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Dec 07, 2001 10:34 PM
by bri_mue
According to documentary "UFO Secrets of the Third Reich ", the Haunibu-3 a 74 meter diameter naval warfare dreadnought - was chosen for the most courageous mission of this whole century - the trip to Mars. The craft was of saucer shape, had the bigger Andromeda tachyon drives, and was armed with four triple gun turrets of large naval caliber (three inverted upside down and attached to the underside of the craft, and the fourth on top of the crew compartments). The flight to Mars departed from Germany one month before the war ended - in April 1945 . . The radio message with the news was received by the German underground space control center in Neu Schwabenland and by their research base on the Moon. Brigitte The reason why Theosophy has something to do with it from starters is becouse the whole UFO myth goos back to story's in the Secret Doctrine ,about earlier planetary situations. As Blavatsky's SD could not be kept to conform with physical reality as it originally claimed to be, contents where transformed to meat more modern circumstances. flying saucers in a way replaced astral travel as means of getting around. In many contactee accounts during the fifties, no flying saucer is included at all. Venusians walk the streets of urban America ready to talk to anyone aware enough to recognise them Young people in the US that time also had been reading about extraterrestrials for years in such magazines as Amazing Stories and Astounding Science Fiction. The editor of Amazing, Raymond A. Palmer embraced the "new" phenomenon of flying saucers. Ray Palmer, editor of Amazing Stories SF magazine, often boasted he could turn any crackpot idea into a salable story. One day in 1944 a weird manuscript arrived at his office. It was purportedly non-fiction, and it described how a race of underground beings were responsible for all the mayhem and madness in the world. The author of this strange opus was Richard Shaver, a welder from Pennsylvania. Shaver exhibited many of the classic symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia (persecution by unknown forces, ill health caused by mysterious "rays," hearing voices), but Ray Palmer saw gold in the other man's delusions. He re-wrote Shaver's manuscript into a "fiction-fact" story called "I Remember Lemuria!" and published it. Shaver's paranoia, coupled with Palmer's exposition of the wonders of alien super-science, ignited the readership. Circulation soared, and the letters column of Amazing was swamped with notes from people claiming experiences just like Shaver's. The first ten years after the Arnold sightings in 1947 saw the growth of an interest in physical flying saucers (that we can hardly understand now, plagued as we are since then by more psychological tales of abduction and ancient gods.) Then, the search for an explanation generally started from the premise that what had been seen - and a lot of shiny, revolving flying-saucerish things were reported as really having been seen - were physically real. On that basis the choice was whether they were terrestrial or extra- terrestrial, and for those who weren't prepared to believe in the reality of extra-terrestrial craft and their extra-terrestrial occupants, there was a further choice - were they friends or enemies, US or Soviet, and how could anyone tell? Brigitte