Post by Deleted on Nov 12, 2014 7:00:21 GMT -6
I don't know about sources..... It goes back pretty much a life time or just under 30 years for me. I mean, I was actively looking for and reading things like the original MJ-12 docs, or what claimed to be, back when they were .txt files on 1200 baud connections to a BBS. So overall lists are a toughie for me....
Hmm... Ones that stand out? Well.. I met Budd Hopkins and consider his books to be authoritative on the abduction phenomenon. I had two people I was in close contact with or in charge of training with during my trucking career that had personal background that matters. There is A LOT of free time to kill between two people on a semi truck. Endless hours of it. That brings a lot of chatting and general talk, where this was no exception. The one of the two that was most informative spent some of his military time TDY to Lockheed Martin's test facility outside Palmdale, California. ..What? You're not aware of a big Lockheed test and development facility near Hwy 58 in California's high desert? (wicked grin) ...They know. That's the point. Nothing to even see there by satellite...and that too, is the point. I learned a great deal of "modern technology" information from him, with SO much more he could hint at but never elaborate with. (He's also someone I saw, going back to look, escorting Manuel Antonio Noriega off the cargo plane in Miami...to have verified he was who he said he was, with me anyway).
I'm not sure what other specifics to name a source would apply here? I mean, knowledge on subjects like this come from hundreds of things read over a lifetime. Sorry if I can't contribute more on that aspect.
* Oh..the 2nd one I trained in trucking? She spent her career in military intelligence and was the first one I heard to speak of a mailing destination on the moon as a simple given fact, not something speculative or even all that special from her position. She never claimed to go...but her work was as a high security courier for part of it...and thanks to her, I learned a few things about otherwise normal looking sites around the D.C. area...including that lunar bit for where she dropped things to be sent on.
It's a wild wild world out there, eh?
Hmm... Ones that stand out? Well.. I met Budd Hopkins and consider his books to be authoritative on the abduction phenomenon. I had two people I was in close contact with or in charge of training with during my trucking career that had personal background that matters. There is A LOT of free time to kill between two people on a semi truck. Endless hours of it. That brings a lot of chatting and general talk, where this was no exception. The one of the two that was most informative spent some of his military time TDY to Lockheed Martin's test facility outside Palmdale, California. ..What? You're not aware of a big Lockheed test and development facility near Hwy 58 in California's high desert? (wicked grin) ...They know. That's the point. Nothing to even see there by satellite...and that too, is the point. I learned a great deal of "modern technology" information from him, with SO much more he could hint at but never elaborate with. (He's also someone I saw, going back to look, escorting Manuel Antonio Noriega off the cargo plane in Miami...to have verified he was who he said he was, with me anyway).
I'm not sure what other specifics to name a source would apply here? I mean, knowledge on subjects like this come from hundreds of things read over a lifetime. Sorry if I can't contribute more on that aspect.
* Oh..the 2nd one I trained in trucking? She spent her career in military intelligence and was the first one I heard to speak of a mailing destination on the moon as a simple given fact, not something speculative or even all that special from her position. She never claimed to go...but her work was as a high security courier for part of it...and thanks to her, I learned a few things about otherwise normal looking sites around the D.C. area...including that lunar bit for where she dropped things to be sent on.
It's a wild wild world out there, eh?