planes of typal perccpu mded
fascinattdlyfixed. It becomes, shall we say, fatefully coimolved in its as structural drives and desires), the lightenergy units arc p r o p s
own internal potential of ideoform 'types', and endures an operative sively balanced, aligned, conscxved and iacorporated as power-.
intussusccption claJing over, around and passing 'through' iu very ponents of the higher anten; rather than simplydischargingin om
field in identified nucleation of the reflective light-patterns of thase uniform stream conducting the standard typologies of the nature-
rypologies It surrounds itself with the signatures of its awn present. pattern, they're integrated according to higher wholeader values
'optimum' capacity for polar resolution in the potential pattemsof- , along the m ' c a l or tmmdhemional line, restored to the common
identity." .
"You mean-that's what all the 'stuff of existence i t h e d - -
--
. ' ofrev-- I . integral unity of the
in & g n m e n E Z Z h r c e - l i a t of void
trees, snails and dugonp of life? They're fonns that display the mind.
polarized range of conscious expression as it's presently abie :to "Ihy significantly rcdua their aggregate, outward flow as
apprehend and understand its Being?" pattem~of-identification(reinforcing and infusing the structural
"Yes AU the prolific 'things' objectify moods, tones, dnvcs, v i t a 4 of nature-forms), and instcad mergetoalign the m u l t i d i i -
desirrs--the various serpentine angles consciousness a l fakc &I its sional rniodlbodypattm through which the common value of Iden-
single Self, tity appear& Such high-integration alignment, achieved by this
"Lightenergy values of the various types are coordinately means, conf~guresa total-unific radiation paaem reflected through
drawn through the axial 'tube' of the mindbody a n t e q collecting the nature-field +optimal harmonious intlucncc.
and conantrating the sum meridians of the nature field; they're "Ibis promotes a mirror magnitication and enhancement, the
ordered as abstractcognitive geometries variably pattrming the refleaion to and from the cognitive field of Whole-king value
dimensions of focal alignment polarized acrau the 'anthropic' through all patterning fonn~;the radiantenergy ambience of the
median, or conscious channel. cognitive field parlays the sum of i u differential identity-paturns into
"They proccss the Psyche of perceptions, imprrssiolls and whole-king c o n p e n a with the axis of CrnciaU Iduuiry. Suuch
influences as energy formats coputivcly interpcted from-and ecstatic, akbrative congruence is a direa expression and higher-
making coded entriesinto-che sum-oyer typal identitiesrunning the dcmity function of Love.
autonomic circuitsor 'naturecumnt' of the k i n g and they conduct "Lauc is then the powerful productive and redemptive identity
thase qualities into the mended nature-field as we& in streaming between the Creative value of k i n g and Conscitnw~essI L K ~ ~ ,
circulatioas following the rhythms of mutual ingestion and assimila- mcdiited by the ideofonn t m n of Light."
tion that arise b e m e n the 'body' and the 'world'.
"In this way, at the o r d i i 3rd density level, we may under-
stand that a continuous two-way circulation is maintained between
the tailored, steppeddown light values transmitting noctic pattuns
through the locus corresponding to the pineal-pituitary glaads, and
coded light-values charged with the psychic imprint of prrvailing
typologies which flow from nature into the pladfom centers and aru
again-as well as the radiantenergy substances taken in through
food, the receplors of the sensory organs and othcr glandular, en-
zyme and hormonal secretions e t c "This Cosmos Isn't Big Enough for Me
"Owing to the chnmcter of those typologies encoding the And You Both, Mom..."
operative light-values (resulting from chronic displaament and " S i the negative polarity scems to reject the principle of
anisometric alignment toward a broken-field of focus through the Love, to what use is 'conserved light-value' put in the negative
conscious axis), the radiantenergy properties flowing into the am- prognun?"
bient 'egg' of the mindbody pattern are generally subjected toawcak "As we've seen, in the negative higher-demity orientation,
economy; they're processed and passed out again into nature on the imbibition o[ radiittnergy values is enacted as a om-way flow.
basis of a comparatively low-level mindbody integration and meta- What 'pwrsout'again through the light-satiated eyesand patterning
bolic balance involving a high rate o f ~ r i o nthose; radiant proper- mindlbody a n t e s of the negative kmg,is the same conrious-iden-
ties yield a specific mio of their innate whole-value as Light, tity commitment to d i and d i m i n a t i o n that formed the
according to the codeof their chroniclock opened to the limited lcys negative point-ofdepanure to begin with. Restored and integrated
of the p&iling mindbody circuit-integration. light-values may be put to whatever use mnriousnas sees fit. The
"Much of the higher values of unitive luminana are therefon uiitivefiutcti& of li'ghtlradiation patterning doesn't compel unitive
lost in the prarssing of radiantenergy properties, and the modilled perapt ion in fact sincethe typobgyinform-
light generally flows out again along the same 'horizontal' plane of ing the absorbed lightenergy value is surcharged with pychic
525
negativity (fear, pain, hatred etc.) in this casc, it integrates most seems to be 'allowed', or accommodated, by a Perfect Being," The
thoroughly with and reinforces the predisposition of a negntiw Chlonel's question was more wistful than expectant as if the very,
mind* polarizationalignmenL - perennial character of the conundrum vetoed confidenceof any real
"The progrcssivcpowrr that devolves from the 'capture' and solution; but AAA a m r e d nonetheless, with soul-staring d i m -
incorporation of radiit-light souras (in terms of an inmasingly ness.
irresistible Pryrhic int* engaging an expanding orbit of control "It comes from the first infinitesimalfluxof ambivalencewithin
and domination) in this casc serves to feed and enhance an exclusive ConsciousnessItself; it's the product and ultimate implication ofwhat
subjectivity-ofoonscio~defined by that very, divisiveldomina- occurs in the 'beginninge-the o n t ~ c a beginning, l not
tive premise, since the effort is toward the subordination of all things 'temporal'--when Consciousness awakens from its perfect Cosmic
... as stabilizing, confirmatory 'food' of the magnified narcissism belong- Sleep homogenously enfolded in infinite Selfcontinuity with Itsclf-
ing to devout egooonsciousness, the greater the s u a s s in securing scarcelystirs from that featureless unity of seamless selfcongruence
the (upandingly-stable) %Id of that domination the greater the and tentativclv stretches its heretofore-undivided attention in notice
disdainful d i i g a r d of the integral validity of the created field al- of the awake& creative potential within Itsclfnownufdenfy boiling
together. The absorptive framework of luminantlyself-enhanced ego fonvord in impressible display on the encouragement of that first,
consciousnesstherefore takes on a severe functional contraction and faint capture of the autho&rg value of ~ttenti&~.
effective wirhdmwl from interesthmoIvement in the created fields- 'That first glimpse of consciousnes in its creative Morning, its
of-being, maintaining a minimalist reference toward that C a m only seductive D m ,gives it vertigo, it feek its indivisible quality of
insofar as it enforces theideoforminfluence of catabolicdualism attention (through which the homogenous Voidness and intimate
and division (in the deliberate, psychic pattern-warping of the basic Selfhood of such Voidness was-but a 'mownt' before-uninter-
logoic architectures). mptedly sustained) being inexorably displaced, unstoppably drawn
" n u s the negative being of the higherdensities takes on the offside and diffused in the potential MyrM-amfening, as it does
'configurationsof a forebodingly lone prcsena, lurking in caves and so, acfualiry to that potential by virtue of the authenticating &now-
desolate grotto5 of the astro-physical or etheric-material fields, a ledgemen! contained in that very concession of Attenth."
fiercely mental entity of 5th to 6th density power-knowledge p o s e 6 'What about the fminafion of (bWaums with its poten-
ing the proverbial basilisk Gaze and onlf turning the stream of tial Lopic creativity?" the Colonel asked. 'What about its twr for
attention 'away' from that intensifiedlcontractile selfense Rnvard the burgeoning offspring it finds within Itself?"
the created fields in token deference of the need to canalize the "Yes, that fascination and thai Love are'thetetoo, virtualty at
' r a d i i t d i i p m e n of the cosmic patterns as continuous, self- the same time. But the responses are dinincr. That's wby it may k
funneling food source-sucking vitality from the superfiuous at- said that t 3 m c h m e s s really exists in an ambivaknt state, at this
travaganas and wholly wasteful pastimes comprising the folly of inchoate dej7ee of Its own Creative Pmas.
energyarpcnditure through the created worlds, restoring the light- "Theaspect of Consciousnesswhich arperienas the vertigo of
units of that nutriment to their 'rightful' function.,that of uninter- rapidlydisplacing and selfdividing attention, however, generates
ruptedly powering the inconceivable 'wattage' required to maintain specific qualities around itself. Fvst of all it expresses as trrprdorion,
the monumental absorption and narcissistic self-luminana of the fear. It rrcognizu the requirement for the intimate in-dnd
negative Ego-postulate. And lhir is the definition of the Luciferian indeed one-tcwmc pvociarion, at some kvel--of the We-being
light." value of Identitywith respect to the delimiting and restrictiveproper-
ties indicative of the Creative pattern; it greatly fears that require-
Spackling the Crack of Dawn ment, which it nonetheless knw as a tenn of the Creative process
'I think I'm detecting a faintly familiar principle here. It sounds voraciously chiming the whole-being value of Attention. It fears a
very much as if, the higher-up the negative densities m climb, the real lope of consciousness through such intimate association of
claser we get to the real negative premise underlying all thin activity Identitvwith scaleddown and internallvdivisiveterms and it has an
through the worlds and plane&" immedhte real fcm of a large magniiude of the s&@c porcntial
'And just what's that, Colonel?" anticipated within Its creative incubation (the character of which is
"It seems to me that it sounds very much like the Luciferian large&borne on the vrry implicdon of that effectually-masked and
intelligence is motivated basically by jealousy!" thus amnesic mode of identification)."
"Very good. Jealousy of what, do you think?" 'You mean, it perceiveswithin Itsclf that the functionalrestric-
"Well ultimately, jealousy o f i t would seem jealousy of the tion of Identity in lighting up the conditional pattensof-identifm-
c m i w power of Being altogether, jealousy ofaU the created cosmos tion on the cosmic gameboard involves a rcnl &pe, a real internal
altogether--as far fetched that might sound." s e l f - d i n and thusa friction or abrasion that can translate out into
"You're onto something, Colonel. It'stkWtro&&goicna@, all the unwholesome things that really do arise in the Zield of manifes-
all the realms and patterns of creative potential combined that tation as a result of 'losing the whok picture'"."
rankles Luciferian consciousness, and provokes the elaborate ramify- 'Yes, exactly. ~lthoughthe Logoic pattern and all its features
ing saga of its venomous response!" are born in the indiible unity and whok-being Identity of Love,
"It's ultimately a matter of atfenfion," AAA continued. "The although they express that Love eternally as the intimate coimrdvc-
real cosmic question is always 'how is attention to be apportioned?' ment and mutuality of all terms, nonetheless the lapse of the whok-
When we finally track Luciferian consciousness to its 6th density lair, king value of Identity in o n e - t m e equation with halved polar
we find a philosophical characterization of how anemMm ought to be terms and oblique perspectives drags the value of Low into those
employed throughout eternity; wc fnd a primary rhcsic of mnscious- schismatic quations as well. Thus Love appears to be pdmizrd,
ness, in the Presence of the great proposition of the creative L o p delimited through survivalit and reproductive drives erc. There
or pattern of the manifestingworlds-for that Proposition p m a k u arises an adversarial condition as the Identity-integrating value of
a spontaneous crisis in the infinite Void-being of Consciousness, to Love finds itself focused through a contingent unity, an egoicallyar-
which several virtually-simultaneous orientations respond." ganized nucleus required to secure and domesticate its specific con-
'Where does the 'Luciferian' response come from then?" the tinuity from a refractory field of counterposed conditions
Colonelasked. 1' f that cwld be a m n d you would have solved one continuously immiping that continuity whik pkwkiionally sustain-
of the great philosophical and theological sore-poinu of all time! you ing its elements through coinherace and interchange."
know, the question as to where 'evil' originates and how it is that it "So 'love' finds itsclf automatically on fighting t e r n "
0526
"It certainly can, wherever that lapse of Identity produces an Creativity is a kind of purist 'return' to the undi~dedattention of
effectual3nl-demiry state of consciousness in which Self-reflectionis V&d-being; it's already tainted with a pamtal 'genome' it despkcs,
potentiaed but at the same time functionally m k e d from un- so in effect a portion of its Protestation is sheer self-loathing. U1-
mediated Self-recognitionas Whde-king value. timately, it's the nightmare effort to get away frorn its own k i n g
"And of courx it's this potentiality, with its suddenly-yarming "It comes about initially as a certain 'angk' of c o w e s s ,
abyss of implied horrors, that Consciousness immediately glimpsesin a rapidkubliminal c ~ l ~ a tofi its ~ ntolerance-potential for the mired
itsontological 'daybreak'. As mnsciousncssscarcclybegins toawaken bag of elements bmding within it. Born as it is lrlong with that
to its internal creative potential, it finds itself virtually swallowed by a Creative upsurge, it becomes immediately reified on its actualking
chasm of terrors, a miasma of runawaystates and nightmare 'scenes' impulse; it emerges at once as a delineation of potential within rhe
.. made all-the-more objectionable because of their a d n m e contrast morivc fieid. So the 'Luciferian' response is a quick study that
and qualitative distance from the undivided Well-being of Consdous- nystallizcsout, hastily breaks off as Personification of a fundamental
ness in its casmic Slecp, its undisturbed state of flotational Void in 'attitude' within k i n & a principal philaJophical4-practical orien-
which attentioa could rest on an infinitely-homogenous clwd of tation toward the total impliation of Comcious~inclusive of Its
Selfcontemplation..." creative power. ~t beamis a sketct;, a cmicmm of ~onsciousncss
"So 'Lucifer', then, is.." as a certain relationship to Its own Creative fitid."
"Yes--thestate of Consciousnessat the ontological beginning, "So that conriwsna, that hti-Logas, f-1s the mccYity of
which cove# attention for itself alone. Tbe state of comchsneg wrdoing those creative worlds, rather than simply withdrawing from
which hatcs, fcan and deeply distrusts the creation, which p f e n to their potential"
roll over--and go back to slcep!" 'Ya; in fact the only way it can achieve that ideal narduislic
withdrawal into itself in infinite Selfcontemplation, is through
Ma-Trona Takes Pater-Time Job from Auntie Logos mlaitnin~ the d i i value of Attentioa and its associated ener-
"Well, why then doesn't it just do hut," the Cobael asked, gies whid; have ekectually 'borrowed against' the indivisible mag-
"instead of wreaking so much havoc in the very field of the creation nitude of c o m c i m in Its cosmicslcep,soas to sustainthe myriad
that it doesn't want to have anylhing to do with!" worlds(and, effectually, keep ~uciferu p b a n incurable iusomnhc)."
"Not that easy, Colonel," IvlT resumed the arplanatioh "In "So that's what they mean by 'evil never sleep'!"
the m o m of that vertiginous glimpse, the Wheels have already "Luciferian consciousnessfeels it must literally tear apart the
been set in motion. That dawning 'preview', that bare glimpse is creative fabric of existence, liberating those units of energy invoked
-
enoush- it's fatal. and it can't be taken back. 'RK Creation is conter-
minouswith ~nf*ite, ultiniately, and in the last analysis it's imprrs-
in the captured f a r a of patterned Attention so as to'swallow them'
back into Itself, erasing their d i i m t i a l propertiesand pcrwers so as
sibk. It comes pouringforward,caryingattentianwithit,authoridng to restore them in an homogenous mass toward btcnsi6cation of the
itself through the v e value of whde-being attention which it fa& luminiferous filament describing the Self-radiant ConsciousA&."
cinataand luresoffside, so as to 'borrowa@ml it'. Might as well ask YThe ultimate lighturter!"
the Mind to fomnr cease ruminating over its associative contents."
"Zhen this 'Luciferian' consciousness isn't just the origin* Master Tournament
featureless Selfness of Void-Mi& before any inkling of the creative "Exactly. It is obviow, of course, that tbis d h u f e proposition
patterns within it," of the Negative does not nakedly represent the negative effort in
'No, ColoneL And that's very perceptive, LucifeMn con- densities below mid4th. 'RK lowerdensity negatives ply a moderate
sciousncssim5 the 'immaculate' state of consciousness prior to the version of this venture that s e m to~ effeaually mask or downplayits
Logoicissuance,norcould u ever be. Luciferian consciousnessis itself deepest implicatiotq the mindmody vehicular condition of 5th and
born of a conmdiction; for it doesn't arise until the LDgdc creation 4th density negative beings necessarily determines the mode, d e g m
is glimpsed l l ~ ~ f o it'spmr
r c of drat Creation; it can't be separated and specific ratioof-balance that will apply in the general pmsecution
from it because it was born and crystallized ri@ dong A u, at the of the negative game-plan. Therefore those 'lesser' kKls attempt to
moment of the creative inception. It's in a certain s e ~ avthait of he secure a delicatecompomie between whoksak destruction, aswith
Lop-although it is p&ly the Logoic 'thesiss that prrscnL its an annihilating nudear holocaust, and pramfation of a vital mini-
direct Antithesis Thmfore thislLuciferian'propositionwithinBeing mum of captured resources so as to passcs~an ongoing supply of
is the Anti-Lop." nutriment within the energycontm requiring maintenance of
"Ah." 'vehicular housing'-4e structurally persistent mind/body 'loci', and
"It is the Selfncss of Consciousness, contemplating the in- therefore formally-configured fields of nudeus/cnvelope inter-
divisible eternality of its own Void-navel, which at the same time change. These are still scenarios played out with planets and
refiuuan integral Quality of Itself-it rejects the creativity of its own spaaships, stars and bases.
Heart, and therefore denies or proposs toncgmc the value of Lave "Zherefore the negative minions may be charactemcd at these
through which the intimate correspondence between Consciousness 4th and even 5th density levels as being interested infrrainn the rate
and its Creative potential, is raked." of destruction and diiirkgration for agiven target c-nimn&nt, at a
"I think I begin to see then, why it can't simplywithdrawback certain manageable level of devitalhation technically conserving the
into itself by a lapse, and r r a M r its initial state." intelligent life-form as gem yet so depleting it of all but a&l
'Yes, exactly-the Creative proas is already bcgrm, it was labor-power as to render it a traaable unit fit solely for slave-service,
imversibly inaugurated with that glimpse, and the Luciferian con- effectuallyamenabk towholesale control in the fonnof an enervated
sciousness is former capwed in that moment as a twilight state-it tissue-mass.
penisu as an in-between pose, caught midway as the awhvard am- "To this general level of negative enterprise, t h m is no per-
phibian between undifferentiated Void-king and the veniginous centage in total destruction; profit panscs byond the arplollabk
fields of manifestation harboring all those properties and potentials halfway-mark of diminishing returns in the face. of unbridled
It so loatha and fears. Thanatos And this of course 2 why the /lcll Project of the negative
"Because this form of amsciousness necessarily occurs in enterpriseas conccivedat middth density, issacened or functionally
conjrurctionwith the creative proposition, it's idenfified through that hid from the immediate concern of the lower densities. Though the
factor; it can't be the exclusive champion of (bnschmess even lesser kvtb of negative functionfeel it,suuc its loomiing presence as
though its dearest assertion in the face gf (potentially s e l f d i i ) the phnesare mounted, the immediate sanguinarypleisures of their
respective styles of feeding-frenzy keep them pleasantly preoc- tively l q e r portions of the multidimensionalcosmos can be wiped
cupied-reinforcing that background 'discouragement' atmos- out in the twinkling of an Eye.
pherically hovering 'round the prmpcct of looking any more deeply
into the Heart of that Particular Darkness which, in itself, harbors no Marduk and Tiamat
qualms over making food out of the very homogenized mist of their "Wait a minute; there's something I don't seem to be getting
own dematerialized carca~scs-nuked-twblivionby the 'chance here."
misfortune' of their very, negative momentum having got out of "What's that?"
hand..." "Well, it's all abshncf&plausible, it sounds like an account that
"Wait, then. Why doesn't the Luciferian Overlord just nuke if takes all the various elements and contrary factors of experience into
..-
all, blow it up in the first place? Why the catand-mouse game of consideration...but there's one thing that bothen me. This 'Luafer',
territorial chess, interdimensional and transdimensional conqucst this prototypal Negative Consciousness, is nonetheless an apution
with armadas of buccaneer space conquerors who aren't yet ann- of the Creative field, right? It's the Anti-logas, and of course that
pletely 'in focus' relative to the ultimate, self-vetoing Object of their reactive 'attitude' h#es the Logoic reality already...no?"
own ongoing activities?" "Quite right."
'You can't forget, this 'game' isn't played ina vacuum! nere's "Then this 'Lucifer' must have some sort of 'body', some son
theposin'w hierarchy and the basicL o p i c pattern to consider. There of 'vehicle'--you m n mentioned that It wishes to absorball the light
are always formidable forces actively working tomtoin the Creative that's gone out into the creative fabric back into the juncture of its
fields t&rd achievement of the p&in'w or iogvic purpose, i.e, the 'vertical axis'- this seems to be a kind of Consciousness reflective
realization of Absdute Consciousness under lrllcondifionsincluding in one sense of the s f a n d a d p a n - t h e mindbody form or
the apparent, compromise conditions of c m e d limit. ?hat parin; cerebrospinal Line that, according to your description, taka place
goal, in which the value of Love is necevarity honoredand conserved h g h the dimensions and states-of-being as the common
& the median term or indispensible qualib reconciling Conscious- denominator of their kids And if that's the case,m n conceding the
ness with its own creative field. commands an even-more wwerful differences in organization that must obtain between the so-called
allegiance of unified conscious~r#olve and collective inte; so that 'positive' and 'negative' polarization-alignmcnrs,how is it possiblefor
the 'Luciferian project' is met with resistance at every t u m - a &- there to exist a whicfe or f o r m a l p a n of Conscious functioningno
tance which is, moreover, a great deal more in intrinsic harmony and matter how comprehensive,which serves the integrity and amplified
alignment with the total thrusf of the Logoic pattern so that it whole-value of Being best by feeding itself on disintegrative values
pmscscsthe sumvalue of the Creativeas Its enforcement-whereas of energy? Isn't that just a flat contradiction? How could such an
ihe Luciferian project, born as we've seen of the aeative proposition Entity function at all, and especially in such an apparently coherent
so that it remains an inextricable if adversarial pan of it, nacsarily manner, when the materials that necessarily compose the subJtanoc
has to 'borrow' the creative extensions and waking toolsof-being as of its functional form are maximum arprrssiollJ of Chaas,virtual
much as anything or anyone else while being in basichhmnony with anti-patterns themsches?"
them." "That's a very good question, one which involves a principal
"1 see. So the Luciferian power can't just influence some 'secret' of reality altogether, and the 'scent' simply s hw an implicit
somnambulant 3rd-stage consciousness entrusted to guard the 'red bior of reality toward the Creative, the inherent validity of the Logoic
button', to go ahead regardkss of all other factors andpuh if." Prolect-
"Ihat's right--even though the Luciferian Overlord, in-and- "Cham is, like the Luaferian 'attitude', apposition within the
of-Itself a mitable R e a h of Negative Light -ping through- creative field-of-being, and as such, it may have morr or less internal
rather than inhabiting--the vehicular fields, could directly profit by selfcolrJiuencyand justification, just like any other propasition. The
the immediate destruction of every possible territory in the cosmos term of Cham,as it happens, cmbodiesan impliat contradiction.It's
even at the expense of Its own underlings and lowerdensity minions, one of those 'propasals' that attempts to negate the very thing
It is effectivelychecked from so direct a gain by all the specificfactors underwriting its being.
servingto suppon the Logoic pattern. Its suaxses can't be arbitrary '"Cham' for example impliesa maximum state of meaningless-
or random. When, as it cccasionally docs, it succeeds in vanquishing ness, random turbuknce and so forth. Well, just as chamtheorists
a whole planet, or even a galaxy, it has accomplished this by a long are now fmding that the term 'cham*represents a state or condition
cerebral tournament of checks and countermoves, plays of the mmt hiding a type of order within it and that 'randomness' itself sorts out
subtle and surreptitious type in which the idea is ahvays to draw on forms of organization which may underlie the elusive presence of
the given, positive elements and attributes of the gameboard and 'negative entropy', at an even more pimary level it's possible to
progressively coopt them, slyly compromise their positive effective- recognize Chaos as a proposition p e e d i n g from the inescapable
ness and gradually integrate their characteristic moves to dmim Medium of coherence, intelligibility and innate value-ir. it's a
patterns &aetly optimi&g the negative potentiakither neutrali- proposition of the unitive/ntegral presena of Consciousness, with
ing their positive effectiveness, or actually 'taking-themover'.by respect to the potential of its mafive fiekf. Since that field ir an
progressive, imperceptibledistortions of the straight and-true align- expression of Consciousness, borrows against and incorporates that
ment till they add their onm dimension of delibullle or conscious integrity through all the variables of its seething, interchanging pat-
negativity to the overall strategic setup. terns, the irreducible presence of meaning and coherence emerges
"Vew often. in fact. the ultimate Luciferian Overlord shows out of the fact of cognition itself.
remrkabl< far-sighted restraint; where for example a resource has 'Any theoretical denial or negation of 'meaning', is itself a
been captured or effectuallycompromised to the point where it could meaning imparted to the creative p k of consciousness, any
be completely annihilated without adequate positive resistance, such denial d a s e c o n d a r y r e ~a, function of the escntial wid-being
taking everything good and bad, positiveand-negative up in one fell of all variably-patterning proctsxswhereby any, integral complex or
swoop of atomized broth for a hearty negative supper, instead the provisionally-fwd form of 'intelligible unity' may be cancelled.
gameboard will be preserved with its negative conquerors holding vetoed or cognitively negated..w hile never in fact k m g abk to 'lose'
their positionsintact and poised to parlay such gains intoeven greater the clinging essence of overall meaning and renewable significanceat
negative glory of 'galactic conquest'--as you can tell, this is just all, s i n e that operative void-tern b the wry agency through which
superiorsmtcgy, seeing how mich can be included at once within the the (infinitely integral and self-coherent) value of t 2 a n c h m e s s
effective reach of Negative domination and control so that compara- readjusts the interpretive focus of the creative field."
'So if I understand you correctly, Chaos has an innate to a resultant state of critical imbalance; it can only hope to aggravate
coherence of its own." tHe inherent, catabolic factor in the texture of creation, excite it
'Exactly. If for example we understand the term 'chaos' in its beyond its proper mean toward voluminous amplificationfor i t s m
less radical and absolute sense, ie. as chamtheorists understand it, sake till it achieves a state of such functional &propottion that a key
it's the ncccsaryspirit ofindctmnhacy imparting maximum creative of inbuilt-regulatory balance completely snaps, and the given system
variance and elastic novelty for the continuous invigoration or goes careening into unrrcovcrable chaos in terms of the local scak
refreshment of patterns; it's the factor of surprise. the informing of adjustments normally sustaining it."
state-of-things &t all& the introductionof ukpected degrees af
M o m in the combination or alordinate integration of elements Like a Diamond Between the Eyes
And, if we stretch it to its most-prodigious potential, allow it its "You know, there's something terribly ironic in this picture
maximum 'menace' as real 'tohu v' bohu', the primordial Chaos of after all,"
Dark-and-Void from which the howls of the halfueated and yet-un- 'What's that?"
r e a l i d proceed, we find there too that it constitutes the Creation- 'It just seems to me that the wholesale horror and universal
Mound,the Isleof Incipiena in the midst of Infinity about which coils destruction such a basic Orientation consistently promotes. con-
the great Sea-serpent of the primeval Deep." tributes to the tangible ~fjunrhwr~i&aLr~&i
'Ycs, I recognize these ambiguous images of 'chaos' from within Creation at the initial borderland of Cosmic S k e w h a t
various creation myths and tribal ritwf-passage, but how does this caused the Lucifcrian 'lightDto recoil PA
the ~ i i g of the
reconcile with.." Dream-mind m the first p k , and reject the Logoic proposition as
"Ihe optimum body-ofcoherencc through which to sustain anathema lo begin with!"
and exalt the form of Luciferian mnsciousncss?Just that: thin Cham "That's quite true. Out of the initial profound fear of the
isiurlfa term of the Creative, in effect the state of saturation-poten- Potential it perceives t h m , this 'infleaion' of mnsciousness m o ~ s
tial prior to the reductive factoringout of subdivided 'islets' in the to allay that fear by summoning the mxst elements of that Potential,
Creative Ocean; 'Lucifer', if p u l l recall, was incapable of escaping driving them pel1 meU to the forefront wbcn t h y can wock their
the fact of king basically a product and e r p u s i o n of Creation, mischief the more rapidly and thoroughly so as t o shorten the sum of
despite the a m a i t of presiding as a Conscious 'take' on it; so the 'suffering'lt believes must otherwist take place on an indeterminate-
'body'or vehicle of Lucifer, primordial chaos itself, constitutes itsown ly lengthy scak."
'meaning' and coherence--or organizational Intelligibility-evcn &s 'So it becomes, in effect, what it most loathes and fears! And
it presumes to ApotheasiP created mMingfumus. on top of that, it serves as the efident agent in crcaccJinirg what was
'By denying essential 'meaning' or validity to the creation, you only wvcalized potential pmriousty."
see, it automatically a f f i an 'alternative' meaning; it implicitly 'Yw could say it's the 'tXonel Kum' yndnme,on a cosmic
posits the validity of Void-usncss in itself, so that whinrlrdy scale. You know, the protagonist of 'Apocalypse Now' whode sen-
it presents ifself as the patterning typology loaning order and or- sibilities were such that he was profoundly shaken and appalled by
ganizational support to that basic 'philosophical' premise of Con- the atmcities he d i i the adKnary capabk of inflicting an his
sciousncss Since chaos mcusarify posits meaning and affirm a own kind, in order to forestall a greater defeat; so dikturbcd to his
particular orientation with rrspcet~otheCreative +ttrmof-being, soul was he in fact, that a revolution of adaptive n&ty was
or Logos, it functions spontaneously as the order and intelligibk fomented in his being to the degree that a anain, fascinatedadmim-
'unity' mast congruent with that meaning, mast compatible with the f b n for the wisdom of negative mersals becamehisspiritual Advisor.
value it affums. 'Chaos', then, mccssarily bas an order, meaning, His 'solution' to the imsdvabk anguish.of-bcing, was to bcnwnc all
valueand organizationalsignificana within irr o w n m n k ,within that which was most feared so as to coartitute its etWent autharship
the termsof the Proposition it pnstnu to king; thus it betrays itself, and foundation, he ptoposed to be aU that in existence which was
after all, as an expression and potential of C o n s c i o u s n ~like every- aligned, threateningly, aver-agaiust him--and, in so k i n g (in this
thing else; in that sense. even being the Vessel of the Anti-logas, it is sense of spiritual paternity) he would in effea install himserf as the
not so unique or special. Its most central and preemptive Denial, can Supnme Caw, w k a subtle 'end-run' on existence whereby he
only sene to affirm the priority of the Creative Pmnise. It carriesthe would antcadcntly underwrite and therefore 'create*what.cternally
unitive selfconfonnance and integral coherena of Consciousoes, pcrellrd him in fact as the guarantor of his aeatedvulnerability and
fonvmd wirh ir, only it frames it in terms of alleged oppwirion to the contingency."
creative pattern or Logos. "Sounds like Colonel Kurtz b sort of the seminal philosopher
"Even h m , h w v c r , it has to b m w f r o m the Creative menu, of 'You Create Your Own Reality'!"
being itself an atpnssion and product of Consciousness coiwtved "Exactly, in fact, the Creator finds that such a tendency-of-
already in Its Creative premise. It has to d a p its characteristic, orientation a r k as the 'occupational hazard' of virtually every
enfomng faaor from the Creative terms spontaneously pouring 'being' and form of cowbums which initially springs fran the
from the Logoic premise of C4nsciousness." Creation-but, that's another story; suffice to say that Lucifers e m
"Let me see if I can guess what that faaor is. It can ody be the as the prototype."
destructive or catabolic term of function within the creative field-
right?" The Sad Car6
"On the mark. Having no independent power of creativity. "You know-I'm beginning to feel a little ilL..I think I might be
having no m u r c c whatsoever on its own even while it comprivsthe feelingn--nervous laughter-'a little sickness of Soul."
lone, proud premiseof ConsciousSelf-suffhency in furturelesVoid, 'Ah. Something has occurred to you out of all thin,"
the Luciferian factor has to filch from features already 'fashioned' 'Uh h u b I'm beginning to feel,.hasn8t it ever seemed to you,
beforehand in the very womb of the Creative. Even here, it can't Michael, as if maybe the 'creation', existence altogether, is a rigged
snatch them out of context and-at least-empby them in an inde- game, a game that's fhnd eternally against your favor?"
pendent manner; as we previously noted, the Luciferian outlook bn't 'Ycs, anainly. I h a w just what you're getting at."
f m to arbitrarily affect annpkte destruction without reference to "You know, the superfidal characterbation of existence is that
the contextual terms of the 'created pieces' on the Chesboard. AU it's a procw of interacting polarities; at f m glance it seems to be an
that Luciferian consciousnesscan hope to do is inrensifi one isolated even 'tension' betwem constructive and dcstruaive Factors, the life-
polarityof the creative processand progrrssively accelerate thewhole impulse and the death-impulse,."
529
'Eras and Thanatm, hmmm?" qualified Identity-of-Absolute, ail qu0lificdion.f characteming the
"Yes;and of course it xems that those Principals are forever creative patterns-of-being are innately allowed by largeve of its own
coinvohrcd, mutually supportive, equally esential, almost like inex- unlimited potential. Love is the pcMr of Absolute that mnku it
tricably intertwined Lovers,the flower blooming beneath a life-giving absolute-and-unqualified,by pcnnittingevcn the apparent antithesis
sun and the grinningskullapparition in the bonegarden of the dead." of that all-inclusive Value thereby undemiting and justifying its
'I believe mmt people would be satisfied with the prospect of Absolute 'claim'. Love is therefore the Matrona, the value of God-
an eternal 'draw' obtaining between thest standard Opposites." head as Mother, the primordial relation between the C m t o r power
'Right," the Colonel pondered with a long stare into s p a . of Absolute-potential and Its offspring."
'But is it a draw? On the surface it looks like just a cmmlc 'Mexican 'It seems then that 'LYEifd is one of thasc 'things' that are
standoff, a sort of compromise 'stalemate' that at least lets us come permitted by the unqualified Love of Absolute for its qualifying
out 'even', with no basic lases after everything's added up and Potential!"
cancelled to zero. But is lhnr really the case? 'Exactly. The Luciferian premise ir itselfa quintessential term
"I get a sudden queasy feeling that the 'deathshead' grinning of qualification, exclusionary exception and so forth; the Luciferian
on the bottom of the pile of Life's itemized inventory, has a much premise is the wry 'version' of Consciousnm which attempts to
more secretly central significance, and that thingsdon't just come out make Absolute-king exclusive, which hypothesizes an absolute suf-
evenly in the end like balanccd and neutralized opposites. Somehow ficiency of Consciousness-initselfas undifferentiated, infinite Void-
1 feel that the 'deathshead' carries much more proportional 'might' self..and so categorically negates the permitted 'Self-negation' of
than would be suggested by its standard inclusion in a recitation of creative limit.
the pairs of opposita" 'The 'problem'with the Luciferian premise is that it's m i o n
"~ndw;t;y'sthat, c ~ l ~ m ~l ?s"e c m e to d passessa vaguegrin of Infinite self-sufficiency becomes immediately an mbhny ntbjec-
himself at this point. 'Surely death doesn't have the kind of de& rive enclonm or featureless circumscriaiw. It's instantlv surmsscd
' Z
finality that comes at the end of a s e n t m a as any candidhe for alltnannpasing Ab-
like an exclamation-point,sina it only yields solute In the moment of its upsurge; for the
again like a dangling clause to the promise upsurge of that Negative premise takes
of a complementary fulfillment coming plaa with respect to (and bemust oZ) a
from any, random cry-of-birth issuing proliferating potential of creative praccs
through the nursery window..." toward which the Whok-beingvalue of At-
'Ah. that's just it! They stem so in- tention is already drawn.
nocently equal, those two continuous 'Thus Reality in its fullness h u d y
Lovers,Life-and-Death; they stem to form outstrips the 'dimension' of Being that
an unbreakable circle through eternity Luciferian mind is ready to alknv. The
where neither can k diinguished as ter- 'absoluteness' of that Miad already escapes
minal or 'final'; but the spiritual, the psychic it in the instant it's born, and it does so on
and emotional faas of that circular con- the strength of the Lavequality of God-
tinuum are ah- telling usdiffemtly--it's head which generously pairs Attention (as
just that, out of self-protection,we seldom indiscriminate value of Absolute) with the
listen!" indetminately-proliferatingproperties of
'How so?" aU patterning potentials l o g d l y contained
'Emotionally and as an immediate within It.
function of our idmily, m know that the "It's f o r this reason that t h e
two t e r n aren't equal. Death always has Lucifcrian premise is 'bitter' toward Lovt;
the final word, the upper hand--even for Love has already drawn the atdusivity
though 'life' comes bawling back around Wr it, forced it to 'share' in the creative bounty
back door, it is forever t o o ~ l a t w h especific subjea of our I&, our along-side which it's indeed been born. Love moves out on the
life, oiu e d s t m a , is gone forever, and it's never any real amsolation multiplyingstreamsof unitive orwhole-value attention.int0 the fiLds
prize to know that life-gocsa abstractly. The whole thing, looked at of its creation; and it expects that the indivisible wholeness and unity
from the viewpoint of the mind and heart that really lives it, L t h c of Attention will prove sufficient, eternally satisfactory for that por-
Sad Cafe!" tion of Creative potential which prefers to retain the term of Aware-
"Then maybe.-Lucifer's right? Better to be off with it? better n m at the starting-gate, at the border of the manvantara or yawning
to let it tip from the scalesof balance intosome definitive termination dm-state of the worlds-sina no matter how many times the
and so bring the gnndimg wheels of inexorableswl-tonure to a halt?" whok-value of Attention issubdividedor multiplied it remains intact,
'Well. uh. what's the but'?I iust don't ste it." merely f o c w d down upon provisionallydelimitingattributes with
'I think the best way to xe'our way clear of this apparent which it may become temporarily identified on a one-to-one basts
impasu-that definitely stems on its own terms to secure the nega- (and so apparently-but not realty-diminished)."
tive premise---is to go back and take a good look at that one factor 'But the Luciferian intelligence doesn't like that anyway."
which the Negative necessarily tries to leave out of its calculations" 'No; it doesn't like Love t o l d in another d i m i o n , not evcn
'You mean-Love?" temporarily; it d e t w even the innocent flirtation of Whole-king
'Esialy. In order to come to Its tinal bleakconclusion,we find attention with the polarized pattern of the worlds.
that Luciferian consciousnes had first of all to subtract the in- 'Although it detests Love for Low's 'wanton' ways. It is none-
separable Valueof Love from the fundamental qualitiaof Godhead. thelev born of LOW; it's the wry p d u c f of h, the Mother,
It was only by that subtractive suppression that all the various because it comes to q m s i o n as a premiseaf-being on& in relation
premises and conclusionscame tumbling forward under the negative to the creative potential of Logos Even as anti-logas, it is f o m r
Irght. After all, Love is specifically the intimate function of Identity q m s i o n of that Logoic*potential.
belonging to Absolute, with respect to the Creative premise of "lhs the factor of Love can't nuflybe subtracted from It; it
delimitation belonging to the Logas. seeks instead to displace LOK from its proper 'pasition' at the Heart
'Love arpreses the eternal condition that, within the un- (i.e. the causative locus of the creative worlds and all patterning
coordinates) and remove it like a kidnapped Princess to the turreted P w r to distract the Awarenevof Godhead and attract It 'back' into
towers and patrolled bastions of the Head4.e. Void-mind in itself. conformal agreement with Its bare Voidness, I u sole Self-premise.
In other words, Luciferian Intelligence co-opts and interpreu the "It docs not understand the Creative, the Logoic proposition;
inevitable hangover term of Love as the Mlue of Ser-low; its only it does not understand that the n s o h ~ o nof the 'problem' within
legitimate function, iu only allowable breath-ofdtence as far as Godhead of whlch It is the chief postulate, is accompl~shedin the
Luciferian conriousness is concerned, taka form as the supreme intimate and inextricable idenriry, the infinite mwudiry of the God-
and exclusive valuation of VoidlSey-the nareissidc conferring of qualities of Self, Love and Void--and so it doesn't understand that
Love's approbation upon those absolutequalities indeprndm of the such a resolution arises through the loving dirpensa~~on of attention,
loving acceptance that would necessarily flow from i n d i m i n a t e the optimum organzation, integration and coordinate adjustment of
void1being'and alltmbracing, absolute-~elfneuwith respect to the attention in consonance with the Kcy of the Logoic pattern. rather
created potential implied in those pcrmissii terms." than in the aggmndizementand monoplhtion of Attention (e.g. by
'SO '~ucifer'is constituted Ha project that intends to c a p m coercing all worlds of intelligent energy and awareness to align in
the Mother." obsenwionaf service of I u sovereignsubjectivity, as continuous sup-
'Exactly. l h e Luciferian void-mind feels the requirement of ponive renimony and corrobmurion of all potential otherness-of-
nmsting the indiscriminate proliferation and freedom-granting being with respect to the solitary validity of its Self)."
bounty of Love (for itf e m d that freedom and the potential it implied, 'Then the Luaferian project is just the ego-game."
from the beginning). It wishes to dominate the Mother, keep her 'Yes,it's only that, after all. It can be identified evcn at the
under lock-and-key, utilize her power in the manner of a dm;-god or confused and admixcd.levelof 3rd density egoconsciousness; It's just
c o n m t w i.e. by appropriating her means, mimicking their actions the ultimate implication of the type of consciousncssrowhichwe have
and functions while strategically altering them and incorporating recourse here any time, blown up and w r i large
~ in Cosmic Lctters as
them into a restricted sirnu& suited to I u own ends. the bluster and infant bawling of the 'Anti-logos'4he 'disgruntled
'Luciferian consciousness, remember, has no power of one' in the nursery of the Manvantara.
creativity itself; it imitates, but it can't generate; it needs the Mother's
power to do that--which is why, when it captures her, it keeps her Love and Will
half-alive so as to maintain a minimal continuity of creative interac- "You see, the Love that such a consciousnw wwld try to
tion and the suitable production of form-for it's through tailored suppress, is precisely the Way and Means w t of the apparent impasse
regulation of Love's f o m that Luciferian intelligence derives the you perceived in the unevcn 'balance' beomen the destructive and
very means of coercing soultnergy into convening abstract-con- amstruaive faces of the Worlb"
scious capital to specific psychic and emotional coinage; and it's 'How.so?"
through the cumulative i m m t on that psychic and emaional '1t'surysimple.Lwt knowswhat's good for it and what's bad
coinage thatsuch Intelligence proceeds to purchase the precious for it. Love, undiitoned and unclouded by the doubts that can be
energy-keys 'to limelocks and spatial corridors of even richer and made to shadow it, is a perfectly unerring Rudder through the
still-virgin terraim, portions of the cosmos intact with creative life and creative fields. It can easily and aptly recognize t h w manifestations
superfetation ripe for plunder and privileged profit. of its all-pcrmisiwncu which are supportive of the whole-king
'And all, as we've seen, toward the uldmate orientation of value subtendiig its patterns, and those which are inimical to i t - o r
those teeming fields of Deifc attention back into conformal service that seek to function on a variant basis, which, owing to the fact that
ofa single, pymmidally apiculate Power preening Iuelfasanarbitrari- they're neccsarily a p s w n i of that whole-being value automat-
ly exclusive and self-sufficient Subject. ically generates a c ~ ~ ~se1/-co#adktion
~ n v emitting
e clear
'Thus the implicit 'uniu'ofattention subtendiig all productive signals to stay clear of their shoals."
fields (from the very Sourcc of creative Godhead), arc f o r d to T h e n this innate power of Love to steer a safe course must
obeisance and functional servitude of the Negative Overlord. be more than just a survivalist capability."
'You see, Luciferwishes to reclaim all themention that's gone 'Much more. But at the same time it isn't diffmnr than the
out into the Creation; the Luciferian premise, as we've noted, is that basic wisdom through which Love optimhcs even the creatural 'sur-
its own preferred Selfnw and Void-state is eternally sufficient, but vival-imperative' for the funherana of individual and species. The
at the same time It can't pcticnlly support that premise s i n a the elaborate 'civilized' problems and perilous contradictions that seem
Whole-beingvalueof Attention spontaneouslysurpa~~es, flows over- built into our collective, survivalist kksdom', aren't the product of
around-and-through that s u b j m k assenion. The Vessel of the Lave-in-itself but, to the contrary, are the direct result of what
Sleep-stateof Consciousnm immediatelysprings l e a k It would like happem when the innate spontaneity of Lare iss~rat~callly cnpplcd.
to exalt itsclf as the sole worthy repository of Attention, thus being 'When Lovc is deliberately thrown the c u r e of 'doubt', it
suspended in (undivided) Divine acknowledgment across the falters. In iu innocent spontaneity, not recognmng or understanding
glorious planes of Eterniry; but its preferred state no longer uccowut the im~canMons that come riding in w e r that cure-ball of Doubt,
for all of Attention. l h e r e is an infinite 'otherness' to attention, that L m hesitates, stumbles; it gets caught in a reverberatory Self-reflec-
rakes its vagrant Being from an unseemly displaament through the lion which isn't basically conducive to 'locating i w l f , geaing its
created patterns-of-being. The Creator's attention is mended, bearings or deriving specific functional coordinates; rather, this type
through Love, as the Mother of all the worlds. And of this, then, of stuttering self-refleaion along a reverberative amidor of mirrors
Lucifer is supremely jealous." c u r e d into Quationmarks, is basically cotutter-poducfiw. It's crip-
"Ah. The theme of jealousy, back around again." pling, and sfopsthe unerring flow of Line in aliGment with the gra~n
of Supernal Will neassariiy. .patterned into the fields of mindbody
It's Only That, After All meat& manifestation."
'Yes," AM continued, 'and now it may be seen what 'Wait. What's this inbuilt factor of 'Supernal Will'? I don't
Luciferian consciousnessis jealous owr. This is why It rages through think I've heard from this before." (But the reader has: cf. "What is
the worlds, and sends up such a big fuss of atomic debris and Christ Consciousness?", issues 5, Vol.1 and 6. Vol. 1 7WTC.)
destructive winds of wanton waste to the very threshold of Heaven. "We'll get back tothat.The point here is that o n a the sensitive
It seeks the Creator'sartention; it implicitly admits that, even beinga Mother-value of Lovc is hamstrung by doubt and superposed fears,
function of Whole-being attention It is not, nor can it ever be, the it is subjm lo coercion and exploitation. It is, then, mallcable; it can
w/iole of Attention. So, like a spoiled infint, It does everything in iu bemnde-to invest in forms of organization, behavior and outlook that
would be instinctually inimical to it--except its instincts have been for the pull of emotions or the flow of feelings but which, on the
blunted, dded. The crude categorial abstractions of mind (basically contrary, despises them and spares no pity on them--scarcely
estranged from the subtle ideotypes out of which the real, sensuous tolertztes them, you know, and functions at its optimum when their
love-patternsof life are ordered) may be made to override the initial presence is precisely minimized."
instincts of love-squelch the immediate feeling of the whole-king "That is the conventional sense of Will-what brings you to
which decisiily sense whether a thing is beneficial or ultimately this alternative consideration?"
deleterious;and by impasing such judgmental, 'parenting' inhibitions "Well, you said something about Will being an inbuilt factor
upon the psyche through suppressive processes of enculturation the of the Creative pattern; and it occurs to me that, if some ultimate
verysrandards of acceprance whereby one's 'survivalism' is a w s c d , Essence or most-valuable term of Identity is realizable through that
the dcscrvtdnw of one's personal con- pattern, it must be so by virtue of the
tinuity weighed, become definitive indices inherent Presence of that Will."
of the thwarting of Love's legitimate func- 'Go on."
tion. They become invisible, unnoticed "It seems to me then that the
and so universally accepted straitjackets presence of Will through the created pat-
for the leashing of love, forcing it to con- h tems-of-Being must signify the way in
form to the configuration of unnatural which C o ~ c w t u s mscnts
s itself. and
molds. takes on organlizational value in the
"Once the basic factors of our very tive field n
s~uw''y0Prnare given effectively into the
hands of abstract mental categories 'Consciousness or-what you
(popularity, bank account, nationalism, ' call-Whole-value Identity, may become
religiousaffiliation etc) and concomitant-
ly taken mvny from the integral instincts or
. .
obscured o r functionallv d i s ~ l a c e d
all its reflections and sun
"
unerring intuitions of Love, all the higher patternsaf-idc:ntificatkm in the cr
functions towhich the force of Love could 7field; but at the same time, since those
be put are automatically effaced, rendered null and wid. Everything patterns and that ficld are atprrYions of the 'Lop', which I take to
in our higherdimensional repertoire which could otherwise open out be an Intelligent spirit of organization, the Logos would inanprate
most naturally to the intimate association of Love. is minimized in a means of conserving that Conscious Presence through all the
importance by a dulling scmn of abstraction, rcc&d and rendered created fields, and of carrying fo~wardthe basic drive or ultimate
so cognitivelyablique as to make its o c c a s i o n a ~ r c s s i b l ea p purpose associated with the comparative equations bctwcen Con-
pearance seem wvlnhval by contras14hereby making the very sciousness and its Creative potentiaL If that ultimate purpose has
faculties of qur higherdimensional birthright automatically suspect, something to do with rrconcilip: the limitless ~ l u of e Consdous
either given completely to skepticism or tainted with a stigma of identity a& the delimiting powenof the creative field, then it seems
'occultism' so intimidating as to persuade us to fear-and so retreat to me the quality that would combine thase two factors in its q u a -
from--all which we'd normally Love, indeed the very codes and tion-while neither rquiring the immediate awareness of Absolute
biochemical libraries of Love itself." nor sanctioning the se& of limit in which it was funaionally em-
"I see. Then you're saying that, if this blanket mental bedded--is the quality of IYill."
'straitjacket' wasn't thrcnvn over the mind/body k i n g of Love from "Why so?"
the very beginning. there would be a natural 'route' for Love to take. 'WelL..Will iscertainly a@tction of Consciousness, fust of all,
one it kid find &rringlywith the wry we and sensitivity bywhich without necessarily requiring the Self-reflective recognition of the
it diiminated 'survivalist' values at the ~rimarvlevel. And that Whole-beingor limitlessvdce of Consciousness. ..in the human fonn,
anificiallyconcealcd'route', coded into the k r y ceilters and current- for instance, the faculty of will is associated with the cerebrospinal or
procwesof the mind/body being,ona entered upon would naturally consciousaxis,the central nervoussystem towhikh the self-reflective
take consciousness bcyond the apparent antinomiesand oppositional power is ascribed. And at the same time, Will implies a amscious
principles between which it's conceptually torn." drive, a type of continuous nupassing, moving b y o n d - a n d of
'Exactly. it would return to theplain appnmcyof Conscious- course, 'surpassing' automatically suggests the presence of a
ness, the true continuity of 1dentity-i.e. that which exists through the provisional 'limit' that is being surpassed."
Whole-being value of Self, Love and Void ...the common T e r y good."
denominator of all othenviw-fated p t t m ofidentification rid to "Then if Will is the instrumental 'representation' orfi~nctionnl
alternating terms of the polar prtxsssof-life, where Thanatos may P n s t n a of Consciousness through the creative fields, it must take
seem to prevail. its most effective movement therefrom on the basis of Low."
"And that Whole-being value would be realized, in this way, 'why?"
not as conntasred with the patterns-of-life or fundamentally distin- 'Well, I'm going by what you said about Love operating on
guished from features of the creative field, but as the inspiriting feeling, intuitions and emotions that in themselves are unerring
menceof all such multidimensional fields. It would be realized as the evaluators of the types and qualities with which consciousness is
Term forwhich theywerecoded. the Master of the keysand tumblers confronted in the created fields
to which the s e m t of their productivity would yield. Do you begin to "On the one hand it e m s as if the spirit of love, emotions and
see where the factor of Will comes into all this?" feeligs-all of whikh are so intertwined and identified with the
creative patternaf-being-must possess that gyroscopic poise in the
Mother's Rudder of Will first place due to an inbuilt guidance-system of the pnern. Since
'Yes-but you know, tell me if I'm on to something or not--it they're effective qressions of the pattern and comprise a kind of
seems to me now that whatewt'will' is, it isn't radically distinguishable resonant i n d a to thepsychic h m o n i c s of the pattern, there must
from Love, from feelings and emotions of the basic Nature..." be somcfhingabout the patternaf-Wig altogether to which they're
"Right." innatelyattumd (that is, if there's no interference from selfdoubtinn
"And usually, you know, we think of WIII as k i n g something forms of mentality, as you described). Just by reasoning it out as I ';
so.- stoic, so austere and stern, something that shows no affinity doing now, it seems that the basic harmonics to which love and the
8
feelinglemotional nature must be attuned, is the k c y w n a n a - p a t - viable expressions of Its spirit despite their divergences, despite thei
tern of the creative field itself; if thosc qualities have an inbuilt differencesin effect and outcome, despite the variety that issues from
gyrmcopic faculty. it can't be independent of the crcated patterns of their respective influenas."
which they're expression. And the existence of that fundamental 'Well then, Colonel, what d o you think about choices made in
harmonics has to be an expression of the C o m i o u common relation to the variable factors Of the given pattern which prove to be
denominator or Consistent Term of the creative field-of-being." inhonnoniour, which do not take that informing, gyroscopic spirit of
'Good. So Will is,." Will as their chief adviser in the upshot but which in effect mow
'In this first case, it would seem that Will is the consistent againrtthe grain of innate feeling, fly in the face of instinctual emotion
integral factor or principle of the creative patterns which binds their and 'aligned intuition' and instcad opt for the artifice, the choia-of-
complex harmonia, and at the same time furnishes the uniform key king made in response to a deep irepdubn and dismut of Being?"
of their~ponenf.It isn't just the harmonic integer ofany givenpuenf "That's an intmrting question-.it seems that, at kast techni-
state in the conditional configuration of patterns and felds, but the c d y , it would still be a function of 'will'...but what son of will in this
consistent Way of their multiplication and extension, the common case, hmmm? We can't really say it's consonant with the spirit of
means of their magnification or amplification continuously beyond Divine Will, the inbuilt guidana-system of the p a t t e r n a what 'will'
any given configuration. It's the integral factor and the transcendent is that, in this case? I sec what you mean."
factor, all at ona." 'For one thing," MT then resumed the explanation. 'it wwld
"Then it maintains its identity with Spirit-coosciousness (im- have to be a 'Will' which retained the spirit or abstract character
manentnnnscendent etc.).even when it's not immcdiirely identifi- dejihg the value of &ril in the first place, in order to continue to
able us spiritconsciousncs." qualifi as a technical arpression of Will; but it would have to enfora
'It certainly seems so. And in this case,then. it seems that love that abstract character, in this case,o m - a p k t tbe deep gyroscopic
is cajmble of k i n g continuously adjusted and unerringly guided by specificity of emotion descriptiveof the whole-psychic engagement of
WilL as the inbuilt Consciousaxisofcomnrence throuph which the the creative field (i.e. as an expression of the Lave-value obtaining
patterns-of-being are polarized and aligned: In its u&udcd state, betwecn chmci- and Its Logo). It would have to suppress or
the presence of love (or, I g u m you:d say, the psychic engtagcment of consaourly sanificc the intrinsic Lovc-value of being with its in-
the creative patterns) is able to respond unerringly to the truth strumental feeling and emotions, thereby excising the very term by
resonating in primary states of feeling and emotion and thereby uct w h i i the Whole-value of Will cwld be rtaliztd and implementedas
according to diiminatory widom in confonnana with WL" a functional Mean of the creative field
"Good." 'Havinggor d of the only viable mode by which that Who&-
'And in rhic sense, then, will seems to become a rupmive value of Will cwld be lranslated in and through the keys of the
factor rather than an initiating factor. having meived its gyrasmpic cmtive field, having chinuled the one vital and organic means
guidana through feeling-sensitivity aligned with the sure, can- meant to transform W~llinto real behaviors and productive venues,
prehensive axis of Will, love generates or 'kcomes' a kind of desk all that's kft is the stark rrloron betwcen Will and those pattern
to move in the appropriate dkeuion; and when that desire reaches a (replete with all the persisting, importunate pressures and demands)
a n a i n threshold of active, stable intention it seelns to kcome an but bereft of the mcdiiting organ, the empathetic agent of the
integral arprrssion of--will!" Hcan."
'Then 'will' seems to be a value that shows up at both polesof 'A& I begin to see where this is leading us-" ,
the psychic procey." 'But of course; where there is no longer the innate. spon-
'Yes I suppose it's probable that it's really all the same 'will', taneous response-pattern of the hean, where love and the feel-
just organized somewhat differently as it arplesyf through the dif- inglemotional nature become suppresJed or distorted from their
ferent stages of 'manifesting'." immediate reflex as unerring functions of W a we have the begin-
"Perhaps as it becomes more 'personalized?" nings of that preemptive if parasitic presence of the pseudo-&ill, the
'Yes, it would seem so. ?hat must be it; its &mact a p impmitional and authoritarian 'will' of the Anti-logas. Whmver
propriatenessas the inbuilt, harmonic guidance-systemof the pattern feelings and innate emotional response-patterns arc thwancd,
must become functionally realized through the specific psyche 'foci' blamed, crippled with the doubt of guilt, there the fake-&ll of the
engaging the experiencesand productsof;he pattern. 1nfa&, it secms Luciferiaa uverlord gains f m foothold and usurps the real functions
it's only in thisway that the terms of the Lopoic pttern can ever have of the creative pattern; there the simulated enforcemenu of the
any reil Merit, o;acquire any significancethat meamanything more pseudo-Will assert the primacy of Procrustean abstraction, the
in the balance." parental guiltconscience of dry categories, inorganic rules and in-
"Then Will doesn't 'predetermine' anything, even though it flcxibk doctrine, restrictive ideals and thetic, socially-sanctioned
may be thought of as the inbuilt guidance-system of the pattern?" goak..there creativity is crushed. and sold piecemeal to the mere
'That's probably correct...just offhand, it seems to me that the techniqru of 'approved' forms without any difference k i n g noticed
way in which the abstract, informing harmonics of the coaxial value at alL"
of Will might manifest inpncnce, is always a function of the variabk "I see-Wl' becomes something which is-.aridlymentl--the
coordinatesconstituting any given 'juncture' of the pattern-of-kin& expression of a preemptive conceptualizing."
And it would be very peculiar if there was only one 'right' way of 'Yes; the function of 'amapt', perfectly legitimate in itself,
operating thosc coordinates o n a the spirit of Will was attuned is-like everything eke-co-opted to the service of that arid spirit.
through them." Then such conapts aren't even the 'end-alUbeall' that they seem;
'You mean it seems there ought to be an innate flexibility of they're merely expedient means to the uldmate end of killing out all
response in any given situation, that would not automaticallybelie a life, all spontaneity. variability or organic elasticity altogether thus
'right way' even in the presence of an appropriately Adjustive WilL." rendering everything suitably-predictableand behaviorally program-
'Yes. 'Ihat would in fact be what made the crcative pattern- mable to the smallest detail without deviation. When you can run
of-being alive, and vitally significant. It would not have one inbuilt, whole-societic~on knee-jerk conceptsand c a t ~ - o diitoned- r
concrete 'right way'; the Way is an abstract Spirit of volitional a d j w - emotions such as 'nationalism' or 'one-worldism' commanding total.
ment to the 'side' of harmony and balance, and it ought to be able in irrational allegiance, you can engineer what othenvise w l d be the
practia to function through the given coordinates of the pattern in unthinkable-you can get consciousneu to accept anything, to
a variable number of ways that would nonetheless remain qually tolerate or even to apparently require any predetermined thing at all
even if that 'thing' is povably inimical to the well-being of the response-pattern so as to convert it fhnirsimo to the familiarly corn-
individual,the individual's offspring, the society-wen lifr dogether. fonable coinage of ego-validation.
And rhm's the key. Unbelievably enough, you can easily induce "Though any true spiritual guideline is meant to k c h the
consciousness to accept or even craw what is essentially and psyche away from its symbolic substitutions and empty ideals, it is at
demonstrably mri-I#.'' the same time ambiguously subject to just such interpretive shears.
"Well; I guevhaf sums up the Luciferian project, if anything In practice, it always seems as if the m a t promising philosophical
docs." premise is snipped and trimmed to the delimiting dimensions and
"Indeed." paltry proponions of the ego-mind's readymade measures, rather
... than frunirhing the proper measure against which the mind may
The Ego of Helpfulness accurately assess its real room for growth.
"But you know, Michael," the Colonel said aFter a thoughtful "So on the basis of the abstract 'criterion' of service-twthers,
pause. "this brings me back again to the initial business about distin- it's always possible to grow the 'ego of helpfulness'. Very many people
guishing or diff~kntiatin~ thc 'pasitive' and 'negative'-the way in have the ego of helpfulnus-and of coune to 'external inspection',
which the higher densitiesand worlds are supposed to factor out, you to the socially evaluative eye, the effects which proceed from such
know?" orientation seem enough; the resultsoften seem eminent justification
"Such as?" of the attitude. What's ncver perceived with the checklist of the
"Well, the whole categorical thing about 'service-to-self', 'ser: standard psychdogical pattern, is the tremendous internal im-
via-twthers' to begin with Yes,I know we seem to be able to balance, the swollen disproportion of psychic parts which has taken
distinguish them best acmrding to their extreme cases; but beyond placeat behest of the common ego-interpretation. As you've comct-
that, maybe more as afURcriona1matter than a philarophical matter, ly observed, all that'sreally taken place in the true or 'internal', subtle
they seem to knd themselves to just those lunds of abstractions and framework of the being isa massive, almost cripplingfy dysfunctional
categorical requirements that are so convincingly descriptive of the distortion in the ratios-of-balance characterizing the current align-
ncgafiw hypothesis altogether!" ments of the centers; and that distortion, chsically, ispcrmimd and
"In what way?" e m u a g e d by the primacy of categorial abstraction characterizing
"In every way! When you think about the co~laeteimplica- the criteria whicb have k e n allowed to dominate and in fact to
tions, a pigeonhole such as 'service-twthers' just stems to promote due*, theegs- -
the kind of vague abstraction that fosters an airy-Fairy 'bgooder' ' ~ o a l t h o u ~what
h the personality is 'doing' may seem toothm
mentality. It's a behavioral straitjacket, like anything else. Why k tbe quite meritorious, it in fact establishes no net improvement. ?bc
'do-gooder' mentality innatelysuperior? Judging hwn all Ihepeopk +tity has& purcbascd its way to a higber&-&ty position on
I know who've b a n iaspvcd by that sort of theoretical guideline, it the basisof what it has 'done'. or the 'positive' effectswhich may have
just generates a species of compulsivedoing, you know, an obstsion e-ated from its actions Ibis,incidentally, takes care of t b - & s k
or avemding drive toward 'works' goaded by nebulous ideals or question re the manifest 'ambigui~ofresults, ie. how often positive'
cloying values like 'the betterment of Man'. Worst of all, it seems the effeas scsm to come from deliberately negative aaions, and vice
q~iin~essen~ial promotion of deadabstract mentality since those who versa-there is no credit extended, or spiritual consideration
subscribe to it do so in the psychological spirit of a sort of fmdcofi regwered, for 'actions*in themschhswhether technically'pmitive'or
they obviously don't find anything inmkically meritorious or valu- 'negative', whether bearingswcet or bitter fruit etc."
able in the things they do, sine it all takes the-at h t implicit- %en you mean-.ma Mother Term..."
fonn of a highly-visible 'sacrifia', a spiritual contract or blatant "That's nof the criterion. It just isn't. After all, how do you
'deal-with-god'; it amounts ultimately to an idea similar to the ac- k i g h ' the effect? Certainly her care and kindness promote a kindof
cumulation of 'liru',inventoriesof deeds done and works performed good will, a 'spiritual' cxampk-and at the same Lime encwrage a
which when piled up to heaven are suppased to axnprist the soul's &imbalanced, doctrinaire attitude tcnvardsaudity, population
guarantee of a personal 'stairway'. regulation, the 'expectations' of 'Divine being' while inferentially
"There's always a self-righteous and really Fatuous air of promoting a personality cultism of grotesque egoiiy-after all since
'reward' clinging to such a person's actions and orientation; he seems there are manifestly few 'MTs' of her particular type and calling, what
to be doing it almost always in implicit anticipation of achow- ovelweeningpridc authorizessuch a soul tostate that all those 'born
lcdgmen~,for the sake of validation-and the ovcmeening pride unwanted into the world' should just be 'brought to her' ...!Oh hell
involved here is that he not only seems toexpect acknowledgment or yes.."
validation from hi peers, but ultimately themeritorioussanctionand 'I see what you mean. But then, what happened to our 'ser-
guarantee of Cod! m t ' s why when I hear, as I often do now in the vice-twthers' category ~ y w a y ? "
'New Age' framework, that the criterion for graduating to the higher- "It's still there, and it's still important; but as usual the impor-
dimensional degrees of Soul development belonging to the '4th t a n a that really attaches to it is chronically mbperceived at the
density' has todo with the percentage-requirements hovering around sluggish, 3rddinsity Icvel. In keeping with the prcdictabk modus
the category of 'service-twthers', I can't help but feel it's the same operandi of this level, 'service-to-others' is taken to k some key of
old religious songanddance that used to pull people into line around rccirafion given to the ego whereby it may 'correctly' display the
the cliche of 'gooddeeds', only tricked out with mn-morc-tanta- 'answer' that will act to promote it; it's grasped as the chief clue as to
r i g doorprizes and meretricious jackpots of 'psychic powers', un- how the ego may best 'show off, how it may draw attention to itself
limited 'seership', 'Divinely-sanctioned' authority..." and so be perceived in the 'winning' light-just like conventional
"As a sage observationaldescriptionof the working world, you school, you know, always looking for the catechistic recital that will
couldn't be mom on target," MT laughed. "As a practical matter. objectively 'prove' the ego's worth as an exterior diplay of Rewar-
though, any form of spiritual criterion, standard or guideline is always dable Effort.
subject to interpretation according to the conventional keys Even "The ego's always looking for the thing it can do in order to
though a viable spiritual principle is meant to illwninnre thase achieve some imaginary minimal percentage in the 'required' expen-
chronic, psychic equations so that they may be recognized for what diture of energy. It may not p o ~ e s subtle s insight; it may not have
they are, and replaced with an infonned function more compatible cver generated an independent ambition or innate-born curiasity
with real Conscious value. any such principle by itself is always with respect to its own being sufficient to have achieved any of the
acutely-vulnerable to easy appropriation through the conditioned philosophical acumen characteristic of those 'different' oms, the
baffling oddities in our human-history; it may not bear much more aggregate tendency and 'proce~ed'into further patterns of align-
than a perplexed relation to those occasional teachings of occasional, ment and integration according to the divergent q u i r e m e n u of
'elevated' personalities or extraordinary sources that come along to each Model, positive or negative. This fateful, threshold c-ng into
fimish the real indicators and diiectional arrows toward Freedom, a decisii higherdimensional zone of potential functioning eithct
toward Conscious resolution with Whole-being value-but, by god, positive or negative, knocks one or the other 'adviser' right off the
ego certainly knows whal it con do, ego certainly understands where shoulder leaving only one as higherdensity counselor and ongoing
it does habitually thrive and therefore where it may best stand in the 'guide' according to the Path inferentially 'chosen'. And all of this, in
'spiritual' spotlight to Shine according to its comprehension: ego its formative stagesespecially, may not cven be particularly noticeable
ahvays'acccpu' Dmne tutelage k s t where that counsel may seem to or consciously marked at all by the subject in question!"
intelsect the interpretivejuncture ceding an 'equivalency' in t e r n of "Ah. I begin tosee why it's a shame the ego fails tovalue those
busy-work-you know, like the high ,xhool teacher occasionally clasificatoy headings for their own merit rather than the ego's
taking pity on the slow student who'd n e w be able to pass according self-preserving interpretation."
to the criterion of competency in p a r and so allowing him "And why is that?"
arbitrary makeup based on sheernrunbm of book reporusubmitted "It stern obvious that they're given as a kind of grace, for the
by the end of the quarter ...ego's always expecting ego's Soul sake rather than for its performance-
there to be some such 'teacher' hanging out at standards. They're categories that should be
the spiritual entrancegate who'll surely identify siknrly accepted and evaluated by the ego, used
and take into consideration .where ego's special as'.internal.measuring-5ti~k for the soul's own
competency lies (i-e., in object-verification, ex- counsel rather than loudly shined as exterior
tenor validation of correspondent 'attributes' 'proof of validation. It seems they're just meant
etc.), and mercifully revise the rquirements for to help the subject steer, to ckady decide wlrm
matriculation according to such accessibIe it wants its, further souldevelopmmt to take
merits. place, in what arena. Otherwise, it could easily
"But there is no such teacher hanging out seme the onset of a higher fonn of integration
at the spiritual entrancegates-that's ego's and functioning, but not beat alldearas towhat
perennial f a n t q , that's ego's insistent conceit jhmwork it was k i n g integrated int-r that
and balming self-assurance maintained in the there was a clcm dis*, that there war a
face of m r y kind of contrary counsel: i.e. there's cttoia to be made at that cms-madsjuncture
a merciful Lord who'll 'let me in' if I've done rather than just a technical alignment, and that
good-and, of course, believed in his specially- as far as the s a d and it. own feeling-nature were
dinpensating Reality! Therefore the criterion of concerned there was a great deal of difference
'service-to-others' i s n e w taken forwhat it really between the two poles of highcrdimernional
is; rather, it's turned around so as to make a salvatory h e out of development positiveor-negative-thc difference between,"
precisely what's perennially lrolding tire ego back from any progress, "Heaven and hell?"
prewntingany transformative insight that would serve to unlock from "Yes. Heaven and hell
the chronic Icvel of mind-body integration committed to the surface "Say, wait a minute, M i l . If 'sewice to seif'rservice to
glamor of 3rddensity objective entrapment." others' is just the cwcatory guide to threading the soul into
'Well what is the real significance of the 'service to others' alignment with oneside of the vertical (transdimensional) axis or the
category, then?" other, then what is the actual criterion for moving into the higher
"Simple. 'Service to others' rn well as 'service to self are density framework in rhefinrplace, either positive or negative?"
categories imparted for purposes of cfuSsi/ic~~on; they establish the "It all comesdorm to t h k j w aren't measured according to
respective frameworks in which any son of higher density progress is your works, but weighed on the basis of your bahce."
going to take place, if it is to take place at all. These categoriesjust "Balance."
give one the criterion, the Sines of orientation tending to determine "Balance. '&lance1 signifiesthe degm of real consciousequi-
the pepondmmt ratios bewen one's msprctiveAdvitm, while still poise through which you're practically functioning. That eq~ripoise
functioning on the 3rddensity probationary level. The more the furnishes the basis of any form of true conscious insight that may be
subject is inclined,behaviorally,toward one axial category or another, obtained, whether in the positive or negative smse."
the more consistent the particular emphasis obtaining in the func- "'hat'sstrange ...you never think of the 'negative' as havingany
tional ratios of 'positive' and 'negative' (higherdimensional) help, relation to 'balance' at all--you always think of it as being comtiru-
counsel and guidance. tionalIy imbalanced,."
"If the 3rd densitypersonality may becartooned asa vacillating %e 'positive' and the 'negative' must be qually balanced
psyche with mixed motives and inclinations, we can visualhe that around their own,respective poles. They may seem imbalanced with
personality as a fellow with higherdimensional 'angel' sitting on om respect to one motItq but within their own frameworks t h y muu
shoulder whispering in the ear, and higherdimensional 'devil'sitting achicve and maintain a kind of functional balance. That w h i i im-
on the other shoulder whispering in the opposite ear; depending on balnnces, to either side of the ledger, is gross attachment, one-twne
whether the cartoon subject is inclining more to the 'positive' or egohdentification with a particular object or objective. If 'serene
'negative' interpretation of reality, the 'service to self or 'service to dispassion' characterizes that positive type of balana to be a c h i i
orhers'category, there will be more or less call for one over the other, as antidote to such disturbing potential, we may say that cold objec-
and consequentlymore or less of either in evidence at any given time tivity characterizes the negative style of balana.
as 'guide' or subtlefivisible guardian. At a certain fateful threshold "There are obvimufystill objects and objecriivu in either case;
in the operative proportion or 'percentage' of orientation, of course, but both, respective forms of orientation serve to prevent or forestall
an invisible boundary-line has been passed and the personality has the collapse of integral harmony (required to maintain higherdensity
effectually 'committed' to one type of alignment or the other with alignment posttiveer-negative) through the allure of the Temptress
referena to further progrcs and learning-modes of the 'higher', 'Lustof-Result*. That's how both positive Md negative highcrden-
postgraduate densities. sity frameworkscircumvent the enervating forms ofrugc, or di~stract-
"The subject is thereafter 'typed', stamped acmrding to his ing subplots of 'pmonal menge' that characterize 3rd density-style
0535
attachment to results, outcomes and desired effects." p u m c e that comprise the mindless sine qua non of physical
"So...what was that again?...'You aren't measured according 'englamment'."
to your works, but weighed on the basis of your b a h c e ' ..." "You mean, nobody sees anything extraordinary in thc flcsh-
'Motto of Maat, the Egyptian MT (sporting dual As in the . born being, there's nothing to particularly distinguish him--or her-
middle, eh?)" no glowing auras or obvious halos, no rays of otherworldly energy
"Ah yes-the Vulture-goddess of Justice, I believe, who emanating from their fingertip.."
weighed hearts in the Hall of the Dead with ...a feather." "Well, theremy be, there could be any of those thing but the
"She might be heard saying, more often than not," AAA point is, thestudent-soulsof this density would nevcrknow it bcguse
smiled,"you have the ego of helpfulness--but not the Soul of Listen- they hadn't developed the faculties lhemseIves wherebv to see such
ing. You're a m running off to 'do the good deed' so as to score things; of course they suppose themselvesautomaticall;deservingof
Brownie points-but you never stop to Listen to what's really been any such disclosuregrmir, either as if it's constitutionallyowcd thcm
Said." or as though an obligmion of 'God as God'is to offcr of divin~ty
up front when claiming thc privilege of 'spedal' appearance.
"Even if there are one or two who typically 'have' such powers,
virtually by karmic accident, the ego belonging to such beings nevcr
allows proper perception or intcrprctation in any casc, and indccd-
in practice--mast often bccomes affrontcd and wildly agitated in the
presence of any such Integrity beyond its own so that it actually
manages to m ~ u f u ca )symbol-system
~~ of interposing properties
grayly the projection of the cgo-subjut's own quality, and %wing to
deflect or obsarre Reception to what's really There.
"In fact, that very difficulty involved in proper apprehension
and receptivity bemmespon of the learning-framework of this dcn-
sity. It comes toserve as theprincipalfesson as towhat the3rd dcnsity
state of amscbsness is all about, because involved in that one
situation may be found all the puzzles, koans and mind-locks revolv-
ing around object-valuation, ihc antipathy between thinking and
feeling, knowledge and understanding and the central paradox that
haunts all considerations of time and eternity, ' s a d ' and 'profane',
the 'ordinary' and 'extraordinary' etc. The living Teacher of a truly
higherdimensional correspondence manages automatically to em-
body, and draw forward, the intcrior crisii of all 'corporeal' condi-
tions, succccds in aggravating their implicit presence to the degree of
the wauwiduble just by the natural expression of that Value propcr
to his Being. In his awakened state he's an a@nt to slecp.
"But m n the sleepstate & e m , and it dreams on the basis
of the availablematerial, the prevailing rwl conditionsol itsnocturnal
environment.Thus thesleepstatednm the being of the Awakened
"You know, Michael." the Colonel said. "I've just had a onewho's really present, there in thc room, but through thc intcrprc-
thought here. As I understand it, those who 'graduate' tothe higher live medium & ihe dream-mind or ego-psyche the $umbering sub-
densities of souldevelopment in the service-to-others framework, ject makes up models and idols of rationalization to account for the
while technically free of the need to return to the schoolhouse of peculiar characteristics otherwise known-in the intuitive substrate
masked, 3rddensity level, nonetheless often do as a function of the o f the dreaming being--to belong to a Consciousness compielely
service-twthers orientation..." awakc.The wocessof dreamingtends tocovet its state: and. asinbuilt
"Yes, that's right. The higherdensity personality, functioning action of its'own device, perceik the things reflected into-it in such
within the multidimensionalcontext axresponding to hiactual level, a way as to preserve the artifice of its narrow self-adjustment, intcr-
may iorm a kind of armpact with others of that and h i g h levels to preting m r y impression in service to prolonging the dream."
return once or occasionally to a 3rd-stage state so as to supplement "Isn't it true though," the Colonel said, "at least the way I
the itdirect education provided by camouflage mechanisms of that understand it, that in 'compensation' for the opaque resistance typi-
framework, with the incomparable factor of face-to-face tutelage by cally accorded the higher 'spiritual tutors' who come to this planc,
an incarnate agency. there is the massed support of all the hierarchy functioning through
"Ihiform of 'educational' help is always considered the most the infeeding oaave of densities with whom thc incarnating 'hclpcr'
potent, universally effective and valuable; it's cherished above all had--as you said-first of all arranged a compact..."
others in the higher densities, m n above the educational forms of "In principle, you can certainlysay that the incarnating teacher
'channeling' or temporary, vehicular intersection in adaptive 'travel' on the 'positive' spiritual side has the cooperation of the Whole
from homebase to the steppeddown density of 'Earth'. Of course, behind him, in terms of the bcncficent intelligences working on his
since it's so cherished in the h i g h densities it tends to be the lcast behalf 'bchind the sccncs' from the vantage of the dccpcr Icvcragcs
appreciated and, indeed, often the most despised form of Instruction of psychic and acativc influcnce (through which evcry attcmpt is
on 'Earth'." made to optimize the cffcctiveness of those pattcrns serving to
'Why's that?" coordinate the Earth-plane upcricnccs forming 'round thc Prescnce
"Contempt for commonality, Colonel. h e very factor of com- of the teacher). It's hard to look at this as any sort of cotnpenrnrion
monality that makes such teaching so unique and valuable, i.e. shar- for the resistance of Earth-plane intelligence, though, since that
ing the same plane and framework of practical focus as the 'studcnt' rcsistanceis--at itscorc-both a function and product ofn7U. of decp
s&ls, is at the same time the veil of normalcy which-in so masked internal preference or psychic sclcction rather than thc expression of
a dimension-often s e w to thoroughly obscure the merit of the a strictly mechanical flaw that can bc offsct by mechanical mcan..
Incarnate teacher with those objective standards and criteria of up "And while it's true that such a psychic oricntation is con&
fioned (given optimum opportunity for framing itsvolitional preroga- and magnifying them into preemptive determinang thesubjectcan-
tive through technical filters and comitivc screens which maximize didate to negative polarization finds himself well on thc way to tom!
the potenLl for distortive determinajions in the first place), once set negative-interpretation of existence (through thc tacit, collective
it has a strictly d o u s inertia or momentum of its own; once thrust of implemcntcd behaviors) bcforc consdousncv nccd pivot
certain, ~illcd~~redispositions arise from a maximallycncouraging on itsvolitional fulcrum and assume such 'philosophy' as an ovcmd-
soil, they exhibit a heartiness that partakes of their specific character ing Intent, a direct desidcration of its own.
and so tends toprevail over thesum of conditioningfactors no matter "In this sense, the negative 'graduate' just ratifies what has
how they may change. Consciousness comes to rely on such willed been impliatly accepted already, he puts his 'conscious' stamp on a
predispositions or prejudicial habit-patterns of the 'sueened' dimen- 'for accompl' that has effectively characterized his oricntation for
sion as a refuge of familiarity, a stable reference of Identitypecirely somc time.
in the midst of what could otherwise be bewilderingly chang~ng "You can scc it, for cxamplc,whcn thc highcrdcnsity ncgative
conditions." 'alien' presences encourage thc paranoid and bellicose tcndcncy of
"Sothe fact that the given 'spiritual teacher' of the positive type the military mentality to the degree that it's prcsured to cnact all its
has more or less the whole of the positive hierarchy behind him, in logical conclusions, driven to forceeject the dcepcst implications of
the technical sense of magically intensifying the coordinate align- its long-time premises into a kind of 'purity' of action unmixed by
ments of those patterns through which he functions. is nonetheless benign coosiderations At thc point where such magnification-of-tcn-
not the equivalent of a real compensation for the typical inertia and dency takes place m a t comprehensively and with greatest internal
resistance accorded that teaching-prance through the 'volitional' consistency, the consciousness in question has all-butaeated an
oricntation indicative of the opaque Earth-medium iuelf." airtight, self-fulfilling prophecy (insofar as the deepening uniformity
"I think it's fair to say that. The incarnate teacher has only one and integrity of its actions has aligned a responsive model of confor-
fundamental purpose, and that is to transform cmciWrnus, to . mably.mirroring reality con-g its assmment to the d e g m of
awaken c o n u ~No. trick in the book, so to speak, that can be Conrcious ratification, full-fledged philmophical endorsement of the
brought to bear towards technical furtherance of that aim as a formally Negative premise as most-accurate standard of thc Way
teaching device or demonstration, can ever be considered the Thing Are)."
equiva&m of affecting any such change. The free-will variabk at the "This brings me to the premise of my original thought," the
heart of this conschmess-transformation rcsenns the inalienable Colonel interjcaed. "I was asking about those higherdensity bcing
right of its bullheaded blindness to call a Heart a Uub, and to insist within the s e r v i a - t ~ t h e r framework,
s who need not rcturn to the
that Evertst is an anthill if you but back far enough away from it. In lower probationary densities but who sometimes do..and I was
o t h e r w o r d s , m o ~ o sheer
f magicaleffect within the convention- specu&ting about that possibility as an understandable function of
ally 'permissible' context of the blindered dimension in question, is the sc~a-to-oIhersframework--mu know. that kind of 'backward'
no guarantor of a capitulation or ceding from the indigenousprychic birth is done with maximal ooo&ration of the multidimensional
sfunce; since the free-will variable-functioning from the premise of sctvesand beings of the 'higher' lcvels who remain at their stations in
its locallydistortive framework--can and does exercise the volitional order to organize and influence the lowcrdimcnsional patterns
'right' to dismissthe evidence of asubtle syllogism aswell as the public toward which the tcacher~oulis temporarily moving, all thc intcract-
d&pptarana of Mount Rushmore, that i&ucible is ing densities and levels exhibit Being who act in conart in order to
the absolute leveler. There's n o d e p a of relative efficacy obtaining accomplish the kinds of transformation that redound to the s c ~ a
(as in some mechanical or alegbraic formula) between the intensity and benefit of the whole."
of 'persuasion' exerted by the Nonordinary patterning of circumstan- "Yes..."
ces through the Teaching-presence, and the independent deter- "Well, it occumd tome that the highcrdensityneg&ve being
minant of will-no malter how conditioned by distortion4f the must occasionally take 'backward' or l m r incarnations as well, you
e g w b j e c t toward whom the teaching demonstration is directed. know,apparently retrogcsivc 'births' in thc earlier densities that arc
There's just no such eqrrnrion at all; and yet they do bear a relation technically beneath their present lcvcl of attainment."
to one another. "Ye& .."
"Ihe teaching demonstration, and the Presence of the teacher "I think some such thing must be what's implied in thc idea of
altogether, is given on W f of the free-will variable. So they bear an the 'Anti-Christ'; a being of some optimum 'evil' that must cor-
in&tt?nnimfe relation to one another. In other words, it's a relation respond to the higher ncgative densities yet who takes birth in the
which, whik its effeas and interactions can be esrimufed by a proas ph$ical dimension and a k r s as a man.-~ow,it's relatively easy to
similartostatistical averaging, can't be determined beforekind in any conaivc, in the service-twthers framework, what might stand to be
absolute way. This is why the true spiritual teacher on theparhive side accomplished by some such 'retrogressive' incarnation; that kind of
of the de~itydividehas much the more difficult task, m this sense, thing seems almost inbinricdy a sacrifice, since a highcrdcnsity
than hi negative counterpart; for the positivelyaligned teacher isn't being enjoying privileged levels of Light and Consciousness etc.
just attempting to influena or induce a bdmioral modification;he's deliberately takes it upon himself to temporarily forfeit all such
trying to effect the infinitely more subtk, elusive and difficult work supcrnal pieasurcs, and faculties fo; what,-by all accounts, is
o f a w ~ g c o ~ ~ t c w ~ ~ ~ i ~ e ~ p m ~ g i t s v ofulcrum l i t iono n a alcontrastively reslrictivcand tortuous form of comprcsscd corporenl
the basis of its own innate merit beyond all the conditioning that existence. On top of that, from what I gathcr, such a formidablc
would counsel otherwise, and keep its determinations statistically 'setback' is lible to be morc than just remporary, s i n e any such
'locked-in'. incarnating constiousncss cvcn proceeding from a point-of-origin in
"The negative 'teacher', on the other hand, while certainly thc highcrdcnsitiesmust takcon the indigcnous%cilof forptfulncs'
attempting toaffcct a polarization of consciousness in alignment with when assuming the physical intcgumcnt of thc lowcr world$. And
the negative highcrdcnsity orientation, is precisely most cffectivc in although the dccpcr spark of awarcncss remains as a h n r itnprs-
his work by the indirect or suneWitious method of behnviod swn of thc soul-being linking it with thc higher worlds from which it
modifcatioi, i.e. carsing that polar&tion-preference of probation- voluntarily came, it's formally obscured by the saamblcd pattcrns of
ary consciousness to take place imperceptibly as silent cffect of the biogeneticand transdimensional coordinates comprising thc ncsts of
sum direction emerging from its &muiative behaviors. Thus the 'centers' compounding the molecular 'locks' of thc physical, fctai
negative 'teacher' s h induces reactive behaviors, intensifying the stmaure.
most negative lines of tendency through aggravating indigenous fears "It's been said that even if the abstract prcfiguralion of thc
nerabiiity before he 'grows' into his self-recognized power again- amidst a certain proportion of positkly-integrated Eanh~ouis,or
what prcvtnts them from slaying him or soul-imprisoninghim in his amongst those of at least potentidy positive serVjCC; and amongst
rendered infant form so as to advance fhumeIve~up to thc higher- these there are certain having 'pcnwen''of their own, forms of far-
dimensional position he's seeminglyvacatcd temporarily?" seeing psychism or even higher typcJ of spirit-intuition which might
"First of all, a highcrdimensional portion of this pcrsonality- bc capable of dctccting thc proximal prescncc of inlenliod
prcsena doern? incarnate-thc individual& vcrsion of what is malcvolcncc with thc triggcr-rcsponsc of an clcctric cyc. It thcrcforc
Oversoul cunsci0usne.son the 'positive' side, docsn't embody in the serves this antichrist bcst if, until he's brought to the point-of-no-
lower dimensionswith the soul-projection but rathcr supervises from return in fully recovering knowledge of his Idcntity and undcrcovcr
Abovc by continuously adjusting 'I$rmic' currents and'thought-pat- 'rnision', he himxlf is'innocently' unawarc of that identity.so that hc
terns e t c That negative, individualized multidimensional Persona may .go through childhood, pubcrty and early adulthood without
'stands guard' ov& its projected-incarnating aspcct, and has the 'setting off psychic alarms', as it wcre. You KC?"
power hierarchically to undo any of those lesser sentitors appointed "Yes, it makes sense. If he isn't aware of his own naturc and
to take carc of the Incarnation. At the same time, those minions and mission, hc won't bc prcmaturcly crating the thoughtforms and
s c ~ t o r participate
s in the process and coopcratc not mcrcly from ' s i p ' that alcrt possible, propinqu~toussc~tiv+s to h i s p m n a . His
fear of Luciferian reprisal toward apostasy or failure, but out of 'supervising' servitors on the other hand, should alrcady hnve suffi-
anticipation for reciprocal gains in terms of advancing their power, cient psychic capacity and highcrdimensional, magical powcrs them-
status and overall position once the antichristcharactcr succeeds in selves to shield both their own prescnce and activity and that of their
his massive negative hanrtst. They expect to profit by the superior unknowing, unholy 'charge'."
power this incarnate antichrist is ultimately able to bring to bear on "Right. So while the ludicrous 'Jeanie Dions' and 'Ruth
the whole business of 'turning the planet negative'4pturing it and Montgomerys'are prattling inanely about the 'birth of the antichrist'
as much of its soul-field as possible, as a negative resource to add as hcre, and his 'activity', there, .the real antichrist slips right in, un-
a plum to the Empire. , heralded and unnoticed like an anonymous lamb, right into the midst
"& for the advantage to the 'antichrist' character himself, of of the flock just ripe for shearing precisely becousc it's in the mean-
suffering the temporary lapse invoived in literal birth or incarnation time mesmerized by sideshow distraaions such as the know-nothing
regardkss how much his aversoul-surrogate has hedged the bet and hit-and-miss 'Dixons' of the world."
sewed it 'round with demon guardians...Donlt forget, this incarna- "l7uu'sristy wrinvuuedp4 ~ t h e p r r f e c t m o II k wns
tion, this 'slipping-in' through the dark portal of birth takes place Ihc only way tofool thepsychics."
