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NEXUS NEWS 6 ElECTRO-MAGNETIC RADIATION & YOU 41


A round-up of the news you probably did By Prof. Ronald S. Laura and John F.
not see. Ashton. Water beds, electric razors,
TIHE MAGIC CRUISI MJSSllE 11 electric blankets, power lines - do they
affect us, and how?
By Jo Via lis. On 19th January a Tomahawk
Cruise Missile hit the AI Rashid Hotel in NEW SCIENCE NEWS 47
Baghdad. The US claims it must have A round-up of interesting news and titbits,
been an accident. But it wasn't! from the underground science network.
This issue features an article on resonance
EARTH CHANGES REPORT 12
and the gravity barrier by Robert Adams.
A column by Cordon-Michael Scallion
THE TWILIGHT IONE 52
looking at his prophecies and predictions.
A collection of strange and bizarre stories
NEXUS FOllIOW-UPS 13
from around (and of{) the world. This issue
A regular section to further inform readers features a story on secret scientific bases in
on developments of issues covered in pre- the Andes, in South America.
vious editions of NEXUS.
REVIEWS - Books 57
THE FOURTH REICH - COMING OUR WAYL.........16 "Lost Cities of North & Central America" by David
By Donald S. MeAlvany. An incredible Hatcher Childress
look at the draconian asset-seizure laws "Men & Gods in Mongolia" by Henning Haslund
now being enforced in the USA. Is "The Gemstone File" edited by jim Keith
Australia next? "Spaceship Conspiracy" by George Knap
THE PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG RACKET - Pt 1........23 "Arktos - The Polar Myth In Science" by j. Godwin
"The Mothman Prophecies" by john A. Keel
By John Leso. An in-depth article revealing
"Tapping The Zero-Point Energy" by Moray B. King
how we are being ripped off, hoaxed,
"The Montauk Project" by Nicholls and Moon
conned, poisoned, and killed by one of the
"Hydrogen Peroxide, Medical' Miracle" by W.
biggest industries now on the planet.
Douglass, MD .
REPORT ON GRID POINT #44 31 REVIEWS - Video Tapes 61
By Paul White. A report on Australia's "Hoagland'S Mars" with Richard -Hoagland
own magical mystery site - Crid Point 44. "The Flying Stones of Nan Madol" hosted by
ARCHIEOlOGICAl COVER-UPS 36 David Hatcher Childress
By David Hatcher Childress. Are the NEXUS PROD,UCT ORDER FORMS 69
world's top scientific institutions covering DE-CLASSIFIED A.DS 71
up proof of hi-tech ancient civilisations? SUBSCRIPTIONS & BACK ISSUES 72

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS-'


Editorial
Welcome to Volume 2, #13, my tli1irteenth issue of NEXUS, and I have to
humbly say, it is one of the best issues yet. Apart from being the best-spelt
issue to date, we a'iso have some great stories.
The article rtitled "The Fourth Reich" is a very disturbing one, especially if
you are a materialist and like to own thi.ngs. II hope readers take note and
stay alert should Australia stray down America's path.
Our. reprinted article, "The Pharmaceutical Drug Racket", is yet another
shot at those merchants of death, the pharmaceutical/chemical companies. I
c.an only hope and pray that people in ever-growing numbers start to take
charge of their own lives, and especially their own health. Maybe this arti-
cle will assist in shanering the blind faith so many of us have in 'the system'.
This issue of NEXUS also sees an article or two exploring our ancient past.
We (the masses) are given two scenarios on our ancient history to choose
from, i.e., Creationism, or Evolution. Both are full of faoual holes, ~o big
you could drive a truck througli1. But even more important is that both these
belief systems are rigidly controlled from the top, by 'experts'. NEXUS
intends to point out in forthcoming is_sues that the 'experts' of both these
schools of thought have aoively collaborated in withhol1ding, destroying, or
manipulating evidence alluding to a totally different origin and history of
mankind!. Thus,. you will hopef\;llly find the articles on pages 31-34, and 36-
39, of considerable interest.
With winter coming on, no doubt many Ireaders will be dragging out their
electric blankets, or turning up the heat in their waterbeds. If this sounds
like you, and you want to get a good night'S sleep, don't read the article by
Prof. Laura on pages 41-45.
In vollume 2, number 11 of NEXUS, we published an article titled "The
Adams Pulsed Electric Motor Generator". This article has caused quilte a stir
worldwide, and Mr Adams has been inundated with maill and visitors.
NEXUS has been contac.ted by several 'mad scientists' who have successful'-
Iy duplicated the initial work of Mr Adams as published in NEXUS. Robert
Adams has teamed up with aruce Cathie and together they are achieving
some startling results, as you may read in Science News on pages 47-49.
Our other news is that at last we are setting up an office in America. We
Ihave been seliling a steadily increasing number of magazines in the USA for
Ithe last two years, and the last few months has cost us a fortune in overseas
postage.
Speaking of postage, did you know that Australia Post's new Print Post sys-
tem will see my bulk postage rates rise from 52 cents per item, to well over a
dollar per item! If you think I will be hard !hit, imagine what it will do to
magazines like Choice, or other high subscription-based magazines. Worse
still, it financially discriminates against those people living out in rural areas,
and, God knows· they are already being hit hard enough.
Speaking of being hit hard enough, I would like to welcome all our new
American readers to Nexus. Instead of shipping magazines from Australia,
we are now printing an American edition, which is identical in contents,
except for the advertising.
Finally, I would like to reiterate a comment I made in an earlier editori.al:
please feel free to photocopy and! pass on information from NEXUS.
Happy readi ng!
Duncan

WARRAN,TY AND INDEMNITY


Advertisers upon anod by lodging material with the Publisher I(or publication or authorising or approving o( the publication o( any material INDEMNIFY the
Publisher and its servanl:; and agents against all liability claims or proceedings whatsoeyer arising from the publication and without limitin-g the generality
of the (oregoing to indemnify each of t1iem in relation to defamation, slander of title, breach of copyright, infringement of trademarks or names of publica-
tion titles, unfair competition or trade practices, royalties or violation of rights or privacy, AND WARRANT that the material complies with alilrelevant laws
and. regulat.ions and that its publicatiDn will nol: ,give rise to any rights allainst or liabilities in the Publisher, its servants or agents and in particular that
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are
ion published on the basis that they are not to be regarded as expressing the opinion of the publisher or its servants or agents. Editorial advice is not
II spedfic and readers are advised to seek professional help for individual problems.
C> Nexus New Times 1993 .

2·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993


NB: Please keep let·
\ters to approx. 100·150
. words in length. Ed.

Re: Mind Control to their finale. What's next? rII proba- as 'the fulllre of science and the qu ality am also surprised thaI the local UFO
Dear NEXUS, Where to start, or bly have to deep with an amethyst and heaJth of !be life of homo saptens is research grollps are fIOl ir(orming their
even if I should. Y~l1r issue Feb-March boulder!
concerned in the next century. members of it eilher. Maybe the
'93, page 4 I. I'm only up ,to 44 and I can say honestly to all the readers I would like to talk with you or with rl/ll'lOlU aboUl US in/elligence UifjLJral-
can't read on Wltil 'l have wriuen to you. out there that are having problems in Glenn Krawczyk ~ any other member ing the hierarchies of 'these grollps is
Mind conuol--thank God you put this this area, there is help, and your elec- of your staff. The subject would be the trlle after all? Ed)
in. I tho.ughl I was 'the only one'. tromagnetic field can be repaired. We positive aspects of the Warsaw Pact
Being of a stroog will myself, I never are not defenceless. I have close Mind Control Experience, as far as the
stimulation of human consciousness,
Re: Festival For The Future
thought I was going mad, bill CII\ per- friends and relatives that will testify Dear Duncan,
sonally testify that HARLAN that I am telling the truth. I am in the harmonising the life force of human
mRARD'S TELLING THE habit of keeping a diary, and ,the next beings from any distance, and such WHATEVER HAPPENED TO 1HE
ABSOLUTE TRUTH. I have been day after the fmal event I told them n Slopping sickness to manifest itself to FUTURE?J1!
psychic ever sjnce I can remember. But they thought I was crazy. I very rarely (Shysical dimension, and the lot more. We avidly read' all your ads-and edi·
since my powers have been gelling buy your magazine and have no idea I feel this would give your readers a torial extolling the virtues of the FES-
stronger I have had numerous visits why I bougi"l the Feb-March '93 issue, good' all-round knowledge of the posi- TIVAL OF THE FUTURE. We duti-
from what I call the 'dream, police'. but am glad I did. loose I told the inci- tive and negative aspects of mind con- fully trekked down and' saw your name
Three times since Dec '92 they have dent to, now believe me and are starting trol experience. on the posters, but not only no sign of
visited me in what I call the etheric and to see the bigger picture. I will leave My personal opinion of the malter is you, but no mention of the Festival !;ver
the astral state. 'They have an inner cir- my name, and address of my clinic, in thai mind research with implanted occurred in the following two issues of
cle of specially trained psychics, and case any of you need any help. human subject should continue but NEXUS I
apparently (so now I fOJIDd out) when Leanne Jacques with. only with, the consent of the WOt happened?! We feel cut olT, let
an outside psychic reaches a cenain Candle Clinic Natural and Oriental research subject! down, and an inconsistency in NEXUS.
level they zoom in on you. They ftrst Therapies International chess !!laster and one of As for the Festivlll, ,it was the most
approached me nicely. I said no. P.O. Box 62, South Wen Rocks the m-ost talented researchers of inspiring collection of genuine non-
Secondly they tried to use force in my NSW 2431 Phone: (065) 66.6007 Hungary mind and aura research and hype brains I personally have ever seen
chest region which I quickly returned to PS: Sorry about the spelling; it's 2.30 telepathic suggestion, Dr Laszlo Liptay and I have made a lifelong ql,lest of
sender. Ouch., it must have hun him. am. Good work on your magazine. I of Budapest, would be a person to be such thingsl Tho' the food and weather
Wait for ito-the third time was a direct interviewed about the future and direc- were an ordeal, we were very
10veitI
attaeIc on my nervous system. I thought tion of the mind research. impressed with Keith Ryall and his
~ was going to die. I saw what was
PPS: The government has forgotten non-multinational castle and co-work-
I shall be in my present address umil
used on mc and ,it looked like some one thing. There are a c~i.!l number the end of March 1993. I hope to hear ers, as they told us they were clllled,
type of ray gun--and it does affect the of individuals on this planet that have from you, Duncan, before that time. and came away inspired.
ccntrlll ,nervous system--it KILLS. It their lkundalini raised and are using it. Thanking you, and ralher eager for
went into my etheric body. Whatever they can throw forward at us Sincerely,
an answer,
For those of you who don't know with their science·-God has implanted Paul C. Dozsa, Hungarian chess
Yours sincerely,
what the ethedc body is, I will briefly in his O~. And it will be returned in master, N1!minbah, QId.
tell you, from an exuact out of one of FUU. MEASUREI
Joe R., Potts Point, NSW.
my patient's sheets, used at the clinic. Re: Mexican UFOs (Dear Joe, sorry 10 hear YOlifee/'cUl
"This is the level that is directly con- Re: Mind Control off and let <Jqwn with NEXUS for fail-
Dear Duncan, I read the article enti- ing to report on the festival, I was
cerned with .heal.in~ the physical body Dear Duncan, Thank you for tled ''The World's Largest UFO Aap--
(~r destroymg I.t In the case of our promptly sending numbers II and 12 of
llnable 10 al/efld the feslival because
Mexico City" in the latest NEXUS and lhe organisers were lIIIl1b1e to organise
fiiends). I! COl),!!tsts of ether-the, state your NEXUS New Times. I congratu- was amazed. How is it that craft of that
between en~rgy and m,aner. It tS .the late you and your wife on the birth of
a flight there afld back for me. I
son (of unknown origin) can appear received very maed feedback aboUl /he
energy matrix upon ,WhiCh th~ phySical daughter Jacinta. I wish her that after a over one of the world's largest cities
maller of the body ussues eXI,st. It has highly satisfying and soul- urifyi life
festival itself, afld thlls was lI11dear
since 1991 and the general public OUt· abollt whaJ to tell olhers. Glad, to see
the.same structure as the phySIcal body, ,P ,ng side of Mexico has nor heard about it?
. Iud'109 all the anat
Inc ' I parts adnon
omlca ·· , Earth, she WIll conllnue to
the planet you had a good lime. Ed.)
all the organs. It is the etheric body." live m a hi~r planet! . Whllt is happening on this Planet
It is the same principle as Bruce Cathie I was aCCidentally muoduced to that we can have these experiences and •• • ,
describes when explaining the world !"IEXUS last year. I was gre~tly nobody will print it (except NEXUS)? Re: David Childress VISit
grid. We have our human grid. IJDp:essed. with your ~ becau~ Itts I think that Joul'Dl!lists and television Dear Duncan, Went 10 the David
Some of the readers might like to ~IDll! ~Ith: very baSIC problems Dl!he reporters today must be either afraid of Childress 'slide show on Saturday -
know what saved my life. I am a crys. ~c,enlLflc :-",ay. Most of. the tOpiCS their publishers, totally incompetent or .magnificent! It's really comforting to
tal healer and have my own clinic. I ~troduced Dl your paper WIll ~.a very forcibly restrained from printing the know that there are people like him
also have diplomas in nutrition, colour IlDponant p~ of21s,t century I~vmg. truth, Which of these do read!;.,rs thiDJt: searching for truth and having eoo.ugh
that it is? I have my views on why courage to preselll that truth to the pub-
therapy, ac1!p!!llclyre, and hara diagno- II am ~~~ul.arJy mterested m Glenn
journalists are not printing the truth, but lic. The amount of information that I
sis. So rm not all that crazy. Well, that Krawczyk s ~md. Control & The New
th!:re'soopoint in airing them here. went home with was astounding!
night I'd just puJ:Chased a double-termi- World Order arucle. I can relate to
nated amethyst erystal. I usually sleep this part:. "Doctors in S~eden. have I'm sure many Australian and NZ Davidl obviously knows his work,
with my new ones, to tune into them been placmg bram uansmmers In the journalists read NEXUS. I'd .like to knows what, where and who 10 look for
before using them in the clinic. Well, ~s of anaesthetised patients without issue a chlllienge to you aUto follow up to get the answers.
when my body was convulsing on the their consent or knowledge for over this inf0[lll3tion, contact 60 Minliles in It's my hope that many, many more
bed during my fmal attack, I grabbed thiny years." I have been implanted, in Mexico City and bring outlthe uuth. willllegin to really open their eyes and
the crystal, knowing that lhis time they a military hospital in Budapest, This must be the biggest and best-doeu- question the system and some day we
were using more than just a psychic to Hungary, as a pari of ear-pin back mented Sl!Jry you'll ever get. Will you can all be free, really free from cont.rol
gel me to do as I was told. I knew my surgery, in the summer of 1958. Since. do it and let the public know what's and dis-information and back in tune
nervous system was burning, ~ could I or probably a few years before that, J really going on? with Nature. Thank you NEXUS,
taste it. The energy from their ray was was a research subject of the Warsaw Congratulations to NEXUS editor excellent work!
sucked into the crystal, and now, Pact Strategical Mind Control and stAlT for a wonderful article thaJ Anonymous
instead of a perfectly coloured Research. I am still pari of the challenges us all. Keep up the good PS: Duncan, you're ,the nicest look-
amethyst, it is very yellow in the mid- I Hungarian Military Mind Control work. ing Ed rve ever seen!
dIe wbere it haB absorbed the rays. Experiment. Thomas B., TeWanlin. Qld. (Dear Whoever you are, yOIl obvi-
I have 'llI_so found a special meditation I Because of this arrangement origi- (Dear Thomas. I sympathise with I ousty have fIOl seen 100 ,",IffY Edr. bUl
that 'stops those voices in the head, as I nally without my consent, I had a most YOllr challenge to jOlirnaJists reading Ithanlc.s anyway for YOllr lcind cammen/s.
had all that dumped on me as a lead-up unusual but I feel very useful life as far NEXUS, as I know a lot of them do, I Ed.)

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS.S

®
WEAPONS OF THE POLL ON THE FUTURE
FUTURE ArrACK THE Earlier this year, The Sun-
MIND Herald newspaper conducted a
survey of 500 adults on their
Many readers may remember views on llie in Australia and the
that during the Gulf War we world in the 21st century.
received news reports of thou- Although the survey results in
sands of Iraqi troops just giving themselves were ,interesting, I
themselves up, sometimes even found the que.stions that were
surrendering to journalists asked just as intriguing.
thinking they were soldiers.
The.re were the predictable
A growling number of questions such as "will science
researchers are now convinced find a cure for AIDS in the 21st
that the US employed 'mind century", and similar for cancer
control' weapons during certain or the common cold; but they
phases of the Gulf War. also threw :in questions such as:
Some of these new hi-tech "WiU there be a one world
super-weapons utiJlise the government Iiuling the entire
effects of radio-frequency planet?" (83% said no);
waves upon the brain. (For "Will beings who live on other
more information on brain- planets make contact with us?"
wave entrainment, please refer to Low Frequency) sound waves which
(68% said no);
NEXUS, Vol. 2, No.6.) provoke nausea and vomiting, and
severely disrupt a person's sense of ori- "Will there be a one worldwide reli-
A recent issue of Aviation Week and gion?" (91 % said no);
Space Techno·logy has revealed that the entation. These weapons have an esti-
mated effectiveness range of ~ least "Will there be a &ecood coming of
US Defense Department is modifying Jesus Christ?" (81 % said no, but in the
some missiles to carry devices capable 2,500 kilometres (1,600 miles).
same poll conducted in the USA, 53%
of generating electromagnetic pulses In addition Ito these devices, the said yes).
(EMPs) to stun an enemy without deliv- Pentagon is also studying the use of (Source: TMSun-Herald. 31 Jan '93)
ering lethal force. This type of weapon materials that can be used to make air-
is primarily designed to burn up the fields so sticky Ithey would be inopera-
electronic equipment of an enemy. SOMALIA: JUST ANOTHER
ble, or devices that could solidify the
Other devices include infrasonic gen- fuel supplies of an enemy.
Oil WAR?
erators, which produce ELF (Extremely (Source: Sunshine CoasrDaily. 27 Feb '93) NEXUS readers (hopefully) are
aware that the slaughter of several hun-
dred thousand Iraqis on the pretext of
'saving democracy' in Kuwait was basi-
cally a war to protect cenain oil compa-
nies' inJerests in Ute Middle East.
Now some international aid agencies
~ have' expressed concern that the
Somalian 'invasion' by the Bush admin-
istration was more connected to oil than
II~ charity.
While US officials in Mogadishu and

J Nairobi angrily deny the claims, there


is' no disputing the fact that four of
America's biggest oil companies,
Conoco, Amoco, Chevron and Philips,
hold exclusive exploration rights to
about two-thirds of Somalia.
These deals were lJIade with the for-
mer dictator, Mohammed Siad Barre,
. who was ousted in a January 1991
coup, and could well be rescinded by a
new govemme[ll.
(Source: Sunday Mail, 24 Jan '93)

6·NEXUS APRIL - MAY '93

.... ~ ..."I.

~)
••• GL$BAL NiEWS • ••
ON BABIES AND MEDICINE Sunday meeting of angry clients, HOLOCAUST REVISED?
promised that, for the next 30 days, all Dr. Franciszek Piper, Senior Curator
• It seems that medicine is catching
up with nature all the time. A recent State Bank customers who are in seri- and Director of Archives at the
study published in The British Medical ous dispute with the bank are to have Auschwitz State Museum, has revealed
Journal has found that a 30-second access 'to a special hotline to arrange to a Jewish researcher (on camera) that
delay in cutting the umbilical cord can direct negotiations with senior manage- "Krema I", the gas chamber shown to
improve the health of premature ment officials. The aim is for bank !hundreds of thousands of tourists each
babies. 'victims' to get a fairer deal, 'rather than year at the Auschwitz main camp, is in
• Even more recently, the 20-year-old the bank charging ahead with further fact a reconstruction, fabricated after
habit of injecting newborn babies with litigation, foreclosures and evictions. the war by the Soviet Union - apparent-
virmnin K will be stopped, following a Several thousand State Bank clients ;ly on the direct orders of dictator Josef
study indicating that it may lead to can- will be directly affected by the move, Stalin. . .
cer. the fIrst of its kind in Australia. This is a very sensitive issue. So
The study published in the August Considerable pressure was brought to sensitive, in fact, that to even suggest
1992 edition of The British Medical bear by the 8-day-old association, the gassings never happened carries lli
Journal found that the injections could which commenced in Canberra when jail sentence in countries like France,
double the rate of childhood cancer. Canada, Germany, and Austria.
400 people, mainly business propri-
Instead of injecting it, the vitamin K There is a growing number of acade-
etors, responded to a newspaper adver-
treatment will now be administered mics worldwide who are trying to
orally. tisement from a local businessman who
claims he was a victim of improper or encourage accurate and open-minded
• In the USA, the scientific uncer- research into the Holocaust.
tainty over ultrasounds has led the illegal practices by the State Bank in
question. 'Revisionists', as these people refer to
FDA (Food and Drug Administration) themselves (the media call them neo-
to advise against sonograms during A similar response in Sydney result- Nazi, right-wing scumbags), are dis-
pregnancy unless there is a problem ed in a meeting of 150 people, attended covering that Russian war records, now
such as bleeding, a family history of by top bank executives who committed becoming available with the collapse of
birth defects, or some other medical the bank to a moratorium "for 30 days, the Iron Curtain, are supporting their
reason fOF the procedure. The FDA on all except 'closed files', so that nego- claims.
specifically warns against using ultra- tiations can occur". For example, the official number of
sound 'frivolously'. For further information contact gassing victims at Auschwitz is now
• Australia will carry out a world- Bruce Miner, secretary, on (06) 296 1.1 million, whereas it used to be 4.1
fIrst study into cot death, in an effort to 3003. million people.
test claims it is linked to vaccinations. (Source: S'idnf,J Momin~ Herald, 8 Feb '93) (Source: The SQolli~ht.ll Jan '93)
Sydney research scientist Dr Viera
Sclleibner claims that about 50% of all
cot deaths in, Australia could be attrib-
uted to vaccinations in the first months
of life. She said booster shots placed
unnatural stress on young babies, caus-
ing their breathing to falter and their
hearts to stop.
Penrith paediatrician Dr Wilfrid
Levy will be testing the breathing pat-
terns of 500 babies before and after
vaccination.
VICTORY FOR VICTIMS OF
!BANKS
An unprecede'nted moratorium on " ..

....
evictions, and a freeze on all further
legal moves against customers of a cer-
tain State Bank, was won in early
February this year by the newly fOIDled
Victims of the State Bank of NSW
Committee.
$._ .",,":"... :~
Top bank executives attending the

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·7


••• GL$-BAL NEW'S ...
CElLULAR PHONE [USERS RISK These comments were taken from could become an insWlt criminal.
CANCER? David Hampson's column in The "And it appears this law is almost
Sunday Herald, on 17 January 1993. working-class specific - intellectua'ls,
Two cellular phone users in Chicago As is further pointed out, several academics and artists are exempt. II
have filed a crass action suit against small advertisements appeared in the This law is based on one report only -
Motorola lIne. and Mitsubishi
pap_ers in early January, headed "Racial by the Federal Race Discrimination
Electronic Corporation, accusing the
Vilification". Commissioner, Ms Irene Moss.
cOlPpanies of failing to explore the dan-
gers posed by their products in bringing The ads invited anyone wishing to Guess who will obtain the powers of .
them to market. comment on the legislation Ito obtain a a federal court judge if this law gets
copy by phoning (06) 250 6737. PUblic through?
A Florida man filled suit in early
February claiming a cellular p.hooe comments were to be made by Ms Moss, whose ,report gave less
caused his wife's terminal brain cancer. February. than five pages to inter-ethnic°racial
This law defines racial vilification as violence, contends that racism is pre-
The suits charge that radio-waves
"the publication, public expression or dominantly perpetrated by white,
emitted' by the instruments could have
promotion of opinions which may native-born Australians (male, of
harmful biological effects.
incite hatred, serious contempt or course).
Tests of radio waves at ,lower and severe ridicule on the grounds of race,
higher frequencies than those emitted That Australia happeI!S to be one of
colour, nat,ional or ethnic origin". the most warm-hearted, non-racist
by cellular phones, have indicated a
Penalty is up to two years in jail. nations on earth • an historical fact - is
breakdown of the calcium that coats
Racism includes "any act by which apparently lost on Ms Moss.
cell walls and which 'transmits hormon-
al messages between cell walls, and words, sounds, images or writings are That she has aired her views publicly,
have also resulted in abnormal growth communicated to the public, including by "words, images and wri,tings", could
of human cells. the display or distribution of docu- perhaps see her silenced and maybe
ments, or the broadcasting, telecasting, prosecuted by her own laws.
The suit a:Is_o notes the government is
considering whether to reduce the screening or playing of any kind of As a great man once said, "I may dis-
wattage allowed for cellular devices material; or any conduct that is seen by approve of what you say, but I will
that operate in the 900 megahertz the public, including gestures o.r the defend to the death your right to say it."
range. wearing or display of clothing, signs, Have your say, contact the Principal
(Source: The Australian. 4 Feb '93) flags, emblems or insignia". Counsel, Human Rights Branch,
"Under this law, newspapers, radio Attorney General's Department, Robert
THOUGHT CRIMES NOW IN and TV would be history. Anyone Garran Offices, Barton, ACT 2600.
waving Australian (or West Indian or (Sour:ce: "Working Class Man", by Dtlliid
AUSTRALIA Pakistani) flags at cricket matches Hampson, Sunday-Herald. January '93)
"No messing about. This is serious.
The Thougbt Police have indeed been
active. Their timing here is more than
suspicious. It borders on the devious, if
not the sinister.
"At 8.01 pm, on 16 December, the
last day of the parliamentary sitting
year, one of the most insidious pieces
of legislation ever seen in this country
was quietly slipped into Federal
Parliament.
"Known as the Racial Discrimination
Legislation Amendment Bill 1992, it
hopes to jail us, and our children, for
writing, speaking, making gestures, or
wearing T-shirts that m"ight perhaps be
considered racially offensive.
"The ,reason given for introducing
this bill at such ,a time was so that it
'could invite public comment over the
summer break'. Yes, you heard right,
over the summer break; when most
people are away from work, relaxing at
home, or in some way out of touch."

