RS III
At about age 4 or 5 Eli began drawing incredibly complex pictures with dozens of figures that that went from edge to edge and top to bottom, filling the page. Most of his pictures were epic battle scenes.
The reason for writing the last two blogs was to show that it is reasonable to believe the Nazis would have tried to build their own puspaka. And, that is the gist of Nick Cook’s, “The Hunt for Zero Point.”
The “Hunt For Zero Point,” describes Nick Cook’s personal quest to discover secret Nazi weapons, weapons that were confiscated by the US military following WWII and subsequently hidden in black budget programs for development. Much of his book is about the now well documented Nazi flying saucers, disk shaped aircraft and antigravity. Toward the end of the book he is led to the location of a secret Nazi facility in Czechoslovakia. During WWII scientists conducted research there now know as the Bell Experiment. “The Bell consisted of two counter-rotating hemispherical half-cylinders, filled with frozen mercury metal and subjected to a rotating radio frequency wave form. This added up to trouble, as it created an impressive Antigravity effect but caused serious illness to the nearby scientists ….”
According to Cook’s sources, near the end of the Nazi regime, the scientists who worked at the Czechoslovakian facility were herded to an empty field and shot dead. The equipment, apparatus and documents were boxed up and shipped to parts unknown and disappeared along with SS General Hans Kammler, the general who was in charge at Penemunde, the rocket facility were Dornberger and Von Braun worked. Cook speculates Kammler traded the goods to the US military in exchange for his life.
Even before the end of the war in Germany the US military initiated several programs to acquire Nazi technology finally known as Project Paperclip. In General Curtis LeMay’s autobiography he talks about how shocked the military establishment was that the Germans were so far ahead of us in technological development. It has been estimated that acquisitions from Project Paperclip, most given to American business, were worth something in the vicinity of five billion dollars. To the victor the spoils.
Paperclip blatantly violated US law by marching over three hundred Nazi scientists across the Mexican border into the US to circumvent a law that restricted immigration by Nazi war criminals. Most of the scientist ended up at Patterson AFB in Dayton, Redstone and later White Sands Missile Test Range, just south of a mountain range that separated it from Roswell, NM.