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. . Emy step-by-step instruction for beginners or those with dificultics in crcativc
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.. Now available On 1 hour tape, MTdiscusses UFOs, thcir origins, occupants and humanity's rclation to
such increasingly persistent "visitors".
.. I
UFOs:-MTexplains phenomenon of l i t o c k mutilation, governmcntlNicn intcnction, Ncgativc and
Positive U F m , how you may disaiminate, protcct yourself, ctc.
I
by "Mother Terasu" (MT)
is "neither Being nor Non-being" ac can nonethelev be charac-
PART 1 terized quite adequately for our sufficient working comprehension--
for, owing to the ~ c l f - ~ d ror
n tinevicrrble quality of Its ultimate
-. Long before there was ever a New Age, indeed since the time disclosure we may be confident that there is nothing in It which is not
of the "new religious movement" in AD. Rome, then was the also in us. Thus wc 'find" in It what can be identifed already in us,
question of "Christ Consciousness", what it was, what it implied. On only extended to its ultimate "mnclusion" or irreducible charac-
the modern global scale allowing-and indeed compelling-the terization.
prospect of Comparative Religions, the question extends itself toask In this way we should be able to make certain positive asser-
whether there is a basic difference or fundamental compatibility tions about Absolute-being without thereby in any way delimiting,
between "Christ Consciousness" and Buddhic or Vedic Realization, straitjacketingor 'qualifying" it; and moreover we should be able to
the Taoist disclosure e t c make asscrtionsfrom-the awakened standpoint of the Whole which
In order to address such a question, it is ahvays best not to start demonstrate the inm'tabilify clinging to the characterization of Ab-
from the inductive basis and build up, structure against comparative sdute as-for agmpk-Consciousness, Identity and Love (rather
structure, conceptual N i c e against conceptual edifice as in the than being unable still, despite our meta-physical posture, to surpass
moderndetective manner of piecemeal, cumulative science; for in the present powcn of physical science to reason why the stuff of
that way, as we've seen time and again, there's only the spectacle of existence should be conrciousness as opposed to any of the
parallel monoliths aspiring upward in their separateness where lines phenomenal candidates- e.g. the "imducible panicle", the single
never really converge except at Infinity4 "destination" which is force or element etc).
impossible of acccss, definitionally,wherever our point of departure We begin then, significantly, where many other spiritual dis-
is thefininrde admittedly comprising any inductive, inferential basis. Cuyions begin, with a Triune formulation of the ultimate "qualities"
Starting at the oppoJie end in order to get a proper 6x on of Absdute-being. In order to understand what "Christ Conrious-
whatevcr 'Christ Consciousness" might possibly be, however, poses ness" is, we have to know f m of aU that Absoluteking is a thm-in-
its own problems Only an initiatic wisdom based on the--nctxssai- one proposition; it may be characterized in tenns of Identity or Self,
ly--global requirement of Initiation as it exists in the present unitary Love, and Void.
situation of the world, may even hope to evcr take up an adequate
station beyond the perspectives that describe the cumnt, codified The Affinity of Infinity for the Split-Infinitive
inventory of "regional" esoteric schools, teaching and official Where arc the necessary or compelling links between these
religions. t h m values? and where is the selfcvident comqondence between
Initiated wisdom would have us understand that in order even them and Absolute-being?
to begin to recognize what's referred to by the term "Christ Con- Fmt of all, anything which is going to be presented authenti-
sciousness", it's necessary to establish the preliminary foundation cally as Absolute must be irreducible. This means that it must be
that provides a servicable acquaintance with the value of Being everywhere the same as i#e& it cannot be 'other" than Itself under
altogether; for only in Light of the totality of k i n g (i-e. what it is, any conditions including thofc in which an apparent 'other" may
what it is "made up of", what it "does" etc) may any such question make iu appearance. It is therefore, of necessity, everywhere idetui-
take confidence in an adequate resolution. cal to lueI/.
Therefore, we can't really begin with the 'finite"; we hovc to That which is everywhere the same as or idenricufto iuey, has
begin with the Infinite, the Unlimited, the Absolute! to be Idcnriryprrse.Ordinarily when we think of "identity", wc think
of it as the subject to which are attached the qualifylng pcdicufes
Know Thy Self-Evident and Irreducible Being framing its protileaf-identification. In this cw hawever Identity is
(Motto Engraved on the Entrance to the Ruins of the sufficient unto itself without one qualifylng predicate term, or ewn
Delphonics' Music Emporium and Late-Night in the paence of any nrch ptetuial tern. Identity is that which is,
Recording Studio in Culver City) nctxssaily ( s d c n a would say "rigorously") identical to Itself. Ab-
solute Identity is that which remains identical to itself in and ~hroligh
Intuition has always shown our mightiest philosophen and all e b l e conditions
wide-awake being that, regardless the inevitable sense of limitless That which is infinitely identical to itself, selfconformant to a
c a p r e and effusivc non-necessiry that pours off the subject of Ab- limitless d e g m and comple;ely congruent with itself under all condi-
solute, there is at the same time a complementary intimation of deep tionsdescribes for us the very essence of Sey. Thii Identity is, self-evi-
necessi~there is the wisc sense that Being, onaknown, has self-evi- dently, a Se&identify since it is identical to itself under all conditions.
dently necessary correspondence with its-apprently arbitrary- That which is infinitely the same as, selfum&ent with or identical
principles and phenomenal aspects. Being in its Absolute status to Itself, necessarily comeslo itself in order that such congruence and
p o s s e s s a certain imd~iciblevalue that makes its ultimate "charac- selfawsistency be considered truly complete. In coming to itself in
ter" wholly ncceuary--an inevitable, self-evident extension and un- infinite Selfcongruence with itself. it necessarily apprehends itself as
deniable conclusion from any given point of departure which Self-identical to Itself.
necessarily takes its existence in thc first plan in and through that Thii apprehension is aworrness. It is Self-awarencss--thus
Being. "Identity" as'a'nonqualifyingdefinition of Absolute is necessarily an
Thus we rmry characterize Absolute value. (despite objections Awarencv of its Self-identical character. M o m r such awareness
from various schkls that beg the question under umbrage of the secrvu that infinite Identity which othemist, in the absena of any
ultimately "ineffablc", "indescribable" or even "unknmble" nature such coming-to-itself. would be infinitely d m p t k d from taal self-
of Absolute-Being) without thereby in any way qtrnIi/j1'ng it. That congruence; it mwld be evcfywhcre d i i d e n t i f d from itself and so
Being which is "neither this nor that", "which can't be spoken", which dk-integnafedfrom the potential Holism of its unqualified uniformity.
This state of affaii is indeed what seem to happen in the of intervening 'distance" betwetn the Value of Negation and itsown
procesrsof Cbmogonyor the creative, conditioning and expressive Self-ground. The factor of Absolute Non-being, applied to Itself as
aspect of Divine Absolute-nature. The oppmnr disruption in the its orm Sole Referent, can only give rise to Being. only "trick"
selfcoming to Iwlf of Awarenets (through introduction of creatively which an absolute, unlimited 'Being" (i.e. Non-being) can pull out of
"qualifying* terms to which the whole-value of Identity may be Its hat, is that of Limitation. ' h e only thing which an unqualified
provisionally attached) produces a network of grades in the seeming Principle can 'do", is qualify. It anainly needn't 'give rise" to infinite
'allapsc" of consciousness. each such grade is unitive through self- terms, since It already resides coincident with any such Infinity.
enclosed, p v i r i o d l y selfcongruent terms on a conditional and This is precisely the philosophical principle coded into B e
comparative scale t h a t - i n themselves--support states of "subcon- emblem of the Tibetan "Diamond-Vajra Void". The Diamond-
..- sciousness" and "unconsciousnets". Vajra represents explicitly a double-qutivc. The double negative is
The question as to 'how" or "why'' such an unqualifd Ab- a self-negation. a cancellation upplied to iuelfso that it apparently
solute-value and perfectly xlfangruent, infinitely consistent Bemg widt iuelfgiving rise to the myriad passibititks of bring,i.e. qualifica-
"content in its own nature" would give rise to the amplitude of tion, conditionality, delimitation etc.
creative and thusfinirinrirg form that seems to compromise it on an The apparent negufion of iuelf, howwr, is a paradaxical
infinite scale, can indeed be "answered". It is nor a iinal "unknow- prospect. 1tsGlf-negatib can oily behjpahm'crrl; it canonly be the
able", but can be intuitedand rationallyexplicated through any phasc creativepopwition ofan infinite-unlimited Value. It can never result
of its own Being; for all things arc models, moments, artmplications -. in a ndlllcoilapscupon,the fmite and delimited, an actual decay into
and selfduplicating expressions of Its Nature inclusive of its cos- an encapsulated being undergoing infmite degradation; for it is
mogonic Impulse or Logoic zeal. All things recapitulate and prrcbcly the continued undertying Reality of the Self-Negation of
"holonomically" illustrate the sum of principles, pawers and proces- M u t e that cradles all t m m of pmisional Wig, that hdds tMm
ses involved in the ancient h - a f f a i r of the Infinite with the fmite, in its Self-cancellimgarms, nurtures and sustainsthem in Md rhnwrgh
so that anything under self-reflective apprehension may serve as Its own continuous Void-character.
sufficient p ~ i n k f d e ~ a r t u rfor
e an adequate nowi in^ without Indeed Void-being is the only continuous (uninterrupted)
having to retreat to some rarefied or yogially-specialbed state, a value. for as m'veseen it is That which is everywhere amistent with
"past" or one-time-only hypothetical moment as the ideal (and er- ~tself,.infinitelyc o n p e n t and selfanformait to Itself. This infinite
roneous) propasition of the Big Bang in physics e t c congruence and S,-efl moIWWr, in unfer to be Ab-
>uswe may come to see that the limitlesscreative abundance solute or unqualified must be sustaiacd in the face of oll cdifiionr,
towhich Absolute scemsspon- togive rise, isnot anarbitrary and "wnditioru" arc pmiscly the brood of that Creative incubation
manufactory any more than the Triune Values of Absolute pmve to in the akmbii of Non-king, furnishing the plethora of potentially
be arktrary. In a a n a i n sense such creative abundance spings from disruptive termr
an internal "necessity" of Absdute. We may suppaac from this that It is for this reason that, under maditions of I u apparent,
Absolute may be 'compelled". But since It is "compelled", in this creative Self-litation through the potentiated appearance of all the
sense, by something within Ifrelf, we cannot object that It is Logoic worlds, D i - A b s o l u t e - W i g mfaccs the continuity of Its
dimininhed by this "compulsion" to something kss than Absolute (as Identity (unbroken at infinity) through the value of W U
would be the case if that "necessity" was imposed upon it by an
intrusive principle). Where There's a Will The& a Wu Wei
WJI,then, is the omw term of Conriwsocssgbsdute
Autogenous Parts and Mind-body Work Done with mpcr to the universes of creative potential coming to arprrs-
Here nnd Now, Only One I.D. Required sion through its very, Self-same Value. W d is the instrumentality of
(Se Habla Espiiol): comioumcsswhich m f . c s the Infinite of I u coming to Itself
Sign Seen on Pinstriped Cowbarn in Oxmrd as Self-identity, or ~ o u Self-awarcne~s;
s it functions as the
pcuurr,thetifore, of absolute void-identity informing and flowing
And what is this "internal necessity? Remember m noted through the provisional patterns of identification (m the field of
that most theological-metaphysicaldescriptionshave, in deference to manifestation- pressure whichpubfrom within on the bash of
Its "ineffable" character,attempted to buck into defming Absolute the inhmntly indcr-e term of Void-being intolerablycmwdtd
by merely cataloguing or litanmng what It is nor. thus Absolute is and insufferably suffocated by any hypothetical investment of the
usually defined as pure Negation, a fundamental Non-being (i-e. Whole-value of Identity in a restrictive or determinable pattern
'Neti, Neti," not this, not that etc). Ihs accwnu for om of its cited, Will is thepmssukof ~ e n d e n c e , c d g i n g1dentityto surpas
tripartite "attributes" ie. Void. Absolute is necessarily Void in the every intermediate equation of (potential) identification with any
sense that It can't be qualified in i u Infinite-unlimited character; but conditional term.
in its homogeneity and infinite Selfcongrumce with Itself, on the Thus whib it may xrm that our 'limited" wills are directed
This leads us to t h t iamous philosophical plopoJition regard- whole-valueof ~dentity,w h i i scn&tosynthcsi; the testable unities
ing the "Negation of the Negation", which in fme H e p l i n fashion of any givpn focal framework and at the same time surpass them-
never brings us summarily to the starting point, but inducesan infinity at least inferentially-in the unrestricted power of its void-rdy.
Self and Identity, then, are basic values of Absolute; and since an unsatisfactorybifurcation; for now there seems to be no neccsary
Absolute p o ~ e s s ethe
s inbuilt power, born of Its inherent Non-being, relation between the Absolute-Being through which we inmitaw
to overcome the "limitation" of Its perfect infinite congruence rak our being, and the patterning processes of perception and
through hypothetical Self-presentation of endless "limited worlds", cognition through which we draw our practical description of the
the relation of Absolute to Its own creative magnitude give5 expres- world. The latter appears to be pcn caprice, or at I w t nothing
sion to consciousncs as Will. prevents it from k i n g pure Caprice; and while for a single instant that
In this way it may be sccn that Absolute-Identity and the fact may seem acceptable, it should become plain with a littk reflec-
phenomena of Creative existence are nor ontililetical. Givcn a suffi- tion that such a situation leaves us stranded with our prefigured
ciently accurate philosophical description of the necessary principles perapmal complex functioning for all we know as a totally "lying
of Being at the outset, we automatically avoid the pitfalls that plague spirit", and an unbridgeable gap opening by virtue of jlut thm cir-
extant descriptions of spiritual and esoteric schools still largely ac- c w r m c e between our functional k i n g and Absolute or True
cepted, at face value, as issuing from some "superior" viewpoint: i.e. Being.
those views running to the effect that Absolute and the overflow Indeed, stranded with those conditional hculties and a
worlds of creative being are incompatible, innately antithetical and philosophical chasm Separating them from anything which can truly
ultimately irreconcilable so that one side of the Sacred Equation has beknown,wearestuckin the prrsmtMstagesituationof&~u~-
to be smrck, eliminated as an inappropriate term through "proper" ness characteristic of mankind colkaively, in which we need ork
fonns of rigorous meditative "insulation" practically producing a whether there isunynlch thingas an Ultimate,an Absolute (and thus
rigor monk of extreme-paralytic tetany in the withdrawal of con- somcrhing&nowub&, in the sense of being an inextricable or apodii-
sciousness from its gross "food-sheath" e t c t i ~ l f t v i d e n t - v a l u eof our Being, rather than something im-
Instead, we & clearly that the Creative (or Logoic) value of pased arbitrarily as a grid-pattern of cognition with no necmary
Expnssion springs from a very magical "internal necessity" belonging relation).
to the unique quality of Absolute as functional Non-being, such There is havcwr a necessary relation between the creative
"neasity" makes the creative as a Whole quite compib& with the aspect of Being and Its Absolute status. S i n e the creative arises
infiniteSelfconformance and absolute congruenceof Spiritualvoid- lhrough Absolute-value, it bormwsagainst and presumes m emulate
Being, while at the same time infusing the potential patterns of that Value on its own finitizing kvel, for it's everywhereinfrued with
creative expression with a vMirble factor (deriving from the elastic the incomparableand alldesirabk pdfy of that Whole-Wing as its
indeterminacy of the void-ground of all creativity) that permits any very Ground. In this way the creative presumes immediately to
given combination of phenomenal appearance to conform quite configure itself according to the i n f ~ t consistency,
e selfcongruena
happily to the standard of Dmne Whim as cited by Meher Baba. and absolute selfconformance that characterizes the Supreme
Such basic ccmpibiliry between Absolute-Identity and the Value of Being through which it upsurges; only it mcesJarily has to
fields of Logoic (or creative) expression, enforced by the instrumen- appropriate such inspiriting Value through the characterizing term
tality of Will,demonstratesthe necessity ofacknowledging thesccond of its own limi~mion.
great Quality by whiih we may characterize Absolute, Le. the primor-
dial quality of k. Hypostatic Cheesecake, The Baking Dessert of
Manifestation (No Matter Which Way You Slice It
"Siva Loves Sakti" (Middle-Dravidian Graffiti,
Carved in the Carapace of a Turtle Found Lounging It Remains In One peace)
in a Corner Booth at Bully's Gym and Health Bar at In thii way we find that the creative value of being configures
Figuema and La Cienega llaving a Dayglo Elephant itself fvst of all as apmrem-of-behghaving necessary, Noctic proper-
ty. That which is w f i c is intrinsically predicated on consciousney,
Standing One-legged on Its Back Supporting a
for it athibits pure abstraa rationality. The configuration of creative
Blacklight Universe at the Tip of Its Trunk) ulimit" as a propasition of infinite selfcongruena and consistency
Love characterizesthe relation between Absolute and itscrea- through all its (delimiting) aspects neccsarily imparts to it, immedi-
tive exprcsion; the "two"arc actually of a single and inanricable ately, an idcntifmbly ided quality. If for arampk a nondimensional
piece, but united in suchaway that one (thecreative aspect) isobliged point represents for us the quintessential term of Limit, we have to
by the other (the Absolute status) and never the other way around. see right away that it's an ideal hypothesis possessing in itself no
The creative arises on the basisof the inbuilt value of Absdute definitive "localization"; mcan't pinpoint such a point--it upsurges
as a whole-Negation having only Itself, ultimately, toward which to as a proposition of the creative Value of k i n g seeking to possess the
apply Itself. Assuch, the creativeneccssarily'bom" its k i n g from Absolute-statusthrough which it comes t 0 6 i o n i o n & o n iu own
Absolute, but never the other way around. ?his intimate relation t m (it therefore implicitly seeks to R ~ ~ S I ~ forIUIC that Absdute-
between the "two" already aftin& w r a l important philosophical status).
propositions underlying any question regarding our furthcst capacity We can say then that suchan ideal point-propositioncomprtscs
to "know" about the Bcing which wc find o u - m b spontaneously a sanuufe orpfenmy affirmation of the creatively delimiting Bcing of
living. Absolute Non-king it necevarily arises coincident with itself at all
For one thing, thii initial recognition contraindicates a sig- poyiMe "pointsn of illimitable Being, but in order to do this would
nificantly challenging proposition put forward by certain commen- therefore seem to upsurge "besiden itself or ripple selfduplicates of
tators throughout history; such a propsition has its most pointed itself in an indefinitely extensive displacement through its own basic
modem application in confoundingthe hypothevsof'naive realism" ink:-, all such "smearing" or diffusion contributing to noth-
advanced by science, is. the rather shallow, taken-for-granted ing other than its illimitable c ~ ~ e n and c y saneness under all
premise that the descriptive characterization given us of the human conditions of its creative self-multiplication.
nervous-system and the inner composition of the field through which It becomes equally evident that wch an undifferentiated,
it a r k , is necessarilyaccurate or pa~csscsbasicverisimilitude (even saturate "plenum" of the delimiting point-propasition would a c h i m
though such a dtsaiption inevitably proceeds from the prefigured an ideal selfcongruena or limitless consistency when extended along
variables ofa pattern that hands us all its working termsapos~m~on). particular dimmtiond axes: Mus the proposition of a lie, a curve of
While such sage obsenfadon undermines the poorly-thought- consissent deformation (i.e. circle) etc.
out confidence ofxience's'naive realism", it inevitably leaves us with
We may see from this that a simple Eiiclidem geomeny repre- the provisional drawing of Itself into conformal identipwith t h
sents the terms of creative limit in their necessary relation-byderiva- forms of potential delimitation.
tion from Absolute. "Euclidean ::romeuy" isn't one "type" of Not only then do thasc forms reprCSCnt configurations and
geometry along with hyperbolic ana elliptic etc., but a prototype of patterned "proposals" employing the Self-sameIdentity of Ahsolute
the n d c status of creative being. It demonstrates the Mension of as suggested eqriivalents of It; they suddenly become, in the Cm-
the infinite amsistencv. a m m e & and illimitable self-sameness of mogonic Act, experimental eqressions of that proposition putting
Absolute through vjibus planes of delimited being, contrastively theoretical premises into practical terms through the inhirely gnr-
polarizing the architectural "lintels" of dimensional perpendicularity ciosrr enabling of such terms by the cooperative conformance of
according to characteristic, coordinate axes (cf. the twistor mathe- Whole-Value Identity, on a Consdwsor IYiUcd basis
matics of Roger Penrase, in which the mapping of minimum binary It is the Will of Absolute in relation to the creative piopaaal,
states into spin-networks produces regular Euclidean angles). remember, whch chfbrcu the absolute continuity and selfsame
Since in Itself this Creative upsurge of Absoluteking has no Integrity of W i g on an Infinite Jcak under d conditions. Thus the
preferential angle, no perspective, no diiminative "bias",we may WIII of Absolute must first of all produce the comogonic dr-
understand that all such projection of ~ n mative y tenn t h m g h cumstance of relative imbalance, shattering the (absolute/mdetcr-
the wordinate axes defining the "limits" of its operative self-consis- minate) status of saturate selfcancelling Symmetry characterizing
tency, takes place according toa universal, indeterminatelyextensive the plethora of creative potent* in itself. To thb end It simply u t c ~
Symmetry. All "lines", then, constitutingunitive and coherent idea of the geometries or noctic prin+ples of delimited rdFcolltuurity ap
a noetic type owing to the rational uniformity and selfconsistencyof pearing within It, as vari8W poinu of reference establbhing a mini-
their defining axes, proliferate as polarized complementariesi n f ~ n g mum triangulation of compound focal-coordinates along a
a radial symmetry of saturate, angular intersections. Every given differential Axis -.
"point" of the creative plenum (and a point may here mathematically This diffemtial "s&c&arirer iv as an intrhsic Mlue d the. -
summarkc a line, angk, curve or plane, sets of dimensions etc.) b e indcfeminacy of r 5 b s o t u t ~ ~d g ~hicb
, the vsriabk -
comprises the locus of such an indeterminately extensive, saturate coordinate relations of all finitmng pclwcn-qd priOdple~within it, -
Symmetry. are specificattons
Throughout this aeative plethora ofevential idea, there is no
differentiation in itself; its values and properties uniformly charac- "You Iiave to Draw the Line SomewhrZ":
- --
terize the Noetic whole without priority-though the penfiuf of Translation from the Original Etnnan,
differentiation a r i m with the dimensional "extension" of the non-
dimensional point-proposition of Limit, in the form of a line. The Inscribed on a Vase Depicting W e r the Interior ,
*-
"line" establishes the minimal basis of defining "interval", and thus - Of a Paleolithic Tattoo Parior,
of the punctuation-mark of discontinuity, contrast, break, inter- Or the Modus Opnndi
ferena e t c ' Of the Mesopotamian T.& T. Working
The second great "circumstana" whereby Love may be b Without Benefit of Wiring or Cable
cated with respect to the necessary relation of Absolute and Its
Creative potential, occurs in the process offruvtional diflknthrh W ~ t hthe cstabbhmuit of an d l plumbline thnnrgb tbc
through which articulated and contrastive wwkk, k i n g and thing plenum Symmetry of creative potential, thc basis for d i f f '
come to full-term expression. jwhim'on b introduced. Such polarization penniu a focal--
d i t e "deformation" along a s e k a i path of variable r r r d u t h ,
Loaning With Compound Interest producing patterns of prcferrnce and sucss, directional amrws,
This occurs at the critical point in which the W e Value of mutually h i b k valucs of %cesn and "relief and qualities cur-
Identity (coincident with Absolute-Being) re!khely comes to recog- rently interpreted at the kvtl of p h y ~ as
a handedmasor "chiity",
nize the implication of the creative "borrowing" agairw that Value "broken gauge symmetry", vcclor and entropic Oow etc.
made by the delimited field of existence. For the XI/-same infinite The selfcancelling symmetry of any given point or-loau of
Value of Identity infuses, flows through, and spontaneously inspirits cuaxial potential (remembering that any such point here summarizes
the provisional coordinate conditions of every imitative selfanfor- unyg&nefric s y k q , i.e. that of lint, angle, circle etc) within the
mance belonging to the tenns of creative limit. W~thoutin any way Noesis of the creative field, owed its uniformity with rcsmm to all
having "drained" the infinite reserves of Absolute Identity, all amdi- other such self-cancelling h i n t s to its "posi&" at infinity, with
tional identification-patternssymmetricallyproliferatingthmgh the neither perspective nor differential plumbline of Identifmtim to
creative tremendum exemplify and draw fonvard the whole-value of take a crass-sectional fa on it. Any such point poses& the ideal of
that Identity in their own,parallel terms. "global invariance", enjoying an homogenous consistency and
Yet to the Whole Value of Absolute Identity in Itself, these uniform selfcongruence from an amplitude of equivalent Yangks"
are precisely the conditions under which t h m may arise a real given the limiting condition of its premise. Any configuration that
internal disruption, a decisive and fateful d i i t i n u i t y whereby the could be taken through such a point, shared its value.
securing self-circuit of Wing infinitely "coming to" itself ntnildfoll With the introduction of adifferentialmic (of focaluirdinate
shorl, frustrated at the contrastively defining barriers of differential triangulation) drawing forward the compound grid-network of a
identification-pattrmr multidimensional Identification-pattern, evay such symmetrized
' h a t Whole Value of Identityinevitablyrecognizes the volidify point participates in a process of relative asynvnefric alignment in
of the claim which aU such finite and contrastive, polarizing values which polarizedkids obliquely intersect, intcrfm and overlap. The
make against its M u t e Being; for they're the spontaneous and resulting rhythms, harmonic proponions and mulddimensional
internally necessary expressionsof all that's implied in the Identity of resonances reap an abundance of creative irregularities,
a basic Void-being. In ordcr that Absolute-Identityhonor the authen- (voluminously suggestive scallops, fractal fronds and decorative
ticity and "right-to-king" of the finitmng potential that bormws crcnations) comprising the rich variable basis for a bounty of corn-
against It without depletion, (while at the same time honoring the binative potential; and aU such armbinative potential is drawn for-
intrinsic Selfdefinition of that very Identity as the value which comes ward in &fomance with a general or whole Gtterning grid-network
to Itself in Infinite Sameness rhmigit all poretuial editions) Ab- suggesting the perceptual and cognitive range within which a world
solute inaugurates the Loving Self-sacrificeof Its own Being through of interlocking, mutually defining f o m may emerge.
3 8-0-3
Thus every such world is first of all expression of a unitive the repetitive passage of that Line though all the hierarchically
pattern-of-beingintegrated along a coaxial locus of compound separating phases and facets into sets that are Q1&y symmetric
focal rcsolutions-amducting the informing force of Identity; all with respect to one another, but intemaUy usymmeaic, i.e. uncom-
beings, matures, events and conditions in any such world take their pensated by polar self-cancellations in themselves. This pattern is
pointafdeparture from a primary Nottic value through which rela- made accessible to visualization in the order of I Ching trignms in
which the first four trigrams, (Creative and Receptive = =
tive identification-patterns are derived by a filtrate harmonics of
creative interferena.
Thus all creatures, beings, events and things of any and all
Fire and Water -- -+ -\
balanad in their own natures m d
counterbalanced with respect to their complements, yield to the
;
This Section Should Only Be Read Too Full? Here Is A lbo-Step Reduction Plan
By Those Who Are Indeed this creative M i d e comes about precisely in the
"moment", or from the 'perspective", in which Absolute formulates
Deeply Interested In Sex Itself as the resolving Principle of Light, LC. nocfic SelJ-himinance
This internal "strain" to take birth pr itsclf. experiencing its encoding the Meam whereby Everything m y be accomplished',for
being as Limitation in the affirmativefomt of limitation, is intuited in in its abstract-undifferentiated Self-luminance, the value of Identity
various cnsmogonic myths-most notably the Maori creation myth produces ancbtle diffmtuiation, a contractile "withdrawal" and con-
in which it's recited that all beings, matures and things preexisted in sequent Ptepdown" from the plenum value of Infinity-in-Itselt As
the ~ressurizedwomb and insufferable self-enclosure fonned of the inf*ite-undifferentiated Light I% Noetic means, it d i i ~ g u i s h eitself
s
&ic embraa of Rangi and Papa (the interlocked, eternal pr&- from the Absolute-value in which all differentiation and delimitine
t e n a of Heaven and Eanh); and that the din of all such beings crying defmition d o preexist. ?his is why it's said that the beings, forms9
to be released into "free" creative expression, echoed through proasses and things of the creative pattern don't exist within the
Eternity's Halls Since in that stifling embrace (which effectually D i Idea, folded up in the cotyledon of the seed-Thought. That
"crushed out" the differential term or hypatatic power of all gods 'cotyledon" is compascd only of Will, tht abstract Intent of Divine
and intermediate beings between the-ontological-range of Identity in all its powers and potentials without, 'as yet", specific
Heaven and Eanh) nothing could come to hition, the gods rrsdvtd application: the instrumental Indeterminacy of Void-being through
to separate Sky from Ground, it is said that Sky (Rangi) Himself which the variable encoding of all determinations and differential
promoted the Means by which Hi children could stretch forward in specifications is enforad.
the luxuriating Space of "independence" between the two Great The actual articulated beings, forms and things of the created
Principles. And indeed we've seen the manner in which the 'SLry" worlds couldn't be contained in the abstract-noetic Idea; for then we
would simply k back tonthe beginning", where the vafiegated beings , d does this in two ways: by making a "distinction" betwnn
and undifferentiated Being abide in the unity of Absolute Identity to existence-in-itself (or Limit) and limitedtxistencealnody r ~ ~ l in w d
the point of indistinguishability. The Creative power would have no Absolute Identiry, it furnishes the ground of a polarking tension; a
way to "get out of itself" sa as to "remove" the delimiting potentials subtle d i i p a n c y intrudes which a h ~ the s potential of existence-
within It from the fateful generosity of Its Infinite nondiscrimination. in-itself to be "liberatedn from i u indiscriminate coariuence at In-
It would ever 'swallow up" t h a differential
~ forms, so that their finitywith all Value equally. At the same time, by creating the basis
properties would only continue to cause them the "anguish" of their of a practical j~umposirionbetween Limit and Absolute Identity, it
undifferentiated Identity at Infinity (at the same time as they were provides the ground for the reflectivethesis of the Ideoform Resolu-
infinitely"fulfilledn of each independently countercancelled tenden- tion of Identity with respect to the proposal of "Limitation-in-Itself",
'3'). so limitation may be furnished the hypothetical contcp~in which it
By abstracting a unitive undifferentiated Means, a Single can "live out" its premise.
Soluble W h o r Self-contained Idea. the value of Identitv at the same The abstract Means (prucntina Itself in the Ideoform
timesucceehr in "separatingnor distincing itself from t i e paniculate homogeneityof Infinite L i g h t ) ' k formilating the Will that recon-
plenary of possible beings and s e k As the undifferentiated Self-il- ciles the creative-limited with the noa-manifest Limitless subtly ser-
l u m i ~ t i &of ldea it sp&tanewsly "rcduccsn Itself by a whole40p K s a t the same time torcduce the i n d i i n a t e plenum of Absolute
Density, from ultimate-Aaolute king. It ison& in this way that it is to a "dry proposition". This "abstraaion" of Absolute in the form of
able to so dintana its undifferentiated, unitive cmbraa from the Idea is then like a Desert of undifferentiated Self-iuminance. It has
principle of Limit that it may 'permit" the separate hypothesisof that no internal richness of d i b k pans; but it has the Will to draw the
Principle. By abstracting a volitional M a m of resolving the hyp06- potential configuratioas of ideofonn worlds and k i n g from their
taticvalue ofULimit"with the IUimitaMe, Identity at the samest& p m m t e n t residencyas a saturate plenumof 'penpeaives" outfitted
produns the condition in which Limit may be imbued with its own, with their various ready-made labels, a m and dimional in-
enabling "ardusivity". In this way the all-accommodating. undif- dicators. It has the Wt11 to dmw rhun as ideoform whdes dmuah its
ferentiated embrace of Divine Light cannot simply "enter into" the Self-resolving formula (or illumined Means) and in that light &ect
zone of Limit and subsume it by a simple "lapse". I u all-accomrnoda- them as fenile potentiality a a a s the interloping Shadow of creative
tion now necessarily accommodates the conmq, ptoposltion of Limit.
delimited independence. All such potential was s u g c s e d in the 6rst place from the
The Infinite Self-Illumination of Divine Idea seems to implitionof creativeLimit within thevalue of Absolute; at thesame
"withdraw" from the discreled region of Limit prrcisely because It is time the idcoform totality of all such potential e t m d y pcCrim
"too total" or alltncompassing a Value to "fit" the propasition of through thc aamnmdating amplitude of all-supportive Infinity. AU
infhte Restriction; and yet it can't rffoce that propasition since the variety in thesubintensitiesofworlds,kingsaod thing may be drawn
very abstraction of I u nottic Means enables it-4e. that Mearrr forward throu& h e wrirfyingobma~thpnhmb of Divine Idea as
reqt~ircsthe oomponent of "interrupted" amsciousness in the form totalizing Meam reconciling the t u m s of Limit, and Limitless Iden-
of restrictive "subconscious" and ' u n a n s c h s " g n e r a (the basin of tity. They may k brought fornard asabstract ideoform potential (in
delimited selfcontinuities and coordinate mensions of the naacrr- the "Sas&" of their global saturation, asstmbkd through all perspec-
fwcr weaving the Patternof-being). tives and dimensions) and experimentally rcfkcted againsf the re&-
In this way the "xparated" proposition of Limit (comprising tive, centralizing 'interruption" of Limit. Iby may k modelled
the basis of manifestable substance or Prakrit) constitutes Morha acraat that opaque intrusion of Limit in a a n a i n sense We bright
whole-stop reduction in density. It establishes the mxkabk value of dothcs over a drab, single-piece dummy.
infinie W i m . It furnishes the funaional limit of resistance or
restrictive opacity a g a m which the abstract Means of creative W a Slipping Into Darkness
models the superabundant potential drawn--by Identity-out of the The centralking, nondimensioaal Point of Limit, k i n g a crea-
preexistent infinitude of ideoform life. live hypothesis, bas no "aaual"position and therefore no 'intrinsic"
feature or modelled profile in iuclf. Under rcfkaivegaze of Identity
Willing To Relocate in the form of Light, that singk undifferentiated "propmition" of
Will doesn't find the model of such forms abiding wirhin the Limit betrays its theoretical character and multiplies indefinitely,
Light of Its own Means; It already apprehends their eternal precxis- proliferating in self-mirrored mension as an inlinite displaament.
tena, in the global fulfillment of all aspects to the d e g m of function- Such pointillist profusion furnishes the requisite "ant&-
al selfcancellation, through the unsurpassable Plenum of Infinity ness" of Akashk Space from its single, opaque and undifferentiated
beyond Its volitional Self-formulation. In reflecting such forms pmulate.
against the enabling resistance of Limit, Will draws fomard their The '%enter" of Limitation (and thus of interruptive, self-
undifferentiated Symmetries in the reductive sratc o f p o f e ~ ~ (adl i i negating u n c o ~ c i o ~ m m seems
) to spread everywhere as an
criminating the 'actuality" of their self-cancelling fulfillments at In- homogenous darkness, any phase of which denies admittance t o the
finity) in keeping with Its own ctlaracter as Ideoform Absna~a'on. boundless Light. Such a "center" or Akashic proposal of substance,
Since all such forms preexist through eternity in all their pas- whik comprising a theoretical "concentrate" has no existence-in-it-
sible combinationsand relations without distinction as to'befm" or self; its borrowed king, srs a thesis of finitude within Absdutc,
'after" but without the acfruion of "before" and 'after", it can truly betraysitselfwhen Identity "turns" by refleaion to pin-point and thus
be said that Absolute in its ultimate nature is withwt discrimination d e f i it, for it slips like oil out from under any definitive grasp and
or qualification, bearing all equally. In contrast to this the smooth, diffuses in saturate displacement as an opaque 'equivalent" of In-
undifferentiated unitv and noctic abstraction of Idmtitv in the form finity.
of Light represents a ;ubtkdiffermnbtion from ~bsoluie-in-~tselt It Thus there becomes an infinite u t u o n s c i ~ ~or ~ )Akashii
~f~
marks the first distinction, even in Its undivided Radiance as Idea Space, the ephemeral basis of "substance", as well as an Infinite and
Therefore it truly comprises the Means whereby Absolute may t a
t cocternal consdousncss.
the Creative h k t h & s (preexisting all variety through its-own There is then no "realn or quantifable Limit which may k
Being) in establishing the problematic perspmive ofjininufe-in-iue& defhtively fixed and exhaustivelydefined What is "lu~rm" of Limit
even out of Its Infinite Essence. is'ltnorm" by reflection; the ideoform modck of potential sclfdefuri-
lioo are drawn from Infinity and projceted, through saturate self-
polarization of the mirroring coordinates of "being" under reflective of resolution on a relative basis, existingat varying functional diian-
'Gaze of Infinite, as typolog& of probable patterning. ccs'"from" that universal Mean of the transdimensionalAxis or Line
The created oromition of Limit, unknowable as "itself". of Light. Each such point could function as a resohring void-locus of
simply s e m s as func;ioil point*fdepaiure for a mirroring multi: a specialized pattern operating near (in tenns of ontological "dis-
plication and adjustive, organizational alignment of variable coor- tana") but not coincident with the universal Void-locus of the
dinate reference. No "thing" inheres in the value of Limit. At the transdimensional Axis
same time, no thing" resides in the unitive Light of Idea, but issimply Thus we may visualize a plenum distribution of such resolving
brought forward throtigh the Light of Idea from the preexistent void-points functioning as the convergent mean of innumerable pat-
ampiude of ~ v e t y t h i 6All. "thingsn nppear bewen the inexistent terns, indiitinguishable in themselves or from the Heart-locus of the
... .
or "unreal" orowsition
' of Limitation-in-itself. and the undifferen-
tiated Light of Idea reflectingupon the proposition of the delimiting
total Patternaf-Being ercep with respect to the all-important, ar-
bitrary if absolutizing F i t of Line (which, by drawing its Axis of
Point (and so diffracting a mirroring multiplication of coordinate polarization through that ponict~hrPoint establishes all the distinc-
variables which, by adjustment, align the focal "range" or resolution tions, and indeed makes the differencesin the various patterns drawn
of the s t y l i d grid-pattern magically regularizing the rhythmic iden- through the locus of particular points a dirrct firncrion of their
tity-values of 'beings and objectsn). relative4ntological-diitana from the Median Term).
The "enfolded cotyledon" of the One Idea, is not then a The innumerable points clustered about the antral Axis with
ramified seed of internal chambers and paw, it is the ~0litiOMl"coil", Its fundamental Coordinate Point may k considered loci of many
unitive and undifferentiated, through which the abstract Means pryrcllu integrated through, but not coincident with, the resolving
reconciling the finite and Infinite turns upon or "comes to" itself in a Mean of that Ax& they may be amsidered the.quintc~sena,the
single hypothesis. The p f e m of worlds, beings and universes which virtual "void-navekn of rich intemovcn forms posscsing d i i t e
seems to issue from that 'cotyledon" doesn't emerge ow of it, but identities and at the same time coinhering, overlapping through
flowsfrom appIicurion of the reflective Line of Volitional Light with numberlev other patte-hic matrices through which arc
respect to the resistive upsurge of Limit in the midst of Infinity. reflectively organized in crystalline mas-hatch the coordinate net-
That Line draws upon the preexistent amplitude of Evetythiing work of Garnet and Orchid, Lynxand Benzene, Pitch and Redwood.
(abiding 'behindn It as Its Absolute Ground) and incorpomc1 the Yet aU such differential form of any such patterning process
vigor of limitlev expression belonging to that amplitude as potential takes its specific (organizational)being and context from the filtrate
through the Light of Its own, Resohring Hypothesis, r o d the gnd-network of canpound, polanzed perceptual keys organized
challenging field of Limit spread out 'before" it. In sodoing, the vigor through thevariable coordinate loci diiributcdalongtheantralAxis
of limitless expression belonging to Absolute is "transcribed", with of Being (the transdimensional susumna or cerebrospinal column)
respect to the Resolving Hypofhuicof the Lihe (of Volitional Light), and having their Common Denominator in the Median Point of that
as the reflective and symmetricallysplayed patterns flawing hleidos- Arris, the Heart established in the Middle by Logoic Fiat of Line.
copiully fror? the "plane of pointillit profusion" in the field of Limit.
(We may visualie this with referena to someone writing at a desk, Making Ens Meet
an image to which the Qabalists resort in referring to Metatron, the All possible, mutually integrated if "disucting" patterns
Archangel of the P m n a transcribing the destiny of souk and as super-saturate assemblagesof allowable geometries under gover-
universes in the Ledger of Life. The Line of Light may be analogous nancr of the prevailing ideotypc, in themsehns without differential
to the Pen which writes; the "ideas" of the various k i n g that wind angle, polarizing perspective or discriminativeaxisthrust through the
up imprinted on the manifesting Parchment aren't contained in the dense-packed bundle of potential as w h i i they abide. Each such
Pen, but flow through Its enabling instrumentalityfrom the Mind of possible pattern (is. creatural model,vegetative form, organ-matrix
the writer.) etc) receives the enabling pcnpedw on the 'subjective endn,
This then is the moment of creative upsurge in the 'plan" or through the c~espondenaof-identitybetween it and the appren-
pattern of the One Idea. It may be recognized as the casmogonic ticed c o ~ c ~ - u nfunctioningi r as the inspiritedvoid-locusseek-
juncture (beyond "time", "spacen etc.) at which the creative ing its self-continuity through an experimental succession of
amplitude of Infinite Being with all Its worlds, beings and things conditional terms. Each such possible pattern receives the enabling
abiding beyond distinction of potential and actual is p~cticallyor- mglr (whereby a matrix of diff?renfiul perception and functional
dered with respect to the integrative and nsohring Line. p a %r- operation is drawn into relief) through the 'objective" lens of com-
tical" line may be recognized as the cerebrospinal column in flat p&nd focal triangulation along the central, multidimensional Con-
physical terms, the Hindu susumna or Theosophical sutratma, the scious Axis drawing Its potential typologies into relative expression
Qabalitic Middle P i r etc.) (cf. Part I).
The antral, transdimensional Line is the operative deter-
Wherein The Line Makes Its Point minant in the polarization of a particular, functional network of
Although the "universal comrergena-point" in the symmetric patterns and processes through the perceptual plane out of the
resolution and selfcanallation of ~ r y t h i i n gexists "everywhere"- "stationary" global assemblages of creative potential, all potential
indiscriminately-beneath the diffracting Gaze of the reflexive Line patterns are integrated mast coherently through, and wuh rcspec~lo,
of Light, the absolute volitional prerogative of that Line under the that Line. All saturate potential of the compound-focal coordinates
abstract Wisdom of Its Resolving Hypothesis (Logoic Idea) estab- aligning variable geometries in the patterning grid-networksof per-
l i e s a specific point. Through the total freedom of Its Will cm- aption, is diffmnrially fi11ered and pdarizcd through the elastic
bedded in the basic indeterminacy of Void-Being, Line establishes discriminations and "undetermined determinations" of Line, the
(by crcntivc Fiat, by sheer volitional "caprice") a principal pm, a Axis of Volition.
fundamental Radix of universal resolution through which It polarizes From the optimum integrity and volitional variability of Line
the extent of Its multidimensional Axis. (the a n t r a l i n g Self-axis of Being), logoic typologies organize the
With that declared Point (the Self-identical Heart of Being) multidimensional current or patterning process of manifestation as a
established as the Mean through which the reflective term of Identity whole. This wholecurrent lypology along the antral Axis serves to
would come to Itself on a definitive basiswitti respect to h e delimiting filter and align 'mnemonic" flowchannels of recursive,automatic-
I y p l h e s ~of lhe crenliw pttem of Being, all other quipotential or subconxi-rdinate grids (the synaptic "typologies" of the
point-propositions could function as similar but not identical tenns c e m l nervous system and responsive patterns of the aritonomic
nerve networks, at the level of physical 'crass-section"); through the sible, it is the primordiilclkurh, or ofspatiality known in the East
irradiatingjunctures and polarizing "pyramid-points" of those coor- as Mulo-pkn3i. Under Self-reflective Gaze of Identity its abstract
dinate gnds,the cumnts of subconsciousmagnetism-or 'fluid vital hypothesis of 'limit" di&u abstractly, polarizing in limitlm ver-
forcen--characterizing the pattern of the nature field draw the cor- sions of itself mutually mirroring and multiptying by cubic selfdii-
responding alignment of planes and angles from the 'stationary" or placements so as to furnish the variable coordinate netwrk in the
dense-floatingglobal assemblagesof patterning potential abiding as grid-alignments (or "intramural fdters") of idceform Perception.
the innumerable point-loci indirectly comlated with the Central Opaque and unanended in itself, the substance of 'Pmlrriti"
Channel. blossoms jewel-like from the Dark (kaleidoscopically minwing in
In this way we may see a clear Influence flowing from the infinite regress the noetic geometries faceting energy-matter of the
integral pattern of the Volitional Line, through all the potential nature currents) under reflective Light of Line. It appears as the
kings, sehns, matures, planes and things athibiting a reflective and meta-asmic Crystal variously knownas the bejeweled pavilions, nets
coinvohnd typology of Appearance. and diamond spiresof Buddha-land, the Sea of Glass of Revekuion,
the aystalline Throne of Qabala etc As such it constitutes the
The "Stufln On Which Dreams Are Made eternally self-mirroring and fenKtively reinforcing "substamz" of
Identity, infinitely Selfcongruent and continuous in Itself as the multidimensional memorycngravings, or impressionat Yrccordu,
consciousmrs, takes on the Idea-value of Light as Ser/-mlorary of the Akashic Space.
inspimiion regarding the Means through which that Absolute status The codesand coordinate impressionsof kjemleb,reflective
&y be r ~ ~ ~ n c i w wthe i t disruptive
h kinciple of Limit pmiitted by Light aren't conrcrin(rd in Ihe matter of Abrrh, the Point-substance
Its very Infinitude and all-potentiality. It is for thin rra\on that we of Praluit is irreducibleand opaque in itself as an infinitelydisruptive
interpkt the fvjt hypost& of ~dmn'bwithrespect to our "chart" of unconriousneJs.But t h y are nested and stabty reinforced h i g h
the mind-body pattern, as the Self-born Light of Idea, the principle the pointillist diffusion that bends all rrvtrkrativc beams under
of Logos. It appears in relation to that chan as the Divine Means by reflective Light of Idea.
which the Absolute Selfnm or identical self-same value of Infinite Aswe learned in Pan I, the Point-hypothesisof Limit functions
Being affirms Itself in the face of all conditions. The inbuilt Solution permanently and inexhaustibly in the fonn of M t i or the Spatial
of that Idea draws f o m r d all Its burgeoning implication in the very A m , the 'black egg" of matter polarized under Light of Identity
form of the~bsaocr~atrem-o/-Iki;~,~through w h i such a concilii- into reflexive phases and geometrically regularizing face& at the
tion between the finite and infinite-maybe aaPmglished. sametime it furnishesthe 'substance" from whichsarlr or the aitical
m e character and function of ihat pattern' (the multidimen- functional units of 'learning", 'development", and 'growlh" ate
sional mind-body axis in relation to which the D i e Hyposlasesarc derived, as the means by which the opacity and disruptionJpcdtically
ascribed) was the substance of our d i i in Pan I. r~pmenfed.throughthe u n of the Aka& ~may be ~
Identity in Its inward incubation and Self-brooding as Light, redecmedand ultimately belied. And those 5arY are derived in the
takes the form of Idea in mpnse to the presence of the creative same way that the basic undifferentiated opacity of the 'Alrash"
potential ofLimit Therefore regardless the innumerable patterns of becomes the faceted medium through which the menmycoda of
beings, conditions and worlds with which Its internally-single and the multidimensional geometries and theu emrgy-networks are con-
self-homogenousHypothesis corresponds, in Itself it represents the seMd: the reflective and thus mirroring, selfduplicating Gaze of
absffacrporeruialofresolvingmfiguration; in Itself it has nointernal intelligence belonging to the Ideoforrn Light
subdivision of components that comprise the compound materials of Beneath that Gaze, the Akash not only 'polarizes" into the
nature, and therefore of the differentiated Life-pattern. functional field of the ccmnic "mcmoryuAln or multidimensional,
It may be said then that the 'substance" of the D i Idea is uaos-corrclating Patterndf-Being; it polaritcs out through the
intelligence. S i it ir Idea and therefore abstract hypothesis recon- specific Fat or Intent of D i Wdl innumerabie eidetic versions of
aling actual rams, it must be conceived as having rrrbnmce or Itself (LC. its Point-hypothesis) diirentially "tagged" to function as
"materia" (as oppased to mndwsnus-in-itself which is Beyond all developmentalsoul-being.
tenns, hypotheses, qualifications etc) although such "wbtance" is Thus these %paraten point units, W e n off as it were from
smooth and singular. In contradistinction to the abstraa "materia" the baJicundiffemtiated Slagof the Alcash,are spcdCicallyendomd
or intelligent substance of Idea, the patterndf-Beingwhich isimplied with an "indiiidualhed" spirit mirroring and recapitulating the One
in the Idea arprrsses the state of nature-matter. As the panernof- Spirit; and such a unit is endowed with that "spirit" in the form it
being it manifests the potential of inertia, fesismce, opacity and would naturally take under conditions of its contraaik self-restric-
self-enfolded limit. Thus its ideoform coherence and pokizcd in- tion or disruptive un-consciousness, as the hypothesis of r l f -
tegrity reflect not simply the response of Absdute-Identity to the centralizing Limit. It possesses that spirit as an undifferentiated
potential of Limit within ItselS it manifeststhe value of that Idmtity emptims, an unqumchabk desire or flame of longing (initially
when, in Its ideoform holism as Light, It pennits the validity and without self-reflective capaaty but with the poremid for self-refkc-
integrity of the proposition of Limit as a functional reality and con- tion born of innate Void-king) having as its abstract ontological
fronu it, in effect, us an exteriorizing quality beyond the selfam- model or implicit, guiding Ideal the amciliation and ultimate consis-
sonancc of Its substance. tency between its 'king" as limit, and the illimitableselfamgruence
Ihepatternof-Being which spreads through Infinity beneath or homogeneity of Being it fetk flowing through and sustaining it.
the reflective Light of Identity, takes its point of departure from the [See Pan I as to how such a soul-whick kcomcs 'fitted" to its
principle of Limit "in itself" and therefore from the primordial, developmental destiny thrwgh successive, patterning contextr)
contractile 'centrism" or hypothetical s e r / ~ ) ~ c f oof~ the c non- Such a unit first appears therefore in the form of mnm-forre
dimensional "Point-being". Regardlw whether a 'thing" has the (is., Akashic "matter"-imbued with a differential as in-
rclative dimensions of a ieacupor a galaxy billions of light years in . dividuatedlocusof unquenchable emptiness basedon the ubiquitous
uttent.with resm to Infinite it cxistsno Limit orinfinireIvcunmcrik value of Void-being); it upsurges as the impressible pomt-mag-
redrut& and m y be represented through the kininblism of the nitude of the vital soul, migrating through restless nrbumscious
geometric Point. apprenticeshipsin the elemental spheres Thus the Akash, eternally
This 'point" is the basis of substance in the pmeprcal smsc; furnishing the basisof nature-substance and functioning:asthe oMib
it 1s the basicninformation"of all cognizable mlity,and &comprises ing "matkr"of the delimiting patterns of the universe, k nonethe&
the stuff ofnnnvc-mutter. Unextended in itself but indefinitelyexten- redeemed through =If-repramtations of itself delikiately 'broken
group, cult, school of thought, practice, old
and new religion and occult school,
Cc)\qqo NEXUS S N M metaphysical study, guru, movement,
philosophy, psychology, counter-culture,
cybernetic epistemology, medical practice and
These following truth maps are presented t o educational source there is. It 80 happens
give the reader solid grounding in the basic that the final conclusion is that the most
and necessary "metaphysical" principles powerful sources of metaphysical information
involved in *taking charge" of ona's spiritual come from this particular mentioned source. It
energy forces and opportunities. To apply is clearly head and shoulders above the rest
these 'words' one must think and feel and in several respects. However, it's still not
choose to implement them in one's day-in and for everybody, so do what you want and feel is
day-out existence, both consciously and right for yourself.
meditatively for best results. These
. metaphysical principles not only are the
single 'most powerful weapon against malevolent
By the way, coincidentally, this below data
almost totally correlates with what the Heier
alien incursions on Earth, but make the entire connected Pleiadeans have stated and discussed
issue of alien incursions a moot one, relating to metaphysical concerns, but t o
relegated to minor if nonexistent impact in appreciate the Heier relayed information is of
one's life. course an independently valuable trail of
learning. The Heier Pleiadeans materials are
There are no actual techniques presented here, just the best noff-planet' physical
only the 'bareboner* knowledge and truth maps extraterrestrial source of metaphysical
themselves in most concise possible form. The knowledge discovered and verified so far.
0 best suggestion for using experiential
techniques in conjunction with these truths in However, and this is critically important,
ultimately the best source for these things is
u'l order to make them live and breathe in a
conscious manner by one's own free will, is yourself. Its just that we been very confused
Cr( to: 1) be willing to intricately think about by the morass of delusion and falsity parading
what is stated here, 2) explore one's feelings as truth for thousands of years, so we have in
00 about it, and 3) discover where one currently many ways damaged our ability to discern. T o
gauge your own capacity to grow and evolve,
stands in relation to these truths compared to
I where 4) one wants to be. That is the key however, is very often assisted by checking
our the best the world around you does have t o
dm ' structure of relating fully to the knowledge
maps. Understanding them only intellectually offer - ar long as it doesn't come with covert
as possibilities keeps them flat and or overt control, enslavement and brainwashing
rtrings attached.
interesting but not truly impactful.
So here we go. Starting with the very basics:
These truths can be inunensely powerful or just
more fancy and cutely arranged words for the A11 creational/universal processes have seven
bookshelf or intellectual curiosity. If one is rteps. These steps can be termed in words as:
strongly interested in technique and does not
know whak to do specifically, and want.s more 1. locus (Point of beginning)
help, the best source the authors know of
today is from a small group called 2. Submtanca (Timeless issue in essence)
Concept:Synergy, located in Florida, USA
(address mentioned earlier in this report). 3. Corm (Spatial structure)
The authors have, over the last two decades
for purposes of private sector scientific 4. Determinatioo (Point of manifestation)
research for major educational and potential
objective technology ramifications, carefully
experienced, examined, anslysad, investigated, 5. Oodarmtandiog (Heta-spatial structure - conceptual)
and correlated just about every technique,
6. Imagioatioo (Expression of the issue beyond time)
7. treadom (Point of completion and enlightenment)
These words can be kept in mind when thinking 1) you're here to learn t o love yourself and your self
about any process or series o f seven (7) steps beyond yourself (others, your world, your spiritual
regarding any process in creation. Often source and destination,
when the mind cannot fathom the order of the
process in question it is made clear and 2 ) learn t o have fun (with harm t o none), and
understandable by remembering these seven key
words, or ones similar. In fact, anything in 3 ) learn t o consciously create success in all things you
life, from the smallest to the largest and wish to do.
most significant, from emotional t o mental,
from material to spiritual, business t o Even these three can be boiled down t o one
pleasure can be understood in these seven reason for it all: t o learn about lpyr & -
quantum 'stepped8 terms. In addition, it can
be valuable t o understand that any process of
a of u.
Thats it. Big
deal! S o whats the fuss? Well, there are many
seven steps also has internal correspondances actually pretty simple yet deeply and
as well: intricately rooted and confusing reasons we
The 4th step in any process is the most determined, And the
don't get t o that state of life -
hence all
t h e rest of these following explanatory
the 4th step is its own energy frequency. datums. That is because this thing called
"love" and its impediment and proponent
The 7th step is the higher octave frequency oscillation of energies is the singular holo-functional
the 1st step. statement that underlies the entire universal
and creational reality we are part of, live
The 6th step is the higher octave frequency oscillation of within, and lives within us.
the 2nd step.
All things that exist in the universe that
The 5th step is the higher octave frequency oscillation of change, o r undergo motion or growth, follow
the 3rd step. the basic seven steps of process. These
process steps are not arbitrary, but rather a
These correspondances are found in the nature consequence of the spatio-temporal topology of
of the time/space wave interaction which is change.
the same at the corresponding subperiod points
in the 7th wrsud
Why does all this work out this way? Actually
for reasons found in quantum physics, spatio- To illustrate in terms of both spiritual energy and mental
temporal dynamics, mathematics and group physics:
theory, topology dynamics, cybernetics and
elsewhere. Like the 'golden means and 8t.p Spec. 2i m o will Dotor~imation
'fibonacci series* phenomena in nature, it
functions universally in everything. This 1. Free Free No control Least determined
subject alone could encompass an entire book.
2. Freo Locked L i t t l e control Little detednation
We are here only going t o touch on those
3. Locked Free Hore control More determination
domains critically relevant t o true spiritual
growth requirements. Human potential, 4. Locked Locked naximum control Maximun dotermination
psychological potential, and 5. Locked Free ela axed control Relaxed d e t a d n a t i o n
metaphysical/mystical powers potential is
largely left out here, since the human 6. rroo ~0ck.d Relmased control Reloasad d m t e d n a t i o n
spiritual potential i s senior t o them a11 and
most relevant to empowerment relating t o the 7. Frae Tree Co-Control u/ Creation S p i r i t u a l determination
subjects of this report. And, if the following
is just too confusing or "fuddy duddy
intellectualw t o you, remember that it can ALL
be boiled down to three mandatory focuses for
success in conscious physical evolution for
human8 :
The process wave of space i n t h e Creation i s a Nogativr Lgo Gives: (-1
s i n g l e wave from f r e e space t o locked space t o f r e e Givas'provides: (+I
space again, with a wave p e r i o d of one (1) s i n g u l a r Insecurity
macro-quantum g a u s s i a n pump. 1. Security '
2. Pleasure Pain
The process wave of time i n t h e c r e a t i o n i s t h r e e
wave¶ forming t h r e e (3) phases, which i s r e a l l y Callous, l i e s
a n o t h e r s i n o u l a r macro-auantum a a u s s i a n w m D with a 3. V u l n e r a b i l i t y and Honesty
f i r s t order-harmonic octave, ( l i k e a cro'ss s e c t i o n Suspiciousness
of t h e wave wall o f a drop o f . wate'r h i t t i n g a water Trust
s u r f a c e which h a s i t s f i r s t o r d e r propagation wave Beholden and u n f a i r l y
surrounding t h e rebound wave, with t h e o u t e r r i n g 5. Intimacy and Caring
obligated
wave forming two g a u s s i a n s and t h e rebound forming
t h e c e n t r a l gaussian. The c e n t r a l gaussian rebbund 6. Reduced sense of loss Lor s
wave matching t h e phase p o s i t i o n of t h e s i n g l e
s p a c e wave gausaian i n t e r r u p t i o n of t h e s u r f a c e o f Confusion and confounded
t h e nothing. T h i s i s o n l y one very l i m i t e d example " Knowing
v i s u a l i z a t i o n and i s metaphorical o n l y ) . Enough
t e c h n i c a l s t u f f however. Lovo L.v.18 Noxt o c t a v r o f Love
1.v.l.
When t h e space 'wave' and t h e time 'wave' a r e
i n t e g r a t e d , then i s developed t h e c h a r a c t e r of t h e 1. S e c u r i t y love 14. T o t a l Being ( l o v e a s )
seven s t e p s o r phases of a l l process, t h u s seven
comes o u t of t h e 'one' and ' t h r e e m . The most 2. Sensual l o v e 13. Beyond s e l f and energy
macrocosmic p r o c e s s has seven s t e p s o r phases and (love as)
t h e most microcosmic process a l s o has aeven a t e p s
o r phases. 3. C o n d i t i o n a l love 12. Merging s e l f and
energy ( l o v e a s )
Since t h e moat powerful frequency v i b r a t i o n s i n t h e
universe and s p i r i t u a l universes a r e t h o s e 4. S e l f love and Unconditional love 11. Energy (love a s )
m,
a s s o c i a t e d with it may be a p p r o p r i a t e t o show
mappings with r e g a r d s t o t h e n a t u r e of love. A s is 5. S o c i e t a l (love o f ) 10. Thought ( l o v e a s )
t h e c a s e with t h e seven wave process c h a r a c t e r , a l l
t h i n g s can be mapped t h i s way, a s well n e g a t i v e 6. Humanity (love o f ) 9. Idea ( l o v e a s )
t h i n g s t h a t oppose t h e s e . 7. Cosmic ( l o v e of t h e u n i v e r s e ) 8. Motion ( l o v e as1
To s t a r t with love, i n i t s many i n t r i c a c i e s :
Fulfillment of Sensual love is love manifest Recognixe > Acknowledpo > Forgive > and Change
as Beyond self and energy
2. Ownership of the reality or thing. Realixing it 8s ones own creation
Fulfillment of Security love is love manifest as
Total Being - the ultimate security
3. runctioning in the right Space and T h , in tenna of right context
and value.
Of course these correspondances may not be obvious
t o most of us, since in a real way we cannot
4. Being Adult
hunvn:
- which is the synergy of four spiritual growth stages of
I
In this way we can unfold the seven actions of love 7 . Forgiving and loving
is l
-
self evident again it is hoped although there
seven stepped procosa of forgiveness that could b. shown
into a somewhat more detailed explanation and
description, which unfolding could continue almost 3. Rospocting: is a four f o m d structure composed of:
indefinitely such that it would begin to couple
back into itself, but at different layers of holo- 1. Giving. 2. Caring. 3. Rnowing, and 4 . Understanding
semantic detail and reference. Each level of
actions o f love are tangible, discernible and 4. Rnowlng: where on0 exprossos awareness and knowing of something or
logical, although maybe not linearly logical and another. To k known is to be loved, in this context.
more often exponentially logical in holographic
metaphorical manner. The fundamental requirement 5. numillty and Inthocy: is composod of four f o r m d structura of humility
for love t o exist with its seven actions and its and seven formed proceas of i n t h c y :
seven potential provisions as detailed above is for
"impacta to exist in the universe.
1. Looking anew each m r n t as tresh and to b. known completely as new
For impact t o exist, one must allow a11 that is which
ultimately is created by oneself t o exist as real beyond 2. The Past does not create tho prosent but serves only as a tool of
ones creating it. That means, everyone is not just a roferonce
figment o f your imagination and that you are the only
one and fundamentally alone, but rather that there are
other beings which are real, who can impact you, either
positively or negatively in your reality. Impact can be
both positive and negative, constructive or destructive,
\
3. a9 datached from tha past
Doing Loving (+) (Different aspects of a person doing
. 4. Knowing avaryona and averything la a tool to learn about love loving)
1ntLP.ey Is: 1. Keeps discipline
I. Closeness 2. Thinks - uses their intellect
2. Openness
3. as patience and listens
3. Vulnmrability
4. Is giving
4 . Trust
5. Willing t o be vulnerable (takes patience and learning)
5. Loving
6. Having courage (requires thought)
6. Caring
7. Is impeccable, has integrity (needs discipline)
7. Privacy,
xatiucy oxnp:
Other than the mention above of the negative ego 'givinps',
I . Closeness 1.e. where a being who does not operate with love, in order
t o operate at all, resorts to the ago 'doing it for them' and
2. Gontlanasr 'turns the neutral or positive ego force into a negative
force, we also must begin t o itemize the reasons that we
1. Vulnerability and honesty don't function such love actions and givings in o u r lives as
fully or as powerfully as is possible and available and
4. Trust and truatworthinaas necessary for real spiritual growth:
5. Love and caring
I . Willing to risk humility
B l o c k ~ g e m o f Intimacy, Love and Caring (-)
7. Undarstanding
6. Coutega and Cornitsant: Salt evident hopefully 1. Misunderstanding what love is
7. Caring: is composad of diffarmnt itemm, such as openness, empathy, 2. Being self centered (creation is not good enough for me)
willingness to rimk baing hurt, confldance. C m is built on tha four
lomad; 3. ' Wants the Past and the right t o manipulate and hurt
1. trust, 2. h d l i t y , 3. hop* and 4. couca9a. 4. The seven above fears
5. Expects charity (does not want t o work for future, wants
To move on, towards further depths and relevant permutations we map past excuses)
the characteristics of a being and their environment, whom is
operating the actions and givings of love: 6. Holds self .as not deserving (I am not good enough)
Being Loring (+) Baing Loring Allows (+) 7. Withholds ones Will (refuse$ t o understand and
appreciate)
1. Honest caring Allow8 life
Responsible E l M n a t e e blockages There are reasons beyond even these that root someone into
not even desiring t o function in and from and by love. These
Itnowin9 and learning Allows change are fundamental resistances that are born of the negative ego
gone rampant, where the conscious being has abrogated their
Raspactful Elhinatas Ego pouarfcontrol natural soul desires by refusing t o think and feel and
procesa their fears and blockages:
l n t h c y (hlghar torn of 3 . ) Allour me to stretch beyond myralf
C d t m m t (highar f o m of 2) tllrlnatas aalf pity and victim
2. Fears the responsibility t o love and care and be Irrmsponsibility (-1 (Responsibility shown above earlier)
intimate
3. Fears the impeccability is impossible 1 Blames others
Want to dominate and control The are multiple reasons that love does not function in
1. certain beings. Besides the above mentioned resistances and
Afraid of responsibility o f being loved blockages and other related characteristics, there are
2. particular cauaes that a being will adopt, 'payoffs' they
will take, that allow for primitive metaphysical domination
3. Enjoy punishing others and manipulation t o exist:
4. Don't feel am deserving t o love or be loved Categorims o f Nagmtivm 'Pmyoffm' t h a t prmvent change:
Crl
00
5. Determined to be a victim and live in self pity 1. Avaidnncc - of honesty, truth, success, responsibility,
visibility, confrontation, people, feeling, power
I , 6. Don't trust 'love'
r' 1. Refusing to create own happiness, wants 'God' t o do it 2.. &lamc - some will do anything t o get the 'fun' of blaming,
a 'competitor who undercut me', 'all women are . . . '
for them
These resistances are enemies of evolution that produce
3. - about anger, hurt, holding one's position,
stagnation and devolution towards what we could call an refusal t o resolve things, .holding onto the reason one
"evilm nature where pain or fear of it is the motivator for has t o be.feel hurt, loves a spotlight, loves t o be
all things, rather than love. The mechanisms which function angry, 'traffic brats1, the intent is t o never give it
up. Only resolution is t o get connected t o the real
t o preserve and replenish this "pain motivator addictionm of
the negative ego are as follows (with the straight forward anger underneath it.
cures as well):
4. Hantina - a guarantee before one begins, 'I
Laadam of Evolution (-) Curam t o tbaaa anadem (+I just want t o be aurel, attitude of wanting t o shown the
light before one takes off the blinders. This is not
1. Xnartia S t a r t f e a l i n g and thinking f o r othars discerning, its wanting a guarantee
2. Pro )action main9 honaat and r e s ~ o anything
~ ~ ~ ~ 5~. ~ - poor me, feeling sorry for oneself, a victim
or martyr
3. Xndantification i n t b t a and i n t r i c a t e with rollwon*lthing
4, loredorh and Rastleasnesa S t a r t g i v i n g t o and c a r i n g f o r 0 t h . r ~ 6. Scli -
need special attention, special, unique,
better than, looking for perfection
5. Jaalousy and Ravanga Say *NOg t o tha Ego
6. Q u i l t , worry, dapremsion r i n d laughtar and joy* t o hrva With
sathing
There are critically important self reflections and 4. Supporta building spiritual Self Supports building negative Ego
properties of a being who functions from positive self S. Sees world aa abundant play of light Sees world as acary place to be
values as opposed t o negative aelf valuea, and the overcome- self centeradneeso as
difference between the positive and negative charactered weapon)
values can be clearly traced to the functioning or love,
or not, within the being or person in question: 6. Gives - joyously and generously Wants to take and receive only
1 Loves and la loved Wanta to blurr and criticize
Levels of Self Knowing a n d Appreciation (+ and - 1
Universal
N e g ~ t i -~XgO
y Roalma Such co-creative dominion or controlling arrogant domination
/ produces either a positive or negative set of metaphysical truths,
C" 1. Self Awareners Self Ignorance which are each provable truths with the set one is functioning from:
W Lovels o f Poaitiro and Negative Hotaphysica (+ and -)
2. Self Worth Self Centered
00 Doaitire Yetapbyaicm Hegetire Metaphysics
3. Self Esteem Self Important
I
1. Metaphysics ia joyful opportunity Mtaphysic is weaponry
I. SelfLove Self Serving
2. ~ t a p h y s i c aia a ray to soar Nataphysics 1s defenalve
5. Self Confidence Self.Delusion
3. Allows the dance, and unknovna Cover all possibilities, logistics
6. Self Respect Self Indulgent
4. Create and CD-create in Love Hanipulat~before being manipulated
'7. Self Realization Self Destructive I. Program out of poaitive mtiratlon Program before being programmed
The person who fully operates from their positive self values '6. cxpect the beat and greatest Alwaya have retreat position#
above is indeed the enlightened person. It should be
mentioned that self worth, self love and self respect are 7. tive 1001, aak 01. wldiacration Reap ledger end balance
gifts that already exist and need to only be uncovered, aheetslpayback expectation
whereas the others one must earn for oneself.
Once functioning within either the positive or negative self It is interesting to understand how all
valuer in ones reality, there results either the property of positive expression in creation also has a
having creative dominion or needing t o dominate and control: negative counterpart. As it may appear on
close examination, many processes and
structures enfold and couple into each other,
and have conmon threads. This is because of
t h e deeply interconnected c h a r a c t e r of t h e s e which a r e c o u p l e d w i t h t h e 3 toolm o f
metaphysical t r u t h s .
1. D e s i r e ,
The n e g a t i v e c o u n t e r p a r t s t o many p o s i t i v e
e x p r e s a i o n s of human c h a r a c t e r a r e dominant 2 . I m a g i n a t i o n and
h e r e on e a r t h a s we w e l l know. With t h e h e l p
o f a c l e a r a f u l l e l u c i d a t i o n and e x p l a n a t i o n 3. E x p e c t a t i o n .
o f t h e t r u t h and h e r d e t a i l e d u n d e r s t a n d i n g s
i n t o a form t h a t c a n b e p r a c t i c e d i n d a i l y No b e i n g no m a t t e r what l e v e l i n e v o l u t i o n o r
l i f e , such o f t h e s e maps c a n b e b u i l t t o show s p i r i t u a l i t y h a s any more raw m a t e r i a l s o r
p e o p l e how t o t r a n s f o r m from t h e n e g a t i v e t o o l s . However it i s c l e a r t h a t aome b e i n g s
character t o t h e positive character. T h i s of a r e f a r more a d e p t i n working t h e i r t o o l s and
course i s a b e a u t i f u l t o undertake. s h a p i n g t h e i r raw m a t e r i a l s t h a n o t h e r s .
0 Roy rroodou ti) uaod t o boat mtagnation balimfa (-): 6. Uck of smnao of Dmsmrvinq ( h o l d i n g onaself as unworthy and u s e l a s s )
1. porcmive and Conceivo vm. k l l o v i n g i t i s aaimr t o a t a y i n place, be 7. sh- (cru8h.s t h e fr**dom - fr**m* on* i n Lnposaiblm **If
tault)
* n o ~ l ' , prodlotablo
Once the positive shield is functioning, once *There eta 14 kinds of Power (+) (7 lower octave, 7 higher
the actions and givings of love are ones octave)
mainstay, once the raw materials and tools are
being used for evolutionary growth as a Productivity 14. Having Compassion
spiritual adventurer and not as a dpiritual
(or otherwise) warrior, then what is there to Comnitment 13. Thinking esoterically/esthetically
be doing? Is evolution such this big melting
pot in the sky. That would be awful, lonely, Evaluation 12. P.erceiving and Conceiving
and a cruel joke. No, the more you evolve,
the more you become, and that more is not Forgiving 1 Love
simpler, but wonderfully complex, intricate
and beautiful. Intellect 10. Impact
relationship, perfect children (child abusers) perfection is- Too much U a m c u l i n o / ~ o o little Feminine Energies:
really a mask for arrogance -
1. C J m u h h n maleness preference, disenfranchises women, they
dg net have value.
3. -
fear of power, to avoid having negative impact
have no impact at a11 -
must forgiv. self about what went wrong
and give self permission to have impact
2. Rcalitv -
withOOkS, statistics, things, title,
grade, status quo, women focusing on hunkism, men focusing on
4 . , L a c k U m -
not real, just a body automaton going through
women as sex objects, men as success objects
the motions of life, not in touch with self Values, false
esteem, living on aspirations and good intentions, seeking
3. -
suppressed, stuffed feelings, just
functioning to 'get more', all doing oriented, 'work' machine,
approval 'play' machine, 'growth' machine
5- might get criticized, 4 . h K X h U l d bv the i m a a c o f H a n * of - unable to
might get hurt, remain impotent and weak admit any feelings
6. W of
*be strong'
- waiting for 'god' to tell me 5. an a -
control or be controlled,
manipulate or be manipulated, dominate or be dominated
7. h d d l c t r d to one1- 6. hllcnatcd tho MLM - no sense of why one is living, a
vacant living for today only
***Thinking and Feeling arise from the two different energies of
masculine and feminine character in the Creation, and each unto
themselves has a 7 component intricacy (not sexual gender based, for-
7.
one has created
- in a kind of victimhood, victim of the realit,
these energies exist in both males and female person forms):
7 U8mculine ICnmrgi.9 (+) 7 reminino En8tgio8 (t) TOO much Imminine/Too littl. M.9culin. Energimm
1. Willinq/Acting/mnifesting ~magining/Feeling/Deairing 1. U U x h L a -
f men are bullish, stupid,
clutsy, idiots, men hating men and women hating men, female
2. Creating Form to fill context Creating Space/context chauvinism, female is better than
3. Focus to create Structure Receive and Nurture 2. -
all these potentials but can't put it
together, person with degrees but no job, person with 'novel*
4. Dynamic Creation Ability to Create ideas but no book written
3. H u h l d z bat.- -
refusing to transmute, unable to
transform, want t o hold onto the anger, can't forgive, the
moody play, dwelling in endless anger or fear 1. Lave and a c l f -love one's self enough t o be
able to love another
4- decaying
delusions of grandeur and brilliance and success
dreams,
2. -@s dna-s what is hrvandane's s e l f - have
-
5. ncatrucrivc domination and control out o f
some humility
vengeance, hatred, jealousy', hurting for hurtings sake 3. Functian(detailed above)
6. -
the the the get rich 4. a c to die tho p
g a s t who one is
scheme that never happens (men), the 'if I just had the money' futurs -
vision, heart and stride of what can be as opposed t o
(women) what has been
7. DimLoishino.- all being and no 5. One .hauldno1s D- to nnr's s a l r i t u a l ,
doing, passive self pity, martyrhood, passive victimhood and one's relationship to that which is beyond one's sense of
possible self -
that which is the essence of love and caring
and intimacy in life
TO finally navigate oneself out of these many
many forms of impediments to the 6. b n c m u s t s a , not wait for it t o be given. What ont
a h h M functions that are natural expressions chooses is what is right until it isn't. Waiting around for
of life as it is motivated from and in love, divine guidance can result in coma.
there are certain key knowledges and
recognitions that are mostly either too 7. -r to -t is nnr's h c s t e of grPlLLh and 'going
obvious o r too hidden to be be noticed. These home' within. Surrenduring to divine will is not letting
someone tell you what t o do, because divine will is that you
are the 7 secrets of manifestation, the 7
secrets of empowerment, and the 7 secrets of
spirituality:
tell yourself what t o do
divine will
-
the essence of free will is the
2 . YPU firL a -
your vision of what CAN be is
the blueprint that the present follows t o become what it WILL
llhcrc t o n
3. ' -
o you already are, else
you wouldn't even be. There is Only the ambience and dance and
be poetry of relationship with that love that is grater than you
that you have have without any prerequisites
Smuatnot domination) .
3. Dominion
is ownership at a spiritual level of the world one lives 4. kev is d n d a h n -
ownership of ones reality as one's own.
within, and the world that lives within. Domination is is Dominion is gained by spiritual ownerphip not material
control over, not the same thing ownership and domination
that time is only a concept at higher levels, all physical 2. The nature of a substantial and impactful process of
evolution takes * n o time at all* from that point of view! *spiritualityv as an available evolutionary
advancement which supercedes and *controlsm
much of the problems associated with aliens
opef fully you can see as the drawing out of and mind control and physical/social control
the various isaues that all originate from the detailed in this report.
issue and reality of laye, and may develop a 3. The undiluted maps of truth without manipulative
rather full mapping in sevens (7'sl and fours power strings attached providing the ability
(4's) of the evolutionary possibilities and t o properly navigate the complex forms of
characters, both positive and negative. negative and limiting beliefs, systems,
There are many many more levels and strata and intentions, processes, and strategies
associated with political, religious and
unfoldments and refoldments that could be social control and suppression systems.
elucidated, but what has been presented if
only somewhat actualized dnd assimilated and 4. The practice of one's own spirituality as a living
realized in ones life on a day and day out breathing dynamic of taking responsibility for
basis can produce an absolutely giant immense one's creative and controlling powers to shape
evolutionary leap in one capabilities and one's destiny according t o self determination
impact as a spiritual being functioning in the by right, and not other's determination by
physical universe in a body on Earth today! might.
5. The development of wisdom and understanding that
allows an effective means t o put rather
fearful freedom impeding activities on the
<n This report has attempted t o navigate through a wide part of aliens and human social structures
b 4 range of loosely interrelated hypotheses alike into contexts of larger truths that pin
relating t o a possible set of realities that down these negative power potentials t o a
a11 can find one of two common issues within level that can be coped with and ultimately
0)
I
them -1. observational veracity and socially
related control or 2. extraordinary realities
fully managed and transcended by the 'little'
individual.
Cn regarding alien contact and influence.
6. The re-ordering of one's individual life and spirit
The report focuses on the one central issue to defuse the negative potentials as they are
that binds these two threads into one seeded or programmed within one's own
inseparable cord that can tow the line of all conscious, subconscious, unconscious realms to
these disparate challenges t o sanity and effectively disconnect any possible attractive
freedom. That cord is the exploration and and fueling forces t o the possible negative
command of spiritual forces resident within potentials that have existed on a social and
each human being that can directly influence global level. In effect, give the collective
and even control the two original threaded subconscious and collective unconscious
issues. blueprinted realities the 'slip8. And
ultimately, enough t o fully defuse their
Finally, the value of the cord towing the line spiritual compliance t o these collective
of social, psychological, political, alien and scripts, and with new positive self
religious influences and controls in effect on programmings, cause the dismantling of the
this planet is distilled into a discourse of global negative *setv.
"truth maps" relating to the essence of human
and universal spirituality. This mapping
process reveals the essential tensions at a
refined level between the natural course of
spiritual evolution and the components of
resistance t o such evolution.
The outcome of these rather distilled
spiritual truths being mapped is several back
reflective inferences provided for much of the
report :
-
Moore does a v a l i a n t job ' c l e a r i n g D himself and ' d i ' e d i t i n g '
t h e Bennewitz c a s e a s holding any water i s e i t h e r a m e s t and
7. 7 . Once having f u l l y owned one's own s p i r i t u a l t h e r e f o r e he is being maligned i n t h i s r e p o r t , o r b) an
power p o t e n t i a l and p r a c t i c i n g i t , without e x c e l l e n t job of back paddling on h i s blown cover.
c u s t o d i a l go-betweens, without negative
payoffs, without n e g a t i v e a l l e g i a n c e s , without 8. Human 'free w i l l " and " s p i r i t u a l i t y a and "choice" is t r e a t e d a s
compromising o n e ' s s e l f determination o r f r e e being extremely powerful and capable of c r e a t i n g whatever it
w i l l e d discernment, without accepting mystery wants, including m u l t i p l e dimensional E a r t h s i f necessary t o
and c o v e r t compliance t o manipulation, without acconunodate human s p i r i t u a l choice and f r e e determination.
c o r r u p t i o n o r p o l l u t i o n o f one's sense o f Tools and maps r e l a t i n g t o t h e same a r e l i m i t e d t o being
p o s s i b l e f u t u r e v i s i o n and personal o r developed from j u s t a few "good sources", which "goodness" i s
p l a n e t a r y d e s t i n y , and without l i m i t a t i o n of e n t i r e l y i n t h e opinion of t h e a u t h o r s of t h i s r e p o r t . These
personal and g l o b a l win-lose game s c r i p t s , t o o l s and maps a r e however nonsecular and considered t o be
THEN t h e v a s t m a j o r i t y o f what has been universal.
discussed a s ' n e g a t i v e , enslaving and r e a l ' i n 9. Sources not l i s t e d i n t h e bibliography a r e not read o r not
t h i s r e p o r t become's shallow, moot, untrue, and included, and s o - t h e r e e x i s t s b i a s i n t h e l i m i t a t i o n s of t h e
j u s t i r r e l e v a n t t o YOUR r e a l i t y 1 source# used, including t h e l i m i t e d experience of t h e a u t h o r s .
10. Hatonn and Sananda and Ashtar and t h e i r " s c r i b e " Dhsrma, though
no longer d i r e c t l y mentioned, a r e g e n e r a l l y t r e a t e d a s being
Any a s t u t e reader should be a b l e t o d e t e c t a number of important and bogus and t h e mad ravings of a p s y c h o t i c who may o c c a s i o n a l l y
impertinent b i a s e s i n t h i s r e p o r t , not t h e l e a s t of which i s be channeling some r e a l a l i e n s but probably not. The previous
t h e assumption t h i s r e p o r t can be of use t o anyone. r e v i s i o n of t h i s r e p o r t gave them more a i r t i m e and ' r e a l i t y ' .
T h i s r e v i s i o n c u t s out most a11 t h e a i r t i m e t o them, and only
To h e l p provide an ' o u t ' f o r anyone who wishes t o d i s q u a l i f y r e f e r s t o t h e f a c t t h a t t h e r e i s a l o t of ' C h r i s t i a n a l i e n e
t h i s r e p o r t a s r e p r e s e n t i n g any g r e a t o b j e c t i v i t y whatsoever, s t u f f going around which could impact peoples p e r c e p t i o n of
t h e following list o f b i a s e s is i n d i c a t e d s o t h e door i a wide r e a l bona t i d e a l i e n s . The i d e a of C h r i s t i a n a l i e n s and such
open : aupposed a l i e n ' s i d e a s a r e c e n t r a l t o much human c o l l e c t i v e
unconscious archetypal symbolic language, and a s such may be
1. "Truth" i s approached a s a r e l a t i v e t h i n g . It is t r e a t e d a s i f r e a l and s i n c e r e from t h e i r o r i g i n and i t s p o i n t s of r e f e r e n c e .
m u l t i p l e opposing and incompatible t r u t h s can co-exist, which
f o r many minds may not be possible. 11. The e x i s t e n c e of a s e c r e t government which is d e d i c a t e d t o t h e
management of t h e a l i e n r e a l i t y is assumed. This government is
2. "ET's" a r e approached a s e x i s t i n g , r e a l e n t i t i e s , which a r e i n s o c l o i s t e r e d i n m u l t i p l e l a y e r s of secrecy and decoy and
t h e h a b i t of v i s i t i n g and "messing around" with Earth and i t s suppression t h a t very few a c t u a l l y a r e aware of i t i n t h e
i n h a b i t a n t s . E x i s t i n g ET's a r e t r e a t e d a s being t h e r e a l government except f o r t h o s e compartmentalized and i s o l a t e d
e x t r a t e r r e s t r i a l type, t h e p h y s i c a l l y e f f e c t i v e groups p r i m a r i l y a s s o c i a t e d with black m i l i t a r y programs of t h e
i n t e r d i m e n s i o n a l and human unconscious mind p r o j e c t e d t y p e s . . h i g h e s t o r d e r s of secrecy which a r e not funded through standard
black m i l i t a r y program c o n g r e s s i o n a l l y approved funding.
