Every weekday morning, at least
500 people arrive at the guarded terminal owned by EG&G on the northwest side of
McCarran Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada. Here they board one of a small fleet of
unmarked Boeing 737-200s. Using three digit numbers prefixed by the word "Janet"
as their callsigns, the 737s fly off North every half hour. Their destination is
Groom Lake, also known as Area 51, an installation so secret, its existence is
denied by the government agencies and contractors that have connections there.
By late 1955, the facility had been completed for flight testing of Lockheed's
U-2 spyplane. Since that time, Groom Lake has undergone vast expansion, catering
to the needs of testing the most advanced aircraft projects in the world.
Forty-four years after it was created, Groom Lake has hosted flight testing of
the aforementioned Lockheed U-2, the SR-71 Blackbird, the F-117 stealth fighter,
Northrop's B-2 stealth bomber, the mysterious Aurora Project, and possibly even
alien spacecraft.
Tony LeVier, Lockheed's test
pilot assigned to test-fly the U-2 spyplane, claims the credit for recognizing
Groom Dry Lake as a suitable test site. The CIA gave U-2 designer Kelly Johnson
the task of choosing and building a secure test site. In March 1955, Johnson
sent LeVier and Skunk Works foreman Dorsey Kammerer to visit potential test
sites in the deserts of southern California, Nevada, and Arizona. After two
weeks, LeVier presented Johnson with his impressions, and Johnson chose Groom
Lake. The Groom Lake facility has been known by many names since its
construction. Kelly Johnson named the place "Paradise Ranch". When his flight
test team arrived in July 1955, they simply called it "The Ranch". In fact, the
secret base was formally named Watertown Strip, after the town in upstate New
York where CIA director Allen Dulles was born. In June 1958, it was officially
designated Area 51 by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). The adjacent AEC
proving grounds became known as the Nevada Test Site and divided into such
numbered areas...
Introduction: The "Silent Invasion" Scenario in a Nutshell
: The 1980s and 1990s spawned once of the most satisfying mythologies of the
21st century. In essence, it goes like this: The U.S. government has known that UFOs are alien craft since the late 1940s
[actually, not totally impossible]. Formal contact with the aliens was
established in the 1950s. Shortly thereafter a deal was struck between the
government and the extraterrestrials: the aliens would be allowed to abduct
citizens for research and experiments in exchange for technological information. [Here the line of reasoning suffers a critical fracture: why would a
starfaring (or dimension-hopping, depending on who you ask...) alien species
need our government's permission to do anything? One would think it could do as
it wished with impunity, much how we tag and research ants without bothering to
"negotiate" with their representatives. While I don't necessarily preclude the
idea of some form of official human-alien contact, the human-alien "deal"
recounted in the Silent Invasion Myth strikes me as very questionable -- unless,
of course, the ETs were simply staging the whole thing...
It was supposed to work like this: the aliens would furnish the government
with a list of their human abductees, never going over "quota." But soon the
horrible truth became apparent: the aliens were abducting more than their legal
share of unwitting humans! And to top it off, they were performing grotesque
biological experiments with cattle and leaving their handiwork in plain view!
How insolent! Moreover, some of the abductees weren't coming back.One naturally
wonders if the government knew exactly what kind of "research" the aliens were
up to when it signed its Faustian pact. Apparently the aliens duped the humans
into thinking they were nothing more than benign interstellar anthropologists,
free of ulterior motives. The brass panic. Although armed with some ET-derived technology (possibly
including crashed alien vehicles such as the one allegedly discovered at
Roswell, New Mexico), they realize they're no match for the aliens (or, as they
are now known, the "Grays"). Pandora's Box has been unleashed...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 18805 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Tuesday, May 29 @ 01:47:49 CDT (1043 reads)
Every weekday morning, at least
500 people arrive at the guarded terminal owned by EG&G on the northwest side of
McCarran Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada. Here they board one of a small fleet of
unmarked Boeing 737-200s. Using three digit numbers prefixed by the word "Janet"
as their callsigns, the 737s fly off North every half hour. Their destination is
Groom Lake, also known as Area 51, an installation so secret, its existence is
denied by the government agencies and contractors that have connections there.
By late 1955, the facility had been completed for flight testing of Lockheed's
U-2 spyplane. Since that time, Groom Lake has undergone vast expansion, catering
to the needs of testing the most advanced aircraft projects in the world.
Forty-four years after it was created, Groom Lake has hosted flight testing of
the aforementioned Lockheed U-2, the SR-71 Blackbird, the F-117 stealth fighter,
Northrop's B-2 stealth bomber, the mysterious Aurora Project, and possibly even
alien spacecraft.
