Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Goat's Notes: Ron, The White House Hamster Guy

Inquiring minds want to know: Is our national insecurity guarded by an elite team of specially trained rodents in residence?



Jon Ronson's quest to track down Ron eventually led to men who stare at goats: Special Forces' psychic Goat Lab operations, including the psychic "death stare" -- but Ronson never revealed the mysterious Ron in his book.


I now have it on very good authority -- this from Ron himself -- that Ron is ... are you ready for this?


Forget the goats:


Ron is the "White House Hamster Guy."


That's right, it's on the (email) record [see the end of this article]:


Ron is THE White House Hamster Guy (in case you thought it was someone else, like Secretary of Defense Robert Gates).


Now it is true that the lowly hamster actually plays a bigger role than the famed goat in Jon Ronson's book. Perhaps this is because, as the rumor goes, Ron eventually shut down the Goat Lab.


It was Guy Savelli, according to Ronson, who dropped a goat stone dead at the Special Forces Goat Lab at Fort Bragg.


And it was Ron, according to his friend Dan T. Smith (the son of Presidential Tax Advisor Dan Throop Smith), who was "a point man for Special Forces" when he wasn't busy testifying in front of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee about his role at CIA.


Ronson asked Guy Savelli if he was the man who had stared a goat to death.

Savelli confessed to Ronson: "Yes, I did drop a goat when I was there."

Then he added, "Last week I killed my hamster."

Ronson wanted to make certain.

"Just by staring at it?"

"Yes."

"Hamsters drive me nuts."

According to Ronson's book, Guy Savelli had been contacted by the Special Forces shortly after 9/11, to reactivate his goat staring skill-set for the war on terror.

Savelli showed Ronson a video of his hamster dropping, legs straight up in the air.

It was tough to be a hamster during the Bush Administration.

If Ronson is right -- I truly suspect history will defend him -- it is the hamster, not the goat, that made a big comeback in the war on terror.



From Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Unconfirmed report: ET contactees sought for UFO Technology

I have been receiving unconfirmed reports of privately funded research seeking to obtain "UFO technology" secrets from "alien abductees."

According to one source, the purpose behind this effort involves a $200 million USD research budget to build a ground to low Earth orbit shuttlecraft for a chain of space hotels.

This source provided the names of two persons he claimed were principle researchers.

I have not received any response neither confirming nor denying the alleged private intelligence collection project.

Here is the email request sent to the two unnamed researchers on 6-17-2009:

Gentlemen:


It has been brought to my attention that a project allegedly funded by -- REDACTED -- is currently investigating "UFO persons of interest" for the overt purpose of obtaining potentially useful information to build a ground to low Earth orbit transport vehicle for -- REDACTED -- proposed space hotel chain.

The budget for this proposed venture is alleged to be around $200 million USD.

It is also suggested that any information gathered from these persons of interest, allegedly using fMRI "lie detection" technology, would be of general covert interest to the I.C.

Your input concerning the nature of this project would be helpful in providing accurate reporting to the public at large.

Thank you!

Gary S Bekkum
STARstream Research

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Bob Collins: Exempt from Disclosure

I read through the second edition of Bob Collins' expose' of the UFO cover-up Exempt from Disclosure a  few years ago. 

Like Sharon Weinberger, the defense journalist who contributes to Wired Magazine's 'Danger Room'  blog, "I am not a UFO person."

Whereas Sharon has spent the past few years exposing "imaginary weapons" that have been or are currently funded by the government, my interests lie (primarily) in cutting edge scientific debate pointing to "imaginary weapons" that might someday come to fruition. 

Although it may appear that Sharon and I live on opposite ends of the debate, we both share fluid channels for sources living out their imaginary dreams on the Internet.

I first heard about the weirdness involving the UFO connections to the U.S. Air Force from a source nicknamed "Sarge," in 1983.

Sarge told me, "If you knew the truth about what's going on with the Air Force and the UFOs, you wouldn't be able to sleep at night!"

I filed this bit of gossip in the back of my mind and hardly thought about it for almost twenty years.