3. "CW-12", o r something l i k e it, it t r e a t e d a s being r e a l and bona
f i d e , with a number of d i r e c t i v e s supported by a powerful 12. The s e c r e t government's use of d i s i n f o r m a t i o n , debunking,
s e c r e t i n f r a s t r u c t u r e . I t now h a s a d i f f e r e n t name. r i d i c u l e , and malignment of bona f i d e ET and UFO information
and c o n t a c t s i s assumed t o be o c c u r r i n g . I t is assumed t h i s
4 . The " B i l l y Meier Casen is t r e a t e d a s being r e a l and bona f i d e , a c t i v i t y i s mostly e f f e c t e d remotely by unwitting o p e r a t i v e s
and h i s Pleiadean c o n t a c t s and beamships a s being r e a l and who a r e f e d counterdata and c o u n t e r b e l i e f s s u i t a b l e f o r t h e
having happened a s he r e l a t e s i n over 2000 pages of c o n t a c t doing t h e job i n a h i g h l y l a y e r e d d i s c l o s u r e mechanism.
conversation t r a n s c r i p t s . D e n i a b i l i t y is t h e s i n g l e most important mandate i n t h i s
mechanism.
5. The William Cooper m a t e r i a l s a s r e l a t e d i n Linda Hove's book "An
Alien Harvest" a r e t r e a t e d a s being e s s e n t i a l l y t r u e and 13. There a r e assumed t o be t h r e e t y p e s of a l i e n s -
benevolent,
correct. n e u t r a l and malevolent a l i e n s , when i n a c t u a l f a c t they may not,
be s o e a s i l y c l a s s i f i e d , and t h e r e may be more g r a d a t i o n s than
6. The William Cooper ( m y 09) *Secret Government" manuscript and '+', '-*, 'O', and t h e c l a s s i f i c a t i o n may r a d i c a l l y change
t h e John Lear (December 0 7 ) " l e t t e r " a r e t r e a t e d a s being depending on which context of r e f e r e n c e i s used ( s e e
e s s e n t i a l l y t r u e , a l b e i t c e r t a i n statements within a r e a l s o wdefinitions" section).
t r e a t e d a s being i n c o r r e c t and synthesized by Cooper's mind.
7 . William Moore, Stanton Friedman, Jamie Shandera, P h i l Klass, and
o t h e r s a r e t r e a t e d a s being knowing o r unwitting s e c r e t
government o p e r a t i v e s , which may be t o t a l l y i n c o r r e c t and
u n f a i r , however they a r e assumed a s such anyway based on
o t h e r ' s a n a l y s e s and t h e a u t h o r s a n a l y s i s and information.
Speaking of which, i n t h e November 89 Mufon Journal wherein
M A T R I X 1 1 1
CHAPTER 9
-
-
OUTLI NE
I. RIEfMT DRY SCPlARIO TI€ "SILENT W" TO U T m W M YIRU) (m)
A. Econaical Tactical Factor (€TI- Econanic Colapse of World Economies
0. Chemical/Biological T. ~actor(CBTF) Popllation Control -
- --
C. Psychological T. Factor (PTF) One World Religion & Universal Spirituality
0. Logistic T. Factor (LTF) Concentration, Detention, barantine Areas, Relocation
E. Termination T. Factor (TTF) Elimination of Udesireable focial/Ethic Grwps
-
11. M UE U)F(LD ORDER RAN: TOT& YORU) CPITRDL & LNIFICATIM
-
A. Total Economic Control(TEC) One World Central Bank/- World C u r r w y hoeni nix)
--
0. Total Psychological Control(TPC) OC\CI\: The One World Religion & fpiritual Centre
C. Total Technological Control(TTC) Electronic Mind ControlKngineered Behaviwr
-
111. TOT& ECONMIC [30EmM AFPRa'RIATION cf clmEM3, LAH), WfO a
A. 4th World Wilderness Congress: Deover/Estes Park, 11-18 fept. 1987
0. The World Conservation Bank(=)
- -
The (krmrship Conspiracy of World Wildernesses
C. The World Central Bank(UC8) Collapse of UC8 & Inception of World Central Bank
- -
W l l W S L S W TIE (TI WORLD WILD-S COYtllUS'
I t Loact t b o r l o r t 01 I b a I l n o ~ l a nl r c l o o r o f a w o r l d t o r o r r r o n l .
st SO#~OSI lW~VIJ Y . O O I ~ ~ ~8
1
.1 I W S ~ I U ~n o noonlfi
IV. E:
LB€ K I U RELIGION, SPIRITWUTY, MYSTICAL CENTRE & COSMIC TEWU (Colorado)
160,000 Acres, Sangre de Cristo Cbuntains, Colorado.
S~lamiSri Aurobindo; Sheila Devi, Divine VIiversal Mother, Spiritual Directors
A. W I M R S A L AN0 WORLD RELIGIONS & SPIRITUAL GROlPS REPRESENTED
1. favitri Ashram, Sri Aurobindo 8. Episcopal & Baptist Churches
2: Babaji Ashram, n i v a Shrine, Sheila Devi 9. Wslim/Sufi Learning Centre
3, Zen Institute 10. Essenes School of Life
4. Eiheji Zen Buddhist Monastery 11. Taoist Retreat Centre
5. Carmelite Catholic Monastery 12. Dingo Khenise Rjnpoche, Tibetan Monast.
6. School of Hebraic Studies 13. Native American Elders Council
7. Lama Campo, Tibetan Wrddhist Temple
8. LAN)lYARtE TE).PLE: SACRED CEOMTRY, HARHONIC RESONLVJIX TO TRANSMIT PSYCHIC ENERGY
C. Creation of Ne* Consciwsness L Radiate-to Whole World- Harmonics of Base 6-6-6
V. ElECTRaJlC H I M CONTROL(DC)- EECTRONIC IIU\IN STIEUAIO~/BMRVIOIR ENGIKERIK;(EBS/~EU)
A. Smnary of EHC Projects, Scopes, Methodologies & Objectives
-
0. Planetary Grid Programning Putting the Great Mother to Slcep/Store Programing
C. Underground EM3, RF, & ELF Penetration Electric and Magnetic Phenanena
0. Time-Release & Activation of Desease Hutation of Viruses via Microwaves--
C
M A T R I X X I 1
Anarchy - r u l e by no one.
Dictatorship/Monarchy - r u l e by one.
Oligarchy -
r u l e by a few.
Democracy -
r u l e by the m a j o r i t y .
CAPITAL GOODS
Economic System Owned BY C o n t r o l l e d BY:
"The C h r i s t Force"
"The L u c i f e r i a n Force"
"The Ahrimanic o r Satanic Force"
t h e e f f e c t o f promoting t h e e v o l u t i o n o f t h e race.
Dalmcing and far outweighing the smail percentaqe (2% or 3*,) o f peonle '
who have the "power without knowlccl~eninsanity, are the millions of ptoole
o f Earth who have knowledqe of life, the truth o f what it takes t o mvive,
the duty m d loyalty o f their family and friends and the trust that others
will exchmne, work and play in a fair and honest, friendly fashion as fhcv
& themselves. These millions (some 97% of the population of Earth) are
the rource o l the ~ood t h i n ~ s and survival components of the
civilization.
And this power L given and the insane actions not halted by the 97-
because t k y :
3) Thus did not recognize that they were the larnest Power source on
the Planet, and
S They wold take the Power away from the 2 or 3 p a c m t a t any time
by just not eivina it to them.
------
and Fall of the Third Reich, as such histories are
tedious in their detail. Public opinion of the Nazis
has been drawn largely from motion pictures, newsreels.
documentaries and articles that are too often
subjective, one-dimensional propaganda. Since the
story of Jonestown has its roots in Nazi Germany, t o
understand the full impact of the experiment some
common misconceptions about the Nazis must first be
dispelled.
Contrary to the widely accepted belief, the
Nazis were not anti-Semitic, they were pro-Aryan and
there is a distinct difference. The fair-skinned.
predominantly blue-eyed, blondes of Nordic descent were
heralded as the master race while all others were
considered sub-human. The Nazis did murder six million
Jews in the Holocaust, but they also murdered an
additional s i x million Slavs. gypsies, intellectuals,
drug addicts, criminals. communists, and homosexuals.
The only reason that Jews dominated the ranks of the
oppressed is that they dominated the sub-human
population in Europe. Had the Nazis risen to power in,
for example Africa. Blacks and not Jews would have been
murdered en masse.
The 1936 Olympics, held in Berlin, is a prime
example of the Nazis' attitude toward Blacks. Germany
M A T R I X 1 1 1
using a radio pulse transmitted to an One monkey in the tests fell into a
electrode in the animal's brain. S u b deep stupor after ten davs and did
sequentlv, Delgado has proved that not r w i w until all irradiation ceased.
direct brainlelectrode contact is not Those who say nonionizing radia-
necessav, as he lulls m o ~ d c v sto tion cannot possibly have anv effect
sleep. or makes them climb wall;. us- may be able to dispute the negative
~ n onlv
g subtle variations In the elec- fears that some scientists have, but it
tromagnetic field of thew cages. is less easv to deny the positive find-
ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS - INFORMATION SHEET
Evidence exists which suggests that excessive exposure to electric and magnetic fields 0 may pose
a risk to human health. This evidence has been derived from three distinctly different types of studies.
These studies are:
- Cellular level studies
- Whole animal or human studies
- Epidemiologic studies (studies of human populations)
These different types of studies have shown that:
1. Exposures to electric and magnetic fields can cause changes in the flow of certain ions
through cell membranes.
2. Exposures to electric fields can alter the rhythmic activity cycle that naturally occurs
in most organisms.
3. Exposures to electric and magnetic fields may cause abnormal embryo development
in animals under specific circumstances.
4. Exposures to electric and magnetic fields have &own a positive (but weak)
association with certain types of cancer in epidemiologic studies.
Because this field of research is new, the evidence for these effects is by no means conclusive. Some
or all of the above findings may change in the near future. However, after reviewing what is currently
known about exposure to electromagnetic fields, the Washington State Department of Health. believes
that this is an issue of concern. Because of this concern, the Department recommends adopting a policy
of prudent avoidance.
A policy of prudent avoidance means taking reasonable action to limit exposure to electromagnetic fields.
On the individual level, people may want to limit prolonged exposure to known sources of high fields.
For example, because there is close body contact throughout the night, use of electric blankets or
electrically heated waterbeds that produce high fields should be limited. On the other hand, appliances
that are used for short periods of time (such as eiectric shavers) pose less of a concern. We believe,
however, that it is too early to recommend extensive changes to lifestyle or residence since we do not
know if these changes would be beneficial or even necessary. On a broader level, the Department of
Health feels dthatJ u
develop strategies for prudent avoidance that will reduce exposure to the consuming public.
The pamphlet, "Electricand Magnetic Fields from 60 Hertz Electric Power: What do we know about
possible health risks?",written by Dr. Granger Morgan at the Carnegie Mellon Institute, describes further
what is meant by a policy of prudent avoidance. It also provides an explanation in non-technical
language of what is known and not known about potential health risks associated with exposure to EMF.
A copy of this pamphlet can be obtained by calling the Department of Health at (206) 753-5935.
TABLE 1
Ron-ionizing tlectramagnetic Energy Radiation Standard.
General Public Exposure
American Conference of
Governmental Industrial 30 - 100 MHz 1,000 uw/cm2
Hygienists (ACGIH)
American National standards 30 - 300 MHz 1,000 uwlcrn:
~nstitute (ANSI) 300 - 1500 MHZ f/O.3 uw/cm
Canada 1 - 300 GHz 1,000 uw/cm2
Connecticut 30 - 300 MElz 1,000 uw/cm2
New Jersey 30 - 300 MHz 1,000 uw/cm2
US Military 30 - 300 MHz 1,000 uw/cm2
International Radiation
Protection Association (IRPA)
10 - 400 MHz 200 uw/cm2
Haseachusetts 30 - 300 MHz 200 uw/cm2
Multnomah County, Oregon 30 - 300 naz 200 uw/cm2
National council on Radiation
Protection and Measurement
( NCRP )
30
300 --1500
300 MHz
ME2
200 uwlcm:
f/l.S u W / C ~**
Portland, OR 30 - 300 MHz 200 uw/cm2
New York City, NY*** All 50 uw/cm2
Czechoelovakia .3 - 300 GHz 25 uw/cm2
USSR 40 - 300 MHz 25 uw/cm2
* f = frequency in Megahertz (MHz). Using this formula, the
expoeure etandard for the frequencies that will be used by
2,666.67 and 3,000
-
the propoeed tower (800 900 p l z ) would be between
ut)l/ct~'
/tIU -g/t,/?z
t* f = frequency in Megahertz (MHz). Using this formula, the
standard for the frequenciee that will be used by tpe
propoeed tower would be between 533.3 and 600 uW/cm .
*** The New York City standard was not adopted as law, but has
been recommended by public health staff and included by the
planning comisaion as a condition of approval of large new
facilities.
U.S. we8t
New Veator Group Findings, Canaludons,
SUP-3-91 and Decirion
Electric and Magnetic-
Field Reduction:
Research Needs
The Electric l'kansmission Research Needs Task Force
January 15,1992
~ n s m i s s i o nLine Design
Numerous conductor and suppon (pole or tower)
configurations are used for high voltage t r a m i s -
sion systems. It has long been known that different
conductor configurations create substantially
different electric and magnetic fields in both
A. "Base caw"
- 11 1R foot spacing
- S d lattice tower
Differences between base case and allanatives to base case are described beneath allernalive tille.
- vatiul d ~ g u r u i o n
d s surface
Electric a d ~ y n e l i field
c ~eduction.~ e s u r c hads 0401
In brief, the a n different alternatives are as fol- Double CircuitlSplit Phase
lows:
A vertical arrangement of two Circuits. one circuit
Base Case on either side of the supporting structures, where
the phases on one Circuit a~ running in the reverse
A conventional flat. horizontal conductor arrange- of the opposite circuit; operation at 230 kV and 150
ment operated at 230 kilovolts (kV) with 300 amps per conductor to deliver 125 MW.
ampem (amps) cumnt for 125 megawatts (MW)
of power, supported by wooden H-frame poles.
Use of the flat, horizontal configuration as in the From Table 2. we draw the following conclusions.
base case; operated at a higher voltage of 500 kV
and only 138 amps to deliver I25 MW.supported 1. Them is a large variation in the fields resulting
by steel lattice towers. from different alternatives. Magnetic fields
directly under (or above. if underground)
transmission lines range from 9 1.5 mG (de-
creased voltage) to 4.9 mG (undefpund
fluidfilled steel pipe). A typical flat. horizontal
configuration, the "base case" is estimated to
generate a 59.6 mG field directly below the
line.
'Indcpndent of its impact on EMF from diiuibution liner. net c ~ mcm t sometimes k the d o h source of brkground
nugnctic fields inside r house or building (Johnson). Beuuse Ihe scop of ESSB 6771 is limited to ekctric md mrgnclis fuldsfrom
diiuibution and uulsmirsion lines. the T~ckFace did not explicitly address rhc issue of reducing magnetic fikds uvriudwith net
cmcnt h i d e homes md orha buildings.
Seven three-phase alternatives and m e single- configurations. Brief descriptions of each altema-
phase alternatives were studied for delivery of 6.5 tive follow. with more detailed descriptions con-
and -72 MW respectively. These power levels tained in Appendix 4. Graphic representations and
result from practical current levels for these field levels are found in Table 3.
-
Table 3 Distribution Line Designs: "Base Case" and Alternatives*
Magnetk Fields Electrk Fields
Graphic 01 Cdlle (mllligaus) (kllovdts/meter)
Description (thousands)
Conflguralon
under 20' 4@ 200' under 20' 40' 200'
I
A. "Bru caw"
- 1UkV
- 6 5 MegaWat~ 50-70 22.4 14.9 7.7 22 0.05 0.05 0.03 .003
- 40 f~ pok
-1 O k ~
- 4 foot wg
1
B. Increased Pole Helghtoo
- 55 f~ pok
60-80 10.1 8.1 53 21 0.02 0.02 0.02
1#
C. Increased Vdtsge
-25 kV
- 475 foot pole 60-80 6.9 5.1 3.1 1.0 0.07 0.06 0.04 .007
I
D. Compact Delta
1
E. Doubk Circuit/
SpUt Phase
-47.5 foot pole 80-120 33 3.1 25 12 0.03 0.03 0.01 .003
Assume 50% rrtrnn cunent in the earth, f 209'0 cwrmt amplitude vrriation md f 5' phase angle variation.
** Differ- behvcar base case md dtunativa to brre c8se me desaibed h u t h dtanative title.
F. Random Lay
Underground
-buried 3 feet deep
-75inrhphrreqmcing
m: 120400 563 9.8 4.7 1.9 0 0 0 0
G. Underground Woe In
Conduit
- bllried 3 feet deep
- 2.5 inch phase spacing
- 120-600 31.2 8.4 4.4 1.8 0 0 0 0
- 0.72 Megawatts
- 0.72 Megawatts
- &ed 3 feet &cp
- ccncenuic n e u d
Base Case Underground Line in Conduit
Placement of two three-phase circuits on either side Placement of an insulated single-phase wire with
of a single structure. with phase conductors stacked concentric neutral. which is a neutral wrapped
one above the other from 32 to 36 feet above the around insulated phase wire, buried three feet
ground; use of 12.5 kV at 300 amps for delivery of underground without encasement: use of 7.2 kV
6.5 MW. and 100 amps for .75 MW.
5. Undergrounding a the-phase distribution line The closer the phase spacing. the lower the
reduces the magnetic field to between 57% to external electric and magnetic fields produced.
6 1% of the base case at 40 feet (see Altema- If all W e phases of a transmission line could
tives "F'.Double CircuitJSplit Phase and be placed at the same point in space, there
Alternative "G". Multiphase, respectively). In would be no electric or magnetic field assurn-
other words, undergrounding is no more ing no net current and voltages on all W e
effective than use of the compact delta (see phases are qual.
above) and is more costly. Undergrounding
also resul~~ in higher fields than other alterna- The higher the voltage. the farther Ue conduc-
tives directly overlunder the line. Table 3 tors must be apan to provide satisfactory
shows a m g e of 3 1 2 mG to 56;3 mG for opention of the Line in Lht arcas of safety.
underground versus 3.3 mG to 22.4 mG for reliability. radio and TV interfennce and
overhead at 0 feet from the center line. audible noise.
6. Magnetic fields from distribution lines can be The State and National electrical codes deter-
relatively greater for the amount of power mine the minimum allowable distances be-
delivered than transmission lines due to the tween phase conductors based upon safety
amount of unbalance in the distribution system. considerations. The Washington State code
the close proximity to ground level where the includes provisions that may affect field
fields are measured. and the amount of earth reduction potential.
Single-circuit, multiphase lines, which are now Magnetic fields fmm distribution lines may
under experimentation. offer reduced magrlclic decrease more rapidly with distance than
fields for the same amount of power because magnetic fields from transmission lines be-
there are additional phases to share cumnt. cause of their close conductor spacing.
Double-circuit, --phase lines can achieve Much of the magnetic field attributed to
lower EMF than when Ihe two circuits are on distribution lines comes from unbalanced
separate suuctures. currents between phase conductors and from
split cunents from neutral-ground bonds to
Increasing the height of phase conductors other grounding systems, such as water piping
reduces fields on the right-of-way but at some systems.
distances close to the line can actually increase
fields off the rightsf-way. Degaussing loops along the right-of-way have
been proposed for reducing magnetic fields.
Electric Fields but so far. practical methods for their use have
not been developed or tested.
Electric fields can be reduced by shielding.
Electric field shield wires can be strung Certain types of undergmund construction can
between energized conductors and the ground. reduce magnetic fields from transmission lines
resulting in a significant reduction in electric except at distances very close to the line. The
fields at certain locations. Also, most houses lines can be placed very close together and
and other buildings are very good shields. some attenuation is also produced by the heavy
steel pipe used in high pressure fluid filied
Lines using single conductors can yield signifi- underground transmission systems. This type
cantly lower electric fields (as much as 25%) of system is not currently being used for
'
than lines using bundled conductors, but they distribution because, among other things. the
produce higher audible and radio noise. net current produces ficlds, whether the pipe is
present or not.
nlngnelic Fields
The multiphase line and double-circuit/split
Magnetic fields are directly reiatcd to the phase transmission line alternatives can rcduce
customers' use of electricity and varies hourly magnetic fields to about amund 50%that of the
and seasonally with living patterns. two delta configured lines. Thcse are lines
with more than three phases that transmit the
The use of two or more transmission or distri- same amount of power as normal single-circuit
bution lines. when one transmission or distri- three-phase lines.
bution line would normally be used. results in
I
BASE CASE 230 kV. 300 amps,
125 Megawarn, wooden H-frame pole,
19-foot spacing
I
I
configuration; 230 kV. 300 amps.
125 Megawatts
Cost:
cost:
$220.000 to $250.000 per mile.
$230,000 to $260.000 per mile.
Electric Field:
Electric Field:
Maximum (at 9 feet right of pole) 1.9 kV/m
Maximum (at 20 feet from center of line) 2.6 kV/m
40' from center of the line 0.7 kV/m
40' from center of the line 1.9 kV/m
200' fmm center of the line 0.04 k V h
200' from center of the line .04 kV/m
Magnetic Field:
Magnetic Field:
Maximum (at 3 feet right of pole) 27.0 mG
Maximum directly under the line 59.6 mG
40' from center of the line 11.0 mG
40' from center of the line 29.7 mG
200' fmm center of the line 0.6 mG
200' from center of the line 1.6 mG
C: M ,
2 feet elevation. feet right of center
C: m.a feet elevation. fi feet right of center
cost: cost:
40' from center of the line 40' from center of the line
200' from center of the line 200' from center of the line
Maximum directly under the line 28.9 mG Maximum directly under the line 91,s mG
40' from center of the line 9.8 mG 40' from center of the line 34.4 mG
200' from center of the line 0.5 mG 200' from center of the line 1.9 mG
A: QO, a feet elevation, fi feet left of center A: QO, 3 feet elevation. feet left of center
B: m,4J feet elevation, Q feet of center B:m.a feet elevation. Q feet of center
C: m,a feet elevation, fi feet right of center C:m, feet elevation. U feet right of center
cost:
cost:
$400.000 to 5500.000 per mile.
5350,000 to $400.000 per mile.
Electric Field:
Electric Field:
Maximum (at 35 feet from
center of the line) Maximum (12 feet) from 1.66 k V b
center of the line
40' from center of the line
40' from center of the line 055 k V b
200' from center of the line
200' from center of the line 0.02 kVlm
Magnetic Field:
Magnetic Field:
Maximum (at 14 feet from
center of the line) Maximum (0 feet) from
center of the line
40' from center of the line
40' from center of the line
200' from center of the line
200' from center of the line
Cost: cost
Maximum directly above line None Maximum directly above line None
40' from center of the line None 40' from center of the line None
200' fmm center of the line . None 200' from center of the line None
(measured at one meter above eanh's surface) (measured at one meter above eanh's surface)
Maximum dilectly above line 4.9 mG Maximum diledy above line 14.7 mG
40' from center of the line 0 2 mG 40' from center of the line 0.6 mG
200' from center of the line 0.01 mG 200' from center of the line 0.03 mG
A: QO, 3 feet elevation, feet left of center A: p.5 feet elevation. a3 feet left of center
B: m,-4 2 feet elevation. QQ feet of center B: m,
fi feet elevation. Q,Q feet of center
Maximum (0 feet) from Maximum (at 11.5 feet right of pole) 2.7 kV/m
center of the line
40' from center of the line 0.8 k V h
40' from center of the line 0.92 k V h
200' from center of the line 0.1 kV/m
200' from center of the line 0.05 k V h
Magnetic Field:
Magnetic Field:
Maximum (at 11.5 feet right of pole) 36.2 mG
Maximum (0 feet) from
center of the line 40' from center of the line 22.1 mG
40' from center of the line 6.7 mG 200' from center of the line 1.5 mG
.Conductor Geometry and Phasing: A: PO,a feet elevation, u feet right of center
A: p,a feet elevation. 3 feet left of center B: Ua0.42 feet elevation. JJJ feet right of center
B: &Q,' 3 feet elevation, 4 feet left of center C: m.& feet elevation, U feet right of center
C : m , feet elevation. 3 feet left of center
I
change to UNDERGROUND CABLE in a change to UNDERGROUND CABLE,
fluid filled steel pipe. 230 kV, dry type cable in nonmagnetic pipe, 230
300 amps, 125 Megawatts kV, 300 amps. Megawatts
Cost: cost
Maximum directly above line None Maximum directly above line None
40' from center of the line None 40' from center of the line None
200' from center of the line None 20' from center of the line None
(measured at one meter above earth's surface) (measured at one meter above earth's surface)
Maximum directly above line 4.9 mG Maximum directly above line 14.7 mG
40' from center of the line 0.2 mG 40' from center of the iine 0.6 mG
200' from center of the line 0.01 mG 200' from center of the line 0.03 mG
A: QO, 5 feet elevation. Q3feet left of center A: p.5 feet elevation. QJ feet left of center
B: m,-U feet elevation. QJJ feet of center B: m, feet elevation. Q,Q feet of center
C: 29QO. 5 feet elevation, U feet right of center C: m,3 feet elevation, 0 feet right of
center
I
BASE CASE 12.5 kV, 6.5 Megawatts
40 foot pole, 10 foot crossarm, 4 foot sag, Megawatts, 55 foot pole, 10 foot crossam,
50% return current in the earth, f 20% 4 foot sag, 50% rearm c u m t in the earth,
current amplitude variation, and f 5' phase k 20% current amplitude variation. and f
angle variation 5' phase angle variation
cost: Cost:
$50,000 to $70,000 per mile
$M).MX) to $80,000 per mile
ElechhcField:
Electric Field:
Maximum or directly under 0.05 kVhn
the line Maximum or directly under
the line
20' from center of the line 0.05 kVhn
20' from the center of the l i k
40' from center of the line 0.03 kVhn
40' from center of the line
100' from antcr of the line 0.003 kVhn
100' from center of the line
Magnetic Field:
Magnetic Field:
Maximum or directly under 22.4 mG
the line Maximum or directly under 10.1 mG
the line
20' from the center of the line 14.9 mG
20' from the center of the line 8.1 mG
40' from center of the line 7.7 mG
40' from the center of h e line 5.3 rnG
100' from center of the line 2 2 mG
100' from the center of the line 2.1 mG
Cost:
cost:
$60,000 to $80.000 per mile
$55,000 to $75.000 per mile
Electric Field:
Electric Field:
Maximum or directly under 0.07 k V h
the line Maximum or direcay under
the line
20' from the center of the line 0.06 k V h
20' from the center of the line
40' from the center of the line 0.04 k V h
40' from the center of the line
100' from the center of the line 0.007 k V h
100' from the center of the lime
Magnetic Field:
Magnetic Field:
Maximum or directly under 6.9 mG
the line Maximum or directly under
the line
20' from the center of the line 5.1 mG
20' from center of the line
40' from the center of the line 3.1 mG
40' from the center of the line
100' from center of line 1.O mG
100' from center of the line
Conductor Geometryand Phasing:
Conductor Geometry and Phasing:
A:= feet eIevation, feet right of center, 150
amps, 8 A: feet elevation. 2 feet right of center. 300
amps, CP
B: 3 feet elevation. & feet of center, 150 amps.
120" B: 3aa feet elcvation. Q fect of center. 300
amps. 120"
C: Z feet elevation, afeet left of center, 150
amps. 240" C: 223 feet elevation. 3 feet left of center, 300
amps, 240"
Neutral: a feet elevation, feet right of
center, 50% Neutral: feet elevation, feet right of
center. 50%
cost: cost:
$80,000 to $120.000 per mile. $ 120.000 to $600.000 per mile.
Electric Field: Electric Field=
Maximum or directly 0.03 kV/m Maximum or directly None
under the line above the line
20' from center of lhe line 0.03 k V h 20' from center of the line None
40' from center of the line 0.01 kV/m
40' from center of the line None
100' from center of the line 0.003 kVhn
100' fmm center of the line None
Magnetic Field:
Maximum or directly Magnetic Field:
under the line
Maximum or directly
20' from the center of the line 3.1 mG above the line
40' from center of the line 2.5 mG
20' from the center of h e line 9.8 mG
100' fmm center of the line 1.2 mG
40' from center of the line 4.7 mG
Conductor Geometry and Phasing:
100' from center of the line 1.9 mG
A: 3L3 feet elevation, &fi
feet righr of center. 150
amps, 0"
Conductor Geometry and Phasing:
B: m feet elevation, & feet left of center, 150
amps*8 A: 3 feet elevation, feet left of center. 300
C: feet elevation, feet right of center, 150 amps. 8
amps. 120"
B: 2 feet elevation, Q feet of center, 300 amps,
D: feet elevation. feet left of center. 150 120"
amps. 120"
E: feet elevation, feet right of center. 150 C: 3 feet elevation. .Ufeet right of center. 300
amps*2 w amps, 24P
F: m feet elevation. 2 feet lefi of center. 150 Neutral: A feet elevation, feet right of
amps. 24@
center. 50%
Neutral: afeet elevation. QJ feet right of
center. 50%
Elecuic and Magnetic Field Reduction: Research Netds
0417
I
change to SINGLE PHASE HEADPIN change to SINGLE PHASE UNDER-
configuration. 7.2 kV, 0.72 Megawatts GROUND LINE, 7.2 kV, 0.72
40 ft pole, 4 foot sag, 50% TChlm current Megawatts, buried 3 feet deep, 81 conduc-
in the eanh, f 20% current amplitude tor with concentric neutrals. 50% renun
variation, and f 5" phase angle variation current in the earth. f 20% current ampli-
tude variation and f 5' phase angle varia-
tion
cost:
20' from the center of the line 0.06 kVhn Maximum or directly above the lint None
40' from center of the line 0.03 k V h 20' from center of the linc None
100' from center of the line 0.008 kVhn 40' from center of the line None
40' from center of the line 6.4 mG 40' from center of the line 8.0 mG
Cost: cost:
$120.000 to $600.000 per mile.
$30,000 to 540.000 per mile.
Electric Field:
A: 3 feet elevation. r(LL feet left of center. 300 Conductor Geometry and Phasing:
amps. 0"
A: feet elevation, #& feet of center. 100
B: 2 feet elevation. QJ feet of center. 300 amps. 0"
amps, 120"
Neutral: 293 feet elevation, feet right of
C: feet elevation, 4 feet right of center, 300 center. 50%
amps, 248
P r o j e c t Scanate
A t Pentagon DARPA l a b o r a t o r i e s , b i o c y b e r n e t i c i s t D r . C r a i g
F i e l d s , according t o a 1978 i n t e r v i e w , was hard a t work w i t h
the development o f techniques f o r e l e c t r o n i c a l l y c o n t r o l l i n g
mass populations. I n f a c t , from t h e very beginning, members o f
the American Medical Association and American P s y c h i a t r i c
Association have p a r t i c i p a t e d i n programs which use p u b l i c
funding t o create a n a t i o n a l mind c o n t r o l network. T h e i r own
documents prove t h e i r goal -
t o r o b o t i z e t h e United States.
The mind c o n t r o l programs under development a t UCLA are now
being supplemented w i t h newer programs a t Los Alamos
S c i e n t i f i c Laboratories i n New Mexico, t h e home of t h e atom
bomb.
P r o j e c t R i v e r Styx
.O R I O N b
TRIDENT
LL5.A.F- 0.N.R.
7 - 4958 b
? 19@9
~&&onic,
~ i r e c g df
-
L Pemn { oh hlpe
Short D i d - Gm93 /tr
awe
- -
rernb1ecL
b - J
*xd*bao0* 4
. 3 '
.
a
4 - ~ ~ l o k e '
a
CIA
sophisticaled that even viaims who become
stati..tics may be unaware of what or who.
has ban interfeting with lhei minds. The
techniques that are in use today arc more
subde, silent, and deadly than ever before.
'Fhen is no way of knowing just how many
research projects, or perhaps more
Mind
imporlantly. deploymenl operations, u e
being c o n d u d u the peseru time. Perhap
the sudden change of attitude by many of
the Iraqi personnel on the ground in the
recent Gulf War could be related lo the
possible tlse of secret long-range bchaviour
modifying technologies.
Much of the research conducted by the
CIA and the Soviets has inspired both the
Intelligence community and the Defense
Dcpmcnt to a close look at the potential
of parapsychology for covert psychic
warfm m - s .e s .
Control
Research
The intention of publishing this story is
not to shock or scare you. It is lo m i n d
you that behind the veil of secrecy that
masquerades as "national security". here
are people perfecting mind-control
techniques that can relieve you of your self
control. Only by W i g aware of the silent
hand that would like to control your mind
will you recognize where the veil s m uld
deception begim. Only by being aware can
m begin to lift the veil.
REFERENCES:
Journey into Madness - Gordon Thomas.
(Published by Bantam Books 1989)
-
CIA The Honourable Company Brian
Freemantle. (Published by Futura Books
1984)
-
Psychic Warfare Fact or Fiction? Edited
by John White (Published by Thc Aquarian
Ress 1988)
The Search for be 'Manchurian Candidate'
John Marks (published by Times Books
1979)
M A T R I X 1 1 1
of solar flare activity. The earth, drawn a the same scale as , luminescence, nature's light show.
some of these tremendous bursts of energy, is this little dot What if the ancient people realized that on certain days of
right here. Tremendous bursts of energy from outer space the year, (the solstices, the equinoxes, etc), these frequencies
alter the earth's ionospheric cavity, therefore changing the change? And what if the priesthood decided to build
frequency slightly; therefore it can re-tune our nervous observntories like Stonehenp and the ones all over Central
systems, electromagnetically. (Ed Note: We don't have
Mr.Beck's film strip, but we do have a copy of the classic in
-
and South America, Europe and England to predict these so
the people could be either freed or implanted all over again.
this field. Dewey and Dakin's Cycles, the Science of I don't know the answers to those totally hypothetical
Prediction, published in 1947 by Henry Holt & Co.. New questions. but it was terribly important to them to predict
York. Figure 2 is a reproduction of chart 9. page 144) these days.
On page 142;Dewey and Dakin write: "...in 1934, two Now man is unique in that the RNA in his brain I& a
Harvard research workers. Carlos Garcia-Mata and Felix dielectric constant (K) of 140.000. How many engineers are
Shaffner, re-examined the Jevons studies .(on crop cycles) here? Do you realise the signifcanoe of that figure? That
and checked them; they ended up with the conclusion W t one little cell, out of billions and billions in your cerebral
the sunspot phenomena showed no correlation with cortex, can approach the liquid crystal boundaries. It's a
-
agricultural production. but the solar phenomena showed a quantum transducer thnt will respond to coherent energies in
remrvkable correlation with industrial production. business the neighboxhood of one hundredth of a micro-gauss. This
activity, and with stock market prices. Since this particular hns not been suspected until fairly recently. It means that we
outcome of thcse studies apparently left them a little
surprised and aghast, the two students thrcw up their hands
-
are not $2.40 worth of minerals and water as I leamed
when I wis in the third grade. We are incredibly complex
and passed the problem over to the biologists and the bio-cosmic transducers; and the things thnt we have been
psychologists." Who weren't particularly interested, we calling mind. or occult, or what have you, are today
might add. surrendering to scientific research on a rational basis. It
But Russian physicists were! They later proved in their means that we have within us probably one of the most
own way the the 4th Kingdom of Nature. the human sensitive, quadruple-conversion, superheterodyne receivers
kingdom, rencts immediately to the magnetic changes of the that's ever been developed; and that we can respond to
sun. and offered this knowledge for the practical and tactical energy levels that almost appear paranormal.
use of the militmy maniacs in Moscow. In fact, some of the paperwork that came out of the secret
Now we won't go into the physics of the H-Layer and the I- files. and was declassified and hand delivered to me. minted
Layer. etc., but basically he ionized particles that are
emitted by the sunspot activity eventually arrive at earlh. are
mpped at the north and south Geomagnetic Poles, and cause
all sorts of electro-magnetic anomalys. One of the things
that we are familiar with that are triggered by this energy
coming in from the sun are the Nonhern Lighq the Aurora
Borealis. These reveal the tremendous amount of energy
that comes in and ionizes the rare gasses, creating the
SUBQiMiNAQWARFARE
(Extra Sensory Perception) with known,
physical mechanisms. That's what it means. Figure 2. Solar Radiation and Stock Prices
Now. an interesting thing developed. A.S. ~ I I I I I I I I I ~ _ , ~
Pressman. Dept'of Physics, Moscow University, ,'I\
a
f
did this open literature survey of the work on
maenetics and life a numbcr of vears arro. Then - -
n19 i
1 \, -'=i Z
r
"
.
..
.r
"
a ".."an r ~in Soviet literature
.i * i * n l n -
-. ,rd l us somching?
*rv
went
underground. 1. ah:- mr;mn
urw u,IIIl;
At the time I did my own liten.," ~ I I I ~- P -
.,cmn-h -.-.
2nd
100
I have a copy of the bibliogr-'-- '---
i t p I I y IIWG, I'-
-
n ---':-'
WIIIGII
- to uo
164
- -
machine? Or had s w c of lhesc DCCn purposely rcmovea!
L ----..-am geophysical society meeting not too long ago. He too came
up with the magi&number-m 1 have, 7 . 8 H a e r tHe z found
How about the relationship between the mean annual that exactly four seconds after t h i s ' m e n t on, the
magnetic activity and the number of Sunspols? Again. man subject's brain waves would lock on exactly. on freauencv
is a biocosmic transducer. We know we live on a planet and p w .
that has fairly well predicfed'0. 21. 11, etc). cycles. What ~ h *was D ~ polrs
. origid pnpr, and henthis -cop.oulm
magnet'C norms* and
about lhis Curve
pm about 1975 when the people that werc working in this field
pervous ana cardiovascular diseases? A guy with a 25- 2u had to go back. bacimck. and pretend likethey had not
-
transmitter with the Luxembourg c-ect (which means 2 published their original ppcrs. or s e n what they had secn.
circularly polarized antenna aimed at the ionosnhcre), with 2 This is what happens when you get a government grant, boys
few Hz freauencv difference from a 50.000 w-*I v.wuC.(Lst
LILL h--A--l
-----
HOWabout Curr~piu~wr~ ---:-A:- -r --,
WIUI uiury prruurc ~~~ilrrgcs
--A - -
.L
UIU u l c
- brain research group. Dr. W.R. Adey was on another
government grant sponsored by the-office of Naval
carth's clecuic and magnetic fields. and rhythms of living Rcsmch into the effects of thcse (in this case -cd) v -
organisms? Circadian rhythms? All of thcsc graphs which m u e n c y Wds. that were pulsed with a very
you arc going to see for the next few minutes. incidentally,
%
are from medically accepted literature. from the medical Trequency modulation. His published p a p , and h s goes
journals themselves. The dielccuic constant of water, the back several years, show that this could influence the bmp
waves of cats and monkeys; and he didn't talk about h e
magic transducer. work that was done out here with human beings bccausc by
Okay, here's another one, a papcr generated in the Radio now this was fairly sensitive. ?hey knew it workcd. Thcy
I.
Science Journal o f Research of the Nation; ' " !ureau Or didn't know why. So a lot of dme. money and effon weit
Standards. ~ ~ a i n , - l a ka elook at where the maglc number into finding out what in the human brain was beginning to
appears to be. That's an 8.0 under the power disulu -'-'Won respond to this.
curve. the same figure that we werc finding in the ha
psychics, the mcdiiine men, the witch dociors, the ChrsaLwaa ! A few German physicists were looking into the possibility
this may have bem the mechanism that we have lived
-
Mystics they're all the same! that
ith for thousands of ycars. The name of this paper is "The
h y of you people know Dr. Ed Maxcy. Swton Maxey in Biological Effect 01 Exuemely Low Frequencies in the
Florida? Okay, about the time I was playing with it he did a &mosphcre". In other words, if we live in a natural EL$
very interesting experiment. He took a liule coil, a few turns environment could this possibly be he key and mechanism
of wire, put it on the floor underneath thc operating table and for mass accidenls, mass suicides, elc? All of the people
found that by turning this thing on a certain frequencies a who did this work independently. Tromp in Holland. Koenig
-
large ~ e r c e i t a a eoT the 'peo6le tested had brain wave in Germany. found: y& when they wknt back through thi
weathcr rccords. this had 10be the mechanism @t caused ail
of these admissions to psychiatric hospitals on certain dates,
all of these homicides. The data is beginning to become
You can't even measure things this low unless you have massive.
ighly sophisticated equipment. It is invisible. It's Iastclcss.
!dorless etc. This - is -in a vaoer that hc prcsentcrl
-- to a
-
James R. Hamer or "Hammer". He was working with
halman subiccts. and he has disappeared. as have a few
M A T R I X 1 1 1
SUDQOMONALWARFARE
ohen. He did some exmmely interesting work, and this varies for most human beings. In other words. you can test
was way hck in 1968. At that time he was with the S ace IQ with this little box. The longer it takes that flash to get
h here as an electrica1 signal the dumber hat person is
Bioloay Lsbontory Brain Research I n ~ t i t u ~ ~ n i v e r sOut
d g a i i fm bemuse the slower his systpm is responding.
about ten years ago are now classified. You can't get them After we found that this thing could alter moods, the
for love or money. Hmer found that in a 9Hz s i ~ m the l questions came up: Is this hypnosis? Suggestion? Am I a
reaction time was definitelv shortened. you were more alen. magician? Am I doing it? So it occurred lo me that I'd carry
tfyou changed that signal down a few cycles Per second. this thing around with me in my pocket. Now, I'm a
HZ to SHz,look what happens to the reaction time, This bachelor. I've been divorced for twenty-some years; so I eat
-
a~oliesto human kinas, monkeys. C U , a ~ ~ e all n d ~ out three meals a &y. So when I went to Denny's Coffee on
Toms that have b n ~ nwaves. Sunset Boulevard I put this thing in my pocket, and
Let's get out of here and into other thiggs. Solar rrcuvily 0cc;lsiomlly I set it at a specific frequency that I'm not going
and incidence of cerebral spinal meningitis. Tom Bearden to mention - because I've been asked not to by the people
was talking about carrier, possibilities? We don't know who can ask other people not to do things.
'
whether the waves lower your resistance. Or YOU Can actually And pretty soon the waitress would start dropping coffee
put the information on them and it is recreated inside lh into the laps of patrons. The babies would start screaming.
nervous -rest days of weather and the relation :t people within a 10 or 12 faradius (hb a 20 fmt mom),
sun spots and magnetic disturbances, elc. Modity, diseases would begin feaking out. rd surreptitiously turn this hing
of the nervous system and the lower curve of sun spot to two Hz higher in freauencv. Whhhhh (a simulated sigh
activity. In other words, we are lookinn here at natural ELF of relief). you could hear the room calm down. If you had a
phenomena before it began bein pocket Radio Shack decibel
m;mrpulated. Sun spots and mnh! meter, the cocktail level effect. h e
volume of the convers;ltion will
meningitis. drop. noticeably, in decibels.
bny of you wake up about 4am
and can't get back to sleep uniil
FM radio tuner. We flashed these liule lights in real time to his muscle near h e coil, saw the spike readout 0" the
the Schumann resonance (we picked the Schumann oscilloscope, and realized that we finally had a derector in
resonance up on a coil), filtered out everyhing except that human captivity h t could see micro-gauss levels. In o k
wave to which he psychics would envain and fed them this words his EMG, the few micro-volu of potentid. firing
litlle flickering light. through the neme impulses, through the conductive layers of
If you flash a light in a person's face you get an evoked his skin. was enough of a magnetic field to read out
potential in the occipital cortex. That's the pholic nsponse. on this Ihing.
And you know that if that is at a certain frequency you are He got very excited, so we began showing him some of my
going to turn that person on to epilepsy. But. if you put in a research dating back for about the last eight years, and he
beneficial frequency, you can probably cause a n ~ m + l decided that this was important enough to take bck u, chc
response of the brain wave at that fncluency. Now at was United Nations. So he contlrted,the chap who reallv run
marvelous. except for one thing. It takes about one hundred
milliseconds from the time that light flashes for the signal to
the government. This man has survived about the &&
minisuations. He must remain nameless because he is in
cause M evoked potential. and that hundred milliseconds !cry low-profile position. I can assure you he is nd
M A T R I X I I I
ou havc cver heard about or read about in newsnaDcr4. drivcn by this litllc magnetic oscillator. It is down below 25
key r a t me an airlinc t k c t and invited mc to come back nano-Trlar at thc source. A nano is one billionth of onc
to the United Nations. Tcsla. A Tala is tcn to the
Dr. Puharich and I were supposed to havc about an hour. It Our govcrnmcnt was playing at that time - God. I gucss,
ran into a two and a half hour briefing. Kurt Waldhcim with the multi-billion dollar Project Sanguinc. Thcir p u r p o ~ ~
(Secrccary General of the UN) was out of thc country at the was to communicate with submarina undcr watcr, with ELF
two man in the United Nations. Rudi himsclf. .
time. so our host and chap h t we informed was thc numbcr
such an outrage among everyone who actually engendering? . But meanwhile. spike wave which we don't like. We
graduated from high school that the from the standard textbook of physics. like to work with a diffcrcnt wavc form
FCC itself (Federal Communications if we look at the E wave as bcing that I don't want Lo talk about But this
Commission) had to back off from this standard propagation wave form - as thing is apparently mildly choactivc.
embarrassing, pseudo-solution. -
being parallel with this screen the B but not nearly as ~ s ~ c=-h-KGo a c t as
~ vtc
"Could they be having onc frequency wave. or H wave, the magnetic vector, oges they used for the tests in Los
which they want to work with and the is at right angles to this and has to Angeles. the ones at the United Nations.
others are just to mislcad us?" (asks a accompany it. and Usslnln~,Ncw York.
listener). *hen you strip off the E wave by Now, what I'd like to mint out to vou
Yes, (replies Dr. Bcck), they have shielding, by natural attenuation, you is that in this very narrow frequeic
phantom frequencies. They a r t still have that H wave left; and that is ctmm corresponding to the Alphay
reconstructine hekrlvnes. & me tell the one against which you cannot eta bordcr of brainwaves. you can
shield. It goes right through you, change the cxcilation frequency by a
everything else, and can trip certain kacuon of a Hem, and have an entirery
--
neurons in your head. different reaction. Now this was a big
This report is from a previously surprise. l h ~ iss the King h t was not
classified document done by Dr. W m anhcipated any more than the little
-
western world except one little and Dr. Erkins. of Gmet Air Rescach gums wcrc before Von Leeuwenhoek
-
segment still. ncar Chicago
" which is on for the CIA showing the "windows' that and Pastcur.
-
~
illsect current
. . - ---. . and one w h ~ c ha qal
Ullnk SoHz in Arizona. is a potential could b e ' the stimulus for ESP,
paranormal. Russian psychotronic
research. Does that look familiar? If
&hey build antennas, re-rddiating you move that down about2Hz, you
systems; when all of us have 1lOVolt ain't got a psychic, you got an e~ilcvtic!
systems in our homes; and we ;ire also Some of &e propagation paths of the
served with gas pipes, miles and miles
various nodes. The whole earth
of conductors, cold water pipes etc. ionosphere cavity rings like a bell. At
- ~ - -
certain frequencies you can put a liule
p
Introduction
The I n t e r v i e w s
L e t ' s s t a r t w i t h t h e Phoenix P r o j e c t .
I t was a p r o j e c t t h a t evolved o u t o f t h e P h i l a d e l p h i a P r o j e c t .
I t was a p r o j e c t t h a t t h e Navy d i d i n t h e 1930's and 1940's i n
an attempt t o make s h i p s i n v i s i b l e . They threw t h e s w i t c h one
e v e n t f u l day and the s h i p went i n t o hyperspace. They had a l l
s o r t s o f problems w i t h t h e people on t h e boat. I t was a huge
success as w e l l as a huge f a i l u r e -then they shelved i t ,
Around 1947 i t was decided t o r e - a c t i v a t e t h e p r o j e c t and i t
was moved t o Brookhaven National Laboratories w i t h Dr. John
Von Neumann and h i s associates. u t o f Phoenix 1 came S t e a l t h
technology, which I cannot t a l k about because o f my job. I t
a l s o produced a l l s o r t s o f e n e r g e t i c l i t t l e toys l i k e t h e
radiosonde.
What i s a radiosonde?
Any p a r t i c u l a r agency?
I ' m not sure what the agency was. Now, somebody got t h e
b r i l l i a n t idea t o p u t the s u b j e c t s d i r e c t l y i n l i n e w i t h t h e
gain horn o f the antenna. Lo and behold they got t h e i r r e s u l t
w i t h o u t burning the people up. They found o u t t h a t by v a r y i n g
the phase modulation and the frequency hopping and t h e p u l s i n g
o f t h e m u l t i p l e phases t h a t they c o u l d have profound e f f e c t s
on a persons mind.
Abou t 30.
I t was t o t a l l y p r i v a t e .
Corporations?
10,000 AD.
So e v e r y t h i n g i s locked i n u n t i l 10,00OAD?
Curious, i s n ' t i t ?
ship.
class.
W e l l , t h e r e a r e a l o t o f i n t e r e s t i n g aspects. There i s a
l o t t h a t i s not explained by most t h e o r i e s . I t i s not
explained why a magnetic f i e l d o n l y propagates a t 0.4 o f t h e
speed of l i g h t , electromagnetic f i e l d propagates a t t h e speed
o f l i g h t and an e l e c t r i c f i e l d (according t o Maxwells
equations) propagates a t the r a t e o f c - i n f i n i t y , which means
t h a t i t propagates throughout t h e u n i v e r s e i n s t a n t a n e o u s l y . I f
you understand those b a s i c r e l a t i o n s h i p s and how they
M A T R I X 1 1 1
I s n ' t a l o t o f t h i s l e f t o u t i n t h e open t o d i s t r a c t
people from what i s r e a l l y going on?
O f course .
What i s t h e c a p a c i t y o f t h e g r a v i t y c r a f t f l e e t o f t h e
Uni ted States?
What a r e t h e c a p a b i l i t i e s o f these c r a f t ?
He d i d ?
Yes.
Maybe i t ' s a d e l i b e r a t e l e a k .
0439
W e l l , one o f the problems t h a t has developed i s t h a t when
you t r a v e l through time you cannot come back t o t h e exact
p o i n t o f o r i g i n . I t has t o be l a t e r than when you l e f t . I f you
were t o come back t o t h e exact p o i n t a t which you took o f f you
would be a t the same p o i n t t w i c e i n your l i f e t i m e and t h e r e
would be a very s e r i o u s problem.
Yes.
O f course .
You ' r e suggesting a s t a t e of absoul t e c o r r u p t i o n .
a b s o l u t e l y c o r r e c t . Planned c o r r u p t i o n .
We t h i n k t h e y P r e s h i p p i n g g u i l l o t i n e s i n t h e r e f o r t h e
people t h a t d o n ' t comply. They're l o o k i n g f o r a s l a v e labor
f o r c e . That i s what H.R. 4079 i s about t h a t ' s i n Congress now.
I t c r e a t e s a s l a v e l a b o r f o r c e i n the p r i s o n system, which
w i l l be p r i v a t e l y owned. States w i l l pay the p r i v a t e p r i s o n a
f e e i n order t o put t h e i r prisoner i n t h e r e .
Yes.
What a r e some o f t h e o t h e r p r o j e c t s t h a t r e l a t e t o t h e
capaci t y o f f a c t i o n s o p e r a t i n g w i t h i n t h e Uni ted S t a t e s
Government and c o r p o r a t i o n s t o manipulate and c o n t r o l t h e
population?
What e l s e ?
and t h e mind c o n t r o l ?
So t h e r e a r e p o s i t i v e l i g h t f o r c e s o u t t h e r e t h a t a r e
s e e k i n g t o balance these n e g a t i v e a c t i v i t i e s b y t h e Orion
group?
M A T R I X 111
W e l l , i t s a super s e c r e t i n t e r n a t i o n a l o r g a n i z a t i o n t h a t
i s funded by a l l major governments. I t performs research on
a1 i e n s and a1 i e n technology, coverup o p e r a t i o n s , and a l s o
does espionage. The group i s n e g a t i v e l y o r i e n t e d and i s
considered t o have no p o s i t i v e a t t r i b u t e s i n r e l a t i o n t o
o t h e r humans. I t ' s c a l l e d the I n t e r n a t i o n a l Aerospace
411 iance.
A - S81f9.rtrucfim mi-; w i l l
i s rttrpt.d w i t h o u t 9-iu
d..froy ttn 3-
to opal L .1
-.
i f vzru
F - Multiburd micro t r m i v a r .
G - Auditory suuon.
M A T R I X I I I
0545
M A T R I X 1 1 1
0 5 50
M A T R I X 1 1 1
port. Rhode Island. tance to and relations with Remington and oth-
Prescott Bush's first college year, 1913, was e r weapons companies.
also the freshman year at Yale for E. Roland This was an unusual appointment, as Pres-
("Bunny?) Harriman, whose older brother cott's father seemed tq have no background in
(Wm.) Averell Harriman had just graduated munitionr Samuel Bush had been president of
from Yale. This is the Averell Harriman who the Buckeye Steel Castings Co. in Columbus,
.went on to fame as the U.S. ambassador to the Ohio, makers of railcar parts. His entire career
Soviet Union during World War 11. as a governor had been in the railroad business--supplying
of New York State. and as a presidential advis- equipment to the Wd1 Street-owned railroad
e r who was greatly responsible for starting the systems.
Vietnam War. The War Industries Board was run by Ber-
The Harrimans would become the sponsors nard Baruch. a Wall Street speculator with
of the Bushes, to liR them onto the stage of close personal and business ties to old E.H.
world histow. Harriman. Baruch's brokerage firm had han-
In the spring of 1916,Prescott Bush and "Bun- dled Harriman speculations of all kinds.'
ny" Hamman were chosen for membership in In 1918, Samuel Bush became director of the
an elite Yale senior-year secret society known Facilities Division ofthe War Industries Board.
as Skull and Bones. This unusually morbid, Prescott's father reported to the boards chair-
death-celebrating group helped Wall Street fi- man, Bernard Baruch, and to Baruch's assis-
nanciers find active young men of "good birth" tant. Wall Street private banker Clarence
to form a kind of imitation British aristocracy Dillon.
in America. Robert S. Lovett, president of Union Pacific
World War I was then raging in Europe. With Railroad, chief counsel to E.H. Hamman, and
the prospect that the U.S.A. would soon join the executor of his will, was id charge of national
war, two Skull and Bones "Patriarchs." Averell production and purchase "priorities" for Bar-
Hamman (class of 1913)and Percy A. Rockefel- uch's board.
ler(c1assof 19001,paid special attention to Pres- With the war mobilization conducted under .
cott's class of 1917. They wanted reliable cadres the supervision of the War Industries Board,
to help them play the Great Game, in the lucra- U.S. consumers and taxpayers showered un-
tive new imperial era that the war was opening precedented fortunes,.gn war producers and
up for London and New York moneycrats. Pres- certain holders of raw materials and patents.
cott Bush, by then a close friend of "Bunny" Hearings in 1934by the committee of U.S. Sena-
Harriman, and several other Bonesmen from tor Gerald Nye attacked the "Merchants of
their class of 1917 would later comprise the Deathn-war profiteers such as Remington
core partners in Brown Brothers Hamman, the
world's largest private investment bank. plfrlnen
Arms and the British Vickers company-whose
had manipulated many nations into
3
1. '2. 3. 4.
Samuel Prescott Flora Sheldon George Herbert Loulie Wear
Walker
d % 1. :5.
Prescott Sheldon
Bush 'T
6.
Dorothy Walker
7.
President George Herbert Walker
Bush
1. Samuel Prescott Bush, the Presi- 4. Loulie Wear Walker, the President's
dent's paternal grandfather: Ohio railroad maternal grandmother. From a "high soci-
supplier, wartime mediator between gov- ety" S t Louis family.
ernment and the arms merchants. 5. Prescott Sheldon Bush, the Presi-
2. Flora Sheldon Bush, the Resident's dent's father: Owing his power and fortune
paternal grandmother:She wrote an apology to the Harrimans, he would do anything for .
for Prescott's fake heroism. them.
3. George Herbert Walker, the Presi- 6. Dorothy Walker Bush, the President's
dent's maternal grandfather: S t Louis mother: Athletic, proud, wealthy, terrify-
banker, sports gambling chief with friends ingly competitive.
in the British establishment
wars, and then suppiied all sides with the weap Upon young Bush . .. were conferred: Cross
ons to fight them. , of the Legion of Honor, . .. Victoria Cross,. ..
Percy Rockefeller and Samuel Pryor's Rem- Distinguished Service Cross.. . .
ington Arms supplied machine guns and Colt Conferring of the three decorations upon one
automatic pistol% millions of rifles to Czarist man at one time implies recognition of a deed
Russia; over half of the small-arms ammunition of rare valor and probably of great military im-
used by the Anglo-American allies in World portance as well.
War I; and 69 percent of the rifles used by the From word which has reached Columbusdur-
United States in that conflict.' ing the last few days, it appears as if the
Samuel Bush's wartime relationship to these achievement ofcaptain Bush well measures up
businessmen would continue after the war, and to these requirements.
would especially aid his son Prescott's career The incident occurred on the western front
.of service to the Harrimans. about the time the Germans were launching
Most of the records and correspondence of their great offensive ofJuly 15. . . . The history
Samuel Bush's arms-related section of the gov- of the remarkable victory scored later by the
ernment have been burned, "to save space" in allies might have been written in another vein,
the National Archives. This matter ofdestroyed but for the heroic and quick action of Captain
or misplaced records should be of concern to Bush.
citizens of a constitutional republic. Unfortu-
nalely, it is a rather constant impediment with The . <. three allied leaders, General Foch,
regard to researching George Bush's back- Sir Douglas Haig and General Pershing . ..were .
ground: He is certainly the most ucovert."Amer- making an inspection of American positions.
.ican chief executive. General Pershing had sent for Captain Bush to
Now, arms production in wartime is by neces- guide them about one sector.
sity camed on with great security precautions. As they approached a certain battery, it was
The public need not know details of the private evident that the place was being shelled by Ger-
lives of the government or industry executives man 77s, but thegenerals mcv@qt',ii .' :
involved, and a broad interrelationship be- ' It is possible a Gorntaafiddglqsp ceiv.ed
tween government and private-sector person- their movements, for a shell lit*atds i n front
of them. None was injured, although a fragment
nel is normal and useful.
tore theboot of Captain Bush . '
But during the period preceding World War I, The party then moved along more rapidly.
and in the war years 19141917when the United Suddenly Captain Bush noticed a shell coming
States was still neutral, interlocking Wall directly for them. He shouted a warning, sud-
Street financiers subservient to British strategy denly drew his bolo knife, stuck it up as he
lobbied heavily, and twisted U.S. government would a ball bat, and parried the blow, causing
and domestic police functions. Led by the J.P. the shell to glance off to the right , ..
Morgan concern, Britain's overall purchasing The three generals marvelled at the exploit
agent in America, these financiers wanted a Apparently, they couldn't believe their eyes.
world war and they wanted the United States
in it as Britain's ally. The U.S. and British arms They immediately took shelter and waited for
companies, owned by these international fi- the shelling to stop.
nanciers, poured out weapons abroad in deals Within 24 hours young Bush was notified.. .
not subject to the scrutiny of any electorate [that] the three allied commanders had recom-
back home. The same gentlemen. as we shall mended him for practically the highest honors
see, later supplied weapons and money to Hit- within their gifi
ler's Nazis. On the following day there was a parade in
That this problem persists today, is in some Paris of soldiers to be decorated. As he was the
respect due to the "control" over the documen- only one to receive three honors, Captain Bush
tation and the history of the arms traffickers. was placed at the head of the procession.
World War I was a disaster for civilized hu- Captain Bush is 23 years old. a graduate of
manity. It had terrible, unprecedented casual- Yale in the class of 1917. He was one of Yale's
ties, and shattering effects on the moral philos- best-known athletes.. . was leader of the glee
ophy of Europeans and Americans. club . . . and in his senior year was elected to
But for a brief period, the war treated Pres- the famous Skull and Bones Society. ..."
cott Bush rather well.
In June 1918. just as his father took over re- The day after this astonishing story a p
sponsibility for relations of the government peared, there was a large cartoon on the edito-
with the private arms producers, Prescott went rial page. It depicted Prescott Bush as a small
to Europe with the U.S. Army. His unit did not boy, reading a story-book about military hero-
come near any fire until September.. But on Au- ism, and saying: "Gee! I wonder if anything like
gust 8,1918. the following item appeared on the that could ever truly happen to a boy." The c a p
front page of Bush's home-town newspaper: tion below was a rehash of the batting-away-
the-deadly-shell exploit, written in storybook
3 High Military Honors Conferred on Capt. style.'
Bash Local excitement about the military "Babe
For Notable Gallanty, When Leading AUied Ruth" lasted just four weeks. Then this somber
Commanders W e n Endungend, Local Man is little box appeared on the front page:
Awarded French, English and U.S. Cnrsses.
International Honors, perhaps unprecedent- Editor State Journal:
ed in the life of an American soldier. have been A cable received from .my son. hescott S.
conferred upon Captain hescott Sheldon Bush, brings word that he has not been decorat-
Bush, son of Mr. and Mrs. S.P. Bush of Co- ed. as published in the papers a month ago. He
lumbus. ..
feels dreadfully troubled that a letter, written
i o5 6 5
in a spirit of fun, should have been mislnter- Prescott ~ u s went
h to st Louis to repairhis
preted. He says he is no hero and asks me to troubled life. Sometime that same year, Averell
make explanations. I will appreciate your kind- Harriman made a trip there on a project which
ness in publishing this letter. ... would have great consequences for Prescott
Flora Sheldon Bush. The 28-year-old Harriman, until then some-
Columbus, Sept 5.' thingofa playboy, wanted to bring his inherited
money and contacts into action in the arena of
Prescott Bush later claimed that he spent world affairs.
"about 10 or 11 weeks" in the area of combat in President ~ h e o d o r e Roosevelt had de-
France. "We were under fire there. . . . it was nounced Harriman's father for "cynicism and
quite exciting. and of course a wonderful expe- deep-seated corruption" and called him an "un-
rience.'* desireable citizen.'* For the still-smarting Av-
Prescott Bush was discharged in mid-1919. erell to take his place among the makers and
and returned for a short time to Columbus, breakers of nations, he needed a financial and
Ohio. But his humiliation in his home town was intelligencegathering organization of his own.
so intense that he could no longer live there. The man Harriman sought to create such an
The "war herol'story was henceforth not spoken institution for him was Bert Walker, a Missouri
of in his presence. Decades later, when he was stock broker and corporate wheeler-dealer. .
an important, rich U.S. senator, the story was George Herbert ("Bert") Walker, for whom
whispered and puzzled over among the con- President George H.W. Bush was named, did
gressmen. not immediately accept Harriman's proposal.
Looking to be rescued from this ugly situa- Would Walker leave his little St. Louis empire.
tion. Captain Bush went to the 1919 reunion of to try his influence in New York and Europe?
his Yale class in New Haven, Connecticut.Skull Bert was the son of a dry goods wholesaler
and Bones Patriarch Wallace Simmons, closely who had thrived on imports from England.''
tied to the arms manufacturers, offered Pres- The British connection had paid for Walker
cott Bush a job in his St. Louis railroad equip- summer houses in Santa Barbara, California,
ment company. Bush took the offer and moved and in MaineuWalker's Pointn at Kennebunk-
to S t Louis--and his destiny. port Bert Walker had been sent to England for
his prep school and college education.
'Zed by J.P.Morgan, thac h m c i c s
wanted a world war and the United
States as Britain's ally. The svne
.;
hcno scn~n,bas of otco Kakn. E.H. Ham- Wlllum iM&eib. pacr A el la.
Kunn L a b . nun's nun at Kuhn C l t i m k founder. C 0 . w W.A. HJm.
Loen. nun L GJ.
with Dwight Eisenhower as well. Prescott's old he U.S. government pays directly for these
lawyer from the Nazi days, John Foster Dulles, sterilizations.
was Secretary of State, and his brother Allen Mexico is first among targeted nations. on a
Dulles, formerly of the Schroder bank, was list which was drawn up in July 1991,at a USAID
head of the CIA. strategy session. India and Brazil are second
This friendly environment emboldened our and third priorities, respectively.
General Draper to pull off a stunt with his mili- On contract with the Bush administration,
tary aid advisery committee. He changed the U.S. personnel are working ftom bases in Mexi-
subject under study. The following year, the co to perform surgery on millions of Mexican
Draper committee recommended that the U.S. men and women. The acknowledged strategy in
government react to the supposed threat of the this program is to sterilize those young adults
"population explosion" by formulating plans to who have not already completed their families.
depopulate the poorer countries. The growth of George Bush has a rather deep-seated per-
. the world's non-white population, he proposed, sonal feeling about this project, iq particular as
should be regarded as dangerous to the nation- it pits him against Pope John Paul I1 in Catholic
al security of the United States!" countries such as Mexico. (See Chapter4 below,
President Eisenhower rejected the recom- on the origin of a Bush-family grudge in this
mendation. But in the next decade. General regard.)
Draper founded the "Population Crisis Com- The spending for birth control in the non-
mittee" and the "Draper Fund," joining with white countries is one of the few items that is
the Rockefeller and DuPont families to p r e headed upwards in the Bush administration
mote eugenics as "population control." The ad- budget As its 1992budget was being set, USAID
ministration of President Lyndon Johnson, ad- said its Population Account would receive $300
vised by Draper on the subject. began financing million, a 20 percent increase over the previous
birth control in the tropical countries through year. Within this project, a significant sum is
the Agency for International Development spent on political and psychological manipula-
General William Draper was George Bush's tions of target nations, and rather blatant sub-
guru on the population question." But there version of their religions and govemmenkm
was also Draper's money-from that uniquely These activities might be expected to cause
horrible source-and Draper's connections on serious objections from the victimized nation-
Wall Street and abroad. Draper's son and heir, alities, or from U.S. taxpayers, especially if the
William H. Draper 111, was co-chairman for fi- program is somehow given widespread pub-
nance (chief of fundraising) of the Bush-for- licity.
president national campaign organization in Quite aside from moral considerations, legal
1980. With George Bush in the White House, questions would naturally arise, which could
the younger Draper heads up the depopulation be summed up: How does George Bush think he
activities of the United Nations throughout the can get away with this?
world. In this matter the President has expert ad-
Draper was vice president of Dillon Read un- vice. Mr. (Clayland) Boyden Gray has been
til 1953. During the 1950s and 1960s. the chief counsel to George Bush since the 1980election.
executive there was Frederic Brandi, the Ger- As chief legal officer in the White House, Boy-
man who was Draper's codirector for the Nazi den Gray can walk the President through the
investments and his personal contact man with dangers and complexities of waging such un-
the Nazi Steel Trust Nicholw Brady was usual warfare againstThird World populations.
Brandi's partner from 1954, and replaced him Gray knows how these things are done.
as the firm's chief executive in 1911. Nicholas When Boyden Gray was four and five years
Brady, who knows where all the bodies are bur- old. his father organized the pilot project for
ied, was chairman of his friend George Bush's the present worldwide sterilization program,
1980election campaign in New Jersey, and has from the Gray family household in North Car-
been United States Treasury Secretary olina.
throughout Bush's p r e s i d e n c ~ . ~ It started in 1946. The eugenics movement
was looking for a way to begin again in America.
C. Boyden Gray,chief counsel to President Bush, ecology kook, 0 . - I
!
.
Nazi death camps such as Auschwitz had just who should be considered for sterilization. The
then seared the conscience of the world. The
Sterilization League of America, which had
changed its name during the war to "Birthright;
'
project in Orange County was conducted by the
University of North Carolina and was financed
by a 'Mr. Hanes,' a friend of Clarence Gamble
Inc.," wanted to start up again. First they had to and supporter of the field work project in North
overcome public nervousness about crackpots Carolina. The Winston-Salem project was also
proposing to eliminate "inferior" and "defec- financed by Hanes. ["Hanesn was underwear
tive" people. The League tried to surface in mogul James Gordon lianes, a trustee of Bow-
Iowa, but had to back off because of negative man Gray Mdical School and treasurer of Al-
publicity: a little boy had pcently been steri- ice Gray's group). ;..
lized there and had died from the operation. 'The medical school had a long history of
They decided on North Carolina, where the interest in eugenics and had compiled exten-
Gray family could play the perfect hostm sive histories of families carrying inheritable
Through British imperial contacts, Boyden disease. In 1946, Dr. C. Nash Herndon.. .made
Gray's findf8ther Bbwman Gray had become a statement to the press on the use of steriliza-
princi a1 owner-of the RJ. R o ds Tobacco. tion to prevent the spread of iqheritable dis-
&
Co.
'
f ' d t h ~ r d ~ c e h t' l y
founded the Bowman Gray (memorial) Medical
eases. .. , . .
'The'fint step after giving the mental tests
School in Winston-Salem, using his inherited to grade school children was to interpret and
cigarette stock shares. The medical school was make public the results. In Orange County the
already a eugenics center. results indicated that three percent of the
school age children were either insane or fee-
As the experiment began, Gordon Gray's bleminded.. ..rrhen] the field committee hired
great aunt, Alice Shelton Gray, who had raised
him from childhood, was living in his house- a social worker to review each case.. . andto
hold. Aunt Alice had founded.the "Human Bet- present any cases in.syhich sterilization was
terment League," the North Carolina branch of Wldicated. Wthe%t&WBU
under North Carolina w a-l
the national eugenical sterilization movement order sterilization. .. ."
Aunt Alice was the official supervisor of the Race science experimenter Dr. Claude Nash
194847 experiment Working under Miss Gray Hemdon provided more details in an interview
was Dr. Claude Nash.Hemdon, whom Gordon in 1990:"
Gray had made assistant.professor of "medical "Alice Gray was the general supervisor of the
genetics" at Bowman Gray medical school. project She and Hanes sent out letters promot-
Dr. Clarence Gamble, heir to the Proctor and ing the prograa to the commissioners of all 100
Gamble soap fortune, was the sterilizers' na- counties in North Carolina.. ..What did I do?
tional field operations chief. Nothing besides riding herd on the whole thing!
The experiment worked as follows. AU chil- The social workers operated out of my office.
dren e n d e d in the school district of Wanston-Sa- I was at the time also director of outpatient
Icm,N.C.,ume given a s p e d "intelligence test." services at North Carolina Baptist Hospital. We
Those children who scowd below a certain arbi- would see the [targeted] parents and children
tmry low mark were then cut open and sutgicdly there. ... I.Q. tests were run on all the children
stedited in the Winston-Salem public school system.
We quote now from the official story of the Only the ones who scored really low [were tar-
project: "In Winston-Salem and in [nearby] Or- geted for sterilization], the real bottom of.the
ange County, North Carolina, the [Sterilization barrel, like below 70.
League's] field committee had participated in "Did we do sterilizations on yoyxig children?
testing projects to identify school age children Yes. This was .. a relatively minor operation.. ..
It was usually not until the child was eight or
ten years old. For the boys, you just make an
incision and tie the tube. . .. We more often
performed the operation on girls than with
boys. Of course, you have to cut open the abdo-
men, but again, it is relatively minor."
Dr. Herndon remarked coolly that "we had a
very good relationship with the pressn for the
project This is not surprising, since Gordon
Gray owned the Winston-Salem Journal, the
Twin City Sentinel, and radio station WSIS. .
In 1950 and 1931, John Foster Dulles, then
chairman of the Rockefellefi Foundation, led
John D. Rockefeller 111 on a series of world
tours, focusing on the need to stop the expan-
sion of the non-white populations. In November
1952, Dulles and Rockefeller set up the Popula-
tion Council, with tens of millions of dollars
from the Rockefeller family. -
At that poinf the American EugenicsSociety,
still cautious from the recent bad publicity vis-
a-vis Hitler, left its old headquarters at Yale
University: The Societymoved its headquarters
into the office of the Population Council, and
the two groups meld& together. The long-time
secretary of the Eugenics Society. Frederick
Osborne, became the Brst president of the P o p
ulation Council The G' y family's child-steril-
k
izer, Dr. C. Nash Rern on, became president of
the American Eugenics Society in 1953, as its
work expanded under Rockefeller patronage.
Meanwhile, the International Planned Par-
enthqod Federation gs founded in Lppdon, in
4
tbasf8-8xri Eugenia SOC&.
.The ulidead en roh World .War 11, re.
named "Population trolinlhadnow been re-
vived.
George Bush was J.S. ambassador to the
United Nations in 1
T when with prodding
from Bush and his fri nds, the United States
Agency for Internatiqnal Development first A poster of the ~ssociationfor Voluntary Sterilization 110rmerl~
made an o a c h l contract with the old Steriliza- the "Sterlization Leaguen). The U.S. government now pays this
tion League of America. The league had group from the Nazi era to sterilize nonwhites overseas.
changed its name twice again, and was now
called the "Associatio for Voluntary Surgical
Coptraception" The 3.5. government began L Phyllis Tilson Piotrow. ~ ~ ~ o p u i &W: o n ~ h Unit-
c
paying the old fascist 'group to sterilize non- edStour Rurwmu(New York PrregerPublishen, IOn).
whites in foreign countries. "Forward" by George H.W.Bush. pp. vii-vili.
The Gray family exwriment had succeeded. 2Adolf Hitler.McinKampf (Boston. Houghton MiminCom-
wny, 1971). P. 404.
In 1988the U.S.Agency for International De 3. T h e Ten Richut People in Hourton." in Houston Port
velopment signed its latest contract with the M a g a r k . March 11. ISM. "$150 mllioa to $250 million.
old Sterilization League (a.ka. "Association for .
h m . . inheritance. plus subsequent investments . ..
Voluntary Sterilization"), committing the U.S. ..
chief heir to a family fortune in oil stock . Aa to his
governmentto spend $80 million over fiveyears. .
finmcial interests, he is.. coy. He once described one
of his businesses as a company that 'invats in and wer-
Having gotten away with sterilizing several sees a Lot of smaller companies ... in a lot of foreign
hundred North Carolina school chiidren, "not countries' "
usually less than eight to ten years old," the 4. The announcements were made in tutlmony before a
Special Committee of the U.S. Senate Investigating the
identical group is now authorized by President National Defense Program. The hearinp on Standard
Bush to do it to 58 countries in Asia, Africa, and Oil were held March 5.24,211.27.31. m d April 1.23 and
Ibero-America. The group modestly claims it , 7. IS42 Available on microfiche, law seeUon. W b n n of
Cbarlu R. Davenport to W.A Haminun. 59 Wall Streef a.~ h l r d~ n i u h i t i o n i i ' ~ u g & ico-
u papen op. dt.,
New Yo* N.Y. footnote 7, p. 512 "Supporting Memkrr"
Jmuary tS. 1932
I 27. Schmiber.
- . a,
m. &.. D. 160. The Third InL Eunenies Cob
m s r papen. p. list, the omcen of the 1 ~ t e m r t i o b
DtuMr. Hurlmm: a1 Federation u of wbllcatlon drte in September,
Thank you very much for your kind letter of Jan- Pat l ~ - ~ u d l n1- G p d d e n t r year he h u
rsd the rctlon you took which h u mulled at once in a *writtenthe sterilization h w for Hltler.
letter from Mr. &U Ledclrr. Thla letter will ~urc ua 28 Dirrctmy g/Dirrcton@ N n o Yarlr City,@ I& l n t e m e r
polnt for correspondence, wblch I hope will en- with Nancy Borlta. librarian of Dlllon Read & CO.
able more of our Garman coIlcy~u to come to America 29. Higham. op. tit.. p. 129.212-15.21Q29.
on the o e d o n of the coagrwu of e l ~ c n i and
u genetlw, 30. Walter Irracmn m d Evan Thomu. The Wlu Men: S u
than otherrlra Pn'mdt and the World ThCy Made-Adam. Bohim. Her-
Coagrea#lo~~I burl- In 1931.eat8blbbtd tb.1Hamburg- *, Kennun. bwtt. McCby (New York Simon and
AmeriL routinely provided free tru~utl.nticpassage for khuster. 108(D. pp. 122 30s.
thoat carrjiw out N u f propaganda chore&+einartigo- 31. Plotrow, op. dt.. pp. 3842
t i a q f N a t i R o p o o m d 4 A c t W i u o d Id ~ b- 32 Ibid., p. vlii. "As cha1rm.n of the rpecid Republican
t a i n o t k,op.~dt., chapter ~ 2
T u k Force on Popuhtlon m d Earth Ruourcu. I w u
11 A1t.L Camel, Man the Unlmom (New Yo* Halcyon imprened by the argument, of Willlam H. Draper. Jr.
H o w , publlahed by amagement with Harper & ...Central Draper contlnhu to lead thmugh hlr t l m
Brothen. 1935). p p 31818. I- W O for ~ the U.N. P~p~lrtion.rn\rad-
The battle cr~rof the New Order w u aounded lo leOS with 33. Sobel, op. dt.. pp. 298.354.
the publicatton of Mantk U h u m n , by Dr. A L u h Cam1 M Interview July 16,1991. with Joanne Groui. m of6cial
ofthe Rockefeller Innitute In New York Thu Nobel F + r b with the USAID's Populatlon Omee
wlnnerrald~enormowsumrare now required to maintain 35. Dr. ~ a hSra d i t "The state of world ~ o ~ l a t l o n .1981.
"
.
priaom and Lnune a a y l u ~.. Why do we p r e a t m t h w New Yorf United Nations Popuhtlon Fund.
36.See urrr's ~ u i d cto the QUiw of Popchfton. lWl.O(llce
w l c U and harmful belny? Thlr fact muat be aqlurely of Populatlon, Bureau for Science and TechwlW,
faced. Why ahould roclety not dupoae of th crimlmh
.
m d the i a u n c In a more economical manner? .. The United Stater Agency for International DcvelopmenL
Avaihble from %TIPOP. Room I11 SA-la USAID.
mmmunlty muat be protected apinat troublesome and Wubington D.C. 205251819.
dangerow elements.. . Rrbaps prirona ahould be abol- 37."Hlrtory ofthe Auoeiatloa for Volunqy Sterlllution
bbed.. . .The eondltionlng of the petty criminal with the [formerly Sterillutlon Lugue of AmericaL 193561."
whlp. or aome more relentilie procedure, followed by a thesia submitted to the faculty of the p.durte r h o o l
short stay In hoa~itrl.wouh nrobablr s m c e to insure
..
order. [Chminrlr: inciudingtlioael who have . misled
of the University of Minnerota by William b y Van
Euendelh Marc4 1878, available on microfilm, Li-
the publlc on important matten, should be humanely and bnry of Congreu. T h b is the o~eia1,hirtory.written
ecowmfcally dbpored of in small euthanuie inatitutiom wlth full cooperation of the Sterillut~onLeyuc
aupplied wlth proper g u u . A aimilar treatment could be 38 lntenlew with Dr. C. Nash Herndon, June 20,10W.
advantageouab applied
.. to the inune, guilty
- .of criminal
aetr"
Carrel chimed to have trmrplanted the head of a dog b
another dog and kept It alive for quite aome time.
13. Bernhard Schrelkr, Thc Men Behind H i t k A Cmncln
Waming to the World, France: La Hay-Mureaux, c r
1075). Englbh language edition supplied by H. & P.
Tadeusz. 368 Edgewere Road; London W 2 A copy of
thlr book is now held by Union College Library. Syn-
cuae. N.Y.
14. Hlgham. op. &.. p. 35.
15. Engagement announced Feb. 10.1939. New York Tima.
p. 20.See alao Oinaory of Dimta for New York City,
19301and 10(OI.
10. Higham. op. cic.. pp. 20, a and other references to
Lhroeder and Lindenunn
Anthony Sutton. Wdl Stmt and the R k c of Hiller (Seal
Beach: 7 8 Prua. 1976). Sutton is also a good m u m on the
Harrlmaol.
17. Washington Eorninp Stor. March 27,1912 p. 1.
18. Higham, op. dt. p 50.
19. I&, p. 48.
2a Worhinpton Pad, April 29.1890, p. r4.Higham. op. eil..
pp. 52-53.
21. Zlpataannual reporta, 1~10d01.LibrarlrofCongreaa
mlcrofomr.
Seattle Post-lntelligencer. Saturday. March 7. 1992 A3
Rapist chooses
castration
over jail term
4
That s barbaric,.' critics say
9
-
Scientist suggests sterilization
as population-explosion curb
~ s n z c : a press
n // @ 'f"F/ Pecker is vice-president of the
French National Commission for the
OTTAWA - Mass sterilization of United Nations Educational and
people in poor countries might be Cultural Organization, former direc-
the only way to stop the world popu- tor of the InstituteofAstrophysics in
lation esplosion, a prominent Paris. and afoundingmemberofthe
French scientist said Monday. human-rights committee of the
"I fear we may be forced to violate French Academie des sciences.
some basic human rights if we want His assertions weren't challenged
to keep humanity alive.'' said Jean- by any of about 50 scientists at a
Claude Pecker. France's leading symposium sponsored by the ~~~~l
astronomer and a long-time human- society of Canada*
rights activist. But the idea of forced sterilization
"One of the greatest needs now is was strongly rejected by Bonnie
to diminish the birth rate in poor Johnson of Planned Parenthood of
countries. In order to do that. you Canada, who has studied Third
might eventually be led to sterilize World population issues.
people aner two children. for exam- **I find it just unconscionable that
ple. we would trv to dictate to anv .
.'You might be forced to that dras-
woman or to any family their rep&
ductive rights or freedoms*" she
'
Wrape3s clients sponsored Hitlds terroristic takeovei; his clients led the
buildup of the Nazi war industry; his clients made war against the United
States. The Nazis were D a p d s direct partneb in Berlin and New Jersey."
4. ,'The Center:ofPow-,-IS
...-i.-C---...-. Pacific Ocean, kiliing his two crew members
, * .. , in -':
-. when the unpiloted plane crashed.
Five months later, in February 1945..Pres-
cott's boss Averell Harriman escorted Presi-
dent Franklin Roosevelt to the fateful summit
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. meeting with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin at
59 Wall Street, New York Cable Yalta. In April Roosevelt died. The agreement
Address "Shipley-New York" reached at Yalta, calling for free elections in
Business Established 1818 Poland once the war ended, was never en-
Private Bankers forced.
....-
shut down !he Union Banking Corporation, Following his services to Germany's Nazi Party,
which had been operated on behalf of Nazi Ger- Averell Harriman spent several years mediat-
many by Bush and the Harrimans. But that was ing between the British. American, and Soviet
behind them now, and they were safe. There governments in the war to stop the Nazis. He
would be no publicity on the Harriman-Bush was ambassador to Moscow from 1943 to 1946.
sponsorship of Hitlerism. President Harry Truman, whom Harriman
Prescott's son George, the future U.S. Presi- and his friends held in amused contempt, a p
dent, was also safe. Three days before this note pointed Harriman U.S. ambassador tb Britain
to Moscow was written, George Bush had para- in 1946.
chuted from a Navy bomber airplane over the
Harriman was at lunch with former British
Prime Minister Winston Churchill~cq&a~$
- ~ - 1 4 4 6 , - w h ' e n ~ p R i 3 3 ~ ~ arrlman.
-.-.-.
asked Churchill if he should accept Truman's
offer to come back to the U.S. as Secretary of
Commerce. According to Harriman's account,
Churchill told him: "Absolutely. The center of
power is in Washington."'
Jupiter Island
The reorganization of the American govern-
ment affer World War 11-the creation of the
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency along British
lines, for example--had devastating conse-
quences. We are concerned here with only cer-
tain aspects of that overall transformation,
those matters of policy and family which gave
shape to the life and mind of George Bush, and
gave him access to power.
It was in these postwar years that George
Bush attended Yale niversity; and was induct-
ed into the Skull Bones society. The Bush
family's home at that time was in Greenwich,
Connecticut But it just then that George's
parents, Prescott Dorothy Walker Bush,
Prescott Bush moved into action in 1952 as a Those who remember the Eisenhower presi-
national leader of the push to give the Republi- dency know that Ike played ... quite a bit of
can presidential nomination to Gen. Dwight D. golf! Democrats sneered at him for mindless-
("Ike") Eisenhower. Among the other team ness, Republicans defended him for taking this
members were Bush's Hitler-era lawyer John healthy recreation. Golf was Ike's ruling pas-
Foster Dulles, and Jupiter Islander C. Douglas sion. And there at his side was the loyal, bland,
Dillon. pleasant Senator Prescott Bush, former presi-
Dillon and his father were the pivots as the dent of the U.S. Golf Association, son-in-law of
Harriman-Dulles combination readied Ike for the very man who had reformulated the rules
the presidency. As a friend put it: "When the of the game.
Dillons .. . invited IEisenhower] to dinner it Prescott Bush was Dwight Eisenhower's fa-
was to introduce him to Wall Street bankers vorite golf partner. Preseott could reassure Ike
and lawyers."" about his counselors, allay his concerns, and
Ike's higher level backers believed, correct- monitor his moods. Ike was very grateful to
ly, that Ike would not interfere with even the Prescott, who never revealed the President's
dirtiest of their covert action programs. The scores.
bland, pleasant Prescott Bush was'in from the The public image of his relationship to the
beginning: a friend to Ike, and an original back- President may be gleaned from a 1956 newspa-
er of his presidency. per profile of Prescott Bush's role in the party.
On July 28,1952, as the election approached, The New York Times, which 11years before had
Connecticut's senior U.S. senator, James O'Bri- consciously protected him from public expo-
en McMahon, died at the age of 48. (McMahon sure as a Nazi banker. fawned over him in an
had been Assistant B.S. Attorney General, in article entitled, "His Platform: Eisenhowern?"'
charge of the Criminal Division, from 1935 to tall, lean. well-dressed man who looks exactly
1939. Was there a chance he might someday like what he is--a wealthy product of the Ivy
speak out about the unpunished Nazi-era League-is chairman of the Republican Con-
crimes of the wealthy and powerful?) vention's platform committee. As such, Rescott
This was mremely convenient for Prescott Bush, Connecticut's senior United States Sena-
He got the Republican nomination for U.S. sen- tor, has a difficult task: he has to take one word
ator at a special delegated meeting, with back- and expand it to about 5,000.
ing by the Yale-dominated state party leader- "The one word, of course, is '1ke'-but no par-
ship. Now he would run in a special election ty platform could ever be so simple and direct
for the suddenly vacant Senate seat He could 0 . .
expect to be swept into office, since he would T h u s it is that Senator Bush and his fellow.
be on the same electoral ticket as the popular committee members . .. find themselves con-
war hero, General Ike. By a technicality, he fronted with the job of wrapping around the
would instantly become Connecticut's senior name Eisenhower sufficient verbiage to per-
senator, with extra power in Congress. And the suade the public that it is the principles of the
next regularly scheduled senatorial race would party, and not the grin of the man at the head
be in 1956 (when McMahon's t e n would have of it, which makes it worthy of endorsement in
ended),so Prescott could run again in that pres- [the] November [election].