8·NEXUS Val 2, Na 13 -1993

(f)
• •• GL$-BAlNEWS ...
DRUG COMPANIES: WHAT sure to low-level radiation but with the Journal of Public Health it was admit-
latent effects of that radiation on the ted that in states with high AIDS mor-
HAVE liHEY GOT TO HIDE? iIpmune system, effects not considered tality rates, there are "associated"
Britain's prime minister, John Major, in the Whyte paper. abnormal increases in "other immune
faces his first important test on his Sakharov, the most eminent and defects", including septicemia, pnep-
resol ve to create more open govern- authoritative nuclear scientist to reveal monia, pulmomuy tuberculosis, dis-
ment, with the introduc.tion of a private the official misgivings about the health eases of the central nervous system,
member's bill aimed at abolishing the consequences of bomb-testing kept heart disease, and blood disorders.
secrecy that surrounds the licensing of secret by all parties in the anns race, Persons in this age group were born
new drugs. calculated that the tests would ultimate- between 1945 and 1965. They were,
The bill, which would open thou- ly kill minions of people worldwide, therefore, most heavily exposed in
sands of previously unpublished drugs immediately and over time. utero to the latent effects of bomb-test
trials to public scrutiny, is supported by Sakharov's theory offers the first radiation that most worried Sakharov.
numerous health and consumer groups. explanation of the great epidemiologi- Tbe consequent hann to their develop-
However, the Association of the cal mysteries of our times. The decline ing hormonal and immune systems
British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) in mortality rates for infants and old would emerge rater when, as young
has warned that if the bill becomes law peop'le in the USA and the advanced adults with impaired immune respons-
its member companies will boycott the Western European countries flattened es, they would encounter the new
British drug llicensing system. out during the years of atmospheric strains of sexuaHy transmitted viruses
Any company that wants to sell a bomb tests. There was only a moderate and bacteria that Sakharov predicted
new drug must present a vast amount of rate of decline aft.er the panial test-ban would also result from radiation-
research data to the government'S treaty was signed in 1963. In the 1980s induced mutation.
Committee on Safety of Medicines. At both routine-and accidental emissions particularly after the Chernobyl dis-
present, these data, along with tbe from military and civilian reactors coo- aster, we can no longer continue to
views of the CSM, are kept from the tinlled, and mQrtality rates are again on ignore the radiation link to immune-
public by a secrecy clause in the 1968 the rise in the USA, UK, and France. deficiency diseases foreseen by
Medicines Act. According to the UN Annual Sakharov. Sakharov complains that "to
This clause has, on occasion, left the Demographic Yearbook, in these same the best of my knowledge, no notice of
public completely in the dark over drug countries the death rate for 25-44-year- these publications of mine was taken in
safety. olds, presumably the healthiest and the West, probably because my name
(Source: New Scientist. 9 Jan '93) most productive component of the was still quite unknown ... Although
labour force, has been rising since 1983 this is no longer true in my case, the
IMMUNE SYSTEM DEFECTS for the first time since World War II. poor use Western journalists make of
FROM NUCLEAR BOMB The Atlanta Center for Disease Control their archi yes and reference works...
acknowledged this anomalous trend still amazes me."
TESTING among American males. In the (Source: Would YQU Beljeve? Spring 1993,
In the 8 February 1992 issue of The September 1990 issue of The American Number 44)
British Medical Journal, R.K. Whyte, a
Canadian paediatrician, reports some
disturbing evidence frOln officiaJ gov-
ernmental sources. Ingested fission
products from nuclear weapons tests
conducted in the atmosphere during the
1950s had caused in excess of 320,000
infant deaths in the United States and
England by 1980.
Whyte shows that the increase in
neonatal deaths in those years can be
explained only by exposure to radioac-
tive iodine and strontium injected into
the atmosphere by the superpowers'
early nuclear testing programmes.
Whyte's fmdings validate predictions
made in 1958 by the Soviet physicist
Andrei Sakharov and cited in his
recently published Memoirs. Sakharov
was concerned, however, not only with 6 __ • ..:Lk-
the immediate consequences of expo-

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·9

(S)
from their 450 kilogram warheads, missile number 37 continued
alone, flying a further 20,500 metres 110rth along the main high-
way into Baghdad before diving into its carefully pre-pro-
grammed target, the Al Rashid Hotel in the city cenlIe.
Just six hQurs before the Tomahawks were launched from US
ships in ,the Persian Gulf and southern Reg Sea, 200 delegates
from 51 countries attending an Islamic conference in Baghdad
voted overwhelmingly to back President Hussein's demands
that the illegal US 'no fly' zones over Iraqi sovereign territory
be removed. When the lone Tomahawk appI:-oached its target
six hours [ater, those same 200 delegates were preparing for bed
at the Al Rashid. Eleven delegates were seriously wounded.
There are those in the Pentagon who might try to cl!!.im this
was merely an unfortunate 'mistake', and that they had 'forgot-
ten' to mention the Tomahawks llad no need to fly over central
Baghdad when launched from the Persian Gulf or southern Red
ccurding to Bush A,dministration defence sources, the

A Tomahawk cruise missile that slammed into the Al


Rashid Hotel in downtown Baghdad on 19 January was
deflected from its 'real' Itarget in the southern suburb of
Sea against the factory complex at Zaafaraniya in the south.
On this singular occasion the Penta-gon apologists would be
trapped by the demonstrated prowess of the Tomahawk cruise
missile system. Its accuracy at the target means the Tomahawk
Zaafaraniya by anti-aircraft gunners in Baghdad city. Contrary
is guaranteed to fall within a 176 square metre circle. Iraq con-
to Bush Administration claims, the missile could not have trav-
tains just over two billion such circles in a total land area of
elled as far as the Al Rashid by mistake.
435,000 square kilometres, each equally vulnerable to the 37
At appmximately 9 pm on Sunday 19 January, American
cruise missiles launched outside Iraqi sovereign territory. The
warships in. the persian Gulf started disgorging Tomahawk
clrances of the Tomahawk hitting the Al Rashid 'by accident' are
cruise missiles. Each Tomahawk rapidly sank to an altitude of
less than one in two billion.
less. than one hundred metres as its miniature turbofan engine
steadily increased mis_sile speed to 800 kilometres per hour on a Put another way. the chances that Ithe Tomahawk in question
pre-planned flight path for Zaafaraniyaua high-tech factory was deliberately launched against the only five-star civilian
complex alleged by the Bush Administration to be a nuclear hotel in Baghdad hosling the 20Q delegates to the Islamic con-
facility. ference that backedl President Hussein earlier in the day, are
The Tomahawks would n:ot risk anti-aircraft fire over the city more than two billion-to-one in favour.
of Baghdad during the attack because Za.afaraniya is located a If me Bush Administration deliberately fired the Tomahawk
full twenty kilometres to the south-south-east of the city and at the Al Rashid Hotel in order to frighten, maim or kill the
well out of range of the latter's formidable array of anti-aif>Craft Islamic delegates, then a new dimension has been added to US
guns. Baghdad was not 'on the way' to Zaafaraniyal because 'New World Order' atrocities in the Middle East, that of
each Tomabawk was flying up from the south at treetop height attempted politiCal assassination.
and would hit the target factory and explode into oblivion long There is another new and frightening dimension. During the
before the lights of Baghdad city appeared on the horizon. Gulf 'War', the Bush Administration showed its utter contempt
As each individual TomahaWK streaked north across the dark- for the media by trapping the entire press corps inside a five-
ened countryside of southern Iraq, its inertiati guidance system star hotel in Riyadh, where jOlunalists were force-fed propagan-
was continually making microscopic adjustments t.o height and da by the US military public relations machine. With the
speed, ensuring the missile would strike inside a 15 metre Tomahawk attack OJ1 the Al Rashid hotel, base for most western
'bullseye' at the target factory. network crews in Baghdad, the US Administration had indicat-
Pentagon claims for such phenomenal accuracy were rein- ed that the lives of western journalists are of no concern what-
forced on 19 January by both American and Iraqi sources. The ever during a punitive military strike.
target was complete1y pulverised by 36 Tomahawk missiles, all President Clinton rerently went public with a statement that
of which fell inside the boundary fence of the factory complex. the United States would never countenance political assassina-
Missile number 37 was not programmed for Zai!fQ1aniya. As tion. Perhaps President Clinton will now be prepared to outlaw
its 36 cousins slammed into the factory with massive explosions 'attempted' political assassination as well. 00

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·"

CID
Earth Changes by Gordon-Michael Scallion
special energy characteristics? once a day, preferably during the cosmic-earth-
A: Depending on the purpose for same, yes. force shift time period of 3-5 pm, will aid the
Large-scale pyramids such as those found in pancreas, kidneys, liver, thymus and thyroid,
Giza, function at multiple levels, not jlust mag- thus allowing the body's natural ,immune sys-
netic forces. With the shifting of the poles, tem to build greater strength.
this monument will have completed its purpose Additionally, sleeping with the head facing
established over 12,000 years ago. With the 20-25 degrees clockwise from magnetic north
coming increase in magnetic forces in the can aid in the rebuilding of the body's primary
world, new geometric shapes will emerge to
purification organs during the sleep cycle, thus
As a result of our new Earth Changes, accomplish similar goals. The tetrahedron
shall be the dominant form. As to smaller- aiding in keeping the body in a state of bal- '
Australia audio tape, more of you have been
writing, sharing your visions of tidal waves hit- scale shapes, much more needs to be u.nder- ance. Keep the body alkaline as well, by eat-
ting Australia. The visions are similar Il$ to stood about their use whether for now, or in the ing proper food combinations.
time frame - spring '93; size of wave - .50+ future. Smaller shapes function at the etheric (TIte Earth Chan~es Report, #13, Ocl '92)
feet; and direction - one from the north-north- level - activated by consciousness.
west and one {rom the north-north-east These (The Earlh Chan~es Reporl. #16, Jan '93) Q: You have mentioned an out-of.body
visions fit my prophecy windows and descrip- .experience that took you to the year 2012
tion. Q: The time scale Ithat you give for the where you found that history had! been lost 'or
The early warning sign to watch for is activ- breakdown of our centraJ government to a distorted. Can you explain how this happens?
ity in Japan or in the Indian Ocean region of regionalised Australia is only three years. A: During Tribulation the magnetic field of
Sri Lanka If mega-quakes occur in either of How could it happen so quickly? It certainly the Earth changes its position and frequency.
these areas, then within 3-5 hours waves will doesn't look like it's possible now. As a result, electronic equipment based on cur-
hit Australia and move inland for miles. I (R. Giles, Noosa Heads, Qld) rent electrical and magnetic standards ceases ID
would suggest that 3 miles would be the mini- A: The greater changes in government will function after Tribulation. Thus, computer
mum safe distance fmm the shore. be because of economic declines. In other discs, CDs, audio and video tapes, and all digi-
The coming predicted California quake will words, I'm saying your economy has not tal formats are rendered useless. However, as
also create additional tidal waves. These come approached bottom yet It will decline severe-
has beeen the case for millennia, paper scrolls
from the north-north east, travelling at over ly so in '93-94, causing many changes.
survive. Also we find photographs, slides,
200 miles per hour and reaching a height of Earth changes also come beginning this year most film formats, microfiche - these survive.
100-150 feet. Advance notice will be only as a result of tidal waves. After the frrst tidal
Note, that ~ survive is to mean that they are
hOUTS.• waves hit, people will sense more will come,
so they move inland. Government pro- discovered at some point in the future, not nec-
I would suggest setting up a phone tree so essarily right after Tribulation.
that when one person hears of the advance granynes will be established to encourage peo-
warning events, they can call 5-10 people who ple to do sol (Lite Earlh Chanees Report, #14, Nov '92)
mturn would each call 5-10 on Itheir phone (GMS leller, 28 Jan '93)
Q: What is the single most important thing
tree, and so on.
Q: What ways do you recommend ID boost we can do to prepare for the greater Earth
Be sure ID store fresh water - I recommend 5 changes?
immunological defences against the continuing
gallons [approx. 23litres] for each person min-
environmental degradation? A: Community! Form community.
imum. Keep a small battery-type AMIFM
radio with fresh batteries. A: Keep one's thoughts in balance! It is the (The Earth Chan~es Reporl, #3, Dec '91)
thought process that is the greater destructive
([he Earlh 9bPn~es Reporl, #17, Feb '93) force for the body physical, as well as the men- . !cW~ie W1sllllill'lo olKaln ~iiiibleri~~IOM:~orjl.c~".
Q: In view of the electromagnetic changes tal and spiritual. :cop.:C1H''';t~ C"....~I ~e~, ""'~~ ~:.The·::
expected during Tribulation [1991-97J, will it As to the physical body, the greater cleans- r.t.trtx~ltltuteiRIUf:Ioll391~ Wellbn--:~.iM!.1IIH:·
be necessary ,to alter the geometry of either
three- or four-sided pyramids to maintain the
ing of the blood should be attended to. A
lemon squeezed into a glass of water and taken
,:.. ······;.i;;·•.~·~·~k·::;~: ¥~~;~~~.~r·~i(;~~;.::: .
NEXUS follow-ups
THE NEXUS HI-TECH Food growi ng areas Food growi ng areas
SUPER-COMMUNITY PROJR:T
A lot of people have long held the dream of
living and working inl an environment which
enriches them by virtue of their just being q;
there. ~.!:I %
This was evidenced by the response generat- ...
~'fi ~
~
.~ .:;,.'fi
"Co
~
ed from a small mention in the editorial of the 'fi 0 parks & gardens %....
previous issue of NEXUs.
It should be made clear at the outset, this
lc.f
O~'fi
~
~
project is not about 'fighting the system', nor is Q:
it about 'escaping cataclysmic doomsdays' -
this project, if it succeeds, willibe a demonstra-
tion of how we can live in the future.
It will be self-susJaining, plus employment-
generating, and will provide a unique living
and working environment for those involved.
This community/village would be essential- parks & gardens
ly a business project in itseU. It would gener- parks & gardens
ate and sustain an income which ,would render
it a profitable business venture.
Indeed a key element in this project is the
establishment of a 'central business district' Jto
house and utilise existing and future ventures.
People will have the option of either living
in a 'suburban'-type section of the property, or
living on' their own one-to-two acre blocks. It
is envisaged that individuals, busipes~~ and
families will purchase their own powered,
sewered, plumbed, etc. bJock from the 'body
corporate'. parks & gardens par'ks & gardens
Apart from being positicrned in a suitable
location for optimal agricultural and living
conditions, it is also necessary to fmd a loca-
tion not too far from a populated area.
It is anticipated that this project will pTQvide
~o% 0.....
~"i(l)~
,9.
~'0 ,fct'
ongoing employment for both those living on <il ~
the property, as well as for people in the sur- ~~ ~~
rounding areas. Such a position would greatly 9.» ~oP ~tf"
a,~
increase income for businesses in the 'central ~'§. parks & gardens ~~
~
business district'. An internal barter system
compatible with existing schemes like L.E. T.S. ~ !
will also be erop-loyed. '"
Food grown on the property will be pre-
pared, stored, and sold. Apart from supplying
the bulk of in-house needs, food will be sold to mini-suburban style 1 or 2 acre block style
the public via food co-op, cafe, and internal homesites homesites
restaurant
This project also aims to incorporate innova-
tive architectural designs, employing geomet- NEXUS HI-TECHI SUPER COMMUNITY PROJECT
ric and harmonic shapes into public buildings.
Other businesses forming part of the project A: Conference Centre: large centtal hall, plus conference rooms, with all mod coIlS.
include: publishing and printing: audio-visual B: Administtation Centte: library, retail shops, business offices, communications centre.
production; re.tail shop/s; conference facilities; C: Food Centte: storage & preparation area, cafe/restaUtants, food co-op.
health farm/retreat facilities; scientific research D: Media Centte: publishing books, magazines; graphic design, printing etc.
and development; on-site monthly flea mar- E: Audio & Video Centte: production and distribution of audio &: video cassettes.
kets: construction company; schools; manlllac-
turing; finance co-op.erative; sportslrelaxation F: Health Centre: acupuncture, massage, oxygen therapies, etc. + sports gym, sauna, etc.
facilitie.s, al)d 11lore. G: New Science Centre: research, fund, develop, use and sell inventions, new technology.
We are currently in the very early stages of a Other:
multi-million dollar proje.ct, a project which Bungalow & Chalets: for hire to guests attending conferences, health retteat courses, or just
will only succeeg if tbere is enough interest visiting generally.
and support for such a conc.ept
Open plan Market site: for use as a regular market for arts, crafts, food, 2nd handgoods.
To register y.our level of interest for such a
project, call our office duti.ng work hours, on
Food Growing Areas: for growing bio-dynamic, organic, perrnacultured and non-hybrid
(074) 429 280, or fax (074) 429381. foods.

Vol 2, No 13 - ] 993 NEXUS·13


NEXUS follow-ups
UPDATE ON SUBLIMINAL BRUCI CATHIE'S GRIDWORKS PROGRAMME
ADVERTISING Earth grid systems are being di$cussed more and more. The popular Becker-I-Iagens Grid
system, as illustrated on page 31, is based on the concept of the Eanh being a huge crystal,
Dear Duncan, specifically a dodecahedron intersecting an icosahedron.
After discussing the article on sub- However, one of the pion~ re~arcllen into grids ~ Capt. Bruce Cathie (Ret.). Readers
of ~ several booJa; will have noted his progress and discoveries, and will have probably
liminal advertising in Nexus Volume 2,
spent ,time trying to calculate different 'grid points' of their own.
Number 7, one of the guys at work Now, however, this has been made easy. In a mastetpiece of computer software, com·
indicated that he had a photo from an bined with easy-to-understand graphics, a computer programme has been released that will
insecticide advertisement on television make grid researchers weak at the knees.
taken around 1980-1981. Bruce Cathie discovered that the grid lines in the primary grid system were spaced at inter-
Enclosed is a copy of that photo- vals of 7.5 minutes of arc north-south, and east-west.
graph. He was experimenting at the We programmed Gridworks to print out ,the primary ,grid points in Australia, based on
time with his camera and tonk a few intervllls lof 7.5 degrees of an;. We would like to encourage readers to investigate and report
shots of the TV. to NE)[US anything of interest· such as unusual or unexplained phenomena, secret govern-
ment bases, etc. For example, it would appear that one point falls on or very near Canberra;
This picture was taken during an maybe someone can ohtaina more detailed map, or use a Global Positioning System, and let
(unknown) insecticide advertisement, us know what they find.
and he was totally unaware of the pres-
cence of the giant insect. Lat. 15.188°S. Long. 124.419°E. (WA, nonh-west, north ofCoUier Bay, in ocean.)
He did mention that the picture of the Lat 16.389°S. Long. 131.51l0E. (NT, north-west, near Victoria River DoWDS.)
Lat 17.693°S. Long. 138.62S0E. (QLD, north-west, near Doomadgee Aboriginal Reserve.)
baby was just faded in from a previoos
Lat 19.08O°S'. Lang. 14i1.S2°E. (QLD notth, neat: Clarke Rivel'.)
scene in which there were also no giant Long. 116.16S0E.
Lat.21.523°S. (WA, near Yarraloola, south-west o£ Dampier.)
flies, but there may have been some Lat 22.580°S. Long. 123.0SZ"E. (WA, nonh-cenlral, between Mt ConnaughtDII and Lake Blanche.)
smaIl flies. Lat.23.759°S. Long.I30.030"E. (NT, south-west, near Ehrenberg Range.)
The picture takes up the entire LaL 25.042°S. Lonl:-' 137.021°E. (NT, Simpson Desel1.)
screen. The advertisement was played Lat. 26.412°S. Long. 144.069°E. (QLD, south-eentral, near Quilpie.)
quite frequently at that time and there :Lat. 27.848°S. Long. ~5t.r86°E. (QLD, south-east, Darling Downs, west of Millmaran.)
was definitely no conscious re.cognition ,Lat. 2S,930·S. L9ng. U4.864°E. (WA, south-east of GeraldtQII.)
of a large blowie having a kip on a lLat.29.961°S. Long. 121593"E. (WA, south-central, north-east of Goongarrie.)
baby having a kip. lat.31.113°S. Long. 12S.3700E. ('iNA. south-~t, NuUarbor Plain. sou!h of Reid)
taL 32.372°S. Long. m.20SOE. (SA. Gawler Ranges, W.est of Jilukey IBruff.)
I hope this will be of some interest
LaL 33.721°S. Long.142.121°E. (NSW. south-west, west of Burtundy.)
(Name withheld on request) Lat.35.140 0S. Long. 149.127°E. (ACT, C&tberra.)
I[See picture below] lat. 42.391 oS. lQng.146.662°E. (TAS, south-cellIrall, near Mt Field National Park.)

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·15

®
THE EXPLOSION OF GOVERNMENli RE<;ULATIONS
ongress passed almost 2,500 new laws in 1992. Most of these laws carry both crimi-

C nal and civil penalties for violations. These laws are tumed over to any of several
dozen applicable federal agencies (i.e., FDA, EPA, BATF, SEC, IRS, OSHA, FCC,
FAA, DEA, etc.) which write tens of thousands of federal regulations each year Ito imp'e-
ment and enforce these new laws. These agencies employ close to 12'1,000 faceless
bureaucrats to write the new regulations and enforce these laws and regulations.
There were 67,715 pages of new regulations written and published (in fine print) in the
Federal Register in 1992 and that suffices as legal public notice of .the new ,laws and regula-
tions. The public are responsible for following every one of those. It would take a large
battery of Philadelphia laWY4ds to imerpret and keep up with this avalanche of new regula-
tions; but each US citizen is considered to be responsible to know, understand, and abide
by these new laws and regulations.
Heavy fines and/or jail sentences are associated with violation of many of these laws and
regulations, and tens of thousands of Americans are now sitting in jail, or have been heavi-
ly fined, or had their businesses closed for violation of these new laws and regulations. In
many instances, agents from the various agencies run stings a~ainst unsuspecting citizens
or businesses, and entrap them into violating the new law or regulation, A high profile
example is then made of the new criminal, or violation, along with the fines, prison sen-
tences, and media publicity, to intimidate the public, or other related businesses into going
along with the regulations.
America ba~ more people in prison per capita today than South Africa, Albania (llI).d
most of Eastern Europe), or even Red China. We jail 6 times as many people per capita as
Denmark, and almost 1'1 times as many per capita as Japan.
These dictatorial new laws and regulations are costing Americans literally hundreds of
billions of dollars per year, and are hamstringing tens of thousands of small businesses
which literally cannot afford the paperwork, red tape, and expenses of! ,compliance, and are
therefore forced out of business. One small example: The Agriculture Department has
made it a crime to sell peaches or nectarines which do not meet the minimum size of 2-
7/16" and 2-3/8" in diameter respectively. This new regulation (passed in 1992) will con-
demn to rot over 500 million perfectly edible peaches and nectarines per year.
The US Attorney General has already filed for a federal injunction @Jld a $100 per box
fme against California's largest nectarine and ,peach farmer, who was selling the forbidden
frui~ at a bargain price of under $10 per box to thankful irmer city residen~. The fl!rnler is
now a criminal who will be fmed heavily for his crime. But meanwhile, the Agriculture
Department has 'asked the California Nectarine Administrative Committee to undertake
market research to determine the effect of fruit size on consumer preferences.

ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
These may be the most dangerous of all, because tthe Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act,
and a host of other environmental laws and regulations passed in recent years give the gov-
ernment draconian, dictatorial controls over virtually every business and person, over every
piece of private property, every car, and every action of every American in the US,
Even as thousands of murderers and rapists are turned loose by our justice system each
year on technicalities, room is being made in our jails for honest law-abiding citizens. A.
case in point is a Vietnam vet and environmental consultant, Bill Ellen, who is now serving
a six month prison sentence for a 'wetlands' violation. (The US attorney had pushed for a
three year sentence but the judge was more lenient.)
What was Ellen's crime? In 1987, Ellen, who had a strong !background as a conserva-

16·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993

@
tionist, agreed to do a project to construct 10 ponds for migrating Guns are often drawn and if the 'victim' of the attack makes any sud-
geese and wildlife Qn the Eastern ,shore of the Chesapeake Bay in den move, he is often shot.
Maryland. Ellen was to build the $7 million, 103 acre wildlife sanc- This writer personally knows of at least a dozen individuals (none
tuary on a 2,000 acre private estate. Ellen, who knew environmental ever convicted 'of a traditional crime such as murder, rape, robbery,
laws well, got all the proper permits, and complied with all those etc.) who have had their homes or businesses invaded by local, state
law's and regulations as written in iJ.987. However, in 1988, the defi- or federal law enforcement SWAT teams in this manner. The expe-
nition of 'wetland' was expanded to include potholes that collect rience is terrifying for the individual, families, or employees
water during rains. ,involved. Shades of Nazi Germany" Red China, or the old Soviet
Ellen, who already had permits, was unconcerned with the new Union!
regulations because the land was so dry that work~ ha.!i to wear
dust masks. However, Ellen was jrpicted for 'wetlands' violations TOWARD A STATE OF NATIONAL EMERGENCY
after one ,government agency told him he could continue landfill Over the past few years, a number of references to a St.ate of
work and another told him he could not. Acting on the former, he National Emergency (or martial law) have
ha~~~ ~:~e~~r:~~:~:~i~u~:~~:::;~,.=g=.~:.,,=.==~==~"="_:'~"":"=d:"=".===.,:.:.,.:.=
. ,~ been hinted at or suggested by government
"=,,:,,,:.. officials, congressmen, etc. usually to fight
toured the iJ.and after three days of heavy rains the drug war, crime, etc. Indeed, martial
and indicted iEflen for "desecration of wet- law was imposed in Los Angeles (and was
lands". He was sentenced to six months in begged for by the pUblic) to quell the mas-
jail where he now sits. The owner of the sive riots in the spring of '92, and' could
estate escaped jail as an accomplice to all. have been declared nationally had the riots
environmental ('wetlands') crime by paying a continued to spread during the summer of
$1 million fme and making another $1 million '92.
dDnation to the National fish and Wildlife MARTIAL LAW,!by defInition, is "A
Federation. system of government under the direction
of military authority. It is an arbitrary
POLICE STATE TACTICS kind of law, preceding directly from mili-
US military and National Guard personnel tary power and having no immediate ,con-
have been undergoing training and exercises stitutional or legislative sanction. It is
for several years for house-to-house searches·-..···,,· " , ,;.0--.'... . , ,.• ; ..; only justified by necessity, and supersedes
(presumably for drugs or guns), for crowd all civil government Martial law lis built
control, ·and for domestic 'counter-terrorism measures'. Roadblocks on no settled principle, but is arbitrary and in truth no law.."
are being randomly set up on highways around America by local, Suspension ,of the writ of habeas corpus (Le., right to trial by judge
state, or federal ,officials to cond.uct driver's licence checks or war- and jury and protection from illegal imprisonment) is 'a major ele-
rantless spot checks of cars or their loccupants for drugs, liquor, or ment of martial law. As Justice Blackstone wrote: "In this case, ilie
fIrearms; local ot' ,state police or military helicopters are, with .great- nation parts with a portion of its liberty and suspected persons may
ly increased frequency, overflying cities, towns, neighbourhoods, then be arrested without cause assigned."
and individual 'houses at low levels (looking for drugs, for surveil- The potential for a State of National Emergency or martial law in
lance, or for intimidation purposes). America over the next three to five to seven years (perhaps to deal
In late '91, an 'urban warfare training exercise' by the US Marines with riots, the war 01\ crime or drugs, a financial/banking crisis or
brought a dozen military helicopters swooping low over San some manufactured crisis) is a very real possibility. Indeed aspects
Francisco rooftops, prompting hundreds of frightened calls to radio of a state of emergency (or martial law) and me suspension of con·
stations and the local police, who denied any knowledge of the exer- stitutional rights already exist in America today! Over a dozen
cise. Hundreds of military vehicles (black and with no markings) Executive Orders have been passed by Congress over the past few
are being observed in various IpartS of the US, in many instances decades giving the President total dictatorial control over every
manned by personnel in black uniforms (with no insignias). Denial aspect of American life if the President decides to trigger and imple-
of any knowledge oJ thes.e helicopters, vehicles or personnel from ment same. F~A would then go into action, firearms would be
local, state, and federal offici.ats ll1most always foliows frightened confIScated, and many (,if nut all) constitutional rights and guaran-
enquiries from citizens. tees would be suspended.
Over the past two years, as training and! enforcement exercises Under a full state of emergency, tens or hundreds of ,thousands of
have increased, SWAT ,tearns in black Ninja suits and other govern- Americans (guilty of hate, enviroru'nental, fJn8pcial, or gpn control
ment marshals and enforcement teams have had an increasing num- 'crimes') are likely to be imprisoned. Perhaps this is why George
ber of 'shootouts with innocent victims who are characterised by the Bush moved in recent years to double US prison capacity, and why
g-overnment as 'religious fundamentalists', 'white supremacists', 'left under a national security directive called, "Rex 84", signed in 1984
or right wing extremists', 'tax protesters', etc. by President Reagan, eleven huge federal detention centres were
In August '92, a mob of Federal agents surrounded the remote activated in California, Arizona, AItansas, Wisconsin, New York,
Idaho home of Randy Weaver (wanted on a misdemeanour warrant) Pennsylvania, Virginia, Georgia, and Florida.
and his family, and in a ten-day siege shot and killed his wife and
14-year-old son. In October '92, a 'drug raid' against a 6 I-year old ElIECT1RONIC SURVEillANCE AND COMPUTERISATION
wealthy, partially blind Ventura County, California r~ident, DQnald OF THE PUBLIC
P. Scott, resulted in Scott being shot dead by Los Angeles County Computers and other high-tech breakthroughs over the past few
Sheriff's deputies. No drugs were found, nor did Scott resist arrest years have given the US (and other governments) the ability to lis·
The general tactic (whether used by local or federal police offi- ten to, monitor, track, and keep citizens under surveillance (from the
cials, or hoth) is to overwhelm (and intimidate) the 'suspected' cradle to the grave) that were not available to Hitler in Nazi
money launderer, environmental or fmancial 'criminal', gun law vio- Germany or to the communists in Russia, China, or the East bloc
lator, etc. by invading his home or bU'sineu with a SWAT team until very recently.
and/or federal marshals or agents numbering 10 to 20 or 30 people. In 1974, the government had 3.9 billion records of individuals

