| Subject: RE: Fantasy copies 
      reality?  Date: Thu, 28 Mar 2002 10:38:14 -0600 
        Hi Mike, 
      Yes, it gets scarier. However, our side has made some real progress -- 
        which is about all I can say. 
      Real problem these days is the spreading "goon" mentality in certain systems 
        which simply wishes to kill civilians in the cities, etc. with weapons 
        of 
      
        mass destruction.  Depending on who makes the estimate, we have from 
        20,000 to 40,000 terrorists already in the U.S., inserted over the last 
        few 
      
        decades.  Castro alone inserted some 10,000, trained in guerrilla camps 
        he 
      
        operated in Southern Mexico.  If half have opted for the good life, 
        that's 
      
        still 5,000 hard core commando types in here that await orders from 
        Castro 
      
        alone.  It's a real mess, since Iraq also inserted teams (along with 
      
        smallpox and anthrax, etc.).  Contrary to popular estimate, I'm also 
        pretty 
      
        sure that Iraq has a few nuclear weapons (up to about three dozen). 
      
        Finally, the former Soviets inserted nuclear weapons and Spetznaz teams 
        in 
      
        here, in all our large cities.  They are still here, as are the nukes.  
        Up 
      
        to 40 KT per copy.  Lunev in his book even tells several ways they 
        brought 
      
        them in. 
      So we have a real tiger by the tail. Since delivery of weapons of mass 
        destruction to their intended targets might be called the first phase of 
        any 
      
        giant strategic strike, then the first phase of WW III has already been 
      
        completed. 
      In my view, the world is a giant powder keg, ticking away to explode. So at this point it's anybody's guess as to what will ultimately happen. It isn't 
        going to be pretty. 
      
        About all an old dog like me can do is continue to point it out as best 
        he 
      
        can.  So we do that, and try to do something in the energy field to 
        replace 
      
        this terribly vulnerable centralized energy system infrastructure that 
        has 
      
        been developed.  That mess will go very quickly, once the foreign 
        nations 
      
        with professional teams in here unleash them. 
      
        Begins to read like a dime store novel -- or one of those games you 
        referred 
      
        to! 
      Best wishes, 
        Tom Bearden 
      
        Subject: Fantasy copies reality? 
      
        Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 18:50:09 -0600 
      Hello again, Mr. Bearden. 
        I have been thinking about many of the principles of the revised 
      
        electrodynamics you have been explaining on your site, and it occurs to 
        me 
      
        that I've seen some of the principles of longitudinally polarized 
        weapons 
      
        somewhere before. I'd appreciate it if you didn't laugh, but I have in 
      
        fact seen some of Tesla's work in computer games. 
      
        In Westwood Studios' Real Time Strategy game Red Alert, the Soviet Union 
        wages war against the European Allies. Sounds familiar. The Soviet 
        arsenal includes giant Tesla Coils that serve as defensive measures, 
        electrocuting anyone who gets too close. Not only that, the Soviets have 
        a "Super Weapon" called the Iron Curtain that projects an impenetrable 
        force field around a vehicle or important building. Sounds a lot like 
        the Tesla 
      
        Shield, if you ask me. As a matter of fact, one of the characters in the 
      
        game mentions that Tesla himself was working on the Iron Curtain 
        project. 
      
        The way Soviet Technology in the game seems to parallel what is known 
      
        about the KGB's secret weapons is most likely a coincidence, but it's 
      
        still very strange. The other side of the war, the Allies, has a super 
      
        weapon of their own developed by Albert Einstein, called the Chrono 
      
        Sphere. It teleports any vehicle through time and space to another part 
        of 
      
        the playing field, and reminds me distinctly of that suggestion you once 
      
        made of an object leaving three dimensional space, existing only in the 
      
        time dimension, then entering 3-D space again at the same point in time. 
      
        This is getting even more peculiar. 
      
        By the time Westwood made a sequel, Red Alert 2, the Soviets had 
        pioneered mind control, another parallel to the real world. 
        Unfortunately, the game included Weather Control as part of the Allied 
        bag of tricks, while it 
      
        seems that in real life, the Soviets hold that card. Still, we have the 
      
        "Big Flasher", I believe you called it, to counteract weather 
        engineering, 
      
        and that's a good thing. However, it would seem that is the only trick 
        we 
      
        have up our sleeve. Of course, if the United States government has 
        finally 
      
        started listening to you, that could change. Naturally, if that was so, 
      
        you couldn't tell me, which is perfectly fine. National security and so 
        on. 
      
        Still, there is another potential situation that I don't think has yet 
      
        been touched upon by either side: Time Travel. If one can... what would 
        be 
      
        the best term... "Rotate" a vehicle out of three dimensional space into 
      
        the time axis, then rotate it back into three dimensional space again at 
      
        another part of space, since every point in space is linked to the same 
      
        point in time, it might be possible to take the opposite of that, 
        rotating 
      
        an object completely into a spatial axis and rotate back into time and 
        the 
      
        other two spatial dimensions at a different time. Then again, I could be 
      
        wrong about this. But if I'm right, then it might be possible to send 
      
        someone back into time and prevent the Russian spy from stealing the 
      
        designs for Moray's device. Of course, that could drastically change 
      
        history, but personally I think everything will turn out for the 
        better... 
      
        as long as someone doesn't give Time Travel technology to the Nazis. 
        I've 
      
        seen too many sci-fi films about that already, I don't want to really 
        LIVE 
      
        in such a scenario. 
      
        Sincerely, 
      
        Mike
       
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