' idential election year .. . once again on Ike's
"For this task Prescott Bush, a singularly
coattails! practical and direct conservative, may not be
With this arrangement, things worked out entirely fitted. It is likely that letl to his own
very smoothly. In Eisenhower's 1952 election devices he would simply offer the country the
tictory, Ike won Connecticut by a margin of one word and let it go at that
129,507 votes out of 1,092,471. Prescott Bush "He is ... convinced that this would be
came in last among the statewide Republicans, . enough to do the trick.. . if only the game were
but managed to win by 30,373 out of 1,088,799, played that way.
his margin nearly 100,000 behind Eisenhower. "Since it is not, he can be expected to preside
He took the traditionally Republican towns. with dignity, fairness and dispatch over theses-
05 9
sions that will prepare the party credo for the
1956 campaign.
"If by chance there should be any conflicts
P
1
rescott Bush was a most elusive, secretive
senator. BY diligent research. his views
on some issues-may be traced: He was
within the committee. . .the Senator's past can opposed to the development of public power
offer a clue to his conduct projects like the Tennessee Valley Authority;
"A former Yale Glee Club and second bass he opposed the constitutional amendment in-
in the All-Time Whiffenpoofs Quartet, he is.. . troduced by Ohio Senator John W. Bricker,
[called]'the hottest close-harmony man at Yale which would have required congressional a g
in a span of twenty-five years.' proval of international agreements by the exec-
"close harmonybeinga Republican special- utive branch.
ty under President Eisenhower, the hottest But Prescott Bush was essentially a covert
close-harmonyman at Yale in twenty-five years operative in Washington.
would.seem to be an ideal choice for the con- In June 1954,Bush received a letter from Con-
' vention job he holds at San Francisco. . .. necticut resident H. Smith Richardson, owner
"[In addition to his business background, he1 of Vick Chemical Company(cough drops, Vapo-
also played golf, competing in a number of tour- Rubli It read, in part, ". ..At some time before
naments. For eight years he was a member of Fall, Senator, I want to get your advice and
the executive committee of the United States counsel on a [new] subject-namely what
Golf Association. ... should be done with the income from a founda-
"As a Senator, Connecticut's senior tion which my brother and I set up, and which
spokeman in the upper house has followed con- will begin its operation in 1956. ..."la
servative policies consistent with his business This letter presages the establishment of the
background. IL Smith Richardson Foundation, a Bush family-
He resigned all his corporate directorships, dictated private slush fusd which was to be uti-
took a leave from Brown Brothers, Harriman, lized by the Central Intelligence Agency, and
and proceeded to go down the line for the Ei- by Vice President Bush for the conduct of his
senhower program. ... Iran-Contra adventures.
"Around the Senate, he is known as a man The Bush family knew Richardson and his
who does his committee work faithfully, de- wife through their mutual friendship with
fends the Administration stoutly, and fits well Sears Roebuck's chairman, General Robert E.
into the clublike atmosphere of Capitol Hill. Wood. General Wood had been president of the
. ..wlS America First organization, which had lobbied
To be continued. against war with Hitler's Germany. H. Smith
Notes Richardson had contributed the start-up money
1. Walter Iwacson and Evan Thomas, Thc Wise M m Six for America First and had spoken out against
Friends and the World They Made-Acheson. Bohlen. the United States "joining the Communists" by
Harriman. Kennan. Lovett McCloy (New Yo* Simon
and Schuster. 19861, p.517. fighting Hitler. Richardson's wife was a proud
2 Reed was better known rn high saciety as a minor diplct relative of Nancy Langehorne from Virginia,
mat, the founder of the Triton Press and the president who married Lord Astor and backed the Nazis
of the American Shakespeare Theatu. from their Cliveden Estate.
3. Palm Beach Part.January 13,lSBl.
4. For Lovett's residency there see Isrocson and Thomas, General Wood's daughter Mary had married
op. dt.; p. 417. Some Jupiter Island residencies r e r e the son of Standard Oil president William
verified
-. .. .- by their inclusion in the 1917 membership list Stamps Farish. The Bushes had stuck with the
ofthe ~ o l ; eSound Yacht Club, in the Hamman papers. Farishes through their disastrous exposure
- -
LibnrvofConmss:
.- .-. others were established from inter-
during World War U (See Chapter 3). Young
views with-10%-time Jupiter Islandera
5. Arthur Burr Darling. 7'he C m h d 1ntcUigNcAgmey: An George Bush and his bride Barbara were espe-
inrtnrnunr of Caumnunr, to 1950. (College Station: cially close to Mary Farish, and to her son W.S.
Pennsylvania State University, 1990). p. 59. Farish IU, who w ~ u l dbe the great confidante
6. The Chicago Tfibune.Feb 9, lW. for example. warned
of 'Creation of m all-powerful intelligence service to of George's presidency."
spy on the postwar world and to p n into the lives of
citizens at home. Cf.Alhony Coa Brown, Wild Bill-
o ~ : T h Iatr
e Hem. (New York: Times Books. 1982).p. 625,
on warnings to FDR about the British control of U.S
intelligen&.
7. Dennis Eisenberg. Uri Dan. Eli Landau. M y c r La&:
M o d of the Mob (New York Paddingbn Rur.1979) pp.
m:2a -
8. See John Ranelagh, The Agmey: The Rise and Dcciine of
the CIA. (New York: Simon'and Schuster. 1987). pp. 131-32
9. Clark ClilCord. Counsel to the Pnridrnt (New York: Ran-
dom House, lWlZ
10. Sidney Hyman. Thc Life of William Bmton (Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press. 1969). pp. 438-41.
11. Phyllis Tilson Piotrow. WorLi Popuhtion C*: Tk
United Stotcs Response (New Yo* Praeger Publishers,
1973). "Forward" by George H.W. Burh, p. vii.
12 Interview with Prexott Bush in the Oral Histoy R e
search Project conducted by Columbia University in 1966.
Eisenhower Administrat~onPart 11; pp. 624.
13. Herbert S. Parmel, Eumhowr and the Anuncan Cnr. The emblem
sodu (New York The Macmillan Company. 19121, p. 14. of'Skull & Bones,
14. N ~ l York
p Tima.Sept 6.1952 Nov. 5.1952 Nov. 7,1958. the secret society of
15. New York Times. Aug 21.1956.
American
bluebloods, into
which George Bush
was inducted during
his years at Yale
University.
H. Smith Richardson was Connecticut's lead- hower refused (for once) to play the Dulles-Brit-
ing "McCarthyite." He planned an elaborate ish game, and the invaders had to leave Egypt
strategy for Joe McCarthySsintervention in Con- when Britain was threatened with U.S. econom-
necticut's November 1952 elections, to finally ic sanctions. .
defeat Senator Benton." (Benton's 1950victory During 1956,Senator Prescott Bush's va'lue to
over Pxescott Bush was only for a two-year un- the Harriman-Dulles political group increased
expired term. He was running in this election when he was put on the Senate Armed Services
for a full term, at the same time that Prescott Committee. Bush toured U.S. and allied mili-
Bush was running to fill the seat left vacant by tary bases throughout the world, and had in-
Senator McMahon's death)." creased access to the national security deci-
The H. Smith Richardson Foundation was or- sion-making process.
ganized by Eugene Stetson, Jr., Richardson's In the later years of the Eisenhower presi-
son-in-law. Stetson (Skull and Bones, 1934)had dency, Gordon Gray rejoined the government
worked for Prescott Bush as assistant manager As an intimate friend and golfing partner of
ofthe New York branch ofBrown Brothers Har- Prescott Bush, Gray complemented the Bush
riman. influenceon Ike. The Bush-Gray family partner-
In the late 1950s, the Smith Richardson Foun- ship in the "secret governmentn continues up
dation took part in the upsychologicalwarfaren through the George Bush presidency.
of the CIA. This was not a foreign, but a domes- Gordon Gray had been appointed head of the
tic covert operation, carried out mainly against new Psychological Strategy Board in 1951 un-
unwitting U.S. citizens. CIA director Allen Dul- der Averell Harriman's rule as assistant to
les and his Britishallies organized "MK-Ultra," President Truman for national security affairs.
the testing of psychotropic drugs including LSD , From 1958 to l M l Gordon Gray held the identi-
on a very large scale, allegedly to evaluate cal post under President Eisenhower. Gray act-
"chemical warfaren possibilities. ed as Ike's intermediary, strategist and hand-
In this period. the Richardson Foundation holder, in the President's relations with the
helped finance experiments at Bridgewater CIA and the U.S. and allied military forces.
Hospital in Massachusetts, the center of some Eisenhower did not oppose the CIA'S covert
ofthe most brutal MK-Ultra tortures. These out- action projects; he only wanted to be protected
rages have been graphically portrayed in the from the consequences of their failure or expo-
movie, Titticut F o k . sure. Gray's primary task, in the guise of "over-
During 1990, an investigator for this book sight" on all U.S. covert action, was to protect
toured H. Smith Richardson's Center for Cre- and hide the growing mass of CIA and related
ative Leadership just north of Greensboro, secret government activities.
Nor* Carolina The tour guide said that in It was not only covert pmjec!s which were de-
these rooms, agents of the Central Intelligence veloped by the Gray-Bush-Dulles combination;
Agency and the Secret Service are trained. He it was also new, hidden stmctumof the United
demonstrated. the two-way ..mirrors, through. States government
whichth&governmentemployees are watched, Senator Henry Jackson challenged these ar-
bhile-@~y3rdput.through mind-bending psy- rangements in 1959 and 1960. Jackson created
chodramla@l'he guide explained that "virtually a Subcommittee on National Policy Machinery
everyone who becomes a generaln in the.U.S. of the Senate Committee on Governmental O p
armed forces also goes through this "training" erations, which investigated Gordon Gray's
at the Richardson Center. reign at the National Security Council. On Janu-
Another office of the Center for ~ i e a t i v e ary 26,1960, Gordon Gray warned President Ei-
Leadership is in Langley, Virginia, at the head- senhower that a document revealing the exis-
quarters of the Central Intelligence Agency. tence- of a secret part of the U.S. government
Here also. Richardson's center trains leaders had somehow gotten into the bibliography be-
of the CIA. ing used by SenatorFJackson. The unit was
The Smith Richardson Foundation will be Gray's "5412 Groupn within the administration,
seen in a later chapter, performing in the Iran- officially but secretlsin charge of approving
Contra drama around Vice President George covert action. Under Gray's @idance, Ike" 'was
Bush. clear and firm in his tesponse' that Jackson's
staff not be informediof the existence of this
***
Prescott Bush worked throughout the Eisen-
4
unit [emphasis in the.' riginall-
On January 1,1959, idel Castro took'power
in Cuba. Thereafter, ih the -lasta.Eisenho?e..
hower years as a confidential ally of the Dulles years, with Castro as a target and univeka6re-
brothers. In July 1956,Egypt's President Camel text, the fatal Cuban-vectored gangster section
Abdul Nasser announced he would accept the of the American.gove9ment was assembled.
U.S. offer of a loan for the construction of the Several figures of t Eisenhower adminis-
Aswan dam project John Foster Dulles then
prepared a statement telling the Egyptian am- permanent Covert Ac
$:
tration must be consi red the fathers of this
monolith, men who
bassador that the U.S.A had decided to retract continued monster after its
its offer. Dulles gave the explosive statement
in advance to Prescott Bush for his approval.
Dulles also gave the statement to President Ei- a Goqdon Gray, the sbadowy Assistant to. the
senhower, and to the British government President for National Security Affairs, Pres-
Nasser reacted to the Dulles brush-off by na- cott Bush's closest exeOutive branch crony and
tionalizing the Suez Canal to pay for the dam. golf partner along withBisenhower. By 1959-60,
Israel, then Britain and France, invaded Egypt Gray had Ike's total confidence and served as
to try to overthrow Nasser, leader of the anti- the Harrimanites' monitor on all U.S. milibry
imperial Arab nationalists. However, Eisen- and non-military projqkts.
0596
British intelligence igent Kim Philby defect- Following the rise of Castro, the U.S. Central
ed to the Russians in J963.Philby had gained Intelligence Agency contracted with the orga-
virtually total access t@U.S. intelligence activi- nization ofMafia boss Meyer Lansky toorganize
ties beginning in 1949;as the British secret ser- and train assassination squads for use against
vices' liaison to the H rriman-dominated CIA. the Cuban government. Among those employed
1
After Philby's defectio ,it seemed obvious that
the aristocratic British5ntelligence service was
were John Rosselli, Santos Trafficante, and
Sam Ciancana. Uncontested public documenta-
in fact a menace to the western cause. In the tion of these facts has been published by con-
1960s. a small team of U.S. counterintelligence gressional bodies and by leading Establish-
specialists went to England to investigate the ment academics.=
situation. They reported back that the British But the disturbing implications and later
secret service could be,thoroughly trusted. The consequences of this engagement are a crucial
leader of this "expert'',team, Cordon Gray, was matter for further study by the citizens of every
the head of the countefespionage section of the nation. This much is established:
President's Foreign ' Intelligence Advisory On August 18,1M, President Eisenhoweraij-
Board (PFIAB)for Presjdents Kennedy through proved a $13 million omcia1 budget for a secret
Ford. CIA-run guerrilla war agaipst Castm. It"&
Robert Lovett, ~ u s d ' sJupiter Island neigh- known that Vice President Richard P Nixen
bor and Brown Brothers Harriman partner, took a handin the promotion of this initiative.
from 1956 on a member of the President's For- The U.S. inilitary was kept out of the covert
eign Intelligence Advisory Board. Lovett later action plans until very late in the game.
claimed to have c'riticized-from the "inside"- The first of eight admitted assassination at-
the plan to invade Cuba a t the Bay of Pigs. Lo- tempts against Castro took place in 1060.
vett was asked to choose the cabinet for John ..,. The program was, of course, a failure, if not
Kennedy in 1961. a circus. The invasion of Cuba by the CIA'S anti-
CIA Director Allen Dullcs, Bush's former C a s h exiles was put off until after John Ken-
international attorney. Kennedy fired Dulles nedy took over the presidency. As is well
after the Bay of Pigs invasion, but Dulles served known, Kennedy balked at sending in U.S. air
on the Warren Commission, which white- cover and Cash's forces easily prevailed. But
washed President Kennedy's murder. the progam continued.
C. Douglas Dillon, neighbor of Bush on Jupi- In 1960, Felix Rodriguez, Luis Posada Car-
ter Island, became undersecretary of state in riles, Rafael "Chi Chi" Quintero, Frank Sturgis
1958 after the death of John Foster Dulles. Dil. (or "Frank Fiorini"? and other Florida-based
lon had been John Foster Dulles's ambassador Cuban-e~iles-we~m-trai~cTa~Lillers and-dnig?
to France (195357). coordinating the original traffickers in the Cuban initiative; their super-
U.S. covert backing for the French imperial ef- visor was E. Howard Hunt. Their overall CIA
fort in Vietnam, with catastrophic results for boss was Miami station chief Theodore G.
the world. Dillon was treasury secretary for Shackley, seconded by Thomas Clines. In later
both John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. chapters we will follow the subsequent careers
*Ambassador b Britain Jock Whitney, ex- of these characters-increasingly identified
tended family member of the Harrimans and with George Bush-through the Kennedy assas-
neighbor of Prescott Bush on Jupiter Island. sination, the Watergate coup, and the Iran-Con-
Whitney set up a press service in London called tra scandal.
Forum World Features, which published pro-
paganda furnished directly by the CIA and the
British intelligenceservices. Beginningin 1961,
Whitney was chairman of the British Empire's
5 The Silver Spoon
"English Speaking Union." George Herbert Walker Bush was born in Mil-
Senator Rescott Bush, friend and counselor ton, Massachusetts, on June l2,1924. Duringthe
of President Eisenhower. next year the family moved to Greenwich, Con-
Bush's term countinued on in the Senate necticut, and established their permanent p s i -
after the Eisenhower years, throughout most of dency.
the aborted Kennedy presidency. Prescott and Dorothy Walker Bush had had a
In 1962, the National Strategy Information son, Prescott, Jr., before George. Later there
Center was founded by Prescott Bush and his was a little sister, Nancy, and another brother,
son Prescott, Jr., William Casey (the future CIA Jonathan; a fourth son, William C'Bucky"), was
chief), and Leo Cherne. The center came to be born 14 years after George, in 1939.
directed by Frank Barnett, former program of- George was named after his grandfather,
ficer of the Bush family's Smith Richardson George Herbert Walker. Since George's mother
Foundation. The center conduited funds to the called Grandfather Walker "Pop," she began
London-based Forum World Features, for the calling her son, his namesake, "little Pop," or
circulation of CIA-authored "news stories" to "Poppy." Hence, Poppy Bush is the name the
some 300 newspapers internationally?' President's family friends have called him
"Democrat" Averell Hamman rotated back since his youth.
into official government in the Kennedy admin- Prescott, Sr. joined W.A. Harriman 6 Co. May
istration. As assistant secretary and undersec- 1,1926. With his family's lucrative totalitarian
retary of state, Harriman helped push the Unit- projects, George Bush's childhood began in
ed States into the Vietnam War. Harriman had comfort and advanced dramatically to Luxury
no post in the Eisenhower administration. Yet and elegance.
he was perhaps more than anyone the leader The Bushes had a large, dark-shingled house
and the glue for the incredible evil that was with "broad verandas and a portecochere"
hatched by the CIA in-the final Eisenhower (originally a roofed structure extending out to
mrs:a half-public,-half-ptimte.IIarrimmite the driveway to protect the gentry who amved
" army, never since demobilized, and incasing- in coaches) on Grove Lane in the Deer Park
ly associated with the name of Bush. 0 7
section of Greenwich.!
Here they were attended by four servants-- "As the 1930s economic crisis deepened,
three maids, one of whom cooked, and a Americans experienced unprecedeited
chauffeur.
The U.S.A was plunged into the Great De- hardshiv and fear. The Bush children
pression beginning with the 1929-31 financial were t a h t that those who suffixed
collapse. But George Bush and his family were
totally insulated from this crisis. Before and these problems had no one to blame but
after the crash, their lives were a frolic, sealed themselves."
off from the concerns of the population at large.
During the summers, the Bushes stayed in a had scorn for people who went bankrupt be-
second home on the family's ten-acre spread at cause they mismanaged their money. Prescott's
Walker's Point at Kennebunkport. Maine. lessons were absorbed by young George. . ..*
Flush from the Soviet oil dealsand theThyssen- When he reached the age of five, George Bush
Nazi Party arrangements, Grandfather Walker joined his older brother Pres in attending the
had built a house there for Prescott and Doro- Greenwich Country Day School. The brothers'
thy. xhey and,pthw yell-to-do summer ~ o l o - "lives were charted from birth. Their fatherhad
di& used &ennebunkport's River Club for ten': determined that his sons would be. ..educated
nis and the club's yachting facilities. , and trained to be members of America's elite.
In the winter season, they took the train to ...Greenwich Country Day School [was] an ex-
Grandfather Walker's plantation, called "Dun- clusive all-male academy for youngsters slated
cannon," near Barnwell, South Carolina The for private secondary schools. ...
novices were instructed in skeet shooting, then "Alec, the family chauffeur, drove the two
went out on horseback, following the hounds in boys to school every morning after dropping
pursuit of quail and dove. George's sister Nancy W c o t t , Sr. at the railroad station for the
recalled "the care takenn by the servants "over morning commute to Manhattan The Depres-
the slightest things, like the trimmed edges of sion was nowhere in evidence as the boys glid-
the grapefruit We were waited on by the most ed in the family's black Oldsmobile past the
wonderful black servants who woul'd come into stone fences, stables, and swimming pools of
. the bedrooms early-in the morning and light one' of the wealthiyt communities in
those crackling pinewood fires. . ..* America."' ' .
The money poured in from the Hamburg-Am- But though the young George Bush had no
e r i h steamship line, its workforce crisply reg- concerns about his material existence, one
ulated by the Nazi Labor Front The family took must not overlook the important, private anxi-
yet another house at Aiken, South Carolina ety gnawing at him from the direction of his
There the Bush children had socially accept- mother.
able "tennis and riding partners. Aiken was a The President's wife, Barbara, has put most
southern capital of polo in those days, a winter succinctly the question of Dorothy Bush and
resort of considerable distinction and serenity her effect on George: "Hismother was the most
that attracted many Northerners, especially competitive living human."
the equestrian oriented. The Bush children If we look here in his mother's shadow, we
naturally rode there, too. ...* Averell Ham- may find something beyond the routine medical
man, a worldclass polo player, also frequented explanations for President Bush's "driven"
Aiken. states of rage, or hyperactivity.
Poppy Bush's father and mother anxiously Mother Bush was the best athlete in the fami-
promoted the family's distinguished lineage, ly, the fastest runner. She was hard. She expect-
and its growing importance in the world. Pres- ed others to be hard. They must win, but they
cott Bush claimed that he "could trace his fami- must always appear not to care about winning.
ly's roots backto England's King Henry III, mak- This is put politely, delicately, in a "biogra-
ing George a thirteenth cousin, twice removed phy" written by an admiring friend of the Presi-
of Queen Elizabeth."' dent: "She was with them day after day,. . .often
This particular conceit may be a bad omen curbing their egos as only a marine drill in-
for President Bush. The cowardly,acjd-tdmed structor can. Once when.. .George lost a tennis
Henrg wafdef&i~~ncets;&uiilXa match, he explained to her that he had been off
(Saint Louis) in Henry's grab for power over his game that morning. She retorted, 'You don't
France and much of Europe. Henry's own bar- have a game.' "'
ons at length revolted against his blundering According to this account, Barbara was fasci-
arrogance, and his power was curbed. nated by her mother-in-law's continuing feroci-
As the 1930s economic crisis deepened, ty: "George, playing mixed doubles with Barba-
Americans experienced unprecedented hard- ra on the Kennebunkport court, ran into a porch
ship and fear. The Bush children were taught and injured his right shoulder blade. 'His moth-
that those who suffered these problems had no e r said it was my ball to hit, and it happened
one to blame but themselves. because I didn't run for i t She was probably
A hack writer, hired to puff President Bush's right,' Barbara told [an interviewer]. .,..When
"heroic military background," wrote these lines a dipcueion. of sotpqone:~ ?me . c a m .up,.as
Erom material supplied by the White House: g.i?baS'd&cribkil it, 'rf I@=!.~hSh*W6"ldsay,
"Rescott Bush was a thrifty man.. .He had " 'She had some good shots," it meant she stank
no sympathy for the qouveau riches who That's just the way she got the message across.
flaunted their wealth-they were without claw, When one of the grandchildren brought this girl
he said. As a sage and strictly honest business- home, everybody said, "We think he's going to
man, he had often turned failing companies marry her," and she said, "Oh, no, she won't play
around, making them profitable again, and he net' * (le., she was not tough enough to stand
05 9 8
unflinchingly and return balls hit to herat close
range.)
A goad to mprd motion became embedded in
his personality. It is observable throughout
George Bush's life.
A companion trait was Poppy's uncanny urge,
his master obsession with the need to "kiss up,"
to propitiate those who might in any way ad-
vance his interests. A life of such efforts could
at some point reach a climax of released rage,
where the triumphant one may Enally say, "Now
it is only I who must be feared."
This dangerous cycle began very early, a re-
sponse to his mother's prodding and intimida- AUV house, George Bush's se-
tion; it intensified as George became more able cret society at Andowr prep
to calculate his advantage. school, where death, sadism.
His mother says: "George was a most un- and humiliation were celebrat-
selfish child When he was only a little more ed. Inset: The number "321"
than two years old ... we bought him one of on AUV's seal is a status symbol
those pedal cars you climb into and work with showing its affiliation with
your feet Yale's Skull & Bones. which
"[His brother] Pres knew just how to work it, calls itself "322."
and George came running over and grabbed the
wheel and told Pres he should 'have half,'
meaning half of his new posession. 'Have half, societies for the
have half,' he kept repeating, and for a while
around the house we called him 'Have halt' "lo school's children,
George "learned to ask for no more than what modeled on the
was due him. Although not the school's leading
student, his report card was always good, and barbarian orders at Yale,
his mother was particularly pleased that he was werc now established at
always graded 'excellent' in one category she Andover. Official school
thought of great importance: 'Claims no more
than his fair share of time and attention.' This advisers were ;issigned to
consistent ranking led to a little family joke- each secret society, who
George always did best in 'Claims no more.'
"He was not a selfish child, did not even dis- partiapated in thdr
play the innocent possessiveness common to
most children. ..."I1 cruel and literally insane
rituals."
At Andover
Geoke Bush leR Greenwich Country Day schools (confusingly called "publicn schools be-
School in 1936. He joined his older brother at cause they were open to all English boys with
Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, sufficient money). The philosophy inculcated
20 milesaorth of Boston. "Poppy" was 12 years into the son of a British Inrd Admiral or South
old, handsome, and rich. Though the U.S. econ- African police chief, was to be imbibed by sons
omy took a savage turn for the wope the follow- of the American republic. .
ing year, George's father was piling up a for- George made some decisive moral choices
tune, arranging bond swindles for the Nazis about himself in these first years away from
with John Foster Dulles. home. The institution which guided these
Only about one in 14 U.S. secondary school choices, and helped shape the peculiar obses-
students could afford to be in private schools sions of the 41st President, was a pit of Anglo-
during George Bush's stay at Andover (1936-42). phile aristocratic racialism when George Bush
The New England preparatory or "prep" came on the scene.
schools were the most exclusive.Their students "Andover was ... less dedicated to 'elitism'
were almost all rich white boys, many of them than some [schools]. .. .There were even a cou-
Episcopalians. And Andover was, in certain ple of blacks in the classes, tokens of course,
strange ways, the most exclusive of them all. but this at a time when a blackstudent a t almost
A 1980 campaign biography prepared by any other Northeastern prep school would have
Bush's own staff concedes that "it was to New been ~ n t h i n k a b l a " ~
England that they returned to be educated at Andover had avaunted "tradition," intermin-
select schools that produce leaders with a pa- gled with the proud bloodlines of its students
trician or aristocratic stampadjectives, inci- and alumni, that was supposed to reach back
dentally, which cause a collective wince among to the school's founding in 1778. But a closer
.. ..
the Bushes .At the close of the 1930s.. .these examination reveals this "traditionn to be a
schools ::brought the famous 'old-boy net- fraud It is part of a larger, highly significant
works' to th6peak oftheir p o ~ e r . " ~ historical fallacy perpetrated by the Anglo-
' These American institutions have been con-" Americans-and curiously stressed by Bush's
sciously modeled on England's. elite private, agents in foreign countries.
Thomas Cochran,a partner ofthe J.P. Morgan When Jedidiah Morse's generation died out,
banking firm, donated considerable sums to the Andover missionary movement was
construct swanky new Andover buildings in the crushed by New England's elite families--who
1920s. Among these were George Washington , were then Britain's partners in the booming
Hall and Paul Revere Hall, named for leaders opium traffic. Andover was still formally Chris-
of the American Revolution against the British tian after 1840;Boston's cynical Brahmins used
Empire. These and similar "patrioticn t r a p Andover's orthodox Protestant board to prose-
pings, with the allumni's old school-affiliated cute various of their opponents as "heretics."
genealogies, might seem to indicate an unbro- Neo-paganism and occult movements
ken line of racial imperialists like Cochran and bloomed after the Civil War with Darwin's new
his circle, reaching back to the heroes of the materialist doctrines. In the 1870s. the death-
Revolution! worshipping Skull and Bones 'Society sent its
Let us briefly tour Andover's history, and alumni members back from Yale University, to
then ponder whether General Washington organize aristocratic secret satanic societies
would want to be identified with Poppy Bush's for the teenagers at the Andover prep school.
school. But these cults did not yet quite flourish. Na-
Thirty years alter Samuel Phillips founded tional power was still precariously balanced
the Academy at Andover, Massachusetts, the between the imperial Anglo-American finan-
quiet little school became embroiled in a vio- ciers, and the old-line nationalists who built
lent controversy. On one side were certain die- America's railroads, steel and electrical indus-
hard pro-British families, known as Boston tries.
Brahmins, who had prospered in the ship trans- The New Age aristocrats proclaimed their
portation of rum and black slaves. They had victory under Theodore Roosevelt's presidency
regained power in Boston since their allies had (1901-09). The Andover Theological Seminary
lost the 177543Revolutionary War. wound up its affairs and moved out of town, to
In 1805these cynical, neo-pagan, Tory" fami- be merged with the Harvard Divinity School!
lies succeeded in placing their representative Andover prep school was now largely free of
in the Hollis chair of Philosophy at Harvard '. the annoyance of religion, or any connection
College. The Tories. parading publicly as liber- whatsoever with the American spirit Secret so-
al religionists called Unitarians, were opposed cieties for the school's children, modeled on
by American nationalists led by the geogra- the.barbarian orders at Yale, were now estab-
pher-historian RevaaJedidiahMorse (1761-1826). lished in permanent, incorporated headquar-
The nationalists rallied the Christian churches ters buildings just off campus at Andover. Offi-
of the northeastern states behind a plan to es- cial school advisers were assigned to each se-
tablish, a t Andover, a new religious institution cret society, who participated in their cruel and
which would counter the British spies, atheists, literally insane rituals
and criminals who had taken.over Harvard. When J.P. Morgan partner Thomas Cochran
British Empire political operatives Stephen built Aqdover's luxurious modem campus for
Higginson, Jr. and John Lowell, Jr. published boys like Poppy Bush, the usurpers of Ameri-
counterattacks against Rev. Morse, claiming he ca's name had cause to celebrate. Under their
was trying to rouse the lower classes of citizens supervision, fascism was rising in Europe. The
to hatred against the wealthy merchant fami- new campus library wasnamed for Oliver Wen-
lies. Then the Tories played the "conservativen dell Holmes, Andover class of 1825.This dread-
card. Ultra-orthodox Calvinists, actually busi- ful poet of the "leisure class," a tower of Boston
ness partners to the Harvard liberals, threat- blue-blooded conceit, was famous as the father
ened to set up their own religious institution in of the twentieth century U.S. Supreme Court
Torydominated Newburyport Their assertion, justice. His son, Oliver .Wendell Holmes, Jr.,
that Morse was not conservative enough, split symbolized the arbitrary rule of the racial puri-
the resources of the region's Christians, until ty advocates, the usurpers, over American so-
the Morse group reluctantly brought the New- ciety. f
buryport ultras as partners into the manage-
ment of the Andover Theological Seminary in
1808.
The new theological seminary and the adja-
cent boys' academy were now governed togeth- The Secret Societies
er under a common board of trustees (balanced Andover installed a new headmaster in 1933.
between the Morse nationalists and the Newbu- Claude Moore Fuess (rhymes with fleece) re-
ryport anti-nationalists, the opposing wings of placed veteran headmaster Alfred E Steams,
the old Federalist Party). whom the Brahmins saw as a dyed-in-the-wool
Jedidiah Morse made Andover the headquar- reactionary. Steams was forced out over a
ters of a rather heroic, anti-racist, Christian "scandal": a widower,. he had married his
missionary movement, bringing literacy, print- housekeeper, who was beneath his social class.
ing presses, medicine, and technological edu- The new headmaster: was considered for-
cation to Southeast Asia and American Indians, ward-looking and flexible, 'to meet the chal-
notably the Georgia Cherokees. This activist lenges of the world political crisis: for example,
Andover doctrine of racial equality and Ameri- Fuess favored psy&iatry for the boys, some-
can Revolutionary .spirit was despised and thing Steams wouldn't tolerate.
feared by-Bqtish opiym pushers in East Asia Claude Fuess had been an Andover history
,and.by~Boston's~blueblo6d.Anglophil~do- teacher since 1908,and gained fame as an histo-
ver missionaries were eventually jailed in rian. He was one of the most skillful liars of the
Georgia; their too-modem Cherokee allies modem age.
were murdered and driven into exile by pro-
slavery mobs.
Fuess had mamed into the Boston Cushin
family. He had written the family-authorize a
whitewash biography of his wife's relative, Ca-
leb Cushing, a pro-slavery politician of the mid-
dle nineteenth century. The outlandish, widely
known corruption of Cushing's career was
matched by Fuess's bold, outrageous coverup."
During George Bush's years at Andover, his
headmaster, Fuess, wrote an authorized biog-
raphy of Calvin Coolidge, the late U.S. Presi-
dent This work was celebrated in jest as a
champion specimen of unwholesome flattery.
In other books, also about the bluebloods,
Fuess was simply given the family papers and
designated the chief liar for the "Bostonian
Race."
Both the Cushing and Coolidge families had
made their fortunes in opium trafficking.
Bush's headmaster named his sonJohn Cushing
Fuess, perhaps atter the fabled nineteenth cen-
tury dope kingpin who had made the Cushings -
rich."
Andover Headmaster Claticte M. Fuess
Headmaster Fuess used to say to his staff,
"1 came to power with Hitler and Mussolini""
This was not merely a pleasantry, refemng to
his appointment the year Hitler took over
Germany. A retired teacher, who was an advisor to one
In his 1939 memoirs, Headmaster Fuess ex- of the groups, cautiously disclosed in his bicen-
pressed the philosophy which must guide the tennial history of Andover; some aspects of the
education of the well-born younggentlemen un- secret societies. The reader should keep in
der his care: mind that this account was published by the
"Our declining birth rate. ..may perhaps in- school, to celebrate itself: "A charming account
dicate a step towards national deterioration. of the early days of KO.& the oldest of the Soci-
Among the so-called upper and leisure classes, eties, was prepared by Jack [i.e. Claude Moore]
noticeably among the university group, the Fuess, a member of the. organization, on the
present birth rate is strikingly low. Among the occasion of their Fiftieth Anniversary. The So-
Slavonic and Latin immigrants, on the other ciety was founded in.. . 1874. .'..
hand, it is relatively high:We seem thus to be "[A] major concern of the membership was
letting the best blood thin out and disappear, the initiation ceremony. In K0.A. the ceremony
while at the same time our humanitarian efforts involved visiting one of the local cemeteries at
for the preservation of the less fit, those who for midnight, various kinds of tortures, running the
some reason are crippled and incapacitated, gauntlet-though the novice was apparrently
are being greatly stimulated. The effect on the punched rather than paddled, being baptized
race will not become apparent for somegenera- in a water tank, being hoisted in the air by a
tions and certainly cannot now be accurately pulley, and finally being placed in a coffin,
predicted; but the phenomenon must be men- where he was cross-examined by the members.
tioned if you are to have a true picture of what ... K0.A was able to hold the loyalty of its
is going on in the United States."" members over the years to become a powerful
Would George Bush adopt this antikhristian institution at Phillips Academy and to erect a
outlook as his own? One can never h o w for handsome pillared Society house on School
sure how a young person will respond to the Street .
doctrines of his elders, no matter how cleverly "The second Society of the seven that would
presented. There is a much higher degree of survive until 1950 was A.U.V. [George Bush's
certainty that he will conform to criminal ex- group). The letters stood for Auctoritas, Unitas,
pectations, however, if the student is brought Veritas. [Authority. Unity, Truth). This organi-
to practice cruelty against other youngsters, zation resulted from a merger of two. ..earlier
and to degrade himself in order to get ahead. Societies ... in 1877. A new constitution was
At Andover, this was where the secret societies drawn up. ..providing for four chief officers--
came in. Imperator [commander], Vice Imperator [vice-
Nothing like Andover's secret societies exist- commander], Scriptor [secretary], and Quaes-
ed at any other American school. What were tor [magistrate or inquistor). ...
they all about? "Like K0.A. A.U.V. had an elaborate initia-
Bush's friend Fitzhugh Greene wrote in 1989: tion ceremony. Once a pledge had been a p
"Robert L Tim' Ireland, Bush's longtime s u p proved by the Faculty, he was given a letter
porter [and Brown Brothers Harriman partner], with a list of rules he was to follow. He was to
be in the cemetery every night from 12:30 to
who later served on the Andover board of trust- 5:00, deliver a morning paper to each member
ees with him, said he believed [Bush] had been of the Society each morning, must not comb or
in AUV. 'What's that?' I asked. 'Can't tell you,' brush his hair nor wash his face or hands,
laughed Ireland. 'It's secret!' Both at Andover smoke nothing but a clay pipe with Lucky Strike
and Yale, such groups only bring in a small tobacco, and not speak to any student except'
percentage of the total enrollment in any class. members of A.U.V.
That's a bit cruel to those who d o s t make
AU[Vl or 'Bones,' " conceded Ireland.
"Afler the pledge had memorized these rules,
his letter of instruction was burned. The pledge
had now become a 'scut' and was compelled to
learn many mottoes and incantations. On Fri-
day night of initiation week the scut was taken
to Hartigan's drugstore downtown and given a
'scut sundae,' which consisted of pepper, ice
cream, oysters, and raw liver. Later that night
he reported to the South Church cemetery,
where he had to wait for two hours for the mem-
bers to arrive. There followed the usual horse-
play-the scut was used as a tackling dummy,
threats were made to lock him in a tomb, and
various other ceremonies observed. On Satut-
day ahrnoon the scut was taken on a long walk
around town, being forced to stop at some hous-
es and ask for food, to urinate on a few porches,
and generally to make a fool of himself. On Sat-
urday night came the initiation proper. The
scut was prepared by reporting to the cellar in Arthur Bun Darling, George Bush's history teacher,
his underwear and having dirt and Bour He wrote the CIA'S official, falsified, secret history.
smeared all over his body. He was finally
cleaned up and brought to the initiation room,
where a solemn ceremony followed, ending
with the longed-for words 'Let him have light,' , 5. Ibid., p. 17. .
B. Ibid., p p 16-17.
at which point his blindfold was removed, some 7. Donnie Radcliffe. Simpig BorbQD Bush(New York War-
oaths were administered, and the boy was fi- ner Book.l9W. p 132.
nally a member. .. ." ls 8. Fitzhugh Green, k w g c B w k An IntimateP M (New
York Hippoerene Boob. -1, p. 1L
9.Radcliffe, op. eit., p. 133.
Notes for Chapter 4 lamg.ap.&,p14
16.Richardson to Rueott Bush. June 10.1% H.Smith 11.Hyams, op. &.. pp. 17-10.
Richardson Papers. Universitjr of Noltb Cuolina. l2mg.op.ca.,pp10.20.
Chapel Hill 13. Ibid., p. 21.
17.Wayne S. Cole. America Fint: The Bottle Apoind Inter- 14 Claude Y Fucu. Thc Lifc ofCakb C w h h ~2;volr (New
anCion 1910-1941 (Madison: the Universitv of Wiseon- York Harcowt, Brace and Company, lOPL
sin PI&, 1953): lnkrviews with ~ichardronfamily&- 15.John Perkins C u s h i w u a multi-millionaire opium
. ~ l w e c s :H. Smith Richardson Foundation annual re- smuggler who retired to Watertom. MassachuKUI
b&;l&hardron to Rcseott Bush. ~ & h26LlG with senants dressed as in a Canton gangster carnival
Richardson hpers. Washingem Part.April 29,1990. See Vernon L Bri-. Hidorl(& Gcncdomofthc Cobot
18 Richardson to Chase Bank executive Cole Younger. Fan@. 1475-1927(Boston: privately printed. UIZ)). VoL
Sept 17.1S52, H.Smith Richardson Papen. University II.pp. 558568.John Mumy Forkr.l*#mandRedkc~
of North Carolina, Chapel HilL tMU. (reprinted New York Arno Rcu.1m1). VoL I.
19. Parmef H e r k r t S.. Eisenhower and the Ammian Cru- p. 6263. Mary Cuoline Crawford. Famow F a d b of
rodcr (New York: MacMillan Company. 1972). p. 48L Mamchwts(BoMn: Little. Brown & Co.. 19301.2~)Ir.
20. John P r a d w K n p m o f t h Kryr:A Hbtoqofthe National la Interview 4th a retired Andwer teacher.
Security Council from *man to Buth (New York Wi- 17.Claude Y Fucu. Creed . Ia &k.l.ur(ar (rcpdnted
liam M o m , l9Sl)pp. 92-95. Freeport, New York Books for Libraries Rerr, 1970).
21.Robert Callaglun in Caart Action. No. 33. Winter 1 m pp. 192-93.
Prcscotf Jr. was a bwdmember of the National Strrt- 18.Gmn. op. cit. p. Is.
w Information Center as of l9Bl. Both PrescouSr. .nd 19. Fkderick S. All*. You& h m E ~ ~Qurtcr:IY AB k o
Jr. were deeply involved along with Casey Inthe c i r t l u teuIal E i r t y of Phillly A d m y , A d . m ( b d o v e r ,
of Pan American Airlines. Pan Am's owners the G r a n Mas&:Phillips Academy, 1979).distributed by the Uni-
family, and the CU's Latin American affain. The Ccn. versity Pressof New England. Hanwver, NX),PP.
ter, based in Washington D.C. declines public inquir- 7.
ies about itd founding
See also EIR SpekdRcport. 'American Leviathan: Admin-
istrative Fascism under the Bush Regime" (Wiesbaden.
Germany: Executive Intelligence Review Nachrichten
gcntur. April, IssO), p. I S 2
22 For example,rceTNmbull Higgim,ThePrrfe&Foil1(1~:
Kennedy, Eimhower, and the CIA at the Boy ofpigs (New
Yo* W.W. Norton and Co., 1987).p p 55-56! 6S-sp.
Unverified information on the q u a d s IS provided m the
affidavit of Daniel P. S h r h m . attorney for the Christie
Institute, reproduced in EIR S p e d Rrpmr 'Project De-
mocracy: The 'Parallel Government' behind the Iran Con-
tra AITaiP (Washington. D.C.: Executive lntelligence Re-
view. 1987). p p 24950.
Some ofthe hired u u u i n a have published their memoin. Two of George Bush's prep school
See. for example Felix Rodriguez and John Weisman. Se- secret society brothers. On the right
em Wawior@JewYo* Simon and Schuster. 1989);and E
Howard Hunt. U n d m o t m : McmoiTs of a Anuricon Srrrct is Godfrey ("Rocky") Rockefeller, a
A- (New Yo* G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1974). great-nephew of Bush family patron
Notes for Chapter 5
Percy Rockefeller.
l. Nicholas Kin& George Bwh: A Bio~mphy(New Yorlt:
Dodd. Mead & Company. 19801,pp. 13-14.
2 Ibid., p. 19.
l lbid.
4Joe H y . m t . F ~ h t o f t h A o m g n : G ~ B u t h o t W m ( N e r
York H a m u r t , Brace. Jovanwitch. lml).p. 14
T he hierarchical top banana of the AUV
secret society in George's 1942 Andover
class was Codfrey Anderson ("Rocky")
Rockefeller. In the yearbook just above the
AUV roster is a photograph of"Rocky Rockefel-
cies involving these respectable Bostonians.
The same book attacks President John Quincy
Adams as a misguided traublemalter, responsi-
ble with Morse for the anti-fkeemasonic move-
ment in the 1820s-30s. '
ler" and "Lem [Lehman F.1 Beardsiey"; Rocke- Arthur Burr Darling, while still head of An-
feller stands imperiously without a shirt, Bear- dover's history department, was chosen by the
dsley scowls from behind sunglasses. Certainly Harrimanites to organize the historical files of
the real monarch of George Bush's Andover se- the new Central Intelligence Agency, and to
cret society, and George's sponsor, was this write the CIA'S own official account of its cre-
"Rocky' "s father, Codfrey S. Rockefeller. ation and first years. Since this cynical project
The latter gentleman had been on the staff of was secret, Darling's 1971 obituary did not re-
the Yale University establishment in China in flect his CIA employmentJO
1921-22. Yale and the Rockefellers were breed- Darling's The CentmI 1nteUigmceAgency: An
ing a grotesque communist insurgency with instrument of Gmmment, to 1950was classified
British Empire ideology; another Yale staffer Secret on its completion in December 1953.. ..
there was Mao Zedong, later the communist dic- This mercenary work was finally declassified in
tator and mass murderer. While he was over in 1989 and was published by Pennsylvania State
China, Papa Codfrey's cousin Isabel had been University in 1990. Subsequent editions of Who
the bridesmaid at the wedding of George Bush's Was Who in A m were changed, in the fash-
parents. His Uncle Percy had cwfounded the ion of Joe Stalin's "history revisers;" to tell the
Harriman bank with Gqorge Walker, and latest, official version of what George Bush's
backed George Bush's father in several Nazi history teacher had done with his life. ..
Secretary of War Henry Stimson, who was
.
German enterprises. His grandfather had been
the founding treasurer of the Standard Oil Com- also the president of the board of Andover
pany, and had made the'Harrimans (and thus Prep, made a famous speech in June 1942, to
ultimately George Bush) rich. Poppy Bush and the other graduating Andover
Faculty adviser to AUV in those days was boys. Stimson told them the war would be long,
Norwood Penrose Hallowell; his father by the and they, the elite, should go on to college.
same name was chairman of Lee, Bigginson 6 But George Bush had some very complicated
Co. private bankers, the chief financiers of Bos- problems. The decision had already been made
ton's extreme racialist political movements. that he would join the service and get quite far
The elder Hallowell was based in London away from where he had been. For reasons of -
throughout the 1930s. on intimate terms with family (which will be discussed in Chapter 7 on
Montagu Norman and his pro-Hitler American Skull and Bones) there was a very special niche
banking friends. ... waiting for him in naval aviation.
One of Poppy Bush's teachers at Andover, There was one serious hitch in this plan. It
now in retirement, offered to an interviewer for was illegal. Though hewould be 18years old on
this book, a striking picture of his former pupil. June 12, he would not have the two yeari of
How was the President as a student? college the Navy required for its aviators.
"He never said a word in class. He was bored Well, if you had an urgent problem, perhaps
to death. And other teachers told me.Bush was the law could be simply set as&, fmyou and you
the worst English Student ever in the school." done, ahead of all the 5 million poor slobs who
But was this teenager simply slow, or dull? had to go in the mud with the infantry or swab
On the contrary. some stinking deck--especially if your private
"He was the classic 'BMOC' (Big Man On school's president was currently Secretary of
Campus). A great glad-hander. Always smil- War (Henry Stimson), if your father's banking
ing." I . . .. partner was currently Assistant Secretary of
George Bush was the most insistent self-pro- War for Air (Robert Lovett), and if your father
moter on the campus. He was able to pursue had launched the career of the current Assis-
this career, being fortunately spared from the tant Navy Secretary for Air (Artemus Gates).
more mundane chores some other students had And it was done.
to do. For example, he mailed his dirty laundry As a Bush-authorized version puts it, "One
home each week, to be done by the servants. It wonders why the Navy relaxed its two years of
was mailed back to him clean and folded.=. ... college requirement for flight .training in
One may ask, ia what way are President Bush George Bush's case. He had built an outstand-
and his backers conscious of an oligarchical ing record at school as a scholar [sic], athlete
tradition? For a clue, let us look at the case of and campus leader, but so had countless thou-
Arthur Burr Darling, George Bush's Prep sands of other youths.
school history teacher. "Yet it was George Bush who appeared to be
Just aRer Claude Fuess "came into power the only beneficiary of this rule-waiving, and
with Hitler and Mussolini" in 1933, Fuess thus he eventually emerged as the youngest pi-
brought [Arthur Burr] Darling in to teach. Dr. lot in the Navy-a fact that he can still boast
Darling was head of the Andover history de- about and because of which he enjoyed a cer-
partment from 1937 to 1956. and Faculty Guard- tain celebrity during the war.'*
ian of one of the secret societies. His Political
Changes in M~ssachusctts,1824 to 1848 covered Net43
21. Spoke on condition of non-attribution ..
the period, of Andover's eclipse by Boston's Z2.Hyrms. op elt., pp. 2SU
aristocaticaphmlordr;Darlingss book attacks 30. See Nem Yplk Tima. Nov. 29,1971.
Andover's greatest humanitarian, Jedidiah 32 All& op. ed,p. 512
Morse, as a dangerous lunatic, because Morse 33. NemMcck. August 0,1943; Boston Globe. July a
34. Cmn, op. cit.. p a p 28.
warned about international criminal conspira-
0603
Bush in World War I1
Plut auzdieuz qw cefut le dmier de ses crimes!* specifically naval aviation, shortly aRer he
-Racine, Bntannicus heard of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
George Bush has always traded shamelessly About six months later, Bush graduated from
on his alleged record as a naval aviator during Phillips Academy at Andover, and the com-
the Second World War in the Pacific theatre. mencement speaker was Secretary of War Hen-
During the 1964 Senate campaign in Texas ry Stimson, eminencergpi$e.of the U.S; ~ l i p g
against Senator Ralph Yarborough, Bush tele- elite. Stimson was possibly mindful of the heca-
vised a grainy old film which depicted young tomb of young members of the British ruling
George being rescued at sea by the crew of the classes which had occurred in the trenches of
submarine USS Finnback aRer his Avenger tor- World War I on the western front In any event,
pedo bomber was hit by Japanese anti-aircraft Stimson's advice to the Andover graduates was
fire during a bombing raid on the island of Chi- that the war would go on for a long time, and
chi Jima on September 2, 1944. That film, re- that the best way of serving the country was to
trieved from the Navy archives, backfired when continue one's education in college. Prescott
it was put on the air too many times, eventually Bush supposedly asked his son if Stimson's rec-
becoming something of a maladroit cliche. ommendation had altered his plan to enlist
Bush's campaign literature has always cele- Young Bush answered that he was still commit-
brated his alleged military exploits and the Dis- ted to join the Navy.
tinguished Flying Cross he received. As we b e Henry L Stimson was certainly an authorita-
come increasingly familiar with the power of tive spokesman for the Eastern Liberal Estab
the Brown Brothers HarrimanlSkull and Bones lishment, and Bushman propaganda has lately
network working for Senator Prescott Bush, we exalted him as one of the seminal influences
will learn to become increasingly skeptical of on Bush's political outlook. Stimson had been
such official accolades and of the official ac- educated at both Yale (where he had been
counts on which they are premised. tapped by Skull and Bones) and Harvard Law
During Bush's Gulf war adventure of 1990. School. He became the law partner of Elihu
91, the adulation of Bush's ostensible warrior Root, who was Theodore Roosevelt's Secretary
prowess reached levels that were previously of State. Stimson had been Theodore Roose-
considered characteristic of openly totalitari- velt's anticorruption, trust-busting U.S. Attor-
an and militaristic regimes. Late in 1990, aRer ney in New York City during the first years of
Bush had committed himself irrevocably to his the FBI, then Taws secretary of war, a colonel
campaign of bombing and savagery against of artillery in World War I, governor general of
Iraq, hack writer Joe Hyams completed an au- the Philippines for Coolidge, secretary of state
for Hoover, and enunciator of the "Stimson doc-
thorized account of George Bush at war. This trine." This last was a piece of hypocritical pos-
was entitled Flight of the Awnqer, and appeared turing directed against Japan, asserting that
during the time of the Middle East conflagra- changes in the international order brought
tion that was the product of Bush's obsessions about by force of arms (and thus in contraven-
Hyams's work had the unmistakeable impri- tion of the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928)should
matur of the regime: Not just George, but also not be given diplomatic recognition. This
Barbara had been interviewed during its p r e p amounted to a U.S. commitment to uphold the
aration, and its adulatory tone placed this Versailles system, the same policy upheld by
squalid text squarely within the "red Studebak- Baker, Eagleburger and Kissinger in the Serbi-
er" school of political hagiography. an war on Slovenia and C~natiaduring 1991.
The appearance of such a book at such a time Stimson.though a Republican, was brought into
is suggestive of the practice of the most infa-
mous twentiethcentury dictatorships, in which Roosevelt's war cabinet in 1940 in token of bi-
the figure of the strong man, Fuehrer, duce, or partisan intentions.
vozhd as he might be called, has been used for But in 1942, Bush was not buying Stimson's
the transmission of symbolic-allegorical direc- advice. It is doubtless significant that in the
tives to the subject population. Was fascist Italy mind ofyoung George Bush, World War 11meant
seeking to assert its economic autarky in food exclusively the war in the Pacific, against the
production in the face oftrade sanctions by the Japanese. In the Bush-approved accounts of
League of Nations? Then a film would be pro- this period of his life, there is scarcely a men-
duced by the MINCULPOP (the Ministry of P o p tion of the European theatre, despite the fact
ular Culture. or propaganda) depicting Musso- that Roosevelt and the entire Anglo-American
lini indefatigably harvesting grain. Was Nazi establishment had accorded strategic priority
Germany in the final stages of preparation of a to the "Germany first" scenario. Young George,
military campaign against a neighboring state? it would appear, had his heart set on becoming
'If so, Goebbels would orchestrate a cascade of a Navy flier.
magazine articles and best-selling pulp evoking
the glories of Hitler in the trenches of 191418.
Closer to our own time, Leonid Brezhnev sought "The Bush p a p d a machine needs the
to aliment his own personality cult with a little
book called M & p Zernlya, an account of his
war experiences which was used by his propa-
3
.fire on b d e Avenger in order to
Bush's precipitous -on
.@ti@ to bail
gandists to motivate his promotion to Marshal
of the U.S.S.R. and the erection of a statue in out, leaving his two acw m e m b to
his honor during his own lifetime. This is the -their fitc, rather than attem ting the
tradition to which Flight ofthe Avenger belongs.
Bush tells us in his campaign autobiography
that he decided to enlist in the armed forces, :themn
landing which might e saved L
06 0 L
Rules Bent for Bush. Bush Bails Out
Normally the Navy required two years of col- In ~ u d eBush's
, ship joined battle with Japa-
lege from volunteers wishing to become naval nese forces in the Marianas archipelago. Here
aviators. But, for reasons which have never Bush flew his first combat missions. On June 17.
been satisfactorily explained, young George a loss of oil pressure forced Bush to make an
was exempted from this requirement. Had fa- emergency landing at sea. Bush, along with his
ther Prescott's crony Artemus Gates, the assis- two crew members, gunner Leo Nadeau and
tant secretary of the navy for air, been instru- radioman-tail gunner John L Delaney, were
mental in making the exception, which was the picked up by a U.S. destroyer after some hours
key to allowing George to become the youngest in the water. Bush's first Avenger, named by
of all navy pilots? him the Barbara, was lost.
On June 12, 1942, his eighteenth birthday, During July 1944 Bush took part in 13 air
Bush joined the Navy in Boston as a seaman strikes, many in connection with the U.S. Ma-
second class.' He was ordered to report for ac- rines' landing on Guam. In August, Bush's ship
tive duty as an aviation cadet on August 6,1942. proceeded to the area of Iwo Jima and Chichi
After a last date with Barbara, George was tak- Jima in the Bonin Islands for a new round of
en to Penn Station in New York City by father sorties,
Prescott to board a troop train headed for Char;-
el Hill, North Carclina. At Chapel Hill Naval On September 2,1944 Bush and three other
Air Station, one o. aush's fellow cadets was the Avenger pilots, escorted by Hellcat fighter
well-known Boston Red Sox hitter Ted Wil- planes. were directed to attack a radio trans-
liams, who would later join Bush on the cam- mitter on Chichi Jima. Planes from the USS En-
paign trail in his desperate fight in the New teqnise would also join in the attack On this
Hampshire primary in February 1W. mission Bush's rear-seat gunner would not be
After preflight training at Chapel Hill, Bush the usual Leo Nadeau, but rather Lt Junior
moved on to Wold-Chamberlain Naval Airfield Grade William Gardner T e d " White, the
in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he flew solo squadron ordnance officer of VT-51, already a
for the first time in November 1942In February Yale graduate and already a member of Skull
1943Bush moved on to Corpus Christi,Texas for and Bones. White's father had beep a classmate
further training. Bush received his commission of Prescott Bush. White took his place in the
as an ensign at Corpus Christi on June 9,1943. rear-facing machine gun turret of Bush's TBM
Afler this, Bush moved through a number of Avenger, the Barbara IL The radioman-gunner
naval air bases over a period of almost a year was John L Delaney, a regular member of
for various types of advanced training. In mid- Bush's crew.
June 1943, he was learning to fly the Crumman What happened in the skies of Chichi Jima
TBF Avenger torpedo-bomber at Fort Lauder- that day is a matter of lively controversy. Bush
dale, Florida. In August, he made landings on has presented several differing versions of his
the USS Sable, a paddle-wheel ship that was own story. In his campaign autobiography pub-
used as an aircraA carrier for training pur- lished ifi 1987Bush gives the following account:
poses. During the summer of 1943, Bush spent "The flak was the heaviest I'd ever flown into.
a couple of weeks of leave-with Barbara at. The Japanese were ready and waiting: their
Walker's Point in Kennebunkport; their en- anti-aircraft guns were set up to nail us as we
gagement was announced in the Ncro York Times pushed into our hives. By the time VT-51 was
of December 12,1943. ready to go in, the sbwas thick with angry black
Later in the summer of 1943, Bush moved on clouds of exploding anti-aircraft fire. .
to the Naval Air Base at Norfolk, Virginia In "Don Melvin led the way, scoring hits on a
September 1943 Bush's new squadron, called radio tower. I followed, going into a thirty-five
VT-51, moved on to the Naval Air Station at degree dive. an angle of attack that sounds shal-
low but in an Avenger felt as if you were headed
Chincoteague, Virginia, located on the Del- straight down. The target map was strapped to
marva peninsula On December 14,1843 Busb my knee. and as I started into my dive, I'd al-
and his squadron were brought to Philadelphia ready spotted the target area. Coming in, I was
to attend the commissioning of the USS Sun aware of black splotches of gunfire all around.
Jacinto (CVI.3). a light attack carrier built on a "Suddenly there was a jolt, as if a massive fist
cruiser hull. Since the name of the ship re- had crunched into the belly ofthe plane. Smoke
called Sam Houston's defeat of the Mexican poured into the cockpit, and I could see flames
leader Santa Ana in 1836, and since the ship rippling aeross the crease of the wing edging
flew a Lone Star flag, Bushman propaganda has towards the fuel tanks. I stayed with the dive,
made much of these artifacts in an attempt to homed in on the target, unloaded our four 500-
buttress "carpetbag" Bush's tenuous connec- pound bombs, and pulled away, heading for the
tions to the state of Texas. Bush's VF-51squad- sea. Once over water, I leveled off and told De-
ron reported on board this ship for a shake- laney and White to bail out, turning the plane
down cruise on February 6,1944, and on March to starboard to take the slipstream off the door
25,1944the SanJocinto left for San Diego by way near Delaney's station.
of the Panama Canal. The SanJacinto reached "Up to that point, except for the sting of dense
Pearl Harbor on April 20, 1944, and was as- smoke blurring my vision. I was in fair shape.
signed to Admiral Mare A. Mitscher's Task But when I went to make my jump, trouble came
Force W38, a group of fast carriers, on May 2, in pairs.'u
1944. In this account, there is no more mention of
White and Delaney until Bush hit the water and ''There was no response from either of Bush's
began looking around for them. Bush says that crewmen and no way he could see them; a
it wa8 only after having been rescued by the shield of'armor plate between him and Lt
USS Finnback, a submarine, that he "learned White blocked his view behind. He was certain
that nenher Jack Delaney nor Ted White had that White and Delaney had bailed out the mo-
survived. One went down with the plane; the ment they got the order.'*
other was seen jumping, but his parachute Hyams quotes a later entry by Melvin in the
failed to open." The Hyams account of 1991was squadron log as to the fate of Bush's two crew-
written after an August 1988 interview with men: "At a point approximately nine miles
Chester Mienejewski, another member of bearing 04ST (degrees) from Minami Jima,
Bush's squadron, had raised important ques- Bush and one other person were seen to bail
tions about the haste with which Bush bailed out from about 3,000 feet Bush's chute opened.
out, rather thah attempting a water landing. and he landed safely in the water, inflated his
Mienejewsld's account, which is summarized raft, and paddled farther away from Chichi
below, contradicted Bush's own version of Jima. The chute of the other person who bailed
these events, and hinted that Bush might have out did not open. Bush has not yet been re-
abandoned his two crew members to a horrible turned to the squadron ... so this information
and needless death. The Hyams account, which is incomplete. While Lt junior grade White and
is partly .intended to refute Mienejewski, de- J.L Delaney are reported missing in action, it
velnns a s fnllnwo. is believed that both were killed as a result of
"?':'.Bush'-was pilotirigtne thlrd plane'ovkr the above described action.'"
the.target. with Moore flying on his wing. He But it is interesting to note that this report,
nosed over into a thirtydegree glide, heading contrary to usual standard Navy practice, has
straight for the radio tower. Determined to fi- no date. This should alert us to that tampering
nally destroy the tower, he used no evasive tac- with public records, such as Bush's filings at
tics and held the plane directly on target His the Securities and Exchange Commission dur-
vision ahead was occasionally cancelled by ing the 1960s. which appears to be a specialty of
bursts of black smoke from the Japanese anti- the Brown Brothers HarrimanlSkull and Bones
aircraft guns. The plane was descending network
through thickening clouds of flak pierced by the For comparison, let us now cite the cursory
flaming arc of tracers. account of this same incident provided by
'There was a sudden flash of light followed .Bush's authorized biographer in the candi-
by an explosion. 'The plane was lifted forward, date's 1980 presidential campaign biography:
and we were enveloped in flames,' Bush recalls. "On a runtoward the island, Bush's plane was
'I saw the flames running along the wings where struck by Japanese antiaircraft shells. One of
the fuel tanks were and where the wings fold. I his two crewmen was killed instantly and the
thought, This is really bad! It's hard to remem- aircraft was set on fire. Bush was able to score
ber the details, but I looked at the instruments hits on the enemy instailations with a couple of
and couldn't see them for the smoke.' five-hundred pound bombs before he wriggled
"Don Melvin, circling above the action while out of the smoking cockpit and floated towards
waiting for his pilots to drop their bombs and the water. The other crewman also bailed out
get out, thought the Japanese shell had hit an but died almost immediately thereafter be-
oil line on Bush's Avenger. 'You could have cause, as the fighter pilot behind Bush's plane
seen that smoke for a hundred miles.' " was later to report, his parachute failed to open
Perhaps so, but it is difficult to understand properly. Bush's own parachute became mo-
why the smoke from Bush's plane was so dis- mentarily fouled on the tail of the plane after
tinctly visible in such a smoke-filled environ- he hit the water.'"
ment Hyams goes on to describe Bush's com- King's account is interesting for its omission
pletion of his bombing run. His account con- of any mention of Bush's injury in bailing out,
tinues: a gashed forehead he got when he struck the
"By then the wings were covered in flames tail assembly of the plane. This had to have
and smoke, and the engine was blazing. He con- occurred long before Bush had hit the water, so
sidered making a water landing but realized it this account is garbled indeed.
would not be possible. Bailing out was abso- Let us also cite parts of the account provided
lutely the last choice, but he had no other o p by Fitzhugh Green in his 1989 authorized biog-
tion. He got on the radio and notified squadron raphy. Green has Bush making his attack "at a
leader Melvin of his decision. Melvin radioed 60-degree angle." "For his two crew members,"
back, 'Received your message. Got you in sight. notes Green. "life was about to end." His ver-
Will follow.' sion goes on:
"1. ..]Milt Moore, flyingdirectly behind Bush. "Halfway through Bush's dive, the enemy
saw the Avenger g3ing down smoking. 'I pulled found his range with one or more shells. Smoke
up to him; then he lost power and I went sailing filled his cabin; his plane controls weakened;
by him.' the engine began coughing, and still he wasn't
"As soon as he was back over water, Bush close enough to the. target He .presumed the
shouted on the intercom for White and Delaney TBM to be terminally damaged. Fighting to stay
to 'hit the silk!' [. .I Dick Gorman, Moore's ra- on course, eyes smarting, Bush managed to
dioman-gunner, remembers hearing someone launch his bombs at the last possible moment
on the intercom shout. 'Hit the silk!' and asking He couldn't discern the result through black
Moore, 'Is that you, Red?' fumes. But a companion pilot affirmed later
" 'No,' Moore replied. 'It's Bush, he's hit!' that the installation blew up, along with two
"Other squadron members heard Bush re- other buildings. The Navy would decorate Bush
peating the command to bail out, over and over. for literally sticking to his guns until he com-
on the radio. pleted his mission under ferocious enemy fire.
"Good! Now the trick was to keep the plane It will be seen that these versions contain
aloft long enough to accomplish two objectives: numerous internal contradictions, but that the
first, get far enough away from the island to hallmark of "red Studebaker" orthodoxy, espe-
allow rescue from the sea before capture or cially after the appearance of the Mienejewsky
killing by the enemy; second, give his plane account, is that Bush's plane was on fire, with
mates time to parachute out of the burning air- visible smoke and flames. The Bush propagan-
cratt. da machine needs the fire on board the Avenger
'The TBM sputtered on its last few hundred ih order to justify Bush's precipitous decision
yards. Unbeknownst to Bush, one man freed to bail out, leaving his two crew members to
himself. Neither fellow squadron pilots nor their fate, rather than attempting the water
Bush ever were sure which crew member this landing which migh! have saved them.
was. As he jumped, however, his parachute The only person who has ever claimed to have
snarled and failed to open.'* seen Bush's plane get hit, and to have seen it
Green writes that when Bush was swimming hit the water, is Chester Mienejewksi, who was
' in the water, he realized that "his crew had the rear turret gunner in the aircraft flown by
disappeared" and that "the loss of the two men Squadron Commander Douglas Melvin. During
numbed Bush" 1987-88, Mienejewksi became increasingly in-
- dignant as he watched Bush repeat his canoni-
cal account of how he was shot down. Shortly
Still Another Story before the Republican National Convention in
1988, Mierjekewski, by then a &year-old re-
For the 1992 presidential campaign, the tired aircraR foreman living in Cheshire, Con-
Bushmen have readied yet another rehash of necticut, decided to tell his story to Allan
the adulatoryured Studebaker" printout in the Wolper and A1 Ellenberg of the N e w York Post,
form of a new biography by Richard Ben Cram- which printed it as a copyrighted article.'
er. This is distinguished as a literary effort T h a t guy is not telling the truth," Mienejew-
above all by the artificial verbal pyrotechnics ski said of Bush.
with which the author attempts to breathe new As the rear-looking turret gunner on Com-
life into the dog-eared Bush canonical printout mander Melvin's plane, Mienejewski had the
For these, Cramer relies on a hyperkinetic style most advantageous position for observing the
with nonverbal syntax, which to some degree events in question here. Since Melvin's plane
echoes Bush's own disjointed manner of speak- flew directly ahead of Bush's, he had a direct
ing. The resulting text may have found favor and unobstructed view of what was happening
with Bush when he wasgripped by his hyperthy- aft of his own plane. When the New York Post
roid rages during the buildup for the Gulf war. reporters asked former L t Legare Hole, the ex-
A part of this text has appeared in Esquire maga- ecutive officer of Bush's squadron, about who
zine.? Here is Cramer's description of the criti- might have best observed the last minutes ofthe
cal phase of the incident:. Barbara 11, Hole replied: "The turret gunner in
"He felt a jarring lurch, a crunch, and his Meivin's plane would have had a good view. If
plane leaped forward, like a giant had struck it the plane was on fire, there is a very good
from below with a fist Smoke started to fill the chance he would be able to see that The pilot
cockpit He saw a tongue of flame streaming can't see everything that the gunner can. and
down the right wing toward the crease:Christ! he'd miss an awful lot," Hole told the N e w York
The fuel tanks! Post.
"He called to Delaney and White-We've Cunner Lawrence Mueller of Milwaukee, an-
been hit! He was diving. Melvin hit the tower other former member of Bush's squadron who
dead-on-four five hundred pounders. West flew on the Chichi Jima mission, when asked
was on the same beam Bush could have pulled who would have had the best view, replied:
out. Have to get rid of these bombs. Keep the 'The turret gunner of Melvin's plane." Mienej-
dive. ... A few seconds. ... ewksi for his part said that his plane was fiying
"He dropped on the target and let 'em fly. about 100 feet ahead of Bush's plane during the
The bombs spun down, the plane shrugged with incident-so close that he could see into Bush's
release, and Bush banked away hard to the east cockpit
No way he'd get to the rendezvous point with Mienejewki, who is also a recipient of the
Melvin. The smoke was so bad he couldn't see Distinguished Flying Cross, told the N e w York
the gauges. Was he climbing? Have to get to the Post that he saw "a puff of smoke" come out of
water. They were dead if they bailed out over Bush's plane and quickly dissipate. He asserted
land. The Japs killed pilots. Conna have to bail that after that there was no more smoke visible.
out Bush radioed.the skipper, called his crew. that Bush's "plane was never on fire" and that
No answer. Does White know how to get to his "no smoke came out of his cockpit when he
chute? Bush looked back for an instant Cod, opened his canopy to bail out" Mienejewski
was White hit? He was yelling the order to bail stated that only one man ever got out of the
out, turning right rudder to take the slipstream Barbara 11, and that was Bush himself. "I was
off their hatch .. . had to get himself out He hoping I would see some other parachutes. I
leveled off over water, only a few miles from never did. I saw the plane go down. I knew the
the island.. . more, ought to get out farther.. . guys were still in i t It was a helpless feeling"
that's it, got to be now. . .. He flicked the red Yienejewski has long been troubled by the
toggle switch on the dash-the IFF, Identifica- notion that Bush's decision to parachute from
tion Friend or Foesupposed to alert any U.S. his damaged aircraft might have cost the lives
ship, send a special frequency back to his own of Radioman second classJohn Delaney, a close
carrier. ..no other way to communicate, had to friend of Mienejewksi, as well as gunner L t
get out now, had to be.. . NOW.." junior grade William White. 'I think [Bush]
06 0 7
could have saved those lives, if they were alive. According to this New Yotk Post article, the
I don't know that they were, but at least they had report of Bush's debriefing aboard the subma-
a chance if he had attempted a water landing," rine Finnback aRer his rescue makes no men-
Mienejewski told the New York Post. tion of any fire aboard the plane. When the New
Former executive officer Legare Hole York Post reporters interviewed Thomas R.
summed up the question for the New York Post Keene, an airman from another carrier, who
reporters as follows: "If the plane is on fire, it had been picked up by the Finnback a few days
hastens your decision to bail out If it is not on after Bush, they referred to the alleged fire on
fire, you make a water landing." The point is board Bush's plane and "Keene was surprised
that a water landing held out more hope for all to hear" it. " 'Did he say that?,' " Keene asked.
members of the crew. The Avenger had been Leo Nadeau, Bush's usual rear turret gunner,
designed to float for approximately two min- who had been in contact with Bush during the
utes, giving the tailgunner enough time to in- 1980s. attempted to undercut Mienejewski's
flate a raR and giving everyone an extra margin credibility by stating that "Ski," as Mienejew-
of time to get free of the plane before it sank ski was called, would have been "too busy
Bush had'carried out a water landing back in shooting" to have been able to focus on the
June when his plane had lost oil pressure. events involving Bush's plane. But even the pro-
The official-but undated-report on the in- Bush accounts agree that the reason that White
cident among the squadron records was signed had been allowed to come aloftin the first place
by Commander Melvin and an intelligence of- was the expectation that there would be no J a p
ficer named Lt Martin E. Kilpatrick Kilpatrick anese aircraft over the target, making a thor-
is deceased, and Melvin in 1988 was hospital- oughly trained and experienced gunner super-
ized with Parkinson's disease and could not be fluous. Indeed, no account alleges that any J a g
interviewed. Mienejewski in early August 1988 anese aircraft appeared over Chichi Jima.
had never seen the undated intelligence report Bush and Mienejewski met again on board
in question "Kilpatrick was the first person I the San Jacinto after the downed pilot was re-
spoke to when we got back to the ship," he said. turned from the Finnback about a month after
"I told him what I saw. I don't understand why the loss of the Barbara 11. According to the New
it's not in the report." York Post account, about a month after all these
Cunner Lawrence Mueller tended to corrob- events Bush, clad in Red Cross pajamas, re-
orate Mienejewki's account Mueller had kept turned to the San Jacinto. "He came into the
ready room and sat down next to me," Mienej-
ewksi recounted. "He [Bush] knew I saw the
whole thing. He said, 'Ski, I'm sure those two
men were dead. I called them on the radio three
times. They were dead.' When he told me they
were dead. I couldn't prove they weren't. He
..,.'
h
setls'Essex Junb.' ,
0 .
:
: '.
I . 13) Timothy Wit:-it; pn*dadYak.
:. .
. *
; .' '. 1195-1817.
l4) William H u n t h # m R t u u l l ( l ~ k p r d ~
: Y I I ~1833; founder or skull a d Bones sotiet~
(or Russell TnrdAuochtionl; Hirmmt&-
*. .' zation spread in lk lm to Phillips Ac-.
the Andowr. YlluchomUS Prep aool.
RW.U ~d pi& aB& GI~Q kW MIja U) muel el a l l : ban in t ? s in ~ ~ l main
e a-
R- R"sd Edwds Sr. Edwub we~t d house ofthe Russell family of Middletom
(9 (6) This house had been orncd by the co-founder of
'
, Dwybt Yale. Nodiah Ftussell(l).and by William Russell
I 0 ;
(3) and his wife Wul. sister-tn-law to Jonathan
Mutbcr c8pl8in Edwards.
tab^ Job He k a m e head of lbc Middletom R u ~ l l r
He cltrblished Russell m d Co. I=, whtch by
R d Rasseu the 18308 supeneded FWkiar mdicate as lhe
(8) (9) -.A* largest ~ m r r i u nopium smu&~ng o r y n i u -
tion His partnen included ludtng Boston fam-
Wttli H& W. ~ w i ~ m .TI&& ? k y ilia
Huo~loo s d Edrah Jr. . ~)ri@DW~@ ~e f~oundedthe h w e l l MU Compmny. Mid-
R& RpEdl (10) (11) (12). (13) dletmn. in 1831; k w n president of Middlesex
(16) County Bank ~tlri~tbeformrtivepanofShlt
and Bones. the f a h u l d y we8llhY S8muel.Rul-
sell was undisputed king of Middlcbm Some-
time prior to 1831. he ordmd "the emtion of
the el~ntmm*ooonthecornerofWlshin~n
and H i g h S ~ T h i ~ d o n c u n d e r t h e s u p e r -
vision of [Coaparmi~lSamuel D. Hubbrd"
N o k For the rrb ofeluity, we have omitted from
1) Rcr. Nodhb h u e & one of 10 or 12 men who 8 Pierpont Edwards (115Q182(D: made muter of thin chart the a n c a t n l line from Rcr. James Pier-
founded Yde UnkemitJ in 1101; Yale tnulcc Connecticut Masons by the British Amy o m - pont (2) to hi v t grwdson Rev. John PierponL
1701-13; w.First, C o q r e p t i o ~ IChurch, pyiq N w York in 1183, he administered the es-
Middlctora. C t a 181-17ld. trtr of the mitor Benedict Anrold. Rw. John Pierpont wrote poetry for the ~ B r i t i s h
2) Rcr.J a w Pierpont: martcelebnted dtbc Yde 3 Aaron Burr. Sr.: Grrduated Yale 1 M President secessionidr; he d e n o o ~ e dPresident Thomu JeF
founders; Yde muter, 1701-14 ofRinceton University CCollegeofNewJenc~l lemon for saying that PierponL'r New W a n d rela-
3) William Russell: Yale hMcc 174Sdl: putor, 0) Y I W n Talcott Russell: graduated Yale l7bD; ti- were "under lhe influence oftbe whore of En-
C o n g c p t i o d Churrk Yiddlc(mn. U deacon of FintCongre#ation81 Church. Middle- gland." Rev. John w u an employee of Aaron Bum's
17164L town.Ct l o r 3 0 m n ; lawyer forthe Middlctom bmily during Burr's Western Coarpir?cy. Rev.
4) J o n a U n Edward% gradyted Yale, 1710; ul? Russell h m i k died a 1817. John's daughter Juliet m m e d Conweut-born
Glrinht theologian. pmrdentofPnaceton Urn- U) O w i n John Rusull: died 1801or 1802 British banker Junius Mo-n and ~m b t M to U.S.
= n i b (ulled then "Qlletp of N w Je- 10) Hmr~rW. Edwuds: governor of Connecticut 6 n w i a l kingpin John P*rpmY named for
R Rev. Noduh Russell: gradluted Yale 1154 BXI, 183WIk prokctor of Samuel RwrcII's opi- his grandfather Rev. J o h n
.., Fidel ,Castro survived ,the widely discussed Harvey's son WilliamP. Bundy (S&B1939)was
assassination plots against him. But the initia- a CIA officer from 1951 to 1961; as a 1960s de-
tive succeeded in what was probably its core fense official, he pushed the Harriman-Dulles
purpose: to organize a force of multi-use profes- scheme for a Vietnam war. Harvey's other son,
sional assassins. MeGeorge Bundy (SdrB' 1940) coauthored Stim-
The Florida-trained killers stayed in busi- son's memoirs in 1948. As President John Ken-
ness under the leadership of Ted Shackley. nedy's director of national security, McGeorge
ness under the leadership of Ted Shackley. Bundy organized the whitewash of the Kennedy
They were all around the assassination of Pres- assassination, and immediately switched the
ident Kennedy in 1963.They kept going with the U.S. policy away from the Kennedy pullout and
Operation Phoenix mass murder of Vietnamese back toward war in Vietnam.
civilians, with Middle East drug and terrorist Then was also Henry hce, a Bonesman of
programs, and with George Bush's Contra wars 1920 with David Ingalls and Hany Pomeroy.
in Central America. Luce published Time magazine, where his iron-.
Bawey Hollister Bundy (S&B1909)was Hen- ically named "American Century" blustering
ry L Stimson's assistant secretaryofstate(1931- was straight British Empire doctrine: Bury the
33);then he was Stimson's special assistant sec- . republics, hail the Anglo-Saxon conquerors.
retary of war, alongside Assistant Secretary William Sloane Coffin,tapped for 1949Skull
Robert Lovett of Skull and Bones and Brown and Bones by George Bush and his Bone com-
Brothers Harriman. ' {. panions, was from a long line
. --of Skull and Bones
Coffins. William Sloane Coffin was famous in after Apaches were moved to the San Carlos
the Vietnam War protest days as a leader of the '
Reservation in Arizona territory. He led other
left protest against the war. Was the fact that he raids against U.S. and Mexican forces well into
was an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency the 1880s; he was captured and escaped many
embarrassing to William Sloane? times.
This was no contradiction. His uncle, the Rev- Geronimo became a farmer and joined a
erend Henry Sloane Coffin (S&B18971, had also Christian congregation. He died at the age of
been a "peace" agitator, and an oligarchical 79 years in 1909, and was buried at Fort Sill,
agent Uncle Henry was for 20 years president Oklahoma. Threequarters of a century later,
of the Union Theological Seminary, whose his tribesmen raised the question of getting
board chairman was Prescott Bush's partner their famous warrior reinterred back in Ar-
Thatcher Brown. In 1937, Henry Coffin and John izona.
Foster Dulles led the U.S. delegation to En- Ned Anderson was Tribal Chairman of the
gland to found the World Council of Churches, San Carlos Apache Tribe from 1978to 1986.This
as a "peace movementnguided by the pro-Hitler is the story he tellsD:
faction in England. Around the fall of 1983, the leader of an
Thecoffins have been mainstays of the liber- Apache group in another section of Arizona
al death lobby for euthanasia and eugenics. The said he was interested in having the remains of
Coffins outlasted Hitler, amving into the CIA Geronimo returned to his tribe's custody. Tak-
in 1950s. ing up this idea, Anderson said that the remains
Amory Howe Bradford (S&B 1934) married properly belonged to his group as much as to
Carol Warburg Rothschild in 1941. Carol's the other Apaches. Afbr much d@cussion,sev-
mother, Carola, was the acknowledged head of eral Apache groups, met$at's'khd ,of summit
the Warburg family in America after World War meeting held at'Fort Sill; Oklahoma. The army
11. This family had assisted the Harrimans' rise authorities were not favorable to the meeting,
into the world in the nineteenth and early twen- and it only occurred through the intervention
tieth centuries;'in concert with the Sulzbergen of the office of the Governor of Oklahoma
at the New York T i m a they had used.t&eir: As a result ofthis meeting, Ned Anderson was
American Jewish Committee and B'nai Brith to written up in the newspapers as an articulate
protect the Harriman-Bush deals with Hitler. Apache activist Soon afterwards, in late 1983
This nade it nice for Averell Harriman, just or early 1984, a Skull and Bones member con-
like family, when Amory Howe worked on the tacted Anderson and leaked evidence that Ge-
Planning Group of Hamman's NATO secretari- ronimo's remains had long ago been pilfered-
at in London, 1951-52Howe was meanwhile as- by Prescott Bush, George's father. The infor-
sistant to the publisher of the New York Times, mant said that in May of 1918,PrescoU Bush and
and went on to become general manager of the five other oficers at Fort Sill desecrated the
Timcs. i grave of Geronimo. They took turns on guard
Thus, we could be assured of "responsible while they robbed the grave. taking items in-
news coverage," with due emphasis on the nec- cluding a skull, some other bones, a horse bit
essary role of "moderatesn named Harriman and straps. These prizes were taken back to the
and Bush. Tomb, the home of the Skull and Bones Society
Other modern Bonesmen have been closely at Yale in New Haven, Connecticut They were
tied to George Bushls.career. George Herbert put into a display case, which members and
Walker, Jr. (S&B1927)was the President's uncle visitors could easily view upon entry to the
.and financial angel. In the 19705 he sold G.H. building.
Walker & Co. to White, Weld & Co. and became The informant provided Anderson with phw
a vice president of White. Weld; company heir tographs of the stolen remains, and a copy of a
William Weld, the original federal prosecutor Skull and Bones log book in which the 1918
of Lyndon LaRouche and current Massachu- grave robbery had been recorded. The infor-
setts governor, is an active Bush Republican. mant said that Skull and Bones members used
Publisher Wlllivll F. Buckley (S&B1950)had the pilfered remains in performing some of
a family oil business in Mexico. There, Bucldey their Thursday and Sunday night rituals, with
was a close ally to CIA assassinations manager Geronimo's skull sitting out on a table in front
E. Howard Hunt, whose lethal antics were per- of them.. ..
formed under the eyes of Miami Station and Through an attorney, Anderson asked the
Jupiter Island. FBI to move into the case. The attorney con-
, David Lyle Bonn (S&B 1963) ... was elected veyed to him the Bureau's response: If he would
to the U.S. Senate in 1979and became chairman turn over every scrap of evidence to the FBI,
of the Senate Intelligence Committee. and completely remove himself from the case.
Though a Democrat (who spoke knowingly of they would get involved. He rejected this bar-
the "parallel governmentn operating in Iran- gain, since it did not seem likely toiead towards
Contra), Boren's Intelligence Committee rul- recovery of Geronimo's remains.
ings have been (not unexpectedly) more and Due to his persistence. he was able to arrange
more favorable to his "Patriarchn in the White a September, 1986Manhattan meeting with Jon-
House. athan Bush, George Bush's brother. Jonathan
Among the traditional artifacts the Skulland Bush vaguely assured Anderson that he would
collected and maintained within the High get what he had come after, and set a followup
Street Tomb are human remains ofvarious der- meeting for the next day. But Bush stalled-
ivations. The following concerns one such set Anderson believes this was to gain time to hide
of Skull and Bones. and secure the stolen remains against any pos-
Geronimo, an Apache faction leader and war- sible rescue action.
rior, led a party of wamors on a raid in 1876,
0
The Skull and Bones attorney representing 0esh and hair, was Neil Mallon. Years later,
the Bush family and managing the case was En- Prescott Bush and his partners chose Mallon as
dicott Peabody Davison. His father was the F. chairman of Dresser Industries; Mallon hired
Trubee Davison mentioned above, who had Prescott's son. George Bush, for George's first
been president of New York's American Muse- job; and George Bush named his son, Neil Mal-
um of Natural History, and personnel director lon Bush, after the flesh-picker.
for the Central Intelligence Agency. The atti- In 1988 the Washington Post ran an article
tude of this Museum crowd has long been that entitled "Skull for Scandal: Did Bush's Father
"Natives" should be stuffed and mounted for Rob Geronimo's Grave?" There was a small
display to the Fashionable Set quote from the 1933Skull and Bones H i s t g ( of
Finally, after about 11 days, another meeting Our Order: "An axe pried open the iron door of
occurred. A display case was produced, which the tomb, and . .. Bush entered and started to
did in fact match the one in the photograph the dig. ..." and so forth, but neglected to include
informant had given to Anderson. But the skull other names beside Bush.
he was shown was that of a ten-year-old child, According to the Washington Post, the docu-
and Anderson refused to receive it or to sign a ment which Bush attorney Davison tried to get
legal document promising to shut up about the the Apache leader to sign, stipulated that An-
matter. derson agreed it would be "inappropriate for
Anderson took his complaint to Arizona Con- you, me [Jonathan Bush] or anyone in associa-
gressmen Morris Udall and John McCain III, tion with us to make or permit any publication
but with no results. George Bush refused Con- in connection with this transaction!' Anderson
gressman McCain's request that he meet with called the document "very insulting to Indi-
Anderson ans." Davison claimed later that the Order's
Anderson wrote to Udall, enclosing a photo- own history book is a hoax, but duringthe nego-
graph of the wall case and slrull at the "Tomb," tiations with Anderson, Bush's attorney de-
showing a black and white photograph of the manded Anderson give up his copy of the
living Geronimo, which members of the Order boob"
had boastfully posted. next to their display of Bush crony Fitzhugh Green gives the view
his skull. Anderson quoted from a Skull and of the President's backers on this affair, and
Bones Society internal history, entitled Contin- conveys the arrogagt racial attitude typical of
wtion dthe History of Our Chrlerfm the Centuq Skull and Bones:
Celebmtion, 17 June 1333, by The tittle Devil of "Prescott Bush had a colorful side. In 1988
D'121. the press revealed the complai_ntof an Apache
"From the war days [W.W. Il also sprang the leader about Bush. This was Ned Anderson of
mad expedition from the School of Fire at Fort San Carlos, Oklahoma [sic], who charged that
Sill, Oklahoma, that brought to the T[omb] its as a young army officer Bush stole the skull of
most spectacular 'crook,' the skull of Geronimo Indian Chief [sic] Geronimo and had it hung on
the temble, the Indian Chief who had taken the wall of Yale's Skull and Bones Club. Alter
forty-nine white scalps. An expedition in late exposure of 'true facts' by Anderson, and con-
May, 1918,by members of four [graduating-class sideration by some representatives in Con-
years of the Society],Xit D.114, Barebones, Cali- gress, the issue faded from public sight Wheth-
ban and Dingbat, D.115, S'Mike D.116, and Hell- e r or not this alleged skullduggery actually oc-
bender D.117, planned with great caution since curred, the mcn idea casts the senior Bush in an
in the words of one of them: 'Six army captains adventurn Iightn" [emphasis added].