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·17

Qj'")
store<Un the personal data systems of 97 federal agencies. The TOWARD A CASHLESS SOOIETY: THE WAY ON CASH
Department of Health, Education and Welfare had 693 separate AND PRIVACY
data systems with no million personal records including marital, Present US government attitudes toward cash and people who
fInancial, health, etc. data stored. The Treasury Department had use it are reminiscent of Nazi Germany. tPolice agencies nation-
910 data systems with 853 million records; the !Justice Departm~t wide consider anyone carrying a large quantity of cash to be
175 data systems with 181 million records; the Defense m
involved cti!:ninal activity unless they can prove otherwise. For
Department 2,219 data systems w,ith 312 million records stored, example, an Iowa man stopped for a traffic ticket ,pulled his driver's
etc. licence out of his wallet, which also contafued $7,000 in cash. He
These numbers (from US News, and World Reporl) are 20 years was on his way to a sale that required cash - much like the govern-
old. The computer files on Americans today are probably ten times ment's own auctions of seized property. The policeman confiscat-
~argerand are linked together between mosJ government agencies. ed the cash because he didn't think that ,a man dressed in overalls
Like it or not, your life is now an open book. Using your Social should be 'carrying that much cash.
Security number, any government agency, or agent (local, state, or A subscriber from New Jersey recently described the following.
federal) can now tap into dozens (or hundre<ls) of computer data incident in a letter to your editor. He was recently driving down
bases on every American. A total and comprehensive computer the New !Jersey Turnpike in an 18-foot Hertz rental truck. He
profile exists on virtually every agult American. stopped at the last toll booth at the end of the Turnpike near
Now the government has developed a DNA (genetic) data base Wilmington, Delaware, and paid the toll with a $50 bit! - t!teonly
on 1.5 million US milit.ary servicemen cash he had on him. The attendant ltold bim
and is experimenting with same on ted- ";$.:l'l<i~.·~.' "".:·:"i~';*':':;<i'~*,#*-!~N~~~;;,;<:,.;jtk ...diiil;'.(W:"'~~i;H?ji;:';';1~~!l . to wait a minute and then went to the• front
eral pnsoners. Most Amen.cans are not ~'3i ..::::%~~,*~.~.>.(;.:;;I\tf:;'¥4};J?:~Wil~'1i$~t,,)ti,i:r~l~,.i.I
• • ~:':~:(;»;'"'' .... ~"'~.,.:-x~.>;:.&::'·:· ..,:~.. x~ "iXNoi-:""':':',;::~:;,:~:: ~.. ::~:::, ' '.~Y~. '
of the truck and wrote down the licence
aware that the~r phone .calls, telexes, 'J;'.:~l~~'tlt*~~~l8~!~~.~pr.~.J9:.r.,t~~~~~~.:l) pla.te number, a de~c~ption of .the sub-
·...·xx·AA......···': ~<xt···,'<X· ~,,·,·~~ ...~~8x~~.> ·"x.'.....,... ,v.v...:·.. ,o,'.<-.:«-<:...gf.~~' ...

faxes' and certam US mail are regularly ~<~~iF~,,*~t<¥.':~:::::':jH'~.:~~'iz.o;:;k;j}';;,:;;:~~"::i:"':;""'i';~'~~"r~i@.), scrIber (who was drIVing) and hIS son (a
. . . "#,,,!,*,~,M:;*%W1:l~~";':f~~~~~'~'t.;,;;;:"W:'t«\;l%*:'~;" . . .
momtored by federal agenCIes. r~I'n::'<':O·f·t:·[:}';(r:'m·,/':'o/':O',v.;r';.;j's":V1·· '0"'0' ~8i~a'·';'·f;·"S<:'O,·: .t ( passenger m the truck). Whlle the driver
Phones can now be made 'hot on the W::;,,;< . ,{lJ~;,W::::fI/A;::'1'~f.1$~~'i;X':":~"~i-" asked about this, the attendant stapled the
hook' (i.e" turned into microphones r~~h~H'!'Cking"::tlieearth"s;'f:¥~S~$50 bill to the government form and told
~cecno~~~~ ~~n: 1u:9~n~e;~~/~;~~~ ii~~Hri6i~~~,a,f~trl1~~~gi{i~:g"((~i~i~~ ~~~in~~~sa $~ :e$)~re~~~
>·lX"~:.,+·~,, . ··:~'.\'>·f··- ,X;-¥, '. "'I.1ot>,' ,'.')J",~ '(>,.~'~:"
':' <P'".·, _" ,w:-:~, iX"~'::B
for anyone
General Accounting Office entitled :~m<'::;:@drn"~~:id1:iClf':"L;f~'t"'e":':c":"L:n;;:;;'o'····:;J·O;··:·;g·;~.1.%t®1~~~@ In Florida, TM Orlando Sentinel recently
FBI Advanced CommunlcatlOn lJ:is;.~;li~*~{i'1:oi~3~ji/i':~;";$!:'>:"~i':;fl:;;'!i"':~':;.'\ll.'ii:~.,r:,,;:~;:;>:;;J!lli;:;:;jca:med a senes entItled. HIghway Robbery
" - . • ·"~"<~"'J,~:w.11 .'.,.,_.11.. ,.""" . ~~(:»:::::::,:t;(~$~ • . . • n.

Techno I ogles· Pose W'Iretappmg .~~m~'~3'~;~~mw'fI'·;;;;;','''',,*:;~X;(;'''''':''''


:"'{-~~~;"~"'~''''''''':'~:'''.li;:'.;''''. """ ..,:.~.".:.".::.;.,.,,,~,;,;,>- <~"":"~""i:&::~~~~""iW"l
":"i"".'.".~iI';,.","':::'S· ;..,.,n: on 1-95 "whIch
. .
descnbed how po I"lee seIze
~""""~:~ii""""''''''':'''/I''''''''X'NX<>X('';'' .... ,·%I·"-""lt~,*~
Challenges", it is the intention of the ~>;dl~~i.~1~&i~'fu.,.~~!.;f,\~i~Hi~Wit~ :~Jk:, ,~~~*{<;~ your cash for even min.pr traffic violations
,
fBI to tap all phones in America
. ., !ii-:)2t~)¥* . i~.'.~.~.~Hrf~;0~.h~i¥~'.~.'i@~.£llf.. ';'<:~.:~.·.·'. ;.:,.~F.~~rt~~
4t:§~0}E\3{;~~~:~~f:1;UJ ·'*.t#?4~f.j~fr~}~~~~1k·f;~~~f;~~~~r~~~:~i;'~
... ~}k". ~k~~;::l. on the basis that the cash is "probable.pro-
. I' .
Every square mch of the earths :s.ur- \;<":~x'.:,ikli..o\l:<,lJi.-·.:··:, "':0&:·':,,,,;;:<.o,¥:;,,,;!iii::~::':li<:<,;,'f~',,!C?il:,,,;.;;,ll ceeds of drug transacUons. At aIrports,
face can now be monitored by satellite ticket agents and security personnel are
so that all persons and activities can now be watched. The govem- alert to anyone carrying large quantities of cash. Why? Because if
ment, in conjunction with AT&T, has developed computerised their tipoff leads to a sejzure, they get a fmder's fee of 10-25%. In
voice recognition on phones and also picks up and records (through a seizure recently described on 60 Minules, a DEA agent testified
the National Security Agency) key words from conversations, in court that the person he seized cash from was clmYing $lOO~,
which trigger the NSA Itape recorders. $50s, $208, and $lOs, "which were all widefy used in the drug
Several yel)rS ago, US passports were made computer-readable. trade." Of course, this only leaves $1 s. and $5s for everyone else.
Now, US, Canadian, Australian, German and other European Drug residue on your cash provides 'pro.bable cause' for its
authorities are installing computers in airports which will not only seizure. Tens of thousands of cash seizures are made each yeas
read passports, but also hand prints via infrared security readers. bec'ause dogs allegedly identified the cash as containing drug
This means data banks of computerised hand prints will be dever- residue. And yet, according to the DEA's own lab studies, it is the
oped over the next few years and linked to other governmental data government itself (i.e., the Federal Reserve) that contaminates most
bases, so that an instant computer record of an individual willibe cash in its currency sorting operations. Rollers on the Fed's cash
flashed on a screen simply by waving a person's hand over a gro- sorting machines are contaminated with cocaine resich!e (20 to 100
eery store-type infrared scanner. Does this sound farfetched? This times higher than those found on the average bill). Various studies
system is being set up at the Kennedy and Newark airports and a'ir- dating back to 1985 show that anywhere between 80% and 97% of
ports in the aforementioned countries at this writing. cash circulating has drug residue on it.
Biometric identification Isystems are now exploding onto the What happens to the seized cash? It's deposited into a govern-
scene with computerised fingerprint comparisons, identifIcation ment bank account to be recirculated. No effort is made to take it
cards, debit and smart cards, driver's licences, proposals for a bio- out of circulation, -according to affidavits from 21 agencies that
metric national ID card, a biometric card to replace welfBre participate in cash seizur~. If you want your cash back, you must
cheques and food stamps, biometric passports, and biometric book- go to court to prove that the funds were earned legitimately. If you
ing oE prisoners by law enforcement officers. Biometric technolo- win, the government always appeals under the strategy that th~y
gi~ include fmgerprint comparison, retina scanning, DNA analy- will litigate until you run out of money. So, does this make carry-
sis, voice recognition, hand geometry, body odour, body heat pat- ing c.ash illegal? In effect it does!
terns and brain wave analysis. In other words, 1001 ways of ,track- Illustrative of the government at~itude toward cash was the
ing the earth's inhabitants are emerging via new high technology. November '92 article by David Warwick in TM Futurisl magazine,
Cars can be tr~ked v,ia small implanted computerised receiving entitled 'The Cash Free Society". The article c'1aims that "cash has
devices linked with government satellit.es. The US government has been the root of much of the social and economic evil.
actually spent $3 billion over the past 15 years to develop thi.s peo- Ridding society of its cash could make most criminal activity
pie/vehicle tracking system. Now the enct location of ,trucks, disappear, from purse-snatching to drug trafficking. Electronic
police cars, and! other vehicles is beginning to be tracked in the US money systems promise to lead the way to a cash-free, crime-free
via this method. society."

18-NEXUS Voll, No 13 -1993

®
The article admits that there are $300 billion in ,legitimate cash banker, stockbroker, car dealer, jeweller, coin dealer, or any busi-
transactions in America each year, but argues that the 40 million ness accepting cash (or the above-listed cash equivalents) is consid-
Americans who primarily use cash must adjust. Warwick recom- ered a money-laundering violation and can result in heavy fInes, and
mends the insthuting of a federal debi.t card system for all 'transac- even imprisonment. Personal cheques, money market fund cheques
tions, down to buying gum or a newspaper, paying for a parking and bank wiLes are not presently reportable on form 8300s. [NB:
meter or toll phone can, or even leaving a tip. Electronic transfers Murder, rape, and armed robbery now result in smaller and less fre-
would "constitute legal tender". There 'would be no such thing as a quent jail tetfil.s or fInes ~ the new federal crime of money-laun-
"withdrawal", only a "transfer". A recent trial run was the govern- dering. In fact, the penalties for money-laundering are 10 times
ment use of debit cards for food stamps and the paying of Marines more severe than the same crime prosecuted as tax evasion.]
at Paris Island via debit cards,
BUSH'S INTERNATIONAL STRUCfURING AND
MONEY-LAUNDERING LAWS EXPANDED FORFEITURE LAW
In the former Soviet lInion, if the, government wanted to appre- Toe November '92 issue of Low Profile, written by Mark
hend and imprison someone who had committed no crime, they Nestmann ~P.O. Box 84910, Phoenix, AZ 85071) carried an omi-
charged lhim with the catch-all crime of 'hooliganism'. In America, nous article on America's latest money-laundering legislation. On
the catch-al~ crime used against organised crim.e fIgures or other 29/10/92, George Bush, who pushed through more money-launder-
Americans has for years been RICO statutes or simply 'conspiracy'. ing, anti-currency, and anti-privacy legislation in his single term
But in ,recent years the government has created a new catch-all than any other US president, signed the "Annunzio-WyHe Anti-
crime, punishable by imprisonment, confIscation of property, heavy money-laundetiDg Act" which: 1) Prohibits a bank or fmancial
f'mes, or all of them. It is called 'money-laundering'. institution from disclosing to a depositor the fact that their account
Most Americans suppose 'money-laundering' refers primarily to is the subject of a money-laundering operation; 2) Requires lUI
the hidden, laund.ered, movement of cash profits from llrog geals. fmancial institutions or others who sell or redeem monetary ins_tru-
Wrong! It refers today to almost any 'financial crime', 'broken fman~ ments (cash, cashier's cheques, money orders, or traveller's ch~ues)
cia! regulation, use of cash, avoidance of government cash reporting or transmit funds by wire, to maintain records of any international!
laws, unreported foreign bank accounts, unreported transfer of transactions, and make them available for warrantless inspection;, 3)
funds, or virtually anythin'g the government bureaucrats want it to Permi1s the Treasury to require financial institutions to report "sus-
mean. The definition is vague and ever- picious transactions" that could involve a vio-
expanding. lation of any law or regulation. The institu-
IRS agents are greatly accelerating tion is not allowed to notify the "suspect" of
money-laundering cases in situations the report; 4) Permits the government to seize
where there is obviously no criminal monetary instruments or financial accounts
intent, and certainly no involvement what- even if it cannot specifIcally identify the prop-
soever with drugs or drug money. erty allegedly subject to forfeiture (in other
Remember, the IRS considers money- words, any other property of the "accused"
laundering to be any effort you make to can be seized); 5) Prohibits any action to
disguise your assets or avoid completing a structure or assist in structuring the transfer of
federal currency transaction of border- lllQDetary ajsets across US borders in !IDY
crossing form:. effort to avoid reporting the transfer. Any
[f a tax case can be called 'money-laun- property involved in any structured transac-
dering', it is no longer civil, but criminal, tion is subject to forfeiture. 6) Applies the
with large potential criminal sentences and weight of the anti-money-laundering laws to
fines. The government's growing and _"-·-·'··'."":':">i"l'''''~''"~C~'-/':':''''O''W'·'C~- <i''''X''~~>- '..':"'i,',M·' those who conspire to violate them, even if no
expanding money-laundering laws are .-:::''''' ,,,,"..,,,,A-.~;' ~'oX"",. ~.'it",?!:;;;",''!'-:'',':i:i,,~''-:-' ·x"" '·>~l-·:" violation takes place; 7) Permits any federal
becoming the basis for a total financial agency to share any data it holds with any
dictatorship in America, all under the guise of fighting the drug war. other federal agency; 8) Permits the government to confiscate the
The first thing the Nazis did in the 19305 to establish control over assets of people even if they are held in foreign countries (this is the
their population was to establish 'money crimes' that were punish- culmination of years of negotiations with other countries); 9) It
able by forfeiture and imprisonment. Half a century la,ter, the same allows the US government to prosecute foreign banks who use US
thing is happening here. The war on drugs is a classic govemnrenl banks to launder money; and 10) It empowers banking regulators to
power grab. revoke the charter of institutions convicted of money-laundering,
The Treasury Department has published a booklet entitled These provisions are designed to terrorise bankers and force them to
"Money-Laundering: A Banker's Guide to Avoiding Problems", become the money police for the government.
which contains a list of suspicious activities that the Treasury As Mark Nestmann wrote in his 10192 Low Profile newsletter:
Department says fIt the profile of a 'money-launderer'. These activi- ''this bill greatly strengthens the goveIJUl'fent's hand in money-laun-
ties ,include: 1) Paying off a delinquent loan all at once; 2) dering and forfeiture cases. The 'vague' intemationa~ structuring
Changing currency from small to large denominations; 3) Buying ban is particularly frightenjog. In l!leory, 3Jlyone transferring more
cashier's cheques, money orders, or traveller's cheques for less than than $10,000 in monetary instruments in installments below that
the reporting limit (i.e., under $10,000); 4) Acting nervously while amount across a US border without notifying the Customs Service
making large transactions with cash or monetary instruments; 5) could be illegally s~turing their transactions. They would then be
Opening an account and using it as collateral for a loan; 6) subject to criminal penalties and forfeiture."
Presenting a transaction that involves a [arge number of $50s and
$100 bills; and 7) Presenting a transaction without counting the cash WHEN MONEY-LAUNDERI!.'lG ME.ETS THE
ftrst. ENVIRONMEN,TAL POLICE
Any non-reporting of cash transactions over $10,000 on a form Mark Nesunann wrote in a recenl Low Profile newsletter: "The
8300 ([HAT NOW INCLUDES CASHIER'S CHEQUES, MONEY July 1992 ABA Banking ]ourTUJl describes how the Environmental
ORDERS OF ANY KIND AND TRAVELLER'S CHEQUES) by a Protection Agency (EPA) can use money-laundering laws againsl

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·19

®
lenders that provide money to corporate polluters. 1986; was found guilty; [med $200,000; had his $62,000 forfeited
"The Crime Control Act of 1990 permits the EPA to apply to the IRS; and was sentenced to five years in the federal peniten-
money-'laundering laws in criminal violations of most federal air tiary, all for the new federal money-laundering crime of Buying
and water pollution legislation. A lender may be convicted of nine cashier's cheques with his own cash. That is structuring flaws
money-laundering if it advances more ,than $10,000 to a company in action and that sounds more like Nazi Germany than the
that it knows or has reason to believe has violated environmental Amqica most of us grew up in.
laws. Violators may be fined $500,000 or twice the -value of the n the government's case is shakier (or less clear-cut) than the
property involved, whichever is greater. A m,axlmuID 20-year principal's case (which, unfortunately, was a classic textbook Title
prison sentence may also apply to the individual(s) approving the 31 violation), their ploy will be to drop the criminal charges if you
loan." allow your assets to be seized without going to trial, and/or pay a
''The courts have defined 'proceeds' as moneys that may have stiff fine. This is now very common in. drug kingpin cases. The
been co-mingled with other, legitimate funds. As a result, all drug dealer goes free, the police keep his assets. 'Structuring' is a
receipts coming from a facility violating environmental laws, prop- strict liability statute. That means that even if there's no criminal!
erty acquired from such receipts, and perhaps even the company intent, even if you earned the money legitimately, unless you can
controlling the facility, may be 'proceeds'. All are subject to forfei- prove that the transactions were unrelated, the government keeps
ture under federal law. " your assets.
''The article suggests that lenders should adopt 'due diligence' If the government decides to prosecute you criminally, in addi·
measures to avoid lending to companies in violation of environ- tion to the mandatory prison sentence and fine, they can legally
mental laws; make personnel aware of environmental and money- confiscate not just the money involved in the transaction, but any
laundering laws." assets associated with the 'structured' funds. For example, if you
'structure' a withdrawal of $10,000 in cash (over any 12 month peri-
od) from a $1 million bank account, the gQvemment can seize the
entire $l million. The seizure can proceed even without a criminal
conviction or indictment, just like the forfeiture laws.
~. .,,~._.~. . =.. =.._=.:=..=.=.
= ..
_ ..
: __ _!!!!~.. _~,..=..=====.=. ~..~...=.~!:.__~.~=_="
The average person might say, "Well, the
government would never come after anyone
who was totally innocent." But that's not
true, he misses the point! The IRS admits
that 85% of the people accused of 'structur-
ing' committed no other crime than seeking
to protect their privacy. The courts have
upheld numerous criminal structuring con-
victions for violations that concealed no
criminal activity. If the government wins
the conviction, the judge must sentence the
criminal "to a mandatory prison sentence".
This gives the lie to the argument that
money-laundering/structuring laws are
enforced to get drug dealers and fight the
Wllli on drugs. The fact is that it is far easier
to convict an honesJ law-abiding citizen and
confiscate his property than to go after a real drug dealer who has a
battery of high-priced lawyers and accountants, and who might
even shoot back.
In US vs Aversa, a federal judge delivered a scathing critique of
the government's use of the 'structuring' statutes. Aversa's 'Crime'
was initiating a secret loan to help keep information about his
wife's infertility private. The loan triggered reports of 'suspicious
transactions' in his bank account.
In conclusion, money-laundering and !structuring' laws have linle
if anything to do with the war on drugs. That is simply the excuse.
They are a legal way for the socialist government bureaucrats to
plunder and confiscate the peoples' as'sets (as in Nazi Germany or
Russia), they are a way to enrich the government's debt-ridden cof-
fers, they are a way to drive us toward the cashless society, and
they are a way to place Orwellian-type controls on the American
people.
This trend is liIcely to get worse under Bill Clinton, judging Iby a
recent speech he gave in Michigan to a group of prosecutors (as
reported by Money-Launderj~g Alerl): "If we really want to get the
big criminals, we can focus more on the .,lDo..D~y-lallIlde.ring aspects
of their operations, and use the federal authorities to deal with
financial transactions that cross state lines, that deal with federally
insured institutions, that deal with those things that the states will
never be competent to deal with. That is what the federal govern-
ment ought to focus on, go after Ithe money!"

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·21

®
ASSET FORFEITURES: HOW THE GOVERNMENf the hard way when federal agents raided them and confiscated a
PLUNDERS THE PEOPLE VIA SEIZURE LAWS small amount of marijuana worth, at most, a few hundred dollars.
George Orwell's 1984 has arrived in the US$A. Just as in Nazi Crim.inally, this would have been treated as a youthful first trans-
Genn<!lly in tlte 19308 and in Russia from 1917 to 1990, any gov- gression of a few Iteenagers. But under the seizure laws, the police
ernment agent or agency in America today can confiscate or seize took the fraternity houses themselves, which were worth 'about one
almost any property from any American and there is very little the million dollars.
citizen can do to protect hims.elf. We are witnessing the death of In Iowa, a woman accused (not convicted) of shoplifting a $25
property rights in America, human rights and all other freedoms sweater saw her $18,000 car (which had been specially equipped fOF
will follow. her handicapped daughter) seized as the potential 'getaway vehicle'.
In 1984, govemment seizures of so-called 'illegal assets' totalled! In Portland, Oregon, the police raided a bar and arrested a bartender
$30 million. In 1991, these seizures totalled $644 million (not (not the owner) on suspicion of bookmaking. There was zero ev~­
including IRS levies) for a net increase of Z,047%. (Seizures in dence pointing to the bar owner's involvement--the police docu-
1992 probably exceeded $750 million.) A total of $2.6 ibilliQn in ments didn't even mention him. But the police seized his business
US citizens' assets have been seized since 1985, the Government .auyway. The deputy district attorney in charge said she didn't have
Asset Forfeiture Office proudly boasts. Eighty percent of these evidence to press criminal charges against the owner "so we seized
seizures never resulted in an ~st or conviction, indicating that the business."
most are being taken from innocent people. PR08ABLf CAUSE
According to USA Today, there are now 1,000 forfeitures per The government or police do not have to show any roore than
week in the US, or 52,000 per year. Assets seized in order of fre- 'probable cause' that a crime has been committed, the same standard
quency are: [) cash or other monetary instruments; 2) vehicles, which for centuries has been app1ied to search warrants. So the
boats, planes; 3) bank and brokerage accounts; 4) real estate police can now seize your home with no more evidence than it once
(including your home); and 5) pension and profit-sharing plans. took to search it.
Police or government seizures now pose a seemingly random, but 'Probable cause' can be when the police or government agency
still, very real and terrifying, threat to everything we have worked 'suspects'racketeering (which is broadly defined, ,it can. mean almost
so hard to earn and save over the years. It is frightening to realise anything), drug possession, drug trafficking, money-laUndering (See
that ,if yol,lT teenage son or daughter hosts a party at your house,and Section ITA above), robbery, murder, tax evasion, extortion, envi-
one of the guests brings a few joints of marijuana, you can lose your ronmental crimes, violation of the Ifrading with the Enemy Act, vio-
entire house and everything in it lunder many local or state forfeiture lation of the Emergency Economic Powers Act, gun 'control viola-
laws. (Federal forfeiture laws will apply only if the substance is tions, and more than 100 suspected unlawful activities named in leg-
present in saleable quantities.) islation.
Asset fprfeiture is an unconstitu-
tional process (though considered ".:.,,"""s."...... '.,. ".., ""'.. '''"""oco..'
'>' . • ........ ""'.'. 'w" ... ,~.,_,
legal according to new socialist
laws and regulations) which allows
the government or any police
agency to siroply 'accuse' or 'sus-
pect' you of a crime (but not formal-
ly charge you), and then seize your
propeny. In most instances there is
no .arrest, no trial and no conviction.
You are presumed guilty until you
can prove yourself innocent. The
plain fact is that the great majority
lilf people who llave property seized
from them by the police are inno-
cent and law-abiding. One study
showed that in 80% of the seizures,
the police never even filed charges against the victiros of the crime.
seizures, or, in some cases, filed charges and then dropped them. Bill and Karen Munnerlyn, recently profiled on 60 Minutes, are
The police need nOI warrant to seize your car, your cash, your classic examples of (7) above. Bill Munnerlyn used to own a Las
business, your house, your bank account, your investments, your Vegas air freight service. Rut on 19/3/S-9, Bill flew an old man and
retirement plan, or your personal property, with no due process. four padlocked blue plastic boxes to a California airport. Unknown
They don't even have to formally charge you with a crime. There to Bill, his passenger was a convicted c01:aine trafficker, and the
are hundreds of local, state and federal !laws and thousands of regu- boxes contained nearly $.3 million in cash from a drug deal. An
lations on the books under which the government can seize your infonnant tipped off the DEA as to the nature of the cggo ;mdl pas-
property. senger, and both the passenger and Bill were arrested upon arrival.
Furthermore, as Financial Privacy Report (PO Rox 1271, The jet, the blue boxes, and even $8,500 in cash Bill's passenger had
Barnesville, MN 55337) says, there's no cap on the value of the paid for the flight were seized.
seized assets. They can take. expensjve cars and homes for even the Bill was released t,bree days later with no charges, but the DEA
most minor 'suspected' violation. You might be under sU'spicion of kept the plane, and the US Attorney prosecuting the seizure said it
violating some statute for which the maximum penalty, if convicted was jus..!ifiab1e because the plane flew into the Los Angeles area,
crimina:lly in a court of law might be a $500 or $1,000 fine. But which is "known as a centre of illegal drug activity" and that was
under these laws, the police or government can seize your property sufficient 'probable cause' to seize the plane. In October '90, Bill
worth 100 or even 1,000 times as much as the maximum fine, and took the government to court and won a jury trial. But the judge
they don't need to convict you to do it. overturned the jury's verdict
Three fraternities on the University of Virginia campus found out
Continued on page 62
22.NEXUS Voll, No 13 -1993

~
The Rocketing Cost of Health Care

M
~cal 'ignorance' is costing tUs billions', reads a hea5iing in
: The Daily Telegraph Mirror of 24 February, 1991, over
an article as follows:
"Poor funding and a lack of knowledge about preventive
medicine has led to a $2 billion blow-out in public health
spending, experts say.
The~ costs rose nationally from $26 billion to $28 bil-
lion [in one yead - an average of $1700 per person -
according to figures to be released by the Australian
Institute of Health."
Writing in an article in The Sunday Telegraph on October 27,
1991, the Federal Minister for Community Services and Health,
Brian Howe, expresses his concern:
"Health care costs a huge amount of money: $1796 for
every man, woman and child ...
The trouble is that if Medicare becomes too costly, this
country can't afford to keep footing the bill: which means
that individual Australians will have to foot the bill instead
or go without the necessary health care.
Medicare is getting increasingly expensive. Total gov-
ernment expenditure on Medicare benefits rose by 70 per
cent between 1984-85 and 1989-90, and by another 11.2
per cent in 1990·91.
Before the changes in the Budget were announced,
Medicare benefits were expected to rise by another 28 per
cent in real terms over the three years to 1994-95: that's
approximately $1.3 billion ...'"
The rocketing cost of health care in Australia is not unique to
this country, but is typical of all industrial nations. In his book
Limits to Medicine (1979), prominent medical historian, Ivan
IIIich, writes:
"During the past twenty years, while the price index in
the United States has risen by about 74 per cent, the cost of
medical care has escalated by 330 per cent. Between 1950
and 1971 public expenditure for heald, insurance increased
tenfold, private insurance benefits increased eightfold,2A and
direct out-of-pocket payments about threefold. a In overall
expenditures other countries such as France 1C and
GermanylD kept abreast of the United States. In all industrial
nations - Atlantic, Scand inavian, or East European - the
growth rale of the health sector has advanced faster than
that of the GNP [gross national productl.n Even discounting
inflation, federal health o_utlays increased by more than 40
per cent between 1969 and 197431'''.1

Are We Consuming Too Many Drugs?


