Friday, May 20, 2016

Area 51 for example, and he was advised

There is a run of the mill fear inspired notion gossip that lets us know the military and government knowledge operations are set up so that the right hand doesn't recognize what the left hand is doing; one division is dealing with one part of an expansive classified venture, and another office is chipping away at yet another. You would think this would bring about perplexity - and it accomplishes for the run of the mill pawns. In any case, not for the fat cats on top; they appear to know precisely what they're doing - or isn't that right?

This is the typical situation: a specific researcher was brought into one of these top-mystery ventures, at Area 51 for example, and he was advised to dissect a progressed test Soviet air ship they acquired (of course, this was back when we had a Soviet Union!), yet they couldn't let him know where they discovered it or they would need to murder him - or something to startle him. More than likely they would need to deceive him by means of an unwaveringness vow, conceivably official by detainment - if not demise. Passing dangers are so interesting and stimulating, right? Just in spy thrillers I assume. Anyway, as he investigated and broke down the puzzling art, the researcher was confused about its apparently outsider nature, since it included innovation outside his ability to comprehend. When he finished his investigation of the strange specialty and reported his examination, his task was closed, and being educated to keep quiet regarding this entire scene, he was sent over into "this present reality" where the general population is informed that UFOs are just lies. However, being no sham, more often than not following a couple of many years of sulking, he chose to end up an informant and uncover the entire thing, since he was "the man who knew excessively." And obviously, the administration would urgently deny his legitimacy, making him sound like simply one more oddball - and trust me, there are huge numbers of them!

History Channel Documentary

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