'robbing a grave wouldn't look good in the George Bush's crowning as a Bonesman was
papem' intensely, personally important to him. ...
The stirring climax was recorded by Hellben- Survivors of his 1948Bones group were inter-
der in the Black Book of D.117: '. . .The ring of' viewed for a 1988 Washington Post campaign
pick on stone and thud of earth on earth alone profile of George Bush. The members described
disturbs the peace of the prairie. An axe pried their continuing intimacy with and financial
open the iron door of the tomb, and Pattriarchl support for Bush up through his 1980svice pres-
Bush entered and started to dig. We dug in turn, idency. Their original sexual togetherness at
each on relief taking a turn on the road as Yale is stressed:
guards. ... Finally Payriarch] Ellery James The relationships that w6re formeid in the
turned up a bridle, soon a saddle horn and rot- "Tomb". ..where the Society's meetings took
ten leathers followed, then wood and then, at place each Thursday and Sunday night dur-
the exact bottom of the small round hole, Pauri- ing the academic year, have had a strong
arch] James dug deep and pried out the trophy place in Bush's life, according to all 11of his
itself. ... '
fellow Bonsemen who are still alive.
We quickly closed the grave, shut the door Several described in detail the ritual in the
and sped home to PaUriarchl Mallon's room, oganization that builds the bonds. Before
where we cleaned the Bones. Payriarchl Mal- giving his life history, each member had to
lon sat on the floor liberally applying carbolic spend a Sunday night reviewing his sex life in
acid. The Skull was fairly clean, having only a talk known in theTomb as CB, orUconnubial
some flesh inside and a little hair. I showered blissn. ...
and hit the hay.. .a happy man.. .."" "The first time you review your sex life.. ..
The other grave robber whose name is given, We went all the way around among the 15,
Ellery James, we encountered in Chapter said Lucius H. Biglow Jr., a retired Seattle
One-he was to be an usher at'Prescott's wed- attorney. 'That way you get everybody com-
ding three years later. And the fellow who a p mitted to a certain extent. ..It was a gradual
plied acid to the stolen skull, burning off the way of building confidence."
The sexual histories helped break down in the 1890s. Since the assassination of William
the normal defenses of the members, ac- McKinley and the advent of Theodore Roose-
cording to several of the members from his , velt, the power of the Wall Street group had
class. William J. Connelly Jr. ... said, "In grown continuously. The Eastern Establish-
Skull and Bones we all stand tagether, 15 ment may have had its earliest roots north of
brothers under the skin. [It is1 the greatest Boston and in the Hudson River Valley, but it
allegiance in the world.". ...." was determined to be, not a mere regional fi-
nancier faction, but the undisputed ruling elite
Notea
of the United States as a whole, from Boston to
5. Fikhugh C m n . George Bwh: An Intimate Pornoit, (New Bohemian Grove and from Palm Beach to the
York Hippocrene Books. 1989). p. 48. Pacific Northwest It was thus imperative that
6. Among the s o u m s used for this section are: the constant tendency toward the formation of
Skull and Bones membership list. 1833-1950. printed regional factions be preempted by the perva-
I949 by the Russell Trust Association, New Haven Con-
necticul available through the Yale University Library. sive presence of men bound by blood loyalty to
New Haven. the dominant cliques ofwashington, New York,
Biographies orthe Russells md related families. in . and the "mother country," the City of London.
the Yale University Library. New Haven.and in the Rus- If the Eastern Liberal Establishment were
sell Library. Middletom, Connecticut
Ron Chemow.ThcHmuro f l l o r g a n : A n A m Bank- thought of as a cancer, then aRer 1945that can-
ing Dynasty and the Rise ofModrrn Finrmcc, (New YO* cer went into a new phase of malignant metasta-
Atlantic Monthly Press, lsBOl sis, infecting every part of the American body
Anthony C Sutton.Hoc0the OnhCrrotaWmandk politic. George Bush was one of those motile,
lution, (Phoenix: Research Publicatio~ls.In?. ISM).
Anthony C Sutton.Amaiaz's Sccrcl EMbluhmmt: An malignant cells. He was not alone: Robert Mos-
InhDdurnonto theOrdrro/SMIandBona.(Billings. Mt:. bacher also made the journey from ~ e ~wo r tok
Liberty H o w Press. lm Texas, in'Mosbacher's case directly to Houston.
Anton Chaitkin. 'Rwon in Anuriux Fnm~Aanm Bun
to AanU Hawiman, second edition, (New York New The various sycophant mythographers who
Benjamin Franklin H o w . 1- have spun their yams about the life of George
Anton Chaitkin. 'Strtion Identibcatlon: Morgan. Hit- Bush have always attempted to present this
ler. NBC," N ~ l pSdidonry, Oct 8.1- phase of Bush's life as the case of a fiercely
Intervim with Bones members and their families
7. Walter Ismaon and Evan Thomu, The Wise Mm. Sh independent young man who could have gone
Rndr and the World Thcy Made-Aehcwh, Bohlm, HmrC straight to the top in Wall Street by trading on
man. Kcnnan, &uett, McClop, (New York Simon .nd father Prescott's name and connections, but
khuster. 1986). p. W9l. who chose instead to strike out for the new fron-
a Ibid. p. 93. tier among the wildcatters and roughnecks of
9. Interview with Ned Anderson. Nov. 6.199L
10. Quoted in Ned Anderson to Antoa Chaitkin. Dec. 2, the west Texas oil fields and become a self-
IWl. in possession of the present ruthon. made man.
1L Article by Paul Brinkley-Rogen or the A* Repub As George Bush himself recounted in a 1983
tie. in the W a s ~ o Part.
n Oet 1.1988
interview, "If I were a psychoanalyzer, I might
12 G m n , op. eit.. p 50.
13. Bob Woodward and Walter Pincus. 'Bush Opened Up conclude that I was trying to, not compete with
To Secret Yale Society," Washington Past, August 7. my father, but do something on my own. My stay
1988 in Texas was no Horatio Alger thing, but moving
from New Haven to Odessa just about the day I
graduated was quite a shiR in lifestyle."'
These fairy tales from the "red Studebaker"
The Permian school seek to obscure the facts: that Bush's
Basin Gang, transfer to Texas was arranged from the top by
Prescott's Brown Brothers Hamman cronies,
1948-59 'and thatevetp.step.forw;rrd!made.by~Bushin .-.
, the oil business was assisted by the capital re-
town. How many Texas ranchers can remember schemed and schemed until he had found a way
selling their mineral rights for a pittance to to go beyond hustling for royalty leases: He con-
smiling George Bush, and then having oil dis- cocted a method of trading oil-producing prop
covered on the land, oil from which their family erties in such a way as to permit the eventual
would never earn a penny? owner to defer all tax liabilities until the field
Across the street from Bush-Overbey were was depleted. Sometimes Hugh Liedtke would
the offices of Liedtke & Liedtke, Attorneys-at- commute between Midland and Tulsa on an al-
law. J. Hugh Liedtke and William Liedtke were most daily basis. He would spend the daylight
from Tulsa, Oklahoma, where they, like Bush, hours prowling the Permian Basin for a land
had grown up rich, as the sons of a local judge deal, make the 13-hour drive to Tulsa overnight
who had become one of the top corporate law- to convince his backers to ante up the cash, and
yers for Gulf Oil. The Liedtkes' grandfather had then race back to Midland to close the deal
come from Prussia, but had served in the Con- before the sucker got away. It was during this
federate Army. J. Hugh Liedtke had found time phase that it occurred to Liedtke that he could
along the way to acquire the notorious Haward save himself a lot of marathon commuter driv-
Master of Business Administration degree in ing if he could put together a million dollars in
one year. ARer service in the Navy during venture capital and "inventory" the deals he
World War 11, the Liedtkes obtained law de- was otherwise forced to make on a piecemeal,
grees at the University of Texas law School, ad hoc basis.''
where they rented the servants' quarters of the
home of U.S. Senator Lyndon B. Johnson, who
was away in Washington most of the time.. .
The Liedtkes combined the raw, uncouth Zapata petroleum
primitive accumulation mentality of the oil
boom town with the refined arts of usury and The Liedtke brothers now wanted to go be-
speculation as Harvard taught them. Their law yond royalty leases and land sale tax dodges,
~racticewas such in name only; their primary and begin large-scale drilling and production
Hnd almost exclusive activity was buying up of oil. George Bush, by now well versed in the
royalty leases on behalf of a moneybags in Tul- alphas and omegas of oil as ground rent, was
sa who was a friend of their family.. . thinking along the same lines. In a convergence
Hugh Liedtke was always on the lookout for that was full of ominous portent for the U.S.
the Main Chance. Following in the footsteps of economy of the 1980s, the Liedtke brothers and
his fellow Tulsan Ray Kravis, Hugh Liedtke George Bush decided to pool their capital and
0621
their rapacious talents by going into business indignant when the ~ a p a n e s business
e commu-
together. Overbey was on board initially, but nity attempted to prevent him from introducing
would soon fall away. , these shameless looting practices into the Japa-
The year was 1953, and Uncle Herbie's G.H. nese economy.
Walker &Co.became the principal underwriter Pickens, too, was a product of the ~ u i h - ~ i e d t -
of the stock and convertible debentures that ke social circle of Midland. When he was just
were to be offered to the public. Uncle Herbie getting started in the mid-fifties, Pickens want-
would also purchase a large portion of the stock ed to buy the Hugoton Production Company,
himself. When the new company required fur- which owned the Hugoton field, one of the
ther infusions of capital, Uncle Herbie would world's great onshore deposits of natural gas.
float the necessary bonds. Jimmy Gammell re-. Pickens engineered the hostile takeover of Hu-
mained a key participant and would find a seat goton by turning to,Hugh Liedtke to be intro-
on the board of directors of the new company. duced to the trustees of the Clark.Family Es-
Another of the key investors was the Clark Fam- tate. who, as we have just seen, had put up part
ily Estate, meaning the trustees who managed of the capital for Zapata. Pickens promised the
the Singer Sewing machine fortune." Some oth- Clark trustees a high& return than was being
er money came from various pension funds and provided by the current management, and this
endowments, sources that would become very support proved to be ,decisive in permitting
popular during the leveraged buyout orgy Bush Pickens's Mesa Petroleum to take over Hugo-
presided over in the 1980s. Of the capital of ton, launching this corsair on a career of looting
the new Bush-Liedtke concern, about $500,000 and pillage that still continues. In 1988, George
would come from Tulsa cronies of the Liedtke
brothers, and the other $500,000 from the cir- Bush would give an interview to a magazine
cles of Uncle Herbie. The latter were referred owned by Pickens in which the Vice President
to by Hugh Liedtke as "the New York guys." would defend hostile leveraged buyouts as nec-
The name chosen for the new concern was essary to the interests of the shareholders.
Zapah Petroleum. According to Hugh Liedtke, In the meantime, after two to three years of
the new entrepreneurs were attracted to the operations, the oil flow out of.Zapata's key
name when they saw it on a movie marquee, Jameson field had begun to slow down. Al-
where the new release Vim Zapatu!, starring though there was still abundant oil in the
.Marlon Brando as the Mexican revolutionary, ground, the natural.pressure had been rapidly
was playing. Liedtke characteristically ex- depleted, so Bush and the Liedtkes had to begin
plains that part of the appeal of the name was resorting to stratagems in order to bring the oil
the confusion as to whether Zapata had been a to the surface. They began pumping water into
patriot or a banditU the underground formations in order to force
The Bush-Liedtke combination concentrated the oil to the surface. From then on, "enhanced
its attention on an oil property in Coke County recovery" techniques were necessary to keep
called Jameson Field, a barren expanse of prai- the Jameson field on line.
rie and sagebrush where six widely separated During 1955 and 1956, Zapata was able to re-
wells had been producing oil for some years. port a small profit In 1957,theyear of the incipi-
. Hugh Liedtke was convinced that these six oil ent Eisenhower recession, this turned into a
wells were tapping into a single underground loss of $155,183, as the oil from the Jameson
pool of oil, and that dozens or even hundreds of field began to slow down. In 1958, the loss was
new oil wells drilled into the same field would $427,752, and in 1959; there was $207,742 of red
ink 1960 (after Bush had departed from the
all prove to be gushers. In other words, Liedtke scene) brought another loss, this time of
wanted to gamble the entire capita1 of the new $372,258. It was not until 1961 that Z ~ p a t awas
firm on the hypothesis that the wells were, in oil able to post a small profit of $50,482. Despite
parlance, "connected." One of Liedtke's Tulsa the fact that Bush and the Liedtkes all became
backers was supposedly unconvinced, and ar- millionaires through the increased value of
gued that the wells were too far apart; they their shares, it was not exactly an enviable re-
could not possibly connect "Goddamn, they cord; without the deep pockets of Bush's Uncle
do!" was Hugh Liedtke's rejoinder. He insisted Herbie Walker and his British backers, the en-
on shooting the works in a va-banqueoperation. tire venture might have foundered at an early
Uncle Herbie's circles were nervous: 'The New date.
Yorkguys were just about to pee in their pants," Bush and the Liedtkes had been very lucky
boasted Leidtke years later. Bush and Hugh with the Jameson field, but they could hardly
Liedtke obviously had the better information: expect such results to be repeated indefinitely.
The wells were connected, and 127 wells were In addition, they were now posting losses, and
drilled without encountering a single dry hole. the value of Zapata stock had gone into a de-
As a result, the price of a share of stock in Zapa- cline. Bush and the Liedtke brothers now con-
ta went up from seven cents a share to $23. cluded that the epoch in which large oil fields
During this time, Hugh Liedtke collaborated could be discovered within the continental
on several small deals in the Midland area with United States was .over. Mammoth new oil
a certain T. Boone Pickens, later one of the most fields. they believed, could only be found off-
notorious corporate.raiders of the 1980s. one of shore. located under hundreds of feet ofswater
the originators of the "greenmail" strategy-of on the continental shelves, or in StlaUOW seas
extortion, by which a raider would accumulate like the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean.
part of the shares of a company and threaten to By a happy coincidence, in 1054 the U.S. fed-
go all the way to a hostile takeover unless the eral government was just beginning to auction
management of the company agreed to buy back the mineral rights for these offshore areas.
those shares at an outrageous premium. Pick- With father Prescott Bush directing his potent
ens is the buccaneer who was self-righteously
Brown Brothers HarrimanlSkull and Bones net- D.D. Bovaird, president of the Bovaird S u p
work from the U.S. Senate while regularly h o b ply Co. ofTulsa, Oklahoma, and chairman ofthe
nobbing with President Eisenhower on the golf board of the Oklahoma City branch of the Tenth
links, George Bush could be confident ofreceiv- Federal District of the Federal Reserve Board;
ing special privileged treatment when it came and
to these mineral rights. Bush and his partners George L Coleman, investments, Miami,
therefore judged the moment ripe for launch- Oklahoma.
ing a for-hire drilling company, Zapata .OK- An interim director that year had been Rich-
shore, a Delaware corporation that would offer ard E. Fleming of Robert Fleming and Co., Lon-
its services to the companies making up the don, England. Counsel were listed as Baker,
Seven Sisters international oil cartel in drilling Botts, Andrews & Shepherd of Houston, Texas;
underwater wells. Forty percent of the offshore auditors were Arthur Andersen in Houston,
company's stock would be owned by the origi- and transfer agents were J.P. Morgan & Co., Inc.,
nal Zapata fin.The new company would also of New York City and the First National Bank
be a buyer of offshore royalty leases. Uncle and Trust Company of Tulsa."'
Herbie helped arrange a new issue of stock for George Bush personally was much more in-
this Zapata offshoot The shares were easy to volved with We financial management of the
unload because of the 1954 boom in the New company than with its actual oil-field opera-
Yorfstock market "The stockmarket lent itself i --
tions' Hid m'oinyactivitp was riot finding oil' or '
v
to speculation," Bush would explain years lat- drilling welb but, as he himself put it, "stretch-
er, "and you could get equity capital for new ing paper-rolling over debt and making new
ventures."" financial arrangements with the ~reditors.'~
1954 was also the year that the CIA overthrew During 1956, despite continuing losses and
the government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatema- thanks again to Uncle Herbie, Zapata was able
la. This was the beginning of a dense fluny of to float yet another offering, this time a convert-
U.S. covert operations in Central America and ible debenture for $215 million, for the pur-
the Caribbean, featuring especially Cuba chase of a second Le Tourneau drilling plat-
The first asset of Zapata Offshore was tlie form, the VINEGAROON, named after a west
SCORPION. a $3.5 million deepsea drilling rig Texas stinging insect The VINEGAROON was
th t was financed by $1.5 million from the ini- delivered during 1957, and soon scored a
1
tia stock sale plus another $2 million from
bonds marketed with the help of Uncle Herbie.
"lucky" hit drilling in block 86 off Vermilion
Parish, Inuisiana. This was a combination of
The SCORPION was the first three-legged, self- gas and oil, and one well was.rated at 113 bar-
elevating mobile drilling barge, and it was built rels of distillate and 3.6 million cubic feet of
by R G. LeTourneau, Inc. of Vicksburg, Missis gas per day." This was especially remunera-
sippi. The platform weighed some 9 million tive, because Zapata had acquired a half-inter-
pounds and measured 180 by 150 feet, and the est in the royalties from any oil orgas that might
three legs were 140feet long when fully extend- be found. VINEGAROON then continued to
ed. The rig was floated into the desired drilling drill offshore from Vermilion Parish, Louisi- .
: ana, on a farmout from Continental Oil.
position before the legs were extended, and the
main body was then pushed up above the waves As for the SCORPION, during part of 1957 it
by electric motors. The SCORPION was deliv- was under contract to the Bahama-California
ered early in 1 W , was commissfon_edat Galves- Oil Company, drilling between Florida and
ton in March, 1956 and was put to work at ex- Cuba. It was then leased by Gulf Oil and Stan-
ploratory drilling in the Gulf of Mexico during dard Oil of California, on whose behalf it start-
the rest of the year. ed drilling during 1958at a position on the Cay
During 1956, the Zapata Petroleum otRcers Sal Bank, 131 miles south of Miami, Florida,
included J. Hugh Liedtke as president, George and just 54 miles north of Isabela, Cuba Cuba
H.W. Bush asvice president, and William Bnm- was an interesting place just then; the US.-
ley of Midland, Texas, as treasurer. The board backed insurgency of Fidel Castro was rapidly
of directors lined up as follows: undermining the older US.-imposed regime of
George H.W. Bush, Midland, Texas; Fulgencio Batista That meant that SCORPION
J.G.S. Gammell. Edinburgh, Scotland, man- was located a t a hot comer. We note that Allen
ager of British Assets Trust, Ltd.; Dulles, then director of the Central Intelli-
J. Hugh Liedtke, Midland, Texas; gence Agency, had previously been legal coun-
William C. Liedtke, independent oil opera- sel to Gulf Oil for Latin American operations,
tor, Midland, Texas; . . and counsel to George Bush's father at Brown
.Arthur E. Palmer, Jr.. New York, N.Y., a Brothers Harriman for eastern Europe.
partner in Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam, and During 1957 a certain divergence began to
Roberts; appear between Uncle Herbie Walker, Bush,
G.H. Walker. Jr. (Uncle Herbie), managing and the "New York guyswon the one hand, and
~ a r f n e0fG.H.
r walker and Co.. New York, N.Y.; the Liedtke brothers and their Tulsa backers
Howard J. Whitehill, independent oil pro- on the other. As the annual report for that year
ducer. Tulsa, Oklahoma; noted, "There is no doubt that the drilling busi-
Eugene F. .Williams,Jr., secretary of the S t ness in the Gulf of Mexico has become far more
Louis Union Trust Company of S t Louis, Mis- competitive in the last six months than it has
souri; fellow member with "Poppy" Bush in the been at any time in the pastw Despite that,
class of 1942 AUV secret society at Andover Bush, Walker and the New York investors want-
prep, later chairman of the Andover board; ed to push forward into the offshore drilling
and drilling services business, while the Lied-
623
tkes and the Tulsa group wanted to concentrate machinery company in New Jersey, a Texas
on acquiring oil in the ground and natural gas pipe lining company, and a gas transmission
deposits. company; none of these investments proved to
The 1958 annual report notes that, with no be remunerative.
major discoveries made, 1958 had been "a dif-
ficult year." It was, of course, the year of the NO~S
1. Hany Hurt 111. "GeorgeBwh. Plucky Lmd,"T~corMonth-
brutal Eisenhower recession. SCORPION, VIN- ly. June 1983.
EGAROON, and NOLA I, the offshore com- 2 See S a n h BarlletS The M a c y Maehinc: HOW KKR ~ m n c -
pany's three drilling rigs, could not be kept ful- foctund Powr a d Ro@ (New York, 1 ~ 1 1pp. , 912
ly occupied in the Gulf of Mexico during the 3. Darw~nPayne, lnatuuwe m E m : ~nrrcrlndwtncr,
whole year, and so Zapata Offshore had lost Inc.. 1880-1978(New York: Simon and Schuster. ea 1 ~ s ) .
P mlr
$524,441, more than Zapata Petroleum's own 4. Bartlett, op. d.. p
loss of $427,752 for that year. The Liedtke view- 5. Darwin Payne, op. at., P. a - 3 3 .
point was reflected in the notation Ulat "dispos- 6.~ u r op.f at.
ing of the offshore business had been consid- 7.IW
8 "Bwh Battler the 'Wimp Factor'." Nnonack, Oct 19,
end." The great tycoon Bush conceded in the 1967.
Zapata Offshore annual report for 1958: "We 9. See Richard Ben Krrmer. "How He Cot Here." Esqum,
erroneously predicted that most major [oil] June l m l .
companies would have active drilling programs 10. See Thomaa Petzinger. Jr.. OII ond Honor: ~ h TCDOCO.
c
P ~ I Z OwwsII ( N ~ WYort 1987). p. n 8
for 1958. These drilling programs simply did 11. I+ p. 8(.
.
not materialize. .."In 1090, Bush denied for r~~ b d .p 40.
13. See 2rp.u Petroleum a n n u l reports, Library of Con-
months that there was a recession, and through greaa Microform Reading Room.
1991 claimed that the recession had ended, 14. Petzinger, op. at., p. 4L
when it had, in fact, long since turned into a 15. See ZIpatr Petroleum Corpontion Annual Report for
depression. His current blindness about eco- 195(1. Libnry of Congreu. M~croformReading ~ o q m
nomic conjunctures would appear to be nothing 16. ~ u r op.
t at., p. 191
new. 17. %pat. Petroleum ~orp.."Fortune. April 19511 .! '1: '
18. Walter Pincus and Bob Woodward. "Doing Well With
By 1959, there were reports of increasihg per- Family. Fnendr." w o r h n g port.
~ e l ~p r o m ~ ~ AW 11.
1981~
sonal tensions between the domineering and
abrasive J. Hugh Liedtke, on the one hand, and
Bush's Uncle Herbie Walker on the other. Lied- Kennedy h i n a t i o n
tke was obsessed with his plan for creating a
new major oil company, the boundless ambi-
tion that would propel him down a path littered
.
( ( W A V E . . proliferated across [Flori-
J
with asset-stripped corporations into the dev-
astating Pennzoil-Getty-Texaco wars of a quar- dal in preparation for the Bay of Pigs
ter-century later. During the course ofthis year, invasion. A subculture of fronts, propri-
the two groups of investors amved at a separa- eta es, suppliers, transfer agents, conduits,
tion that was billed as "amicable," and which dummy corporations, blind drops. detective
in any case never interrupted the close cooper- agencies, law firms, electronic firms, shopping
ation among Bush and the Liedtke brothers. centers, airlines, radio stations, the mob and
The solution was that the ever-present Uncle the church and the banks: a false and secret
Herbie would buy out the Liedtke-Tulsa 40 per- nervous system twitching to stimuli supplied by
cent stake in Zapata Ofihore, while the Liedtke the cortex in Clandestine Services in Langley.
backers would buy out the Bush-Walker inter- After defeat on the beach in Cuba, JWWAVE
est in Zapata Petroleum. became a continuing and extended Miami Sta-
For this to be accomplished, George Bush tion, CIA'S largest in the continental United
would require yet another large inhsion of c a p States. A large sign in front of the.. . building
ital. Uncle Herbie now raised yet another complex reads: U.S. GOVERNMENT RECULA-
tranche for George, this time over $800,000. The TIONS PROHIBIT DISCUSSION OF THIS OR-
money allegedly came h m Bush-Walker GANIZATION OR FACILITY."
friends and relative^.^ Even if the faithhl ef- -Donald Freed, Death in Washington (West-
forts of Uncle Herbie are taken into account, it port, Connecticut, 1980). p. 141.
is still puzzling to see a series of large infusions
of cash into a poorly managed small company The review offered so far of George Bush's
that had posted a series of substantial lobes activities during the late 1950s and early 1960s
and whosefuture prospects were anything but is almost certainly incomplete in very impor-
rosy. At this point it is therefore legitimate to tant respects. There is good reason to believe
pose the question: Was Zapata Offshore an in- that Bush was engaged in something more than
telligence community front at its foundation in just the oil business during those years. Start-
1954, or did it become one in 1959, or perhaps ing about the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion
at some later point? This question cannot be in the spring of 1961, we have the first hints
answered with finality, but some relevant evi- that Bush, in addition to working for Zapata
dence will be discussed in the following Offshore, may also have been a participant in
chapter. certain covert operations of the U.S. intelli-
George Bush was now the president of his gence community.
own company. the undisputed boss of Zapata Such participation would certainly be coher-
Offshore. AlthougH the company was falling be- ent with George's role in the Rescott Bush,
hind the rest of the offshore drilling industry, Skull and Bones, and Brown Brothers Harri-
Bush made a desultory attempt at expansion man networks. During the twentieth century,
through diversification, investing in a plastics
0624
the Skull and BonedHarriman circles have al- American move into the Persian GulLnZFelix
ways maintained a sizeable and often decisive Rodriguez tells us that he was infiltrated into
presence inside the intelligence organizations Cuba with the other members of the "Grey
of the State Department, the Treasury Depart- Team" in conjunction with the Bay ofpigs land-
ment, the Office ofNaval Intelligence, the Office ings; this is the same man we will find directing
of Strategic Services, and the Central Intelli- the Contra supply effort in Central America
gence Agency. during the 1980s, working under the direct su-
A body of leads has been assembled which pervision of Don Gregg and George Bush?Theo-
suggests that George Bush may have been asso- dore Shackley, the JMtWAVE station chief, will
ciated with the CIA at some time before the later show up in Bush's 1979-80 presidential
autumn of 1963. According to Joseph McBride campaign.
of The Nation, "a source with close connections To a very large degree, such covert opera-
to the intelligence community confirms that tions have drawn upon the same pool of person-
Bush started working for the agency in 1960 or nel. They are to a significant extent the handi-
1961, using his oil business as a cover for clan- work of the same crowd. It is therefore reveal-
destine activities."' By the time of the Kennedy ing to extrapolate forward and backward in
assassination, we have an official FBI docu- time the individuals and groups of individuals
ment which refers to "Mr. George Bush of the who appear as the cast of characters in one
Central Intelligence Agency." and despite offi- scandal, and compare them with the cast of
cial disclaimers, there is every reason to think characters for the other scandals, including the
that this is indeed the man in the White House secondary ones that have not been enumerated
today. here. E. Howard Hunt, for example, shows up
The mystery of George Bush as a possible as a confirmed part of the overthrow ofthe Gua-
covert operator hinges on four points, each one temalan government of Jacopo Arbenz in 1951,
of which represents one of the great political as an important part of the chain of command
and espionage scandals of postwar American in the Bay of Pigs, as a person repeatedly ac-
history. These four cardinal points are: cused of having been in Dallas on the day Ken-
1.The abortive Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, nedy was shot, and as one of the central figures
launched on April 16-17, 1961, prepared with of Watergate.
the assistance of the CIA'S "Miami Station" George Bush is demonstrably one of the most
(also known under the code name JM/WAVE). important protagonists of the Watergate scan-
After the failure of the amphibious landings of dal, and was the overall director of Iran-Contra.
Brigade 2506, Miami station, under the leader- Since he appears especially in Iran-Contra in
ship of Theodore Shackley, became the focus close proximity to Bay of Pigs holdovers, it is
for Operation Mongoose, a series of covert oper- surely legitimate to wonder when his associa-
ations directed against Castro, Cuba, and possi- tion with those Bay of Pigs Cubans might have
bly other targets. started.
2 The assassination of President John F. 1959was the year that Bush started operating
Kennedy in Dallas on November 22,1963, and out of his Zapata Offshore headquarters in
the coverup of those responsible for this crime. Houston; it was also the year that Fidel Castro
3. The Watergate scandal, beginning with an seized power in Cuba. Officially, as we have
April 1971visit to Miami, Florida by E.Howard seen, George was now a businessman whose
Hunt on the tenth anniversary of the Bay of work took him at times to Louisiana, where Za-
Pigs invasion to recruit operatives forthe White pata had offshore drilling operations. George
House Special Investigations Unit(the '!Plumb- must have been a frequent visitor to New Or-
ers" and later Watergate burglars) from among leans. Because of his family's estate on Jupiter
Cuban-American Bay of Pigs veterans. Island, he would also have been a frequent visi-
4. The Iran-Contra affair, which became a tor to the Iiobe Sound area. And then, there
public scandal during October-November1986, were Zapata Offshore drilling operations in the
several of whose central figures, such as Felix Florida strait
Rodriguez, were also veterans of the Bay of The Jupiter Island connection and father
Pigs. Prescott's Brown Brothers HarrimanlSkull and
Bones networks are doubtless the key. Jupiter
George Bush's role in both Watergate and the Island meant Averell Harriman, Robert Lovett,
October Surprisefiran-Contra complex will be
treated in detail at later points in this book C. Douglas Dillon and other Anglophile .finan-
Right now, it is important tosee that thirty years ciers who had directed the U.S. intelligence
of covert operations, in many respects, form a community long before there had been a CIA at
single continuous whole. This is especially true all. And. in the backyard of the Jupiter Island
in regard to the dmmatis personae. Georgie Olympians, and under their direction, a power-
'Anne Geyer points to the obvious in a recent ful covert operations base was pow being as-
book: " ... an entire new Cuban cadre now sembled, in which George Bush would have
emerged from the Bay of Pigs. The names How- been present at the creation as a matter of
ard Hunt, Bernard Barker, Rolando Martinez, birthright . r
Felix Rodriguez and Eugenio Martinez would, -
in the next quarter century, pop up, often deci-
sively, over and over again in the most danger-
ous American foreign policy crises. There were
Cubans flying missions for the CIA.in the Congo
and even for the Portuguese in Africa; Cubans
were the burglars of Watergate; Cubans played
key roles in Nicaragua, in Irangate, -in the
06
The Barbam was originally an LC1 (Landing
Operation Zapata
- Craft Infantry) of earlier vintage. Our attention
, is attracted at once to the ~ a d m a n the
d Hous-
During 195960, Allen Dulles and the Eisen- ton, in the first case because we have seen
hower administration began to assemble in George Bush's habit of naming his combat air-
south Florida the infrastructure for covert ac- craR alter h u wlte, and, In the secona case,
tion against Cuba. This was the J W A V E capa- because Bush was at this time a resident and
bility, later formally constituted as the CIA Mi- Republican activist of Houston, Texas. But of
ami station. J W A V E was an operational cen- course, the appearance of names like "Zapata,"
ter for the Eisenhower regime's project ofstag- "Barbara," and "Houston" can by itself only
ing an invasion of Cuba using a secret army arouse suspicion, and proves nothing.
of antiCastro Cuban exiles, organized, armed, After the ignominious defeat of the Bay of
trained, transported, and directed by the CIA. Pigs invasion,there was great animosity against
The Cubans, called Brigade Wl6,were trained Kennedy among the survivors of Brigade 2506,
in secret camps in Guatemala, and they had air some of whom eventually made their way back
support from B-26 bombers based in Nicaragua. to Miami after being released from Castro's
This invasion was crushed by Castro's de- prisoner of war camps. There was also great
fending forces in less than three days. animosity against Kennedy on the part of the
Before going along with the plan so eageri~ J W A V E personnel.
touted by Allen Dulles, Kennedy had estab During the early 1950s. E. Howard Hunt had
lished the precondition that under no circum- been the CIA station chief in Mexico City. As
stances whatsoever would there be direct inter- David Atlee Phillips (another embittered J W
vention by U.S. military forces against Cuba. On WAVE veteran) tells us in his autobiographical
the one hand, Dulles had assured Kennedy that account, The Night Watch, E. Howard Hunt had
the news of the invasion would trigger an insur- been the immediate superior of a young CIA
rection which would sweep Castro and his re- recruit named William F. Buckley, the Yale
gime away. On the other, Kennedy had to be graduate and Skull and Bones member who lat-
concerned about provoking a global thernfonu- e r founded the National R&. In his autobio-
clear confrontation with the U.S.S.R. in the graphical account written during the days of
eventuality that Nikita Khrushchev decided to the Watergate scandal, Hunt includes the fol-
respond to a U.S. Cuban gambit by, for example, lowing tirade about the Bay of Pigs:
cutting off U.S. access to Berlin. "No event since the communization of China
Hints of the covert presence of George Bush in 1 W has had such a profound effect on the
are scattered here and there around the Bay of United States and its allies as the defeat of the
Pigs invasion. According to some accounts, the US.-trained Cuban invasion brigade at the Bay
code name for the Bay of Pigs was Operation of Pigs in April 1961.
Pluto.' But Bay of Pigs veteran E. Howard Hunt "Out of that humiliation grew theBerlin Wall,
scornfully denies that this was the code name the missile crisis, guemlla warfare throughout
used by JWWAVE personnel; Hunt writes: "So Latin America and Africa, and our Dominican
perhaps the Pentagon referred to the Brigade Republic intervention. Castro's beachhead tri-
invasion as Pluto. CIA did not'" But Hunt does umph opened a bottomless Pandora's box of
not tell us what the CIA code name was, and the difficulties that affected not only the United
contents of Hunt's Watergatesra White House States, but most of its allies in the Free World.
safe, which might havetold us the answer, were, 'These bloody and subversive events would
of course, "deegsixed" by FBI Director Patrick not have taken place had Castro been toppled.
Gray. Instead of-standingfirm, our government pyra-
Acgording to reliable sources and published mided crucially wrong decisions and allowed
accounts, the CIA code name for the Bay of Pigs Brigade 2506 to be destroyed. The Kennedy ad-
invasion was Operation Zapata, and the plan ministratipn yielded Castro all the excuse he
was so referred to by Richard Bissell ofthe CIA, needed to gain a tighter grip on the island of
one of the plan's promoters, in a briefing to Jose Marti, then moved shamefacedly into the
President Kennedy in the Cabinet Room on shadows and hpjed the Cuban issue would sim-
March 29, 1961: Does Operation Zapata have ply melt away.
anything to do with Zapata Offshore? The run-
of-the-mill Bushman might respond that Emi-
liano Zapata, after all, had been a public figure
in his own right, and the subject of a recent
Hollywood movie stamng Marlon Brando. A
more knowledgeable Bushman might argue Kennedy and MacArthur
that the main landing beach, the Playa Giron, Hunt was typical of the opinion that the deba-
is located south of the city of Cienfuegos on the cle had been Kennedy's fault, and not the re-
~ a p a t aPeninsula, on the south coast of Cuba. sponsibility of men like Allen Dulles and Rich-
Then there is the question ofthe Brigade2506 ard Bissell. who had designed it and recom-
landing fleet, which was composed of five older mended it. After the embarrassing failure of
freighters bought or chartered from the Garcia the invasion, which never evoked the hoped-for
Steamship Lines, bearing the names ofHouston, spontaneous anti-Castro insurrection, Kenne-
Ria Escondido, Caribe,Atlantic,and Lakc Chdes. dy fired Allen Dulles, his Hammanite deputy
In addition to these vessels, which Were outfit- Bissell, and CIA Deputy Director Charles C a b
ted as transport ships, there were two some- ell (whose brother was the mayor of Dallas at
what better armed fire support ships, the Bl<rgar the time Kennedy was shot).
and the Barbam. (In some sources B a d m J.)'
0626
During the days alter the Bay of Pigs debacle, dummy corporations to provide employment,
Kennedy was deeply suspicious of the intelli- cover, and commercial disguise for all these
gence community and of proposals for military operatives. There were detective bureaus, gun
escalation in general, including in places like stores, real estate brokerages, boat repair
South Vietnam. Kennedy sought to procure an shops, and party boats for fishing and other en-
outside, expert opinion on military matters. tertainments. There was the clandestine Radio
For this he turned to the former commander in Swan, later renamed Radio Americas. There
chief of the Southwest Pacific Theatre during were fleets of specially modified.boats based at
World War 11, General Douglas MacArthur. Al- Homestead Marina, and at other marinas
most ten years ago, a reliable source shared throughout the Florida Keys. Agents were as-
with one of the authors an account of a meeting signed to the University of Miami and other
between Kennedy and MacArthur in which the educational institutions.
veteran general warned the young President The raison d'@treof the massive capability
that there were elements inside the U.S. gov- commanded by Theodore Shackleywas now O p
ernment who emphatically did not share his eration Mongoose, a program for sabotage raids
patriotic motives, and who were seeking to de- and assassinations to be conducted on Cuban
stroy his administration from within. MacAr- territory, with a special effort to eliminate Fi-
thur warned that the forces bent on destroying del Castro.personally. In order to run these op-
Kennedy were centered in the Wall Street fi- '(Imtions.fromU.S. territory, flagrant and .ex$ep-
nancial community and its various tentacles in sive violation of federal and state laws was the
the intelligence community. order of the day. Documents regarding the in-
It is a matter of public record that Kennedy corporation of businesses were falsified. In-
met with MacArthur in the latter. part of April come tax returns were faked. F M regulations
1961, after the Bay of Pigs. According to Kenne- were violated by planes taking off for Cuba or
dy aide Theodore Sorenson, MacArthur told for forward bases in the Bahamas and else-
Kennedy, T h e chickens are coming home to where. Explosives moved across highways that
roost, and you happen to have just moved into were full of civilian traffic. The Munitions Act,
the chicken house.'* At the same meeting, ac- the Neutrality Act, the customs and immigra-
cording to Sorenson, MacArthur "warned [Ken- tions laws were routinely flaunted.*
nedy] against the commitment of American foot Above all, the drug laws were massively v i e
soldiers on the Asian mainland, and the Presi- lated as the @llant anticommunist fighters
dent never forgot this advice." lo This point is, filled their planes and boats with illegal narcot-
grudgingly confirmed by Arthur M. Schlesinger. ics to be smuggled back into the United States
a Kennedy aide who had a vested interest in when they returned from their missions. By
vilifying MacArthur, who wrote that "MacAr- 1963, the drug-running activities of the covert
thur expressed his old view that anyone want- operatives were beginning to attract attention.
ing to commit American ground forces to the JMMTAVE, in sum, accelerated the slide of
mainland [of Asia] should have his head exam- south Fiorida towards the status of drug and
ined."'! MacArthur restated this advice during murder capital of the United States it achieved
a second meeting with Kennedy when the Gen- during the 1980s.
eral returned from his last trip to the Far'East
in July 1961.
Kennedy valued MacArthur's professional
'
C o m m i t t e e o f 300
-Sku 1 7 and B o n e s
AFab U n i t e d N a t i o n s e--
Shi e k s
Commun i s m
n t e l ligence S e r v i c e - - F a b ian i s m
CIA
I
Inte1
Agencies
L ibera 1 i s m
S o c i a 1i s m
Right-wing
Petroleum, Banking
Insurance, M i n i n g 4
Commerce, Industry C -
-
B r i t ish E a s t
Round T a b l e
Heroi n T h e M i lner G r o u p t
The Rhodes G r o u p
F r e e m a s o n r y & S e c r e t C--
OPIUM Societies
Terrorism
CFR ---+
U.S. GOV'T
TAVISTOCK INSTITUTE OF HUMAN RELATIONS (1921) U.S.
1
4 M I 7 itary
S c i e n c e P o l i c y R e s e a r c h U n i t (SPRU)
RESEARCH S u s s e x Un i vers i t y
INSTITUTES 4
"Future-Oriented Manipulative
P o p u l a t ion P s y c h o 1ogy "
S.R.I.
M . I . T.
I.P.S. E x p a n s ion o f D r u g C o n s u m p t ion
RAND
HUDSON
WARTON G e n e r a t ion M u s i c & Fads
( k ( l ~ N e m T t l e u n 0
Officials feat the Ondina* berthed near the Maersk terminal, could dnk, catch tin or leak 011.
Nothing could be finer than getting rid themselves because the port docs not W 8 p thc b m
of the Ondirur, Port of -Tacoma commis- want to end up owning the Ondina. "Our catchflreorkako&hesaid.
sioncn agreed Thuday. interest is in recovering oar ad 'We've just been holding om breath,"
moving the boat," he said. Terpstr8 mid. Tbe ship b in such disre-
The vessel has been at the port since Jobn Terpstra, aecutive director of pair that ally maintenance feed "have
J& - when U-3._Customs-agets d g d the Port of Tacoma, said several parties just been pooriry moacg do- r rat
--
94EPpads
-- of cocaine from its h x - - haw expressed interest.in InI* the hole," he mid.
So far, the port luu paid m.500 tO. lien rights to the 275-foot ship. ~ h ~c . p t . i nad rn otfic~rot thc
ward keeping the rusting old ship afloat. Goodstcinsaidtheportcanclrpcctto Ondlnr were indicted shortly after the
said Robert Coodstcin, the port's at- nmver most of the momy it luu spent cocrine was sciad by federal officers.
torney. The total tab for keeping it at so far to tow and maintain the OadiaP, T h e m
the port since July, including dockage but the dock fee can't be collected ob B e YM in p m =&&y~ggling
fees of $664 a day, now stands at lesstheownershowsaptor~~~~a~
$170,000. ship. He said he doesn't hold oat much T A n & t o r . - v a &
an, /I
To cut the port's losses, Goodstein hope of that. a$le in d o i olJd@!Ac.rg~ of
asked for and was granted authorization
by the commission to sell the right to
The ship u b a d in H o n d u r a s s * Tma ore m.?!!SL ~ k w p r t ban
owiier is b e l i t v a - t b r d w h e r e in esllfnrted 84.5 wag, Customs agcats
foreclose on the Ondina to the highest c a z i i % G : a said said.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
--
0 6 3 I-A-S
M A T R I X 1 1 1
SL-ved
e
Another player in the Arkansa n t-
eed a ormercom a
to Little Rock
in the autumn of =(reportedly at
North's request) and set up a rainin
euerillas in+ NeI!a
north of Mena.
w o Reed's testimony at his
own 1989 trial on wire fraud charges,
-
ODerations to Arkansas. Other pa#
- -
tici~antsin the Contra r e s u ~ o ~ parently speak with authority about
pmaram were similarl~~invited"t! Gov. Bill Clinton's role in the Reanan-
relocate to Little Rock during the Bush contra fiasco.
Assassinations in Europe
Signal Terror Offensive
HARP# 2 8 / 9 9 ~
by Jeffrey Skinberg avenge the killing in Lebanon of
March 16 (EIRNSkFour days ago, Sheik Abbas Musawi." the head of
a prumlnent Sicilian polit~cian, the Hezbollah. Sheik Musawi and
Salvo Lima. was assassinated in an several members of his family had
ambush as he drove his car near been killed Feb. 16 when an Israeli
Palermo. Sicily. Although Italian helicopter fired on his car in south-
authorities blamed the murder on ern Lebanon.
the Mafia, the death of the Europe- 1 Arab sources say that the Sadan
an Parliament'member. wha,'was murder was probably camed ouu
also a leader of the Christian Demo- by terrorists deployed by the Irani-'
cratic faction of Prime Minister Gi- an government It is feared that the
ulio Andreotti, triggered a security killing ofthe Israeli government of-
alert in Rome, whereseveral senior ficial will trigger some dramatic Is-
politicians were placed under raeli countermove, in much the
round-the-clock security. same way that the 1982 attempted
Lima's was the most significant murder of Israeli ambassador S h l e
political assassination in Italy in mo Argov in London led to the Is-
years. and occurred against the raeli invasion of Lebanon.
backdrop of an intensive political Although there is no direct link
battle for control over the govern- between the Lima and Sadan inci-
dents, they both underscore the
growing threat of terrorism, as the
old Versailles System c u m
ana long-slmmenng pOltbCal con-
flicts boil over.
European security specialists
point to the recent reactivation of
- the Irish Republican Army (IRA)
and Basque separatists (ETA) as
further evidence that a new period
of low-intensity conflict is begin-
ning in Eurasia The concern is
Brigade murder of Moro.
assassination has been
laid at the doorsteD of H
anger. who had opposed
forts to rorge a stable coa~ltlongov-
ernment In IUIY wnlcn couia pur-
po~lcy,particularly to-
laale East, free of U.S
contr . Both srlt~sfiand Israeli intelli-
A Hit in Turkey ence have been accuses of
Leu than a week before the am- <retly controlling such terrorist
bush executton of Llma, the chief of as the Red Brigades, t h ~
security of the Israeli embassy in d Black September, and d e
~nkara,=rke~ was killed by a them to eliminate ~ o l i t i c a l
powertul car bomb. His murder nts and destabilize
March 6 was clalmed by a states. Illone recent book by British
2 . D e s t r u c t i o n o f a l l n a t i o n a l i d e n t i t y and p r i d e .
5 . An end t o i n d u s t r i a l i z a t i o n and p r o d u c t i o n o f
nuclear power. -- -
6. L e g a l i z a t i o n o f a l l drugs and pornography.
9. D e s t r u c t i o n o f a s i g n i f i c a n t amount o f human p o p u l a t i o n
by l i m i t e d wars, b a c t e r i o l o g i c a l warfare, chemical
warfare, and e l e c t r o n i c warfare. Three b i l l i o n people
must d i e by 2000, The Global 2000 Report produced by
Cyrus Vance d e t a i l e d t h i s , and was accepted by C a r t e r
on b e h a l f o f t h e U.S. Government, The U.S. P o p u l a t i o n
must be reduced by 100 m i l l i o n by 2050.
12. To i n t r o d u c e new c u l t s a n d c o n t i n u e t o b o o s t t h o s e
a l r e a d y f u n c t o n i n g , which i n c l u d e v a r i o u s t y p e s o f
d e g e n e r a t i v e music.
To c o n t i n u e t o b u i l d u p t h e c u l t of C h r i s t i a n
Fundamentalism begun by t h e B r i t i s h E a s t I n d i a
Company, w h i c h w i l l be u s e d t o s t r e n g t h e n t h e
Z i o n i s t State of I s r a e l t h r o u g h i d e n t i f y i n g w i t h
t h e J e w s t h r o u g h t h e myth of "Gods C h o s e n P e o p l e "
a n d b y d o n a t i o n of s u b s t a n t i a l a m o u n t s of money
t o w h a t t h e y b e l i e v e is a r e l i g i o u s c a u s e i n t h e
f u r t h e r a n c e of C h r i s t i a n i t y .
1 4 . To press f o r t h e s p r e a d o f religious cults.
15. To e x p o r t " r e l i g i o u s l i b e r a t i o n " ideas.
18. To g i v e f u l l s u p p o r t t o t h e s u p r a n a t i o n a l i n s t i t u t i o n s
s u c h a s t h e UN, IMF, B I S , World C o u r t a n d c a u s e t h e
f a d i n g o u t of local i n s t i t u t i o n s .
a n d w o r k from
19. P e n e t r a t e a n d s u b v e r t a l l g o v e r n m e n t s ,
w i t h i n them t o d e s t r o y t h e s o v e r e i g n i n t e g r i t y of
n a t i o n s r e p r e s e n t e d by them.
t e r r o r i s t a p p a r a t u s a n d nego-
20. O r g a n i z e a w o r l d - w i d e
t i a t e w i t h terrorists whenever terrorist a c t i v i t i e s
take place:
21, T a k e c o n t r o l of e d u c a t i o n i n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s w i t h
t h e i n t e n t a n d p u r p o s e of d e s t r o y i n g i t .
M A T R I X 1 1 1
R o c k e f e l l e r Foundation c h a r t e r e s t a b l i s h e d .
0 6 3 1-H
M A T R I X 1 1 1
1966 - B i l d e r b e r g e r meeting.
1973 - B r e z i n s k i , CFR d i r e c t o r , s i n g l e s o u t C a r t e r as n e x t
President.
2 m i l l i o n . Mexican m i l i t a r y k i l l Federal N a r c o t i c s
P o l i c e a t an a i r s t r i p i n Mexico's Opium producing
area.
Excerpt from
"The Technotronic Era"
by Zbigniew B r z e z i n s k i
7
S i r Kenneth
Strong
16--------Queen o f Englan
Queen o f Netherlands
Queen o f Denmark 7
Royal European F a m i l i t i e s
Knights o t h e
Order o f t h e
S i r Kenneth Black Nobi 1it i e s Garter
Keith Corporate Conglomerates
Sir William Eastern American Establishment
W iseman
Lord H a r t l e y ASSASSINATION BUREAUS
Shawgrass
Sir W i l l i a m PERMINDEX Kennedy Assassination
Stephenson (MI61 f Project
.1
The MOSSAD
L
Sarayet Maktal
if
SWISS BLACK NOBILITY
"The Guys" 01tramai r e Fami 1y
Lombard-Odier Bank o f Geneva
Middle East Arms Trading
-t Bank of
_I
I n t e r n a t i o n a l Settlements (BIS)
I
Some Other Drug Money Laundering and C l e a r i n g Houses
Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, Orion Bank, Bank o f I r e l a n d
Bank o f England, Banco d e l Columbia, Banco Mercanti 1 de Mexico
American Express Bank, Bank o f Montreal, Bank o f Scotland
World Bank, Bank o f Nova Scotia, Royal Bank o f Canada
I n t e r n a t i o n a l Monetary Fund, Barclays Bank, Banca P r i v a t a
BCCI, B r i t i s h Bank o f t h e Middle East, Netherlands Bank
Bank o f Geneva, Banca Commerciale d ' I t a l i a , Standard Bank
0631-f'
M A T R I X I I I
BRITISH
C'
C e n t e r for M I 6
and S I S
THE CORNING GROUP (US)+INTERTEL
( P r i v a t e Intel Grp)
METROPOLITAN L I F E I N S
4 NEW
I->I YORK L I F E I N S CO(US)
->ALLSTATE
PRUDENTIAL L I C E N
I SURANCE CmPANY
INS (US)
(us)
PRUDENTIAL ASSURANCE COMPANY (US)
*-I
-
HILL-SAMUELS BANKING HOUSE (UK)
c t BANK OF ENGLAND
N.M. ROTHSCHILD ( G o l d P r i c e F i x i n g )
+ CANADIAN I M P E R I A L BANK
4Heroin
II Import to United States
U n i t e d F r u i t Company
1
& Rapid American Corporation d
THE FEDERAL RESERVE (US) (Owned by B r i t i s h C o m p a n i e s )
lionsofdollvsthatitknewhad
kmesrncdthrwnhdruPsales.
- "Lhe~trrrbellbalt
on comcthg Narkga no matter
What tbe 8aid Schumcr.
reauybnntoburndovnthevil-
lPge down in order b save it?"
M A T R I X I I I
GRITZ. Listen. I am he= to tell you that a lo1 of people tlre Special Warfare Center. Unco~rventional Warfare
talk very highly of Allen Dulles, but I know a IitUe bit Department, Fort Bngg, Nonlr Carolina. I recognized llre
about him. A lot of things may have been wrong with signature of a trianglization shooicr team even as I would
Truman. If you remember Truman fired MacArlhur and recognize my wife's own handwriting. evcn though she
wc all disagreed with that. There was some collusion didn't sign a note to me. And there is no qucslion, we
going on because MacArthur was going to bomb the had a t e r n known as RZ Rifle. The lean was designd
bridges over the Yaiu River, and some of the oil depots 10 kill CSlro. The t e r n was based out of Mexico City. It
that were owned by Rockefeller and some of the power was wdl known by Nixon. It was well known by Allcll
phnts and Lin Pio [the Chinese Defense Minister] later Dulles. I1 was well known by J. E d p r Hoovcr. That ui-
said hc would have never inlcrvencd in K o m if he had anglbtion Cam was brought to America ;md instad of
not had assurances that America would not bomb those killing CSlro. it killed John Fitzgerald Kennedy. The
critical installations, s o Truman certainly wasn't lily l a m was made up of Americans working as CIA contract
wl~ite-but in dcfennce to Truman, when the war was opentives and Cubans. It was designcd to dcal with
over. Truman saw that we were sandbagged. We Cslr0. but it ended up being a weapon of destruction for
authorized the newly created CIA 10 bring in .Nazis. the President of the United States.
G e n e d GGen was Hitler's principal intelligence oficer.
He was allowed to pick 300 of his very best. They
weren't prosccuted at Nuemberg for war crimes. InsteM GWJ'Z. The New World Order. lo work. has to destroy
Gcnenl Galen brought 300 of his best SS Nazis into Our consfilulional System, our c o n s t k u t i o ~government.
America We gave them citizenship becaw. we figured Effectively. George Bush is not a leader of the American
, they would know trow to fight Russia k t t c r than we people. He is. primuily. a drone for ihis New . World
.
-
, would. Order. Ttie New World - 0
Council of Foreign Relati- the
ACHES USA. Galen ended up in tlrc United States? sion. but mainly the New W a l d Order is of E u r o ~ c v l
manufacture througl~the Royal Institute of Intcniational
Of And so wonder we have Affairs. the Club of Rome the Cornmitt= of 300. the
Gcorgc Bush and a corporate fascism model today.
Wc've had these fvcisfs in here helping us ah a l o n i . - ~ u t ~
in d e f e ~ n c eto Truman, he got rid of the OSS. H e ' i w
~ l
l
~
~ H~,,,.,,
i It includes
~
~ ~ ~and i all ~of k i
~ :z=
~ are~ th;k elitists.
~ This .
~Kissinrer
.
vou*ve hmrd about
whcre we had tremendous links to the Mafia and drug- (he yem-Rothschiids ~~~k~
rululing during World WY 11. SO he wiped out the OSS. cludm the owners of theFekml v
' He d l o w ~ dthe N ~ t i a r a lSecurity AfX lo be m d in vw -fully planled a a n a r w i h h i h e e ' w ~ m ~ l i ~
1947. This created the CIA. but the CIA charter ex- with Ule t b t cancer would eventuGlv
trcmely limited It was only supposed to be an agency 10 b o d , , v th ,
a gather information for the president. World Order. Geome Bush is iust a worker. He hassaid
-AC-S:A~e1mbmid-thi~aven71ct,u~~- Whatever I ant. whatever I become. I owe to David R o d -
cfcller. Well, Jimmv Carter was no thin^ more than a
Rockcfellerite as a Democrat and- w-t .1s t F s ; - m
get in there?
GRITZ. I think bccause of the likes of Allen Dulles. George Bush.
When Eisclrhowcr camc into power. we had John F a t c r
Dulles, lhc Sccrctary of Statc. His brother, Allcn Duilcs ACRFS USA. This New World Order thing keeps p o p
had been a m c m h r of the OSS. Allen Dulles lovcd ping u p 4 1 thc way from Wendell Wikie's One World
sp& work, and so he was givcn the job by Eisenhower to the Bush euphemism. When Georee Bush was CIA
;Is head of the CIA. Allen Dull--with Tricky Dirk director. did he know his ancncv was d o ~ i ~Americg
re
N i x o w s e t up thc whole Bay of Pigs affair. Kennedy
w;an*t suppose to win tile election. It should have been GRITZ. TIICR'S no auestion a b u t it. He had to Imvq
Nixon. Of course, Kcllndy find Allen Dullc~S h d of klmwn. I don't c u e what he Q v s 1-
CIA. It is a little bit irotric that Allen Dulles went on Norei~aict from Panama to ~shineto-
to ~ > ed~ head ilrvcstigator for the W m n Commission ,Manuel Noreiaa. His dcwtv had Manuel..Noricea . Slav in
after he b d W n lked. Kennedy made the stcltcment. homc. G e o r ~ cBush went to the
I cm, ~~i~~~lo sp/i,,rer rhc CIA k r o a rhousand pieces. in Wasbinaton and mcl with Manuel Norei~a.Hc squired
well, of c o w . tlley wcrcn't going to allow 11131 to h a p him around Washington. D.C. This was 1976. exactly the
pen and so thcy got rid of Kennedy. titnc frame in which O~c&tionWatchtower was going
on. 111 my book. I include Colotlel Edward Cutolo's af-
ACRES ~S.A. Who got rid of Kennedy? Is the Stone fidavit. He was tlre Co1011cl who was in c h q e of Opera-
film. J.F.K.. halfway accurate, fully accunte? lion Watchtower. He was the second commander. A. J.
Baker was the first commander. Onention Watchtower
GRITZ. I think fie Storre film is probably 90% aCCufiltC. Was an oPCrati0n to run througll CIA aircraft cocaine out
When Kennedy was killed on Novcmber 22. 1963.1 was P ! ?
a capbin t w h i n g assassination and guerilla warfa= 31
0 6 3 1-U
M A T R I X 1 1 1
ACRFS US.A. Basicallv you're saving tliat Bush knew' Homestead Air Force Base in Florida. were met with a
that wc wcrc dooina Ameria. Cl~inesestyle, ruld that he follow-me truck. tJ e n to a remote p y t of the field where
allowcd this to go on under tiis tutclane as Director of tlie the pilot was paid $75.000 and the drugs were loaded
.-CIA? aboard trucks to be talcen off the Air Force Base. The
same tiling happened at h ~ u n Armv
a Air Field at Yumq
-
(;RI'I'Z. He ccnainlv h e w . Hc hnd Manuel Noricga on Arizona. Tllese aircraft were cominn back lmded with
the payroll. and if 111iswere a court of law. I think Bush drugs in the 80s. Drugs, of course, ended UP oayinn for
would be found guilty k y o n d reasonable doubt because Ihe puns.
when .Statisfield Tun~ertook over fmm Bush as hmd of
thc CIA-Stansfield Turner was brought .on by Jimmy ACRES U.S.A. What w ~ the s ourpose of thc Panama in-
Carter when Ford left office-he immediately fired vasion m d the seizure of Noriega? ,
Manual Noricga saying. I miff nor have a drug smrtggler
on the uayroll of the Cerrtral Intelligence Agency. 4 CRITZ.The r c d purpose has k e n veiled. ' n c eye-wash
soon a; ~*a;rn -came to Washinnton-with Bush 39 hjS cxplmaion was that he was 3 no good drug smuggler.
on the CIA ~3vroll. . ..... ... - --
and so we were going to go down and seize him.
-
CRITZ. China is a favored nation. Technically, favored
nation status is something you don't come by easily. Rus-
sia, for example, is not a favored nation. Red Chba. of
course. r;m over their own people and shol them up in
l i m m e n S q m . It is toldlv o-ut
Bush would continue the f 8 v m d nation . .
has about $15 million ~ersonallvinvolved ae;~&uJke
-
hotels and this type of thing. S o to promote his own
private interests in Shanehai* in Q&g and in Pllnuna.
George Bush has continued to d e d favorably with these
? h c o n d thing-we would stop the incomc tax bc-
cause income tax is unconslilulimal. All we have to d o is
go to the state houses of the 48 stares and determine
wbether o r not they properly ratified the Sixteentl~
Amendmenl. They did not. Them! is no statute of limira-
lion on bud. So you do away with the incomc tax and
counbiq. F a example, whcn we wcnt down and s e i z a go back u~ldctthe Constitulion as a way of vaying for
Manual Noriega. we put in, as vrcsidcnt. a man who was govcnlmcnt.
running one of the h n banks. He now is the president
of Panam. We also, at that time, ouened UD the bank2
again so that they were totally free to launder drug ACRES USA. O.K.,what about G A T , General Agree-
money, even h e r than they wcre under Manual Noriem. ment of Tariffs and Trades?
So we now have as running the country in Panama a
banker who was one of the leading laundry experts for CRITZ. Wcll. the General Agreement on Tariffs and
h g money coming through h a m a . Manual Noriega is Trade violates the Constitution-cs~cially the fast track
provision. 1 have a thing called the Bill of Gritz The Rill
not baking there, of course. but the banks m even open of Gritz has 10 pints. Basically. it says that everv law
wider now Uun they were before for money laundering. that docs not square with the Constitution will hc
--
and I think you arc going to see Manual Noriega even- reoealed. F c Constitution says that we have tariffs and
tually freed. He has about $10 billion dollars he has been dutics on imports and direction a ~ m n i o n m e n tas a wnv
able to scrap off of the drug opentions. He'll probably to pay for government. Here's how that translates: if
end up becoming Saddam Hussein's neighbor on the
French Riviem. The French will take almost anybody a d Chrvsla wants to go offshore to Mexico in order to make
I think eventually you're going to sec Saddam on the
bakeries becauscthey can d o it for 5 0 cents there,
French Rivien retired with his $10 billion. Hussein may whereas it costs $25 in Indianapolis, then Chrysler is
have a little more bemuse he also has 800 tons of K u w i t back-into the ~ n i i states:
d
-
going to have.to my a duty when thev brina that htterv
'lht m s o i Japan is the m o i
gold.
prqductive nation on the face of the e m h todav is be-
cause J a p has adopted the American system, and we
ACRES U.S.A. Which he never rcturnd lo Kuwait? llave abandoned it. Tlte reason America has slipped is be-
CRITZ. Iraq never turned it back in lo Kuwait. They cause we have opened our bordus to free trade. Onlv in
keep saying they ye going lo, but I've never seen where America can you buy up the land and the.-b You
t l ~ did.
y can't do f in Japan. You can't d o it in China. You can't
cvcn do it in Mexico. We've allowed ourselves to k
I~ocdwinkedinto lhinking that protecting thc nalion
ACRES ~ s . A . Lct's just tnkc one final shot. What cconomicall~is wrong. When I am prcsidenl, we are
would yob say if you IIXI a chancc to i~dcpcntkntly.in- going to n ~ d ite nonhabit forming for foreigners to buy
dividually or en mass. talk to tlx avenge citircn? up America. If you are a foreigner and you want to buy
CRXTZ.
i ell, tlle T i t thing I would say is that America
must say o 10 tlle NCW World Order. that American
must remain a sovcreig~lnation and the way wc are
up an Amcrican busincss o r Amcrican land. you arc
going to pay such a high duty it will ~ ? be t to your ad-
vanmge, so very quickly you are goin, io see these busi-
llcsses turned back ovcr to America. and you are going to
going right now we won't get a chance to vote bec;luse scc thcse forcigncrs getting out of the Unitcd States encl
thc bonower is the slave to the lender. 1 would say that out of ownership of our farmlands and our industrial
in order to keep our sovereignty. our birth right intact, we capacity. 0
have to get rid of the Fedenl Rescrvc. The Fcdenl
Rcscrvc is no more f&ml than Fred Smith's Fecknl Ex-
press. The bankers arc in busilless to make money. That's
*
THE CONSPIRA C Y = UPDA TED
Americans have been so programmed to change, and this has a special significance, ihat we
are no longer aware of it, nor are we aware of the unrelenting pressures on.us to change our
American way of life. It is no wonder that our divorce rate is so high, that suicide is on the increase,
that social deviations from the norm are more and more acceptable. As a nation, we appear to have
lost our way, or rather, the huge number of choices with which we are daily confronted, has caused
us to become confused and unable to make those choices.
We live in a throw-away society, programmed not to last, this is part of the Age of Aquarius
Conspiracy. Since Stanford Research Institute first mounted its offensive, back in the late 1950's,-
early 1960's,we have been subjected to subtle but heavy pressures by Stanford's team of specialists
in the field of future shocks. We have, since the 1950's been through a prolonged "softening up"
to condition us so that we will change our ways and our life-styles at every level.
This insidious pressure was increased in intensity in 1986,and will reach its highest intensity
levels by 1993. Things are changing so fast, that we have become "punch drunk," a scientificfact,
as we shall see.
The latest threat to our freedom is the personal computer card, which we will be discussing.
The computer card will accelerate the process of depriving us of our familiar environment, and
environment as we shall see means more than just the usual explanation of the word. We are going
through a period of trauma, on a scale that we cannot begin to imagine, let alone believe.
This is as it should be; this is how Tavistock Institute and Stanford planned it, this is how
the social scientists have mapped it out. Nothing changes by itself, all changes are preplanned, and
as a result of this onslaught,we have been changed, very gradually at first, and then with increasing
momentum from one nation into a polyglot of nations. We are no longer the one nation as we claim
to be.
Nor have we ever been, except in the beginning, when our forbearscame from Anglo-Saxon
stock and gave us a common nation with a common religion, namely Christianity.
Our forbears spoke a common language, held common ideals, and shared the common
religion of Christianity. There were no aliens in their midst, that only came much later, and was
deliberately planned to break us up into several fragmented nationalities, segments of differing
cultures and languages, which could under no circumstances be called one nation.
The United States is many nations striving to co-exist under a common system of
government. The 'culture shock which resulted when these aliens were allowed into the midst of
a common language-common religious and cultural background, caused great confusion, and
made "one nation", an unworkable concept.
It was part of an ongoing Freemason conspiracy to nullify the American Revolution. The
social upheavels which follow~d,can all be traced back to this starting point.
Science has proved that there is a limit to absorption of change, before people crack up
completely. The U.S. has reached the limit of its absorption capabilities. Individually this truth
applies, and we shall examine a few of the profound implications of this as we proceed. Nations
are made up of individuals, and individuals, no matter how robust and equipped with great stamina
they are, have a definite limit to their ability to absorb and withstand changes without fragmenting.
That was the basis of the StrategicBombingSurveywhich called for the saturation bombing
of German worker housing, during WWII. The study was conducted by the Prudential Insurance
Company, and its subsequent adoption and application proved very successful in bringing about
the defeat of Germany. Many of the scientists who were engaged in that project, are either still
working onsaturation bombing America, or they have passed their knowledge onto others who are
* Please read n o t e a t
0 6 37.0
bottom o f page 6371,
continuing with their devilish work.
The enemy decided to make a strong movelagainstthe people of the U.S.back in 1980. Who
is the enemy? Are we talking about the Russians? While the criminals in the Kremlin are the
enemies of free people everywhere, they are not the subject of this report.
We are talking about the corporations and people in what is known as the Eastern Liberal
Establishment, allied with their European cousins, backed by the biggest and most important
banks, financial institutions and insurance companies; communications networks, the printed
media, law, education and religion.
.Thisgroupwas responsible for providing the assistance which brought about the Bolshevik
Revolution and WWI, as well as WWII. This is the group that managed the controlled disintegra-
tion of the U.S.economy, created "local wars", and international tensions, mass brainwashing of
the nation through 'The Beatles", drug cults, mystic cults subjectingus to one cultural shock after
another until we have become nearly totally confused, dazed, numbed and largely an apathetic
people.
Why has this been done to us? Simply put, it was and is being done to break down our
resistance and weaken our determination to resist changes we know are against the best interests
of the nation and individuals who go to make it up.
America today can be compared with the soldier who falls asleep in the thick of battle. We
fall asleep when we give way to apathy, brought on when confronted by confusionthrough changes
that so alter our environment, that we are no longer able to make the right choices. We react as
the soldier often times does in the heat af battle; we give up because we don't know what else to
do.
There is a technical term for this condition and it is called "long range penetration strain".
The art of subjecting a very large group of people to continued long-range penetration strain, was
developed by scientists working out of the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations, the Stanford
Research.Institute,the Rand Corporation, and at least 150similar but smaller institutions.
Dr. Kurt Lewin, the scientist who developed this fiendish art, and I use that word as a
quotation, has caused the average patriotic American to fret over various conspiracy theories, and
his failure to isolate and understand the underlying causes of changes and decaying values, which
he sees all around him, and who fears the social, moral and political changes he deems undesirable
and does not want.
Now we won't find Dr. Lewin in any of the regular history books which are in fact nothing
but a view of war from the side of the victor. In fact I take great pride, and justly so, as the first to
bring the name of Dr. LRwin to your attention.
It was Dr. Lewin who organized the Harvard Psychological Clinic, and the Institute for
Social Research. These names do not give any indication as to what their purpose is. They remind
me of the infamous bill to reform coinage and mint laws, which was passed in 1873.It was certainly
a harmless-sounding bill. but the title was misleading; indeed deliberately so.
Senator John Sherman betrayed the nation into the hands of the international bankers.
Sherman sponsored this "harmless" bill without reading it, (and I wonder if President Reagan
signed the INF Treaty without reading it), one of the most ugly frauds ever perpetrated on the
American people.
Aswe know, its true purposewas to demonetize silver, and give the thievingbanks unlimited
powers over this nation; powers to which the bankers were not entitled in terms clearly and
unmistakably laid out in our Constitution.
Kurt Lewingave the institutionsI havejust mentioned,unlimited powers over the American
people, to which they had no right, and these institutions have used their power to destroy the will
-ofthis nation to resist the intentions those who are steering us away from the fruits of the American
Revolution.
Lewin's colleagues in his satanic plot to diminish our national will to resist changes not in
our interets, were John Rawlings Reese, Richard Crossman, Eric Trist, H.V. Dicks, Wallace
Harmon, Charles Anderson, Gardner Lindzey, Richard Price, and W.R. Bion.
This is not a complete list of the plotters. There were and are hundreds of others involved
in forcing radical uncontrolled changes upon us, but these were the ringleaders. Together they
founded Stanford, Rand, MIT, and the National Training Laboratories, Essalen Institute, and
scores of similar institutions.
What was taught at these institutionsspread out across this great land like a cloud of poison
gas, the foul miasma penetrating government at all levels, the church, schools, the news media,
opinion makers, Congress, the Supreme Court, until every layer of our lives, national and private
became saturated with deadly toxic poison to which we have now almost totally succumbed.
In 1980, I exposed the Aquarian-New Age conspiracy,which was the result of four years of
intensive investigation and research, with which I am still continuing. The success of the Age of
Aquarius-New Age conspiracy, can be seen in the visible signs of breakdown in our environment,
the all-inclusive state in which we live.
The use of "rock music" to spread the message-of drug-cults, the overwhelming rise in
mindless violence, especially among teenagers and so-called "serial killers", and the overlapping
and unmistakable signs of lethargy which is called "long range penetration7' are part of our
environment and as dangerous, if not more so than pollutants in the air we breathe.
We as a nation, and individuals, were not prepared for the changes that were forced upon
us by the Aquarian Conspiracy, therefore our response to this danger has been a falling-off of our
ability to withstand and resist it. As a nation we have become fatigued, we are in psychological
distress, of which widespread apathy is the outward manifestation
The Tavistock Institute describes our national condition after two decades of saturation
bombing shocks, social turbulance caused by created crises, and crisis management as follows:
'There are three distinct phases in the response and reaction to social crises displayed by large
population groups. First, there is superficiality, the population under attack, will defend itself
by adopting slogans, this does not identify the source of the crisis, and therefore does nothing to
address it, hence the crisis willpersist. The second is fragmentation. This occurs as the crisis
continues, and social order breaks down."
And who can deny that with the huge increase in the use of drugs, with crack making
thousands of new instant addictseach day, ashockingrisein the number of murdered infants, which
now far exceedsour casualtiesin two World Wars, the acceptance of homosexuality and lesbianism,
with laws to protect the "right" to ply their destructive way of life; murder, rape, a falling off in
education, a numbing increase in divorce, that our society is breaking down. Tavistock says:
"Smaller groups will break away to defend themselves; the so-called "maladaption" because here
again, the source of the crisis is not identified, and so the response is maladaption."
"Then, there is the third phase, where the population group goes into 'self realization', and
turns away from the induced crisis, and there follows a maladaptive response, accompanied with
active synoptic idealism and disassociation".
According to Stanford, and I know this to be the truth, this type of induced trauma has been
going on in America for 30 years, yet how many of us are aware of the insidious brainwashing to
which we have been forcibly exposed.
An example of this can be found in the mysterious gang wars which broke out on the West
Side of New York in the 1950's. Where this came from was not known until very recently, when
researchers (includingmyself),uncovered the connection between the seemingly chance encoun-
ters and the hidden forces that directed them.
Gang wars were carefully planned events deliberately created to shock society and cause
ripples of disturbances. By 1958 there were in excess of200 of these gangs, but then a very strange
thing happened. In 1966 they had all-but vanished from the streets of Los Angeles, New York,
Philadelphia, Washington, Newark and Chicago.
Throughout the period of gang warfare, the public reacted exactly according to profile;
society as a whole could not comprehend gang warfare of this nature, and the public responded in
a maladaptive manner. But had there been some who were wise enough to realize that what they
were witnessing was a social engineering brainwashing experiment, the whole filthy edificewould
have collapsed.
Even if such a discovery had been made, there would have been no media coverage; the
discovery would certainly have.been smothered. An example of a large group being unwittingly
subjected to brainwashing is that of the Beatles, who brought Tavistock's Theo Adomo's 12-atonal
system of music to the US.
Without the cooperation of the electronicmedia, and in particular that of the scurrilousEd
Sullivan, who knew very well what the plot was, nobody would have given this motley crew and
"their" music the time of day.
Now that we know it, it is too late to counteract its insidious influence, the damage has been
done. Our values have been changed forever by the rag-tag band from fiverpool, or rather from
the Tavistock Institute. And they didn't write the music, if one dare call it that; Theo Adorno did
it for them
The prime function of the Beatles was to be discovered by "teenagers", and incidently the
word 'teenagers' was never used until after the close of WWII. It was a trigger-word created by the
Tavistock Institute to create a distinctive segment of the population and persuade them to believe
that the Beatles really was their "favorite" group.
The word teenager was constructed by Tavistock, and released for mass youth control
purposes. The Beatles did a perfect job, "witha little help from their friends", i.e. illegal substances
we call drugs.
T h e ~ e a t l e were
s a highly visible "new types', and please take note of that expression,
because it is part of the jargon used by these social tinkerers, and as such, the Beatles made new
styles and new tastes for teenagers which upset the older generation. It is important to note the
diliberate fragmentation -inducing language.
The role of the media was, and remains, very important in the brainwashing of society. The
street gangwars ended, because the press and TV media ceased to pay further attention to a
medium of change that was "burned out". They had served their purpose, which was to create
turbulence in society.
And thus that attention was focused on the so-called "beat generation", yet another phrase
coined by Tavistock in its effort to bring about social changes in America. The hippies and beatniks,
the drop-outs in jeans, sandals, filthy clothes and long hair became the role models of youth, just
as the "cleaner" Beatles had been before that.
This created style took in millions of young people, and even the older generation began
to believe that American youth was uncrrgoing a revolution, failing all the while to realize that it
was not a spontaneous movement but an artificially created one.
These were the disciples of lysergic acid, LSD,so conveniently provided for them by the
highly respected Swiss pharmaceutical Sandoz company, and financed by the great Warburg
banking dynasty, and brought to the U.S. by Aldous Hwley. The new "wonder drug" was promptly
distributed on campuses in free sample package lots. There is a question that cries out to be
answered: "What was the FBI doing at that time? Was it fast asleep, or deliberately looking the
other way?"
With the coming of "rock", which I will henceforth use as shorthand to describe Adorno's
devilish bedlam of sounds, a tremendous increase in the use of marijuana occured. How did it
occur? Well, it just didn't "occur", it was all carefully planned well in advance, and the jackals of
the media saw to it that the "new culture", (another of Tavistock's creations), received the widest
possible publicity, which cost the puppet-masters, not a thin dime.
Now because of the anger I feel about people, and I think particularly about one individual,
I make no apology for language which perhaps is not of the standard I am accustomed to, but one
of the most disgusting slobs ever to walk the cities of America, was an alien, Alan Ginsberg.
We can be sure that Ginsberg's antecedents were not Anglo Saxons, nor did any of them
come over with the Pilgrim Fathers; rather, they came over on the crests of the Roosevelt flood-
tides of Eastern Europe waves of immigrants, and their coming is one of the worst disasters ever
to befall America, and contributed largely to preventing America from becoming a unified nation.
This Ginsburg pushed LSD through advertising, which cost him nothing, though it would
have fetched billions of dollars in advertising revenues for TV and the newspapers under normal
circumstances.
This free advertising reached a crescendo in the 1960'~~ thanks to the ever-willing
cooperation of thejackals of the media, The effect of Ginsburg's massive advertisingcampaign on
the American public was devastating; suddenly we were confronted with one cultural shock after
another, in rapid succession. Here it is necessary to point out that through the introductionof alien
races into our society, the task was a great deal less arduous than it would otherwise have been.
We became "over-exposed and over-stimulated", and again we must remind ourselves that
this jargon is taken from Tavistock and Stanford manuals. We were "overstimulated" and
overwhelmed by this new development, and when that happened, our minds began to lapse into
apathy; it was just too much for us to cope with, i.e., long range penetration had taken hold.
Ginsburg claimed to be a poet, but no greater garbage has been written by anyone aspiring
to be a poet. Ginsburg's real function was to push the new subculture and force its acceptance upon
the U.S.
To assist him in this endeavor, Ginsburg coopted the services of Norman Mailer, and it was
Mailer who got Ginsburg on national television, under the fake pretext of having a serious
discussion with him, which of course was no more than a horrible charade.
We ought to take note of the method in which these demonsget free advertsing on TV.The
electronic media moguls always have big hearts when it comes to giving free time to dirty products
-
and even filthier ideas. Their promotion of Hollywood garbage speaks volumes.
Ginsburggave anationallytelevised performance in which he recommended the use of LSD
and marijuana. Not to be outdone by the electronics media, every one of Ginsburg's dope friends
in the newspaper business wrote special reports and articles about "this colorful character".
Ginsburg's friend, Kenny Love, published a five-page report. When newspapers want to
advertise something not yet acceptable to the general public, they write "articles" in the papers or
have "discussions" with a learned panel on TV.
Love's article appeared in the New YorkTimes, and let me stress that had Ginsburg taken
out the same amount of space in a paid ad, it would have cost him at least S50,000, but he didn't
have to worry, thanks to his friend Love, Ginsburg got it all for free.
Worse yet, (or better yet, depending upon one's viewpoint), the article was picked up by
United Press (UP) and telexed to HUNDREDS of newspapers and magazines around the country,
under the guise of a "news" story. Harpers Bazaar and Time magazine, duly made Mr. Ginsburg
"respectable". If a campaign of this magnitude were presented to Mr. Ginsburg by an advertsing
agency, it would have come with a price tag of close to $1 million dollars! No wonder I call the news
media a pack of jackals.
I suggest that you try something I once tried, with an expose on the Federal Reserve Board
swindle. I took my story to major newspapers and magazines, TV and radio stations. Some made
promisesthat sounded good, but not asingle word ofthat article ever appeared in the establishment
print and electronic media. I suggest that you take this account of how LSD was promoted in
America to the news media, and offer it to them at no charge, and see if you have any better luck
with it than I did with mine.
The point is that without massive media hype, and with almost round-the-clock coverage,
the hippy-beatnik, rock drug cult would never have got off the ground; it would have remained a
small localized affair. The Beatles with their silly twanging guitars, and ridiculous expressions,
would never have amounted to a hill of beans. Societywould not have been subjected to one series
of jolts after another.
The men buried inside the think-tanks, whose names and faces are still not known to but
a few of us, made sure that the press provided the necessary coverage. They also made sure that
their plot to turn our young people into somethingwhich has no place in a Christian republic, was
not uncovered.
Thus was our society "driven mad", through psychological shocks and stressful events, the
actual language used in Tavistock training manuals. By 1966, the mother of this evil, the Tavistock
Institute was ready to launch another of its mishapen creatures on an unsuspecting world.
The Science Policy Research Unit, (SPRU), was opened in Sussex University. Privately
billed as a "future shock research" center, a title given to so-called future oriented psychology
designed to manipulate whole population groups and induce "future shocks", it was the first of
several such intsitutions.
"Future shocks" is described as events or series of events that come so fast that the human
brain cannot absorb the information. As I said earlier, science has shown that there are clear limits
to the amount and nature of change which the human mind can absorb and deal with.
After that, apathy sets in as the targeted group discovers that it does not want to make
choices. Apathy is preceded by senseless violence, of which the New York and Los Angeles street
gangs were part, hostility, murder appear. Apathy about these conditions then sets in, followed by
withdrawal. Long range penetration strain now takes over.
Such a group is easily controlled, and will docilely take orders without rebelling, which is
of course, the object of the exercise. "Future shocks", said SPRU "is defined as physical and
psychological distress arising from the excess load on the decision-making mechanism of human-
ity". That again is the jargon which I have lifted directly from Tavistock manuals, which it doesn't
know I have in my possession. It will probably shock them that their inner sanctum has been
penetrated!
Just as an overloaded electrical circuit will activate a trip-switch, so humans "trip out",
which is a syndrome that medical science is only now beginning to understand, although the
brainwashers of Tavistock knew it as far back as the 1920's.
In 1962 the SPRU was run by Leland Bradford, Kenneth Dam, Ronald Lippert, and of
course, a host of other scientists. Until I first revealed them, these name were NOT known among
rightwing circles in America. Even today, they are known only to a relatively small group of
researchers.
SPRU "future shocks" research unit run by the three scientistsjust mentioned, became a
training ground for scores of agents who later became skilled in manipulative techniques which
were used to plant its policy papers in goverriment departments at all levels.
That is why the U.S.will be run in the near future by committees and councils, who have
been brainwashed into taking policy-planning decisons which they believe to be their own;
decisions that will change the form of government and the quality of life in the U.S.tosuch a degree,
we shall no longer be the country and the people we are now. We will have become a changed
society through "crises adaption". Our environment will have been changed.
There is much talk about the environment,and environment to most people does not appear
in their thinking as changes in lifestyles; changes they appear to have little if any ability to control.
Environment of change produces deep anxiety and confusion, and we begin to look to group
decison-making, rather than making use of our own resources. This strategy is a deliberate one,
aimed at the most vulnerable of all areas, our self-image, and leads inevitably to our being led like
lambs to the slaughter.
When we are manipulated by unscrupulous men without being aware of it, the stage is
already set for a relatively easy transition from the present Constitution and our form of
government, to a transitional period of change, leading to the entry into a One World Government,
which will take a big step forward during the tenure of George Bush in the White House.
While there are those who say, "it cannot happen in America," and how often haven't we
heard that expression, the fact is IT HAS ALREADY HAPPENED.Our will to resist events not
to our liking has been steadily undermined since 1950. We will resist, some of us say. Well, some
of us may be able to do that, but we will be in the minority.
Computerization has already robbed us of the ability to prevent being brainwashed and
controlled. Which brings me to another environment, PEOPLE CONTROL, also known as
personal informationcontrol,without whichgovernmentscannot play their numbers game. We the
people have absolutely no means of knowingjust what government knows or does not know about
us. Their computer files are not subject to scrutiny by we the people. Do we really believe that
personal information is sacrosant?
Remember, in every society, there are rich and powerful families who control law
enforcement agencies, and this includes the USA, and I can tell you that in my more than twenty
years of research, I have definitely proved the existence of such families.
Do not for one minute think that if one of these families wanted to find out about us, they
could not do so. There is no guarantee that a man like Kissinger, doesn't have his own private
dossier on hundreds of individuals on his enemy list.
Some may think this far fetched. The secret Freemasonic P2and Comite Monte Carlo had
such enemy lists, running into many thousands of names. Kissinger was, and might well still be, a
member of Comite Monte Carlo.
In any event, we would never know (until it is too late), what information government (and
so many private agencies), have onus. Mass surveillance is here. It is not somethingthat may come
in the future.
The Bilderbergerswho have gained in strength during the last twoyears, are known to have
their own "pattern recognition technique". This is the jargon used by Tavistock Institute. The
Bilderberger's security has computers capable of conducting mass-surveillance of any given
population group, which includes the most personal details.
The Bilderbergers tap into data-gathering terminals used by commercial credit informa-
tion companies.They have a plan callingfor international identity cards linked to fingerprints-This
chilling information was provided by my top intelligence contact in this field. We should not have
any doubts about its veracity.
Little wonder that we are fast becoming a cashless society. A bill which will soon become
law, is designed to regulate the amount of cash that each person will be permitted to have at any
given time.
Pilot automated electronicpayments are already being tested in Western Europe. Our right
to privacy is about to be eliminated. Machine-readable documents, bearing internationally
recognizable numbers are already here, which will soon embody our drivers licence number, which
numbers can identify us anywhere.
In the world of George Orwell, we learned how absolute dictatorship operates in the daily
lives of people, and by the year 2000, there is little doubt that we shall be in the dictatorial grip of
a One World Government.
How can we be controlled? It will be something of the followingorder: All transactionswe
do will have to be authorized by the central data bank, and this will not happen, unless an
authorizing number is displayed at the point where the transaction is taking place.
Let us suppose that we want to purchase food at asupermarket. Cash will not be acceptable,
so we will show some type of "credit card" (shorthand for whatever the card will be called).
However, to prevent illegal duplication, our card will have a secret encoded number which we
cannot see and won't be aware of.
It might well be the number 666,so popular with Bible students who prophecy the future.
Whatever the number, it will be tied inwith fingerprintand voiceprint. If the secret number on your
card does not check out, it will come up and your purchase will not be accepted. If you have been
"marked" by the government, that too will appear and your transaction will be cancelled.
It will of course not be possible to tamper with such cards, especiallywith the encoded voice
and fingerprint data, which means that if we are "outlaws" in the very real sense of the word, we
will have great difficulty in obtaining food, as our card or absence of a card will preclude us from
the system.
We have got to avoid the numbersgame, our future depends onus being able to short-circuit
the "system", and this is the kind of subjectour Christianuniversitiesshouldbe teaching. We should
not think this speculation or imagination. Already there exists a far reaching system of tracing
individuals, through the records of telephonecompanies for example. Telephone calls in the future
will automatically deliver the address of ALL numbers called, even if not listed in the directory.