As was reported in The Bulletin, 24 March, 1992, one of the
fastest-growing romponenrs of Australia's cosily health bill is the
pharmaceutical drug trade, which accounts for $2 billion a year for
prescription drugs. The Bu.lletin article reveals that "Australians
are on a drug binge, consuming twice as many antibiotics per capi-

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·23


ta as Sweden and far more than the US and Britain".' The situa- users of these substances." The avalanche of drug and chemical
tion in the United States and Britain sixteen years ago was bad usage by these ind~r.ries occurred with the shift in production
enough for lllich to write: methods from free-range fanning to factory and feedlot fanning in
"In the United States, the volume of the drug business the last 20 to 30 years."
has grown by a factor of 100 during the current century:'" Over 15 years ago, there were more than 1,000 drug products
20,000 tons of aspirin are consumed per year, almost 225 and as many chemicals in use by the livestock and poultry produc-
tablets per person." In England, every tenth night of sleep ers in the United States. I ' Also, more than 40 per cent of the
is induced by a hypnotic arug and 19 per cent of women antibiotics and other antibacterials produced every year in the US
and 9 per cent of men take a prescribed tranquillizer dur- were used as animal feed additives and for other animal pmposes.
ing anyone year ..c In the United States, central-nervous- Almost 100 per cent of poultry, 90 per cent of pigs and veal
system agents are the fastest-growing sector of the pharma- calves, and 60 per cent of cattle have regular amounts of antibacte-
ceutical market, now making up 311 per cent of total sales." rials added to their feed" Seventy-five per cent of hogs have their
Dependence on prescribed tranquillizers has risen by 290 feed supplemented with sulphur drugs l ' and almost 70 per cent of
per cent since 1962, a period during which the per capita US beef is from cattle fed on hormones to promote growth."
consumption of liquor rose by only 23 per cent and the The amount of drugs and chemical substances used on farm ani-
estimated consumption of illegal opiates by about 50 per mals in the industrialised nations is enormous.
cent''*'.'
At the time ofI1lich writing this (1976), it is estimated that 50 to
80 per cent of adults in the United States and the United Kingdom
were consuming a medically prescribed chemical every 24 to 36
hours.' In his book Confessions of a Medical Heretic (1980),
famed medical writer and paedi-
atrician, Dr Robert Mendelsohn, .
accused doctors of having ' ',
A ' , ." . ' . , . 0" . w

"seeded the entire population


with these powerful drugs".
Mendelsohn further states that
"Every year, from 8 to 10 mil-
lion Americans go to the doctor
when they have a cold. About
ninety-five percent of them
come away with a prescription -
half of which are for antibi-
otics ...•
A recent report by the
National Health Strategy (1992)
has pointed out that 160 million
prescriptions are being dis-
pensed from Australian pharma-
cies every year, and an estimat-
ed further 20 million from hos-
pital pharmacies.' This figure
represents a 640 per cent increase since 1949, during which time
280,719 prescriptions were dispensed.•
As reported in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (1976),
a study in a large country town in Australia has revealed that peo-
ple who reported no illness took as many drugs as those who
reported a chronic and acute illness. The authors noted that "the
rate of increase in drug usage at around 25 per cent per year can
only ,be explained by increased drug usage of both prescription and
OTC [over-the-counter] drugs by the majority of the population".' How Common Are Drug Adverse Reactionsl
At the time of the report Australians were consuming half the According to the Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee
number of prescription drugs compared to today.1O (ADRAC), the official federal government body responsible for
Recent figures of how many OTC or non-prescription drugs monitoring the safety of drugs already in use: "There is a dearth
consumed by Australians are difficult to obtain. industry sources [scarcity] of published information on the medical and economic
are reluctant to divulge this information. However, a, study by the importance of adverse drug reactions in Australia,'''' However, a
Health Commission of NSW in 1979 that stated that "at present recent study (1991), cited Iby the National Health Strategy report
Australia has one of the leading rates of per capita consumption of on drug use, claims that in 1987-88 there were between 30,000 and
analgesil:s in the world", quoted 1973 figures for sales of OTC 40,000 hospital admissions in Australia because of drug-taking
medications at $166 million. 11 and also that adverse drug reactions (ADRs) would have been a
major :factor for between 700 to 900 deaths a year. zs
It is estimated that in 1991 $1.4 billion was spent on OTC med-
ications!' which, when added to the $2 bil'lion spent on prescription There are some who are highly critical of the official estimation
drugs," totals a staggering $3.4 billion. of the extent of drug reactions within communities. Dr Juljan
Gold, head of the National Health Surveillance Unit of the
Commonwealth Institute of Health, whose job as a medical epi-
Drugs In The Food We Eat demiQlogist is to collate information on the total health environ-
Apart from the vast number of drugs taken directly, people are ment, estimates that yp to 40 per cent of all patients in Australia
also unknowingly consuming large amounts of drugs and other may a,ctually be victims of doctor-induced (iatrogenic) illnesses.'"
chemical substimces indirectly from the food they eat. Most food A 40 per cent figure has also been estimated for the United
industries rely on chemical substances from soil to supermarket Kingdom." Generally, of this amount half are from drug reac-
and the animal products industries are by far the most excessive tions.:UO

Vol 2, No 13 -1993 NEXUS·25


Under-Reporting of Drug Reacfions ano.ther iatr?genic djs.ea~. A patient ~y eVt;n experie~ce
Many drug reactions go unnoticed. In Controversies in an latrog~nlc c~,:"phcatlon ~r~~ a. dlagno.stlc.test which
TJu!rapeutics (1980), Dr Leighton Cluff comments: ~as r~qu~red ~ dlagn?se the l~lItl~1 Iatrogenic disease. The
"National Health statistics do not reflect the magnitude ~Ituatlon. In whlc~ a,: Iatrogenic disease provokes a se.cond
of the roblem of drug-induced diseases. A death certificate matrog~nlc compll~atlo_n ~ould be te.r~ second levellatro-
ma liJdi~ate that a per~n died of renal failure, but it may genesis. ~n a hospital. setting t~ese sltuatl.oos are n?lluo.com-
notst~te that the disease was ~used by a drug. 29 - ":lOtn. It IS ev.:n pOSSible for third and fourth level latrogene-
.
Accordmg to a US S S I C .
enate e ect omnuttee, un h dreds f .
0 VIC- SIS 0 occur.
. P rf'" th A I .~ I I
. f th dru hi h ' 1 died undi sedl' th U 'ted Dr Beaty and Dr etersdo wnte In e nna S oJ merna
tuns 0 1lI e g c oramp eruco agno m e ill Medicine (1966):
States. 'gh
Dr Le1 ton Cluff further sa t tes: "Ph" '
ySlCIans are currently not ... ItI 's hou Id dbe'pam
u ' 'ted h'
f f out t at 'Iatrogenic
,
h ' pro.
Ibl
1£ f ems are
. ed t ort b ed of dru -induced diseases to a cu.mu ,alive, an , In an.e ort to extricate IInse I ,r~m com-
requ~. ; r~ try~31serv cases g pllcatlons of diagnOSIs and therapy, the Iphyslclan may
centr lZe ~gIS. . .. compound the problem by having to employ manoeuvres
In Australia, the ~eportmg by doc~rs of adverse reactIons IS vol- that are in themselves risky.a"
untal'y. Postage-paId ~onns are provIded to doctors who are ~ked DrTa lor further ex lams:
to report adverse reactIons to ADRAC. Due to coPlplacency, tgno- • y . p.. ".
rance, and perhaps guilt that their prescribed treatment has caused Every drug adml~lstered, every d'lagnos!lc test p~r-
harm, most doctors fail to fIll in these forms, fo,rm~, ev~ry op,eratlve procedu,re ~lJtered Into, c~mes
Even when doctors are willing to report ADRs, there are signifi- ~J~ It the risk of latrog~nlc coml?lIcatIQns.. The more med-
· fd act'ons lcatlon, tests and operations a patient expenences, the more
can t probl ems th at add t0 the undeI-reportmg 0 rug re 1 , I'k I h h" d I ' 'd' B
ADRs can sometimes be difficult to identify and'Dr Judith Jones, ley e or s e IS to eVE! op an latr?g~lc lse~se. ecause
n'
vrrector 0f the D'IVlSIon
. , 0f D rug E '
xpenence at the FDA'm th e of, the.Firesent fragmentation
, . of medical
. care With each sub-
United States, has listed three factors that inhibit detection: specla.lst lookln~ after hiS ~wn rartlcular or~an system, the
. d"Istmguls
1. __D1'ffiICU1ty m 'h'mg the reactton
'from un-der1"ymg d'15- ten "]8.rlsk to which the patient IS exposed IS often forgot-
total
eases ' or negative, placebo
. effects. . . T ay. 1or, Beaty and P dor
eters f are not aonel 'm th· ., .
err cntiCISms 0f
2. Many ADRs have a sIlent nature and I~ not specI~cally looked allopathic medicine, also known as 'modern medicine'. More and
for, they ma~ not be fo~d. ~o~ ex.~ple, kld~ey ~d liver d~age. more ,physicians and other medical professionals are be.coming
3. In ~ul!I-drug. reglffies It IS dIffIcult. to ~dentify the partIcular increasingly disillusioned with their own profession, Allopathic
drug wh1CP, tS causmg the suspected reactIon, medicine has become more of a band-aid treatment. In their
Only 5 to 10 per cent of actual cases are believed to be reported attempts to 'patch-up' symptoms of illnesres, doctors are known to
to ADRAC." In the 'United Kingdom, which has a similar report- use poisonous chemical-based drugs, radical .surgical o~ralions
ing system to ours, only 1 to 10 and dangeJou~ radjatioJ;)" which
per cent of cases are revealed." """>i'-"'V""";""""":-'''''-':;;'''~''''''' _" ",,;.. ,,;i,;.. ,•. .J;si""";'I';1{·""""":::" , "'..io ; >'; often cause more hi!IJl1lhm the
The inadequ'acy of the reporting 0'~i"'q"~«:!!'.;li~:~"~'\-~~·~l:<lW",'~":l~<;lm:''',~.~',~~%f,~~i":··J'o.,<";";;ti18~;'-'iil;:.~'? 'f$.:/!< original problem

~~l~i ~~f.~~~~.E r.t.j.:.~.Ii.Ii:.'.1.:I~.i.~,


linked with .isoprenaline ly'-~:-: _. :.:ne. •.~.III.III~~II.1
. ·:>a_ .
aerosol §;I~"~Wr-.1<~~::u~r,lo;40.
~£{~{~:~~.~::~:~~~
.. ~X~"~s·; ~~~~:-".;:;,;.r;:,,~. Y:-:"'~ ~,~<;,'
r.'::C.e,nt:p~
r~'''''20" ···....·... w
4i';#i;¥f~
}~ )-",.='..x;.;'.O>~~.JI:.-%/>
causes of {he illness, which

~~~~~~;~ J~~~e~eb~9~~;~0~e~~ ilii!!~~6r~,1!D!~g~fl~n~£mt~~:I~:y~n.~ :e~;~~~i a~t~eI~t:~ ~~~~~


• .. ••• ••• o:;•• '.. • •

~~~;:~se most adverse rejC- f~J§~1~'i~!!:m~~9~;::~Q~I§~Jl~~~£~~~t!1~:usmg to.becom~ ~ore chron- It