Tony LeVier, Lockheed's test
pilot assigned to test-fly the U-2 spyplane, claims the credit for recognizing
Groom Dry Lake as a suitable test site. The CIA gave U-2 designer Kelly Johnson
the task of choosing and building a secure test site. In March 1955, Johnson
sent LeVier and Skunk Works foreman Dorsey Kammerer to visit potential test
sites in the deserts of southern California, Nevada, and Arizona. After two
weeks, LeVier presented Johnson with his impressions, and Johnson chose Groom
Lake. The Groom Lake facility has been known by many names since its
construction. Kelly Johnson named the place "Paradise Ranch". When his flight
test team arrived in July 1955, they simply called it "The Ranch". In fact, the
secret base was formally named Watertown Strip, after the town in upstate New
York where CIA director Allen Dulles was born. In June 1958, it was officially
designated Area 51 by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). The adjacent AEC
proving grounds became known as the Nevada Test Site and divided into such
numbered areas...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 10239 bytes more | comments? | Score: 3 ) Posted by Nuke on Friday, April 06 @ 05:33:33 CDT (1371 reads)
Literally thousands of government employees are
sworn to secrecy at the base called Area 51. Why? It is known for a fact that
many USA aircraft are designed and tested there, and for national security
reasons, these state-of-the-art planes and weapons demand secrecy. But is that
the only reason for the veil? Many think not. Many reports have come from this
clandestine site of reverse-engineering of UFOs, test flying UFOs from other
worlds, and development of our own designs based on craft captured from other
galaxies.
The employees who work under the cloak of
mystery are flown to the base in an unmarked Boeing 737 to perform their duties.
For years even our own government denied it's existence until Soviet pictures
confirmed what many knew all along. The base did exist. The facility was
originally designed for the testing of U-2 spy planes, and ultimately Stealth
technology would be born there. The secret site has grown to many times it's
original size. The USAF took over command of Area 51, and it's airspace in 1970.
The facility is usually referred to as Dreamland.This mysterious fortress and it's surrounding
grounds are strictly off-limits. What secrets are kept inside this highly
guarded facility ? The rumors abound. Yes, there have been pictures of craft
doing amazing maneuvers over these guarded skies, and pictures and video
smuggled from inside. These smuggled articles show living and dead aliens,
spacecraft of futuristic design, but still the government denies these claims.
What will be revealed to us next? High-tech security measures guard her secrets
for now.
AREA 51 Lawsuit
:
During the 70's and 80's the workers at Area
51 were exposed to Jet Fuel toxins like JP7. Supposedly old computer parts
were also burned in trenches. The workers were ordered to go into the trenches
and mix up the material and were only allowed to wear protection up to their
waist. Helen Frost, whose husband Robert died in 1988 from the fumes, filed a
lawsuit against the government in 1996...
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 11191 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Sunday, November 19 @ 09:50:44 CST (585 reads)
"Area 51" is a part of an off-limits military
base near Groom Dry Lake in Nevada. UFOers are sure it is used to hide aliens
from us. The state of Nevada recently designated a barren 98-mile stretch of
Route 375, which runs near area 51, as the Extraterrestrial Highway. Such a move
is no doubt proof of a government attempt to throw us off the track and think
there is not a cover-up when there is one. This is a cover-up of the cover-up,
typical of government agencies when dealing with sensitive information regarding
UFOs and aliens.
Since you can be shot if you try to trespass on
the military base where area 51 is located, UFO tourists must view the sacred
ground from a distant vantage point. Many do this, hoping for a glimpse of a UFO
landing. Apparently, our government has a treaty with the aliens that allows
them to fly into this area at will, as long as we can experiment on them and try
to duplicate their aircraft. You don't really think that any human could
have come up with the idea of the Stealth Bomber, do you?
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(Read the FULL Article here... | 2831 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Thursday, July 28 @ 02:48:44 CDT (287 reads)
A moment before the sonic boom hit his trailer, Joerg Arnu’s UHF radio scanner crackled to life. “Cylon 1, got you on radar,” said a voice just barely perceptible through the static.And then — badamm-booom! — the whole trailer shook in a shockwave, and Mr. Arnu jumped, a big plexiglass window reverberating as a jet streaked overhead and through the sky.“That was probably an F-16,” Mr. Arnu said, peering out the window and squinting into the sun. A telephoto lens sat on a countertop nearby.“T... Read More
Reverse engineering of flying saucers captured at Roswell, the development of energy weapons and weather control, time-travel technology, a shadowy one-world government -- these are a few of the rumors floating around about Area 51. Even though the government says no such research is occurring at the nonexistent base, many people ask "What if?"The rumors began in Roswell, N.M., in July 1947, when the local newspaper published an article titled "RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch... Read More
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Ever think some folks in the Inland Empire are out of this world? The UFO seminar on Saturday could provide some answers. The murky world of UFOs, government coverups and America's secret planes will be the topic of March Field Air Museum's UFO seminar and family days on Saturday."UFOs and Things That Go Bump in the Night" will try to explain flying saucers and alien sightings such as Roswell and Area 51. Resident UFO-ologist and museum volunteer Bob Mauger, 65, of Norco, will ... Read More
Are unidentified flying objects real or just the product of overactive imaginations sparked by pop culture? Millions of Americans believe that extraterrestrials regularly visit Earth. The UFO industry has evolved over 50-plus years, starting in 1947 when pilot Kenneth Arnold flew near Mount Rainier in Washington State and spied nine crescent-shaped metallic objects in the distance traveling at speeds he estimated to be 1,000 mph. During the same year of Arnold's flight, another seminal UFO e... Read More