It has become so sophisticatedthat there exists electronic means of identifying and linking
individuals with records held by credit card companies, insurance companies and employers and
banks.This system can be fine-tuned and up-graded, which will leave us as naked as new-born babes
in the hands of the One World Government
If you are tempted to think that GLOBAL agencies don't exist, then go down town in
Washington, DC, and find the office of the so-called "police force of the world", Interpol. Interpol
is a One World Government Agency operating illegally in the heart of our nation.
Computers that can perform complex operations in seconds, and surveillance techniques
have improved dramatically in the last decade, make it fairly simple to trace anyone back to the
source from where the telephone call was made. Computerized payments will be compulsory in
the near future, and will provide ready-made data on individuals, by linking billing information for
utilities, TV, automobile payments etc. By this means, an almost complete picture of the individual
can be arrived at.
In the near future we are destined to become a cashless society, with profoundly far-
reaching impact on our rights as individuals, economicfreedom and our whole way of life. Our right
to privacy will disappear, even though it may still be in the Constitution. Great pains will be taken
to conceal the real intent of future legislation which will deprive us of our rights.
We will be told that new laws are necessary to govern electronic payments, having-been
subjected to a barrage of propaganda on how convenient such payments are over cash transactions.
The fact that cash cannot be monitored or audited and enables one to live outside the numbers
game, will of course be downplayed, while all of it's inconveniences as opposed to the new system
will blare forth from every TV screen in the land.
Cashlimits the abuseof automation and its capture ofpersonal data, which clearlythreatens
the individual. The flow of cash is difficult to follow when one knows how to follow certain basic
elementary rules, which government clearly hates. It was one of the reasons why China cracked
down on its "dissidents", because free market and floating labor paid in cash, made people control
very much more difficult than before.
The globalists have already taken control of data gathering companies including market
survey companies which give information vital to control systems. Companies of this type have
proliferated in the past decade, and their size, and influence, ought to be of the utmost concern to
those who believe in individual rights and freedom
By channeling such data to a central computer (ordered by law as a means of tracing "drug
dealers" for example), a serious threat to our liberty is immediately apparent, and will bring with
it a change in the way we live. We shall be hearing a great deal about this in terms of "long range
penetration" and "future shocks environment", to use-Tavistockterminology.
The Tavistock Institute, the mother of all brainwashing institutes, is funded by Rockefeller
and a number of giant global companies such as Unilever. The Survey Research Center, was
established by Tavistock and became the top-dog in social profiling in the US. This institution
conducts psychological studies on an enormous scale, which touch on every aspect of our lives. It
specializes in what it calls "reshape response", and this is taken directly from their manuals which
I am fortunate enough to possess.
In plain language, "reshape response" means that if a population group reacts unfavorable
to a particular policy initiative, then that group's thinking is "reshaped", so that the response then
becomes the required one. The Survey Research Center, worksvery closelywithpollingcompanies
such as Gallop and Harris, and can obtain gauging of initiatives, and in this manner can "reshape"
responses to conform to what is required.
Public opinion is no longer public opinion. What the majority of us believe is "our"
viewpoint, is largely a viewpoint created for us. The campaign of Dukakis is a good example,
because the turning point of his campaign was clearly discernable, only it was not a natural turning
point, but a "reshaped response". The CFR had decided at that point to put its full weight behind
George Bush.
Since 1965, Eric Trist has been directly responsible to Tavistock and hence to Rockefeller,
for setting up a network of so called "organization development centers"; problem solving think
tanks in other words.
It is a sophisticated brain-washing network which extends from factory floor to corporate
office,from poli tical clubs, to countryclubs, schoolsto universities; "future shocks" is administered
to create controlled stressfull situations. The idea is to break individualism, and replace it with
"team spirit", the words used in Tavistock manuals.
The gist of it is that our rugged individualism, for which Americans are famous, is being
broken down and substituted with "team spirit" of the kind that is displayed by a flock of sheep.
This course ingroup dynamics teaches individuals to forget their individual personality and
work for "the good of the whole". In Tavistock's own words; "this presents participants with
opportunities for increasing their understanding of group process, with particular emphasis on
covert dynamics which occur in groups with regard to issues of authority, leadership and
0 6 9 -7-d
followership.The focus of the staff is in exercising authority based on power". Chilling words for
those of us who value liberty.
The sinister implication is obvious; once we like sheep have been programmed to act like
mindless beings, we will follow the leaders and blindly accept authority. If enough of us accept the
new automated cashless society, and live with a card instead of cash, the globalists will have taken
a giant step toward breaking down the U.S. Constitution and the institutions upon which this
republic's foundations rest.
Resistance will decrease as soon as we have become accustomed to the system, and it will
be a relatively easy matter to identify those of us who refuse to become a part of it. But being
brainwashed to accept authority over personal freedom, the momentum toward a collision
between the need for individual freedom based on a secured right to privacy and a central
automated authority, is gaining speed.
Fundamental differences can never be reconciled, anymore than we can be recokled to
living with the Federal Reserve Board swindle.
Computerized pattern recognition techniques, already in existence, have opened the doors
wide to secret mass suweillance,which at present is with us in covert form, but which by the mid
19903,it is highly possible that each individual in this nation will be obliged to carry a card similar
to the Soviet "internal passport".
This card will be used for every conceivable transaction. No transaction will be possible
without it. Is this card the "mark of the beast?" Perhaps it will not be called that, but whatever it
is called, it will be an unprecedented threat to freedom and justice, liberty for all.
The very latest intelligence information is that President Bush will make a major effort to
require an identification card bearing machine-readable internationally identifiable numbers not
visible to the naked eye for every citizen Everything will be embodied in that card.
South Africa of ail countries has successfullyshown the way. Each citizen is required to
obtain and present on demand his or her "book of life", which contains every detail from the day
of birth, even his driver licence number. Such a card instantly identifies one. By adding fingerprints
and a voice print (remember the musical Christmas cards?), every person can be identified,
especially if it is linked to the 666 computer inBmssels, Belgium. I expect to see this linked to every
"authority" computer bank in the world, without regard to national boundaries or nationality.
There is already strong pressure on the US Congress to upgrade driver licences. As
Brzezinski put it, and I previously quoted this as far back as 1982: "The instantaneous electronic
intermeshing of mankind will make for intense confrontation, strained social peace".
Unfortunately the average individual knows little and cares even less about technology as
it relates to politics and people control. It seems to me that the attitude toward such a card will be
"so what", as long as it is possible to buy what is needed, watch football and hold down a good job,
"so what". The convenience of the card, with which he is familiar, thanks to broadsides of
propaganda, will override any anxiety we may have over this "people control" device.
Those who have an understanding of the vast ramifications this card will bring, will be
quickly isolated and probably rounded up, henceforth "outlaws" in the very real meaning of the
word.
'Trend makers" have been conditioning us, since the advent of the Beatles followed by
widespread usage of marijuana, cocaine and deviant sexual behavior, female aggressiveness, Dr.
Spock and so on. Trend makers are usually portrayed as young, attractive and successful.They are
what I call "travel poster types" widely used to promote air travel or vacation spots.
In the scores of years1 have travelled around theworld by air, I have never yet come across
any real life "travel poster types" among my fellow passengers. Trend makers is an illusion
compatible with those travel poster types. ,
Older people are never used in "trend maker*'advertising. Older people react strongly to
change and an acceleration of change. There is a connection here between what Mr. Joseph
Califano proposes for America's aged, and the wholesale marketing of euthenasia.
Since older people are strongly resistant to change, the older people must be got rid of. This
conclusion is based on a top-secret report, a copy of which was loaned to me for a few hours. Let
me assure you that what I have just stated about getting rid of the eldery is fact, and not fiction.
Human behavior follows attraction or repulsion toward the pace of life forced on
individuals by society or some other group. This is where Tavistock's group authority comes into
play. Most of us will be swept along by "group thinking". It happened recently in the 1988 election.
We went along with the group and voted for a man many of us knew to be unsuitable to fill the
vacancyin the White House.
Trend makers have a specific target for future shocks change, and that target is the family.
Transience has already weakened the most important unit in Christian society.
We develop a relationship with our family, which today is being derided. Our throw away
society mentality where nothing is built to last; "dont fix it, throw it away and buy a new one" has
reached into our family life. The throw away mentality of economicimpermenanceis reaching into
marraiges. It was designed to do so -by the men at Tavistock, Eric Trist, Kurt Lewin and his
associates.
In 1980 I revealed what the Age of Aquarius-New Age was all about. In an audio-cassette,
I told of what Brzezinski had in mind for us for our future, and Lthink it is well worth quoting again,
because of its great significance and uncanny accuracy of his prophecy: "Finally, looking ahead to
the end of this century, the possibility of biochemical mind control and genetic tinkeringwith man,
including eventually, the creation of beings that will function like men, and reason like them as well,
could give rise to the most difficult questions".
In 1865 a journalist wrote as follows: "Well-informed people know that it is impossible to
transmit human words over wires for long distances and that were it possible to do so, the thing
would be of no practical value." Just look at how far we have come sincethen. What wasunthinkable
in 1865is commonplacetoday. What isunthinkable in 1989mightwell be commonplaceby theyear
2000 according to Brzezinski, and I have no quarrel with that.
The globalists are creating a new society, not merely changing it. The bio-factory turning
out human embryos is here. In 1962 Dr.'s Krick and Watson received the Nobel Prize for DNA
research, and from then on, molecular biology research has exploded.
New genetic information permits us to "tinker" (Brzezinski's word), with human hereditry,
and manipulate genes to create a new man. This is political dynamite. ScientistJoshua Lederberg
says "cloning is already being done with animals", and he suspects with people too. "It won't suprise
me if it comes any day now" he added. "But cloning man will come within the next 15 years".
Scientistsareat this moment discoveringhowvarious body organswork, and experiments to modify
body organs is already at an advanced stage. The USSR and Stanford Research are busily engaged
in experiments to modify human organs, especially the brain and its sensory qualities, and even
growing brains. This will be brought under direct development control. The Hinckley, "Son of
Sam", Jim Jones experiments were the beginnings of this period of experimentation.
I have seen a copy of the report on just how far these experiments have progressed, and it
has chilling overtones. The experiments are going on right now. In order to distract our attention
away from this research, we have a whole lot of misguided people agitating against lab experiments
with animals, and pouring red paint over fur coats, while they look the other way as aborted babies
in theirmillionssilently scream inagonizingpain ending indeath.TruIy, we have been conditioned.
There is a biological revolution going on, and it is rapidly gathering momentum. Dr. E.
Hafez of Washington State University says that b&ed on his own research, a new form of slavery
(my words), is going to be common-place within the next 15 years.
Biological factories will sell frozen embryos. The potential "mother" will purchase the
embryosand have it implanted in herwomb, having received an absolute guarantee that the "baby"
when it comeswill be strictly according to her description;color of eyes, hair and the sex of the child
and its I.Q.
Dr. Daniel Petruchi, anoted scientist in this field, says it will soon be possible to "raise" such
children outside the womb. The impact of such "births" can only be vaguely comprehended at this
time.
Family life as we know it, will disappear, our traditions of motherhood, parenthood, child-
-
rearing, education, relatives no more grandpa and grandma, sexuality are going to be subjected
to the severest of strains. The equivalent of the atom bomb is soon to be dropped on the family unit
in society.
The moral and ethical choices we will have to make in the category of future shocks, and
worse than that, (morals won't come into it) will be in the political arena!
We are at the point where selective breeding is totally possible. Races and super-races, the
thing we roundly condemned Hitler for, will in future be acceptable. Given the absolute reality to
tailor race to preplanned specifications, will there be superior or inferior classes?
Are we on the threshold of a class of people especially bred to serve a "super-race"? If this-
comes about, the negro and hybrid races face extinction. The pretended concern for the welfare
of the colored races will be revealed in all of its ugliness. They will probably find that as far as the
majority is concerned, the classification will read "slave type".
Above the slave class will be a class of a higher order to run things, and docilely serve the
super-elite; the Rockefellers and Gorbachevs of this world, i.e. the top echelon membership of the
One World Government and their bureaucracy.
The problem of bringing this all out in the open now, is not one of fearing failure from
scientific and or technical difficulties; it is one political choice. Ethics do not come into the
equation. Family life as we know it will become extinct. According to Dr. Hutchins of the
Rockefeller Institute, many of us are going to feel an instinctive revulsion over the meddling with
finely balanced far-reaching body systems that make an individual an individual and what he
becomes.
Dr. Hutchins said; 'Yes, it will be done or attempted. The pathway will be built from a
combination of altruism and private profit".. Compare this with the predictions of Bxzezinski:
"Finally looking ahead to the end of this century, the possibility of bio-chemical mind control and
genetic tinkering with man, including eventually the creation of beings that will function like men
and reason like them as well, could give rise to the most difficult questions".
With Brzezinski in the Bush cabinet, no doubt he will be engaging his attention to finding
answers to those "difficult questions". He also talked about super intellectuals, super elite and
world super culture.
If this challenge to our Christian way of life and especially the family unit is to be met, then
there needs to be a dramatic and immediate response to those who seek to destroy us as individuals.
Changes must first be moderated, brought under control and then regulated. Rampant unre-
strained change must be brought to a halt. When that condition prevails, we can turn our attention
to eliminating the ideology of future shocks, a term invented to cover unrestrained changes
unleashed inrapid-fire tooverwhelmus,so that like the soldierwho fellasleep in the midst of battle,
because he did not knowwhat to do amid the hailstorm of machine gun bullets,we too will succumb
to apathy.
Instead of teaching relatively useless subjects in our schools and universities, our children
and young people ought to have instruction which will prepare them to cope with future shocks;
to be good soldiers, spiritually strong enough to withstand the shock of wild changes. If we do not
begin now to resist this evil with all of our might, we are going to be relatively easy targets for future
shock induction into a One World Government.
From
Supplementary Sociologica7 "Beho 7d a Pale Horse"
Reading Mater i a 7 ------------ by W i l l i a m Cooper:
t d f
(a) unnlenrirrgeinotional rontations and attacks (mental and emotional rape)
-
way o constant bamge o s y violence, and wars in the media especially the
V.an the newspapers.
- --
(b) .giving them what they desire in acess "jwtkfood for fl~ougl~t"and
depnmg thun of what they molfy need
-
3. nwridng histo and law and su bjecting the blic to the daiortt creation, rlrus
be@tgeble to sh$ their persona~ee& to h~ghlyjabncared ou&i&
pnonna.
DIVERSION SUMMARY
hlcdia: Keep the adult ptiblic attention divcrtcd away.from the real social is-
sues, and captivated by matters of no real Importance.
Scllools: Keep the young public ignorant of real mathematics, real economics,
rcd law, and real history. .
Entertainment: Kecp the public cntcrtainrncnt below a sixth grade Ievcl.
\Vork: Krc the public busy, busy, busy, with no time to think; back on the farm
i'
wth the ot cr animals.
HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION
r
Silent wc,rpon t$ciinolo has cvobcd lrom 0 .rations Rcscarch (O.R.),.a
RY
strategic and~actrcalmc! odob dcvclopd un er thc nlilitary mana cnicnt rn
England durrng World.rVar It. T h e or1 md pur .sc of ~ ~ e r a t i uhcrearchm
Pb P"
was to stud the stratcgrc and.tactlca1 pro lems o a e and land dcfense wth thc
qbjcctjeaivc defiectlvc use of lrrnrtcd military resourus against forcigm cnemru
(1.c.. Ioyucs).
It was soon recognizcd by those in positions of power that the wnie mcthods
might be uscful for totally controllinga soaety. But better tools wcre necessary.
Social cn neer ring (the anal sis and automation of a soci~ty)rcquircs the cor-
f rY
rchtign o great amounts o constantly changng economlc rnformat~on(data
,h s )ccd comp"tcrlzcd data.proccssmg sptern upas ncccssarywvh!ch cqu d I'
hak
c::::: of the socrrty and Prcdrct ushen m c t y wc~uldarrtvc for caprtulatron.
Rcl~vconlputrrs \bPcrctoo blow but the c.lcctmnic ccr111Iutcr, invcnrcd in 1%
hy 1.Prcspcr Eckcrt and John \k. Mauchly filled the bill.
Thc nFxt brcnkthrough was il~q?c\pclopmentof the sinlplex mcthod of program-
mmg in 1947 by the mathcnratrcran Gcorge B. Dantug.
Then in 1948, !hc transistor, inycntcd by J. Bardcen, W.H. Brattain and W.
Shockley, promrsed great cxpansron of the computer field by reduclng space and
poulcr requlrcnlcnts.
With these thrcc inwntjons under. thcir direction, those in positions of power
srronglv suspected that rt was possrblc for them to control thc whole world \nth
thc push of a button.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
ACTION / OFFENSE
Most eople waq to be able to subdue and/or kill other human.hcing which dis-
turb tRer dally h e s but they do not want to have to cope y t h the moral and
t on their part mi ht rase. Therefore,they
reli$ous issues which such an o ~ ract
asslgn the dqty work to others (rncludin their own d ~ d r e n so
) as to keep the
blood off then o m hands. The rave dour the humane treatment of anunalr
and then sit down to a delicious iamburger from a whitewashed daughtcrhovx
down the street and out of sjght. But even more hypocritical, they pay taxes to
finance a profess~onalassoclatlon of Lt men collectlvcly called pohtraans, and
then compliun about corruption In government.
RESPONSIBILITY
A ain, most people want to be free to do things (to explore, etc) but they are
.#aid to fail.
The fear of failure is mafifcsted in irresponsibility, and qspecially in delegating
those rsonal res .N!~I!IIICS to others where sucqss a unccrtatn or cames
possibPfor create&ab~l~t~rc (law) whch the person u not prepared to accept.
--
Thcy want authority (root word "author"),but they will not acc
ept responsibility or liability. So they hire politicians to face reality for them.
MEDIA
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I I I X I t i l V W
SKULL AND BONES SOCIETY COVER-UP?
The two biggut scandds to hit the news in y c m involve the In 1989. Satam K a y and his rubcanminee wm fm
BCCI W n g mess and the so-called %ctoba Sllrpruc" Ihe given the risk of "pmbing" BCCL BOLu N O Y ~ W C ~ I N ~
lum involvu Ronald Reagan's pal William Cauy.alleged to (Aug. 1 2 1991) mently noted. Key "hu been airicizcd f a
havemade a sum: deal in 1980vith Inn's Ayatollah Khomcni. not having pvrued the sundal more y m v e l y . " 'Ihy's
Under the mnu of this bargain. Inn was to k c q ~the US. putting it mildly. In fur.after fm making a few obligamq
hostages held at the U.S. Embury in Tehcnn in chain^ until melatiow about potential wnmg&ng by the bank. Kary's
d t r Reagan could be elected and invlgunted u pruidcnt. committee stumbkd all o v a t h a s t l v u to slow and finally
Thefrilurc of the intawianrl. p - m w mBCCI sbelvc the invcsfigafion.
Bank involves some wy big namu among the The magazine assera lhuKay soft-pedaled the
Council on Fomgn Rdrtiau (CFR)and the TriLmrl probe after cuoin. u n d officials l a him know
Commission (TLC) crowd. including top lobbyist "Ulmughthe~"thrtminlmoive~g&m
CIukCliffadCliffod.farmerS~ofDefenrc. was -k. a cow-up wu begm.
is a Washington D.Cutancy whoovcrres a nmnba Manwhile. the SarO ladcnhip dnrsc S u u t a
of C F R m C xcouna. T a y Sanford to h a d up the invutigrtio~of the
My inside sesearch shows clarly thu Ihe m a of RcrgnK%r 'mu for h a r p l u " swrp. S a d a d n
TheOrderarckhindboththeBCCIbankfailufclad a C F R m C man with impeccable globalist
Resident Reagan's campaign shenanigans. If the
comp~ercm t h were to get out, thing could r e a ~ y -'* acdcnti.lr
c commimcof ~ c n g t u - incimrpc~y
~ h only
unwind. Resident George Bush. who knew much mat than knowlcdgeabk d the B M and -lInn Yand.L
he's ktling on. might even end up the m y p d a a x s R i c h u d Uum those k d by Sanford and Kary is the Senate Inrclliace
Nixon did. Committee. beaded by S w David B m n of OU?homr B ~ L
Notto~y.Tothehercscoecomc M c o m r P d a o f l b e smpriocofarrprirs.SautorBorenalroj~hPppar,toka
Order. US. Sautors John Kcy hutem em) m3 T a y manba of the octultic Skull& Bana Scciuy. 'lhir is fordy
Sanford (Nonh Carolina). Kcy. like Blrrh a fellow of Yak's alled sacking the deck in w ' s favor. a barn yet, it rbollld
saicty. the Skull & Bona. is the Smuc's choke to bdt be labeled w h t it it: a corn-up.
into the BCCI mokcd~~as. Whr all this munr u n be put 'simply: Expect a h of
As hub of the Senate's Subcommiaee on Tarorism. smokeand very IitcLePnion 6un aarConpcsson ~e+maaa%
Narcotics. and Intcnutiwl O p m f m u Skull & Boms kaha Ihy don't n n t the he to come our. and u lmg rr (he boys
K a y will be putting on a big public hwu d "seiauly' d the and S h l l k Bona arc h charge,
pmbing into the money sculdrl. Bot insidas I w w better. bel*ve me. it won't!
DEA agenls that was conductcd wilh taurence Victor .- (North's -1:
Harrison. a shadowy figure who. according to court testi- Mr. Chairman? ''
mony. n n a communications nctworks for major Mclriun
drug t n f f i c k u s and their a l l l a In Mexiwn law enlorcc- .. J.
senat& &mi& fnouye: I b e l i e v e that
question touches upon a hiqhly s e n s i t i v e
and c l a s s i f i e d area s o may I request that
you not touch upon that?
C dePw believes h a t 'the men who arc running our Iwl,state, and federal governments have a plan afom that rhe American
K people have absolutely no idea about" DePw ( a h Cnig H u l d , is a $lkiiicli -rchet.who spent 13 yan as a consultant to
m u i t i n a t i d corpontions and five yevs as d i m o r of a small think unk. He now devotes histime ?the research and pubhation
of m i t e papers,' treatises prepared by consultants based solely upon documented h q which malyre social and politial events.
docummu k f o r c they Impkmerued the made agains %d&m Hmscin's d i i r -
Common Gmund: You've puMuhed *icy. IJnfmunaIely, the onh way IO ship by A ~ M~ntcnutiona~
I ~ were rrade
white ppen m i n g a w* m r i a ~ d k h g the U.N. Sccurky Council togaher, to a k h a a1 %bbmh b Kuwak.
topics: the war on drugs, Vietnam, bibgbglad, F n w , cemuny,adb- Thcmwaldorderisabanmary,
Kmnedfs M h . the Persian Gulf pan at1 on sueam so quickly and allow M i , poi*, and n w muc-
AIDS. roc&. Uc. flow hYou P a- George Bushtocluice lierally bomb a third rids. It has nothing 16 do with poiikio the
your mearch? world developing country h o the stone way IheAmaicrnpopkhave ken nkd
KC d m : Ihave some doclms* a s , was through the al Sabbah's family to klim @it* work. We Iua hin
I a v s . bushes people a d fellfed Md- financial h d d i i g h the Oniced We, 1915. f h r r s gom'lt's aba* money and
-
ligenccaen* wracingl~ enwgh* who Brlain, Japan, and Germany. Worldwide, burinerr.
send me material on an --going b b . ws ww h- h t che d the al CG: Iimagineyaalheorybom-
y a r around. thaltheY'vee&erd*co- sabbah family alone b at leas^ a trillion whelming, even frightening, to many
or hat was dwfied. It's a network d
me frm dinera kvels I uke their dollars. three l~undrcdbillion jun h the
U.S. loos enlbrrwing fa b ttmt the
people he
e"ccd by he g M m r n S hi& rufl like
innu-
and red- & 10 a -posire Ihu we were b a d ho in (hi Q YOUthink W American p e e
. .
wilbe l the puMk and In a Kuwric was ku a petty &wlm han a jUIl don.( wuil l o knov?
ws my PIPas corponle ditmor of US. copration deRa: That'sthequeaion. We ask
are so bi6-
me
ar of the
lo uke
bve
ad '
many ul'ibi callcdLrva Fe Imernational, m d &iliing
want
Papers ad not
rim. Sating on the board of that c o r p m
thrt aban CWlJ' maning. T h m ' S a
pan d me t b t doant klicve the Arneri.
tlon was Orent Scowcrolt, -f p w i ~ c m a n m e want ra know. See, we don't
have a c o m o ~ ~ epeu.
;~~~&~u~~z;I$m'.;"'~u5e~ ~ e r a ~h dd . and carla II~I., an trade
reptesenlativc umkr the Bush adminktra-
c ~ we do t m r a
caWinnce on the p n of the press, we
as or lo r
lhet tbn, and her husband. Roderkk Ilills. haw some diusionr s b m so many news-
maher and fatha and frknds. p p a S use Ihesame wire r w i c e and they
Wmn y w put lhesc conmalons
CG: lhat your t o g d m a d you reallte C-ge ~ush a iun p- it. BUI 1 believe that if he
Wh Rper
ile ken banker and an oilman, Jbn Baker is a Amerian m e warned lo know. really
lore@ lanpP andht you* *Irn a banker and an oil man. Wlllhrn W e b a s is wanted to know, faaual, hard-hiuing and
ladnochrurour'mblrdthePmbn a banker and an oil nun, and on down the often bad mws,the press would tell
"If war. 7b8 Scqh plnted lislall the way back to tlle 1910's. our entire Ihan. Ia n t believe the pert wouldn't
aflMeh J a n v whkh hat you abinet ate corporate burinusmen, you pint It if it was in their fmncial interest to
didn'
Or ern
money. What do
** war was about
but lhrc it
~ I I ?
know-4tli.s isnl a h putthg a political
en~ilyback h~parer. h y ' r e putting back
doso.Andlknowta,manypeoplethrttell
me they s k h the headlines of Ihe front
in power one d t t ~ l busimsmen.
r some- page andthen go m i g h t to h e sports page
dePrrs: The Hkkr' owlve of one OICY do businas with. And (hen you or the comics ancl basiilly they don% ctn
h e uush AJminlsmtion h h e PersianGulf rerlize that tl,ercls somahing very wrong -tL going on.Solhe voyeurism k there.
war was to do a a a l y what Ihey're doing
today. The policy fomplion you See -1
wfih our go- when our pdicy Like when IheAnita Hill andJucigeThomas
d i ~ l e by
d he coworate h m sUd pi. rhov dom'mted che press, incredible in-
rEporcthat
-
brd lo Apil 1990 in
spailkally said they had to g c ~t l x U.N. lomulion ¶born the St. B C a and AIDS
Them's nothing like d e m ' 7 8- was relegated to nowhere in ik ~ e yod w
sccurhy council to d i i r m Iraq and force a
ing 0" hew- Has anybody UP h e T i ,BUIthe press gave them what t l ~ y
pceconlcrenc+~wecnlrnel~~yr~. al
subje" of d-'7 in K w h ? wan~ed.How a n ymcrickizC a free yes..
A,,,,lhallsexaaly whathey did.Iwuright
tlut. Dm hc bnet
Sabbh a feu&iis dimlor. not a d m II you belkve in It la giving the peopk
on he
I'm a Irmd matic ally. The same c b r g a t b t wen what they danmd,
CC: So would YOU say h e Amerian a~lmri7atbnact, Ihey turned the drug war puttingt f m ina work a m p , making them
people are d e e p or a p n h a k ? ovcr to ttw Fcntagon. And !hey culled lrum work lor the Pentagon to plant tree, and
&Rw:Wen k's tremendoudy dls the '88 drug law to g i w the Pentagon Ihc you say It's OK? 1 like the k h of plantlng
caunging. But Idon't bdkvethcy're asleep power to cstabllzh work d&lls lor those urn. You go plant hem.
at all, and Idon't thhk LL apathy. If yau pccqdr pot on the millary ba.scs under llut k gets wore. In ttw hrccu Yo&
watch the speed and skill with whlch t h q 'boa mntlm.' Wltile tlib b gokig an In Tima, At~gusI5tli. 1991. hadlinc. lront
drive onthe lreevays y m know they're nnl r a k r a l law, states are W i g coerced in~ I C page: 'Military has new strategic goal h
aslecp. and 11you damage their property or Im and '88 d ~ laws:
g If tlwy don't adopt d c m - u p dvast toxkwaslc.' Well, whodo
kick ttwir dog a k k k them om a busin- these laws at t l r state level, they wlll lose you think Is going to bc deanitrg up, on
dcal. t l m dme's a trcmctdorn arrtourvl or t i i ~ l ~ w alutding.
y So 19 states edaMWlcd site, ~IIC toxic waste?G.E.employees? Gn-
high cncrgy h, the American people. JI* h o t anips bclore it became legal at the tral lorces personnel?l h c higtrly trained
watch a football game. The energy is time. lcdcral lcvcl to a a w l l y dose the m l l b r y c i v l engineers? Of thc military?Idon1think
1lic strcneh b there. fhc will k tlmc. It's ba.m and esclblkh thc boot amps. w h k h so.S o m e ~ y ' sgof to beon-sight. werring
just dirmed at scll-lntcresl. And 1 think tlwy only did seven months a g d n the the machinery and c d k a i n g h e glowing
that's beau=, quite simply, i t s an alllucnt new drug and crimc blll that just passed In purple sludgc. Ttiere's no technologY that
xxircy and ic's made us a vcry arrqant Ihc llousc and Scnate. The Senate MI does k, people h a w to do it. Well who's
~rockly. number was 1211 and the 1louse blll was gonna do W Nobody wants to h m r k
P e e only w r y about thitlgs tlnt 3371. Well Ihcy /usl pwed & b a joint becausethat'sm inaedibly ugly prophesy.
a f k t them directly, per.mally. You h a w contcrencc comrniucc. They're going to bucIdiidn'tscekha~lball.Itwason
to leam to a r e about your n e i g h h - dose ten military bases, turn them into the lront page dthe Nau York times And
Mack, whice. male. lemale. homoscxr~al. lcdcnl boot a m p s and turn the p r i s w r s to me ttut means this has to stop.
hccnoserual,p hawtoareaboulsome- ovcr to the Pentagon lor work program. The worsl pan of it is h e American
tl~lngotherthan ywrsdl. Because wllat the N v a t there are rm~gessmcnand senators p p l e oren1payingattention. TIK military
government b dolng presently is destroy- sayittg let's put the homcless there. llq h a s k e n turned inwardagainst the Ameri-
ing the inlrrsrmure of a people. a nation. want to pin thc homelcu there; they wapc a d pople. It's us hiare the enemy now.
7'hey're taking your neigfikns to work to IN i l l c g l allcm inscpaotcamps. l h q D N ~users. UDS victim, the homeless.
are a1.w looking v a y seriously at A I M cleaning u p t o x k dumps. We're h e enemy.
mmlw. In the luturc. Ilt l r AIDS epidcmk lhere's now an internal enemy of the state
rrrns ~I'S courx, by the ycar 2000 approxi- just like the Jews were the internal enemy
mately o m and a tiall rnllion t o three of the Gyman RepuMi Well we h a w an
mllion people w l l have d k d d AIM. and internal enemy and the army a n now k
they plan on taking the remainder. w h k h wed against the American people, legally,
may be a1 many as ten million l l l V p o s l l w by law. And they're doing it. Tlut's wlwre
tllat are dying. and putting ttmn In separate w e b at. That's the emplre. That's George
tamps. In the end. i t s a wemendous cress Bush's new wodd order.
wxlion d o u r Amerkrn culture. and yarr Common Grouna flow did this
prrscnral opinions and b i i x s arc not what come about? l i a r ic jusl happened so
TfiE ENEMY NOW. THEU.S. m n w s hne. We are literally talking about
a Wcinnr Rcpublk conversion of Ameria
slowly that we d i i ' t notice or has it b a n
veiled in rhetoric?
into thc Fourth Reich. And nobody giva a KC cklbas: The work a m p s were
damn. outlincd in tlie 1988 drug law, 0101670.
The U.S. miliury was given the p b of
=:
CG: Arc you suggesting seleclfvc
cfetnprlation? What is the purpose d fighting the drug war under h e National
PEOPLE, LEGAUY, BY LAW. Defense Authorization act of 1989. because
It- Well, theyvnno~conVerting the government says there's a national
ANDT~~EY'RE
DOING IT. t k ntlitary bases into work campsout d emergency, we have a [drugl epidemic.
sanebcnilqna.spectdrchabitiiion.lhcy're Well, e p i d e m ~ by definition means it's on
taking Ihc antl-socialelement d s a k l y . b the rise, noI on Ihe decline. And every
C*rn~e Onsh's own mnacular. and plac- single alcgory o f drug usage i n Ametia,
Ingtlicm Inm c e n t r n k m amps. Now I'm every single a t egory... is off sharply and
not mlliiig t l m n death camps. I'm alling down draslhlly. 2.8 million fewer people
I~IC a mucmntlon,
III i n anips. of a pop- usccaaimthan bcfore. What ismy zourcc?
latkm tlmt lmr hccomc underinble to the 71ic rutional drug control strategy report o f
Aalcric*ri pecrpk. And thb b not a con- 1989.90. and 91. Bill lknnett's olike, the
spiracy tl-. It's in the Iaws. Ipcscnted drug czar.
amps, rigta now as we speak. And Ian't this on Mike Sigel's n d l o show and the Evay category 01 drug usage has
stand that. vas~nujmity of people InSeattle said Iwas k c n off sharply since 1979 to "85. then
CGx what do you mean by out d my mind. But Mike would tell them. from 1985-88.Soifdrugusagc isolisharply,
a m ? hc's rcading lrorn federal law, he's not down dras~iallyand lewer p o p l e than
Jkpnm: lhi isnt a myth. r s in makingthis up, he'sreading it from the law ever are using cocaine, why are we locking
puMi law. I t kn't a supposkion. h isn't a i~wI1.laws to dose milicrry basts and turn everyone up i n boa camps? We've beco
I d t wing or spocligfmnewspaper m a l p k . It d v i n g the.problem socially. as a people,
t b n i into detention centen.
Is a hct 01our own p u M k admlniantion. all by ourselves, no govcrtinient intcrvcn-
CG: What will happen b the yys?
What's happened b the federal p v e r n - tion. 7bose statistics arc k l o r e tlte 19&
d e w * Well, who do y w h t n is
mcnt liar passed lawsgoing back to 1198610 and '88 drug laws, by the drug Iaws' own
p i n g to plant George Rush's one b i l l ' i
dose military bues. PuMk h w -70. a d m i s i i in Appendix D. Iwrs sitting in a
trees? You're rplng la pay for them as
Two yeanlater inthe'8Bdrugtiw,.1016#). hotel room at t w o i n die morning alter I'd
taxpayers and these poplc are going to
they authorized audii to look at thc given a leaure in Panland-and I'ln read-
'plant them. lmmediawly an mvironmen-
involuntary c o n f i i d the mentally ing the appendix to the drug cur's report
t a l k wit1 say. -Well Idon1have a poblem
ill,ttwn redefined d n ~ use
g as behg a sign and I'm going. I l ~ e r e ' sno epihnic.'
wilh tliat.' m i a t a minute. We're talking
d k n t a l illnes, so If ~u smoke m r i j u a r atxnnstamy tmc,Fcopie.Anaringpcopk n y r ' r e saying tt~ere'sno epirkntic, it's on
tlwy a n conline you. I n thc 1989 ddcnsc lor a fir* time d n ~ gdlcme. marijuana, the &dine.
M A T R I X I I I
CIA-funded
program
jolts school
--
By Laurie Goodstein
ROCHESlPl N.Y. -
/o C q j
Revelations propriaten bat that he made a
about a QA-funded program at the take in coordiMting all contacts
Rochester Institute of Technology with the agency through his offlct,
have generated stormy debate on which he has stopped doing.
thisnormally quiet and amservative A W e C o w reserve officer,
-p"= Roe was deputy rssistrnt defense
RMas have begun an investip secretary for education fmm 1972 to
don, the executive assislant to Presi- 1WC Ha helped to qnite the con-
dent M. Richard Roe has reigned. veny at the school in April when he
and students aud faculty have called revealed that he WIU spmihg a four-
for the president's ouster. month srbbatlal at hugley to help
Univemity and M oMdals srp create tniofne prograu for agancy
that, in the last fivey e y 5 the agency penomel-
has given the school at least SS mil= Hiscrndorcamcafttrwmontha
lion to establish a center to conduct of statements lnwhich he slld only
xwearch exclusively for CIA use,has thathehadac#ptedaamfi&ntl.l
tried to shape the cunicalum and asdgllment in WasbhgKm in some
h a s p l a c e d a u M o f f i a r i n m i . rryrcktadtothePcrrirnGolfmr
dence" in a doctoral them cnoh
in addition, faculty members nid Rme wm on smbbahl when "S+
Raswlhb~tshdaskal aoo" became p o b k A fora
t m m t o t r a i n ~ p u s o n a e l ~ t owordPlndcrbfs.~l~lelnthedraft
apply for security cluMccawhich repoltsrtdAmnicrnsmtutuco~
as many as 20 faculty members have turt Jlpm's M d o M l -on md
done. One dean declined and later their 'porspft of world econamk
learned that the CIA had initiated a domfnrtlon."
background check on him without Rosa safd that the document was
his consent "ndstamlembunssing".ndthat
The revelations were made by the he bd not written or read the repon
local newspaper, the Democrat and or its foreword before pubUcadon.
Chronicle. Although a rcvlssd version was m
All of this has been fueled by the lewd immediately and omitted de
release this month of a draft report scriptions generally regarded aa of-
called "Jam: 2WO" that was pre fensive, Dougherty resigned
pved for the CIA by the executive Rose said he planned to vMt Japan
assistant. Andrew Dougherry. The m ln September to smooth rclrtlons
port described the Japanese as "mb with numerous corpoflfions that
mres of an agelcss. amoral. m a n i p fund prolyu~sat m.
ladve and controlling culture." TheQArecruitslSto2Oofthe
Ruseandhisstanueayingto 13,100 R n studen1 Ulnrully, mid
dispel cridcism that RPP. on Lake George Ryan, operatloas director of
Ontario's rim. has become "Langley RIT Raseuch.Corp, an o f f a m p
on the Lake," a reference to the CU's univustty subaidby. Rase recently
headquarten In northern Virginia d c s t ( p p r t o d R y a n a 8 R l T ~ w i t h
In an interview in hls offlce, dece them
rated afth Japcmese fans and vases A n d d i ~ J O t o S O s t u d e n f t
Rase said that the school's coonec- ha- saudty cleuancea to work at
don with the CIA was "entirely a p the corpantlon'a Federal Rogrrms
'mialng C+nter, fiMnced enttnly
thm@ M contrra
dryS J ~ U M O * U ~ ~ H I $ U
a a
niques are being used again, to des uncertainty" (page 236-7). ting on the sidelines, we can expect
tray the United Stater, and personal This ie quite true, as Sery few people things to get even wome It is insane
liberties have taken the time to learn how the to think that HCI will back down, or
The anti-gun mavement'e main p m political system and legislativepmceas be eatiafied with only the Brady Bill,
paganda themes eeem to be that (1) w o r k not to mention the U.S.Con- they have onlyjust begun their attack,
guns and gun owners are the root of stitution, and what it means. Theee and we have much more to come
all evil, and (2) that they (the mciaht people are "ripe for the harve& of a We can consider the leadem of the
anti-guunem) are our only hope against propaganda experf. anti-gun movement (and their media
the spreading plague of crime In Mein Hitler also said. 'The m - p- l e- in an elitist friends) to be experts in the art
Kampr, Hitler'e main propaganda overwhelming m & i t y , are so femi- of propaganda. They most definitely
thema ueem to be that (1)Jsws and nine in their n a t w and attitude that know what they are doiw and they
Jewry are the root of all evil. and (2) their activities and thoughts are moti- are very tnuxedul.
that Hitler was Germany's beat hope vated lem by sober consideration than Hitler said, "... for this (propaganda)
again& the spreading communist by feeling and sentiment" (page 237). is also only a weapon, though a fright-
rwolution. Look again at the gun contra1battle ful one, in the hands of an expert"
lb u .the movements, we An people talcing the time to study (page 230).
muat uoder&and what propaganda ia the ieoue individually befm making Fiighfful indeed! We can me the
Simply put, propeeaPda can be out- a decision? No,.rather t h y .me imagea propaganda masten taking our h e -
right lieo, distortedfacts, andlor truth, on TV of dead bodiea, body bage, pools dom and our fellow citicens (the
combinrd to change - a8-. thoughts
- of blood, and a gun lying next to a "m" are practhuy begging
on a mbject. ~ ~ m e ~ v i ~ k p s i n a n d
Axording to Hitler, 'The tank of thcyeeeDextofkinCryingover1~
propaganda lies not in a acientifie loved onca They allow their emotiom
trainbg of the individual, but rather to take OM, and b a tbeir ~ ~opinione
in dhcting the mr.r# &cer- on thea emotioas, rather than "eober
tain facts, events, n d t i e a , etc. conaideration." n 1 e 0 n h become
the purpoee being to move their impor- the most effketiva tool
tance into the mmaeu' field of vision" to turn gun control into an emotional
(page 231). b m a We an ail human, and none of
WeeansecthisinHCI'e~ us e m seeing weeping relatives or
astheyalaosticktoafewmainpoinb erimevictimslyingintheatreet.Thoe
and repeat them over and over, How among us who are strong see Ulese
many timea do they draw out atten- images and decide to prepare to m i a t
tiantotheHinkley~thePuniy an at- to oureelvea and our fami-
shooting or the AK47 rifle? Rather lies Those among us who are weak.
than use many Merent crime8 as succumb to the brainwanhing tech-
examples in their pmpaganda, they niques and think that guns are evil.
umcentrateon a handful dwell known Wlw is HCI, a relatively amall or-
crimea ga&tion (in comparhn k the large
Hitler believed that propaganda had number of atizem who own tkimrm8X
to be very simple, so the average per- so successful in their mpeated a d
eon, with a very short attention apan, against ue?
d d understand it. He stayed away Hitler anmma t h "When propa-
fnrm complicated ideas and stuck to ganda haa fiiled a whole pwple with
a few basic and easy to underatand an idea, the -tion, with the
ideaa help of a hrrndful of people, can draw
Hitler said, 'The m b modest
~ then. thecomequencea Fx&&nda and or-
--
its scientific ballast is, and the more &tion that meurs followem and
it exclusively coddexa the feelings of &embus have thusa ~ t mutual
e
themasaeo,themozestrikingwillbe relationship The better p d a
its aocesa.. This is just the art of has been working, the smaller may be
propaganda that it, underetaDdingthe the organization, and the greater the
great marapa' world of ideas and feel- number ofmembers and vice versa: the
ings, f i n 4 by a Eorrect peychological worse pro& is,the greater must
h n . the way to the attention, and fur- and will be the organbation and the them to do it.
ther to the heart, ofthe great marules" smaller the host of followera of a move- HCI is known for sticking to a hand-
232-2331. ment remains, the greater must be the ful of basic lies or statements, which
Basically, Hitler says, KEEF' IT number of members, if it atill wants they repeat constantly. The result is
SIMPLE! to count on success a t all" (page 851). that the average person (Hitler calls
Hegoesontosay,'Thegreatmass them "the masea," while Lenin called
of people is not composed of diplomata Chipping Away -From Hitler's them "rwful idiots") has these ideas
or enn kachen, of political law, nor words, and HCI.8 example, we can see hammered into h i d e r , until eventu-
even or purely reasonable individuals that they will continue to chip away idly they agree with HCI, and a~ won
who are able to pama judgement, but at our finarms frcedoma As long as wu to HCI's side
ofhuman beings who are as undecided the vast mqjority of gun awnem and According to Hitler, "N? the pur-
as they are inclined twards doubts and freedom loving Americans remain s i t pose of propaganda is not continually
to produce interesting changes for a that they stick to their main theme, culatedexclusivelyfor the miwm, and
few blase little mastere, but to con- as this is absolutely critical to the it waa carried out with untiring per-
vince; that means, to convince the succeaa of their movement. sistency. Basic ideas and fonnr, dexe
masees. The masses, however, with Hitler said, "All a d v a t i h g whether cution which had once been lacognized
their inertia, always need a certain it lies in the field of business or of as being right wem empl0y.d h u g h -
time before they are ready even to politics, will uvry success by contin- out the entire war, and ncvv did one
notice a thing, and they will lend their uity and regular uniformity of appli- make even the slightest change At the
memories only to the thousandfold cation" (page 240). beginning it was apparently crazy in
repetition of the most simple ideas" Hitler goes on to say, "The great the impudence of its aeaertiona, later
(page 239). masses' receptive ability is only very it became1%- and M y it
Do you not see HCI using the same limited, their undedadbg amall, but wae believed'# (page 240).
lies thousands of times, per Hitler's their forgetfulneae is great. Aa a con-
instructions?We are r e f 4 to as "the sequence of theae facts, all dective -
Spreading The Idea Hitler goee
lunatic fringe,*'"gun nub," and "bul- propaganda has to limit itself only to on to say,"hevery great revolution-
lies" The scary sounding terms they a very few points and to use slogam ary movement propaganda will fm
until even the laat man is able to havetospreadtheidcadthemon-
imagine what is intended by such a men+ ' h a t means, it will untiringly
word. As soon o one s a d l c e a this trytornakecleartotheothemthenew
basic principle and tries to become ver- train of thought, to draw them over
satile, the effect w i l l fritter away. as toitaowngmua&oratleasttomake
the mraa~aare neither able to digest them doubtful of their own pmioua
the material offered nor to retain it. conviction'' (page 862).
Thustheresultisweakenedandfipelly H C 1 h a S I n a M g e d t o c h a n g e ~ -
eliminated" (page 234). ety'svi~ofgun~pGunsused
This is true, am most people rely to be consided normal, healthy and
solely on the maas media for their in many imh-a, IWC--Y. 'lbday,
news, and never take the time to me mo~haad~peoplebelievethatguna
ifthenewareporbareactuallytrue arc d, and mmehow mqmmible for
We tend to have very short memories crime~changeofthoughtdidnat
as well. Can you remember what you just "happen," it war, brought about
were doing nine d a p ag4 what the bycleverpropaganQ-
lead story was on the news three days Makenomiatakeaboutit,HCIand
ag4 or jut one or two campaign pro- the gun grabbing eli- want noth-
mieae that George Bush has not ing&rtdtd& all d o u r The
broken? brad^ Bill biurttheirfinrt&caSound
In the beginning of the anti-gun crazy? Sum, &dthat ir why itin wwk-
movement, most people did not belicva ing! But don't taka my word fbr it, let's
the anti-gun lias They knew that all see what the anti-gmmm have said
the .chrminPand dreamingwould not about their devioua plan, in their awn
eliminate crime, but rather that it norrb:
would strip them oftheir liberties. By "Thb is the h t mu U S -
utilhing efwive propagrurda tech- Fbpmmtative Edward Feigbm nfer-
niqueqHCIhaamaMge!dtachange ring to the Brady Bill (which he in*
quite a few minlla This is espedally duced) at nxent Hotme hearbga
evident when we look at the Brady Bill " W r e going to have to take one step
votes in the U S House of Repre~en- at a time, and the finst step ia necee-
tatives A few years ag4 when the sarily -given the political realities
H o w voted on the Brady Bill, it was -goingtobeverylnode&..Sowell
use repeatedly, Buch as "assault wea- dcfeated by 24 votes. This time it won have to &ut working again to
pon," "cop killer bullet," or "Saturday by53votesWhythedrasticchange? strengthen that law, and then again
Night Special" are also hammered into Simple, by not giving up on theu never tostrengthenthenutlaw,andmaybe
our heads as a brainwashing tool. Add ending pmpaganda campaign, they again and again. Right now though,
to thisthe slogans "Has the NRA gone brainwashed more people into pining we'd be satidid not with half a loaf
off the deep end?" "Haw many more their side, including many who used but with a slice Our ultimate goal -
have to die?' "If we can save just one to be -gun (at least seven of those total control ofhadgumin the United
life.!' "We're working to keep guna out -
"Representatives" that voted anti-gun States is going to take time.. The
d t h e wrong hands" ete, and you have had ~ceived NRA PAC money for their fitat problem is to dow down the
a very dective pmpaganda campaign prior support). k n a a h g number of bandgumbeing
in use We are merely hearing slight Hitler said, "Here, toq the enemy's p,duced and sold in this country. The
variations of the main propaganda war propaganda (he is refemng to eecond problem ia to get handguna
theme that guns and gun ownen, are World War D set a typical example. It registered. And the final problem is
the mot of all evil. They make sure was limited to a few points of view, cal- to make the pimesahn of all hand-
guna and all handgun ammunition - -
nd need to own guns;' Joseph Mc-
except for the military, policemen. Namara HCI Spokesman, and former
licensedeecurity guards, licensed aport Chief of Police of San Jose, California.
ing clubs, and licensed gun collector^ "I don't want to go for confiscation,
- totally illegal" - Wte Shields, but that is where we are going" -
Chairman Emeritus, Handgun Con- Daryl Gates, Police Chief of Los An-
trol, Inc (interview appearing in The geles, California.
New Yorker, July 26, 1976) 'There may be other things that will
'This is not all we will have in future happen later...It may not be the end...
Congresses, but this is a crack in the the bottom line is what we are seeking
door. There are too many handguns in now is the Brady Bill" - U.S Rep
the hands of citizens.The right to Charles Schumer, interviewedon CNN
and bear arms has nothing to do with C d m .
the Brady Bill" - U S Rep Craig "The Brady Bill is the minimum
Washington, at the mark-up hearing step Congress should take.. we need
on the Brady Bill, April 10, 1991. much stricter gun control, and even-
"Handguns should be outlawed. Our tually should bar the ownership of
organization will probably take this handguns, except in a few caserr" -
stand in time but we are not anxious U.S Rep William Clay, qwted in the
to rouse the opposition before we get St. Louis Rmt Dispatch on May 6,
-
the other legislation passed" Elliot 1991.
"It's only a fixat step, it's not going
Corbett. Secretary, National Council
For A h p o ~ i b l eFirearma hlicy to be enough...we've got to go beyond
(interview appeared in the Washing- that, and I hope we'll do it this 8es
ton Evening Star on September 19, #ion of- -US Rep E d d
1969). Feighan during an interrriew on ABC
"It is our aim to ban the manufac- Newa Nigbtlinc.
tun and sale of handguns to private Theee people are quite clear M to
individuals.. the coalition's emp- their tnre intentions,that is, to t o t d y
is to keep h a n d g u out
~ of private p disarm the American citizenry. Make
session - where they do the mo& no mistake about it, they are winning,
harm" -Recruiting flyera m m t l y dib and arc are losing
tributed by The Coalition 'Ib Stop Gun Ifyouarenotalnady involvedin
Violence, formerly called The National fighting to p- our right to p
Coalition 'Ib Ban Handguns aeee fuearma, I strongly urge you to
"lb,I'm for an outright ban (on get involved. Join one or more of the
handguns)'' - Wte Shields, Chairman national p g u n -tiom But do
emeritus, Handgun Control, Inc, dur- not atop there If you expect to win
-
ing a 60 Minutes interview. thiswartyoumustbewillingtostand
"We are at the point in time and ter. up and get involved. The national p m
mr when?nothiG short ofa stronguni- -pa simply are unable to hold
form mlicv of domestic dbrmament the tide anymore We must supple-
will ail-te the dangerwhich is ment their &k with grass roots &rk
tal clear and perilously present. Let at the local level.
ua take the guns away from the people Join a local p g u n grass roots
Exemptions should be limited to the group, and if thue aren't any in your
military, the police, and those licensed area,start one of your own. Meet with
for good and d i c i e n t reasons. And politicians when they are in your area
I would look forward to the day when Write letters, make phone and
it would not be neassary for the vote Organize people and educate the
policeman to carry a aidearm"-IBtrick "ma8sea"
V. Murphy, former New York City While we may have truth on our
%lice Commissioner, and now a mem- side, the people are not l i n i n g to
ber of Handgun Control's National the truth. They believe the lies and
Committee, during testimony to the will not take the time to find out that
National Association ofcitizene Crime they are indeed liea This will only get
Commitmiona mma WCIdo not ham the odds in our
"My experience M a street cop favor, aa the anti-gun fon#a are well
geets that most merchants should not entrenched and powerfully anned.But
have guns. But I feel even stronger wemustresistorwewillmostar-
about the average pereon having tainly loae Make no doubt about that.
them... most homeomrenr.. simplyhave Get involved immediately!!
Summary of Dr. Coleman's Tapes and Monographs:
Neil Bush
"Genealogy of Tyrants " 0
.
The Genealogy of the Bush and Roosevelt WASHINGTON - President
D Neil and x e r
Families -Bormer directors and officers of
Tailed Silverado Banking Savings
6 Lmn Associa-
InthtmoagphrodaocttcDr.Colcmra~vupra~katromeoftbcfrcuinhh booLgDiplomscy tion tentatively
By Deaptiaf which wilt be anitrblc thir 8 ~ m m a . agreed Wednu-
day to pay the
government
nearly $50' mil-
In m intcrahg md highly radrbk mmcr. we lurn that Vice R a i d a t Qua* b lehted to O m p lion to' settle a
Ihrh h tbe FIRST EVER report Dr. Coleman rbor, that Richard Bruce QCncy b a h a di8-t relatho $200 million
of tbe BPrh and R o a c d t cknr And we Uxm@t Cbcrwy'a appointment u Scuctmy of Wane rrr mere civil suit tbat
o=maiil charged the of-
ficials contrib-
Referrin;- .> -8 mddcn and t # 9 y unexpaed appointment to oar of thc hi- offiac in tbe uted to the ia-
~ D r C o l c m m n ) n ~ a p p o i a t r r w n t b a r o o c b a ~ p l e o f t b o r c n u ~ a r a i n ~ a f o o ( Ndl6u.h stitution's col-
wbtpu~,brrtrbopolinor'. hpse in 1988 through lax manage
h t .
Othrg~'rLelctadfntbeBprbchraW~MunpM~BcneI)I*irtbewrr~Winnoo Little of the near1 $50 millig
Qlucbin.and~~afwlrthcolnhLrewotimar~mmd~Lnlrtcdto~*A k ~ k - g i d h i e oth-
Roac*eltrodTcddyRwrcvcltmd9fnrIi~~BurhLnktedtottnotberf~0~~~pllUoftbc k ~ i i i i i e i i a 3 r - ~ i , l l
White HaPv - komfn,e m insurance compania
he
I n t h i c f ~ ~ n u n t k * c D r . ~ u t a o r t h r o ~ ~ w b t h a l k ~ t b e f r m i l y t n a o f ~ ~h~ ad ne-1dyears ago.sai source ivcndfu<~
said.
o n n a u p r i t h r o l l w t r o l y c ~ 1 ~ ~ o r w o f w h i c h n t h r t 2 1 U n i t e d S t r t a ~ w a r ~ ~-SirteZa5'Ktauurc,one of the 10
kted to ad^ otbcr, w b t Dr. C o k m a cJh r writable !royal f d y ' of mg.
brgest in size and expense. is ex-
pected to coat taxpayem more tban
$1 billion.
Under the proposed settlemc11t.
ithc 11 officlab and Silverado's
After ruding tb& -ph oo listdog to tbe assctte up. few if m y wiU doubt that we h w beta former law f i . Sbcrmra &
NlcdbyiatCmhted'roy.rfrmilia.~of~~q~ynt~ :Howard of Colorado, have 'agreed
WIR March 199L .to pay $26.5 million, mid. Alan
',Whitmy, a spokesman for the Fed-
DR. J . COLmmm eral Dcposit Insurance Corp., the
NQ.ARB s ~ o . 0 0 mn m a TARS/II*-J PS F.0.
MI- ,Q,,,,,
.O. 40011 federal agency that filed the civil
;suit in the fall. Most of that money
will be paid by insurance firma.
The agreement also calls for the
Summary of Dr. Coleman's Tapes and Monographs: officials to torn wer to the federal
government a $23 million legal de-
''Environmentalism: The Second -
. f e fund
a "war chcst"-
what nguhton a l l
the forma Sll-
Civil War Begins. Part 11." vend0 officials set up for ulera-
sdvea in 1986 ming SIlvemdo's'
money, whitaey mid.
Tbc .propo#d ~ c t t l c m ~ nwhich
f
b apected to become find June
When Dr. Coitavn bepn an- sad a ~ l r t i data
q and infomution for th& w a t be did not rrrtiw 12, means Neil Bush, r Denvet oil,
thrt be would h v e cooogh mataiol to write a book on thir *any Imponmt mbjrd. x 4 that be phm to nun, m d - t h c e r former Sil-
Qroatthbh
f h u d o r e Dr. Coleman dcdded that it would bc bat to divide the work b t o three par& thc flnt of which verado officials will have to pry
hu alnrdy ken crwpktcd their om legal expenses.
In put twa Dr. Coleman giva k c w r y detailed fKtr whish have not been available befor& Dr. cokmn However. US. District Judge Sh-
draw8 1 8utliIq cwdluim thrt cbcrr L 1 M i t e link betyrc~*orderly pgrclr md abrolilte freedom erman F i n e s i l ~ .who a ~ o ~ n c c d
v h i c h t b e e n ~ u l i r u w i l l o p p a c w i t h r l l m ~ a n i L b l e t o ( b t n r d ~ y . r r r r r ~ ~ n W ~ the agreement in principle Wednes-
be 8 t a t a day, noted those costs would be
More MomatiaD about tbe forthmdag m c ~ t i qd tbe Club of Rome o -
m and ratd *Wminimizcd" by this settlement
poiitid and rc&ioua Icrden which w i l l take p h a in Montevidw In Novcmkr arc given in thb work. The FDIC's suit charged that
whishh.Cd~~~ba'tar-m~footbe~d~~~Podcrthcaorpdcaofthc
United Nati0111' which L ut to meet in Brpil In 1992
Dr.Col~~l~willtcllwaboPtthc~~pt~bythcTrCinbelpiogen~o~andwiU~
back to the Ind* CIPprr MowmenL
Ibt Qun Atr Ad rrecntly &goal into Lw by PraidcDt Ocorp Burh bas opened tbt way for p b a b l y
tbe mat repmdve agency in ow history. tbc EPA to n n t d y flout our right8 Mda thc Bill d R i W
and ow bbUitutiaag m y Dr. Colanub and be giva r very itcxestbg aaouot of tbc new %PA-KGF
dhxof, William Riky a d w h t we may upd froan hlrP
Dr. Colerm~exptinr why President Bush auted a a b k t part f a Wcy, hi# cbacn did* of
environm~~tllirrnmdthc~yiagrruocrfortL top officers kceived excessive
W e b e l i c r r t h r t d t r r ~ a ~ e r d n f t o t h k . t & w c o o d d a ~ - p r c r u i a o m ~ ~compensation. all of it approved by
andtberimrditlpwrfdkd4thclevmaern&pb(thatwerrr~f~thc~d the thrift's diitors.
amr#ctdaKcooddri)wu.
'BookAsserts Reagan Slowed
Release of Hostageslin 1980
By NEIL i.LEWIS
~ l c o T h c WYorLTlawr
l
-
/i8 *?/
, 'NASHINGTON, Nov. 7 - In a new was later named to direct the Central
h k . Carv Sick. a Middle East exwll Intelligence Agency, traveled twice to
and form& ~ a r i eAdministration
r offi. Madrid in the summer of 1980 to meet a
181. presents what he describes as ar delegation of Iranian officials, includ-
f
. e austive collection of evidence tc ing a leading cleric, Hojatolislam
holster his assertion, now under heated Mehdi Karubbi. The deal to delay the
, debate in Congress and elsewhere. thal release of the hostages, Mr. Sick says,
senior officiais of the Reagan cam was then consummated in a series of
paign negotiated a secret agreemenl meetings in Paris in October. The PBS
.with Iran in 1980 to delay the release 01 program "Frontline" and the ABC
.the American hostages. News program "Nightline" offered
' .Mr. Sick's book. "October Surprise; similar versions on the W r y .
America's Hostages in lran and the There are several other crucial as-
Election of Ronald Reagan," published sertions in Mr. Sick's book:
by Random House, is the latest of sev- 4 The Caner Administration autho-
era1 arguments and counter-argu. rized its own private negotiations with
ments over whether efforts by Reagan lran through an intermediary in the
campaign officials to monitor what summer of 1980. Mr. Sick, who served
on the National Security Council staff
under President Caner, said that a
private citizen, whom he did not identi-
Campaign fy, was met in London by an Iranian
arms dealer. From Ihen, he was flown Gary Sick,the author of "October
Suprise America's Hostages in
officials are on a private plane to Madrid when he
met with a relative of Ayatollah Kho- Iran and the Election of Ronald
meini. Those circumstan&s. he writes, Reagan."
negotiations.
President Jimmy Caner was doing to
.free the hostages, escalated into illegal
negotiations with representative of
.Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Ira-
.nian ruler.
.The book does not offer conclusive
new evidence to support Mr. Sick's
view, which was first espoused in an
article he wrote for the OpEd page of
The New York Times on April 15. Be-
cause of his stature and reputation as a
'cautious analyst. Mr. Sick's article was
largely responsible for resurrecting in-
terest in-eht
t of olw-1-
e e r Ronald Rearan was inaw
gurated in 1981.
The attention paid to Mr. Sick's t h e
ries also led to other independent inves-
tigations on the same matter. Two of
them published this week. in the New
Republic and Newsweek magazines,
concluded that the accusations were
groundless. Moreover, the accusations
have been strenuously denied by Presi-
dent Bush, former President Reagan
and others said to have been involved.
In a sense, Mr. Sick's book and the
other journalistic investigations are
battling not just. with each other over
what really happened 11 years ago.
They are also aimed at ConJZmSS,
which is 'ust beginning a fractious Par-
tisan deiate over whether to investi-
gate the accusations. and how t h a
-House Rules Committee
approved a resolution authorizing a
special panel headed by Representa-
tive Lee H. Hamilton, Democrat of
Indiana, to look into the accusations.
The foundation for Mr. Sick's thesis
is the accusation that William J:Casey,
the Reagan campaign manager, who
Dispensers of death
Donald Gould is disturbedlby a ruling in the US fSfi06&J
HERE are many reasons for suppos- lethal injection and demanded that he
T ing that the human race may be self-
destructing, but how discouraging it
is to have this sad conclusion enhanced and
force-fed down our gullets by the US,which
should, instead, be hanged-an option
which the state laws allow. But prison
officials couldn't find a properly qualified
hangman. They advertised, and dozens of
great nation likes to see itself as a commu- o r d i y citizens applied for the job, includ-
nity excmplifylng the highest achievements ing a 7 year-old man and several women.
ofdemocra . Unfortunately, they all lacked the necessary
expertise. and an out-of-state person had to
I refer to& a allingdecision by the US
Su reme court X c h , by a majority of five be employed at a reported fee of around
f
to our, and after consideringthree separate
appeals, has recently ordained that the
f900.
And it is recorded that when Theodore
execution of juveniles or the mentally re- Bundy, "America's most infamous sex
tarded for the crime of murder does not killer", was electrocuted in Florida last
violate the coun 's constitutional ban on January, parties were held throughout the
**cruelor u n d * . punisbent. he re- country. .
jected appeal, which has opened the way for +Of.course, the US is by no means the
the killing of some 300American sim letons worn offender. Last April, Amnesty Inter-
l'
now languishing in condemned ce Is, was
submined on behalf of a 32-year-old man
with an IQ of less than 60 and a mental age
of seven.
The US'S recent record in the matter of
judicial homicide--outlawed in 1972 but
restored to legality a short four yean later-
was sufficiently disgraaful before this
latest manifestation of wickedly obtuse
insensitivity.
Just two years ago I recorded in thesc
columns the barely credible details of an
execution in T e w , one of the states which
has opted for killing its unwanted malefac-
ton bv lethal iniection. Resumablv nobodv
had &thered tb look at the wretd~edvie-
tim's veins before he was led into the death
chamber. At any rate, it was found, when it
came to the m c h , that all his super6idal
veins were sclerosed because of his habit of
"mainstreaming"drugs. They had to spend
35 agonisin m u t e s prodding around with
a needle before they were able to b@g the
obscene pantomime to a merciful end. national published a rt showingthat 125
Such extreme demonstrations of state- nationssdll retain theTath nalty ,despite
sponsored callousness and inhumanity may am ~ e turd
, statistical evignce thu u is
be rare in the US.but aslower. lessdramatic inekcctual as a deterrent. Some two-thirds
form of pre-ex&tion t o k e is virtually of all executions are carried out b just four
routine. Condemned men and women coutri-Iran, South Afxica, &ma and
spend many months or, more often, many Nigeria-and often the rite, as with thc
years, on "death row" while a cumbersome stoning to death favoured by seven Islamic
appealsprocedure runsits interminableand states, involves extreme cruelty. But it is
usually unsucassful course. At any one specially depmsin to find the reven eful
time some 2000 American citizens are kept ceremony so a lawh&tbc
in miserable confinement, living with the bte ~ e s i d e n t oocirow & o n once de-
almost certain knowledge that their h a I scribed as "the only idealistic nation in the
release can only come m the form of an world". Not that Britain can afford to be
injected poison, or gassing, or the noose, self-righteousin the matter: a majority of its
or electrocution, or (in Utah) a friendly citizens (includin the Rime Minister)
nei bourhood firing squad. would like to see tie scaffold back in use.
@this d o a not constitute of a If the inhabitants of the world can act so
" c m l or unusual kind",then I'm damned if vindictively toward their kith (think of the
I know what does. current terior in China), what possible hope
Aod this sort of horror cannot be largely
blamed on bureaucratic bumblin and in- nations?
-
can there be for ucace and eoodwill between
efficiency (dthou* thesc maie their It seems to me that scientists and tech-
considerable conmbution to the sorry nologists should search their souls before
mess). Instead it n5ecu the will of the using their skillsin the developmentof tools
peo ie. and means which might inacase the powm
e! l rapid albeit reluctant) reversal by of men and women to distort, corrupt,
b
the Sunreme urt of its 1972 decision that
the diath penalty was "unconstitutional"
repress or destroy the lives of their fellow
beings.
was the result of a widespread public clam- People, on the whole, aren't very nice,
our for its reinstatement. and probably never will be. They certainly
Earlier this year a condemned man in the can't be trusted to w the fruits of science
state of Washington refused to accept a wisely and well.
FEDERAL BUDGET
Surpluses vs. Deficits
TOTAL
8 *am - Dtnaa
u.4byon
8*
.n 8lUl
*IS stria
bWlon Won I
mlE8 s'mAm~~~
-a#*ul,.n*I)mm*n.raCm*lrn
Imn *Ol-*I)mD-
-L.mhra*L~mlgCanr*r*
,.nw..nrrbrD#*Cnn*mrfi
e4.
-li..m.""~*.IO.lubmMn-
a ~ r a a - - - m m . a
-
. o y v M I - l Y l r ~ ~ r r u *
. O D M I I ) W C * I ~ W W - ' * I ) NOTE:m i 8 IS an updrm m ind& 11 - OMB *stinurns
w- ol I861.I bud*! drficiU (or FY 82 ($348 billion).
wms;
8rn.I
M W I . 1881 whr '
ma3
mu. DnPPr
NATIONAL TAXPAYERS UNION
ur *-n,u n w mw.n - mu!.c CPU NU.rD. 1.5001,1),*8-m 8 '*.m - 8l.fW.t YU..
M A T R I X 1 1 1
by la F. S a n k . YiL
WASHINGTON. March 25 (EIRNSLA would. under eowltdatM contml. k
The document's regronal-war see sufficrent b ;enente global power.'
Penugon plannrn#document r e c i n ~ i naFios maae pub~tcsomrm.rmnrui.
leaked to the preu cdls forthe Umted In thrs document, former allies b e &1We( ).1i1*1I L( ecmomic u-
States to assume the role of global po
b.an Inawlmen1or me Bush aamrnu- e n e m r ~ ~ b ~ ~ aLBCU
u s eCCD C7 temphuis added).
trat~ontorergn p o t r q ~ n e yprmulin- The Bushmen f e u that Europe and
linman and, more. the world's only StlDlllt~m a government corlaDse In
emprre--eonlrmin; what we hrr tbe a r e u where Bush has establuhcd Japan (rill meet the h e - m d e doe-
low wrd about the ultrmrte aim of
Ccoqe Bush's 'New World Order:
The Pentagon document uyr &Uy
that the United Stales must k p m
mredto trcedom anvother wtcatial
iuperpmer. rn orderto utiblrrh the urumes global uoaomrc ranrbrlrQ world dm.
Amencan lmpenum ot whrch George leadilytotheeme~necotam ' s u -
Bush a d the ArUloAacneam Esub perpower- hostile to G.5 i n t e m l y e t
lishment dream pmdrnr Lb.t the U.S. wrll not k able
Adminutration olXeials tout the to defeat thu threat with the vuporh
study. whrch is rarebed to the otlicial systems the present defense b u w t
Defense Plrnnilu Gurdmn. u the pmpowr to W. -tbc Pentagon is beWfy h o t :
doCPIDe khmd ~ w h ' vr a n w Rar- The only ry r baalrmpt rupr~or- Ikrr are other potenud mtioar or
Mand Inq. Accordin( to the repows wlitioar thrt coold. in the further 8-
plannrnlrccnanos. the U S sbodd be er un p y m p c thirlhrru the, p b , The Chrd ofSUUot the U S Army.
p r e p a d for repeat retioar in those ' m e ins* u to prevent any muon or tura. d d o m stratetic aims .nd dc- Ccn Cordw Sulll*ra emPh.rl2cd
poclp of mlioar from developing the fense poocuri ofmgiionde a&brl
theaters. rod rcrroa in rreaa u di- power to challenge the United States' domination Omr s t
raw m a wr m
verse u the Philippinu and Korea
Written nnder the direction of Un- prrrumed8Iob.l bremw)..
der kcremyof Defense Plul Wolfow- 9 u r lintobieetiwe is to pnrcnt the
itz the repon v u eireulated b top reemergence of r new rink either on
military and civilian omcirls for re the territory of the former Soviet
'
Union or elrcrhere. that poses a tc*ancrorderUrthol&tbcp&
view lut monlb--the Srst- - such
- - -- d
-.m
... threat on the order or thrt posed for- ot potemrl cnmpee to~reseneane
mtnt p r o d u d by the Pentagw u n n merly by the Soviet Unron." the docu- ton*-?he ruthon mean cawrk nomre mtem wnrcn 8s dntmylng ihe
the hecollapse ofthe Sonet Em~rre.Ac- ment w m This means defendinl U.S comveuton mot Plilitln o a a - - - t ~ ~ t world. r n c ~ u a me
r ~ unrtea butes
a e n u to n v materials in the Third rbe~oeedGtupurtoi0uccr6b
World, oil in particular. the repon or punue r more ~ t v ~~~LIIIC e to
ad& UW 'the n n re@nrl defense PIOM their legitimate i n t e m k Scc-
stn- requires that we e n d u m r to ond.inthermddcnuareuvem~~(
prewnt any hastile p a r fmm domi- rccovnt a t d l c i m b f a the in-
. nathg a region whose, m ~ u r c e a ofthe~udlutr*l~uoan*
THE DRAFT
(As military scnice.)
Fcw efforts of human behavio~modification ?re niorc reniarkablc or more cf-
fcctivc than that of the socio-mrlltary insti.tutu~onknown as the draft. A pr!mary
purpose of a draft or other such tnstltutlon is !o instill, by intimidation,!n the
young males of a society thc uncntlcal convlct~onthat the povernmcnt a om-
ppotvt. He s soon taught that a prayer !s.slow to !evene &at a bullet a n do
rn an Instant. Thus, a man trarned m a rellg~ousenaronment for elghteen years
of his life can, by t h ~instymcnt
s of the government, k brokcn down, bc purged
of his fantasies and delus~onsIn a matter of merc months. Once that convlalon
is insidled, all else becomes easy to instill.
Even more interesting is the proccss by which a oung man's parents, who pur-
portedly love hip, can be~nducedto send btm o to war to his dcath. Although
the scope of thu work wll pot a!low thu matter to be expanded In full detail,
R
nevertheless, a coarse ovtmewwrll be poss~ble;~ndcan serve to reveal thoscfac-
tors which must be tncludcd In some numerical form In a computer analysis of
social and war systems.
Magazine describes
Pentagon's goal: stock deal by Bush's son
-
WASHINGTON President
Bush's eldest son
worldys.onlycop his stock in a Texas
plunve because of poor earnings
reports, according to U.S. News
by Patrick E. Tykr and World Repon.
New York Times The magazine reports in this
3/3/9~ week's issue that at the time of the
ther debate in Con ress and sale last June 22. e W . m
among Americ?*s allies about was a member of %%mittee
Washington's vllingness to toler- fonned by the Dallas-based Hark-
ater asp~rationsfor q o n a l
order.
ate'F=
lea ership fmm a united Europe or
a more assertive Japan.
en E n e y to. to study likely
effectso corporate restructuring.
The magazine says Bush's
In a broad policy statement in Together with its attachments stake in Harken. a* hi insider
its final drafting stage, the Defense on the military levels requ~redto role. stemmed from Harken's take- .
Department says +nericals politi- insure America's ~redominant over of another oil company that
cal and military muion will .beto tole. he draft is', a . detailed Bush helped found
make s u n no superpower is .ustifiAtion for the Bush adminir The magazine said Bush. as a
allowed to emerge in Western Jtratlon's ~ r o ~ ~tos saul ~ ~ oar 1.6-
l
Europe, Asia, or the territory of the member of a committee looking
former W e t Union. .Mion-man
. militarv over the next
at a cost o a out 1.2 into a restructuring of Harken. had
The 46-wae document. which ~ ~ Z i ~ ? I I a nDemo&:
yy in :on- "detailed knowledge of the finan-
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney mess have criticized the proposal cial pressure Harken was under
exDectS to release later thls month and of the demands being placed
says part of that mission will be on the company by its creditors.!'
"convincing potential competitors A week after Bush sold a large
that they need not aspire to a
greater role or pursue a . more
-
portion of hi stock he still owns
105.012 shares worth $400,000 -
'
of nau?ns from cbengn which prowded the mandate for magaune sa~d.
-primacy. -- the allied assault on Iraqi forces in It said Bush maintains he did
T o . p e r this role, it says. Kuwait. and which may m n be
- asked file the insider sale notice as
the Unit States "must sufficient- for a new mandate to force required, but that it was lost.
ly account for the interests of the President Saddam Hussein to com- U.S. News said Bush declined
advanced industrial nations to &is- ply with his cease-fire commit- to discuss his ties to the co-
courage them from challenging ments. wlth the magazine.
our leadershi or seeking t o owr- The draft nates that coalitions
turn &&shed pohucal d "hold considerable promise for
economic order." promoting collective action" as m.!
the Persian Gulf war. but that "we
should expect future coalitions to
be ad hoc assemblies. often not
lasting beyond the crisis being
confronted. and in many cases
carrying only general agreement
over the objectives to be accom-
~lished?'
violence. *:' -. . . .
.
Although 'the document $ inter-
What is most important. it says.
is "the sense that the world order
is ultimately backed by the u . > . ~
nal to the .Pentmn and IS not and "the UnlteQ States shoula be
postured to act independently
when collective action cannot be
orchestrated" or in a crisis that
demands quick response.
ers.
.T
copy co~"~rovided
to The
New York Times an offiual who
20
believes the post- Id-War strate-
gy debate should be carried out in
public It's likely to provoke fur-
PKiE Y W W ~ O N r O n N A l r r c * l ~ Y ~ 13.19 lW2
BOOK WORLD
Remember That Other
DIRTY MONEY
IKCI: The Inside Story
Of the W d ' r S l d s t Bank
& kbrt WIS, N iKochon ond RobedWhimin*
~ ' k Y I I m n l u
h
s
'..
.
i s k ~ ~
audm
Fd ---
M
s
- ~ ~
ad-
rd d
~ m i u & ~
o t m h - ~ k n - m m ~ ~ * ~ & d ;
of that rumorcd list of '100
o r & l K e V ~ ~
bmmdiatedtbrtiftbncoa(imrdthw~a~tULc
thm,~thehhharImhdmlicicJwwu~arndchcror\il
inrr*rthatrwlddwarfeveochc~nnspimthmy~
POhOdmra~dl~lrada 8
bbrcQ*mlhkoPrpordolr~kht&Ia
c c a a t ~ h P ~ t k r o a d e m J d d
HOUSE OF CARDS
Inside tho troubled Empirr How the Deck omummiitbrtlondrhinladmdbdcplldea
m~ndbttwlfromppr.wurcesbr~~
rionIna~8my.lberroureern~Ldcnl
Of Anwritan Expms =d--.Id-a=7Lcapontc-tim-
Was Stacked Against -
-priva(Ildm~)hrlaLmdrrraod
habadr.Idmrlroacna-thcwdmvh~ourar
pbarmcrri(aohcmi.bk~0f~thcpo
Sfrettgrltsand wcahtcsses:
(1) activities (sports, hobbies, etc.)
(2) see "legal"(fear, anger, etc, --crime record
(3) hospital records (drug sensitivities, reaction to pain, ctc.)
(1)psychiatric records (fears, angers, disgusts, adaptability, reactions to
stimuli, violence, suggestibility or hipnosis, pain, plcasure, love, and sex)
--
Methods of coping -- of adaptability behavior:
(1) consumption of alcohol
(2) consumption of drugs
(3) cntcrtainment
(4) religious factors influencing behavior
(5) other methods ofescaping from reality
dill'crcntly."
"I l l i i ~ t kil's a miSfakc of'
jadernent." said Sen. John Kerry,
D-hlass.. chairman ofthe Foreign
Rclalions s ~ ~ b c o r n m ion t t ~ter-
rorism. He protnised to hold
furlhcr hearings on the subject
and sumrnon Treasury omcials to
teslify.
Thc ranking Republican on
tlrc pnnrl. Hank Brown ofColoia-
do. rolled it a "major break-
dowrr" that raised serious ques-
lions about CIA management.
K* WMHINGTON - A former
top executive of the Bank of
-
and MachiaveUan ph&g tk p.rrrrrpt M l t
preserves or prisons?
1 . ~
foot or horseback and mud
;
a T O - . a r a facility
ia - t d
~
Olrlm.
d J ~ e d 1 yfor di.porl
By TONY BLlZWRD comes to mind. camp in primitive fashion, of rut..
Jim T-nd's l a d article No longer do various federal while the king's men easily
in the October National Ed* agents conceal their in-place arrive at their plcuh ~ r t c l a After k 4 i m owvorrl
plans to suspend our Constitu- deep tnsfde Ulem by hell- trudr o f r u t w tdwrr
--
catm exposed the illegal fed-
era1 codspation of publlc tion on the pretext of some COP-. f o r nwmJ dam* tk
land in this country while emergency (such as the Bush of us in Jea* past mw&m of nrt. l w f t *
m a k g another point. But war). FEMA has t?m fleshed were hired by the f o n d ax- m d t k r r h w b a o o
back In those f e d d woo&
things are happening of which
out and made ready to en- Pice to build log cabins b the
force the nnning milltaw wild- for the trcret. tlkrr-.
f ~ i l i Otf ~
8-&
A
-
whtk government
aqlun inch of this land rrlP There will k a percentage d bOC ken pubuc memnldirtblkoamiP
ingly but it may k home for
some of us anyway.
Americans who will not cower lw pumla* rrportd
to t h e g w ~ h~e-l bve ken s y s t a n r t l ~ a ~ y c b t tbw r t l l R l d
We have tinthlmd accounts designed to instill total sub- burning
---
these M 6-1- d i r t rad
of doh@ in b1atcd d o n of thc people. If h d -tely
parts of national forest land in sfmply mmdcring these P o m 4 helllngs on l a d d w r m r t h t b r w
Oregon and Idaho and expect ple at point of contact Is mininge l m s , pnc.idy so--* 8-fwt
the same type of destruction deemed counhproductive the 10ckingthe =le of I ~ i k u lrbo *
is taking plact elsewhere. proven tactic of mmdhg a - ~ m u C l d . nmmd tk to " J a w
Destruction is Uie proper them up in con-centration the ftrr ar p * x m M t *
tenn as 50ecre plus areas of camps for whatever means of -t ,,did hart
- -
forest are king totally de- disposal will be used. Rumors lisw m b and fees
nudd by the forest d c t ,
some of it by private contract.
of barbaric treatment drifting for sad
back to the general populace
mm
peb
This land is bdng screened of from such p h m usually ple,s farestsnitg,n,
all twigs, rocks and any keeps it marc dodle than -ti& uc
stone mom than w e inch in blood in the streeb. marc mtrictive with mna
diameter'ova thi'khole W- The inaccesabillty of thew shtt g, .mnr
fact and two feet f f new compounds pluj the -d d-
it. Then dght-foot cyclone forest service's obvious dcsin w m b l e m
fencu, which also extend for the public not to k aware
about four feet underground, of them tends to weigh frontations sach as that f d
are W i g erected a r d the heavily toward the idea of by the Insolent and 8wagga-
perimeters. So what do we concentration camps in our h g Pogoe against Claude
now have inside that fence? public lands. Dab which cost Pogtw md
According to the forest su- And why not? Although the one btha Uldr and Dalb
vice, it is an area for seedline publlc has been propagan- hb tmd0m.
plantings. Ostensibly. the dized for years on the need to Qv~nrmenhltYmnY not
fence would k there to keep pmeme the West's natural- new on i b ~ItlaWfUll~ held
browsing animals apart from nm for future generations, lands or even prlvate land. It
the seedlings. the facb are different. Deslg- b an ongoing and ever in-
There is some rationale to nated wilderness areas con- cnasing program of design to
this. Yet the burying of the sistently colndde with des- do away wlth private oma-
fence under the ground is dls- perately needed natural re- ship, ala Karl M a n & Co.
turbing. In the lght of the sourcu which the owners d Only a d and detcnnlncd
Bush admMstration's plan to oar gwanmcnt have thus dtl~mvwill halt and reverse
incarcerate those too mu& tied up for future profit. Their this blatant p r o w tbdt
opposed to hb banker's war, profit. with Its consequent economic
once he gets it started, an- -
The federal government has slavcrp for the ~ C of S
other tuc for Unsc compormds the people work from the
axiom: He who o m wery-
thing o m he who OWTI8
nothing.
A STRANGE AFFAIR, AND A STRANGE
SEQUEL
--
e c o n n a h c e OfficeA the United Statess m& Of wm ga- to us. Phfl-
!Mestine - -
and molt expensive intelligence relied workers.
agency. NRO spies are reading the electronic mail With& m - t i a g agency by n a m both:
and watching the military movements of friends Desert S w a x n m No- Schw-OPf
and foes. . and Gates have called the N W s inability to de-
The agency b d & and the nation's li= m y battlefield of thc big-
soace sate 'tes code-namea v
@mum and Eyh6le. These spiesxe apz
LB
see license plates from deep space, peer through task f-
gest failures of the war.
MY the 8- d Y pr0b1-
m t l y rebuked the a#cncy for huge
A Qb
clouds to survey battlefields, track armies fighting C O S ~excuse~in buiWng its m k l l l h , which now
at night and eavesdrop oa the wotld's klecom- can cost than St billion eech.The CIA team
munications. W d the NRWS opaptiolro had become SO sprawl-,
Everything about the NRO, including its name, ing and m p h that no one W a s in CJWW
is supposed to be Top Secret. National secari Mach of the satellite data flow past analysts,
laws prohibit m e m h of Coa -who have no tin* to study iL The costly in-:
h e words "Nahonal Recmamissance Office" in tellig- ends up gathering dust in a vault, ac- .
open sesslon. The NRO's budget, an etsbnated $? COrdiag to ni- Oekram
billion a vear. amears nowhere on the ~ e n t a z o n s The NRO also has been shaken by the end of the
,books. OfficiaUv. the NRO does not exist. Cold War. Until recently, the primary target of its
But it's no secret the agency is in trouble with satellites was the Soviet Union and its nuclear
, 'Congress, the CIA.and the Pentagon. weapaaa. The urgency of that task b disappearing
- .- Its critics in the intelligence community say the along with the Soviet military threat .
es with gold-rrlated techml-
,
om and tanaled chains of command. Tim want to
' .overhaul or abolish it and save b i o m .
;' The MlO's incapabilities are "a glaring gap .
in an area where many,many, many of our dollam
..
: -are going," Intelligence Committee Chair-
an David Boren i . told CIA D i i t o r R o 6 Rging to refom the NRO "cracks the most
.%
.: Gates at a p u b l i x g earlier this month. crockery" of any postGold War changes in the
d: "It is not a milliondoIlar area," Born sald nation's !py &works, sai
' "It's a multibilliondollar area." $Munittee Chairman Dave ,
-
M A T R I X 1 1 1
TECHNOLOGY
"I will say what we observed." @e
MIT t o Hear Imun.
-if- c ear h sicist
On Cold Fusion ~. - - ~ .- .~ -~
4% -4%
~
times."
Dr. Takahashl May create &the[,@
in Cambridge, albeit of a different sor€ '
F'rom the davcold fusion hit 'theheadlines
Lold Fusion
..The Enemies of Cold Fusion Fusion in His Basement Preparata pointed out that cold fu-
- The press conference was chaired
sibn scientists are being subjected to
by Dr. Eugene Mallove, author of the Mallove also announced that he and a double standard. There are experi-
book "Fire from Ice," the story of the some collaborators were attempting to ments that go on in the solid-state
development of cold fusion. Mallove repeat experimental results obtained physics lab, in which the accepted
updated the story of persecution of the by Dr. AkitoTakahashi in Japan.Taka- phenomena are much more difficult to
many scientists who confirmed hashi hasrun a cold fusion cell over a reproduce than this one. Onen things
Fleischmann and Pons' contention two-month period with well over lm go wrong But no one ever questions
that fusion could be achieved at room excess heat, at an average power den- the validity of the phenomena, be-
temperatures, only to be ostracized by sity. conservatively estimated at 50 cause these are done in the labora-
the leaders of the scientific estab- watts per cubic centimeter. tories supefiised by Nobel Prize win-
lishment. On two occasions, he witnessed sud- ners who are considered unassailable,
After the publication of his book, Dr. den bursts of excess heat .which Preparata asserted. .