.,'Mtlill ;~5g[!,§~:;;I~
tlons to drugs go unreporte<,i, the j{8f.'§;~::B;"'i,,";~fC'; .. :fA'-':'i,iiiV·.;;~\':.';'T •• ll::'H"*~iS:;<?i::;~~;!%',j~Wt':~,::,~"~: AllopathIC medlcme can be

~~~~~~;::~:t=u:nlY
Not only do health officials __ A prominent critic of allopathic
grossly underestimate the extent medicine has been the late Dr Robert Mendelsohn, who exposed
of drug reactions, they also try to convince the unwary public that much corruption in Americi\ll medicine. Or Mendelsohn published
.drug-related illnesses are largely due to inappropriate drug usage. the following best-seUing books: Confessions of a Medical
Officials try to place the onus on con.sumers and prescribi.p.g doc- Heretic J9 (1980), Mal(e) Practice: How Doctors Manipulate
tors, and reassure 'the public that problems rarely occur if drugs are Women" (1982), and How to Raise a Healthy Child In Spite of
used as prescribed. To protect the drug industry from blame, offi- Your Doctor" (1987). These books are highly recommended,
cials purposely ignore the fact that most drugs are hannful; even if In Limits to Medicine Ivan lllich warns:
used 'appropriately', ''The ~a~n, dysfu~'ctiC?n, disab.il ity, an'd ,a'nguish resu~ti~g
., • from tecnnlcal medical intervention now rival the morbidity
EpidemiC latrogenesls due to traffic and industrial accidents and even war-re'lated
On doctor or hospital induced illnesses, a once active member of activities, and make the mmpact of medicine one of the most
the Doctors' Refonn Society and author of the book Medicine Out rapidly spreading epidemics of our time.'142
0fConlrol (1979), Dr Richard Taylor, writes: •
aln fact, because of the increasing complexity of medical Doctors Strike: Death Rate Drops
tecnnology and the 'i ncrease in tne variety of chemicals With the above in mind, it is not surprising Ithac during a one
available for treatment, iatrogenic disease is on the month physicians' strike in Israel in 1973, the national death rate
increase... reached the lowest ever. According to statistics by the Jerusalem
Unfortunately iatrogenic diseases may be self-perpetuat- Biltial Society, the number of funerals dro-pped by almost half,"
ing. Many iatrog~nic compli~ations require spE!c:ific treat- , Identical cirCl;lmstances oCgmred in ~976 in Bogota, ~e capital
ment, thus exposmg the patient to the pOSSibility of yet CIty of ColumbIa where, there, the doctors went on strike for 52

26·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993


days and, as pointed out [by the NatiOlUlI Catholic Reporter, during tbe corporate mind-set If corporations did not have control
that time the death rate fell by 35 ~ cent. This was confirmed by over their distributors (the physicians) they would not be
the National MOJticians' Asso<;iatioI1QfColumbia." able to guarantee profits to their stockholders... Thus, we
Again in California a few years Ilater, and in the United Kingdom need not wonder why senior executives of majm health-
in 1978, identical events have occurred. 4J care oriented'co~orationsIhave decided to woo physicians
into their camps.
The Small Rolle of Medicine in Mortality Pharmaceutical companies have curried the favor of
It is important to understand that the vast majority of people are practising physicians for many years... As the cost of devel-
born healthy and, if not tampered with, are 'equipped' to remain operent and marketing of pharmaceuticals increased [dur-
healthy throughout life. We seldom require: in~rvention with ill- ing. t~e '1960s], t~e. arug c~~pan!es e~~rts to attract the
nesses because the body, as well ,as the mmd, IS usually able to alreglance of practicing phySICians mtenslfled.
defend and.heal i~self against disease and injury. Only infrequently Not only did drug c<;>mpany operation costs increase
do we reqUIre asSIStance. [markedly, out the rewards of ithe marketplace rose tremen-
Medical intervention is the least important of !he four factors that dously.... The increase [in revenues brought compe1itian
determine the state of health. The Center For Disease Control which led to a nationwide increase in drug advertising.
analysed data on tb..e ten leading .. ........ '.' ... .. Advertisements in medical jour-
causes of death in the United States, ~:~~""!;R"*';i;~,:~"",;,~\";,:&*,,,::%};)m<i,';ii:ffl~il;"~ i"'i§ifi~{ :T'~<i~,~~ nals and pu~lic magazines
and determined that lifestyle was by :*;;'-';:1~.~:,,':].}E~i:;A~.:1;;l.~'.~."r:"£~
, o .•, l a "
. . :?)j.:~.:§;@i.·~~.§~,f:#l.m.:\liii~,,?~~rf.m. "''ll..~,.,~~l~?'.'~i'" were popularlzedl by carefully
-",.,.",?" 1'"";=" "·''''.'~;r'·'W'iLe~''':''·''"'' ii'". " "'fti~:m, "A~~
far the most impo~t factor (51 %), ~~~ZS(J$W6f:(JrU"s'6h>ulermarJ<ef:dl~:~: controll~ ,news rel.eases assocl-
f 0 !lowed by env n. onmen I (20 %), R~."':'" :t.'::•'. ;":.' : 'i:': ~:.~'·.(:,~\~: ••:.' '.':;";::."'."" ",.J~t c~.:: ... :"x,.:";".c,.",..,;".,:,::.::::.::: .;:.,: . ;,. :.:""". ::.m8:';~.>. ~" .' . 3
.;. ','''''.·ills a ted w I til ' med I ca'l b re a k-
1biologic inheritnce (19%), and last-
ed' al' I ti (10%)" ,:.,.x,..".,:.,+... t" ........,.,.;,:..1i!l,;c,..·.. . .Yeaf:j~'6;~'aridd6Ctors;'*
JJifot'ex1s \1'ot ".".'v.. .:, ... ,'!'S!;:;,;,', ./ ....".,.'/"';, .. ¢!-...,~,.,.'., .. ~." •..,. throughs'.
g, Th d " ff
ym lC. rnerven on. @t"~i~:Ii";:·d·:·llofleathe(falJoui:.rtl1~m';trS'#:iW~ ,ese a ve~tlsl~g e orts,
Accordrng to a clasSIC analysIS by ]~mm:~',~c'»':~ij"~'.";.i.'i' ::"":'B;,"::":*'"cI';';"-»;~:»'::::' .::.,,~.,*,n~1t! whIch began With gifts to rrac-
0...

Professor Thomas McKe'own of *.G.'.~@.~~.l.A.:,~,:k.~.:*.:W:···,:·:::··;·d·.'·'·:··.::'.".'1".'."':1'."'.'.".'."'/'.1:.:.•.~~. •;r:~.'.BVli~.;<?'~ tising doctors and medica stu-
' . h U" . «..,,,,,m""~~""'!i:me IcascnOO{.·~'!m';""~~,~,<.,.mi dents, h ' become a massive
B Irmmg'am mverslty, me d'Icrne 2(:iB:r,s::~)!1'i!,,~W{;:·}':~::·.;';;·;·:;i;,.:,;,,'~~,·':":li.,;',i';/,r:ki~1§l;li~~:;?~:~l~1:<:l"n~ ave .
played a very.small ~le in~x~ending ¥mB;~:.;Rq$.Y¥P··h,!sJti~O$:;thl~~~efor¢F.relii:g;~~4 campaign to mold. t~e attitudes,
the average lifiespan rn Bntam over ~,,,~,,,,",,,....,......,./:: x,...I",,-;'v "J<'''v~' ,:;1. ,:',:.,. .~~<,'" "'' ' 7.J,'' R thoughts and poliCIes of prac
the Pll:st few centuries, ~he major ~,m~';~:I~.!9nt:,~c~·Qg:~§i,j1e~~Y£:~I~~}S1~ffM ti~ing p.hYsjcian~. Drug co.mp~:
~eneflt to p~ople. ~avmg bee:n ~ld~.teJEt6'~rrf:aboutMewmedi'caUoris~r~ nles .n,lre ?eta.tl men to VI~I~
rrn~~em~~ts UJ nulntIon and publIc ~W:i~*W4t~t,:~~W:;W}i,K:?n,;\'rWF2i.i/w~~;~~~J~?;?1~'iEl::~W: ~:~,~ IP~ys,c,adns offlces_ al nd Ito hdls
sarutatIon. l!;l8<;:.;.,,::'r,;'i1i~;'f.'~'~':;l:"1"~:;8~:"'~'=1;>:i:.,.§j,''';j)~:,:;;:.:i·',~'''4i''ill'' ·~;i;":;"" :~~. tribute rug samp es. T ey
Researchers, John McKinlay and '.:"., ~:'~::"'h", ,': :., ) ,..,:.:..':,;..:". : <,.:"':>:~':":'~ "'''1'Ct.•"~,,.,: :;".:,':.:..:', .:.'.,.:.:>:,::>::~,' 'i. de!lc rib e the ind Icat ion s fo r
Sonja McKinlay came to similar these drugs and attempt to lPer-
conclusions. They showed that medical intervention only account- suade physicians to use their products. Uke any other
ed for between 1 and 3.5 per cent of the increase in the average salesman, they denig:rate the products of their competitors
lifespan in the United Stales since 1900.49 while glossing over the shortcomings of their own. Detail
The above statistics prove thai health depends primarily on pre- men have no formal medical or pnarmacolQgicali train,ing
vention, through hygiene and proper nutrition. and ~re ~o~ regulated b.y.any state or federal agencies.
In the few instances, when therl\py oJ any SQrt is warranted, it Despite tn,elr lack .of tram lng, t~ese salesmen have been
must deall with the whole person (the holistic approach), treating very ~ff~tlve. T~elr sales carrpalgns have been ~o. succe~s-
the actual cau:se rather than attempting to isolate and suppress ful wl~1l1n the United S~ates that the average P~yslclan todil:Y
symptoms. Allopathic medicine fails in comparison to the holistic [has ~Irtually been tra!ned by the drug cetail man. ThiS
approach, and in many instances. damages the patient even more prac~lc:e ha~ lied ~o wldes~read o~eruse of drugs by ~th
than the illness it intends to treat. phxslclans In th~lr everyday. practice an.d the lay pubhc...
. . . . With the exception of herOin and cocame, 85 percent of
Natural medlcrnes and therapIes, such as herbalISm, homoeopa- all drugs currently abused in the streets are manufactured
thy, naturopa!hy, osteopathy and acupuncture, to name,a f~w, work by 'ethical' drug companies... Cross sales f.orecasts from.
on the ,~J.Olisuc approach,.~d are gen~rally far supenor In safety these 'ethical' drug companies deliberately include profits,
and effICacy than allopathIC treatments. made from illicit sales to drug peddlers.
The drug industry woos young medical students byoffer-
Drug Companies Bribing Doctors ing them gifts, free trips to 'conferences', and free 'educa-
A major reason 'Why health care is in such a shambles is that the tional material'." [Emphasis added.p'
medical establishment has allowed itself to be bought off by the A double page article titled "$200m bribe' to lure our doctors",
pharmaceutical industry, whose prime motive is profit. In the book appearing in The Sun Herald (18 August, 1992), reported that:
Dissent in Medicine - Nine Doctors Speak Ow (1985), Dr Alan
Levin writes: "Drug companies spend a massive $200 million every
year in A'UStralia on marketing th_eir products... That repre-
"Health care io tbe United States has become a mega- sents almost $10,000 a year spent attempti.ng to woo each
billion-dollar business. It is responsible for over 12 per of Australia!s 21,000 'actively prescribing' CPs, according
cent of the gross national product. Revenues from the to Dr Ken Harvey from La lrobe University."
health industry, which currently exceed $360 billion a
rear, are second only to those of the defense industry. The article cited Theo van Lieshout, secretary of the NSW
True profits are much higher. [In 1991 the US had spent Doctors' Reform Society, as saying that 50 per cent of drugs on the
$750 billion on health care. It has been estimated that by market did not exist 10 years ago - and doctors had not learned
the ye'ar 2000, annual health care costs in the US will have about them in medical school. Busy physicians therefore rely
increased to at least 1.5 trillion dollars. 5O] It is not difficult, mainly on drug company sales staff to tell them about new medica-
then, to see why this industry is so appealing to corporate tions.
investors. Many indiustrialists determined to profit from As reported in The Bulletin (24 March, 1991), Dr Ken Harvey
health-c.are produ(jlS have encountered one major obstacle: stated: 'The students concede concern. The problem is, !U'ter five
practising !physiCians remain the primar.y distributors of years out in practice, with six drug reps a week coming in, they
health care products, Physicians, who have traditionally have gone away from prescribing sensibly and by scient.ific name
existed as ioclependent entrepreneurs, do not fit easily into to prescribing the brand promoted by the last rep who Walkedl in."n

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·27


University Scientists - The Willing Pawns century is amply demonstrated by world-fam.pus medical historian
Drug companies employ many means in bribing doctors and and author, Hans Ruesch, In his devastating expose: Naked
medical institutions. Dr Levin writes: Empress or The Great Medical Fraud 5' (1992). The book js an
absolute must to read. Naked Empress exposes massive corruption
"Young physicians are offered research ,grants by drug and fraud in medicine, science, industries, govermnents, media, and
companies. Medical schools are given large sums of money
various organisations. The importance of this lbook carmot be over-
for clinical trials and basic pharmaceutical research. Drug
stated.
companies regalarly host lavish dinner and cocktail parties
for groups of physicians. They provide funding for the estab- In Naked Empress, Ruesch cited another important expose titled
lishment of hospita'l buildings, medical school bulldings, The Drug Story so (1949), by American investigative reporter,
andl !independent' research institutes. Morris A. Bealle. According to Bealle: "America's largest and
most ruthl~ ittdustrial combine, the Rockefeller Empire" I(which
The pharmaceutical industry has purposefully moved to
was built on Styldard Oil Company) in ,the early part of this centu"
develop an enormous amount of influence within medical
ry became interested in the drug trade after making breath"taking
teaohing institutions. fhis move was greatly facilitated by profits from ,palming off bottled petroleum called Nujol as a sup-
several factors. The first was the economic rece-ssion,
posed cure for cancer and later constipation.
which caused a marked constriction in federal funding for
research programmes. In 1939 the iDrug Trust was
Academic scientists lacked formed by an alliance of 'the
funding for pet ~search pro- Ht1n;, :,j)i:A:~:'9';~:,.:;;Ii:"::'~::;:'~,~~'iiil!i%,:~,":::;;:'~~:":f:F'if, &;V~:;·::n#.i':~,-'~ ::;n,:,",':,i:;J",i@;world'stwogreatestcartelsin
jects. The second was the f;f;. nh~.iJAll:i(f~~J2rug}lrUSrWa.S:lormeuuy,~~ world history - the Rockefeller

11'1Iillll'1~'l'lfi~~~·g~f,;
tremendous interest Ithat aca-
demic scientists held' in
biotechnology, the stock
market, and the pOSSibility of
becoming mill I ionalres upwards into gigantic propor-
overnight The third is the tions and by 1948 it became a
fact ttiat academic pnysi- 10-billion-dollar-a-year ,indus-
cians tend to lack real clini- try."
cal experience. In the uni- to. Farben's unsavoury past is
versity, ,the phys.icia~ lis an highlighted by the fac.t that dur-
ing the Second World War it

¥X.~~e!i~!.;{~a;n~~ .1~tl~~J{.l~~Z{"
built and operated a massive
chemical plant at Auschwitz
using slave labour.
no experience with the day- Approximately 300,000 concen-
to-day needs of the chronically ill patient or the patient with tration-camp workers passed through I.G. Farben's facilities at
very early symptoms of serious illness. As the academic Auschwitz and at least 25,000 of them were worked to death.'·
physician does not depend upOn! the goodwill of the patient Also, others were brutally killed in I.O. Farben's drug testing pro-
for his or her livelihood, the patient's well-being becomes of grams.'" Twelve of I.G. Farben's top executives were sentenced to
minor consideration to him or her. All these factors make terms of imprisonment for slavery and mistreatment offences at the
the academic physician a very poor judge of treatment effi- Nuretnberg war crime trials. lIO
cacy and a willing pawn of health industrialists. Hoechst and Bayer, the largest and third largest companies in
Pharmaceutical companies, by enlisting the aid of influ- world phllJIDaceutical sales respectively, are descended from I.G.
ential academic I,)hysicians, have gaineo control of the Farben. In September 1955, Hoechst appointed Friedrich Jaehne, a
practice of medicine in the United States. They now set convicted war criminal from the Nuremberg Itrials, as chairman of
the standards of practice by hiring investigators to perform its supervisory board. Also, a year later, Bayer appointed Fitz ter
studies which establish the efficacy of their products or Meer, another convicted war criminal, as chairman of its board."'
impugn that of their competitors. On the Rockefellers' moves towards 'influencing' medical col-
Practising physicians are intimidated into using treatment leges and public agencies in the United StateS, Bealle writes:
regimes whIch they know do not work. One glaring exam- "The last annuaf report of the Rockefeller Foundation
ple is cancer chemotherapy. itemizes the gifts it 'has made to colleges and public agen-
Your family doctor is no longer free to choose the treat- cies in the past 44 years [from 1948], and they total some-
ment modality he or she feels is best for you, but must fol- what over half a billion dollars. T'hese colleges, of course,
low the ,dictates established by physicians whose motives teach their students all the drug lore the Rockefeller phar-
and alliances are such ,that their decisions may not be in maceutical houses want taught. Otherwrse there would be
your best interests." [Emphasis addedl.Ju no more gifts, just as there are no gifts to any of the 30 odd
Dr Alan Lewis is an Adjunct Associate Prafes'sor of Immunology drugless colleges in the United S~tes.N62
and DemLatology at the University of California. He ,is a Fellow of The Rockefellers did not restrict their 'education.al' activities to
the American College ,of Emergency Physicians, the College of the US alone. In 1927 they formed the International ~ducation
Ameliican Pathologists, and the American Society of Clinical Board which 'donated' millions of dollars to foreign universities and
Pathologists. Dr Lewis is also a ,recipient of fellowships and politicos, wi1h all the usual ~trings attached. s
awards from Harvard Medical School and other rnedicalinstitu- As. these huge amounts of money were being 'donated' IP drug-
tions, and was director of various res.earch laboratories. propagandising colleges, the Rockefeller interests were expanding
Ivan Illich echoes Lewis' last comment: "The medical establish- worldwide. It was large enough 40 years ago for Bealle to state:
ment has become a major 'threat to health. The disabling impact of "It has long been demonstrated that the Rockefeller inter-
professional controll over medicine has reached the proportions of ests 'have created, built up and developed the most far
an epidemic."" rreaching industrial empire ever conceived in Ithe mind of
man. Standard Oil is of course the foun-dati"on industry
The Drug Story upon which all of the other industries bave been built
How the pharmaceutical industry toOK c.ontro~ of the hospitals, The keystone of this mammoth industrial empire is the
universities, research and other institutions in the early part of this Chase National Bank with 27 branches in New York City

2S·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993


and 21 in foreign cou.ntries [now renamed the Chase Food and Drug Administration - Serving Who?
Manhattan Bank with over 200 branches in tthe US and Leaving no stone untumed, Ruesch shows how the Drug Trust,
abroad]. Not the least of its holdings are in the drug busi- in securing their drug interests,planted stooges int.o senior posi-
ness. The Rockefellers own the largest drug manufacturing tions of colleges, universities, and government bodies. About the
combine in the world, and use all of their other interests to Food and Drug Administration. Ruesch charges:
bring pressure to increase the sale of drugs."'" ·When a good law was enacted many years ago for pro-
tecting the American public from ~poiled food and poiso-
ifhe Not-50-Independent Media nous arugs, the Drug Trust lost little time to get its hooks
Instrumental in Rockefellers' moves towards making the world into the government bureau that was charged with enforc-
drug-dependent is their enormous influence on the media. ing the law....
Commenting on this, Ruesch explains: Ruesch cited Moms. Bealle who wrote that the FDA "is used pri-
"So the stage was set for the 'education' of the marily for the perversion of justice by cracldng down on all who
American f>Ublic, with a view to turning them linto a ~­ endanger the profits of the Drug Trust.".. Ruesch further $~~
lation ,of drug dependents with the early help of the "Apparently, the FDA doesn't onl.y ~ink at the violations
schools, then with direct advertising and~ last but not least, of the Drug Trust whose servant It IS (such as the mass
the influence the advertising revenues had on the media." deaths in tile ginger jake and sulfathiozole cases), but it is
A {:ompilation of the magazine Advertising Age showed particularly assiduous in rputtingout of busines-s al'l competi-
that as far ba.ck as 1948 the larger companies spent for tors 'of the Drug Trust, like the vendors of natural therapeu-
newspapers, radio and mag- tit devices that improve the health of the public and thus
azine advertising the sum decrease the profi ts of
total of $1,104,224,374, ; .." ._ ......... "~."'!h . .z·.·..:'.·.·.....~.. .;~ ..w::.~ -;~.A: ~;;"~;~'Jl.thv,. ~~~~;:.~;::5f':::~~¢;:.:t4.~~~~., ::.:'. _ :>;;~:::'G:p'~~::~._.
... .. the, Drug Trust..."
when the dollalr was stitll ,.,::~ And the situation is
worth a dollar. Of this stag- practically identical in
gering sum the interlocking all the other industrial-
Rockefeller-Morgan interests ized countries, notably
I(gone over entirely to Great Britain, Fran'ce
Rockefeller after Morgan's and West Germany.'ow
death) controlled about 80
per cent, and utilized it to The Undedared War on
manipulate public informa- Natural Medicine
tion. on health and drug mat-
ters " then as now. The Civil Abolitionist car-
ried an article rightly titled
. Arnybody who tri~s t,o get "FDA: The American
Into the mass media mde-
pendent news, contrary to Gestapo Prosecutor or
the interests of the Drug Persecutor?", which reported
Trust, will sooner or later =7:.~":1. ~4~;,~~''?;'~~::':%'::t.:~i.;~~::::~.~~~~~~:r..(:. ;'.; :;:':::?-:~s~·~"-;,.:.:.::~t:;::;;~~:;::::):e~.:<~~:::;~:~:}::~,~:,'{~);~::~~~::tr~:~~~'''~ , clthat on May 6, 1992, the
inic of Jonathan Wright
,run into an unbreakable
wall. MD, a highly regarded nutri-
tion specialist, was assailed by 22 armed men because the doctor
For big advertisers it is easy not only to plant into the had been treating his patients with safe natpral substlUlces that did-
media any news they wish to disseminate, but al'so to keep n't meet the FDA's approval. During the SWAT type attack the
out the news they don't walilt to get around. A survey in front door was kicked open, guns were pointed directly at staff and
1978 by the Columbia Journalism Review failed to find a the shocked patients were herded into a room. Also patient records,
~ingle comprehensive articl~ about th~ dangers ?f smoking equipment, business records and vitamin supplies were confIscated.
lin the previous seven years In any major magazine acc~t­
At the time of the article, the FDA has not as yet filed charges
ling cigarette advertising. against Dr Wright.70
Even the ,most independent newspapers are dependent During last year, similar actions have taken place against three
on their press associations for their national news. And manufacturers of vitamin supplements (Allergy Research, Thome
there is no reason for a news editor to suspect that a story Research and Highland Laboratories).7'
taming over the wires of Associated Press, United Press
International or the International News Services is censored In Australia, a repeal of Schedule I, Exemptions of the
when it concerns health matters. Therapeutic Go04.s Act, scheduled for January 1994, would min-
imise access to natural therapy remedies by natural therapists and
Yet this is what happens constantly. ~Emphasis added.]" would threaten tne existence of the natural therapy profession and
Ruesch showed how Ithe above-mentioned international media manufacturers of patural therapy remedies. 7I
were taken over by 'the Drug Trust and he further explains:
"So this sews up the press associaNons of the Rockefeller Corrupt fDA Officials
Drug Trust, and accounts for the many fake stories of In their August-September 1992 issue, NEXUS Magazine report-
serums and rTreoical (;.ures and just-around-the-corner- ed that it is a matter of public record that the FDA indulges in the
b~eakthrough:t~H;ancer, wh!ch go ?ut brazenly over its following practices:
wires to all dally newspapers In America and abroad..."
* Many of the so-called 'research grants' that the FDA receives
Thus n.ewspapers continue to be fed constantly with .propaganda are 'donated' by the very drug companies they were supposed to be
about drugs and their al~eged value, although 1.5 million people regulating.
landed in hospitals in 1978 because of medication side-effects in
the US alone, and despite recurrent statements by intelligent and * Mid- and upper-level FDA officials enjoy 'revolving door' sta-
courageous medical men that most pharmaceutical. items on sale ,tus when they leave the FDA, wherein they go to cushy, well-pay-
are useless and/or harmful. 06 ing jobs in those very same drug companies they were supposed to
have been regulating.
Among the many publications owned by the Rockefeller Drug
Trust, are: Fortune, Life, Time, Readers Digest and Newsweek * Currently, 150 top FDA officials hold significant amounts of
magazines, and the Encyclop-aedia Britannica. These p~Jjcations stock in the phannaceutical companies they were supposed to be
regulating.7•
are constantly pushing drugs. Continued on page 64
APRIL - MAY 1993 NEXUS.29

20'\
[fl!.E{P@[fl7J [F[fl@!tMJ
([;[flOW {P@OH7J (J(J
J

lot of folks these days have heard of the 'Earth Grid'. The earth grid is

A the earth's electromagnetic field that envelops our planet with a geo-
metric pattern of magnetic lines of force.
This invisible web of energy crisscrosses the terrestrial landscape much like
the human acupuncture meridians define the body's energy field in an intricate,
though rationally precise matrix. The major energy pathways are called 'ley
lines' in Britain, 'dragon paths' in China, and 'song lines' in our own country.
Where the ley lines intersect, an energy eddy or vonex occurs, wbich are the
'earth chalaas' or power places on the earth's surface.
These power places are like electricall switch points or energy transducers
spread 'around the planet in the precise 'geometry of an icosadecahedron. Many
ancient structures from pyramids to stone circles, all tuned to particular electro-
magnetic frequencies like a crystal radio, can be found worldwide on these
powe..:r places.
In fact, the earth grid was originally discovered by three Russi~ scientists in
the 1960s who had the idea of examining the globe to see if any vattem should
emerge linking significant Iplaces in history. The precise geometry they found
in the shape of a dodecahedron, linkiOg key sites worldwide, caused author
John Mitchell to note: "A great scientific instrument lies sprawled over the
entire swface of the globe. The vast scale of prehistoric engineering is not yet
generally recognised."
The scientific sophistication of pyramids and other tuning devices carefully
positioned around the world certainly gives rise to speculations about the exis-
tence of ;m ancient worldwide culture that harnessed earth and stellar energies
in a variety of spectacular ways.

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·31


and the Ihigh-tech mining of the key
'power places' is somehow short<ircuit-
ing the system-.that the 'hoop of the
world has been broken'. In fact, the old
people say, "The big blow is going to
come again!"
The ancient art of geomancy, the high
science of how to work the earth sy-s-
tern, has been a'lmost lost. The
Aboriginal people were amongst the last
cultures to follow the song-lines and
'sing' the power places. Seeing the
imminent collapse of the world ecosys-
tem in the modern dreaming, the
Aboriginal elders of Australia, and
indeed many other indigenous cultures,
have declared the time Ihas come' to tell
w.
..
~, the white man the 'secret tradition', or

~'·'WL~
me planet faces serious consequences.
The ancient knowledge that is emerg-
ing like a jigsaw puzzle worldwide from
archaeological and mythic clues and the
Modern grid researchers like mathematician Captain
traditions of so-called primitive people, is beginning to
Bruce Cathie (Ret.) in New Zealand are convinced that some
describe an extraordinary modus operandi for the planet.
kind of ancient high technology utilised the frequency trans-
Ancient peoples and indigenous cultures envision the earth
mission capabilities of the earth's oscillating electromagnetic
as a living organism of finely tuned naturam forces, and teach
grid. As research progresses it is beginning to emerge that the simple ethic of reciprocal! maintenance.
the.se tuned ancient structures were like antennae or radio
Clearly, modern civilisation has 'broken the balance'
towers that could be energised as sonic receptor sites accord-
which has us scrambling - like an intelligence test - for the
ing to a graduated dial of master transmissions.
clues to tune our local ecosystem correctly. The present
These transceiver sites and structures were somehow cali- disharmony on our world is not irretrievable. All our best
brated in terms of a master electromagnetic spectrum geared mythic traditions assert an interesting evolutionary destiny
to consciousness and life-support needs of humans and bios- awaits us if we successfully decode the keys of conscious-
phere. Each site was an interactive energy switch point, an ness and matter.
energy vortex, that could both recei,ve and transmit resonant But why should we bother with all this ancient history and
frequencies through the local web system. idealistic grandeur from a remote past? Because many inter-
The early 20th century genius researchers Guglielmo locking universal, galactic, solar, planetary and human evo-
Marconi and Nikola Tesla were forced underground after lutionary cycles are all synchronously coming to fruition at
remarkable public demonstrations of how 10 tap 'free energy' this end of the 20th century. Certain basic incarnational
from the oscillating earth field. No electricity meter or fossil
fuel! The vested interests of the day were horrified and
acted quickly to stifle this knowledge of the earth grid.
A wealth of new archaeological evidence that has emerged
in recent decades revealing high civilisation in the ancient
past has pushed our history back to about 100,000 BC. It
appea,rs certain from myth and the geological record that
dramatic disasters and earth changes have occurred in
bygone days. Our present civilisation may exist in a win-
dow of time between great cycles of change. We may be
rediscovering much that was lost.
The Aboriginal! elders of NSW North Coast Bundjalung
tribe relate the extraordinary tale of the coming of seven
tribes in ancient days who came from a destroyed homeland
in the heavens. These people built a system of pyramids,
containing giant crystals, that encircled the world to create a
nouri$bing and protective energy field. Bundjalung elders
even refer to a large pyramid hidden in Ithe rainforest of
northern New South Wales.
The Aborigines, not unlike their Hopi Indian counterparts
in the USA, say the earth energy field is damaged in some
way. Like many indigenous people around the world who Top left, top right facing page and above - are all pholos of the
preserve the ancient wisdom, they insist that nuclear testing strange markings found at the sile known as Grid Point 44.

32·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993

:;.2.
obligations all humans willingly agreed
to long ago as a condition for inhabiting
the earth, have all come due. It's not a
question of the 'wrath of the gods' or an
'angry Jehovah'. It's simply a matter of
cosmic clockwork.
A major cycle is nearly finished.
New things are about to begin. The
ancient and revered art of 'grid engi-
neering' not only provides a deep .
insight into the evolutionary cycles but
describes how to reprogtamme the local
electromagnetic spectrum to reactivate
the earth grid and restore the earth to
the legendary 'paradise' that existed
before "the fall'.
So, there we have the basic brief.
Earth grid research, 'ley hunting' as it is
called in some cirC'les, has become a
modern-day quest for enigmatic clues of ~';,:;~:
~~<,..
ancient culture and science on this ~"''S:''''A
worldwide grid pattern. Australia is coloured paintings and told us the creation story firsthand.
much less explored but certainly not exempt in this regard.
For thousands of years Wilpena Pound was famous for its
As part of a film brief for a group of Aboriginal elders coloured ochre. Other tribes came great distances to trade
called 'missing links', we ,have been talking to grid whatever they had for the richly coloured ochre. Living on
researchers and tracking the grid system, folloWing the the major power place in the country gave the Adncpnatna, as
major 'song lines' around the country to visit key power caretakers, the strongest magic in the land. Even the power-
places and talk to tribal elders and clever people who rctain ful Pitjantjatjara didn't mess with these guys. The
the ancient knowledge. Adnamatna were a very spiritual tribe, with total equality of
We are looking at a number of key areas around Australia the sexes, extremely strict initiation laws, and an unusually
in this curious mythic quest for archaeological clues and high number of 'Wirrupul Men' or wizards. These wizards
indigenous traditions that might decode the mystery of the were notorious for casting lightning bolts at anyone who
earth grid. Of the major power places or energy vortexes approached with evil intent -
that encircle ,the earth like the famous Bermuda Triangle, Mt We explained our brief ,to collect and legitimise the anciem
Shasta in C.alifornia, or the Giza Pyramid in Egypt, Australia knowledge and our suspicion that these grid points were
has one major vortex at grid point 44 on the local grid map. sonic transceiveF sites. The elders told us they still 'sang' the
Another occurs at sea in the Gulf of Carpentaria. sites up until 1944 when the old people became ill with dia-
We organised a camera team trek to the central harmonic betes and other problems from eating white food. We were
grid point in the heart of South Australia's Flinders Ranges, told that since the singing stopped', the eagle (principal totem
a logicallplace to start looking for mythic and archaeological for the area) no longer talked to their people, and! only one
correlates. old man re.wned the art of the 'summoning of the Bwanapul'
In the grid point area there is an extraordinary crater-like - the higher light beings who manifest through the vortex to
forma,tion rising from the surrounding desert called Wilpena come and teach their people.
Pound. the home of the unusual Aboriginal tribe called the They drew a map for us to the power place and sacred site
AdnamalIla - which is an old Hebrew word meaning 'God's where the ancient ritual of summoning used to be enacted
gift'. Consistent with parallel legends and traditions at the thousands of years before: Chambers Gorge, the site of the
Power pla~s worldwide, the AdnamalIla record the tradition creation myth in the book of legends. We trekked into the
of the 'Bwanapul' whQ come from the sky to teach their peo- ancient £iver valley, in considerab'le heat I might add, to
ple and rescue them in, ,times of disaster. locate a small culvert with a natural spring that was off to
There is the recurring tradition of ancient and indigenous one side of the gorge. The river, really a small creek in the
peoples around the globe who describe communication with dry, was salt-water having been polluted by the artesian
'gods' and the comings and goings of 'angels' or 'higher light water table.
beings' at these power places. The Jews were not the only After a bit of serious trekking, with a dedicated grasp on
tribe that had strange things happening on the mountain top our camera gear, we finally crossed a ridge that brought us
and bushes lbursting into fiame. face to face with two cliff walls facing each other, absolutely
In the grid zone surrounding Wilpena Pound we began covered in ancient writing. The excitement we felt was like
tracking Aboriginal myths and legends .around the area using something out of Ithose Lost Ark' movies! This was ancient
Dorothy Thunbridge's hook, Flinders Ranges Dreaming, writing - of the stylised, glyphic sort. Deeply etched, ancient
which she compiled a£ter spending several years with the rock carvings, some of them strangely familiar, and yet not
Adnamatna old people. Their story of creation and ,initiation an Aboriginal motif amongst them. It was all a bit strange,
led us to Arkaroo Rock where we encountered some of the nothing lilce the lurid Aboriginal cave paintings we had seen
Adnamabla who took us to their sacred cave full of rai-.nbow- the previous day. Many of the highly stylised glyphs were