When Bob Collins, a retired Air Force officer, offered to send me a copy of his Revised 2008 second edition of Exempt from Disclosure, I could hardly refuse. 

Bob's timing could not have been better.

On a whim, I had been looking at the original "leaked" MJ-12 MAJIC TOP SECRET Eisenhower Briefing Document  -- an unconfirmed piece of work that many, including the FBI, would declare as BOGUS -- mainly out of curiosity about the picture it was designed to paint in the reader's mind

What I found most curious about the  MJ EBD was the strange combination of markings and errors -- obscurity wrapped in obvious mistakes -- which suggested the possibility that there was more to this story than simple fabrication.

As it turns out, Bob's book paints the backdrop for a large part of the "rest of the story."

The revised Exempt from Disclosure strikes me as more coherent today than my recollection of the original. 

The new coherence is largely due to my own enhanced understanding of the stories behind the story, which I consider essential for anyone attempting to scale this particular mountain with any intention of finding a trail that leads to the top. 

(I ask that "UFO persons" steeped in the mythology have pity upon us newbies to the field -- those persons for whom this review is intended.)

An essential prerequisite to Bob's book is the 1988 national broadcast of a TV special titled "UFO Cover-up Live." Part of that broadcast includes two UFO "birds" from the AVIARY: FALCON and CONDOR.


Whereas the 1988 broadcast used the bird names to conceal the identity of these UFO sources, Bob's book opens up the back story to the so-called "bird droppings" and pushes the mystery with tidbits of fact, rumor, speculation, and conspiracy. 

In a previous brief review I noted a "wealth of information" in Bob's book. 

Bob's approach to the topic mixes fact with rumor, fantasy with speculation, and in the end leaves the uninitiated reader confused about what this journey is really all about. 

I suspect that is exactly the purpose Collins had in mind. 

You will not find an answer in Exempt from Disclosure.

Instead you will find a lot of unanswered questions waiting at the end of the road: questions I suspect that have haunted the author for years. 

Collins' gift is to hand off the mystery to the reader, in hope that someone "out there" will pickup on the threads and track down the heart of the mystery. 

I don't know if there is any one special trail to the top of this mountain, but the base is well worth exploring. 

The book is divided into three main sections.

The first offers some background to the key persons involved in the "bird games" of the AVIARY, and the alleged MJ-12 group. 

The second reviews some of the key intelligence persons alleged to have been involved, including CIA's Allen Dulles, James Jesus Angleton and Richard Helms. 

The testimony of "contributor" Richard (Rick) Doty, a controversial former AFOSI agent, provides most of the UFO-related information about the alleged alien visitors.

The final section concludes with a look at where the government may be keeping all of the ET technologies which many claim have been reversed engineered and incorporated into secret projects.

Along the way you will be treated to tales of alien ambassadors with a preference for strawberry ice cream and a human extraterrestrial exchange program. 

I keep hearing "Sarge" in the back of my mind saying, "If you knew the truth ..."

What are we to make of all of this?

In the end a "reality check" is necessary to put Collins' work in perspective.

We know for certain the government has an interest in exploiting weirdness for intelligence purposes. It's a matter of record found in numerous officially released documents dating back to World War Two. 

Whereas "unauthenticated" documents (others would declare as "debunked" and "bogus") cannot be taken at face value, the true history of the American and British governments' fascination with parapsychology, UFO physics, and psychological warfare slowly trickles into public awareness in spite of serious resistance to the Freedom of Information.

It does not matter if the conspiracies and speculations are right or wrong. 

Our government has been involved with UFOs in the past, persons in high-level government positions continue to express an interest, personal or otherwise, and intelligence agencies and their proxies in the private sector have been tasked to take advantage of phenomena outside of the mainstream experience.

To paraphrase my friend "Sarge," after you read Exempt from Disclosure,  you may not be able to sleep at night. 

And if you are certain Exempt from Disclsoure is nothing more than fantasy,  keep in mind the old adage "The truth IS stranger than fiction."

Bob Collins' book Exempt from Disclsoure is available here.

Monday, May 25, 2009

DANGEROUS ENTANGLEMENTS

DANGEROUS ENTANGLEMENTS