Mallove, who had been a press officer caused his electrolyte to rapidly boil "You are dealing with a subtle pro-
at MIT, resigned fros his position off, and once. when he removed his ex- cess here which must be explained by
there rather than defend what he saw periment from the electrolyte, he saw real scientific thinking," Preparata
to be a.deliberate fraud heing commit- the beginnings of what he feared said. Then he directed an impassioned
-. ted by leading scientists a t n Z o dis- would be a runaway fusion reaction. 'appeal to the audience that they, espe-
credit the Fleischmann-Pons results. To avert this he restarted electrolysis, cially the laymen, not be dissuaded
Mallove reviewed the hideous treat- thus effectively stirring the electrolyte from fighting for scientific truth. "Fot
ment accorded cold fusion experi- in order to bleed heat more easily from the sake of your children, for the sake
menters in the United States, and said the overheating cathode. ofthe future ofhumanity, we must fight
he believed .technological implemen- Mallove hopes to have himself some this stranglehold on science that af-
tation is very .near. "Within this de- confirming, positive results by the fects us all." . .
cade. I would expect to see cold fusion time Dr. Takahashi comes to MIT,
cells heating homes and perhaps even where he is scheduled to give a talk . Working with a scientific team in
powering home-generating stations in April 15. Mallove warmly described Nice, France, Pons and Fleischmann
certain situations. . ..Spectacular a p Takahashi's collaboration with the in; now routinely achieving power de-
plications to aerospace are also possi- ternational scientific community to positions in.the range of one. kilowatt
ble, such as the powering of electric replicate his experiment per cubic centimeter, in a series of re-
ion thrusters." Unlike the case of hot fusion-in peatable experiments. This is a power
Mallove and Preparata attacked the which nuclei of d m (the heavy .density about 1,000 times greater than
vicious witchhunt conducted in the isotope of hydrogen) are accelerated that achieved in commercial nuclear
U.S. and Europe against scientists who to high speeds so that they will crash, -&ion plants.
had the courage to attest to the reality into each other and fuse into -a new
of this revolutionary new science, and heavier nucleus-in cold fusion the ie
then were subjected to persecution markable metal, ~a11adiu.m~ is used -to
similar to that which drove the two pio- promote the fusion react~on.
neers to leave the United States. Takahashi uses a palladium cathode
In perhaps the most exciting mo- (positive electrode), with a plate-like.
ment of this dramatic press confer- shape and a volume of 0.6 cubic centi-
ence, Dr. Preparata gave an impas- meters. Using electrolysis, he pumps
sioned deferise of truth in science: "I deuterium (which is liberated by elec-
want you to understand that we are in trolysis from a heavy-water electro-
a really serious situation, because our lyte) into the palladium,. in a ratio
science is now dominated by an Aristo- above one atom of deuterium to each
telian ideology, and this is what lies atom of palladium. Other groups in Ja-
behind the adverse reaction that we pan, Italy, and the United States.are
are getting to the results of cold fusion. repeating his experiment
In response to one reporter's obses-
sive demands for an explanation of
why some scientists had been unable
to reproduce the Fleischmann-Pons
results, Preparata explained that cer-
tain criteria.had to be met in the load-
ing of the cells--that is, the procedure
by which.deuterium is caused to be
absorbed into the palladium metal lat-
tice. But once these are met, compe-
tent experimenters can and have regu-
larly reproduced the phenomenon of
cold fusion.
L ~ EDGE~ RESEARCH,
D P- ~0. BOX ~48 1-MU58,
~ WASHINGTON : 1.'Z/1-ilS,NV 891 80- 14 0 7
The Secret Alliances of the CIA
from World War I1 to Watergate
-
by Howard Kohn
(from Rolling Stone, May 20, 1976)
ob Haldeman sat in the Oval Oflice and outlined prob- Luciano to have Mafia henchmen pan1 the w a t e r h a In tun,
B lem. A security guard had snunbled onto a burglary at
the
Democratic National Headquarters six days earlier. FBI agents
Luciano was 10 be set free.
As New York City's Mafia-fighting special prosecutor,
had k e n asking embanassing questions ever since. Thomas Dewey hadcatapulM to the governor's chair by putting
Richard Nuon's solution, as recorded by the While House Luciano behind ban. But Governor Dewey now agreed to the
taping system. was simple: the ClA should tell the FBI to call deal and transferred Lucivlo from Danntmon state prison,
off its detectives. The CIA would agree, Nixon assured Hal- hown as "Siberia," to gentlemen's quarters at a prison near
dunan. because "if it gets out that this is all involved. the Cuba Albany. Then. shortly after V-E Day. he signed the parole p a p .
thing woulg be a fiwo-it would make the CIA look bad-and By then the Mlfia had developed a larger friendship with the
it is likely to blow the whole Bay of Pigs thing which we think Ofiice of Strategic Services (OSS), the country's f ~ sautono-
t
would be very unfornmate. both for the CIA and the country." mous intelligence agency, set up to oversee all wutime espion-
Hddeman cvried Nixon's message to CIA director Richard age. The OSS made a pact with the Maf~a,known as Operation
Hclms. And later he told thc Senate Watergate committee of Underworld. that included gangland assistance for the Allied
Helms's reaction to chc Bay of Pigs rcfcrcncc: "On that one Mr. armies when they landed in Sicily. Having an IOU from thc OSS
Hclms jumped up veryrapidly and very defensively to say. 'That secmcd like a shrewd investment f a rhc Mafia
is of no concern at all. We don't want to get into that at all."' But at Ihf war's end in 1945 IIIC OSS was disbanded. a move
TIE Bay of Pigs operation had takcn plxc tcn ycvs cvlicr as that dismayed bolh thc M s ~ anda a sccrct circlc of businessmen.
r plan to ovcnhrow the govcrnmcnt of Fidcl Cauo. Among its politicians and espionage expcru.
pvticipmu had bccn John F. Kcnncdy, Robcrt Kennedy. Rich- Thc mcn in this circlc wcrc from wcll-bred. well-cduatcd
ard Nixon. Mafia Ic3dcrs and hiuncn, Howard Hughcs. thc CIA. backgrounds. gcncrdly evtcrncrs with connutions at thc high-
Richard Hclms. Cl~vics"Bcbc" Rcbozo. Robcrt Mahcu. E. tit lcvcls of govcrnmcnt and fmancc. Allen Dullcs. a Rincctcn
Howard Hunt, Frank Sturgis and thc Mullcn Agcncy. Thcn lhcy graduatc and formcr top-ranking OSS official. and Governor
all rcappcarcd in the Watagatc scandd. Dewy wcrc two of thcir Imdcn. Both Dullcs and Dcwcy had
All cxccpt thc Kcnncdy brothers. Thcy wcrc dcad bccn Wall S u e t lawycn. on rhe opposite sidc of New York from
Lmky and Luciano, and they bolh expcctcd to reach top posi-
BThe0thrwtcd
thc Bay of Pigs affair andthc Watergate scandal wcrc
in thc cynicism of a World War fl allimcc.
year was 1942. The U.S. had just entered the war. The
tions in Washington. Their mentor had kcn Dulles's brolhcr.
John Fostcr. who had mprescntd IheUS. government in crucial
treaty negotiations after both world wan.
D e p m c n t of War was worried that nazi saboteurs were in-
filtrating thc docks and shipyards along the East Coat. Alrcady World War II had turned thc U.S. into the world's most power-
the troopshipNormandie had burned and sunk in her Manhattan ful nation Dewey, the Dulles brothers and others had formed
berth. their secret circle because lhey saw themselves as loyal and
pragmatic Americeticvlswith aduty to help shape thecounuy's new
Thcn a Navy officer suggatcd seeking help from thc Mafia. international role. The project was to resurrect the OSS.
which controlled an army of toughs through iu influence in the
dock-workers' unions. In shon order. Naval Intelligence offi- Nocaunvy could stay on top, they believed without a powerful
cials struck a bargain with Meyer Lansky. and independent intclligence agency. Allen Dulles championed
tjnslry had grown up in a scruffy New York neighborhood this idea among his contacts at the Pentagon and in the Tnunan
whcre he had levncd to boorlcg. loan-shark and kill on assign- administration. Tnrmvl was so impressed that he appointed
ment. He also had gained a reputation as a business wizard and Dulles to head a three-member carunission to study the U.S.
become close friends with Lucky Lucimo. the MaZia's don of intelligence system. Dewey and others in the stcrrt c k l e lob-
'
dons. In 1931 Lucimo's hirmen had cvried out a bloody purge bied Congress.
In July 1947 Congress passed the National Security Act Tm-
of the hla!ia's old guard "Moustache Pcta" to clear the way for
his takeover. 73en he had employed h k y to modernize the man signed it. as Dulles and Dewey had recommended. thereby
Mafia's ingrownfamily saucture. But in 1936 Luciano had been creating the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) as a successor to
scnt to prison with a 50-year sentence. a misadventure that the OSS. The CIA was given a secret budget and a chancr written
jeopardized the vision of a new mafia. Orher leaders in the so loosely as to grant the agency nearly unlimited power.
blood-03th Sicilian fraternity still considered the Jcwish Lasky Outfitted in the country's finest ideological cloak. the CIA was
an outsidcr and. without Lucivlo around, balked at his innova- charged with protecting America by whatever m e m neccssuy.
tions. The Cold War had staned. Communists werc rhe new enemies.
LuisL~saw the Naval ln~cllipcnccdcd as a chance to improve The communist spread across the globe w s to be stopped TO
his posiuon among ctie ruling lords of organized crime by thc secret circlc. some of whosc mcmbcn becane key CIA
opening prison gatcs for the don of dons. hnsky penuadcd officials. that mcmt the CIA war to be Ihe patron of U.S.
mulrinational cornpanics which had set up shop in undcrdevel- medentills were slim: the FBI had rejectcd him. his law clients
oped countries to makc money and oppose communism. had found him embarrassingly naive and his war record w v
The OSS's old friend. the Mafia. was among the leading mediocre. But Nixon ran with manic zest. slandered his o p
multinational corporations that emerged in the L e Forties. ponent as a communist and returned a winner.
LYuLy's moxie in frceing Luciano had impressed the Sicilian ' In 1947 Dewey had recruited Nixon's vote to helpestablish the
dons. Even his chief rival. "Fat Albert" Anastasia. paid homage CIA Dewey liked Nixon's m o d pragmatism and his fitrce
to Lvlsky when the Mafia boss waked out of prison-"You're anti-communism. So in 1948 Dewey arranged a special favor
the only bastard with the brains to do it" Lansky also had f a Nixon during the celebrated Alger Hiss eye.
outwitted the don of dons. Luciano was departed to Sicily A magazine cdita had claimed Hiss was a communist n e
immediately upon his release. But. with hciano's ~ n r r ~ e n r e dHouse Un-Amtrican Activities Commiuet (HUAC) investi-
blessing. I a s k y took charge of domestic operations and fm- gated and was about to exonerate H i when N i o n suddenly
ished the job the two had started a decade before. Lansky merged asked to take over whaf seemed a losing case. Nixon's rkasoa
the Malia's rival gangs into a conglomerate known as the Inter- f a volunteering lo head the investigation. according to CIA
national Crime Syndicate, a network that Lansky estimated was souus. was that he had inside infonnafion from Dewey.
"bigger than U.S. Steel" and which he immersed in baddng. rcal Dewey had initially alsoconsidend H i s innocent John Foster
uute. tourism and gambling. Dulles. serving as Dewey's chief foreign policy adviser in the
At the same time. the exiled Luciano expandedthe Syndicate's 1948 campaign, had defended Hiss and had recommended him
o v m e v conneuons. With some help from the CIA. Luciano f a 8 job at the Carnegie Endowment where Dulk was board
formed an-international smuggling route for Ihe Syndicate's chairman. But then, according to CIAsourcu. the secret k l e ' s
booming narcotics business. When communist strikers shut friends in the agency conducted an invesugation and informed
down the French pon of Marseilles in 1947 and lfueatened to Dewey and the Dulles brothers that Hiss, while a top Smte
ruin American shipping. the CIA called on Luciano. He fur- Depamnent official under Tnunan.hiklonged to the Com-
nishcd hiunen while the CIA supplied money and weapons. munist Party.
After several murden the dock opened for American shippcn Dewey saw a chance to emburass Tman. to bolster the
and for the Syndicate's heroin smugglers. credibility of HUAC (which Truman wanred u, abolish) and to
-
Whcn thc Syndicate later added Southeast Asia's "Golden boost Nixm"s carter without publicly involving himself. In
Triangle" to its hcroin routc. thc,CIAagain was accommodating. late July 1948 Dcwey Icakcd the CIA'S frndings to Nixon. On
To stop communism thc apncy shippcd cash and munitions to August 51h Hiss appcucd bcfm HUAC and dcnicd hc'd cvcr
Laotian mcrccnarics. who happcncd to k opium gmwcn cm- met thc m a g h c cditor who had accused h i of communism.
ploycd on thc Syndicate's hcroin uadc. CLA plsncs wcrc uscd to Nixon stood firm against H i s while thc other HUAC mcmbcrs
providc s d c pvsagc for thc first Icg of thc heroin's long joumcy acccptcd Hiss's version. But Nixon was unccn;rin about how to
to U.S. ghcttos. Likc the OSS. the CIA did not shrink from procccd. So on August 11Lh hc hcld a rcndczvous with Ihc Dullcs
making dcals with thc Syndicatc to preserve U.S. intcrcsts. brothcrs at thc Rwscvclt Hotcl in Ncw York According to CIA
Undcr thc CIA'S charter. such vnngcmcnts wcrc Icgal. But sourccs. thc brothcrs gave Nixon their approval for a full-scalc
Thomu Dcwcy and Allen Dullcs rcalizcd that chc CIA ncedcd atuck on Hiss. and Allcn Dullcs providcd somc ammunition:
to safcguud its own political basc to avoid potential power confkrnation that Hiss had known thc magYinc cditor tcn ycvs
struggles in Washington. a practical analysis that quickly cvricd before. Five days latcr Hiss m a p p e d before HUAC an& undcr
thc agcncy into a clandcsrinerolc in Amcrican electoral politics. Nixon's questioning. began to rcacat from his former state-
Dcwy himself was thc oddson favorite to kcome president ments. A few months later. raording to CIAsourccs. CIAagents
in 1948. To insure his elcction the CIA funneled more than S1 also played a part in leading the freshman conpcsmm lo the
million from its seaet budget into Dewey's campaign. according evidence that eventually convicted Hiss.
to agency sourcu. Meyer b k y likewise supported Dewey. The SCmdal gave Nixon a national reputation. In 1950 Nixon
marshding Syndicate money and political clout behind the left the Housc to run f a the Senale against the popular Helen
rcpubiican nominee (although some older M d a bosses. still Douglas. Nixon labclcd her the " P i Ljdy" and his campaign
rcsmrful of Dewey's racketeering spree in the Thinies. refused literature described h a as a fellow uaveier of communists.
to contribute). Munay Cholincr. Nixon's campaign manager and his first "diny
Truman's upset victory inttrmpted this scheme. But that did u i c W specialist. wrote the smear pamphlets. But. actording to
not conccm the CIA as much as the ephemeral moods on Capitol CIA sources. Chotiner received most of his information about
Hill. What the CIA wanted from Congess. aside from its money. Douglas from CIA files that the agency provided.
was to be left alone. In the opinion of Dulla and Dewey's senet Nixon won easily over Douglas and took his seat in the Senate.
-
circle. Congrcss posed the grcatcst danger to CIA autonomy. As thanks to thc assist from the CIA and to another from thc
Syndicate.
3 hcdge against difficulties. the secret circle began to buy con-
gressional goodwill for the CIA. Congressional members found In keeping with Malia uadition. Lvlsky invested money in the
Lhcir reelection problems aided
cndoncments - - conuibuuons. volunteen. campaigns of politicians at all levels of government Mickey
and their staffs occupied with bright young Cohen, the Syndicate's Southern California gambling chief in
assistmu introduced by mcmbus of the secret circle. Most the Forties. later admitted to helping t i i c e the early stages of
favors went to young congressional members with a promising Nixon's career. According to Cohcn. the oansactions wzre hand-
future. politicians who someby might be Capitol Hill leaden led by Choliner, who rcmained a Nixon advisa through his later
and \Vhite House spirants. ascent to the presidency. Columnist Drcw Pearson rcponcd hat,
Richard Nixon. a membcr of the House of Rcprcsentatives. was in exchange for the Syndicate conuibuuons. Cholincr usfd his
cnc recipient Nixon had been electcd in 196. The Orange influence to keep bookmakers out of jail in U s Anples.
County rcpubiican party had placcd a newspaper ad to solicit a In 1952. afier only six ycvs in politics. Richard Nixon bccvnc
~okcncandidate in a race against h e undcfcated democratic vice-prcsidcnt. His nomination was shcpherdcd through by
incumbent. Nixon. just out of thc Navy. applied for the job. His Dewcy's backroom mancuvering. Having abandoned his own
presidential ambitions. Dewey lhrcw his suppon ru uwlght On Capitol Hill the freshman Nixon prqbefriended by fellow
Eisenhower. Then. at Dewey's request. Eisenhower picked congressman George Smathus, a M l m playboy who inno-
Nixon as his running mate. duced him to Richard Duma. Smarhen's 1946 campaign man-
Allen Dulles. who had become CIA deputy director in 1951, aga. Danna, a former FBI agent. had been fucd as Miami's city
arranged for CIA bacldng of the Eisenhower-Nixonticket. Poli- manager in 1948 after the city council accused him of 'playiag
-
tical intelligence reports of Korean War mistakes embarrass- both sides against themiddle" in a gangland dispute ovacontrol
-
ing to the outgoing Truman administration were leaked to the of the city police depuanent btn.Dannu went to work for
Howard Hughes. as H u g h ' s liaison to Nuon. and became a
media. And agency money was slipped to the campaign through
CIA front groups. pivotal character in Watergate, but in the la& Forties he was best
Immediately after the election. Dulles was promoted to the CIA known as a guide to LplSkyesuGold Coast"
directorship and his brothu was named saXetaly of statc. Nixon began socializing with southern Florida's fast-buck
With Nixon as vice-president and Dullu as CLA director. enuepreneurs. Among tbcm was Charles 'Bebe" Rebozo. Dan-
Lansky was immune from federal laws. In 1953 the Justice n a said he introduced Nixon to R e k in 1948. when h e
congressman vacationed in Miami on "the verge of a physical
Depament decided not to prosecute him even though the IRS breakdown" aftaweeks of t w i o n m the Hiss care.
intelligence division found he was evading taxes. and in 1 9 s
the Justice Deparanent failed to c m y through on an aucmp by Rebozo. a Cuban-American, had atfended elementary school
immigration authorities to deport him with SmalhuJ and l i e Nuon.had made his fvst big money
during World W u 11. Reboro had cornered the w h e market
Throughout the F i e s the careus of Richard Nixon. M e p r f a recapped tires in southern Florida. then had lent h a t money
Lansky anll Allen Dulles prospered. Their f u m s seemed un- to poor familiesat high i w m t ram.Both Rebozo and Smathen
limited. But then the adIairs of a little island in the Caribbean
changed that outlook and inextricably bound up the collective
- who became partners in several questionable r u l esuce
-
ventures shared Nixon's earlier fascination with Cuba.
f o r m s of the CIA. the Syndiate and the White House. In March 1952 Batista recumed fran exile and resurrected his
dictatorship in a bloodlc~scoup set up by h k y ' s S250.000 to
M eycr Lylsky fmt visited Cuba in the fall of 1933 on a
scarch for molasses to use in making rum. But the island
was brimming with othcr opportunities. Lansky befriended Ful-
be JIU elected president in return for his abdication. Nuon and
Smarhtnjoined tvlsky as ardcnt fans of Batista. Smathus. who
gcncio Batista. achubby ex-army scrgcant who had just ordaincd had becn clccted to the US. SCIUW in 1950. lobbied so aggrcs-
himsclf dictator. With Batista's sanction. h k y opcned scveral sively for rig to Batista that hc became known as the "senator
ncw casinos. thc gcncsis of thc Mafia's international gmbling from Cuba.' One month after Batisu's rctum. Danncr took
nctwork. Nixon on a tour of LhC Havana casinos. (Also along was Dana
Richard Nixon's f i t known trip to Cuba c m c in 1940. Rou- Shinilh. soon to become infamous as adminisator of the slush
Icttc whccls wcrc spinning 34 hours a day; tourisu j m c d the fund t h s almost knocked Nixon out of the 1952 vicc-presiden-
country. Hc was on vacation from his job as prosamtor in tid race.)
Whidcr. California. According to b r l MYO. Nixon's biog- Nixon. Smathen and Rebozo uscd Cuba as an investment
raphcr. Lhc young lawycr expiorcd Cuba and c n t d n c d "the property as well as a playground. According to a law enforce-
possibilities of establishing law or busincss connections in Hav- ment official familiar with American holdings in the Cpbbean.
ana." the rhrcc hcld vast interests in Cuba during the Fities
Buista had turned into a hard-line anticommunist and his
Whatcver Nixon had in mind was intermptcd by World War II. Cuban home provided a safe haven for American entnprcneun.
The tourists stopped coming. and LYlsky shut down the Cuban None were more successful than Lanslry and Luciano.
gambling spas. According to the Federal Bureau of Nucotics. Luciano hoped
With the Cuban economy sagging. Batisu encountered politi- Cuba would "become the center for all international narcotics
cal m o i l . To stay in power he had to make concessions that operations." Luciano had arrived in Cuba in 1947 to lay rhe
extcnded communist influence. U.S. corporations fcared their groundwork. For yevs there had been factories in Cuba that
Cuban invesanents might be nationalized So. in 1944. Naval processed cocaine. Luciano added laboratoriesfor heroin Then
Intelligenceasked Lansky topressure Batista intoncpping down with Batista's return. Cuba mushroomed into a major narcotics
to keep out the communisls. headquaners.
Lmsky, a staunch anti-communist. prevailed upon the dictator, Under the new Batista regime Lansky also rejuvenated gam-
elections were held. a pro-American candidate won. and Batism bling in Cuba. He had persuaded the other Syndicate leaders to
left Cuba for eight years of exile in southern Florida. invest heavily in a new concept: the hotelcasino. High-rolling
Southern Florida was hteyu Lansky's headquartus in the gamblers were flown in and bedded in plush rooms an elevator
Forties. He had trvrsfcrred his Cuban casino business to hotel ride away from croupiers and poker chips. Lansky and hciano's
suites md restaurant back rooms along the Miami Bexh "Gold junia parmer. Bugsy Siegel. had in 1945pioneered his concept
Cost." The 1950 Kefauver Scnate committee discovered that a on a dusty stntch of Nevada desert that became known as the
major gmbling entcr was headquancred at the Wofford Hotel. Las Vegas Suip. But Havana's midway was even more dazzling.
a htivni Beach hotel m by Taturn "Chubby" Wofford. One of In a few years the Syndicate's hotelcasinos there were earning
WoUord's yachting companions during this time was Richard an estimated annual profit of $100 million.
Nixon. Batista arranged for legislation that guvanteed a gambling
When thc war began Nixon h d gone to work in Washington license to anyone investing S1 million in a hotel. The Cuban
Y 3 ~ovcmment lawyer. thcn joincd Lhe navy and shipped out to government not only matched such invcsuncnts dollar for dollar,
Grccn Island in thc Pacific. whcre he built a jungle shack. but it also waived corporate tyrcs on all hotclcasinm.
stockcd it with booze and ran pokcr games for the other sailors. Nixon was among Batista's frequent md well-rcceived pests
Hc lcft thc navy with a 510.000 bankroll to invest in his ncw during the Fiftics. In 1955Nixon pinned m award on Batistj and
political career. . the two posed grandly in thc d~ctator'spalace.
pany. was granted a tax-exempt stants that had beendenied twice
befae3a tax dodge that saved Hughes an estimated $36 millian
B y the mid-Firties. Howard Hughes. sole owner of the coun-
try's largest privately held corporation, also was deeply
enmeshed in the dynamics of money and politics. Hughes's
a year.
During the next decade. Hughes's intuesls continued to merge
with Nixon. the CIA -and eventually with the Syndicate.
involverncnt dated from World War 11. His aircraft company had
not talcen off fmancially. despite his brilliant innovations in
aviation. until the war broke out Then. due in part to a recom-
mendation from Franklin Roosevelt's son. Colonel Elliott
Roosevelt. Hughes won a $70 million government contract for
IThree
n 1958 a bearded ex-lawya descended from Cuba's Sima
Maestra mountains with a YankeeGo-Home revolution.
Lansky lieutenants smuggled in a planeload of arms.
his personally designed F-11 photo-reconnaissance plane. Ac- stolen from a Natiorul Guard may,to help Balista stop the
cording to Senate testimony from former Hughes man John advance of Rdcl Casm. But Castm seized Havrnr on New
Meyer. Colonel Roosevelt made his recommendation after Year's Day 1959and Batista md Lansky fled Cuba the sarr& day.
Hughes's money had helped fmance the colonel's romance with Lansky 's brother Jake stayed behind to try salvagingthe Syndi-
an actress. cate's gambling and narcotics opntia But Casm threw Jake
Senator Owen Brewsta. a grandstanding Maine republican in jail for 25 days and. by 1960, had deported dl Syndicate
angry with Hughes over an unrelated business dispute. accused members, padlocked the amusementparlors. Nedthe dope labs
him of license-buying. But Hughes survived a wideopen wn- - and expropriated all other Amaican business holdings.
gressional investigation headed by Brewster by araibuting the At CIA headquarters ia Laagley, Vuginir meanwhile. the
investigationto Brewster's personal vendetta. Hughes then des- agency began hatching a plan to retake Cuba.
uoycd Brewster's power by pumping 560.000 into the election Urdu Allen.Dulles's leadership the CIA hd become h e
campaign of a political opponent. strategic arm of his brother's foreign policy at the State Depart-
Hughes considued himsclla patriot and fclt he'd becn unfairly
singled out for practices standard to most defense firms. He
-
ment promoting US. investmenu abroad and stopping the
spread of communism. In 1954. f a example. the CIA helped
-
-
tumcd bitter and cynical. Hc dccidcd that for his own good
and for the gobd of thc counvy he nccdcd powerful allies.
ovenhrow a communist-leaning G u a t e d a n government bat
had expropriated 22S.000 axes from Unircd Fruit, a U.S. com-
Thc CIA was an obvious choice. as he latcr explained in a burst pany with ties to the RockfeIhr family.
of candor. According to sworn testimony in 1414 from formcr Casuo's government in Cuba piqued the CIA for several rca-
i d c Robert Maficu. Hughcs bclicvcd that "iT hc evcr bccamc sons. 'Ihc CIA'S Sovict counlcrprm. the KGB. could used Cuba
involvcd [again] in any problcm with the govcmmcnt. cilhcr to launch revolutions in C a m 1 and South America against U.S.
with a rcgulatay body or an invcstig~tivcurn. it would bc intcrcsts thcrc. Dullcs's Wall Succt friends alrc~dyhad suffcrcd
bcnclicial for him to bc in the position of bcing a front [for thc hu'gc rcvcrscs in Cubz Casm had confiscated the Frccpon
CIA]." Nickcl mine. aftiliatcd with the Rodccfellcn. ud a scon of
Hughcs was a tough-mindcd oppornmist and an intensely lcsscr industries.
privatc mm, with no stockholders to qucstion his decisions
an idcd ally for thc CIA. as carly as 1949Hughes was dcsigning
- Thcrc also was thc loss of the Syndiwtc's casinos. Thc casinos
had bcen an opcn-cndcd money funnel for both Ihe Syndicate
and mmufacturingspccid equipment for the spy agency. During and the CIA. Lansky had mvtamindcd a system that allowed
thc Fiftics, Hughcs bcgm hiring ex-CIA employees as top the Syndicate to skim winnings. made cues and launder illicit
adminisvators and he cvcntually b e m e the country's leading funds at the gaming tables. The CIA. actording to agency
CIA conuactor. a position that effcctivcly shicldcd him from sourccs. had been using the same system and the same casinos
fcdcml prosecution. to hide its pymems to the underworld figures it wmcrimes
Hugha. likc the CIAand W k y . also understood quidpro quo employed.
and elcctoral politics. "Everyone has a price." hc told Noah So the CIA planned to topple Castm w i h a sup& invasion
Dicvich. who latcr rccalled that thc billionaire conuibuted up to About 1200 Cuban exiles would land at the Bay of Pigs. steal
5400.000 csch year to "councilmen and county supervisors. tax through the jungle and establish a renegade govanmcnt thus
asscssors. sheriffs. statc senators and asscmblymcn. district at- providing a m e for a full US. military assault against the Casm
torneys. governors. congressmen and senators. judges - yes. regime. The invasion plan was developed almost entirely behind
and vicc-prcsidcntsand presidents. too." Resident Eisenhower's back accading to author Haynes John-
Among thcm was Richard Nixon. son. who wrote a d e f ~ t i v einside account of the operation
Hughcs and Nixon s h a d the same antiunnmunist pose. Colonel L. Fletcher Routy. an Air Force lilison to the CIA
During thc McCarthy era Hughes closed down his movie studio between 1955 and 1963. reached the same conclusion "Eiscn-
for thrce months to check his payroll for patriotism. and he vied hower had never wer contemplated an invasion," Rauty said in
to destroy Elizabeth Taylor's career because she was dating a a recent interview. "We h d pretty specific insauction from
supposcd communist. Eisenhower of the limits of our authority. What we were allowed
In cvly 1956. according to a former Hughes aide. Ihe tycoon to do was land five or six people on a beach and have them blow
furnished Nixon with a sccret 5100.000 to help the vice-presi- up a sugar refiner).. snrfi like that."
dent fight a dumpNixon move by fcllow Republican Harold But four days kfore the 1960 presidential election. according
Slasscn. Then. in December 1956. Hughes loaned 5205,000 to to Johnson. the CIA circulated a memo saying the invasion was
h'ixon's brother Donald for a hamburger restaurant The "loan" going ahead. T\vo &ys later. Routy recalled. "we were told to
was ncvcr rcpaid. get B-26 bombers ready and to get transport aircraft ready."
In thc following months. Hughcs rcccivcd several special According to Routy. approval for the moves came from vice
dispnsalions from thc White House. A Justice D e p m e n t president Nixon.
antitrust suit was scttjcd by a consent dccrec. And the Hughcs Nixon was then head of the 53/12 Group. a National Sccurity
Irlcdicai Foundation. which technically owned the aircraft com- Council subgroup that supcrviscd coven activities. E. Howard
LEAOING EDGE RESEARCH, P. 0. BOX 48 1 -MU5
Hunt, thc CIA agent who ncmitcd Cuban exiles for the invasion Richard Whattley. a fellow merrenuy hired for rht invasio
later reported that Nixon was the Bay of Pip "secret action later recalled thz! SP- hjd s e ~ visits
d fr41i mZcantt. R
officcf" in the white House. 'Trafficante would order SNrgis to mwe his men and he'd do
Hunt had been h e CIAs chief political action officu during i u it. Our ultimate conclusion was that Trllficante was our b h .
successful coup in Guatemala. At every opportunity he po- .He was our money man." Accotding to sources in M i a .
moted the same tactics for ~ u b a . ~ ' l h r o the
u ~ long
h fall of 1960 Trafficante also infiluatd Operation Fony with Syndicate
Hunt mustered a secret m y of exiles. They were run through money and henchmu~"'~
makeshift boot camps and shaped into a strike force. Secret As the invasion neared. wofk kgan on a plot to demo&
training sites were set up in the Florida Evaglades. on the casno's forces by killing their leader. Among those invoived in
Louisiana delta and in the Caribbean. The CIA-installed govern- this plot were Trafficante. Sewgis. Hunt a d R o k n Maheu. a
ment in Gu;ucrmla also pmvided a nurrptitim guerrilla base. Howard Hughes operafive.
Another was on Cay Sd. a rocky outaapping off Florida ?he CIA eventually tried s e v d times to murder Gastro.
owned by Howard Hughes. Not only had Hughes given the CIA Resident Johnson later discovered that "we're running a damn
temporary custody of the island. but. according to one former Murder Incorporated in the Caribbean." Lursky had been the
CIA operative. he'd furnished the guerrillas with an alibi: if fmto propose the idea when he placed a $1 million price aa
discwered. they could say lhey were rehearsing for r Hughes Castro's life in 1959. Sturgis was still Castro's gambling super-
movie. Gerry Hemming. a hulking ex-Marine who conducted visor when he heard about the bounty from Hymrn Levine,
drills at one of the tnining sites. later recalled that he helped Luuky's manager at the Comodoro Casino. Snugis said he
unload crates labeled Toolw." then the name of Hughes's prued Lhe word along to his CIA contacts.
parent company. h i d e the crates werecamp gear and m x h i i u y Hunt. as the Bay of Pigs operations officer, added his personal
for the invasion. recommendation in a memo Knt to his CIA supavisas in the
Hughes had a purposc for his paviolism. A c w t i i g to a former spring of 1960. That summa the C u m , assassination con-
aide. Hughes intended to nrsh into Cuba once Castro fell and spiracy began.
dcvclop a series of resort pYkt on the b h front. build his own Allcn Dulles and his deputies decided in August 1960 to
jumbo a i m and buy up a block or two of casinos and set subconrna the job. l h e y enlisted help from R o k n Mahcu. an
himscU up as a tourism magnatc. Bccause of the manipulativc ex-FBI agcnt who h# worked f a thc CIA under a spccid
qualitics of casino accounting. the aide said. Hughcs hopcd to rctaincr s i n e 1954. M l c u . an engaging. smanh-W3ng
nun the cntirc vcnnuc into an cnormous tax dodg h t would opentor. had quit Ihc FBI in the early Fdtics to open a pnvate
banish tax bills forcvcr. Hughcs apparently cxpcacd to rcach an dctcctivc agcncy in Washington. a firm that spccidizrd in solv-
accommodation with thc Syndicsc. "Hughes had a \ot of rcspcct iqg problems ouuidc thc normd chumcls. At the CIA hc was
for thc Mob. apccidly Lasky," the aide rcwllcd "My guess considcrcd a c o n s u m t c "fix-it" m;m.
is h t he hopcd to form somc soft of p m c n h i p with Lmky." ?hc CIA officials askcd Mahcu to enlist Syndicate men for the
For h ~ k and y Lhe Syndicate. thc Bay of Pigs plan hcld f u Casuo murdcr. according to thc 1975 ChurchS a n e commiucc
v a t c r significance. Four c x ~ v i n bosscs
o -Russell Bufalino, and autholizcd h i to pay 3150.000 for the hit MAcu told the
J m c s Plumai. Georgc Lcvinc and Salvatore Grancllo uscd -
vustcd Cuban contacts to supply the QA with scouting rcpons
Church committcc hc hcsiutcd initially beeaux he f d the
projcct might intcrfcrc with his w a k for Howard H u g h . who
on Casuo's uoop and naval positions. Richard Cain. a policc- also had rcuincd M h u ' s m i a s . But Maheu said he a g e d
man on thc Syndicate payroll. also helpcd m i l Spanish-speak-
ing mcrccnvies for thc CIA army.
to thc assignment dtcr informing Hughes of the murder plot -
and. according to one source, gaining the billionaire's approval.
The S?-ndicate's primvy ~prescnutivein h e Bay of Pigs For the project Maheu called on John RoselIi. Sam Giancana
pmpantions was Santo Trfl~cante.a Florida businessman who and Santo Trafficante. Rosclli and Givlcuu, like Tnlfrcantc.
had belonged to thpe nrling circle that adminisercd gambling and were members of h e Syndicate's ruling elite. Roselii's home
narcotics in Cuba. Trdficmtc had risen to h t position panially turitory was h Vegas and Giancura's was Chicago -but they
because of a power stntggle bctwcen Lansky and "Fat A l W had helpd administer the Syndicate's Cuban opentions.
Amsusia. known as UIC Lord High Executioner of Murdcr The CIA wantcd Casuo's murderers to be subtle. The CIA'S
Incorporated. Anastasia had vied in 1957 to n m i t TnZf~culte fist proposed weapon. according to the Church committee, was
into a schcme to undercut Lasky's conuol of Ihe Cuban opera- a box of Casuo's favorite cigars contaminated with a botulinum
tions. Instead. according to a Justice Depamnent account. Traf- toxin "so potent that a puson would die after putling one in his
Iicvlte bctrayed Fat Albcn to kmky's hiunen: Anastasia was mouth." But after Maheu's discussions with the Syndicate
shot five Limes as he sat down for a haircut. leadcn. the CIA opted f a a plan to spike Castro's food with
Trdfiunte's contact in the Bay of Pigs operation was Frank poison pills that would leave no u a u in an autopsy. Traffkante
Sturgis. Lhen known as Frank Fiorini. Sturgis was an American found a Cuban tmigrd who claimed to know a waiter at a
soldicr of f o m who had enlisted with Casuo in the Sierra restaurant where Castro frequently dined. In early 1961. accord-
Maesua. smuggled guns for Casuo. paraded with him into ing to Senate testimony. hlaheu delivered the poison pills and
Havana and. for a shon rime. served as Casm's supervisor of S1O.OOO in CIA money to Sy?$cate men in a rtndervous at
gambling. Miami's Fountlinebleau Hotel.
\\lcn Casm decided to eliminate the casinos. Snrrgis defected When newspaper headlines reported soon afterward that Cas-
and claimed he had k t n w~rlaingundercover against Casm all w was sick. Maheu allcgcdly phoned a Syndicate contact and
~ h cumc.'" The CIA quickly rccruiled Sturgis. Hc Icd several exultcd. "Did you sce the paper? Caruo's ill. Wow, we got him."
small prc-invasion raids against Cssuo and. a m d i n g to his But Casuo's illncss was not rclatcd to the CIA-Syndicate assas-
o\\n ~ccount.joincd the Opcrtuon Fony assassination squad. a sinauon attcmpc the pills appucndy never rcached his table. The
spcc~alCIA unit sct up to assassimtc CJSVOloyalists in post-in- CIA blmcd thc faiiurc,pn a Casuo whim to stop eating at Lhc
vasion Cuba. designated restaurant."
l k fJilcd assminuion was not thc only sctback in UIC gnn- was a newmner. he allowed H e l m to keep his job. which gave
diose plan to retake Cuba Richard Nixon had been defeated in Helms jurisdiction ovu the CLA'S "diny ai&" divisim
rhc 1960presiddal race. a cum that seemed to imperil the eruire orher deepcwer covert activities. Helms immediately resumed
scheme. According to Colonel Pmuty. the CIA had delayed the the CIA'S private war against Cutro.
Bay of P i g invasion bemuseit expected a Nixon a&ninistratim Kennedy. miffed at Cutro f a the ia(emrtional e m b m e a
to approve any mliCrmo plan regardless of internationalreper- did authoriu sane funher CIA ictivitits against the Cam
cussions. Instud, the CIA now had to o b h John Kennedy's government. But he apparently wanted them limited to the
suPPon small-scale hit-and-m raids Eisenhower had allowdI6 Un-
Kennedy was presented the Bay of Pigs plan as afair accompii. detcmd the CIA ignored tho limits and returned to its con-
"When Kennedy became president" R w t y explained. "he was rpay to assassinate Casrn,!'~~~ o f i d a h began d i ~ ~ ~ ~ f i n g
suddenly told the Bay of Pip was going to involve an invasion plans that called for planting a bomb-la&nswhell on the ocean
He had no choice but to go rlong." CIA director Allen Dulles floor where Cutm liked to go SCUBA diving or giving Casw
warned Ihe young president that if he called off the plan. there a diving suit nnund with a deadly fungicide. The CIA liso
would k a "disposal problem" with the CIA'S 1200 exile sol- ructivucd plans for hiriDg Syndicate assusins. CIA oIficiilt
diers. "We can't have chan wandering uound thc counay ccllii apparently Pied to win Kunedy's approval but, u far as the
everyone what they've been doing," Dulles told Kennedy. Church cornmittre d d dclemrine. the agency's "diny PiT;
On April 1 7 b 1961-rhfiemanths after Kennedy t o o k o f f i division curied out theserrmrda plots withoutJFK's surction
-theaArrmystonnedthebuchatrheBayofPip.The I&simmaing tension betweea Kermedy and the CIA flared
Americanpeople were led to beliwe the invasion was a up in Oaobu 1962 during the Cuban missile crisis. Top CIA
righteous aucmpt by exiled Cubans to reclaim rhti baneland. officials viewed the a i s i i as a pnlude to r second Cuban
But. under the friendly escort of a CIA man. four of h k y ' s invasion and alerted the surviving Bay of Pigs m y to stand
casino openton waited in a boa a few yards oflshm. And ready. But Kennedy's negotiations with the Sovia Union po-
poised in the Bahamas with enough gold to reopcn rhe Havana d u d an opposite nsult lhe Soviet Union agreed to withdraw
tablcs was a Trlliicuoe lieuwluu. its missiles from Cuba. and Kennedy pmmisd to end the U.S.'s
Unexpcctcdly. Casuo's p w l s spotted the invadcrs and attack- undercover war a p h Casw.
cd with dcvasuing fwwcr. l h e CIA m y . aaustomtd only Kennedy promptly ordered Lht CIA to stop organizing anti-
to m a k boot-cmp baulcs. ~ s t t c r c din dismay into swamp yd Castro raids and to obscrvc ~nrpulouslythc new me. By thc
junglc. CIAofficiJls infomcd Kcnncdy hat. if the invasion plan fall of 1963 Kcnncdy was reaching for a f o m l &mr with
was to bc salvaged. Air force banbcnwould havc to fly in with communist Cuba.
air covcr for thc CIAsoldias. But it was a nccd that went unma
Casuo had fcncd rhc Sovia U N Undcr
T"
~ that circumsmcc.
Kcnncdy fcvcd that a US. air aujclr on Cuba would bc blatant
c Kcnncdy Adminhration's failwc to restore Cuba's prc-
C ~ s a oheyday also had infuriated Ridurd Nixon. who
provauion. He rcfuscd to send in rhc plvlcs and the CIA ymy publicly upbmidcd the young president for k i n g soft on C m .
fled ingloriously into C s w ' s prisonudf-war amps. The former vice-president had hopcd to masc the new Cuban
"No c v n t since thc communintion of C h i in 1949 has h ~ d policy by ousting Kcnncdy from the White House in 1964. But
such a profound cffca on thc Unitcd Smcs and its allics as the Katncdy's soaring popularity and Nixon's ern-;hg loss in
dcfcat of thc US.-trained Cuban invasion brigade at thc Bay of the 1962 Califomia gubernatorial nce drove Nixor. mto unex-
-
Pigs." Howard Hunt latct wrote. Hum blamed Kennedy's pccled political seclusion dashing the hopes of the CLA. the
"bctrayd" of the CIA and fell FK's subsequent investigation Syndicate. Howard Hughes and all others who had invested in
was intcndcd "to whitewash the New Frontia by heaping guilt him
on the CIA." Allen Dulles was similarly outraged. Nixon's demise seemed to assun that IR<would k president
Kcnnedy's appraisal was signif~mtlydif'fucnt He saw him- through 1968. After that, Kermedy's younger brother. Robert,
scllviclimircd by thc CIA'S reddcss anduestimtion of Casuo's stood an excellent chance of inheriting the presidency for eight
sucngth. Hc felt the CIA had misled him and exploited his lack more years. By that lime it might k loo late to undo all the
of execulivc cxpcrimce. JFK told an aide he wanted to "splinter Kennedy policies. The Syndicate. in puricular. was suffering
the CM into a thousand pieces and s a t t a it to the winds." under the new administration. JFK had appointed his kother
For nearly a decade Allen Dulles had bem running the CIA. attorney gencnl. Bobby had been an investigator and Jack had
The Bay of Pig invasion had been the agency's most ambitious been a senator on the McClellan S m w committee when it
project ever. DulIes himself had supervised the agency's anti- declared a war on organkcd crime in the late Frfiies. In 1961 the
Casuo alliance with the Syndicate. All memos about the C a w K m d y adminismion picked up where the McClellan com-
assassination plot. aaording to CIA deputy director Richard mittee left
Bisscll. had gone only to Dulles. oma as Dewey also had taken R o k n Kennedy quadrupled the size of the Justice Depart-
timc out from his Wall Street law practice. according to CIA ment's orpized crime and rackteering division and compiled
sourccs. to help set up front group to funnel funds to the CIA a -hit list" of 4300 Syndicate urge&.Near rhe top d thc list were
m y . Cuba was to have been the CIA'S fiest hour. Chicago don Sam Giancana. New Orluns don Carlos hlarccllo
-
\\%en Kennedy criticized the CIA for the Bay of Pigs failure. and a business partner of theirs Teamster president Jimmy
he was adding insult to humiliation. But his ttrre3u to abolish Hoffa. RFK had diicovcnd Hoffa's links to the Synd~atewhile
the agency were n u tlkm saiarsly. The CIA was still a s a d on the McCleIlvl commiuce, and his pursuit of the Teamster
institution with many cvcfully cultivated friends. K m d y boss had developed into a public vcndetu Hoffa rcwliald by
Sacked do\\n. The agcncy stayed But he did force out Allen campaigning for Nixon in 1960. Nixon. in cum. intervened at Lhc
Dullcs in thc fall of 1961. To replace the longtime director. Justicc Dcpuuncnt to hold up a Hoffa indictment for misuse of
Kenncdy J~ptJirit~d a compmmisc selection. Wall Slrcet lawyer union funds.
John hlcCone. Dullcs. howrver. left bchind his mastcr student. But once RFK took command of the Justicc Dcpment. he
R~chardHelms, as CIA dcputy director of plans. Sincc hlcCone moved quickly against Hoffa. Icvciing charges of jury urnper-
ing. kickbacks and r S2 million pensionfundswindle.The young cua~
d o t Ihc annrnhh'S o f i b l mp~nmrdeno mention
attorney general also initiated deportation procc+digs against of a w r c y to kill w y , even rhough two commission
Culos M~ccllo.When he began investigating Sam Gianmi. lawyen raised that possibility during the investigation. h a d -
however. he found the mobster involved in a disconcuting deal ing to a document dedutifrcd a decade lam. the lawyers were
with the CIA. waried that Oswald had ban used as a p a y by anti-Castm
The CIA. hc learned. was a p m a with Giancina in the Casm fanatics. 'The motive of lhir would. of course. k the expecutim
murder plot RFK was furious. but not shocked. During his rhu after the president was killed. Oswald would be caught or
McClellan committee mure he had tried u n s u ~ f u l l yto at l e m his iduuity ax~ruinedtbe law enforcement authaities
s u b p m a Lu Vegs mobster on the U s protected list "You and the public would then blame the assassination on th C m
can't touch me." the mobsta had boasted "I've got immunity." government md the call for its forceful ovathrow would be
As attorney general. however. RFK did not scan as intimidated imsistiblc" the lawyers wrote in a memo. "A second Bay of
by SyndicateIOUs from theC1A.h thc summerof 1963. Justice Pigs invasion would begin. this time, hopefully, lo end suaccss-
Department investigators shadowed Giancana so lcnaciousiy fully."
that the mobster asked for judicial relief so he could play golf Alrhough Oswald was never oficially identified as a CIA
without an audience; RFK l u a had him booked briefly on agent his life histay showed a rcrmrk;lble similarity to the
contempt &ages, the fun rime since 1942 that Giancana had behavior of a low-level inulligence operative. As a U.S. Marine
seen a prison cell. In the fall of 1963 RFK announced he was in rhe lue Fifties he had kcn given 8 top security clearance c
taking his best aime lighten lo Lu Vegas. the Syndicare's a CIA-sponsored U-2b u c in J a p a Shortly herafter, Osarlld
biggest domestic gambling center and the home turf of John defect4 to the Soviet Union. somehow paying a $1500 navel
Rosclli. an- of h e CIA'S pumers in crime. fuc even though his bank account held only $203. He cl;rimed
At the same lime John K m e d y began enforcing his ban on to be a Muxist and said he planned to give military secrru to
anti-Castro activities. a policy t h a ~promised to end any chance IheSovieu. But IheUS.SR.accmding to a formu Soviet agent
for a Syndimc rcmm to Cuba. In the summer of 1963 FBI agents was convinced that Oswald was a double agent for the CIA. 'C\va
werc scnt to chc Louisiana dcln where they broke up an mi- years later. in 1962. he rctumedto the U.S. and. despite his prior
-
Casuo camp and seized a tcmrist usend dynuniu. bomb
casings. sailscr asscmblics. primer cord and blvling cqs. The
admissions of treason. was handed back his cilknship papers.
Theh in the summaof 1963, Oswald surfaced inNew Orleans
camp had bccn run by a CLA front p u p md had bcen rcntcd by as the 0rgYliza of a poCasuo goup. with himself as its only
thc bmhcr of a formcr Cuban casino owncr. In Scptcmbcr the member. Hc spent the summa in rhc eye of the local media. as
Kcnncdy govcrnrncnt ismcd tough-mindcd warnings tosix anti- if he wanted to be remanbaed for his p d a s t r o antics. He
Casuo p ~ s a m among
: them was Frank Sturgis. then piloting distxibutcd pro-Casm leaflets and picked fights with anti-
B-52 raids against Casuo. C.asuoilcs. Oswald's proCasm, l d c u sccmcd suspcct bcmure
they werc stvnpcd with Lhe address of a building used by 8 CIA
Casuo l c ~ p ~ n d cwith
d a mcssage. scnt h g h diplomatic
ct~umcls.asking Kcnncdy for a personal audicncc to discuss
improving relations bcrwocn thc two gowmmcnu. Kcnncdy
-
front goup the mtiCasmCuban Revolutionary Council Lhjt
Howard Hunt had hclpd setup duringthe Bay ofPigsoperation.
sccmcd willing. Hc authorized a Frcnch journalist to serve v his Piles of the s;unc litcmurc were found Iatcr in the possession of
pctsond cmissvy in sounding out Casw's ideas. Guy Bumista. a former FBI agent with t~llnec~ions to Robcn
Cvtro felt Kennedy was sincere in his overture. In an interview Mahcu. New Orlcvrs don Carlos Mucello and H U ~ L ~
after Kcnncdy's dcath. Casw had this assessment of the Amer- ?hc circumstantial evidence seemed to suppar the theory of
ican prcsidcnt: "He took many measures against us. But I spa& the two commission lawyers that Oswlid was an unwitting pawn
to you in d l sincerity and try to give you chc opinion I have of in a umspiracy to kame C u m , for Kennedy's murder. But the
Kennedy. I say that vuly he was one of h e few men who had theory still lacked proof. Then New Orleans district attorney Jim
enough courage to question and policy and change iL" Garrison announced in 1967 ihat he had secured the proof. He
But as Kennedy moved closer to a U.S.Cuba r o p p r o c k n r . named Clay Shaw. David M e and Edgar Eugene Bndley as
he came funha in c d i a with the CIA'S unforgiving anti- munkn of the conspimy. Garisan's investigation was bur-
Cjsuoism. Dulles's prottgts remained so unyielding in their dared with several unreliable wimesscs. however. and soon
rcsismce to Casuo that Kennedy a i d friends he feared the floundered Shaw was acquitted. Fenie died and Bradlg was
agency had become too autonomous. He felt that the CIA'S "diny shown to k the victim of a misuken identification But
uicks" division pYliculvly was not ruponding lo presidential Garrison's probe did produce some new evidence. -
orders. John McCone. as Kennedy's CIA director. seemed un- Richard Helms. who had been promoted to Ihe CIA director-
willing or unable to overcome the independent nature of the ship in 1966. apparently took Garrison seriously. During Gar-
CIA'S old-time covert operators. F i l l y . in mid-November rison's prosecution of Shaw. a New Orleans businessman.
1963. Kennedy ordered his aides to get ready for a more tho- Hclrns kcame especially anxious. Victor Marchelti. a mutaker
rough houxcleaning at the agency. for CIA sufi meetings at the time. later recalled that Helms
T h e CIA will have to be d d t with." he told aides shonly repeatedly u h d his deputies: "Are we giving Shaw all thc help
bcforc avcling to D d l v for a November 22nd motorcade. On we an?"
the s m e day Kennedy's emissay opened talks with Casao in Gmison claimed he had lost his case the day David Fenie died
Havana. And according to the Church committee. the CIA also Gatrison had counted on Ferric to turn state's evidence. On
chose November 2 n d to begin yet another plot to assassinate F e b r u ~ y18th. 1967.G v r i s a had revealed him as a member of
-
CSVO in conlinuing defiance of Kennedy's new policies. the alleged assassination plot Four d g s later Ferrie was found
dead of a massive bnin hemonhage.
But by thc end of the day Kennedy's plans were dcad wilh Lhcir
patron in Dallas. Ferric had a curious b~ckgoundthat included work for both
Tlic \ V m n Commission investigated UR Kennedy assassina- the CIA and the Syndicate. The CIA had used him during the
uon and. after tcn months. atuibutcd it to the personal dcrmgc- Bay of Pigs preparations to uain pilau for the invasion. and he
mcnt of Lre Hmcy Oswald. whom they described as a pro- had showed up again in 1962 as an instructor in an anti-Casuo
camp ouuidc Ncw Orleans. At thc same lime he was sewing as several wiowsts. Ruby wens lo visit McWilie in Lu W g u in
a pilot and Icgd investigator for Carlos Marcello. a Syndicate Oaokr 1963.
lcadcr with a personal strrke in Cuba. On the day Kennedy died. That same month Ruby made s ~ v c nothu l calls to men with
Fcmc and Marccllo had k e n together in a New Orleans court- Syndicate connections. Calls weri to Paul Dorfmau. Hoffa's
room attending Muccllo's uial on charges thu grew out of trusted canfidanc Irwin Weincr. anorher Hoffa adviser with
RFK's attempt to dcpon the New Orleans don Ferrie was a connections to the Syndicate's Chicago chap- and Bvney
dedicated mi-Caswite. At one point he groused aloud that Baku. describedby Robat Kennedy as Hoffa's "anbassador of
Kennedy "ought to be shot*' for his role in the Bay of Pigs. But violence." RFK's Justice Deparmmt had put Baker injail but
Garrison found several seemingly credible wimcsses who tes- he was released shonly M a e Ihassassination
tified that Furie had been seen conferring pival~lywith Lee Ruby did nu explain why he was taking to Hoffa's fiends.
H m e y Osonld in late summu 1963. a ibne when Oswald was But a major topic of C O n v ~ l t i ~inmthe Hoffa circleduring 1962
making public claims of pro-Casnoism and I963 was the Kennedy adminkmion Accadiag to Edward
Also in later summa 1963. Ferrie called he Chicago phone Grady Parlin. a Baton Rouge Tumsta official. Hoffa corn-
number of a young wornan who. on the day k f m Kennedy's plained that "samething has to be done about that liule s.0.b.
death. arrived in Dallas in the company of a man who met t w i a Bobby Kennedy" and suggested blowing up the attorney general
that night with Dallas nightclub ownu Jack Ruby. The next in his amvenible. Carlos Muccllo also had asked for revenge
n i g k afta Oswald's capture, Furie took a hurried and unex- against the Kennedys. rceording to a Mucello associa who
plained 1000-milecar ride through a rainstorm to a Houston ice ulked to a govunment invenigrta. Marcello allegedly ma& a
rink. 7'hmhe monopolized the pay phone for several wgmt dramatic plea in a secret Syndiare metring: "Licarsim pem
. ulls. Hours later Ruby wau to Dallas police headqurncn a d di h scrupdN (Take the stone a t of my shoe!")
gunncd down Oswald.
Afterward. Ruby Jlcgedly told his psychiatrist that he had "a At one point rhe W m Commiuim did seem interested in
been part of a plot to kill Kennedy" and alsosaid hc had expectcd whether Ruby fit imo the Syndicate feud w i l the Kumedys. It
the Kcnncdy assassination to l e ~ dto another Cuban invasion asked Richard Helms 10 inve~tigat~ tits between Ruby ud r h e
But !hc I V m n Commission decidcd that Ruby had acid alone, Lis Vcgas gambling community." Eight mcmths lam Helms
out of a psychouc pauiotism. and discounccd a mcmo prcparcd replied that the CIA had found "no information on Ruby or his
by two commission invcstigaton that profiled Ruby as a lackcy activities."
with Syndicatc connccuons. . Allcn Dullcs presumably was UIC only Wmen Commission
At a p IS, Ruby was running cmnds for Frulk'Thc Enforcer" member who k r w of rhc CIA'S allivlcc with IhcSyndiurc. But
Nitty. licir to Al Capnc's Q~icjgogangland cmpirc. Hc bccvnc hc did not volunteer to bricf thc othcr wmmission mcmbcn. Nor
a small-time hustlcr. selling "tip stlccu" at nccuacks and pcd- did hc say anything about Ihc agency's v u i m assassinaricm
dling sidewalk watches. In 1937 hc obtincd a top position in plots -which. according co Frank Sturgis. had bccn upvdcd
d ~Scnp
c -
Iron and Junk Handicn Union whichonc FBI report to inciudc mgcu within rhc US. aftcr the Bay of Pigs. (In a 1975
inmicw, Sturgis said rhjt in rhc cvly Sixucs he had bccn askcd
dcscribcd as "largely a shakedown opcradon." 'l\M yevs latcr
Ihc unionf founder was murdered. Ruby was hcld briefly for by a CIA agent to LAC pan in an unspc&cd "domestic" assas-
questioning but was not chargcd in Itr case. sindon.)
Robcn Kcnncdy lala singled out hat murdcr as a mcial step FBI agcnu intcrvicwed Sturgis shorriy after the assassination
in thc Syndicate's takcwcr of the Chicago union Paul Dorfman and. according to Sturgis. cold him: "Frank if hem's anyone
became union prcsidcnt and. according to RFK. quickly formed capable of killing the president of Ihe United States. you're the
an alliancc with Jimmy Hoffa. "Paul Dorfmvl and Jimmy HoKa one guy that can do it." But the FBI's invcstigarionof the murder
YC Y one." Kcnncdy wrote in T k Enemy IVithin. "Evcrywhm was no more rcveriing rhyl the CIA'S. FBI d k m Hoover
Hoffa goes. Dorfman is close by." By 1963 Chicago don Sam harbored an abiding rcsemmau of thc Kennedys. Hoover's
Giancana and Carlos Marccllo shared in his friendship.u ?he official posture was ttut he Syndiutc did not exist as the
1950 Kcfauver committee found Ruby had links toDave Yam. powemti organhion portrayed by the Kennedys. And he bad
been embarrassed when Syndicate informvu Joe Valachi tes-
a member of thc same Syndicate circle as D o r f m and Hoffa.
Ruby ken1 to Dallas in 1917 to open a night club. In 1956 the
-
-
tified in 1962 to a litany of Syndiute crimes bib.execu-
tions. nucotics deals. gambling skims in mtiondly televised
FBI rcccived a rcporl "that Ruby is the [Syndicatc]payoff man
for thc Dallas policc d c p m e m " hearings m g c d by RFK's Justice Dcpvunenr
In Au y s t 1959 Ruby visitcd Cuba at the invitation of Lcwis J. But for the Wmen Commission Rcpon. it was the CIA and the
McWillic. a fomcr World \Vu II black matkctecr and man3 r FBI who were doing the investigating. They were not king
-
of thc lropicana casino a man Ruby said he ' i d o l i n d . ' ~ t
lfic time. h s k y still was hcping Castru might keep Ihe casinos
investigated. The W m Commission was mildly m b l c d by
-
Dulles's admission that the two agencies in keeping with their
open and Ruby apparently was offcrcd a casinojob. Ruby stayed s m # y standards -probably would not tell the truth about any
for eight days. hen returned the next month for a tweday visit operatives involved in l e assasinxion But it suppressed its
He did not take a job but he did contact Robm McKeown. a qualms and did not consider seriously the possibility that Syn-
formcr gunmnncr to Cuba. According to hlcKeown. Ruby of- dicate le3dus and mti-Casuo exuemisls within Ihe CIA con-
fcrcd S 15.Mll for help in frceing three men k i n g held in Cuba. spited to kill he prcsidcnt
hlcKcoun said Ruby told him someone in Las Vegas was
nce froc of Kcnnedy's resmctions the CIA intcnsfied iu
financing Lt;e project. But the dcd apparently fell through.
In 1961 LlcWtllic left Cuba for Nevada. whcre he took a job at
tlrc Cd-Scva M g e . I! hotel casino in which Giancana allegedly
0 efiorts to ovenhrow CYUO.Thrce months after JFKS death
CIA agcnu were alrcady planning a second invaion of Cuba.
hc1J an intcrcst:By rhcn both Ruby and hlc\Villic were out- Howard Hunt was in c h u g of Ihc plan. according to the inves-
sp-kcn foes of the ncw Cuban regime: the Wamn Repon tigative reporter Tad Snrlc. As a prclude to the invasion. h e CIA
dcscribcs hlcwillic as a ':violent anliCuuoitc." According to equipped a hiunan wirh an automauc rille lo shoot Casm. But.
LEA01 NG EDGE RESEARCH, P. 0. BOX 48 1 -MU58, WASHINGTON STATE, C . F . 9059 7 C. F
according to Szulc. the CIA became discouraged when the In 1963 the company b e m e pyl of a Florida scandal afta it
assassin delayed the hit and r d l y was caught by Casuo's men loaned S100.000 to stock promoten wit\ aileged Syndic=
Most CIA officials kgan to concede Cuba to communim. ~ S swn
C O M ~ C ~ ~ OBut . alterward the company k g m buyingland
Casuo's instinct f a swival was uncanny. And Vietnam was in the Bahamas. sold i n Mary Carter paint divisioo and sub-
luring CIA "diny mcken" to the o k side of the world sequenuy adopted a more conventional Caribbean name: Re-
Through the mid-Sixties t h m wen mom assassination attempts sons International.
against C u m , and more haassmat mi& to Cuba By 1965 the Resorts entnrd the gambling business in 1965. aceording to
CLA had abandoned the second invasion plan. f f A sourtes. w give the agency a conduit f a hiding money it
By then the Syndicate also had lost interest in Cuba. Meyer sends to counterinsurgency groups in Cenual and South
Lansky had found a new home for the Mob's offshore gambling America. Resorts slaned as pamwn wilh two Syndicate front
anpire in the Bahamas. men. a cucumsmcc that persuaded the Justice Deparuncnt's top
The Bahamas held some of the same attractions as Cuba an
easy plane aip from the maidand. hide-and-sock tax laws. the
- - organized crime official write a worried memo: T h e armos-
phae seems ripe for a Ltnsky skim." But thea Luuky's men
formally withdrew, leaving the field to Resons.
warm assurance of benign weather. 'Ihae was no Batista. But Resorts tried to appear separate and distinct h n Lamb.
here was 300-pound Sir Suffad Sands. the Ministtr of Finance
and Tourism and a politician of porcine build and appetite. Sands rigorously applauding itself as an alternative to Syndicate gam-
was boss of the Bay S u e t Boys. the bloc of colonial merchants bling. But R e s m had n u severed dl Syndicrte ties. As wiw
and politicians who ran the d p e l a g o of palm trees and white manga it had h i d Eddie Cellini, brother of a lop Lursky
smd. - lieutenant who. accading to a S a r a investigation. intervened
at R m to get jobs for two friends. And according to swam
S t Stafford l a w tesrified hat Lansky had approached him in testimony ham Syndicate infarmant Viment Teresa. junlrclaus
1960 with a bribe of S2 million to be deposited in a Swiss bank continued to need L;msky's pcnnission a book their t o w into
account in retum for a Cenif~cateof Exemption. a piece of the Bahamas. A disgnmrled Resorts stakholda. supumulcet
legdese needcd to operate a casino in the Bahamas. Sir Stafford heir Huntington Hanford, later went to civil mun because he
claimed to have refused the offa. Instcad he hired out his legal believed the Resons profit columns were k i n g juggled. a goid-
tslcnts to Syndicate front men: for this. Stafford colleclcd S 1.8
million in legal fccs and Lansky's men got thc CcniT~catcof plated clue to hidden panncn. Rcponen investigated and con-
cluded hat. bascd on the circumsmtial evidence. LYrsky was
Exemption. The casinos opcncd in 1964 to rhE attendant b u n of still a moving force in Bahamian gambling.
thc intcmationd jct sct At the s m c timc. 3000 miles away in isVcgas. the Syndicac
But Sir Stafford's urYlgcmcnt with thc Syndicatc bccamc so was changing thc fa= of its domcstic gambling anpire.
blatant it angcrcd local Bahamians. 'Thc h v c s wac rcsllcss." In 1945 whcn Lansky's junior pumcr. Bupy Sicgcl. anivcd
crimc rcpona HYrk Mcssick wrotc, "and Cuba had prwcd the in Vcgas. Ihc town's futurc sccmcd as chccrlcss as the ntllc-
dylgcr of bctting cvcryrhing on a man or a political pmy that snakcs that stood scnuy in its vacant lou. Vegas clung tcntaivcly
no longcr cnjoycd popular support. If gmbling was to survive to a ptch of dcscn. as close to oblivion as the next big duster.
in thc Bahamas. it was ncccssw to turn convol over to a Then Sicgcl brought in S2 million in Syndicatcmoney andkgan
govcmmcnt thjt offcrcd stability." building the Suip.
According to Mcssick. what followcd was the slickcst maneu- But Sicgcl's urogant and spcndlhrift nanue prevented him
ver of h k y ' s cucez: hc cngincacd his own revolution against from sccing the projcct Ihrwgh After a quaml with h k y in
Su Stafford by having an aide b m m c a secret informant and 1947. Siegcl was killcd by a hired gun who shot him through his
Ic* ccrtain information about thc Syndicatc deal with Sands. living room window. New b k y assoc&les. W e d by John
According to Mcssick. it gave thc \Val1 Street J o w d a Pulitzer Roselli and Mot Dalitz, replaced Sicgel. By tbe midSutits,
Prize and Icd to S u Stafford's suddcn retirement in 1967. Las %gas was the boomtown of the West enticing thousands of
A new govunment headed by Bahamian-born Lynden 0. men with a fondness for neon-lit ladies and a weakness for
Pindling rcpiaccd the Bay Succt Boys. Pindling looked as shin- baccarat and blackjack. But then the Justice Department
&
ing and clean as the sun in the mormng. But Messick discovered launched long-delayed drive to expose Syndicate influence
that h s k y secretly had shoveled thousands of dollan into the in Vegas. There was a k i d of unrestnined fuocity in the
campaign thlt put Pindling in office. investigation Lansky h i l f was later indicted based on evi-
To complete the housecleaning. Lamky's front men also wcre dcnce that he'd k e n skimming Vegas from 1960 through 1966.
removed ?he new power in Bahamian gmbling became the (lhe indictment claimed h k y had taken 536 million out of
Mary Cmer Paint Company. On the face of it there seemed no just one casino.)
rcvon why an obscure psiru company should venture into the But in 1967. Lmky's old front men disappeared from Vegu.
gmbling business -or why thc Bahamian government should just as they did in the Bahamas. ?he man who bought thun out
Ict i~ But one of Sir Stafford's r i a l transactionshad been to give was Howard Hughes.
hlary C a n a Paint a Certificate of Exemption in exchange for In 1965 Hughes had elected lo sell his TWA stock rather than
StJ0.000 in legal fces. appear in civil coun. He had received 5546549.771 - the
Mary Cmer Paint. according to CIA sources. was a CIA front liugest single amount ever paid an individual in the history of
group. It had been set up by Tbomas Dewey and Allen Dullcs. American finance.
In 1958 Dewey and some friends bought controlling interest in Hughes arrived in Vegas by private uain on November 27th.
thc Crosby Miller Corporation with 52 million in CIA money 1966. A truck backed up to a ~erviccelcvator at the Desert Inn
from Dullcs. who w s still CLA director. A year later thc Crosby Hughcs was cvried on a suctchcr from the back of thc truck into
hlillcr Corporauon merged with the paint company. During thc the elevator and was soon bmicaded in the ninrh-floor pcnt-
Bay of Pigs operation in 1960 and 1961. according lo CIA house of the hotel.
sourccs. hlvy Cmcr laundcrcd CIA paymcnts to thc Cuban Within three ).cars Hughes was Nevada's biggest employer.
cxiie army. . with a payroll of S50 million. Hc owned a TV sution. prime rcal
csutc and a string of hod-asmos: the Desat Inn. the Sands. Nixon had met the Re#ns c f u i m . James Crosby.at
the Casumys. the Fronria* the Landmark and the Silva Slip- a party in late 1967. CmSby'S *f had been a manba of the
per. Statc gming officials, assured thu Hughes was replacing secret circle that lobbied for e s u b l i of the CLA after
the Syndicatc. waived most mles - including the submission
of a rcccnt photograph -so the billionaire cwldquiddy assume
World War II. Crosby had been m executive in a Wall S m t
brokerage until 1958 when. aceonling to CTA sources. Dewey
control of the town's gambling business. Howard Hughes had and Dullet placed him at IheCmby Miller Corporation. the CIA
givcn Nevada "Ihe Good Housekcping s u l of approval." front group ttut became R a n t s Internafiond.
mowed Nevada govunor Paul h d t Nixon was inuoduced to Crosby by Bebe Rebozo, the Florida
However. the Syndicac didn't step vide out of kindness. entrepreneur who had becane Nuon's best Wend Crosby kept
Instead. according to s e v d swces. the Syndicate formed a an account at Rebao's Key Biscayne bank, a relationship that
partnership of symbiosis with the Hughes organizatia ?he Watergate investigaton later stumbled across when they began
Syndicate supplied casino expdsc. Hughes lent the necessary looking into an allegation that Rebozo's bank was being used to
respectability. Iaunda Resons conuibutioru to Nixon.
A hint rhuthe Syndicatewas still in business m Lu Vegas came Reborn had opened his bank in the w l y Sixties, had hung
when Hughes filed his ofticialcuino winnings.lhey were much Nixon's picture next to the flag and had given Nixon the account
lower than Ihe volume of playing warranled a ci&cit hat labeled number one. Thc bank soon developed a rrpuution for
indicated a big-time nkcoff. 'Ik W d Sfref Journal r e p o d m stolensecurities.In one caseReborn acceptedIBM
that rnilliom wm k i n g skimmed s d t i e s , rrponedly stolen by a New Y d Mafia family. uid
nK Syndicate desperately needed a front Moe D J i a o m sold than f a cash even though he suspected they were dubious.
of the Desat Inn. was under investigation. So wae Syndicate (He called Crosby and N i ' s brother* Donrld. to chak on
men at the F m t i a and Sands. Hughes aboned these investiga- Ihari.)27
tions by taking tidc to thc three casinos. .But he kept Dalitz. But some investigators felt another bank function was to abet
among o h . around for advice. '"h many conucu I made a skim from Resons. Franklin DeBou, a former aust officer at
with Mr. Daliu wen made at the -c suggestion of Mr. the bank, told the Wamgue invcstigaton hat a Resons "bag-
Hughcs. whcrcin Mr. Hughes wanted the of his think- man" had brought money from the Bahamas to Rebozo's bank
ing." Hu@a aide Robcrt Mdcu Iata explained Another bank olfrcid gave a sworn sutcment to Florida inves-
Mahcu. thc cx-FBI agcnt who had saved as inlcrmcdivy tigators that thc sync couria had come to thc bank aftcr normal
bctwccn thc Syndicm and thc CIA, hvrdlcd Hughes's ukcovcr business houn and exchanged S20 bills for 5 100 bills.
in L3S Vcgs. Hughcs also got hclp from John Rosclli. who. Thc invcstigaton did not prove thc bank was laundering moncy
along with an associate. collcctcd S235.000 in finder's fces in f a Rcsoru. But they did lcvn that Crosby had givcn 5100,000
die salc of thc Dcscn Inn and thc Suds. to'Nixon just bcfac (hc 1968 Ncw Hampshire primary. Ihc
But H u m succcufully stoncwdlcd my suggestion that hc pivotal event in Nixon's camback.
was now p m e r s with Lansky. tikc Resorts in ~ h cBahamas. As it workcd out. thc S100.000 from the hcad of Rcsoru hclpcd
Hughcs bliucd thc media with publicity that cl-d just thc put Nixon in the Whitc House. Then a scparatc 5100,000 from
opposite. Ncwspapcn and tclcvision networks. having no Howard Hughcs. in an uncxpcctcd twist, bcc~nccrucial to his
chance to quiz Hughcs. acccptcd [his linc. as did the Las Vcgas eviction.
c i ~ yfalhcn and Nixon's Justice Dcp~uncnt. Nixon's cagcmcss for such boodlc was a dominating force in
his carter. In 1966 Rcbozo's Cape Florida Development Corn-
R obcn Kcnncdy left the Justice Department in 1964 to run
for the Semtc. Rcsidcnt Johnson. pmaupied with Vict-
nun and happy t a rid of RFK for political reasons. turned the
k
pany had b g h t up $1 million in prime waterfront lots on Kcy
Bisuyne. Reborn had trouble selling them until Nixon posed
f a a p r o m o t i d picture with Rebozo's partner. Donald Berg.
job of Syndicate-hunting back to J. Edgar Hoover. ?he FBI a man the Secret Scrvice latu found so dimputable that it
director dcflated the Justice Department's drive against organ- stopped Nixon from eating at Berg's Jamaica Inn Rataurant in
-
ized crime and rerumed to his number one concern hounding Key Biscayne. (The reason fa the Secret Scntice's brushoff
communists and other radicals. The Syndicate began to recover
from the Kcnnedy ywrs. - -
was Berg's connection to a Syndicate front man a 1960Nixon
campaign contributor who had k e n insaumend in estab-
For a while WK's bid for the presidency in 1968 rhrmtened lishing Lansky in the Bahamas.)
thc Syndicate. But an assassin d c d the K m d y campaign Reborn gave Nixon a 33%discount on two undeveloped lots.
Instead. Richard Nixon was c l d One of Nixon's first moves One lot had a mortgagc held by Anhur Dessu. a director of the
as president was to fire Roben Morgenhu from the U.S. Miami National Bank. which Lansky q#gedly used to launder
attorney's job in New Yorlc. Morgenthau. considered lhc tough- money skimmed from Vegas casinos. Nixon kept his tie to
est prosccuta left in the Justice Depvunent had ken inves- Desser unadvertised by not recording the deed to the lot until the
tigating thc Syndicjte's cmnections m the Bahamas. mongage was paid off four years later.
Nixon had his own Bahamian connection. He had vacationed As president. Nixon perfected quid pro quo. Whtn he took
thcre in 1962. contemplating the prospsts of an unemployed office. thc major remining symbol of the Kennedy's Syndicate-
politician. aftcr turning his back on the v u e n and nponcn of busting legacy was an irnpnsoned Jimmy Hoffa. Then in 1971
California. He had spm the next half-deude playing the role of Nixon commuted the forma Tccunstu boss's sentence eight
rcpublicm gadfly and repairing his political career. Wtth some years ahead of schedule. Soon after. Nixon began accumulatin
hclp from T i Dewey. he also became a Wall Street lawyer Teynstcr donations evcntudly totaling more than S1 million.d
wid1 nc-w contacts in the corporate establishment. Then in January 1972 Nixon sccurcd m t h a carly relcasc for
In Jmuq 1968 Nixon rcnuncd to the Bahamas as a presiden- rcd esutc dcvclopcr Calvin Kovens. who had becn convicted of
1i:11 carufid;ltc ~.zdan honmd pest at the opcning of the ncw pnsion-fund fraud along with Hoffa. Eight days before thc
Resorts casino. l l ~ Resons
c pcht was placed at his disposal and Kovens pmlc. fomcr scnator Smathcrs callcd White Housc
hc sojkcd up the sunshine. . aidc Chuck Colson to urgc Lhc movc. "I was Ialking to Bcbc
[Rebozo] about it." Smarhcn told Colson in a taped conversa- the Viernun war. So Hughes sau a mano in early 1969 k l l i
tion. "and said. 'Bck. it loob to me thu this would be a pretty Maheu he "should get lo our [new] friends in Washington to set
good thing to do.'" A few months later the Nixon re-elation what could be done a b t keeping the war in Vietnam going."
campaign received a secret 530,000 in cash from Kovw. (By 1974 Hughes was ctnm0y.s eighh largest Pentagon
Onc month after Nixon moved into 1600Pennsylvania Avenue. amtractor, with backlog orders of 3825 billiaa. becoming so
Bob Haldcmm sent a top-senet mema to John Ehrlichman: much a pan of the dcfcmc csublishmmt h t Nixon offered to
"Reborn has been asked by the president to contact J. Paul Getty have Henry Kissinpr brief Hughes UI tbc antiballistic missile
in London regarding major contributions. ?he funds should go sys=)
to some operating entity olhu than he Nuiorlll [republican] Hughes's second ccmCM was he Atomic Energy Commis-
Cormittee so that we un ~ u i full n c a r w l of their use." sion's (AEC) testing uadct the Nevada desen He feared the
White House memos did not record whetkr Re- ever -
a f u r t f f a and he felt Ihe tests were saaugicdly worrhless
approached oil billionaire Geuy. But l c c ~ d i n gto the Senate ashe explained in rnorhumemo toMaheu: "Of cowsc we must
Watergate committee. Reborn did suve Nixon as a courier and k careful not to place ounelves in the position of disclosing
laundcrcr of money kept in a secret White House ache.shuttling military secrets. But I un tell you, based upon actual Defense
lhese unattached funds through dispa~brbank accounts and then Depament t d m i d infannuion. legally in my hands. that this
shelling them out to indulge Nixon. last AEC staurnent is pure 99 prwf unadultentcd shit" (Con-
Reboro tried to hide these payments in a tangle of expen frorued with Hughes's axxagonism. the AEC did move iu testing
f m c i a l manipuhtions. One payment was uuandacd lJmn~gh ground from Nevada to Amchitiu Island off Alaska, at a cost o
lhne bvlk aaounu and a cashier's check. none of them even in uxpayen of sI00 million.)
his name. He succeeded in confusing the trail enough to conceal Third, Hughes needed approval from the White House k f a e
-
most expenditures and in burying the identities of the slush
fund's moneygivus where they could not be exhumed.
he could.uke o v a Air West airliines. (Hughes received Nion's
pcnonal g+ahcad in 1969.just about the time the f a t $50.000
But thcre was one critical exception. a 5 100.000 donaion from -
i n s d h e n t S 100 b i b cinched in bank wrappers and stuffed
-
in a manila envelope was delivered to Rebozo.)
Howard Hughcs.
Fountr, H u g k wanted u u i w t laws waived so he could
B y 1968 Hughcs was close to becoming the world's richest purrtrw the Dunes Hotel. Hughes already had bought up five
man and Robcn Maku was cn#onccd as Hughes's chargk big hotclcsinas md by late 1969. was angling for the 1000
d'affaires on a S520.000 annual retainer. In the spring of 1968 mom Dunes. But the Junicc Dtp~rment'santinust divisim
Hughcs handed Mahcu a toppriority insuuction: "I want you to opposed granting Hughes an even bigger monopoly on Vegas.
go to scc Nixon as my special conlidcntid emissary. I fccl thcrc So in culy 1970 Mabcu sau Danm to I&wiLh thc "boss," in
is a really valid possibility of a rcpubiican victory this yciu. U this use Auorncy Genenl John Mitchell. who had worked with
fha~could bc ralizcd undcr our sponsorship and supervision Danncr on Nixon's 1968 campaign. Mitchell and D ~ l n c r
cvcry inch of thc way. then we would be ready to follow with clorcccd together in thrce secm meeting o v a a period of seven
h a l t (UIC politically unknown Ncvada gwcmorj as our ncxt weeks. ?hen Mitchell gave the gem light MAeu subscqucntly
candidate." authorized the urond SSOMX) explabiqg to a Hughcs lawyer
Hughcs must havc bcen chccrcd whcn he hcard a fcw months "that cerwin political obligations had to be met" because of
latcr that thc man with whom hc'd dcdt so compatibly as Duuwr's metrings with Mitckcll. Dumu again cvried the
vicc-prcsidcnt had rcachcd the White House. A month after the money in a manila envelop to Reboto.
election Hugha decided to conmbute to Nixon's private ache. (Mitchell's supposed excuse for approving the Dunes sde was
In Dcccmbcr 1968. Maheu took 550.000 in 5100 bills from the hat Hughes was fighting the Syndicate in Vcgas. But Danner
cage at thc Silver Slippercasino and flew to Palm Springs where told the Wucrgate committee Ihu, in actuality, Mitchell felt
Nixon was attending h e republican Governors AssociationCon- Hughes had m t really ZITated Ihe Syndicate's standing in the
fmncc. Maheu told the Watergate committee thu he drwe to casinos.)
thc house where Nixon was staying and waited in the car while T h e yun later. when Walcrga investigators began beating
a c w o n went inside. Appuatly it was Hughesf intention that on Lht Whiu House door. Rebozo k a m e alarmed that the
the money be delivered to Nixon persondly. a high-handed and 5100.000 from Hughes would be discovend. At 8 a.m. on April
risky procedure at which Nixon balked. 3(hh. with Nixon about to announce h e exit of his While House
Mahcu r c m e d to Vegas with the 550.000. Shortly thereafter. front line beforenctwrkTVcyneras in the Oval 0fZice.Rebozo
howevcr. Rcbozo sought out Richard Danner. the ex-FBI agent hurriedly confcneddown the hall in the Fish Room with Nixon's
who 20 years beforc had inuoduced Nixon to Rebozo. Danner personal lawyer. Hubert Kalmbach. According to Kalmbach.
had worked on he 1968 Nixon campaign. then had bcen hired Rebozo was worried kwusc part of the S 100.000 had bacnspurt
by he Hughes organization as a "Nixon liaison." Rebozo by Nixon's secretary and his lw brorhcrs.
broached the subject of money. Danna told the Watergate com- Howard Hughes's 5100.000 paymen to Nixon's secret cache
mittee. by needling h i about Hughes's supposed favorifism almost certainly would have stayed undetected if Hughes had
toward H u k n Humphrey. gnmbiing that Hughes had donated not fued Roben Maheu in November 1970.
more to Humphrey's 1968campaign than to Nixon's. According For more than ten y e m Maheu had handled assignmenu for
to Senate testimony. Duma twk this message to Maheu. who the CIA and the Hughes organization. In the espionage. business
agrccd to send money to Nixm through Rebozo. and crimi~Jne~herworlds.his connections were invaluable.
Hughes had at least four favors in mind: W~thMahcu as his top lieutenant. Hughes had been awarded
Hughcs had just lost a major defense conmct because of several CIA conujns. including one to build .m intelligcncc-
advcrsc publicity that devclopd when a House subcommittee gathering satellite. Yct Maheu had madc some miscalculations.
found that his moncy again had bas wining and dining top The Dunes dcal. for instance. had fallcn through whcn last-
Fcnugon gcncrals. Now Nixon was in a position to cut off h e minute vithmctic showed it was a bad risk. Maheu also had rued
major mvkct for Hughes's lagging hclicopccrdivisionby ending John Mcier. who allegedly was defrauding Hughcs on mining
deals. Howcvcr. Hughes apparently l i k d Mckr bcc;ruse Meicr Hughcs's parent company into the CIA'S most valuable Erorp
was a buddy to Donald Nixon. the president's brother. The CIA would pay Hughes m ettimued $360 million to build
Soon after thc Dunes dcal backfired. Chester Davis. a long- the Glomar Explorer, a super-sophistialed rig to work in the
rime Hughes counsel and a bitter rival of Maheu. made his move ocean's d e w . The CIA slid it wanfed the Glomu to rcrrieve
to oust h i . Davis approached Intmel. a "security" f i with military codes and nuclear wafl?eadjffioma Soviet submarine
k t t u CIA cormdons than Maheu. sunk h e miles deep in the Praf~c.
Intenel was born in he Bahamas. the offspring of Resom' At midnight on ?hurlugiving eve 1970.Inttncl agents cartied
anti-Syndicate posturing. Intenel was supposed to be a private Hughes down a back suin at the Duut Inn and through thc only
police force to keep gangstas away from the casinos. What d m tha wasn't marimed by Maku's closedcircuit TV sys-
Intenel became. however, was a private CIA-for-hire thu,~lied tem.A decoy caravan of black sedans was dispatched to the civil
on computa data. political IOUs and inside connections. airport while Intertel ferried Hughes to m Air F a base md
The Intarel president. Roben Peloquin. began his cpea as a loaded him aboard a LockheedJetSut bound for tbc Bahanus.
manber of the m w p society. He worked f a Naval Intelligence. A c a d n g IO one aaamt. Hughes was met thue by James
the National Security Agency and the Justice Depmment's Gddea the Inrcnel extcative md Nixon fried.
Security Diuision. Thcn he had been chief of IheJustice Depart- Mahw. who usually annmunicued with his cmploya only
ment's f i t Organized Crime Task Force, a job that got h i through handwritten nws. did na lam of the mysterious
acquainted with Resorts. Peloquin was che prosecutor who m- d c p m until two weeks Irttr.At firm Mlheu cwld nol believe
vestigated Resoru and initially rrparted that "Lhe atmosphere he'd ktn replaced More l i y . he thought. Invntl bad kid-
seems ripe for a h k y skim." But in 1966 he suddenly retired napped Hughes f a some u n d d i i purpase of its o m
from the Justice Dcpartmcnt and went to work for the CLA front So Maheu sent a team of men to the Bahamas. They located
group Rcsau. Hughes's new aerie atop the B r W a Beach H a l md camped
-
By 1970 Pcloquin with 32 million in backing from Rcsons
-had wcmblcd Intcncl. having recnrited operatives from the
a floorbelow. Then they obtained a search wanant to breaJ~irw
the pcnthousc; they had a boat urnding by to rcaua Hughes to
i ~ cprccincu
r of the CIA. FBI. IRS. Natiorul Security Agcncy. the U.S. But lhcir plan was foiled when Intcncl's Golden. along
D c p m c n t of Star. Sco~JandYard. Interpol. Customs Burwu. with a police squad. rounded than up and had them deponed for
Royd Canadian Mourucd Poliu. Bureau of Nuootia and Dan- "warking wirhout a pcmri~"Hughes then telephoned Nevada
-
pcrous DNg and J. Edgar Hawcr's only nephew. govcmor h a l t to say Lhjt he had not kcn kidnapped and h t
Installed as an Intcncl vice-prcsidcnt was Junes Goldcn. he had fired MJhcu.
known as "Nixon's man" at Rcsons. Goldcn had bccn a Sccrct Maha's h i s t a i d s i ~ c m c might
c have endcd thcrc. But
Scrviccman ~ s i g n c to
d guard vice prcsidcnt Nixon in rhc Fiftics Ri-d Nixm wme to view M h as a k c a t b u s c the
and had rcturncd as sccurity dircctor at the 1968 npublicvl ex-aidc's loyaltics had bccn cut adrift and bccatsc he knew too
convention. A f t c ~ r d at. Nixon's rcqucst, R m had h i d
Goldcn as iu dcputy director of security. (From thac Goldcn
-
much as one White House mcmo put it."Maku's tentacles
touch many exvcnrcly d t i v c amas of government uch of
wcnt to Intcncl. thcn to a top sccurityjob with Hugha and finally which is fr;~ught with potentid for kdt Andcnon-type u-
back to Washington undcr Nixon as chicf of the organized crime
scction in the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration.) pos~"
'TIE White House Plumbers were not yet oprativc So the IRS
In the summer of 1970. Pcloquin and the Resoru prcsidcnt wasaskodtoexamine M ~ u ' s b a n k a a o u a t . o s u r r h f a r a
cvnc to Lzs Vcgas. sharcd binks and a floor show with Bebe
Rcbozo and Richard D m e r and visited with Chester Davis. -
heavy-handed tool of coacion an indicrmenr Whm Maim
suddenly found himself under IRS scmtiny. he decided to con-
According to a Hughcs insider. Pcloquin and Davis reached a fide in Hank Greenspun. the highly indepcndcnt publisher of the
tcntativc agreement. Intmci would rcplau Mahcu as the fix-it L a Vcgm Sun.
expert in the Hughes organization. And Hughes would replace
Rcsoru in thc Bahamas. By lQ11 Greenspun had galhaed a boxhi of Hughes's privau
(By 1970 b k y had become as reclusive as Hughes, hiding papers and information about the 3100.000 donatioa to Nixon
out in Israel. vying to avoid the lingeringreperrussionsof Bobby The maccriid had come Ihrough sources within the Hughes
Kennedy's hs Vegas investigation. The Syndicatedid not want organiurioh much of it presumably from Maheu. Grcaqnm
anothcr major investigation in the Bahamas. But already some revelled this information to Jack Anduson over dinner in Wash-
investigative rcportcn were trying to uncover Lansky between ington. Greenspun had h o w n the coiumnist since -he early
the b a l m c sheeu. Hughes could provide a much better front: Fdties when bolhhad brawled editwiJ l y against Senator Joseph
his antiSyndiate stance in Vegas was still unmpromised) Mecarthy.