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEX;US·33

~~3
to the top. Here was an unexpected concentration of carv-
ings of all sorts, ranging from a variety of extinct and prehis-
toric animals to the enigmatic carvings of strange, goggle-
eyed beings in large circular and pyramidal cartouches
(closed line around).
We found a large stylised 'eye', not unlike the Egyptian
eye of Horus and many other unusual glyphs and motifs,
some of them even appearing to show stars and planetary
motions. There was also a high incidence of carved foot-
prints, in some cases running right up the cliff-face. There
were a number of normal human footprints etched in the
rocks, but were also a number of miniature human prints .
with six toes and a number of larger-than-human prints with
remarkably similar to other ancient languages we had seen. four toes! Curious indeed. There remains much to be deci-
There were even figures with long pointed hats and falcon phered and studied.
heads encircled by cartouches, along with a remarkable carv- The archaeological reports from the 1930s make it clear
ing of a 'helmeted figure with a bird's tail standing ,in a that the Aboriginal people of the time had no knowledge of
stylised boat similar to early Egyptian or Phoenician craft. the carvings, and insisted they were made long before their
Light-box tracings from infrared photographs reveal the clar- people came. In fact, the Adnamatna elders said the carv-
ity and precision of the various 'written entries' on the cliff- ings were made in creation times by the mythical 'serpent
face. It's quite possible that some of the hieroglyphs were men' who were caJled Iti (pron. E.T.) in the Adnarnatna lan-
carved by different visiting ancient cultures on pilgrimages guage. They described the symbol we had seen everywhere
to this power place. at both places, the circle within a circle with a straight line
Comparisons can be found with the writing of other through it, as the 'signature' of the creation beings who came
ancient peoples ranging from early Sanskrit to Easter Island to the power places when the Earth was young. The same
and wly Chinese. The archaeologist who gazetted this site symbol is found at Mt Shasta .and other key grid vortexes
for Nationa~ Parks and Wildlife says the carbon dating of the around the world.
carvings (interior of the carving, as opposed to the weath- We will be taking our camera team to other key power
ered surface) indicates that they are from a period 40-to- places around the country that radiate out from the central
60,000 years ago, older than the Cave of the Bulls in grid point, looking for archaeological anomalies and talking
Altamira, Spain, previously thought of as the world's oldest to elders and 'clever people'. We will be searching for clues
rock art. Some of these glyphs represent very old writing amongst the ancient knowledge that reveal the workings of
indeed. Perhaps. even, from a previous culture in an earlier the prehistoric energy system.
time cycle.
This could be the formative origins of the ancient harmon-
ic languages that include Egyptian, Tibetan, Hebrew, and
Sanskrit. It may be evidence for some sort of 'mother
tongue' that belonged to the survivors of a one-time world
culture. The similarities between the previously mentioned
ancient languages have long been noted.
Interesting to remark that such observations have not sur-
faced in contemporary academic circles. The archaeologist
responsible for the site, who works for the National Parks
and Wildlife Service, is not familiar with other cultures. He
says he is a specialist of some twenty years' standing in
Aboriginal primitive rock art, and that these carvings are
nothing more than unusual primitive etchings. He becomes
hostile if you even refer to the carvings as 'writing'. He even
said that he had a colleague he went to university with who
came out to the site and insisted the carvings were Atlantean
writing. He angrily refuses to entertain any such 'fringe
balderdash' !
Another quite incredible site we sought permission from
the Adnamatna elders to visit was Red Gorge, which archae-
ologists of the 1930s claimed to contain more rock carvings
than anywhere else in Australia. Sited on private land
behind a remote sheep station, we had to gain permission
from both the white and black custodians to gain entry.
Red Gorge was a dry river bed with twin cliff-faces of
blood-red stone that had weathered in huge blocks, creating
giant steps and slopes of scree that enabled one to scramble

34·NEXUS Voll, No 13 -1993

3Lt
M
o~t of us are famjIiar wim the last scene in the popular Indiana Jones archaeologi-
cal-adventure film Raiders of the Lo.fl Ark in which an important historical artefact,
__ _'the Ark of the Covtm.ant fl'orn the Templ~ in Jerusalem, is locked in a crate and put
in a giant warehouse, never to be seen again, thus ensuring that no history books will have to
be rewriueoapd DO history professor will have to revise the lecture that he has been giving
fpr the last fQrty years.
While the film was fiction, the scene in which an important ancient relic is buried in a
warehouse is uncomfortably close to reality for many researchers. To those who investigate
allegations of archaeologi~alcover-ups, there are disturbing indications that the most impor-
tant archaeQlogical institute in the United States, the Smithsonian Institution, an independent
federal agency, bas been actively suppressing some of the most !interesting and important
jlfc,;lliieologic!Jl d~coveries made in the Americas.
The Vatican has been long accused of keeping artefacts and ancient books in their vast
cellars, without allowing the outside world access to them. These secret treasures, often of a
controversial historical or religious nature, are allegedly suppressed by the Catholic Church
because they might damage the church's credibility, or perhaps cast their official texts in
doubt. Sadly, there is overwhelming evidence that s-omething very similar is happening with
the Smithsonian Institution.
The Smithsonian Institution was started in 1829 when an eccentric British millionaire tby
the name of James Smithson, died and left $515,169 to create an institution "for the inc,;rease
and diffusion of knowledge among men." !Unfortunately, thj:Te ,is evidence tthe Smithsonil!Tl
has been lfiore active in the suppression of knowledge rather than the diffusion of it for the
last hundred years.
The cover-up and alleged suppression of archaeological evidence began in late i881 when
John Wesley Powell, the geologist famous (or exploring the Grand Canyon, appointed Cyrus
Thomas as the director of the Eastern Mound Division of ,the Smithsonian Institution's
Bureau of Ethnology.
When Thomas came to the Bureau of Ethnology he was a "pronounced believer in the
existence of a race of Mound Builders, distinct from the American Indians." However, John
Wesley Powell, the director of the Bureau of Ethnology, a very sympathetic man toward the
American Indians, had lived with the peaceful Winnebago Indians of Wisconsin for many
years as a youth and felt that American Indians were unfairly thought of as primitive and
savage.
The Smithsonian began to promote the idea that NatLve Americans, at that time being
exterminated in th.e Indian Wars, were descended from advanced civilisations and were wor-
thy of respect and protection. They also began a program of suppressing any archaeological
evidence that lent credence to the school of thought known as Diffusionism, a school which
believes that throughout history there has been widespread dispersion of culture and civilisa-
tion via contact by ship and major trade routes.
The Smithsonian opted for the opposite school, known as Isolationism. Isolationism
hoJds that most civilisations are isolated from each other and that there has been very little
contact between them, especially those that are separated by bodies of water. In this intel-
lectual war that started in the 1880s, it was held that even contact between the civilisations
of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys was rare, and certainly these civilisations did not have
any contact with such advance.d cultures as the Mayas, Toltecs, or Aztecs in Mexico and
Central America. By Old World standards this is an extreme, and even ridiculous idea, con·
sidering that the river system reached to the Gulf of Mexico and these civilisations were as
by David Hatcher Childress close as the opposite shore of the gulf. It was like saying that cultures in the Black Sea area
could not have tnad contact with the Mediterranean.
world IExplorers Club When the contents of many ancient mounds and pyramids of the Midwest were examined,
403 Kemp Street it was shown that the history of the Mississippi River Valleys was that of an ancient and
Kempton, Illinois 60-946-0074 USA sophisticated culture that had been in contact with Europe and other areas. Not only that,
the contents of many mounds revealed burials of huge men, sometimes seven or eight feet
Tel: (815) 253 6390 tall, in full armour with swords and sometimes huge treasures.
Fax: (815) 253 6300 For instance, when Spiro Mound in Oklahoma was excavated in the 1930s, a tall man in
full armour was discovered along with a pot of thousands of pearls and other artefacts, the

36-NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993

3b
largest such treasure so far docwnented. Th~ whereabouts of the the remains, yet nothing else was heard. Sanderson seemed con-
man in armour is unknown and it is quite likely that it eventually vinced that lthe Smithsonian Institution had received the bizarre
was taken to the SmithsonianJlnstitution. relics, but wondered why tl\.ey would not release the data. He asks,
In a private conversation with a well-lmown historical researcher "... is it that these people cannot face rewriting all the text lbooks?"
(who shall remain nameless), I was ,told that a former employee of In 1944 an accidental discovery of an even more controversial
the Smithsonian, who was dismissed for defending the view of dif- nature was made by Waldemar Julsrud at Acambaro, Mexico.
fusionism in the Americas (Le., the heresy that other ancient civili- Acambaro is in the state of Guanajuato, 175 miles 1l0I'thwest of
sations may have visited the shores of North and South America Mexico City. The strange archaeological site there yielded over
during the many millennia before Columbus), alleged that the 33,500 objects of ceramic; stone, including jade; and knives of
Smithsonian at one time had actually taken 'a barge fujJ of unusual obsidian (sharper than steel and still used today in .heart surgery).
artefacts out into the Atlantic and dwnped them in 'the ocean. iJalsrud, a prominent local German merchant, also found statues
Though the idea of Ithe Smithsonian's covering up a valuable ranging from less than.an inch to six feet in length depicting great
archaeological frnd is difficult to accept for some, there is, sadly, a reptiles, some of them in active association with humans-"generally
great deal of evidence to suggest that the Smithsonian Institution eating them, but in. s.ome bizarre statuettes an erotic association was
has knowingly covered up and lost' important archaeological relics. indicated. To observers many of these creatures resembled
The Stonewatch Newsletter of the Gungywamp Society in dinosaurs.
Connecticut, which researches megalithic sites in New England, had Jalsrud crammed this collection into twelve rooms of his expand-
a curious slory in Itheir Winter i 992 issue about stone coffrns dis- ed house. There startling representations of Negroes, Orientals, and
covered in 1892 in Alabama which were sent to the Smithsonian bearded Caucasians were included as were motifs of Egyptian,
Institution and then ·lost'. According to the newsletter, researcher Swnerian and other, ancient non-hemispheric civilisations, as well as
Frederick J. Pohl! wrote an intriguing letter in 1950 Ito the late Dr portrayals of Bigfoot.and aquatic monsterlilee creatures, weird
LC. Lethbridge, a British archaeolog'ist. human-animal mixtures, and a host of other inexplicable creations.
The letter from Pohl stated, "A profess.or of geology sent me a Teeth from an extinct !Ice Age horse, the skeleton of a mammoth,
reprint (of the) Smithsonian Institution, The Crumf Burial Cave by and a number of hwnan sleulls were found at the same site as the
Frank Rums, US Geological Survey, from the report of the US ceramic artefacts.
National Musewn for 1892l pp 451-454, 1984. In the Crumf Cave, Radio-carbon dating in the laboratories of the University of
southern branch of the Warrior River, in Murphy's Valley, Blount Pennsylvania and additional tests using the thermolwninescence
County, Alabama, accessible from Mobile Bay by river, were method of dating pottery were performed to determine the age of the
coffins of wood hollowed out by frre, aided by stone or copper chis- objects. Results indicated the objects were made about 6,500 years
els. Eight of these coffins were taken to the Smithsonian. They ago, around 4,500 BC. A team of experts at another university,
were about 7.5' long" 14" to 18" wide, 6" to 7" deep. Lids open. shown Jalrud's half,dozen samples but unaware of their origin, ruled
"I wrote recently to the Smithsonian, and received reply March out the possibility that they could have been modem reproductions.
11 th from F.M. Setzler, Head Curator of Department of However, they fell silent when told of their controversial, source.
Anthr.opology. (He said) 'We have not been able to fmd the speci- In 1952, in an effort to debunlc: this weird collection which was
mens in our collections, th.pugh records show that they were gaining a certainl amount of fame, American archaeologist Charles
received.'" C. DiPeso claimed to have minutely examined the then 32,000
David Barron, President of the Gungywamp Society was eventu- pieces within not more than four hours spent at the home of Julsrud.
ally told by the Smithsonian in 1992 that the coffms were actually In a forthcoming boolc:, long delayed by continuing developments in
wooden troughs and that they could not be viewed anyway because his investigation, archaeological investigator John H. Tierney, who
they were housed in an asbestos-contaminated warehouse. This has lectured on the case for decades, points out that to have done
warehouse was to be closed for the next ten years and no one was that DiPeso would have had to have inspected, 133 pieces per minute
allowed in except Smithsonian personnel! steadily for four hours, whereas in actuality, it would have required
Ivan T. Sanderson, a well-known zoologist and frequent guest on weelc:s merely to have separated the massive jwnble of exhibits and
Johnny Carson's Tonight Show in the 19608 (usually with an exotic arranged them properly for a valid evaluation.
animal like a pangolin or a lemur), once related a curious story Tierney, who collaborated with the late Professor Hapgood, the
about a <letter he received regarding an engineer who was stationed late William N. Russell, and others in the investigation, charges that
on the Aleutian island of Shemya during --- ;:;Z;O±=:'n.•.• n .• _~n. __ •· ·H • . • "

World War II. While building an airstrip, his


crew bulldozed a group of hills and discov-
ered under several sedimentary layers what I
appeared ItO be h,wnan remains. The Alaskan
mound was in fact a graveyard of gigantic
hwnan remains, consisting of crania and long
leg bones.
The crania measured from 22 to 24 inches
from ibll$e to crown. Since an adult skull nor-
mally measures about ~ight inches from back
to front, such a large crania would Unply an
immense size for a normally proportioned
hwnan. Furthermore, every skull was said to
ftave been neatly trepanned (a process of cut-
Iting a hole in the upper portion of the skuIi).
In fact, the habit of flattening the skull of
an infant and forcing it to grow in an elongat-
ed shape was a practice used by ancient
Peruvians, the Mayas, and the Flathead
fudians of Montana. Sanderson tried! to gather
further proof, eventually receiving a letter
from another member of the unit who con-
fInned the report. The letters both indicated
than the Smithsonian Institution had collected

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·37

31
the SmithsoniJln iInstitution and other archaeological authorities con- The World Explorers Club decided to check on this story by call-
ducted a campaign of disinformation against the discoveries. The ing the Smithsonian in Washington DC, though we felt there was
Smithsonian had, early in the controversy, dismissed the entire little chance of getting any real infofllliltion. After speaking briefly
Acambaro collection as an elaborate hoax. Also, utilising the to an operator, we were transferred to a Smithsonian staff archaeolo-
Freedom of Information Act, Tierney discovered that practically the gist, and a wOI'lli!D'S voice came on the phone and identified herself.
entirety of the Smithsonian's Julsrud case fIles are missing. I told her that I was iRvestigating a story from a 1909 Phoenix
After two expeditions to ithe site ,in 1955 and 1968, Professor newspaper article about the Smithsonian Institution's having exca-
Charles Hapgood, a professor of l!iLstory and anthropology at the vated rock-cut vaults in the Grand Canyon where Egyptian artefacts
University of New Hampshire, lrecorded the results of his 18-year had been discovered, and whether the Smithsonian liist,itution could
investigation of Ac6.mbaro in a privately printed! book entitled give me any more information on th& subject.
Mystery In Acambaro. Hapgood was initially an open-minded seep- 'Well, the first thing I can tell you, before we go any further," she
tic concerning the coUection but became a believer after his first said, "is that no Egyptian artefacts of any kind have ever been found
visit in 1955, at which time he witnessed some oJ the figures being in North or South America. Therefore,] can tell you that the
excavated and even dictated to the diggers where he wanted 'them to Smithsonian Institution has never been involved in any such excava-
dig. tions." She was quite helpful and polite but, in the end, knew noth- .
ing. Neither she nor anyone else with whom I spoke could find any
Adding to the mind-bogg'ling aspects of this controversy is the
record of the discovery or either G.E. Kinkaid and Professor S.A.
fact that the Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e lHistoria, throu-,gh
Jordan.
the bte Director of Prehispanic Monuments, Dr Eduardo Noguera,
While it cannot be discounted that the entire story is an elaborate
(who, as head of an official investigating team at the site, issued a
newspaper hoax, the fact that it was on the front pag~ named the
re,port which 1'ierney will be publishing), admitted "the apparent
prestigious Smithsonian Institution, and gave a highly detailed story
scientific legality with which these objects were found." Despite
!hat went on for severa) pages, lends a great deal to its credibility. It
evidence of their own eyes, however, officials declared that because is hard to believe such a story could have come o..ut o( thin air.
of the objects' 'fantastic' nature, they had to have been a hoax played
Is the Smithsonian Institution covering up an archaeological dis-
on Julsrud! covery of immense importance? If this story 'is true it would radi-
A disappointed bqt ever-hopeful Ju,Lsrud died. His house was sold cally change the current view that there was no transoceank contact
and the collection put in storage. The collection is not currently in pre-Columbian times, and that all Am.erican Indians, on both con-
open to the public. tinents, are descended from Ice Age explorers who came across the
Perhaps the most amazing !Suppression of all ~ the excavation of Bering Strait. (Any information on G.E. Kinkaid and Professor SA
an Egyptian tomb by the Smithsonian itself in Arizona. A ~engthy Jordan, or theiJ; alleged discoveries, that readers may have would be
front page story of the Phoenix Gazette on 5 April 1909 (see page greatly appreciated.)
39), gave a ihighly detailed report of the discovery and excavation of Is the idea that ancient Egyptians came to the Arizona area in the
a rock-cut vault by an expedition led by a Professor S.A. Jordan of ancient past so objectionable and preposterous that it must be cov-
the Smithsonian. The Smithsonian, however, claims to have ered up? Perhaps the SmithsQnian Institution is more interested in
absolutely no knowledge of the discovery or its discoverers. maintaining the status quo than rocking the boat with aston-
ishing new discoveries that overturn previously accepted! aca-
demic teachings.
Historian and linguist Carl Hart, editor of World Explorer,
then obtained a hiker's map of the Grand Canyon from a
bookstore in Chicago. Poring over the map, we were amazed
to see that much of the area on the north-side of the canyon
has Egyptian names. The area around Ninety-four Mile
Creek and Trinity Creek had are~ (rock formations, appar-
ently) with names like Tower of Set, Tower of Ra, Horus
Temple, Osiris Temple, and Isis Temple. In ,the Haunted
Canyon area were such names as the Cheops Pyramid, the
Buddha Cloister, Buddha Temple, Manu Temple and Shiva
Temple. Was there any relationship between these places
and the alleged Egyptian discoveries in the GrJUld Canyon?
We called a state archaeologist at the Grand Canyon, and
were told that the early explorers had just liked Egyptian and
Hindu names, but that it was true that this area was off limits
to hikers or other visitors, "because of dangerous caves."
Indeed, this entire area with the Egyptian and Hindu place
names in the Grll,Ild Canyon is a forbidden zone--no one is
allowed into this large area.
We could only conclude that this was the area where the
vaults were located. Yet today, this area is curiously off-lim-
its to all hikers and even, in large part, park personnel.
I believe that the disctming reader will see ithat if oIlly a
small part of the 'Smithsonian,gate' evidence is true, theJ our
most hallowed archaeological institution, has been actively
involved in suppressing evidence fOf advanced American cul-
tures, evidence for anckIlt voyages of various cultures to
North America, evidence for anQmalistic giants and other
oddball artefacts, and evidence that tends to disproYe the offI-
cial dogma that is now the history of North America.
The Smiths.onian's Board of Regents still refuses to open its
meetings to the news media or the public. If Americans were
ever allowed inside Ithe 'nation's attic', as the Smith.sonian has
been called, what skeletons might they ftnd?

3S.NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993J

3g
Front page of The Phoenix Gazette, 5th April 1909
The Shrine
EXPL "Over a hundred feet from the enlnmce is the aoss-hall, several hundred feet long,
in which are fotmd the idol, or image, of the people's god, siDing aoss-Iegged, wi!b a;
lotus flower or lily in each hand. The cast of the face is oriental, and the carving
shows a skillful hand, and the entire is remarkably well preserved, as is everything is
Ithis cavern. The idol ahnost resembles Bud.dba, though the scientists are not certain
Mysteries of Immense Rich Cavern Being as to whal religious worship it r~enls. Taking into 'consideration everything
found thus far, it is possible thai this WOlJhip most resembles the ancient people of
Brought to Light Tibet. Surrounding this idol are smaller images, some very beautiful 'in form; others
CIJ)Oked-necked and distorted shapes. symbolical, probably, of good and evil. Then:
are two large cactus with protrudmg arms, one on each side of the dIlis on wbic;iLdi
JORDAN IS ENTHUSED god sqllalS. All this is carved oUI of hard rock resembling marble. In the opposite
c:pmer of this cross-hall were found tools of all descriptio~, made of coppa. These
Remarkable Finds Indicate Ancient People Migrated people undoubtedly knew the lost art of hardening this meta!l which has hem sougbJ
by chemists for cetl!qries without result On a Ibenc!J, running around the workroom
From Orient was some charcoal and other material probably used in the process. There is a1w
slag and stuff similar to mane, sho-wing that these ancients smelted ores, but so f!!l no
trace of whae or how this was done has been discovered, nor the. origin ,of the ore.
'The laieSI news of the progress of the exrloralions of whal is now,-egarded by sci-
entisls as I}9t only the oldesl archaeologica discovery in the United SlAtes, hUI one of "Among the other fmds an: vases or urns and cups of copper and gold, made very
the most valuable in the world, which was menlioned some lime ago in the Gazdll:, artistic in design. The ponery work includes enameled wan: and ,lazed' vessels.
was broughl to the cily yestaday by G.E. Kinkaid, the explorer who found the grea~ Another passageway lleads to granaries such as are found in the onental temples.
underground citadel of the Grand Canyon during a lrip from Green river, Wyoming, They contain seeds of various kinds" One very large storehouse has not yet been
down the Colorado, in ,a wooden boat, to Yuma, sevaal months ago. According to enlered, as it is twelve feet high 'and can be reached only from above. Two copper
the slOry related to the Gazette by Mr. ~aid, the archaeologisls of the Smithsonian hooks ex tend on the edge, which indicates that some sort of ladder was allached.
Institute, which is fmancing .the expeditions, have made discoveries wbtcP &\most These granaries are rounded, as the materials of Which they are constructed, I think,
conclusively prove thatlthe race which inhabited this myslerious caVeJJ\, hewn in is a very hard cement A gray metal is also found in this cavern, which puzzles the
solid rock ,by Ihuman hands, was of oriental origin, possibly from Egypt, tracing back scientists, for ils identily has not been established. It resembles ,platinum. Strewn
to. Ramses. If their theories an: borne out by the lrl..IWaiion of ,the tablets engraved promiscuously ova the floor everywhen: lire what people call 'cats eyes,' a yellow
''with hieroglyphics, the mystery of the prehistoric JlOOI?les of North America, their stone of 1\0 great value. Each one is engraved with the head of iIhe Malay type.
ancient arts, who tlJey were and whence they came, Will be solved. Egypt and the The Hieroglyphics
Nile, and Arizona and the Colorado wiU be linlted by a historical chain f1IJ!,!ling back "On aU the urns, or walls over doorways, and tablets of slime which were found by
,ito ages which stagg!;1"S the wildest fancy of the fictionist the image are the myslerious hieroglyphics, the key to which the Smithsonian
A Thorough Investigation Institute hopes yet to discover. The engraving on the tablets 'probably has something
Un.der the direction of Prof. S.A. Jordan, the Smithsonian Institute is now prosecUt- to do with the religion of the people. Similar hieroglyphics have been found in
ing the mOSI thorOirgh explorations, which will be continued until the lasl link in the southern Arizona. Among the PICtoriaJI writings, only two animals are fOl!nd. One i!l
chain is forged. Nearly a mile underground\ about 1480 feel below the surface, the of prePistoric type.
long main ipassage has been delved into, to find another mammoth chamber fnmt The Crypt
which radiales scores of passageways, like I1Ie spokes of a Wheel. Several hundred "The tomb or crypt in which the mummies were found is one of the largest of the
molns have been discovered, reached by passageways running from Ihe main pas- chambers, the walls slanting back at an angle of about 35 degrees. On these are tiers
,sage, one of them ,having been explored for 854 feet and another 634 feet The recenl oLmummies, each one occupying a separate hewn shelf. At the head of each is a
fmas include articles which have never been known as native 10 this cOlUUry, and small bench, on whicb is found copper cups and pieces of bmken swords. Some 0
doublless they had their origin in the orien!. War weapons, copper instrumenls, the mummies are covered with clay, and all an: wrapped in a bart fabric. The urns or
sharp-edged and hardl as steell, indicate the hi~ state of civilization reached by these cups on the lower tiers are crude, while as the higher shelves are reached, the urns are
strange people. So inla'esled have the scienusls become thalsrep&rations are being fmer in design, showing a taler stage of civilization. It is worthy o( note thai all the
made to equip the camp for extensive studies, and the force wi be increased to thirty mummies examined so far have proved to be male, no children or females being
:.or forty persons. huried here. This Iea.ds to the belief that this exterior section was the warriors' bar-
i "Before going funher into the cavern, bener facilil.ies for lighting will have to be racks.
linstalled, for the darlmess is dense and quite impenetrable for the average flashlight ~ Among the diseoveries no bones of animals have been fotmd, no skins, no cloth-
In order to avoid being lost, wire are being strung from the entrance to all passage- ing, no bedding. Many of the rooms ate bare but for wala' vessels. One room, about
ways leading directly 10 large chambers. How far this cavern eXlends no one can 40 by 700 feel, was probably the main dining hall, for cooking utensils are found
guess, but it is now the helief of many that whal has already been explored is merely hae. Whal these people lived on is a problem, though it is presumed thai they came
the "barracks", to use an American term, for the soldiers, and thai far into the under· south in the winter and farmed in the valleys, going back north in the summer.
worrd wiu be fotmd the main communal dwellings of the families. The perfecl venti- Upwards of SO.OOO people could have lived in >the caverns comfortably. One theory
lation of the cavern, the steady draUghl that blows through, indicates that it has anoth- is that the present Indian tribes found in Arizona are descendants of the serfs 0
er outlet to the surface. slaves of the people which inhabited the cave. Undoubtedly a good IIIiIlY thousands
Mr. Kinkaid's Report of years before the Christian en a people lived here which reached a high_ stage 0
Mr. Kinkaid was the flJSt while child born in Idaho and has been an explorer and civilization. The chronology of hWl\4D history is fyll of gaps. Professor Jordan is
hunla' all his life, thirty years having been in the service of the Smithsonian Institute. much enthused over the discoveri.es and bd_i!:ves thai the fmd will prove of in~eula­
Even briefly recounted, Ihis history sounds fabulous, abnost grotesque. ble value in archaeological work.
"First, I would impress that the cavern is nearly inaccessible. The entr~ce is 1,486 "One thing I have not spoken of, may be of interest There is one chamber the pas-
feet down the sheer canyon wall. It is located on government land and no visitor will sageway 10 wb.ich is not ventilaled, an4 when we appro&&l!ed i! a deadly, snaky smell
be aJlowed th«:n: unda penally of trespass. The scientisls wish to work unmolested, struck us. Our light would not penetrale the gloom, and until slronger ones are avail·
with.out fear of the archaeological discoverills being disturbed by curig or relic able we will DOt know whal the chamber contains. Some say snakes, but other boo-
hunla's. A lrip then: would be fruitless, and the visilor would he S.ent on his way. hoo this idea and think it may contain a deadly gas or chemicals used by the ancienls.
The. story of how I found the.cav~ has been related, b~t in a JW:agraph: I was ~our­ No sounds an: heard, but it smells snaky just. the same. The whole underground
neymg down the Colorado nver m a boat, alone, looking for lIIIDeral. Some forty- ins.tallalion gives one of shaky nerves the ,qeeps. The gloom is like a weight on one's
two miles up the river from ,the El Tovar Crystal canyon, I saw on the east wall, sho.ulders, and our f1ashlilShts and candles only ,make Ihe darkness blacker.
stains in ~ sedimentary formation about 2,000 feet above the river bed. There was Imagination can revel in conjectures and ungodly da)'dreams back through the ages
no trail to this pomt, but 1 fmally reached it with greal difficulty. Above a shelf that have elapsed lilI the mind reels diuily in space."
which hid it from view from the river, was the mouth of the cave. Thqe are steps An Indian Legend
leadiJJg from this entrance sQllle !hiI1Y ¥ards to what was, aI the time the cavern was In connection with this story, it is notable that al;Jlllllg lI}e Hopi IndiAPs the Iradition
inIlabited, the level of the river. WIlen I saw the cbisel marks on the wall wide the is told that their ancestors once lived in an underworld in the Grand Canyon till
lentrance, f became interested, securing my gun and went in. During thai lrip I wenl dessensjon ~e~between the good and the bad, the people of one heart and the pe0-
back several hundred' feet along the main passage till I came to the crypt in which I ple of two hearts. Machetto, who was their chief, counsele'd Ithem to lea've the tmder-
discovered the mummies. One of these I stood up and pholographed by flashlight ~ world', but there was no way out The chief then caused a tree to grow up and pierce
gathered a number of relics, which I carried down the CololJldo to Yuma, from the roof of the underworld, and then the people of one heart climbed out They, tar·
whence I shipped them to Washington with details of the discovery. Following this, ried by Paisisvai (R<'<d River), which is the Colorado, and grew grain and com. TILey
the explorations wen: IIIldenaken. sent out a message to the Temple of the Sun, asking the blessing of peace', good will
TheP~es and rain for people of one heart. Thai messenger neva returned, Ibut today at the
"The main passageway is about 12 feet wide, narrowing to nine feet toward the far- Hopi villages at sundown can be seen the 91d, men of the lribe out on the housetops
ther end. About 57 feet froml the',entrance, the flJSt side-passages branch off 10 the gazing toward the sun, looking for the messenger. When he returns, their lands and
"right and left, ~.ong wmch, on both sides, are a number of roorns aboul the size of ancienl dweUing place will be restored to them. That is the tradition. Among the
ordinary living rooms .of today, though some are 30 by 40 feet square. These an: en~s of animals in. the cave is seen the image of a heart over the spol whae it
,eAtered by oval.shaped' doors and are ventilaled by ro.iliid air spaca; through. the walls is 10 . The legmd was learned by W.E. Rollins, the artist, during a year spent
into the passages. The walls are about three feet six inches in thickness. The pas- with the Hopi Indians. There are two theories of the origin of the Egyptians. One is
sages are chiseled or hewn as straight. as eould be Iaig out by an engineer. The ceil- that they came from Asia; another that the racial cradle was in the uppt:r Nile region.
ings of !ll;l!Jly of the roorns converge to a ?eDler. The side-passages near the entrance Heeren, an Egyptologist, helieved in the Indian origin of the.Egyptians. The discov·
run al a !;hjrp ~ngle from the main hall, but toward the rear they gradually reach a eries in the Grand Canyon may throw further light on human evolutioo and prehis-
right angle in direction. toric ages.

~(I
.
THE ELECTRIC BLANKET/HEATED WATERIBED
CONNECTION: SHOULD YOU BE PLUGGED INJ

Early Warning Signals


Smitten by the marvels of electrical power, we have as a society
been slow either to notice or to investig'ate its harmful effects on the
human body. One of the fIrst published epidemiological studies on
electrical power frequency fields, was carried out by Dr Nancy
Wertheimer and Ed Leeper of the University of Colorado.'
Wertheimer was concerned in this initial study to determine whether
a connection existed between exposure to electrical currents ,generat-
ed! by high voltage power lines and the increased risk of childhood
leukemia. Upon reflection it is perhaps not surprising that emana-
tions from power lin-es with voltages as high as 230,000 volts (230
kilovolts) might be regarded as hazardous to health, even at some
distance from the lines themselves.' The capacity of power lines to
generate signifIcant electrical fIelds at quite some distance from the
line-wire source is 'll11J.ply illustrated in that well-known photograph
of a young boy beneldh a high voltage power line, holding Ii pair of
fluorescent lamp tubes which were lit simply because he was stand-
ing in the electrical field generated by the line.
Initial research indicated that there was indeed a vague correlation
between the location of high voltage power lines and the proximity
of the homes of childhood leukemia victims, but considerable
research had still to be undertaken until a more defmitive pattern was
to emerge.
Although the potential effect on human health of the high voltage
power lines would continue to prove worrying, Wertheimer quickly
became aware that the high voltages emanating from power generat-
ing plants and transported through major power lines are soon
stepped down to 13,000 volts (13 kV) by large transformers set up at
strategic points at a prescribed distance from the high voltage lines.
Mapping the locations of the substations and the birth addresses of
childhood leukemia victims, the pieces of the puzzle began to come
together. In order to make electricity in the 13 kV lines accessible to
customers, pole-mounted transformers are used Ito reduce the primary
wire voltage of 13 kV down to the 240 and 120 volt levels required
by electrical appliances in the home. The association between the
location of the transformers and the vicinity of the birth homes oJ
childhood leukemia victims proved! to be statistically interesting, but
the case was not as clear-cut as it may have seemed.
Although there appeared to be a correlation between the increased
incidence of leukemia amongst young vic.tims and the proximity of
their homes to the transformers, a puzzling aspect of the distribution
pattern of the relevant leukemia rates had also emerged which was
inconsistent with this finding. In addition to the fact that the inci-
By Prof Ron S. Laura dence of leukemia was significantly higher for those children living
& John F. Ashton in houses closest to the pole-mounted transformers, a significant per-
centage of young leukemia victims had lived lin not the fIrst house
Extracted from their recent book: 'away from the transformer, but the second house away. What was
equally puzzling was that the leukemia rate fell sharply for children
I fidden Hazards in the third @use, away from !he transJormer and was negligible in
Published by Bantam Books, Australia, 1991. respect of the overai population for all the remJUning houses on the
line.)

Vol 2, No 13 - , 993 NEXUS·41


Having consulted a physicisJ friend, Ed Leeper, about these on the line to the service drop wires.' Since the secondary wire was
unusual fmdings, it became clear to Wertheimer that there Was a carrying sufficient current to feed the dozen or so service lines
factor missing in her original equation about the direct and appar- directly supplying the local houses, it was producing the strong
ently straightforward relationship between the increased rate of magnetic field which seemed to be implicated 'in the increased rate
leukemia in children and the distance of the transformers from the of childhood leukemia.
childhood homes of leukemia victims. The correlation could cer-
tainly not be explained in terms 'of the magnetic field generated by
the transformer, nor by the alternating electric field generated by
the transformer, nor by the altetfiating electric field generated by
the wires as a result of the 60 hertz alternating current which passed
through them on its path to 'households from the transformers. The
reason for this is simply that the magnetic field given off by the
transformer should in pringple drop off so sharply that it would be
negligible even at the bouse closest to It. Nor could the electric
field generated by the alternating current in the lines be responsible
for the varying rates of leukemia from one house to another, since
the voltage upon which these fields would depend does not change
in strength according to the wire distance from the transformers.'
There would be no difference, in other words, in the force of the
electric fields as manifest from one house to the other.
The key needed to unlock this final door in the investigation was
found when Wertheimer enlisted Leeper's help for the production of
a gaussmeter, a device used to measure magnetic field strengths.
Testing the device in a neighbourhood whose pole and wire config- Wertheimer followed up her preliminary findings with an exten-
uration were typical of the distribution network of the electricity sive investigation of the correlation between the field strengths of
system of the city, she was surprised by what she discovered. first-span secondary wires and the birth addresses of childhood
Begirming at the base of the transformer pole at an alley entrance, leukemia victims. These follow-up studies revealed that the rate of
the gaussmeter gave off a loud hum, indicating the presence of a leukemia for children living in dwellings where first-span sec-
strong magnetic field. As she walked up the alley past the first ondary wires ran past them was disproportionately higher than for
house, however, the hum of the gaussmeter did not subside and children living in homes away from these wires.6 Encouraged by
strangely continued until she reached the next pole, located at the these fmdings, Wertheimer decided to expand her research to de_ter-
far corner of the lot of the second house where hum from the gauss- mine whether the incidence of other forms of childhood cancer
meter suddenly ceased. Wertheimer noticed that this was the point could be associated with exposure to high-current wiring of any
at which several wires known as 'service drops' linked up with and kind, not just first-span secondary wires.
reduced the current load coming from the secondary distribution Severa! categories of high-current exposures were identified and
line fed by the transformer two houses away. She noticed also that included in the study. Homes situated less than 50 feet from first-
the point at which the first-span secondary distribution line finished, span secondaries, those within 65 feet of a group of three 10 five
coincided with the pronmmced decrease in the childhood leukemia small-gauge primary wires, and homes located within 130 feet of
rate. On the basis of these initial observations Wertheimer postulat- either three-phase, large-gauge primary wires or of a group of six or
ed that the association she was searching for was not the proximity more small-gauge primary wires, were all regarded as high-current
of the neighbourhood transformer to the homes of childhood risk homes.' The results of her research were startling and alarm-
leukemia victims, but rather the proximity of the secondary distri- ing. As Brodeur puts it:
bution line which ran from the transformer past the first two houses
"During 1976 Wertheimer visited the birth and diagnoses
addresses of each of the cancer cases, the birth addresses
of each of the controls, and the addresses at which control
children had been living at the time their matched cases
had been diagnosed with cancer. She then proceeded 10
draw a diagram describing the location, size, type, and
proximity of the electrical wires andl transformers she had
observed in the vicinity of each of these. homes. Once that
was done, she analysed the data and found that her predic-
tion had held up: children who had lived in homes near
high-current electrical wires had died of cancer at twice
the rate seen in children living in dwellings near low-cur-
rent wiring. The association was strongest among those
children Who had spent their entire lives in a high<urrent
home. Particularly disturbing was the faot that of six chil-
dren in the study population who had lived near high-cur-
II A fV\ODe.R~
rent wires coming directly from power substations, all were
SINGLE. STOlt"'" cancer victims.'"
RAT OI!SCll.\I~I()N
Although it had previously been assumed that any harmful effects
MAZE SOOrl'TO&E of electromagnetic fields would ordinarily be cancelled in house-
E~'H!D 0,.. THI hold wiring, by virtue of the fact that return current tends to balance
SfTE.. the supply current, Wertheimer and Leeper argued that such equi-
librium is rarely preserved.' The problem is that some of the cur-
rent which should return through the wires tends instead to flow
through the ground. Inasmuch as most household electrical systems

~
are grounded through the plumbing, the return current passes
through the pipes of the house to produce a new magnetic field
.s~ within the home itself. This suggestion was especially disturbing,
since the duration of continuous exposure to a magnetic field

42·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993

2.-
appears to be equally, if not more damaging to human health than UnPQrtant factor in any analysis of these matters. Lel it be said,
the strength of the field in itself. This being so, exposure to a weak however, that neither of the authors makes use of an electric razor.
b\lc constant magnetic field could be far more deleterious 10 human The dose-rate for electric razors and other such high-strength-field
health than was at first supposed. Additionall support f.Qr their appliances also varies considerably, so that a general £tatement
hypothesis came to light in a US Public Health Service report which about their safe use could be misleading. Althou-gll most women do
correlated the cause of death for men between the ages of tw~nty not shave their legs every day, Ithey do spend more time shaving
and sixty-five with their occupations.... According to Wertheimer their legs on any !()ne occasion than do men shaving their faces OR
and Leeper's analysis of this data, it was clear that the cancer ra_te anyone occasion. The fact ,that women have a higher incidence of
for workers exposed to fairly regular exposures of alternating-cur- melanoma on ,their lower legs than do men may be of relevance
rent magnetic fields was significantly higher than for the overall here. Some professions in which men are involved similarly
population. Among some of the workers referred 10 were telephone require regular depilation, lI4l in the case of professional body-
and power linemen, sllbway and elevated-rajlway motormen, power bullders, some dancers" some models and some competitive athletes
station operators, electricians, and even welders. 'sueD as cyclists and swimmers.
When Wertheimer and Leeper's research was first published in The dose-rate for hair-drie.rs becomes equally variable. Both men
1979, their results were resoundingly rejected by the medical and and women tend to use an electric dryer to dry their hair at least'
scientific community which criticised the won as shoddy and poor- once per day. The exposure time is generally longer than the dose-
ly evidenced. The electric utilities industry quickly joined the ranks rate for the electric shaver, and the high-strength magnetic field
of orthodoxy to condemn the fmdings as heresy and the researchers
a$ heretics. 1I Dismissed out of pand, it was not until 1986 that
Savitz and his colleagues were one of the first research groups to
announce that they had accumulated sufficient data 10 replicate and
confum Wertheimer and Leeper's conclusion that prolonged expo-
sure to low-level magnetic fields generated by high"current wires
significantly increased the risk of developing cancer in children. 12
According to Savitz's longitudinal study, the risk of developing any
of the various types of childhood cancer is increased by more than
five times the control population for those children living in homes
in close proximity to high-current wires. It is important to note, by
the way" that the Suitz study did not include any of the same can-
cer cases used in Wertheimer and Leeper's study and thus provides
a genuinely independent measure of the magnitude of Ithe problem.

Electric Razors and Electric Hair-driers


Once it was established that prolonged exposure to low-level gener.ated is directed most often towards the skull and thu.s th-e
electromagnetic radiatioIl! could increase the risk of cancer,
brain. This brings into play another factor to which we have also
Wertheimer turned her atrention to household appliances in respect alluded in previous NEXUS articles, namely, the extent to which
of which prolonged exposure ,is generally a characteristic of their certain parts of, or organs in, the body are more susceptible to toxic
use. The risk factors of relevance here need carefUlly to be distin- intervention (e.g., the accumulation of mercury or aluminium in the
gui$hed, and the distinction should I1!Ot be reduced simply to the dif- Ibrain) or electromagnetic intervention (e.g., the special sensitivity
ference between the health hazards associated with extremely low of the reproductive organs to magnetic fields) than others'. This
levels of electromagnetic radiation and those associated with issue has special import for those people working in occupations
extremely high levels. In addition to the question of individual where certain vulnerable parts of the body are more directly
hypersensitivity, the concept of dose-rate must be included in any exposed to magnetic field sources than others (e.g., women working
risk-benefit ratio regarding the use of household appliances and at computer display terminals). In regard to the health lrisks ofhair-
electrica) equipment. 13 The electric razor is a case in point. Electric driers, the much neglected example is the hairdressing profession in
current which is used for household appliances is, as we saw earlier, which the hair-drier is used frequently throughout the day. This
supplied at a frequency of 60 cycles per second (now known as 60 being so, exposure of hairdressers to the relatively-high electromag-
hertz). In basic term$ this' mean~ that the current provided for our netic fields generated by the professional hair-driers usedl in salons
homes is an alternating current which flows first in one direction is not only regular, but the hair-drier is also frequently held in a
and then in the other, generating an electric field. When it does this position reasonably close to 'the breast, neck or head lof the hair-
at a frequency of 60 hertz, it is moving back and forth sixty times dresser as she or he brows dry the customer's hair. As far as the
per second or generating a 60 hertz. authors are aware, no study has yet been done of the potential
In the case of the electric razor ,the electromagnetic fields pro- heaJoth risks of electromagnetic radiation within this profession,
duced have been measured as 60 hertz fields with magnetic though the questi'ons which arise are of great interest.
strengths as ihigh as 200 to 400 milligauss one-half inch or approxi-
mately two centimetres away from the cutting edge of the blade. The Electric Blanket and the Heated Waterbed Connection
Since the blade is often in direc~ contact with the surface of the skin Although the field strengths of electric razors are, as we saw, rel-
during the process of shaving, it is clear that the nearby ti$ues are atively high, the daily exposure or dose is generally minimal.
being exp_osed to a powerful magnetic field. Since it has been While this daily dependency upon an electrical device with strong
established that 60 Hertz fields oJ as Ilittle as 3 miUigauss are associ- field strengths' is wQI1}'ing, the worry pales in comparison with the
ated with an increas-ed risk of cancer, the exposure levels from potential health risks associated with the use of electric blankets and
applianc_es such as elec_tric razors, electric hair-driers, curling irons, heated waterbeds. The field strengths of electric blankets are con-
etc., need to be carefully monitored. I ' siderably lower than those associated with electric razors, ranging
It is of course true that the electric razor is normally used for only from 50-100 milligauss or about one-half to one-quarter the field
a few minutes every day, and this brings in the point about the dose- strengths exhibited by razors. u The difference in the two cases is
rate as a factor in assessing the adverse impact on health of magnet- that Ithe electric blanket is used for many hours at a ti~ and is
ic fields. It is generally assumed that if the dose-rate is low (expo- maiJl!ained as close to the total surface of the body as possible.
sure for only a short duration), the use of appliances which give off Th-» means that the accumulated exposure or total administered
relatively high magnetic fields is safe. We have argued elsewhere dose of electromagnetic ragiation is collSiderably higher than the
that this assumption may not be as uncontentious as some dose-level for the electric razor. The fact that the exposure is com-
researchers'make it seem, but we do accept that the dose-rate is an

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS-43

'-'3
prehensive aCIQSS the entire surface of the body also adds a new can claim its product to be free of relatively strong electromagnetic
dimension to the question of dose impact, the health implications of fields.
which still need to be explored further.
. Although the electric 'blanket generates a greater field strength The Health Hazards of Electric Blankets and Heated
than the heated waterbed, whose heating element is located on the Waterbeds
underside of the bed, the heated Because of the problem of baving to
waterbed pJoduces a magnetic field ;"'Bb;;;";"';"';;w""~"""";""",~,,::,,;,,,,,;,,;,;,i""'4;""'''';''';:''';'';:;'';-''''''''';';:'-;'::i~'''i;;''''s elect a separate control population to
reaA:ng
~ of approximately
, five milli- 'm.'~"~"""~W":'-o/-"'''':?S'~.~.,,:,,
~!J~~~~"":lt::j:~mi i~~ii'. t,s,«}:.::.::.;",~,.
::l.<C>*-":'''''?~%.~,<-'iJl"";§;;,::"",,,,.:,·,,.,'<il,'''';'r:~t.,;,,.,,~-j.
·~)~:~~.,~.;:r::;:;'·~~··<;'-~f:r'~i~·
0,
(,:.~x~s>:--:.;t:,~~~;»:?«:-:~~,*X~e stabw:·sh whether those
1 - who used electric
g auss , the dose to which anyone lymg' \;k'@';,,,.-'<~,:~i;:-:ij;.:::;;" ,';,~l.ixN:&j~l.o,,)!;i$.:~~
>.• OO)"C>~':'~'~<'*:l;{)Y .... ~",'~"'x,~. ~~:<::~$@!r&:r,$ff,8;' ~,o, blankets or heated' waterbeds have a high-
I.

,~.,v.,-",()?§:",,,"f}o<Xi':-.,... ,,o) • • • • ~.:-I' ......".< "'~'''<\'JI "~R

in the. bed ~ould, be ~xposed. ,Sin~ 'tft'e:~]'lo'unQ;':il1atJtfle;~ricfa!~i\~e~i)'f);~ er incidence of can~er than those who do
the children mvolved m Werth.elffier• s ~,,,,,:~:'.«<oY~ic:;:'M,:;,,*,,,'c':"'
~'j;"--'=il»':'~" 'Wf'l"
. cc:,.,;,,,":(:;i;':c{;,;..i'i;;;;:(C:'ii:;."i*':';:"'.':.,~.x;.~?;;:''''~:~MS'~'''.';s:."
~.,.,,' '.""'''''''' . ,,,--,.,. "'" ,'"" ,--, ,.. "" .. ~" 'f{ ''is' ---Bl; ',","
not, the research m the area has been
earlier study on childhood le,ukerma ':i!~i~"<B1~i£',§L¥~;~;trllscatttag' e;was'·" lV":>
'~r,-W;;~'i~ihir'ili;;;~~1i designed instead
...·;.p,l:.' y~~~,:" ... :~ ...;;.•:?,. ,;', ., .:..... -: '.~;., ... ,'.' . ;. ~:/"""'" :*;''' :%:~;E: ·~>:~,S;":":J;j;:"""'<'
to determine the effects

:r::~g~~P~;~~I~oo:eafon~;~~~~:i~ ~!(iPr,~ft[~~i!I!1~!Y.':6Jg~if~<~f,!tt~d~:~f;;':~~~I~i:~~~a;~~;:c~O:~~
• ." < ••• • •

gauss, the potentIal bealth nsks asso- i*~:(~m,i::!\f:.'L:c: ",c"'-". ,,:,F,,"'c,t'L:'-=:::.,;~c,c-"'.::""""'h' ·:"'I:ii:."'\.t)j':"""" "":.:#*,~.: . ~~ pIer smce <It IS poSSIble to compare the
"ed ·th h ed t bed t ~";..~~,,,~f1::;..n~;mon IISJO:W I.Cn, e$e~i-~ft;. ;.,: ff f . f' Id th'
~~a~a~~ded~a1t;~~ ~~=~-lrtw~t~fG~aS1&f;j@'tftFiat6r~(i~ijtfJi,I~~
of ~;~lt:ti~n.m~~~e~~~~le,\~nCo~p~:
rate calculatIon, It IS Important to*'$':;::~:::~$J~":;'~'"~:9;;:'t:;~;::;S'iic.:-<i:;;"ic::*ntl\', . ;'~"';i;';:;:.:2:"':'~":'~:::":):~;:" the rate of mIscamage dunng the wmter
appreciate that while electric blankets:~@.,We~."e~Useij;tlfa. n.:.wtlen:t.
Ii. e. v. w.:ere€ir versus the summer months for a single
" 'I ed 1 d' th lt~,» ""'i>':lL "",,"", ,'" 'J1<""'" "'''''l'x " l"m~v»''-''18'" ''-~i!lxft''«.-" .- . ,
are ordman y us on'i unng e ffi~i~?~BW~~~<,,:~$1'JJ~;~::;':"'XCt"ii"~'~.~~~k'i;:itib:j,~,:-i*l~control population, It,ts poSSIble to assess
coldest months of the year, heated %P1fl'{~"'~~I' N~li.>m~<~ ~~~~n . ,~)1~~f-'%!il¥:fi~;;.~.t.~~*;'};~f-;:<.§~f.-'4t
.. o. . whether the use of electric blankets and
waterbeds tend to be heated for ~J4i~~@1",::~'k;~I;:,:m.i]@%*,.:~l~$l~~,;;ii;~~t?~~&.lmi.~;:i~h eated waterbeds during the winter
); .;<?-~ ..~.-: ',' .... <;<;;,., ''-.~~~r'"···'···''' ,.,%~ •• ~*;;.. ~~ .. ~', ?r~~. ;"'"'~~'"

1onger pen' 'ods th an e1"": ts ~W.'''iO~.*,*;::",,;m,


ecu"c blanke. :~~l':l<h::i~@l""
1 ; _"'h$.siJl""""~';tt:;:!\;'~*l>N4X'j:iitic:i€:~~'.; .
:#.~'~"'>~','1';"'ffii?ifu:;,xi!i~<;;is':~i':,;,:;;~,,,,,:m creases
th'e rate 0 fmIscamage
''- d '
unng
:' '~,%~j~$t¥::'l'~ii;:l,'-lh":x€J~i~'§:}~4:,>:;Y.~'~3i§l-;"'%~it:q-,,,·,'i*;;<:,*,,:,''''''': ,'.' that period. Because the study deals with
Why Electl1ic Blankets Generate the sam--e group of people, i.t is possible to
Magnetic FJelds eliminate the confOlmding influence of other .fa'Ctors such as a cou-
The parallel wires inr the middle of the electric blanket form an'S' ple's dietary, smoking or drinking habits, thus isolating the role in
pattern through which the electric current flows. Because of the miscarriage played by electromagnetic fields,l1
configuration of lines, the current flow ,through the'S' pattern is bal- Once again, it was the pioneering work of Wertheimer and
anced by the current <flowing in ,the opposite direction, thus tending Leeper which has served to advance the frontiers of knowledge in
to cancel out or prevent the generation of magnetic fields. The this area and encourage other researchers to continue their initial
heating element within the waterbed is simillU:ly designed to min- investigations.
imise the generation of electric fields. The problem is that at the Utilising a rigorously controlled experiment, Wertheimer and
outer edges of both the electric blanket and the heated waterbed, the Leeper compared the rate of miscarriages among users of 'electric
current becomes unbalanced. When this happens, the relatively sig- 'blankets and heated waterbeds as they occurred during the summer
nificant electromagnetic fields characteristic of each appliance are and winter months. They found that the incidence of miscarriage
generated." Whether electric blankets and heated waterbeds could was disproportionately higher during the months in which these
ever be constructed to avoid completely any current imbalance appliances were used than when they were not. II They discovered
which might lead to the generation of a magnetic field strength of also that the rate of miscarriage was higher between September and
significance, is a moot engineering point. Suffice to say that to date the end of January. The greatest risk of miscarriage was thus
we know of no brand of electric blanket or heated waterbed which observed to occur during the frrst months after conception and to
coincide with the coldest period when the temperature setting of the
appliances was likely to be set higher, thereby increasing the
strength of the magnetic field generated." No such seasonal'pattern
of miscarriage was reported among non-users. The results of their
study also demonstrated a trend towards slower foetal development,
and research is presently being done by Dr Michael Bracken of the

~
Yale University School of Medicine to make more specific determi-
natio.ns regarding the patterns of growth and d'evelopmenD of chil'-
dren exposed in utero to electromagnetic fields.:IIl
In their firsJ study on rthis matter published in
BioelectrOflUlgnetics ,in 1986, Wertheimer and Leeper admitted that
the effects they had documented could also be interpreted as the
effects of excessive heat eXJXls_ure. In other words the in-creased

~
~
D~~f-~.~,,--
"-
. rate of miscarriage, slower foetal d~velopment, and perhaps ev~n

~
D some forms of chil9hood disability, rWght be due to the heat radia-
tion generated by the appliances in question, rather than tbeir elec-
Q,
G
~,ir\,\1
tromagnetic fields. Excessive heat, for example, is known to have a
o L?L..> n~ deleterious effect on both sperm and ova.
In order to distinguish the different effects which each of these
two factors might be playing in the increased risk of miscarriage,
Wertheimer and I.&eper undei'took a neW study in which the effect
} 0': ' "-~., of electromagnetic radiation could be separated from the effects of

~
heat radiation!' To do this they now focused their investigations on

-r
(>
ceiling cable heating units, popular ,in many homes built during the

);.~~\
..' . " 1960s and 1970s in the Eugene, Oregon area. They conceived of the
, ceiling cable units as a kind of big electric blanket in the ceiling.
As in the case of the electric blanket, the current flowing along the
edges of the ceiling cable pattern was also unbalanced, thus gener-
ating quite strong magnetic fields." The difference was. that while
the humm body would be eXI!O's'ed to the magne_tic fieJds produced

44·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993

"\ \1I
by the ceiling cable, it would remain relatively unaffected by the razor is a relatively safe bet. If you feel you have to opt for the
heat radiation. The room would be warmed, in other words, with- electric razor effect, try a battery-operated razor.
o~t th-e body temperature being raised excessively. The electric blanket case deserves our special attention. In the
With the new experimental situation well defmed, Wertheimer light of current research on the magnetic field effects of electric
now compared the seasonal rate of miscarriage for families liv,ing in blankets, the threat of increased risk of miscarriage should be a suf-
homes heated Iby ceiling cable. As in the electric blanket study, the ficient deterrent in respect of their use, at least for all pregnant
rate of greatest foetal loss was observed in the coldest months when women. Ordinary blankets provide a safe alternative, but if you
the magnetic field strength generated by the cable was at its peak.'" feel you must use an electric blanket, there are ways in which you
This variation in the seasonal pattern of spontaneous abortion was can minimise the risks. One helpful strategy is simply to heat the
not manifest among families living in homes which relied on non- bed for an hour or so before retiring. Just before you are ready to
magnetic-field heating sources. On the basis of th'ese results go to bed, shut off the blanket and enjoy the warmth. Be careful not
to switch the blanket off at the temperature regulator, or to assume
that all is well 'simply because you have switched off the wall
switch. A number of electric bllll'll!;etsare capable of generating a .
magnetic field if they are left plugged in.llt the wall socket. Unplug
the electric blanket from the wall before actually getting into bed....
Similar precautions will make your use of the heated watetbed
equally accommodating. Once you are in the waterbed, your own
body heat, coupled with the heat from the bed water, will keep you
surprisingly cosy and comfortable.
A few other helpful tips in minimising the risk of electric blanket
use: Choose a blanket of the correct size so that wired areas of the
blanket are never tucked in under the IlliUtress. Do not use an elec-
tric blanket with a waterbed. If you use a waterproof s.h-eet, cover
the electric blanket with an lordinary blanket to absorb moisture
!below the waterproof sheet. When the blanket is SWitched on,
never pile blankets or clothing on it. If you are not using the elec-
Wertheimer and Leeper have re-affiIfned their original hypothesis tric blanket, it is best to store it in a hanging position and unfolded.
with confidence. Enough has certainly heen said to show that it Never use pins to secure somethiJ1-g to the blanket. Do not dry-
would be imprudent to ignore their conclusion. Given that expo- clean electric blankets; if lauudering is necessary, it is imperative to
sure to the electroma~etic fields generated by electric blankets and follow the instructions of the manufacturer. Keep the electrical
heated watetbeds can significantly increase the incidence of miscar- leads and controls free of the bed at all times. Switch off the hlanket
riage, these household appliances need to be used with caution, if at whenever it is not in use. Check the blanket and 'the controls on a
all. As the cost of home heating rises, the temptation is to make regular basis to ensure that neither has become faulty. Electric
more rather than less use of electric heating devices designed to blankets should be replaced every two to five years, depending
watm our beds. If the result of succumbing, to this temptaJion is upon use.
that the level of exposure to electromagnetic fields is increased, the
temptation is best [eft resisted.

Other Hazards of Electric Blankets


It is clear that electric blankets are susceptible to leakage involv-
ing considerable current flow. This can be particularly dangerous
in hospitals or in homes where electric bl!Ulkets are used to heat the
beds of patients with intercardiac connections, or otherwise plugged
into electromedical equipment. Individuals with pacemakers are
also vulnerable, as the electromagnetic field strengths of electric
blankets are sufficiently high to cause pacemaker dysfunction.
Microshocks can also result if electric blankets are used in conjunc-
Ition with electromedical equipment, or if wires in the blanket are
accidentally exposed or broken or even affected by wetness. Bed
wetting, for example, ca,n in certain circumstances of electric 'bl'an-
ket use, prove to be extremely dangerous. This hazard of use pro-
vides a significam problem in the case of infants and the inconti-
nent, as ,it also does for IDose who tend to perspire excessively or
for ,some medical reason are prone to excessive drainage associated
with a wound or surgical procedure. There is also the risk of hyper-
rhennia burns from excessive heat due to faulty thennostatic con-
trols or loss of skin sensation on the p,art of the patient. Electric
blankets are not generally recommended for individuals prone to
convulsions of fits 'and should be avoided in the case of uncon-
scious or anaesthetised individuals.

What You Can Do 10 Avoid the Wrong Connection


It is clear that exposure to electromagnetic radiation in all of its
form~ needs carefully to lbe monitored. Some appliances such as
the electric razor generate considerable magnetic field strengths, but
more research needs to be done to establish the acceptable dose
exposure, if any. The rule of thumb which we propose is, where
there is a possible health risk and the return is not great, seeR a min-
imal risk alternative. In the case of the electric razor, the safety

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·45


ADAMS BREAKS THE GRAVITY be published tational pulse, but domg no actual work
BARRIER I wish readers to refer further to the fol- over and above ,the 100%.
. Iinventor Robert Ad~ms appears .to lowing discussions OR Wilhelm Muller and In regard to another claim by Muller that
have broken the gravity barner, with Dr Rolf Schaffranke, the general content of he had! to use powerful neodymium mag-
his advanced Adams IElectric Motor which relates to my discovery of the mys- nets, this also is contrary Ito our fmdings. It
Generator operating in a high state of teries of magnetism some twenty-four years matters not whether you use standard off-
ago." the-shelf 'alnico' magnets or powerful mag-
resooance and apparently tapping gra\'i-
tational energy. nets, the results are no di'ferent. It is not
THE ADAMS PULSED ELECTRIC necessary to use powerful magnets to prove
MOTOR GENERATOR: if a machine can be constructed with over
"During the later months of 1992, I unity capability. This fact has been shown
derived what I considered to be an equation ON WILHELM MULLER repeatedly with the Adams machines, using
for possibly the ultimate in rotary motor "Reference to an article authored by Tom small and weak magnets.
generator design.The purpose of this exer- Valentine, California bases freelance jour- The inference also that Nikola Tesla
cise, was to ascertain whether further nalist, in regard to claims by Wilhelm might have required today's advanced mag-
unconventional design features of the Muller an_d IUs magnet manufacturers. netic materials to achieve over unity results,
machine paramelers, using this equation, I mu.st take Muller and his magnet manu- is also totally wrong. The only difference
proved certain theories which I had previ- facturers to task on their statement that between using ordinary magnets like 'alnico'
ously discussed with Mr Bruce Cathie, an "magnets can do a tremendous amount of and, for instance, 'samarium cobalt', is that
internat,ionally recognised New Zealand work" - this is not so. you get greater energy output from the
researcher in this field. In an over-unity rotary machine, the mag- stronger magnets by way of their ability to
Upon applying the 'equation' to the nets are 'assisting' to run the machine, but detect and amplify this energy on a greater
machine parameters and testing it, there was they are not generating the extra energy scale; and, therefore, upon utilising the
no doubt the machine w-as running in a beyond the reaching of 100% efficiency. Adams pulsing system, you can have a
higher state of resoU@ce than previously The magnets are not doing acroal work, as device using any ordinary magnets capable
obtained. such, beyond that point of not only 100% efficiency, but also of
It had been arranged beforehand between It is likely that Muller's machine is oper- being tuned into operating as a ,gate ill!
myself and Mr Cathie that, should the ating, according to the efficiency figure detecting and delivering gravitational ener-
resu}[s of this test be of some substance, Mr Muller quoted, somewhere on the near gy.
Cathie would travel from Auckland to lower end of a positive resonance curve. As for the establishment's texts stating
Whakatane specifically to check the From the generally known information on that "magnets do no real work", the estab-
machine parameters with his 'harmonic his device, tbis would be the likely area in lislunent, for once, is c_onect. It is, howev-
equations'. These results confirmedl the the- which it is operating. If this is so, then the er, interesting to note that this is a very 'con-
ory which we had previously discussed and chances of greater efficiency are slim, par- venient' fact for the establishment to
planned ,to implement. ticularly on account of it appearing to be expound upon - there could be an underly,
The results of these first trial tests have operatiJlg in a positive mode. For the rotor ing inference here that magnets are useless
been superseded, with the new figures magnets to operate as a gate to harness for machines designed to achieve beyond
obtained being found beyond anything that gravitational energy beyond unity, it must unity results.
is known of in the present-day field of free be in a negatively reso-
energy research. There is every possibility nant mode and not
that these latest figures, also, will be sur- operating in a closed
passed in the near future. magnetic circuit system.
The equations and how they are applied Bruce Catbie and I
are hidden within certain parameters and, to spent an entire day
this end, it could be said that to reach the together in January
ultimate in rotary over-unity devices is not 1993 going over his
possible without the correct application to harmonic equations in
all parameters of the machine using the regard to my advanced
'Adams Pulse Method' and ,the Adams- machine, and confmned
Cathie equations. that it was running in an
The above methods and results give us a advanced state of reso-
valuable lead in the realm of solid-state nance, harnessing gravi-
gravitational energy research. The equa- tational energy and
tions and methods of application in design demonstrating evidence
procedures, however, remain, at this stage, of the magnets forming
a 'gate' to harness one s.
secret The efficiency figures possible from G,

the device are such that they simply cannot half-cycle of the gravi- $_":' 4 , •• ll._

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·47