For Hughcs it was a chance to put Lhe Western Hemisphere's On August 6th. 1971, ten months Mae the Watergale burg-
two prcmium gamblingcenten in his m e . Hughes already had lary. Anderson's column described the bare dctails of the
contempiatcd moving to the Bahamas. Hughes representatives s100,m Iransaction.
had mct with Resorts executives during the previous year to On September 26th. 1971. Hank Greenspun mkkcd to Pon-
discuss thc chance of buying up the Bahamian franchise. IT he land. Ongon. where Nixon was inmuring in a longshoremen's
did expand to the Caribbean. Hughes told Mzheu in a Uped soikc. Nixm knew Greenspun as an idellistic newspapeman, a
conrcrsation. "I umld expcct you really to wrap that govm- Hughes critic and a Nixon friend for m a y yeus. in approxi-
mcnt up d o ~ there
n - -
to a point where it would be well a mately that or&. The two posed for the usual gaggle of photog-
raphers. Then Greenspun wrnaed Nixon confidant Herb KJcin
capivc entity in cvcry way."
Cllcsccr Davis's proposed dcd with Intcncl offercd Hughes and. according to Grccnspun's notcs of thc mcefing. wamcd
dnt ocpnunity only if M ~ wasu eliminated "But. according Klein hat the 5100.000 in cash potentidly could "sir&Nixon."
ro CIA sourccs. thc Inccncl scenario held an added incentive About tw weeks later. on October 121..Grecnspun mxived
incsistiblc to Hughes. According to the sourccs. Intcncl officials a visit from Herb Kalmbach. the Nixon lawyer. According to
brojchcd Ihc idea of a rnMunoth CIA contract that would turn Grccnspun. Kalmbach spcru two hours scribbling on yellow
legal pads. taking down Greenspun's answas to questions about "commonality of interestn between the White House urd the
his knowledge of the 5100.000. Hughes organization. Wmte. =ding to Hunt.agned to r j
In late Dccunbcr the White House Plumben unit discussed a a floor diagram of GSr-' ~Zfice.'lLvo weeits later. m
plan. which apparently he n w u attempted, to assassinate Jack F e h v y 19Lh Hunt and Liddy new to Los Angeles and met
Anderson by coating his car steering wheel with a poison that Wme at the Beverly W~lshireHotel. Wine allegedly had p-
would be absorbed through his skin According to Anduson. the pared the freehand floor plrn and offered to supply lookours
Plumbers hoped to oblain the poison from the CIA. during the burglary. Hunt was not satisfied. He wanted Wmre to
m n in early 1972. McGnw-Hill Publiihing Company an- provide an airplane for a quick geuway to Cenual America
nounced it was about to release the inside stay of Howard where the conrenu of the safe could be quietly split between
Hughes's real-lie shenanigans. In front-page miclcs on January Hughes and the White H o w .
16th and January 17th. the New Y i k T i quoted excerptsfrom Liddy, Hunt and Winte later claimed that p p a r a t i o ~bmke
~
the McGnw-Hill book that charged Nixm with king a political down at rhis point and that the break-in was aborted But in a
fixer for Hughes. The book, authaed by freelancer Cliiord taped conversation on April 1 4 L 1973. E h r i i c h m told Nixm
Irving. purported to be based on his immiews with Hughes. ?he Uut the Greenspun mission was suats&htl: %y flew out,
Hughes organization knew that to be false. But the book did broke [into] his safe. got something OUL'
contain a plethora of details. According to several sources, W In any case. the Plumkn next focwed on Dernoudc party
Hughes and the While House f e d that M a h a was Irvij+*s ch* Lury O'Brien. m Edward Kennedy conf~duuand a
ghostwriter. using the book to uule on Hughes and Nixoh puty loyaliit who studiously avoided c o n m e n y and had-
McGnw-Hill had decided Irving's book was authentic. Thcn lints. O'Brien also had been Hughes's chief Washington repre-
in a theatrical phone call from his Bahamas penthouse. Hughes s d v e in 1969 and 1970. He had been hired by his end,
stopped McGnw-Hill's presses by denouncing both h i n g and Roben Maheu, and he had worked for Hughes when the
-
Maheu as frauds. But check-muing Irving's book to which
Mahcu apparently conuibutcd norhing -did not pwcnt a new
$100,000 took its discomfoning journey. O'Brien had kcn
dismissed along with Maheu when Hugha left Las Vegas. K
move from Greenspun and Anderson Mahcu had evidence about the $1 00,000.so might O'Brien. And
On Jvluvy 2 Ah Andcnnr's column again mentioned h e he might only be waiting for an opportune momuu to smash it.
S100.000 and added a proviso: "we have evidcnce" that money like an ovuripc melon, between Nixon's can in the farhcoming
had bccn illicitly funnclcd through Rebozo. The White House elcaion
evlier had hcvd rumors that M b u had squinclcd away hund- ?hc Whitc House had &en wonicd about O'Bricn for marc
reds of Hughes's hvrdwrittcn communiwtiw. Wac thcy the than a ycar. Hddcman. Ehrlidunur. Reborn and White Housc
evidcncc? ff so, whcrc Wac those prpcn? sparial counscl John Dean had all scvchcd for political din on
n u t Yltwcr was supplied a weck lam. on Febnaay 3rd. 1972 O'Bdcn. They had come up empty-handcd So, according to
A New York T i i h d l i n c reported that "hundreds of copies of Sate tcstknmy. John Milchcll authorid a second burglay
Hughes mcmos are readily available in h Vcgas." fims rc-
pona Wdlacc ?'umcr had discovered their hiding place: a boxy
- O'Bricn's office at D c n t i c rutionid hcadquvlcrs in the
Walcrgate Oficc Building.
Meilink s d c stuck in a coma of Grccnspun's office. ironically IIIC Watcrgatc burglars wac all veterans of Ihe Bay of P i p
under an autographed p i c m of Nixon posing with Greenspun operation. Bernard Barker, a forma member of Batisu's secret
in Ponlmd. "Wall Turner is an old fricnd of mine." Grccnspun police. had bocn the invasion paymaster and reportedly an
explained mattcr-of-faclly. "Hc came to my office looking for a officer undcr Howard Hunt in the 1965 stillborn invasion"
story and I couldn't send him away empty-handcd. So I told him J m s McCord. a CIA security chid, had played a minor mle in
about thc Hughes papers." Greenspun had not told'ILrner exact- the Bay of Pigs and thcn workedon Hunt's seamd invasionplan
ly wh3t the papers said. just that he had lhcmsacrcted in his safe. Eugmio Mutinu. still on a CIA ~ t a i n e ar decade afm the Bay
The next day lhcre was a secret meeting at the Justice Depart- of Pigs. had belonged to the exile army and later had participated
ment offices in Washington. G. Gadon Liddy. an ex-dismct in an estimated 300 harassment raids against Casao. The kst-
attorney. had spurt the past several weeks trying to sell a political hewn burglar was Frank Snrrgis. Lhe self-styled Bay of Pigs
espionage plan to Mitchell. It had been ~ r n e ddown as expcn- double-agent.
sive. risky and ineffective. But on Febntary 4th. 1972. with Now all were employed in the White House Plumben unit and
k e r ' s story only a day old. Liddy was given a go-ahead. again their chief was Howard H w Exccpt for McCord. the
Campaign director John hlitchell. actording to deputy director team had been handpicked by Hunt rhrough his lingering con-
Jeb Magmder, ordered Liddy to scout prospects for breaking into tacts in Miami's "Liule Havana."
Greenspun's safe. According to an unpublished section of the Hunt claimed to have r e l i d from the C U in the summu of
Watergate comrnittcc rcport. "Mitchell not only brought up the 1970 after 25 years as an agent He had s p a Lhe rust half of
Greenspun entry opention but also urged Liddy to consider it a 1971at the Mullen Agency. a Washington-bued public relations
more pressing and important than the other targets di~cussed.'~' f i purchased in 1970 by Roben Benneu. Chuck Colson. the
(hiitchell allegedly told Liddy that Gremspun's safe contained White House's resident uoubleshooter. had h o w n both Bennett
documenls linking Democntic candidate Edrnund Muskie to the and Hunt for yeus. When Colson realized he needed assistance
Mafia. But Watergate burglar J m s McCord assumed this was in plugging up Nixon's leaky affairs. he UUced to Bennett about
a pretext. McCad testified that he believed Mitchell and Nixon bonowing H u n ~Bcnnett concurred and. in July 1971. Hunt
were afnid Greenspun had "material which would presumably began moonlighting at 51000 a dry at h e Whitc House.
incriminate the pnsident and his friends.") Public reladons man Bennett. a Mormon and the son of a U.S.
According to the unpublished Watergate rcpon. Liddy referred scnrtor. hardly sccmcd a fit confidant for Hunt and Colson. But
LIIC Grcenspun job to Howard Hunt. the ex-CW operations Bcrmett cultivated heir friendship. provided surprising assis-
officer at the Bay of Pigs who rcccntly had taken a ncw job as mce. and took a spccirl interest in rhc NXte H o w f undcr-
h e "dirty tricks" c x p n for h c H'hite House Plumbers. Hunt cover activities. Bcnnctt coordinated the hiring of a n opcrativc
met with Ralph Wtn!c. a Hughes sccurity director. to discuss the. to spy on chc Democnu for Nixon and furnished him a bed in
his housc. acnnctt rmngcd an intavicw f a Hunt to collea faeign policy dclibentioru." Colson told a privuc investigator
anti-Kcnncdy matcrial about Chappquiddick. He helpd author in May 1974,a few monfhsbefore Nuon's rrsignati0pvSo they
a press rclcjse that tried to disnedit Jack Andenan's TZT angle ..
had two choices: one to infiltrateand spy on him. a rhey could
see lhrmsclvej losing their team. I'm convinced thu Hunt was
in the Dim Beard case. And he set up 150 dummy cunpaip
committns so Nixon donors could avoid gift taxes the CIA vehicle. Hunt didn't go to work for the Mullen Agency
In addition. it-was Bennett who allegedly intraduced Hunt to kcruse he happened to find a good job there. He was posted
Lhe Hughes security director in the early suges of the Greenspun there by Dick Helms. All the time thaf Hunt was on h e Mullen
break-in plan. Bennett h q p n e d to know the Hughes people payroll he was reporting biweekly to the CIA. ?hen Hunt stans
because he had just bem hired as rheir Washington repre- wming over to me, bringing me cigars and inviting me ovw to
sentative. taking the place of Lury O'Brien his house. He r a m i u the teamof Cubans and works himself into
To the White House. Bmneu's connection to Hughes scuned the job at the White House."
an added uuibute. White House memos about Bennett in 1971 Helm cirimed he barely knew Hunr But reporter Tad Szulc
md 1972 contained a smugness: Colsm and other Nixon rides muled that Helms and Hunt were actually good friends. And
congratulated thanselves that they had a new illy in chc Hughes a House committee later did rurd evidurce that Helms had
organization But Nixon's men appucndy did not b w about pasanilly p l d Hunt at the Mullen Agtncy.
Bennett's other connections. They lamed much l a m that the James McCord. another W e - m t e d agent left the CIA u he
pencil-pushing Bennett was a CIA m m same time as Hunt and wait to work for Nuon's campaign
According to 1974 wngressional teslimony, Bennett's com- commim. Ihuseemed suspiciouswhen McCad lam told the
pany had been a CIA front since iu inception in 1959. uranging Senate Wucrguc committee how k felt about the CU's rivalry
cover faQA agenu m Asia and Europe and as?idng CIA with the While House. "It a p p r c d to me hat the White House
activities in this country. During the Bay of Pigs preparations. it had f a same time kcn trying to get political conaol over the
h d hclpcd set up thc Cuban Freedom C d u e c a CIAsuppon CIA asscssmau.and ufimatcsin order to m&c lhunconfom
group that tried to sabotage Casoo's fim mgar cmg. to 'White House policy." McCord said adding that he fclt
t p l d himself at the nexus d the Hughes-Nixon-
B c ~ c thad Nixon hadprcverucd the CIA f m conducting i u "business with
CIA imbroglio. a unique position hat gave him em&to d l thra complete integrity and hones~yin the nrtional interesr"
principals. Aftcr Robcn Mahcu's ruing. for inwncc. Bennett But then the ~ ~of the s Waterguc
t burglars plJCCd LhC CIA in
pcrformcd thc following chorcs: (I) f a t k Whir House. he a devilishly awkward spa The mcn bchind b u s had danon-
supplicd information about Mahcu's friendship with O'Brien: s u l l c CIA backgrounds. Even more ernbvnuing was lhc
(2)for thc CIA, hc invcstigatcd how much influence MAcu hcld CIA'S c ~ c l c s soutlittins of the Plumbcn with agency q u i p
with Nixon: (3) for rhc Hughcs organization. hc triedlo m c e thc mcnt: disy iscs. voicc-alrcring .dcviw. .a Uhcr 5000 tap rc-
cxtcnt of Mahcu's rchtionship to thc CIA. cordcr disyiscd in a typcwriur cuc. a cynut hidden in a
Aftcr thc Watcrgatc burglary. howcva, Bcnnctt chvrcd a t o m pouch. a wig the color of a butcher's apron and d l
coursc that prolcctcd thc CIA and Hughes at thc cxpcme of m;mncr of forgcd idcnM~cation.
Nixon.
1972 samc Richard Nixon who had wakcd so closcly Mawith t of thc docwn6nution that could have l i d CIA the
B y Ihc
The F a s c l l Agenda for the 90'8 bunkas. They've ga just one uep after amha ming
with he program
- - ahead
--
do whatever is ncccssuy gcnocidc. inrrvention. or exploiu- md work again f a the rise of the Farrth Wch and intururiorul
tion of mallcablc labor to control those rcsowccs~anddeny fascism which u what we live undu md am fostering in lht
cuncnt period md the Soviet Union is again the t u g u But pan
thcm to thc Sovict Union.
Tlr.sccond aspca or prong of the fascist agenda is to establish of that would bc Hitla's d d &cam of the rcunifiion of the
Gaman state, which is what they're vying to m y wilh the
by thc end of lht century a first-strike capability of nuclear Bcrlin Wall chmgc, although thc polidu internally in East
weapons. 7Iat.s what MX and 'hident and Stu Wan ue about Bcrlin arc ~wcthat diffcren~and rhc peaple rhu came ovu marly
- to give us first strike capability and the idea of a "winnable" came ovcr to get a free Coke and SSO in free shopping mcncy
nuclcar war. where we have 15%of the industrial capability and and went back Ihc same day.
11lest 5% of the population left. That's enough for lhun lo d l
it a win. They're going to be down in the underground bunkers n r y always like lo ulk about all the pcople running from
anyway. and to go for broke lhcy have a thing cdlcd Air land communism. but usually reality is a lit& dilfcmt T k y like to
Batrlc 2000. In Army T i magazine they talk about it. It's say that IJE Sovieu put up the wall to slop the brain drain, but I
full-scale chemical, biological and nuclear attack on the Soviet think that h e reality was that hey put up lhe wall to stop d l the
Union by the turn of the century. nazi agcnu ltut w e m ' t ukcn out of IIIC post-war German
But thc Soviets are no longer in a position lo wage the nuclear miliury and intelligence s u u a u t s from coming in ud easily
arms race and the cold war bccause it's bvJcruptcd their entire inliltrating and destroying their u m p t at a socialiit society. I
ccmomy o the point thu they've got a huge in~cmaldomestic think h a t lhe main people involved in these eastun European
problem. So Gorbachev is playing reafpoliric in a cIever way changes are the old rcvmchisu. rhc Radio Free Europe pcople.
that at least partially embarrasses the Unilcd Slam into dropping The nazi sympathizut =.king inviled back in
some of their dtferues. But at the same time Bush talks about I talked earlia about b c h Walaa. Everybody thought he was
going o the Malta summit and having a ''kinder and gentler so noble when he golf 1 million from Ihc N o k l Peau Rize and
America." he's developing a new program of next generation gave it to the Valian. tkrell. he's just paying irucnst on the SSO
nuclev weapons cdled SIOPS 7, wilh nuclev bombs chat bur- million lhal the Pope. whare family nunc is Wojtila. gave to him
row 600 fect into the ground and blow up the Soviet command in order to help effect Solidmosc ud Ute Polish disruption
here. But they 're doing an efledve job of changing lhe rutwe
of the buffer job and destabilizing it and I think it's just pan of
the program. By the end. some of these people wuu to go for
broke. They want lo go to martial law and loul armed control
hue in the Unird States.
NEVADA AERIAL RESEARCH GROUP, P . 0 . BOX 8 1 4 0 7 , LAS VEGAS, NV 8 9 1 8 0 - 1407
Co~cr~ction
P m Am 103. the jumbo jet that blew up over bckcrbie, the investigation:
Scotland on December 21.1988. might have passed into his- Tbere were. it is now known, at least four. and. accord-
tory as simply another example of the tragic loss of life spill- ing to one unsubstantiated repon. as many as e i g h ~C U and
ingout of rbe .Middle East conflict. But. asuith other incidents other US. intelligence agency operalives renvaing from Bei-
of this kind. the official investigation leaves questions un- mt.Lebanok aboard the plane. The Lockerbie bomb &p-
answered. Many relatives of the victims- the plane's 259 pas- pled US. intelligence effoas in the Xfiddle East. Were the
-
sexeers. and ll people on the gound f e u that the full vuth intelligence operatives on 103 h e bomb's target?
A C U team headed far Lockerbie uithin an hour of the
uill never be know.
By s o r t accounts, investigators believe the a s h was crash' At l e s t onc: during the gound search, C M inves-
uused by a sophisticated bomb-with a rime-delay, baro- tigators wore Pan Am uniforms: and a u o r d i g to one un-
-
n c v i c fuse placed on the plane by Ahmcd Jibril's Popular refuted d e g a t i o q C U operatives temporzuily removed a
suitcase from the site that bclon~edto one of-their agents,
Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command
(PFLP-GC). a Syian-backed group that rejects PLO efiont thereby breaking the Scottish police investigators. 'chain of
to oeporintc urith Israel. evidence," which could be crucial to any succtuful prosecu-
Flight 103 originated at FrdcJurt and continued 04-6th tions.
another plane. from London. The bomb detonated at 7:03 Atso aboard Pan Am 103 was Bernt Carkon, t t e
p.m. If ii had gone off just 10 minutes h e r . the P h Am clip- Swedish U.N. diplomat, who bad just completed negotiating
per would have already crossed rbe Scothb co,ast and the tbesamibian independence agetmcnt uithsouth Aria.He
plane -its victims and e\idence -would havc vanisbxm the was due in New York the n c n day to s i p the agreement.
Sorth Atlantic. Jibril has denied respoiibiry for the attack. In Oaober 1988. the West German Federd Police. the
But investigators believe that the PFLP-GC received a luge Bundeslvimindamt (BKA).raided a suspected t e n o ~sde- t
p a p e n t from Iran-ABC News has reponed S10 d o n - house. Dwing the raid, they found a bomb-hidden in a
to cvry out the attack to avenge rhe US. dowing of an Toshiba radio- that was virtually identiul to the one bcticved
Iranian airbus in which nearly 300 people died on July 3.1988. later to havc brought d o w Pan Am 103. All but one of rbe 16
Paul Hudsoa an Albany, Sew York l a y e r . h the president people arrested were soon released and several of them arc
of Families of Pan Am lOjjLOckerbie, one of h e : groups now top suspects in the bombig.
made up of r t h t i v o of the victims. Paul and Eleanor Hud- Pan Am was frned more t h a f600.000 by the US.Fe-
son's 16-year-old daughter hfclina was r e h g home from deral Aviation Admkisuation (FAA) for lax sccuriry at its
a year of school in England when she died in the crash. baggage-handling facility in Frankfurt. And according to the
'Anghing that cvill prevent a coverup. ...h a t wiIl keep others West German newwcekly Stem, a Pan Am security olficid in
from experiencing what we have, is importank" Eleanor Hud- Frankfurt was spotted after the crash backdating a copy of a
son said recently. "Tbe fuU uuth should come out," Paul Hud- crucial FAA memo. The memo described a u l l placed to the
son a p e d Tbe charge of cover up d w not come easily to US.Embassy in H c k i in which the cdcr reportedly ayn-
either Eleanor or Paul. But Paul H u d s o ~who has followed ed that a bomb would be smuggled onto a Pan Am aircraft
the investigrtion cfoscly, is dismayed at its progress. 'It ap- flying from Frankfun to the United States. .
pears that the government either has the facu and is covering The most startling and controversial charge to surface
tbis up." he said, "or doesn't know all rbc facts and d m ' t around Pan A n 103 comes from a report issued by a tittle-
want to." b o w New York Cipbased inteitigenc: g o u p uUcd Inter-
for, Inc. 2 The company was hued by the law f m representing
> h a y Qucstioos
Most of the initial controversy surrounding Pan Am 103
focused on the US. long stand& policy of not
I. St-n Emenan and B M ~Duffy. 7he F ~ t t d P ~ n A143(.\'ew
m York
informing the general public when an airline. an air-travel cor- - -... . ..-lm,
- I. ,,
.. - r. -..
ridor or a specific flight has been threatened by terrorist at- 2 Acmrding to Daniel Ahamni. Intedots p n e n l counsel. the I o - ~ a r -
tack. Pan Am 103 fit in to dl of lhese utegorics But there old - P n r is c n ~ r in
d 'pmnte in,ellipnce and for corpontc
many other qucaiom percolating just beneath h e surface of cli~a" Fmm Itme to time. Ahamni mid. Intedor condunr 'wnru ~ n w -
t i p t h s on pntcular m e s u m including rountcnemnrm' Jwrl Aviv.
' Jeff Jon- is a political comspondenc rrth ~ \ f e ~ ~ an
n drl~crmtirc
. the ~ P W founder S and pmident and a lonncr member or Mourd.
n-elly bucd in Albany. S a YorL authored the contmtsial repon.
NEVADA AERIAL RESEARCH GROUP, P- 0. BOX 8 1 4 0 7 , LAS VEGAS,NV 89 180- 1407
- -
through S>~ianinteiligence saw the McKee team make their veiUanc= operation code.narned Autumn Leaves. left Wen
u ~ v e anansemenu
i back to the US, a n d according to the Gcrman officials facino interne criticism. Of ~ h c16 people
report. AI-Kyrar informed his Frankfun CU protectors of they rounded up. all but one were quickly released from j d .
rttcKee's p l a . Aod some of those released are now supcur in the Locker-
Follouing the leak of the Interfor R c p o r ~Pan Am went bie bombing. (The West Germam were further embanaved
before the federd judge bearing the ci\il suiu 3-1 the air- when. newly three months after the Pan Am bombin6 several
line a d asktdtbat he subpacna the= FBI, D m andstate more similar bombs t u n e d up during a subsequtnt B m
Deparuncnt in an effort to verify bterfor's Goding. The search of the P ~ u S SSde house.) There are enough apparent
government moved to quash the subpoenas on nationd se- mistakes and lapses in the West German handling of ~ u t u m n
curiry ~ o u n d s . T h eJustice Department &en took the use our k v e s to argue that the bungled investigation allowed the
of tbe hands of its l o d anornejs by sen* a team from bombers to slip through potice hands.
washingon to handle ,be litiption. A tuling is still pending.
rorist attacks. Some ofthe proposals i l l go to the President parently related to a ull for more a s t u i v e coven opera-
as recommendations for action by executive order. whiie tioas intended to prevent or respond to terrorist ICU-W~S
others =ilbe l introduced in Congeu sent to the President in a clwifred letter.
f
short 00 c~nclusioo.The authors do not purpon to know just had access to information indicating that the flight was
what happened. They believe bat Kbdd Jaafiu, a young rhreateocd. while the traveling pubtic was kept in the dark?
Arab-American from Detroit,'unaittin@f urried the bomb Is it the c u e that in their rush to make flight schedules and
hidden in a bag onto the plane in F r e Who gave it to cut costs. Pan Am dowed bagr that had not been properly
him. and why he didn't "eumioe" tbe wntenu. they say, 'is scarcbed to be loaded on its plane?
b e biggest mystery of the Lockerbie inrutigauoa" k it. as Interfor maintains, rhat a r o p e CIA operation
That. however. k hardly Lockerbit's biaest mystery. For vying to free US. hostages by protecting a heroin smuggling
one thing. Frontline reported shody after the EmersodDuffy ring faded to prevent tbe bomb from going on board?
book went to press that al of Jaafafs bag had k e n accounted k it. as Frondhe sugguu. that experienced US. h e l -
for. Wlichever bag or suitcase held the bomb, had to win- t i p n u operatives made fatal security mistakes? k the C U
tcgnte into frapents. thereby dtving Jaafw's name. His vying to hide the fact that it could not bring its people home
parents believe he beume a suspect beause he had the only t o m Beinrt safely?
Arabic s w a m e on the flight list. Whatever the answer may be, mmy relatives of the victinu
But the more serious quesuoas raised in the investigation fear they will never h o w what allowed the bombing to hap-
have to do aith the nature of the investigation, and why so pen or see those responsible p k h e d . An April 1990 letter
many relativesand reporters feel a fogofdiridormation ban@ to George Bush and Margaret Thatcher, cosiped by Paul
heavy over the crash. Hudson and J i i Swirt, -chairs of ' U X Families-Flight
103." spoke of the 'entirely believrble published accounts
The Remaining Purtlcs [that] ...bothof you have decided to deliberately docrmplay the
1s the story of Pan Am 103 that some US. government, evidence and string out the iovutigation until the case cur be
UN. officials, and foreip leaden were spared because they dismissed as ancient history."
M A T R I X 1 1 1
New theory
links Syrian
to Flight 103
. - -
'rime mew- nporta
A our-month . b
the w a y m=p,
bombing of the plane had two po
tential motivations
.Avenging the July 1988 shoot-
ing of an Iranian Airbua by the
USS V i
-
tinue his munnlian o~eratipQfg
the United States. a m g o d By a Syrlan and aimed at six CIA em loye88 who
Tht CIA Beirut unit was i n a - were p a w n g e m - r * t C / R A6- (;u-
W E / M A / - -=A
'L MHRIAJ~~,
ated about the link with the Ptyg
iie?Ictt, f-g his krrorist b l o m up over Iadterbie, Scotland, retired US. military intelligence':
Torr
s might squash any rescue at- on Dcc. 21,1988. officer M. OClpC WhCBfba. 1
THE
THE RESULTS OF
E S I S T ~ G -iTTHESTIC IXFOR3d,4TIOX' & I
ORIGISAL IbTLCTIGATIOS AS TO THE ORIGIX, DERIV.4-
TIOS, FOTSDERS, DETELOPlf=T, AIMS, Elf BLEUS,
CHARACTER, LXD PERSOSSEL OF
*ALBERT C. STEVEXS -
..
. . DATE.
.
S E C O S D E D I T I O S , RRE\'ISED TO.
- ...... . .._._. ... :..
..
. .
.;' ..
. . . ..
I
1770 Phl Beta Krppr.
1 _LI-.....-A -
The (Modern] ~ b ~ o r o p h l cf hr l e t y .
Amerluo ~ o l l & F e r r l e ~ l r l c r . .pore than Lbree rcom of 1hcm.l
-17a Bonr.of~U*.tydonr of ' r - ~ - ~ 1 f i - l m p o v e d O n k r of lCDd Meu.
I
-1686 Independent Order of ICccLrbllu.
-1881 Unlted bretllrcn of Frlendrhll~.
-1-1740 The ODD FELU)WB -1- Independe~~t Order of Mecbnnlw.
-1Sil Bonr of Bt. Ocorgc.
I
-1- Knlghlr and hdla of Becatlty. -UIW Order of the Iroqoolr.
-18W Nr1loo.l Rrletnlly. , -1w7 m d m t ~ r t r l c l r r of
u Pompdl
-1mI NU1w.l Prdsllrr . -18M W k of B ~ Eat.
--me Ool.mku lu(lw.
o
L-w
I
Yplk Walrar of tbr World.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
SMOM has chosen to 'honor
some dastardly individuals. In
1948, the Order issued one of
The Sovereign Military island" its most prestigious awards of
Order of the JCnighk of Malta is Its later history claims: honor, The Gran Croci al
a powerful international, super- "After the loss of Malta. the Merito Con Placa, to General
secret society with d i m linkage Knights wandered from place to Reinhard Gehlen. He was
to the Vaticah place until 1834 when Pope Leo Adolph IIitler's anti-Soviet spy.
Information on the Knights XI1 established the Following the war, Gehlen
of Malta is sketchy. Some Ileadquarters of the Order in found a home with the C.I.A.
research connects it to Rome..Jh e Grand Mastera (so too did other Nazi war
Fmmasonry and Gnosticism. o r the Order continue t o criminals). American
Most connects it to the medieval enjoy the rights o f a head industrialist, J. Peter Grace,
KnightsTemplan---some to of state, as. the Sovereign once the American head of
both. Either way, it is an
' Military O r d e r o f Malta SMOM, personally intervened
organ'aation with a dusky and has.. place la the world o f to get Nazis out of Europe and
shadowy past that is cloaked in diplomacy and statecraft. into America -
honor, ethics and charity. Today mote than 4 0 Grace used his influence to
There is a Catholic arm and a countries recognize t h e have Nazi war criminals' prison
Protestant arm. Currently, soveieignity o f the Order sentences reduced. Nazi Otto
Five Continent Grand Master is o f Malta and maintain full Ambros who ran a plant within
Andrew Dertie. Ilowever, the diplomatic relations with Ausschwitz, used over 100,000
absolute head is Pope John I'aul it. 1n.addition. there a n hapless Jewish prisoners as
11. oflicial delegates of the Order to laborea. Though he was found
The present-day Knights br various states and guilty at Nuremberg for his part
Malta, otherwise known as the in ternat ional organizations. in war crimes, Ambros found
Sovereign Military Order of T h e Moly S e e a n d a employment with Grace. Also,
Malta (SMOM), is a 900-year- number o f ' nations have the son of a high-ranking Nazi,
old, exclusive chivalric order. been and arc recognizing Frieddch Karl Flick, a key
This ancient order of the Order of Malta a s a financial supporter of Hitler,
knighthood existed even before sovereignity, in as much as was also tried at Nuremberg
the Cmsadn. It was founded it e n j o y s p r e r o g a t i v e s and found guilty ofabetting the
under the name of the which according t o Nab cause. Yet, Peter Grace
Ilospitallen of St. John of principles of international brwght Flick's son to America
Jerusalem back in the eleventh law, a r e proper t o and put him on the Grace
century. Like Frcrmasonry, it sovereignity."
likes to promotes itself as a Clearly, this "charitable" payroll-
Catholic order is a government Social historian Stephen
charitable organization. Binningham has said of them:
Nevertheless, the Order has a itself. And this government T h e Knights of Malta comprise
political and military side to it, answen only to the pope. The what is perhaps the most
and it is a supreme pope who legitimized it, Lco exclusive club on earth. They
powerbroker. XI1 (182 1-1829) condemned all are more than the Catholic
When the Turks invaded the religious freedom. tolerance, aristocracy...I they) can pick up
Holy Land the Order of Malta Bible societies and . Bible a telephone and chat with the
b e m e a military unit to defend translations; and declared that pope." Research by Bttty Mills
Jerusalem and prnenn it and its 'Everyone separated from the indicates that "In the 1930s.
holy citles obtenslbly for Roman Catholic Church, there was a military pact to seize
Christianity. Its own literature however unblameable in other the White House. John J.
describes its historical room mpects, has no part in eternal Raskob, a member of the
"When Jerusalem was lost, life.'" I 'The current Pope,'
Knights of Malta. was
they (the Knights) moved to
Acre. A century later, when
John Paul, holds exactly the
same perspective. The
...
implicated in.thii An attempt
was made to have Marine
the city also fell to the Moslems, internatioml head of the Order, General Smedley Butler take a
they moved to Cypnrs were the Grand Master, is elected for lead in this plan."2 Instead,
given the island of Rhodo by life. By Papal. Decree and by Butler secured damaging
the lIoly Father and t h y held it vlme of his once, he has the evidence against the SMOM
for many centuries against the rank of Prince, the precedence plot to seize the White Iiouse.
Moslem invaders. Ultimately, ofa Cardinal, and the title Mast IIe exposed the plan: John J.
the expansion of Islam drove Eminent Iiighncss. Raskob, one of the thirteen -
them from Rhodes, and they SMOM appears to have ties founding members of the U.S.
w m given the care of the island to monarchs- and powerful, branch of SMOM and .board
of Malta which they governed wealthy aristocratic families chairman of Genersl Motors,
as a sovereign state for 300 mainly In Europe. Its politics was implicated in the coup
yeas until, in 1798, Napolean appears to be far-right. It has attempt.
forced them to sunender the clear bonds to the C.I.A. . Congressional hearings were
M A T R I X 1 1 1
held on the plot, but SMOM These alliances of appear as an anti-communti
kingpin Raskob was never conveniences operate on many eKort in Central America, ,was
called to testify. "It is fronts through high finance, another plot. Evidence from the
interesting iind ai the same time international conglomerates, hearings clearly indicated that a
intelligence networks, shadowy govemment within the
very disturbing to note that the U.S. government was in
1930s plot to seize the White education, religion, media,
military, politics, various think operation. Exactly what it was
louse is not to be found in attempting to accomplish
history boob or encyclopedias . -tanks. Cross fertilization of
individuals and groups occur. remains murky.
as far as we can tell,"^ writes .Perhaps members of SMOM
tkcty Milk For example, Knight of Matla,
William Buckley, is also a working in allaince with other
The SMOM enjoys such member' of the Council on covert organizations in the
power and connection to other Foreign Relations. Another world were attempting another
s e a t societies thrwghout the Knight, Frank Shakespeare, a coup of the White House
world that it can exert U.S. Ambassador to the similar to that in the 1930s.
tremendous impact on global Vatican, was also President of The goal?. Chaos. The result?
amain. Though somewhat CBS Television Services and . A .Vatican -inspired revolution
puzreling, SMOM combines Vice Chairman of RKO within the United States .that
powerful resources with other would eventually force -the
shadowy, coverf organizations General. Shakespeare joined ~ + c s l d Gto
t tn6d (hi Fi;b'crr\
to complete an objective. For ultra-rightist Paul Weyrich Emergency. :,Management
example, one or two covert when the former became Agency (FEMA) and begin
groups might want to Chainnan of the Board of martial law. ,Important pieces
accomplish a clandestine Trustees of Weyrich's Heritage of information that surfaced
operation. To d o it Foundation. Incidentally, . during the Contra hearings was
successfully, it might appeal to Weyrich has traveled to Col. Oliver North's
another group(s) for assistance. Moscow to help the Soviets invalvemeat in FEMA.
When this happens, an ill establish a "democraticwsystem Incidmtly, North's attorney,
-assorted consortium will work
of govemment. The Heritage Brendon Sullivan, is part of
together evm though they might group also brought Karl Von Knight of Malta, Bennett
be at odds philosophically, liapsburg to America as a Williams' firm .
speaker. The Hapsburg dynasty
religiously, or financially. is the primary f o m behind the The Saverrign Military Order
In the Novmber-December Pan European Movement of the Knights of Malta
1990 Timnpet, the foundation Other past and present comprise a n elite of
for a case existing between the members of SMOM are: Lee unprecedented power on a
Prieure de Sion and John Paul global d e . Thcy can depose
I1 was made. Despite Malachi Iacocca, Greek shipping world leaders and entire
Martin statement that the Pricum magnate, . Spyros Skouru, gwemrncnrs at will. lhiu gives
is a myth--that it does not exist, Nixon friend, Robert them an unharnessed power to
we believe it does and is, in Abppplanalp, B a m n Hilton, shape and create a prototype
fact, worltmg in un'uon with the John Volpe. William Simon, world government. The major
Vatican of John Paul 11. In Tlie fonner treasury secretary, ptoblem is that the SMOM is
Musiurlc Legam the authors Alexander Ilaig, William totally loyal to the pope.
write of the manner in which Buckley, Bennett Williams; Therefore, it would be his fonn
secret organizations come attorney for the rich and of government they would be
together, pool resourrm then famous, and W i l l i i Casey. implementing.
quietly dismantle efforts and Is toby's SMOM, the neo Footmotom: I. Hraw H. HaUey.
return to autonomy. The -~emplarorganization, aiding Haby'# BIW Handboat (2oadmu
authors write: wNevertheleu,. Pope John Paul I1 in his quest P&Mbq, ( Q d Rmp16. 1%). p 711.
it had become i n a e d n g l y clar to extend Europe's boundaria, 2. <y M u , Cbt. North wr. .CucJc
that the Pricure de Sion d i d and to become the major player and Tho W g h a d Malw (Privala
have interests, and did conduct in the new world order? Yes. Printins 1990). p. 4.. 1I#d. WIb. p.
activities, in a somewhat Two CIA Directors have S. 4. M k k l 8d1mt ct at. T h.
murky sphere -.a sphere where Merriaair Le#ac): [Hlcy Holt Co.
been Knights of Malta. For 1 9 ~ ) . p nx
.
Christian Democratic parties of example, John McCone,
Europe, various movements William Casey held
dedicated to European .unity, membership in SMOM as did
royalist cliques, nco-chivalric George Rocca former deputy
orders, frnmasonic sects, the chief of CIA counter
CIA, the Knights of Malta and -intelligece. More than
the Vatican swirled together, adequate information exists to
pooled themselves temporarily link the SMOM, the ultra-right
for one or another specific wing, the Vatican and the CIA
purpose, then disengaged againw to the Iran Contn Affair.
4 (em- in the original). Behind what was made to
M A T R I X 1 1 1
4 4 8 2 % BOND STREET
SIN DIEGO. CALIFORNIA 92 109
7 101274-01 96
EARTH EN'!?'!?m :
CATHII: GRID AND m LINES
The wrltlags of Cathie and Jalaadrls cover the same eaut& cmcugy grid system.
Jah&-is has researched in depth the ancient system ud th.ir a a r k e r s / ~ ~ t s .
Cathie h a rsswchad the -ent reactivation aad u t i l i t y of this sum grid systm.
The earth energy grid that they am both discuaslng is a =turd parL of the &h it-
s e l f d ham pmbQbly been rodiscoverad nuaazmxs t a n over t&m ages d utilized by
W M t o n t s of this Wt. The m l i t OPd
~ ~ 8-t bth4z:ho- of the fl0r3.d ~ V O
hd th. hrowluige of this natural aprth energy grid contfnuously for at least th. h a t
20,000 years. Therefore, thm appearance, disappearance aad reappearance o f "chis earth
p 5 d rad the a ~ ~ c i r pheaolrruro
t d connected with it arm not unusual.
lay permission i s hereby given to anyone to publish or copy the above data.
&Ld L. U,fl.~
R IM
March L. 1982
10, -k,. PhJ).
M A T R I X 1 1 1
5 September 1985
- -----
I have f i n i s h e d r e a d i a g Dr. Sutton's The S e c r e t C u l t o f THE ORDER and I
have some f i n d i n g s t h a t you m y be i n t e r e s t e d i n p e r t a i n i n g t o the po.ssible
ones.
o r i g i a o f t h e s e n i o r y e a r s o c i e t y a t Yale c a l l e d S k u l l 6 ~ r Sutton
i
w r i t e s t h a t "The Order had i t s o r i g i n s a t Yale i n 1833, b u t S k u l l & Bones i s
a c h a p t e r of a Geman s e c r e t s o c i e t y . It was introduced i n t o t h e United S t a t e s
...
by W i l l i a m R u s s e l l who brought 8 chapter back from h i s s t u d e n t days i n
Cerzany" (p. 40). I t h i n k t h i s tumor was s t a r t e d a long time ago f o r disinfoniiation
purposes. Allov me t o s t a t e a theory supported by evidence.
-
From The History o f Fhi 3 e t a Kappa by Oscar M. Voorhees, o f f i c i a l Phi Beta
Rappa h i s t o r i a n and member, we surnnerize some of t h e following: ( I n c i d e n t a l l y
t h i s book was published i n 1915 and i s t h e f i r s t h i i t t e n h i s t o r y of Phi Beta
Kappa. Voorhees took f i f t e e n y e a r s t o v r i t e i t . )
Hamward was founded i n 1636; College of William and Hary (1693); and Yale (i701).
p h i Beta Kappa was e s t a b l i s h e d 5 December 1776 a t College of William and Hary. I n
1350 during t h e Revolutionary War a Phi Beta Kappa c h a p t e r c a l l e d an "Alpha" was
e s t a b l i s h e d a t Yale College and then another "Alpha" was e s t a b l i s h e d a t Haward i n
1781. Phi Beta Kappa had a s e c r e t , Masonic r i t u a l ; was a s s o c i a t e d w i t h many of the
most prominent men i n t h e c o u n t r y a t t h a t t i n e , and was a " s e n i o r y e a r s o c i e t y . "
M A T R I X I I I
p r e s e n t harmless, i s
...
of i t s i n i t i a l l e t t e r s ;
l i a b l e
they were apprehensive t h a t t h i s Society, tho a t
to,be abused t o t h e i n f i d e l and s e d i t i o u s purpose
- .
I l l
of o t h e r s e c r e t a s s o c i a t i o n s . (Emphasis by underscore t h e i r s ) . How many
members joined i n t h i s a c t i o n i s n o t known but probably few because Phi Beta
Kappa functioned a s a s e c r e t "reading society" f o r another twenty-five years.
The theory t h a t Skull & Bones evolved out of a Wasonic-Phi Beta Kappa
----
Cult of THE ORDER, page 88, "Four Years a t Yale," published i n 1871:
--
scandal, i n f a c t , i s alluded t o i n a r e p r i n t from an a r t i c l e i n The Secret
-* e
Also read what The Ro a l Masonic C c l o edia published i n 1877 has to
say about Phi Beta Kappa See enclosure
.
izdf cates t h a t out o f l ' V a r i o u s Occult Societies and ~hilosobhi.cZlBrother-
hoods buropa " evolved Phi Beta Kappa, 1776.
We don't need t o look toward Gemany f o r the origin of Skull & Bones i n
1632, 'but Perhaps we should look eastward f o r the origin of Phi Beta Kappa i n 1776.
Best,
and regards,
M A T R I X 1 1 1
i t h f u l l y yours,
. Shannon A.
retary-General,
ddd Clark, KMStJ
G.P.A.
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Chapter 10
PATHWAYS TO HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS
Hopefully, you read the material in Chapter 8 quite
losely, for therein lies the key to much understanding about
.he dualistic nature of the planetary situation; it should
enable you to engage the rest of the book, and perhaps Matrix
11, in an entirely new way. Now, with all this behind us, as
it were, comes the moment to discuss some basic issues of how
to work on non-dualistic states of consciousness.
There are clues to the interrelationships between the
factors of consciousness, energy, and matter strategically
placed in this book -
to address such matters to people who
may be steeped in social consciousness is not easy one must -
be quite creative, as humans are, by nature, a "tough nut to
crackn.
There are many human disciplines which address the issue
of non-dual consciousness. Research indicates that many of
these disciplines have three essential factors in common:
Factor 1 (Fl): Active Attention is the primary factor. It
consists of i n t e n s e yet r e l a x e d a l e r t n e s s , coupled with t o t a l
a c c e p t a n c e o f what i s happening i n t h e p r e s e n t (NOW) and the
t o t a l a c c e p t e n c e o f a n y t e n d e n c i e s which a r i s e w i t h i n your
c o n s c i o u s n e s s . Imagine sitting with the light blocked out from
your eyes and no sound around you, if you will, and mentally
address the Void around you, saying "Speak, I am listening",
and simply be attentive. In Vendanta Hinduism, this is also
spoken as "Who am I?" or "To Whom Have These Thoughts
Occurred?" In the Zen discipline, it is accomplished by the
use of the KOAN ("What is the sound of one hand clapping?"),
sometimes called the Great Attention, functionally an inquiry
into the Source of Thought. In Tien Tai, it is represented by
the factor of a c t i v e inward a t t e n t i o n . Perhaps the most viable
expression of (Fl) is in the Taoist sense through the concept
of Wu-Wei, essentially a state where there is no volitional
activity at all, a state of letting the mind absolutely alone,
totally authorizing all of the tendencies of the mind in an
impartial and non-judgmental way, allowing thoughts to flow by
as clouds in the sky, with no intention present. If properly
performed, Factor 1 leads automatically to:
Truth
It appears that humans want to find the truth -
that is
what their constant search seems to be about, yet, what is
truth? If you read something and gain knowledge of it, is
that knowledge true? What does truth really mean? You want
to learn the truth? Take the knowledge and theory that you
have and undergo Experience, for through Experience actual'
learning occurs - Experience leads to Wisdom (which is non-
dual in nature -neither "goodw or "bad" -
it simply IS). From
the Wisdom, you gain your own personal truth. If you could
gather up all the "personal truthsw within the consciousness
comprising the Universal Intelligent Matrix, THAT would
comprise the TRUTH (with a capital "Tw) that humans are always
looking for, but can never find within a consciousness steeped
in dualism.
I AM THAT I AM
If you earnestly pursue the process at the beginning of
this chapter and take all the other knowledge in the book that
has been provided, you will realize that:
].No amount of looking in any direction will help you
see WHO is looking. Perception, by its very nature,
requires dualism. You can only perceive something by
being separate from it. When you BECOME what you are
perceiving, you can no longer perceive it, because you
M A T R I X 1 1 1
9. It appears that the more "in tune" you are, the more.
you notice the "coincidence" or synchronicity that is
always there. A good example of synchronicity would be
that you are riding down the road reading a book about
alligators and you look up and notice a shop that sells
. alligator handbags, or you are talking to someone and
- -
n ~ s ?
M A T R I X 1 1 1
19.What ARE you? You are a part of the IS. What does it
mean BE this way? It means loving yourself without any
judgment. You are never judged, for all you are is part
of All That Is. You can only judge yourself while in
M A T R I X 1 1 1
6. THE CRYSTAL CONNECTION by Baer & Baer, 1986, Harper & Row
Making known the unknown u 1t imate l y means deve 7opment . o f one *s own
awareness. J o i n us i n t h i s adventure. Take the Quantum Leap i n
Consciousness. Work w i t h your "be1 i e f systems', which are not founded
'
Descri~tion Pase
Descri ti on Pase
Descri~tion Pane
Body consciousness
Body Consciousness and manipulation
Body, natural frequencies of
Body, operation exterior to the
Body, Physical, Triple Design of
Bohm, David
Borne, Dr. Peter
Boulder, Colorado, as EMC Headquarters
Bourl and, David, proposals of
Brain Activity
Brain Circuitry, Charts of
Brain Circuits, activation by drugs
Brain Circuits, density relationship to
Brain Ci rcui ts, dimensi ona1 aspects of
Brain Circuits, Gurdjieff Centers and
Brain Circuits, personalities typified by
Brain Circuits, Social Acceptance of
Brain entrainment by natural EM fields
Brain Structure, Fifth
Brain Structure, First
Brain Structure, First, Dualities of
Brain Structure, First, Reimprinting of
Brain Structure, Fourth
Brain Structure, Fourth, Dualities of
Brain Structure, Second
Brain Structure, Second, Dualities of
Brain Structure, Second, Imprints of
Brain Structure, Seventh
Brain Structure, Sixth
Brain Structure, Third
Brain Structure, Third, Dualities of
Brain Waveforms, Fourier Transformations and
Brain, chemicals released by Conscious Act
Brain, creation of internal holograms by
Brain, Crystalline Structure of
Brain, electrical activity, frequencies of
Brain, evolutionary development period of
Brain, function as a prism and receiver
Brain, genetic structure o f and perception
Brain, interpenetration of mind
Brain, Lateral View of
Brain, origin of "sight"
Brain, Sagittal section of
Brain, Structural Areas, Diagram of
Brain, tuning circuits of
Brain, Visual System of
Brains, children born without
Brainstem, diagram of
Brainwaves, entrainment by ELF of
Bristol-Meyers, information about
British Intelligence Service
Brookhaven National Labs
M A T R I X I I I
Pase
Chemicals, Environmental
Chi ckenpox
Children, Fluoride Consumption by
Chi 1 dren, murdered by government mi nd control
Chlorine Gas, 1.G.Farben and
Chlorine in water, toxicity of
Cholera, Hog
Christ Consciousness, essay on
CIA and Drug Trafficking
CIA and parapsychological studies
CIA and the Jonestown murders
CIA and the Phoenix Projects
CIA and the Shah of Iran
CIA payments to Reinhard Gehlen
CIA, Bush and Kennedy
CIA, composition of Nazi SS intelligence
CIA, connections in the international drug trade
CIA, Connections to BCCI Scandal
CIA, description by Harry Truman
CIA, Falsification of history of
CIA, George Bush and, Suppression of News by
CIA, Guidelines for Journalists
CIA, heroin injected into society by
CIA, Links to SIL Scandal and
CIA, Links with Mexican Drugs and DEA
CIA, Pan Am 103 and
CIA, Secret Alliances, W 2 to Watergate
CIA, University Funded Programs with
CIA, weapons deal i ng with Terpi 1 and Wi lson
Ciba-Geigy, information about
Circadian rhythm changes, ELF causes of
Circadian Rhythms
Circuit, DNA, Collective
Circuit, Time-Binding Semantic
Cloning , development at University of Utah
Cloning, Necessity for
Cloning, New World Order and
Coagulation of Light into Mass
Cocaine, shipping seizure of
Cognitive screens and filters
Coherence and Incoherence, Chart of
Coherence, Bioelectrical
Coherence, El ectromagnti c
Coherence, Human Body Internal
Color, dreaming in
Common sense, concept of, brain area relat-ion to
Communication, morphic, species specific
Communism as a false enemy to hide Nazis
Complex Conjugate, as Hyperspacial component
Complex Conjugate, definition of
Complex Numbers, definition of
Compul si ve behavi or patterns, ELF re1 ati on to
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descr i ti on Page
Descri~tion Pane
Densities, Basic Principle and Function of
Densities, explanation of
DePass, K.C., interview with
Depatterning as a Mind Control Technique
Depression, creation by ELF of
Deuterium, use in cold fusion experiments of
Devices for Manipulation
Dimensional Consciousness, Model of
Dimensions, definition of
Di rac Sea
Disease and polar amoebic cloud structures
Disease, Foot and Mouth
Disease, Infectious, Concept of
Disinformation, government
Di sp1 acement of Whole-Val ue Identity
DNA Helix oscillation
Domains, Hyperspacial, Access to
Dominion, Positive and Negative, levels of
Dope Incorporated
DOR
DOR Oscillation
Downs Syndrome, Vernon, New Jersey study of
Dreaming, sleep-state
Dream1 and
Dreams, holographic
Dreams, REM and Brain Function
Drug and Implant Technology
Drug Companies, Major, Who Controls
Drug dealers, Syrian, Pan Am 103 and
Drug Money Laundering and Clearing Houses
Drug money laundering, BCCI and
Drugs, Culturally Promoted
Drugs, Planetary movement of
Dualisms Within Society
Dulles, Allen
Dulles, Allen, the German SS and
Dul les, John Foster
E=MC2 C2 Light Reciprocal
Eagle Star Insurance Company
Earth as a staging base for the Orion group
Earths Power Grid
Earths Power Grid and Relationship to N W 0
Edison, Thomas, the DC current system and
Educating For the New World Order, book called
Educational Systems and Behavior Modification
Ego, conceit of
Ego, emotional load of
Ego, expression through 2nd Brain Circuit
Ego, function in consciousness of
EGO, perception of separateness and
Ego, what i t -1ooks for
Einstein-Rosen Bridge, higher oFder of
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri~tion Pane
Electro-convulsive Therapy
Electromagnetic effects on blood
Electromagnetic F i e l d I n t e r a c t i o n s i n Tissue
Electromagnetic F i e l d Reduction, Research Needs
Electromagnetic F i e l d s and A n t i b i o t i c s
Electromagnetic F i e l d s and Epidemiology
Electromagnetic F i e l d s and Neurotransmitters
Electromagnetic F i e l d s , Man-Made
Electromagnetic Hazards, No Action i n Cases w i t h
Electromagnetic Hazards, P u b l i c References on
Electromagnetic Information, Health Sheet on
Electromagnetic I n t e r a c t i o n With Nervous System
Electromagnetic P o l l u t i o n , harmonics generated
Electromagnetic P o l l u t i o n , M I T recommendations
Electromagnetic Propogation, aspects o f
Electromagnetic Radiation E f f e c t s E x t r a c t s
Electromagnetic Radiation, Growing Hazards o f
Electromagnetic signature, indivudual
Electromagnetic Spectrum, Scales, Chart on
Electromagnetic Theory, e r r o r s i n
Electromagnetics, increased use o f and cancer
Electromagnetics, Three Orders o f
Electromagnetics, Time-Varying, Report on
Electron as a p a r t i c l e o r wave
-
E l e c t r o n i c Mind Control P r o j e c t s Part 1
-
E l e c t r o n i c Mind Control P r o j e c t s Part 2
E l e c t r o n i c Mind Control, Detection o f
E l e c t r o n i c Mind Control, Search mode o f
E l e c t r o n i c Stimulation o f t h e Brain
Electrons, Free Radicals and
ELF and genetic transmutation
ELF and Sub-ELF Fields, E f f e c t s o f
ELF F i e l d s , Behavioral E f f e c t s o f
ELF F i e l d s , B i o s e n s i s t i v i t y t o
ELF F i e l d s , d e f i n i t i o n o f
ELF F i e l d s , Windowed Responses i n Brain Tissue
ELF Fields, World Health Organization Study on
ELF Radiation and DNA T r a n s c r i p t i o n
ELF Tests, U.S. Navy r e s u l t s w i t h
ELF, A d d i t i o n a l C a p a b i l i t i e s of
ELF, Areas o f E x i s t i n g Usage
ELF, i n t e r a c t i o n w i t h DNA and
ELF, Lesser-known C h a r a c t e r i s t i c s
ELF, Macromolecular Phase rans sit ions
ELF, Natural, A r t i f i c a l and T a c t i c a l
ELF, p r o t e c t i o n from
E l i L i l l y , information about
Elohim, t h e
EM1 Thorn and t h e Philadelphia Experiment movie
Empowerment, secrets o f
Energies, Masculine and ~ e m i n i n e , Key
Energies, Seven generating
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Paae
Energies, sustaining
Energy Centers, Physical, Seven
Enfolded Information, Fourier Analysis of
Enfolded Order
Entities, Embedded
. Entrainment, Brain
Entrainment, Rhythm
Enzymes in a cell, number of
Equation For Power, Orthodox vs Relativistic
Equations, Fourier Transformation
Equations , Harmonic
Equations, Maxwell
Etheric Body, change of
Etheric Body, network
Etheric domains .
Etheric matter, relationship to physical matter
Etheric Structures, Human
Eugenics, Congress on
Europe, New World Order in
Events, spatially independent
Evolution, "enemies" to
Evolution, Positive and Negative, Truth Maps on
Ewing, Oscar
Ewing, Oscar, as promoter of fluoridation
Existence, non-physical
Experience, cellular
Experience, Goals and
Experience, screening of
Expl i cate Order
Facsimilies, memory gestalts as
Fatigue states, creation by ELF of
Fear of being left out, 2nd Brain and
Fear states, ELF cause of
Federal Researve, ownership by British of
Federal Reserve Board, inaction about BCCI of
Feed back-
Feel ings, levels of ,-consol idation by 4th brain
Fetal Mortality, acceleration by ELF of
Fever, Dengue
Fever, Heartwater
Fever, Pappataci
Fever, Phl ebotomus
Fever, Q
Fever, Rift Valley
Fever, Sandf 1 y
Fever, Trench
Fever, Typhus
Fevers, Spotted
Fevers, Tsutsugamushi
Field Enhancement Effects
Field, electrical, biological membrane
Field, Human Energy
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri ti on Paqe
F i e l d s , A l i e n B i o l o g i c a l , Spin-Vectors of
F i e l d s , D r . Craig
F i e l d s , E x t e r i o r , Life-Form Organising
F i e l d s , Hyperspace
F i e l d s , Magnetic, Pulsed, P r o t e i n Synthesis and
F i e l d s , Ultraspace
F i f t h Density Alignment
F i f t h Density and the Creative Mind
F i r s t B r a i n C i r c u i t , Natural Breathing and
F i r s t Order Electromagnetics
Fleischmann, M a r t i n , c o l d f u s i o n work o f
F l u o r i d e and dental p r o f i t s
F l u o r i d e Compounds, Use o f
F l u o r i de, hydrogen
Fluoride, Major Sources of
Fluoride, propaganda program f o r
Fluoride, r e l a t i o n s h i p t o cancer
F l u o r i d e , t h e Gambit
F l u o r i d e , use by Germans on p r i s o n e r s
F l u o r i d e , use by Soviets on p r i s o n e r s
Fluorides, as by-products o f F e r t i l i z e r p l a n t s
Fluorides, Congressional Statement on
Fluorides, deaths r e s u l t i n g from
Fluorides, Envi ronmental Pol 1u t i on by
Fluorides, human tolerance o f
Fluorides, Overseas Usage
Fluorides, use as r o d e n t i c i d e s
Fluxon, d e f i n i t i o n o f
FM r a d i o f i e l d s and disease, Orgeon study on
Focus, s t a t e o f
Focusing, I s o e l e c t r i c
Food Colors, FDLC
Food Supply, A d d i t i o n o f N i t r a t e s t o
Food, D i r e c t A d d i t i o n o f Chemicals t o
Food, I r r a d i a t i o n o f
Food, v i a b i l i t y decreased by chemical f e r t i l i z e r
Fornix, p o s i t i o n o f
F o r r e s t a l , James, murder o f
F o r t D e t r i c k , MK-NAOMI operations a t
F o r t Know, Army mind c o n t r o l experiments a t
F o u r i e r Transforms, Conversion by
Fourth Density and Void-Nature
Fourth Density beings
Fourth d e n s i t y consciousness
Fourth Density f o c a l l o c k - i n
Fourth Density P o l a r i z a t i o n s
Fourth Density progression
Fourth V e n t r i c l e
Frame, S i r A l i s t a i r
Framework i n which t o View M a t r i x I11
F r a t e r n i t i e s , Exerpt from Encyclopedia of
Free Radicals
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Free W i l l , concept o f
Free W i l l , human
Freedoms, Key
Frequencies, Beat
Frequencies, Body, Range o f
Frequencies, B r a i n
Frequencies, Coherent and Incoherent, Chart
Frequencies, Database on
Frequencies, Government Implant
Frequencies, muscle
Frequencies, Osmic
Frequencies, Psychic
Frequencies, Window, Mind Control
Frequency Analysis, Visual Systems and
Frequency Weapons, B r i t i s h , 1982
Frequency, P r o t e i n r e a c t i o n t o
Freudian School o f Thought
F r o n t a l Lobe, p o s i t i o n o f
Funct ional dependency in Negative Pol a r iz a t ion
Functions, P e r i o d i c
Fungal Disease, Airborne Spread o f
Fungal I n f e c t i o n , I n s e c t Anti-bodies and
Fungal Warfare
Fungus, Neural, Discovery o f
Fusion, cold, new experiments w i t h
Gehlen, Reinhard, d e f e c t i o n o f
Gehlen, Reinhard, e s t a b l i s h e s West German C I A
Gehlen, Reinhard, meetings w i t h B i l l Donovan
Gehlen, Reinhard, meetings w i t h Truman
General E l e c t r i c , mind c o n t r o l research and
Genetic causes of aging
Genetic E n t i t y
Genetic E n t i t y , e n t r y i n t o protoplasm l i n e o f
Genetic E n t i t y , memory t r a c e s i n
Genetic programming
Genetic, Orion
Geomagnetic F i e l d and Magnetic Storms
Geomagnetic F i e l d C h a r a c t e r i s t i c s
Geomagnetic F i e l d Reversal, Theories on
Geomagnetic F i e l d , Micropu1sations o f
Geomagnezic P o l a r i t y Reversals
Geomagnetism and s o l a r a c t i v i t y
German e l e c t r o n i c s experts i n Phoenix P r o j e c t s
G e s t a l t , p e r c e p t i v e memory
Getty, John Paul
Gibbs, W i l l a r d , H e r t z i a n Conspiracy and
Glaxo Holdings, i n f o r m a t i o n about
Glaxo, RLD a t
G n o t o b i o t i c organisms
Goldwater, Barry, shutdown o f Phoenix work
G o t t l i e b , Sydney
Government, US, C F R / T r i l a t e r a l Hierarchy
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Grand Rapids, F l u o r i d e t e s t s i n
Grandfather Paradox, r e s o l u t i o n of
Great F i x a t i o n , t h e
Greenspan, Alan, as d i r e c t o r o f ALCOA
Greys, o r i g i n i n a d i f f e r e n t time continuum
Grid, Earth, Loading o f
Grid, Planetary, p u t t i n g t o sleep
Grid, Tensor F i e l d , Non-Linear, 2-0, Chart
Grid, Tensor F i e l d , Non-Linear, 3-0, Chart
Grimaldi Family, drug connections o f
G r i t z , Bo, i n v e s t i g a t i o n s i n t o drug smuggling
Ground-Wave Emergency Network (GWEN)
Groups, a u t h o r f t a r i a n and dogmatic
Groups, congregation o f , and Second B r a i n
Gui 1l a i n - B a r r e Syndrome, Swine F l u and
Guns, Anti-Gun Propaganda Same as Nazis
G u r d j i e f f , . views on M u l t i p l e P e r s o n a l i t i e s of
Guy, Arthur
H a b i t u a l pathways of consciousness
Hami 1ton, James
Harmonics
Hartman Lines, t h e
Hatch, O r i n
Head., resonating systems w i t h i n t h e
Heard, George
Heart a t t a c k s , c h l o r i n e - t r e a t e d water and
Heart Center, 4 t h l e v e l o f consciousness as
Heart disease, f l u o r i d e s and
Heaviside, O l i v e r , H e r t z i a n Conspiracy and
Hemispheres, cerebral, f u n c t i o n s w i t h i n
Herpes
Hertz, H e i n r i c h
Hertz, H e i n r i c h , H e r t z i a n Conspiracy and
H i l a r i o n , Negative Beings and
Himmler and race p u r i f i c a t i o n
Hinduism, Vendanta
Hippocampus, p o s i t i o n o f
H i t e r , a l i e n technology involvement o f
H i t l e r , a l l e g e d involvement w i t h Phoenix
H i t l e r s s t r a t e g y t o win World War I 1
H I V , Links w i t h A f r i c a n Parasites and
Hoechst, A.G., i n f o r m a t i o n about
Hoffman LaRoche, i n f o r m a t i o n about
Hollywood convinces the p u b l i c Germany no t h r e a t
Hologram, d e s c r i p t i o n o f
Hologram, The Physical Body as a
Holograms, M u l t i p l e , M u l t i p l e P e r s o n a l i t i e s as
Holographic I n s e r t s
Holographic Theory o f Telepathy
Hormone l e v e l s , a l t e r a t i o n o f by ELF
Hormones, Enzymes and r a d i a n t energy value
Human Being as a Composite E n t i t y
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri ti on
Pane
I n f l u e n z a Type A, A n t i - v i r a l agents f o r
Influenza, Epidemic forms o f
Influenza, Epidemic o f 1918
Influenza, Epidemic, United States 1991
Influenza, Swine
Influenza, Swine, Massacre o f 1976
I n i t i a t e s and Consciousness Development
I n j u r y , Vaccine-Caused, J u d i c i a l Awards f o r
f nman, Admi ra1 Bobby Ray
I n s e c u r i t y , f e e l i n g s o f , 4 t h B r a i n and
I n s e r t s , Holographic
I n t e l l i g e n t I n f i n i t y and Negative P o l a r i t y
Inter-Brai n
I n t e r c o n t i n e n t a l Aerospace A l l i a n c e (IAA)
I n t e r f e r e n c e Patterns
Interference, Sound, Properties o f
I n t e r l o c k i n g o f Psychic and Psychokinetics
I n t e r n a l Vision
I n t e r n a t i o n a l Aerospace A l l i a n c e
I n t e r n a t i o n a l A f f a i r s , Canadian I n s t i t u t e f o r
I n t e r n a t i o n a l A f f a i r s , Royal I n s t i t u t e o f
I n t e r n a t i o n a l Monetary Fund, Drug Money and
Interpol
Intimacy, blockages t o
Intramolecular M a t r i x Theory
I n t u i t i o n , concept o f , 6 t h b r a i n process
Ionospheric Cavity Resonance Frequencies
Ionospheric Cavity, Resonance o f
Iran-Contra A f f a i r
Iran-Contra Hearing, Excerpt from
I r a q and nuclear devices
I r r a d i a t e d Food, data on
I r r a d i a t i o n , f o r e i g n banning o f
I r r e s p o n s i b i 1it y
Is-ness
ITT, breakup o f
Jerusalem, Order o f S t . John o f , Denials by
Jeruselum, Temple o f
Josephson E f f e c t , c e l l u l a r l e v e l
Jungian School o f Thought
Kaiser Wilhelm I n s t i t u t e
Karma as conceptual impression on consciosuness
Karma, concept of
Kennedy Assasination, ON1 connection t o
Kennedy Assassination
Kennedy, Assassination r e l a t e d t o ET knowledge
Kennedy, Bush and t h e C I A
Khun Sa, drug smuggling and
Kidney disease, f l u o r i d e s and
Kidney problems, aluminum poisoning and
King, Moray
Kinship With A l l L i f e
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Page
Kintex Company, drug running by
K i r k p a t r i c k , Evron, C I A
K i r k p a t r i c k , Jeane
Knights o f Malta, C I A t i e s t o
Knights o f Malta, Nazi t i e s t o
Knights o f Malta, Sovereign M i l i t a r y Order of
Knights of Malta, Vatican Ties t o
Knowing, b r a i n areas r e l a t e d t o
Koan, t h e
Kondrashskin, a l i e n group c a l l e d
Kundalini, p o l a r i z e d l o c k i n o f t h e
Lansky, Meyer., and Syntex
Lashley, Carl
Laws, Noahide
Lazar, Robert
Learning, cu1t u r a l process o f
Learni ng , 'Human
Learning, occurance during unconscious s t a t e s
Leary, Timothy, research on b r a i n c i r c u i t s and
Lebensborn, the
LeFebvre, Archbishop
Lemuria and T e l e ~ a t h i cUse
Leukemia and electromagnetic f i e l d s
Leukemia and t r a n s m i t t e r s t a t i o n s
Leukemia, c r e a t i o n by ELF o f
Leukemia, V i r a l Causes o f
Levinson, Norman, C l a s s i f i e d p r o j e c t s and
Levinson, Norman, Time Equations o f
Levinson, Norman, Time-Equations and Phoenix
L i f e Energy as a U n i f i e d F i e l d Energy
L i g h t as food
L i g h t Energy and t h e Mind-Body Axis
L i ght-Bei ngs
Livestock, f l u o r i d e poisoning o f
Longitudinal Waves
Love
Love actions, substructure and processes o f
Love and t h e curve o f "doubt"
Love as a, force, a c t i o n s of
Love as a f u n c t i o n o f I d e n t i t y '
Love God, concept of
Love l e v e l s , octaves of
Love, b l ockages t o
Love, resistances t o
LSD Tests on US Servicemen
LSD, Canadian l a w s u i t because o f
L u c i f e r i a n consciousness
Luci f e r i an consciousness as a Contradi c t i o n
L u c i f e r i a n consciousness as an i m i t a t o r
Magnetic F i e l d s and Cancer
Magnetic Shielding by Aluminum
Magnetic Symmetry o f Organic Lifeforms
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Oescri~tion Page
Manifestation, secrets o f
Manipulation and enslavement, O r i e n t a t i o n t o
Manipulation, Multi-Density E l e c t r o n i c
Manipulation, S o c i e t a l , Drug-Caused
Manipulative technology, d e r i v a t i o n o f
Marciniak, Barbara
Marks, Leonard
Mars, c i v i l i z a t i o n s on
Mars, t h e face on
Mars, underground f a c i l i t i e s on
Masking of holism o f S e l f and C r e a t o r .
Masonry, t i e s o f t h e Vatican t o
Matter, e t h e r i c , a c c e l e r a t i o n o f
Mattreya, Lord
Maxwell, James Clerk
Measles , German
Measles, Return o f
Medical Research, Misconduct i n
Medit a t ion
Mellon I n s t i t u t e
Melotonin
Memory Complex, S o c i a l
Memory loss, r e l a t i o n s h i p t o ELF
Memory, 5 t h and 6 t h b r a i n areas and
Memory, Ancestral
Memory, Associative, Holographic Aspects o f
Memory, b r a i n f u n c t i o n s and
Memory, Brain, Holographic Storage and
Memory, Cognitive/Associative
Memory, E i d e t i c
Memory; F i g u r a l
Memory, genetic
Memory, H a b i t
Memory, Human
Memory, Human, Capacity o f
Memory, I c o n i c
Memory, Immune System
Memory, Long-Term
Memory, Neo-Mammal ian
Memory, P e n f i e l d experiments and
Memory, r e t a i n e d d e s p i t e t i s s u e removal
Memory, Savant
Memory, Semantic
Memory, Short Term
Memory, Visual Image
Mengele, Joseph
Mental Disorders, r e l a t i o n t o Caramel
Merck, i n f o r m a t i o n about]
Mercury, Poisoning i n Dental F i 11i n g s
Messai a n i c Legacy, t h e
Metal p o i soni ng , research on
Metaphysics, P o s t i v e and Negative, l e v e l s of
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri~tion Pane
MI6, funding o f
MI6
Microwave Grid, National, Chart o f
Microwave s i g n a l s and t h e American Embassy
Microwaves and B i r t h Defects
Microwaves and Brain Tumors
Microwaves and cataracts
Microwaves and Fetal Development
Microwaves and Genetic E f f e c t s
Microwaves and Tumors, Hughes A i r c r a f t study on
Microwaves, Absorption o f
Microwaves, B i o e f f e c t s o f
Microwaves, DNA Absorption of, M i l i t a r y Work on
Microwaves, genetic e f f e c t s and DNA resonance
Microwaves, hearing
Microwaves, i n d u c t i o n o f hypnosis by
Mid-Brain, area o f
M i l n e r Group
Mind a m p l i f i e r s , a l i e n sourcing o f
- Mind Control and t h e Cel l u l a r Telephone ~ e t w o r k
Mind Control and t h e White House
Mind Control Using Fluoride Compounds
Mind Control, a l i e n i n t e r v e n t i o n w i t h
Mind Control, Burying signals i n EM Waves
Mind Control, Conversations on
Mind Control, Drugs and
Mind Control, E l e c t r o n i c , Frequencies Used i n
Mind Control, E l e c t r o n i c , Programming Stages o f
Mind Control, Pre-Conditioning Stage o f
Mind Control, Psychology behind
Mind Control, Schools o f Thought Behind, Chart
Mind Control, Use o f Bedsprings as receiver o f
Mind, Anal y t i c a l
Mind, p o s i t i o n r e l a t i v e t o the b r a i n
Mind-Machine l i n k s
Mineral O i 1 , e f f e c t s o f
MIT as a stronghold against cheap power
MKULTRA subproject 142
MKULTRA Subproject 94
MKULTRA, D r . Louis West and
MKULTRA, Sub-projects under
Modulated F i e l d s , Neurophysiological E f f e c t s o f
Modulation, Amplitude
Modulation, c a r r i e r s f o r
Modulation, Frequency
Modulation, Information Transfer, Chart on
Modulation, Phase Relationships and, Chart on
Modulation, Pulse-Code
Modulation, Pulse-Position
Modulation, Pulse-Width
Modulation, Secret o f Information Transfer
Molecules, R ~ g h tand Left-Handed
M A T R I X 111
Descri~tion Page
Order, Concept o f
Order, the
O r i e n t a t i o n o f Negative P o l a r i t i e s
Orion Confederation
Orion Crusaders, t h e
Orion Group, purpose o f
Orion Group, r e l a t i o n s h i p t o Mind Control
Orion Technology and Other Secret P r o j e c t s
Orthogonal r o t a t i o n and d e n s i t y s h i f t i n g
Orthogonal Rotations
Oscillations, "lock-in" o f
Oscillations, Periodic
O s t e o a r t h r i t i s , Genetic Causes o f
Pan Am 103, Bombing o f
Pan Am 103, E i g h t C I A Agents on Board t o t e s t i f y
Pan Am F l i g h t 103, C I A connections t o
Pan Am F l i g h t 103, drug connections w i t h
Parasympathetic Nervous System and Negative I o n s
Parasympathetic Nervous System and Telepathy
P a r i e t a l Lobe, p o s i t i o n o f
P a r t i c l e Enfoldment
P a r t i c l e s and Waves, Holographic Aspects o f
Past and Future Enfolded Everywhere
Path, becoming the
P a t i e n t records, Use as a P r o f i t Source
Pau D'Arco, suppression o f i n f o r m a t i o n about
P e a r l i a n School o f Thought
Pentagon, 1992 goal as World Policeman
Perception and B e l i e f Systems
Perception and Expectations
Perception, Holographic Aspects o f
Permi ndex
Perot, H. Ross
Personalities, M u l t i p l e
P e s t i c i d e s , E x p o r t a t i o n o f Banned
P f i z e r , i n f o r m a t i o n about
Phase space, 12-dimensional
Phi Beta Kappa, r e l a t i o n s h i p o f S k u l l & Bones t o
Phi l a d e l p h i a Experiment
Phisohex, issues around
Photic Driver
Physicians, US Health Service L e t t e r t o
Physics o f Frequency and V i b r a t i o n , Chart o f
Physics, Suppression o f V i t a l Data i n
Piaget School o f Thought
Pineal Gland, Human, Magnetic s e n s i t i v i t y of
Pineal Gland, r e l a t i o n s h i p t o geomagnetic f i e l d
P i n e a l - P i t u i t a r y Glands and r a d i a n t f l o w
P i t u i t a r y , f u n c t i o n i n g of
P i t u i t a r y , p o s i t i o n of
Plague, C a t t l e
Planetary Biorhythm Cycles
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri ti on Paae
Projection, a f f e c t a t i o n and
Projection, Media Encouragement o f
Projection, Perspectives i n
Projections, holographic, Use By M i l i t a r y
Protein, d e f i n i t i o n o f
Pruett, Jack
Psi-Corps, b a t t l e s w i t h i n
Psi-Corps, t h e
Psi-Plasma Theory o f Telepathy
Psychic Bonding
Psychic d r i v i n g as a Mind Control technique
Psychic warfare, C I A and Soviet
Psychology, Future Oriented Manipulative
Psychosocial Aspects of Population, Level 1
Psychosoci a1 Aspects of Population, Level 2
Psychosocial Aspects o f Population, Level 3
Psychosocial Aspects o f Population, Level 4
Pulse C a r r i e r
Pul se Mani f e s t a t i on and Consci ousness
Pulse Modulation, Class D, damage caused by
Pulses, Atmospheric Electromagnetic
Pyramid, Giza, tunnel under
Pyramidal Forms, Significance o f P i and Phi
Quanta and Consciousness
Quanta and Consciousness
Quantum b i o l o g i c a l f i e l d s
Quantum Mechanical Models o f Long-Range Action
Quantum R e a l i t y , Interconnectedness o f
Quaternion Equations
Quaternion notation, Maxwell s use o f
Radiant f l o w i n Negative O r i e n t a t i o n
Radio Free Europe as a Nazi Tool
Radionics Equipment, use o f
Radiosonde, operation o f
Radiosonde, operational use o f
Radiosondes, Background and Operation of
Radiosondes, Nichols a r t i c l e on
Ramtha i n t e l l i g e n c e , F i f t h domain s t r u c t u r e o f
Ramtha School, p r o t e c t i o n around
Rapid American Company, Heroin Importation by
R a t i o n a l i t y , S c i e n t i f i c , l i n k e d t o b r a i n area
Reagan, Ronald, mind c o n t r o l and
R e a l i t y as A Frequency Domain
Reality Fields
Reality, Internal, Brain Localization o f
Receiving States, Telepathic
Ref 1e c t ion and Ref r a c t i on
Reich, Fourth, US Government as
Reich, Wilhelm, and r e s p i r a t o r y blocks
Reich, Wilhelm, Mind Control devices of
Reich, Wilhelm, Mind Control work
Reich, Wilhelm, o r i g i n a t o r o f Radiosonde
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descti~tion Pane
Reichian Programming, d e t a i l s on
~ e i c h i a nSchool o f Thought
Reimprinting techniques, F i r s t B r a i n Area
R e l a t i v i s t i c Magnetics
R e l a t i v i s t i c Physics, D e f i n i t i o n s i n
REM Sleep and Brain Function
Remote Viewing
R e p t i l i a n Aliens, e l e c t r o n i c support of
R e p t i l i a n B r a i n and the Medulla
R e p t i l i a n Brain, Bio-Survival and
R e p t i l i a n Brain, stimulus-response reactions
Resonance Between Humans and t h e Planet
Resonance Conditions i n L i v i n g Systems
Resonance Response Rate, Chart o f
Resonance, Sharpness o f
Resonance, Sympathetic
Resonant Systems
Responding, process o f
Responses, h a b i t u a l
Rhodes Group, t h e
Rhythm Entrainment and Coherency
R i c k e t t s a i e Group
Ridge implant devices
Ridge implant devices, types o f
Ridge Implants, E l e c t r o n i c
Ridges, interference
Rothschild, Lord, Cloning concepts o f
Rothschild, N.H., gold p r i c e f i x i n g a t
Safety Standards, Electromagnetic, Hidden Data
Sagan, Carl, perception o f human b r a i n
SAGE Radar, use i n Mind Control Development
Salmonella, Detection o f
Sandoz, information about
Sarayet Maktal
Saudis, bankrupted by the US
Scalar Wave Devices and Planetary Grid
Scalar Waves, propagation o f
Scalar, d e f i n i t i o n of
Schneerson, Menachem
Schroder Bank, H i t l e r s personal account i n
Schroeder Bank, A l l e n Dulles and
Schumann Resonance
Schumann waves, coincidence w i t h Alpha rhythm
Schwan, Herman P
Science P o l i c y Research U n i t (SPRU)
Screen memories, abductees and
Screening o f T h i r d Density R e a l i t y
Second Order Electromagnetics
Second Order Electromagnetics and Mind Control
Secord, Richard
Security, Sensation and Power Ego Functions
Seeding and Fa11 as Propaganda
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri~tion Paae
Seeing w i t h t h e Heart
Seeing without focus
Seizures, Caused by T e l e v i s i o n Programming,case
Self-Knowing, l e v e l s o f
Senses, Fourier Transformations and
Sequence, Physio-Kundalini
Serotonin and p i n e a l enzymes
Service t o Others and Service To S e l f
Sexual t i e s , addressi ng
Sexuality and reproduction
Sheldrake, Rupert
S i ght , b r a i n waves and
Sigma Peaks
S i r i a n s , Negative
Skinner School o f Thought
S k u l l and Bones, Coverup i n
S k u l l and Bones, Leading Bonesmen i n
S k u l l and Bones, Opium Empire and
S k u l l and Bones, Racism and
S k u l l and Bones, t i e s t o Phi Beta Kappa o f
S k u l l , Human, Sacred Geometry o f
Sleep induction, inducement by ELF
Small pox
Smallpox, The Gambit
Smith,Kline Beckman, i n f o r m a t i o n about
Social Memory Complex, advancement t o
Social problems r e s u l t o f " c r i p p l e d ' love
Social Security Number, use i n schools o f
Society, supression and s t a b i l i t y
S o f t Drinks, e f f e c t o f
Solar Plexus Area and Telepathy
Soul Memory
Sound I n t e r f e r e n c e P r o p e r t i e s
Soviet Woodpecker Signal, f u n c t i o n s of
Space-Time E l e c t r o n i c Function Amp Net (STEFEN)
Space-Time Frameworks and t h e Soul
Space-Time Laboratories
Spectrum, Electromagnetic, Functional
Spectrum, P u b l i c a l l y Viewed, Chart on
Spinor, d e f i n t i o n o f
Spiritual negativity
S p i r i t u a l i t y , secrets o f
Squibb, E.E., i n f o r m a t i o n about
SS p l a n t o c o n t r o l t h e United States
Stagnation, causes o f
S t a l k i n g and Domination
Standards, Electromagnetic, M i l i t a r y and
Standing Wave Mechanics
Standing Waves and O s c i l l a t o r s
Stanford Research I n s t i t u t e , Cold Fusion and
Stanford Research I n s t i t u t e , P r o j e c t Scanate and
S t a r Wars, planetary defense using
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Paae
S t e a l t h Technology -
S t e r i l i t y , r e l a t i o n s h i p t o ELF
S t e r i l i z a t i o n , Worldwide Movement f o r
S t e r l i n g Drug, information about
Stopping, Mental, Factor o f
Streams, Holographic
Strength, b a r r i e r s t o
Strength, kinds o f
Structure, Cranial, I o n i c C r y s t a l l i n e
Structured Electromagnetic Quotient S t i m u l i
Study, U n i v e r s i t y o f Washington, EM Radiation
Subconscious mind and t h e body
Subliminal Programming and t h e FCC
Sub1iminals, envi ronmental
Suisse, Credit, gold payments t o Opium producers
Superluminal s i g n a l s
Superluminary Communication Systems
Sympathetic Nervous System and Telepathy
Synchronicity
Synchronicity and Connections
Synchronicity and Psychic Phenomena
Syntex, information about
Synthetic Humans
Taboos, Rules, Laws, and P r o h i b i t i o n s
Tachyon-Antematter-Delton Coupling E f f e c t
Tachyons, Orthodox S c i e n t i f i c View o f
Takahashi, D r . Aki t o
Tao, t h e Great
Tavistock I n s t i t u t e o f Human Relations
Tejapaibul Company, Acetic Anhydride from
Telepathic A c t i v i t y
Telepathic mind-machine l i n k s
Telepathic Progression o f t h e Human Race
Telepathic States, I n d u c t i o n o f By Substances
Telepathic Work, d e s i r e f o r
Telepathic Work, Factors f o r Successful
Telepathic Work, Group
Telepathy and Duke U n i v e r s i t y Tests
Telepathy and Respiration
Telepathy and t h e 6 t h race
Telepathy, C r i s i s
Telepathy , I n t u i t i o n a l
Telepathy, Mental
Telepathy, Theories of
Telepatin
T e l e v i s i o n Reference Signals, Videodrome Signals
T e l e v i s i o n t r a n s m i t t e r s i n Portland Oregon
Telsa and t h e Zero-Time Generator
Temp1a r s , t h e
Tensor Fie1d
Tensor F i e l d P o t e n t i a l A c t i v a t i o n , d e f i n i t i o n o f
Tensor P o t e n t i a l
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Tensors, d e f i n i t i o n o f
Tesla and the P h i l d e l p h i a Experiment
Tesla devices, suppression o f , reasons behind
Tesla, Colorado Springs experiments and
Tesla, generators a t Niagra Fa11s
Thalamus, d e s c r i p t i o n o f
Thalamus, d e t a i l e d information on
The Game and the Goals
The I S
The League o f German G i r l s
The Thousand Year Reich, F i r s t 50 years o f
Thermal E f f e c t s o f EM Radiation
Theta rhythm, EEG
Theta wavefronts
Theta waves and Thought Propogation
T h i r d Brain Structure, f u n c t i o n o f
T h i r d Brain Structure, r e l a t i o n t o NWO
T h i r d Density Incarnation, o b j e c t o f
Thi r d Density Perception o f Service t o Others
T h i r d Density, conscious r e t u r n t o
T h i r d Density, laws o f
T h i r d Density, l e a r n i n g framework o f
T h i r d Order Electromagnetics
Thought, Reception o f , Mechanism o f
Thymidine, q u a n t i t y as a measure o f m i t o s i s
Tien Tai
T i l l e r , William, t h e o r i e s o f
Time B a r r i e r a t 2011-2013
Time Dimension, i s o l a t i o n o f
Time Loops
Time, W i l l and Determination
Time-lock, humans locked t o
T i me-Loops, t r a v e l through
Time-Machi ne P r o j e c t s
Time-Space Frameworks and Densities
Time-Travel Technology and t h e U.S.Navy
Time-Tunnel, t r a v e l s t o the f u t u r e i n
Time-tunnel, use o f c h i l d r e n i n
T I R trucks, drug shipping on
Tobacco, Hazards o f Chemicals Added To
Toothbrushing, f l u o r i d e accumulation during
Toronto Dominion Bank
Total Recall
Toxins and A n t i t o x i n s
Toxins, Important, Table of
Transduction, Mind-Cranium
Transductive Coupling i n B r a i n Tissue
Transferases, DNA,RNA and ELF Waves
T r a n s l a t i n g Higher Density A l i e n Structures
Transverse Waves
Trap, implant
Travel, o u t o f t h e body
M A T R I X 1 1 1
Descri~tion Paae
Words of Power
World Conquest and Domination and Planetary Grid
World Psychiatric Foundation
World War 11 as a Race War
Wu-Wei, concept o f
, X Disease, Australian
Yellow Fever
Zero-Point Energy, source o f
Zero-poi n t vaccum' energy