~1
- --------------

NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCEN
Permanent magnets and their place in sci- dous amount of work, they certainly 'gateway' to harnessing gravitational ener-
ence today need to be more fully under- wouldn not last long in any machine. There gy.
srood." are secrets and mysteries surrounding mag- With the application of the 'Adams reso-
nets and collapsing field energies, and only nant pulse frequency equation' and the
ON DR ROLF SCHAFFRANKE after exhaustive studies of these two phe- 'Cathie harmonic equations' combined with
"Reference to an article written by Dr nomena in practice, do these mysteries the 'Adams Pulsed EMG System', incredi-
Schaffranke in The Manual of Free Energy unravd ithemselves and emerge in their ble energies can be very easily and cleanly
Devices and Systems, Volume Two, pub- glory, and, correctly applied through the use made available.
lished by DA Kelly, in which on page 7, of the required mathematics, pave the way I wish to state to all readers at this partic- •
paragraphs 7 and 12, Dr Schaffranke erro- ro tapping gravitalional energy in astronom- ular stage, that I have only, in the past year,
neously maintains it is ne·cessary to use ical quantity. made the decision ro publish certain aspects
super ma-gnets ro tap gravitational energy. For high-power rotary machines, howev- from my twenty years, work in the field of
I found that my original 1970 open mag- er, super magnets are the obvious choice, free energy research.
netic circui~ motor generaror is superior Ito for reasons of higher power capabilities, Because of this, most other research~8
my 1976 closed magnetic circuit model in reduced weight and volume. When have probably never heard of me and so
regard ro the results of obtaining and main- installed in an 'Adams' machine, these super naturally assume they are among the first
magnets enable the opening up of clear- pioneers into free energy research.
taining a correct harmonic vacuum oscilla-
tion and so tapping gravitational energy ances between rotor and stator without
appreciable loss due ro the high overall effi- There are no doubt many other
during one half-cycie of the gravitational researchers who, for various reasons such
ciency of this machine.
pulse wave. as lack of finance, fear, suppression and
If indeed it were possible to induce mag- very many other barriers, have not had even
People who make such claims regarding
nets to do a tremendous amount of worle, as a chance to be heard. It is to lbe hoped the
the use of super magnets, obviously have
claimed by the aforementioned people, then
little or no experience in the realms of day will soon arrive when all can benefit
I claim that the magnets must first have from our work."
rotary free-energy devices using permanent
very s.ubstantial energy imparted ro them to
magnets. Over twenty years ago, I proved
undertake the task ahead. Secondly, when
that even tiny weak magnets bought off the reaching this 'tremendous' state, they would THf ADAMS PULSED ELECTRIC
shelf and incorporated into my machines start heating up and continue to do so until MOTOR GENERATOR - January 1993
yielded efficiency into the hundreds of per they reach the point whereby their magnet- "An explanation to readers on matters
cent over unity. ism would begin disintegrating, and contin- pertaining to hysterisis loss, eddy current
A permanent magnet is an entity unto ue ro do so until the machine would eventu- loss, magnetic drag. Also some advice
itself. It is no different in any way whatso- ally come to a halt, unable to start again. regarding further information required from
ever from its brothers made of different There are a lot of people out there striv- enquiries received to date by interested par-
materials; it is still a permanent magnet ing for the ultimate in rotary electrical ties:
irrespective of its gauss rating. machines. They all have my personal bless- I would first like to state that it has been
These claims are tantamount to saying ings for their endeavours, but may I hasten made clear that this machine has been
that you can get more than 2.2 volts out of a to add for those who make such claims, that proven to be capable of over-unity perfor-
lead acid ceU simply by increasing its they exhibit a lack of experience and mance, plus the fact that it has proven itself
ampere hour rating, or conversely, you use knowledge of the capabilities of permanent capable of returning energy to its supply
a ten horsepower motor to run a machine magnets in rotary electrical machines. source. So we now come to the matters
that only requires one horsepower. But don't be disappointed, readers, as I mentioned above.
I reiterate - the sooner science rejects assure you that permanent magnets are If a machine is to run at unity or better, it
conventionalism, the better for humankind. indeed the answer to free energy. Correctly must first 'overcome' those problems found
If indeed magnets were doing a lremen- adapted to a rotary machine they are the in the conventiond machine,~hich, of
-- Current in a series-reliOllant circuit Current in a series-resonant circuit
0 1.0
1.0

I
I
0.8
0.2 0.8 ...
ell:

t-
...
Z
t-
...
Z ~
L
ell: ell: t-
ell: 'ell: 0.4 0.6 ;;;)
;;;) 0.6 ;;;) L
...
U
:>
...
u
:>
5
0
0.6
~
........~
0.4
0.4 ~
...
.....
ell:

0.2
J\ ell:
0.8
J \ 0.2
s...
llI:

V
-/
" "
,

0 ,....
0
r-- 1.0
-20
- -10 0 +10 +20
0

PER CENT CHANCE FROM RESONANT FREQUENCY PER CENT CHANCE FROM RESONANT FREQUENCY
Hypothetical Case The "Adams Open Magnetic Circuit Machine"
Typical conventional D.C. tl)achine current variation; if indeed it were capable of even Typical current variation in 'Adams Pulsedl D.C. Machine' upon approaching resGo
approaching a state of resooance, in a c1<Ked magnefic system. nanee, curre!!f d\!creases, [power oulplA increases, machine in this negative mode Is
tapping gravitational energy.

48·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993


NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCEN
course, are principally those of magnetic 'neodymium' or 'samarian cobalt' magnets However, for those who are seeking
drag, hysterisis loss and eddy currents, ail of without first having experience with cheap greater efficiency figures, it is advised to
which waste energy in heat and hence easy-to-get 'alnico' magnets, for if you com- stay with the tapered disc contaetor method
require a cooling fan - with its attendant rru:nce with powerful magnets you will fmd and build! a smail low wattage unit, i.e., 0.25
losses as well.. yourself facing powerful problems. More to 1 wan. This is the area of power rating
As exptained previously, the Adams :information. on this matter of 'powerfJJI within which you will gain quicker and bet-
m3Chine runs cool in comparison to the con- mag!1ets' will be found in the .article referred ter results which, in tum, will provide the
ventional machine and does not, therefore, to as "The Adams 1992-1993 Christmas- necessary experience for designing and
require a cooling fan. Now these factors New Year breakthrough" (refer to NEXUS building a larger unit.
surely speak for themselves. It must also be Vol. 2, No. 11) and in-the article written by Once again the inventor cannot stress the
bome in mind by the reader that in the con- the inventor referred 110 as "On Wilhelm importance enough, for those who wish to
ventional AC or DC machine, the internal Muller" (dated 1 February 1993). Using constrUct a successful device, to start at the
heat of windings and stators reach boiling powerfull magnets will not prove anything bottom rung and listen to what the device is
point within fifteen min~tes. The Adams beyond what alnico will do. However,
saying to you as you go along.
machine does non nave this problem. given this, if you feel you must cJ:!pose pow-
erful magnets, fOl whatever your reasons,
Given these salient factors, which in
themselves are a starting point for those of
take heed - great care is reqlJired in the han- NOTE FOR THE CURIOUS
dling of them to preclude personal injury. I have received a lot of requests regarding
you who are ,forward-thinking, I feel I have
provided sufficient hints, information and 2) For a proving machine do not use less an explanation accounting for such low
guidance to enable those astute enough to than 10 ohms each for two stators at 180 0 temperature operation on full load. This
realise the potentiality of the principles apart; recommend series mode for first one fact 'alone is indisputable evidence of
attempt. Don't be concerned about start very high efficien"Cy rating.
given, to build a machine for themselves
windings initially and, remember, what can I have therefore decided to make up a set
according to their own le:anings as well as
be achieved microscopically can be
along the lines of the Adams machine. of drawings which will explain to 'the reader
achieved macroscopically and so I strongly the questions regarding hysterisis, eddy cur-
Most of you lmow of tire manual· which suggest - walk before you run.
has been published and' dislributed by rent and magnetic drag lo"sses, as well as
3) Should yOUi experience any difficulty temperature ratings, etc.
NEXUS Magazine. My purpose in compil-
in designing and constrUcting the 'tapered
ing this manual is to give those interested an disc contactor (machining, etc.), then use These drawings will be accompanied with
insight into ,the principles of the mysteries electronic switching, i.e., photo, Hall effect, written explanations concerning the 'how'
of my machine, and I expect those interest- or inductor effect, with switching current and 'why' 'of certain factors.
ed. patient and persevering enough to accept transistor, etc. The machine, correctly con- These drawings and their accompanying
that they must work out and work with structed, should still deliver a min~mum information will be available directly from
these mysteries and to, like myself, to battle 107% efficiency. The charging effecn will, the inventor at the address given below at a
to get there. Only then will trUe understand- of course, be lost, and the input current to cost ofNZ$20.00 including postage.
iug and enlightenment reveal itself and trUe supply the electronic switching will raise Meanwhile, for further information on 'the
reward, however slowly, be theirs. the total input quite steeply. The point to be 'Adams and Cathie' projects, you'll find it
Notwithstanding these staleroents howev- made here is that in using electronio switch- ail in your future issues of NEXUS."
er, I submit here a few further vaJuClble rec- ing, in a larger machine, the degree of loss Robert Adams,
ommend.ations for re~eIS, and as time pro- due to this use of electronic switching is 46 Landing Road
gresses, and as time Permits, some fJJrther negligible. Whakatane, New Zealand.
such tidbits of information will be drip-fed
through NEXUS as a form of encourage-
ment to all concerned.
] would like to inform readers at this
point in time that, because of the steady
flow of response I have had since publica-
tion in NEXUS, by enthusias~, interested
parties 'and investorj! alike, it is no longer
possible to address enquiries of the nature
of those above individually, other than on a
consultancy basis. Although I will continue
to contribute certain articles to NEXUS as
long as I am able, and will continue to per-
sonally reply to all mail, I ask readers to
kindly understand that a good deal of my
time is involved in consultancy already on
my advanced projects, sO my free time is
somewhat limited. [encourage readers to
keep their eyes on NEXUS as [ intend to
remain as loyal to them as they are to me.
Here, then, are those few further recom-
mendations to readers.
If contemplating the construction of a
proving machine - note as follows:
The inventor of the Pulsed Electric Motor Generator, Robert Adams, with his technical assistant Mr John
I) Don't purchase expensive powerful Martin (background), March 1975, then six years into his research and development work (IS years ago).

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·49

'-\ (\
N EWSCI ENCEN EWSCI ENCE·'
SUPP,RESSED MECHANICAL So now you know what someone badly Italy's Mount EIDa increased sharply six
didn't want anyone to fmd out. No wonder months before it spewed forth in December
FUEL VAPORISER they're worried. Sounds like a nice weekend 1991.
By Peter Nielsen (The Mad Scientist) project to me - at your own risk, of course. Unfortunately the technique of gathering
Seriously, this conversion ds highly danger- this data can be very dangerous, since
ous, maybe Hlegal, and to be attempted only researchers often have to cliIDb into a vol-
Dear NEXUS, by licensed automotive engineers. The cano to take gravity readings.
n response Ito the recent article on fuel

I
above info is offered for educational purpos- (Source: Iim/:..15 February '93)
vaporisation for increased performl!nce es only, and has not been substantiated by
and mileage, I would like to offer the fol- the authQr.
lowing story. It was told to me about fifteen PS: Years later, my fricmd conducted his
FUSION RESEARCH RESULTS
years ago by an inventor living ill Phoenix, own experiments while working at SUPPRESSED BY WHITE
Arizona. In the cotme of business, he visit- Motorola. He once injected an unknown HOUSE
ed a friend who happened to be doing patent proportion of petrol and wate)" between two Scientists involved wit.h fusion -experi-
illustrations for a simple petrol-saving thinly spaced piezo-ceramic wafers. It is a ments at nuclear weapons laboratories are
device. Several days later they met again property of this material to vibrate at ultra- "beside themselves" over a continuing gag
and the following tale unravelled. The art- sonic frequencies when electrical power is order.
work was commissioned by a small machine applied. Circuits of suitable configuration
are common in medical scanners, and indus- According to the researchers, German and
shop on the outskirts of town. When the Japanese scientists often present at open
trial cleaning baths for small parts. What
draftsman tried to deliver the finished job, conferences fmdings that are treated as mili-
eme.rged was a white viscous foam, a sur-
he fo~~ the factory stripped and deserted. prisingly stable emulsion that ignited vio- tary secrets in the US.
Only the metal studs, which once anchored lently when lit Then there is also the story Laser-powered fusion, sometimes called
heavy equipment, were left protruding from about how he tried to 'blackmail' razor blade inertial confinement fusion, is produced by
the concrete floor. A neighbour said an companies with a herb from Ithe Amazon focusing an array of powerful .laser beams
unmarked semi-trailer had a few days earlier that removes hair permanently. Maybe later, on a small pellet of hydrogen fuel.
hauled everything away. The proprietor also folks. Unlike Germany and Japan, laser fuSion
disappeared without a trace. research in the US, Britain and France is
Out of curiosity, the orphaned plans were funded by the military. As a result,
then re-examined. They showed a horizon- GRAVITATIONAL FIELD American scientists have been calling for
tal metal tube. It had three or four vertical CHANGES LINKED WITH less secrecy on laser fusion, so that they can
partitions and closed ends, all with a round work more easily with foreign colleagues
vent near their ,uppermost circumference. A VOLCANIC ERUPTION and promote their research.
shaft mounted on ~ealed ball-bearings ran The art, or science, of predicting volcanic Despite a promise from energy secretary,
down the central axis, driven at high speed eruptions has received a new boos.t recently, James Watkins to "eliminate unnecessary
by an external pulley connected to the car's with the discovery that the earth's gravita- restrictions", officials from dIe White House
fan-belt To it were attached, in each com- tional field ,can fluctuate in field strength in National Security Council stepped in and put
partment, a set of radial turbine-like blades. the months or weeks leading up to an erup- a stop to the process. They were worried
A tube led' from one end of the cylinder tion. that information from the experiments could
direct to the vehicle's petrol supply or pump. In Nature, geophysicist Hazel Rymer and give foreign nations clues to the design of
The downstream side went to the carburet- colleagues at England's Open University important thermonuclear weapons.
tor. The unit could be switched in or out of found that the gravitational field around (Source: New Scientist, 5 December '92)
the line by a solenoid valve activated from
the dashboard. Here's how it works. "
THE UN,NTIMJOATING
Upon starting the car and warming up,
COMPUTER SHOP
ordinary fud was drawn. At speed, the .r-lC.
machine was placed 'on-line'. The effect

, gt3JFl'-ll
reported Wl\S a sharp acceleration - without
ever touching the foot pedal. Petrol entering
the fIrSt ajr-fIlled chamber was mechanically
atomised by !he rotating wheel. This passed
through each successive cOJllpartment,
becoming more and more like a fine mist.
Any condensed liquid fell to the bottom of
each section, which acted as a sump, sucked
~
-=---1
up again injo turbulence by the spinning
blades. Only the most vaporous components
from each chamber passed through the row
of top vents and on to the carburettor, result-
ing in cleaner and more EXPLOSIVE com-
bustion. Adjustment of flow rate would be
critical to prevent s.aturation of the impeller
cavity. With improved design, the device
could possibly function as both a liquid fuel
pump AND variable inlet chamber for
admixture of air and/or water.
-----------.
s~
50-NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993

50
.
, .\~
~. ~.' .. ~-:-
~'.' l~ '.
.,~
• , .'
',t·-
~'~ :. .~ J'\~' ~
....
,"::'.
.
."'''.~
,,\

A SECRET UNDERGROUND the radio. Marconi's historical radio Marconi demonstrated the rayon a busy
transmission utilised a Heinrich Hertz highway north of Milan one afternoon.
CITY OF THE ANDES? spark arrester, a Popov antenna and an Mussolini had asked his wife Rachele to
A high-tech, secret city has been said to EdolIard Bramely coherer for his simple also be on the highway at precisely 3.30
exist in a remote jungle crater in South device that was to go on to become the in the afternoon. Marconi's device caused
America. If so, who might the scientists modem radio. the electrical systems in all the cars,
be who run this James Bond-type super- Marconi was a mysterious man in his including Rachele's, to malfunction. The
fortress? later years, and was known to perform car motors would not function for half an
The story begins with the great Italian experiments, including anti-gravity exper~ hour, while her chauffeur and o.ther
scientist Guglielmo Marconi (1874- iments, aboard his yacht Electra. motorists checked their fuel pumps and
193'1), a former student of Nikola Tesla. Marconi's yacht was a floating super-lab- spark plugs. At 3.35 aU the cars were
Marconi studied radio transmission theo- oratory, from which he sent signals into able to start again. Rachele Mussolini
ry with Tesla and made his first radio space and lit lights in Australia in 1930. later published this account in her autobi-
transmission in 1895. Marconi and Tesla He did this with the aid of an Italian ography.
are both accredited for the invention of physicist named Landini by sending wave Mussohni was quite pleased with
. train signals through Marconi's invention however it is .said
t.be earth, much as that Pope Pius XI learned about the
Nikola Tesla had invention of the para~ysing rays and took
done in Colorado steps to have Mussolini stop Marconi's
Springs. research. According to Marconi's follow-
In June of 1936 ers, Marconi then took his yacht to South
Marconi demon- Ameri'ca in 1937, after faking his own
strated to Italian death.
Fascist dictator A number of European scientists Were
Benito Mussolini a said to have gone with Marconi, iPclud-
wave gun device ing Landini. In 1937, the enigmatic
that could be used Italian physicist and alchemist Fulcanelli
as a defensive wamed European physicists of the grave
weapon. In the dangers of atomic weapons, and then
1930s such devices mysteriously vanished a few years later.
were popularised as He is believed to have joined Marconi's
'death rays' as in a secret group in Soutl1 America.
s ~ - LL.. Boris Karloff film
Ninety-eight scientists were said to
of the same name. have gone to South America where they

52-NEXUS Vol 2, No U -1993

s~
THE TWILIGHT ZONE
built a city in an extinct volcanic crater ,in reached a speed of half a million miles an scientsts, aviators and politicians to the
the southern jungles of Venezuela. In ,l1our and withstood enormous pressures, final fortress of Nazi Germany. Two of
their se~ret city, financed by the great near the limit of resistance of the alloys these U-boats surrendered in Argentina
wealth they had created during their lives, that composed it. The problem was to three months after the war. [n 1947, the
they continued Marconi's work on solar slow it down at just the right time." US Navy invaded Antarctica, mainly
energy, cosmic energy and anti-gravity. Genovese located the city in a crater at Queen Maud Land with Admiral Byrd in
They worked s~retly and! apart from the thirteen thousand feet in the jungle moun- command.
world'is nations, building free-energy tains of the Amazon. The Americans were defeated and sev-
motors and ultimately discoid aircraft Genovese claimed that flights to Mars eral jets from the four aircraft carriers
with a form of gyroscopic anti-gravity. were made in their 'flying saucers,' and were said to have been 'Shot down by dis-
The community is sltid to be dedicated to that this secret city is still ,iQexistence! coid craft. The ,navy retreated and did not
universal peace and the common good of There have been many reports of UFOs return until 1957.
all mankind. Believing the rest of the in South America, especially along the According to the book, Chronicle of
world to be under the control of energy edge of the mountainous jungles of the A/cakor, a book first published in German
companies, multinational bankers and! the eastern Andes, from Bolivia to Venezuela. by the journalist Karl Brugger, a German
military-industrial complex, they have battalion had taken refuge in an under-
Is it possible that some of these UFOs are
remained isolated from the rest of the anti-gravity craft from the Ciudad ground city on the borders of Brazil and
world, working subversively to foster
Subterranean de los Andes? Peru. Brugger was assassinated in the Rio
peace and a clean, ecological technology
In light of highly reliable sources who de Janeiro suburb ofIpanema in 1981.
on the world.
claim that a 'last battalion' of German sol- While the secret cities of South
We have information on this astonish-
diers escaped via submarine in the last America manufacturing flying saucers and
ing high-tech city from a number of
days of WWII to Antarctica and South battling the current powers of the world
sources. In the South America the story is
America, it is possible that the Germans from their hidden jungle fortresses may
a common subject among certain meta-
may have high-tech super-cities in the sound too much like the plot of a James
physical groups. Says the French writer
remote jungles of South America as well. Bond movie, it appears to be based on
Robert Charroux in his book The
Mysteries of the Andes (1974, 1977 Avon A number of modem military histori- fact!
Books)," ... the Ciudad Subterranean de ans, such as Col. Howard Buechner, Perhaps a final showdown between the
los Andes (CSA), which is discussed in author of Secrets of the Holy Lance and 'last battalion' and the current political
private Caracas to Santiago." Charroux Hitler's Ashes, maintain that the Germans system will be a battle waged with flying
relates the story of a Mexican journalist bad already created bases in Queen Maud saucers and space-based weapons sys-
named Mario Rojas Avendaro who inves- Land, opposite South Africa, during the tems.. What part will the peaceful scien-
tigated the Ciudad Subterranean de los war. tist-philosophers of the Secret
Andes (Underground City of the Andes) Afterwards. German U-boats, in some Underground City of the Andes play in the
and concluded fthat it was a true story. reports as many as 100, took important coming changes on planet Earth?
Avendaro was contacted by man named
Nacisso Genovese, who had been a stu-
dent of Marconi and was a physics teacher
at a high school in Baja, Mexico.
Genovese was an Italian by origin and
claimed to hav-e Ilived for many years in
the Ciudad Subterranean de los Andes.
Sometime in the late 1950s he wrote an
obscure book entitled My Trip To Mars.
Though the book was never published in
English, it did appear in various Spanrsh,
Portuguese and Italian editions.
Genovese claimed that the city had been
built with large fiQam::ial resources, was
underground, and! had better research
facilities than any other research facility
in the world (at that time, at least). By
19A6 the city was already using a power-
ful collector of cosmJc en-ergy,> the essen-
tial component of all matter, according to
Marconi's theories.
"In 1952," according to Genovese, "we "That's Halley's Cornman :i~
travelled above all the seas and continents
in a craft whose energy supply was con-
tinuous and practically i.nexhaustible. It

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS-S3

53
THE TWILIGHT ZONE
MAGIC MECHANICS viewing the tools. FLIGHTLESS BIRD FLAP...
JAKARTA, Indonesia - The World All of Indonesia's under-the-hood WELLINGTON, 25 Jan '93 - Tbree
Bank Iknows that IndoAesia's economic sages claim ties to a day labourer from New Zealand hikers said on Monday
IProblems can't be solved by magic. But East Java named Turut, who acqijired a they saw, chased and photographed a
fixing the boss's car is another matter. reputation as a kind of Merlin among huge flightless bird and are convinced it
mechanics before he died in 1986. was a moa, believed extinct for 500
Just ask Nicholas Hope, resident
Eddy Susanto, a 32-year-old worker at years, the New Zealand Press
director of the World Bank's office
here. After an accident damaged his Ketok Magic Nusantara, says that as a Association reponed.
Toyota Crown, a local garage said child, he saw Mr Turut pick up a length Paddy f'reaney, Sam Waby and
repairs - mainly body wor1c - would of railway track with his bare hands and Rochelle Rafferty said their encounter
take two weeks and cost $700. Too tie it around his waist. Says Mr in the South Island's CFaigieburn Range
long and too much, Mr Hope's staff Susanto: "It convinced me he wasn't an on Wednesday left them -stunned but
decided, 'turning instead to a practition- ordinary person." they were positive of their sighting.
er of 'ketok magic", or magic knock, an Mr Turut guided Mr Susanto and 29 "As soon as I saw it, I believed It was a
Indonesian hybrid in which mechanics other self-proclaimed disciples through moa - amazing as that sounds. It was
tap unearthly powers to better wield a training regimen. They earned the one of those things you don't lbelieve is
their socket wrenches and spot-welders. right both to practise ketok magic and happening, yet it is happening,"
Half a day later the car came back, to train others, but proselytising has Freaney told NZPA.
fully restored. The bin came to just proved difficult. Young people "aren't f'reaney, a hotelier and a former
$122, and now, more than 18 months patient to learn the magic things,''' Mr instructor with the British Army's elite
later, the car "stillilooks fine," Mr Hope Susanto says. Special Air Service, dismissed the pos-
says. Sceptics abound. Ishak Ismail, owner sibility that the bird was either an
Thousands of ketok-magic shops of 'Buyong Motors, a conventional ostrich or an emu. "I've seen them in
have opened in Indonesia in recent Jakarta garage, says: "I don't believe in the wild, I know exactly what they look
years. Workers in these garages por- such a thing. I do the real things. No like. This was definitely not an ostrich
tray themselves as merely the tools of a magic." or an emu. The minute I saw it, I knew
magic spirit with which they can com- T~sikun, the driver who delivered what it was. I believe we saw a moa."
mmte after long periods of fasting and Mr Hope's World Bank car to its ketok Waby, an art teacher, and Rafferty, a
rigorous study. doctor, is also dubious. He says that gardener working for Freaney. con-
These magicians prefer to practise while waiting outside, he heard loud fltfned the sighting.
their trade with no outsider looking on. noises that "didn't sound like magic." In pre-European times, New Zealand
At Ketok Magic Nusantara, which fixed Still, he adds, "the results are OK, and had 25 species of the moa, which domi-
Mr Hope's car, visitors are kept from much faster than ordinary workshops." nated the economy of the native Maori.
the inner sanctum by an iron fence. (Source: The Wall Street Journal. 5 They ranged in siz'e from small bush
Another garage bars customers from Feb '93) animals to giants standing three metres
high and weighing 230 kg. Freaney
said the bird's body was about a metre
off the ground, with a long thin neck
\
~OC~f10
almost another metre long ending in a
small hel!d and beak. It had reddish-

~.I I-~~.r '/'-,~/~,~::,j


brown and grey feathers.
(Source.' MUFONET Network, 20

' : ;-:/"~
Feb '93)
'---irrn
\/ X ) [
;'(~ ..--ffi ~ :~,/~J . "~' 1- PAR FOR THE COURSE
,~." l )~"QL;1[10''<'I_.\_:~-f?1I[p:~:7':'~' ~-­
_,~~I,o 1!1-"-"""~'
Brian Simpson perfomJed a golfing
miracJe [ast week - two holes-in-one

"~'I ?<.\_~.__~I.~( _''''~' ~


with one shot
,."., \'-<1' Brian, 69, had to wait 50 years for his
I"_L
'--I'.... --h

,-,-"--,,,,'-
:':;::'''-r "," <. • , . , . . .' , e
first hole-in-one, but it arrived in sensa-

~
tional circumstances.
\"P " ..... vV \"---'~ Brian and Bill Austin, 58, were
paired in last Tuesday's veterans' com-
petition at the Busselton course, 200
km south of Perth, when the impossible
happened.
----' ~~ Bill's tee shot on the 151 m par-three

54-NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 -1993

5,'1
third hole finished 10 cm from the cup.
IiIJIIIDIIEI
"We could see it was close and Brian
gave me a bit of stick, saying I'd been
slack leaving it short," Bill said.
BIian responded by hitting his tee
I
I
~ I Churchill I

RQm;. I 1874 I
Hitler

1889
I,Roosevelt. 11 Duce II

III 1882 I 1883 I


Stalin

1879

I
Tojo

1884
shot to the front edge of the green and
both men watched it roll relentlessly
towards Bill's ball before both balls can-
noned forward into the hole.
I Took
~
I 1940 I 1933 II 1933 I 1922 I 1924 I 1941

But it didn't count for two holes-in-


one. Rule 18-5 says if a ball in play and I At Aile: I 70 I 55 II 62 I 61 I 65 I 60
at rest is moved by another ball in
motion after a stroke, rthe moved ball
shall be replaced.
I~
Served: I 4 I 11 II 11 I 22 I 20 I 3
Bill had to replace his ball 10 cm
from the hole and tap in for a birdie.
(Source: The Sunday Mail. 21 Feb '93)
I ImE I 3888 I 3888 I 3888 I 3888 I 3888 I 3888
SlGN OF THE CROSS
Don Giacomo Perini, a priest, cursed
the rain as he stood outside his church
in Alto Adige, Italy; whereupon a cross,
loosened by the rain, fell on his head
I +.2= I 1944 I 1944 I 1944
• 1944 I 1944 I 1944

and kiIled Ihim.


(Source: T1J&....SJJJ:J.. 6 Oct '92, reprinted in
,rlean Times. #67. February/March '93

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·55

s
(--/

REVIEWS ~
remarkable discovery of an ancient ARKTOS---THE POLAR MYTH IN

BOOKS - --_ .. _._.-


underground 'city' in the Grand Canyon
is an example of what can be found in
this book.
The book covers his travels from the
SCIENCE, SYMBOLISM, AND
NAZI SURVIVAL
by Joscelyn Godwin
LOST CITIES OF NORTH & CEN- jungles oj Guatemala, Nicaragua and
ISBN 0 933999461
TRAL AMERICA Honduras to the deserts and mountains Published by: Phanes Press,
by David Hatcher Childress of the Mexico, Canada and the USA. USA,1993
The ,reader will fmd many maps, pic- Price: $14.95
ISBN 0932813 09 7
Pub~: Adventures Unlimited Press
tures and photos to illustrate the Available: Adventures Unlimited,
author's travels. Ail in all, an excellent Box 22, Stelle, It. 60919-9989, USA
P,liice: $19.00 (includes postage) book! This amazing book is the first ever
Avai~able: Nexus Magazine, Box ~, written about the archetype of the
Kempton, Il 60946-0001 USA Poles-celestial, terrestrial, North lUld
From the jungles of Central America South. It takes us through the eSoteric
to the deserts of the southwestern accounts of a mythical Golden Age and
USA...down .the back roads from coast explores the many tales of an ancient
to coast, maverick archaeologist and Arctic race.
~dventurer David Hatcher Childress It covers research into ImSt and possi-
takes the reader deep ,into unknown ble future tilts of the earth's axis, and
America. the causes of planetary catastrophes.
Lost Cities ofNorth & Central Prof. Godwin explores the origins of
America is the latest in his series of modem neo-Nazi ideology, its 'polar'
'Lost Cities' books, and this one is prob- inspiration, and links with other occult
ably the best of .them all. myths-Hitler's survival, German bases
David investigates a wide range of in Antarctica, UFOs, the Hollow Earth,
.archaeological anomalies, such as and the hidden kingdoms of Agartha
Egyptian cities in the Grand Canyon, and Shambala.
lost treasures, slrange tunnel systems, His thesis is scholarly and responsible
sunken ruins, Viking forts, and even in approach, and his extensive bibliog-
living dinosaurs. raphy is a rich resource for polarphiles.
The articIe in this issue on the Fascinating reading for the curious!

Vol 2, No 13 -1993 NEXUS-57

,S1
REVIEWS
THE MOTHMAN PROPHECIES School of Medicine; and the United
by John A. Keel States Naval School of Aviation and
Space Medicine. He was voted Doctor
ISBN 0 9626534 3 8
of the Year in 1985 by the National
Published by: IllumiNet Press, USA Health Federation, and was a founding
Price: $16.95 member and state president of the
Available: Adventures Unlimited, Florida American College oJ
Box 22, Stelle, IL 60919-9989, USA Emergency Physicians.
Originally published in the New York Hydrogen peroxide is essentially the
Saturday Review Press in 1975, this 'component' of oxygen therapies that all
work by famed Fortean journalist John the three main ,modalities produce at
Keel is is a parapsychology classic. their end-line, so to speak.
The MOlhman Prophecies is a bizarre Ozone therapy and stabilised oxygen
story with aU 'the elements of modem
are a longer way around of getting the
science fiction, but the material is factu~
body to reproduce or incre~e its levels
al and fully documented.
of hydrogen peroxide.
The book focuses on weird events in
the town of Point Pleasant, Virginia, The bottom line is the presence of this
that happened over 13 months from late amazing substance is required for the
1967-terrifying accounts of winged HYDROGEN PEROXIDE - metabolism of protein, c;rrbohydrates,
monsters, ghostly apparitions, strange Medical Miracle fats, vitamins, and minerals. It must be
aerial tight displays, domestic animal by William Campbell Douglass, present for the immune system to fune-
mutilations, those infamous men-in- tion properly.
M.D.
black, unusual ps-ychic and prophetic This is an excellent boQk. It has a lot
phenomena.
Published by and available from:
of very useful information, and nearly
Second Opinion Publishing, PO
Author John Keel personally experi- half the book details case histories on a
enced many of these strange manifesta- Box 467939, Atlanta, GA 30346-
wide range of illnesses.
tions during the year he spent in Point 7939, USA. Tel: (404) 668 0432
Did you know that roasting coffee
Pleasant. He broadens the context of Price: $12.95
beans produces hydrogen peroxide?
his material with reference to ancient Dr William Campbell Douglass is a
Prepared in the usual manner, coffee •
and turn-of-the-century acc,ounts of fourth-generation physician. He is a
strange beings and creatures. This is a graduate of the University of Rochester, will produce 750 micrograms of H 20 2.
scary book-you have been warned! Mew York; the University of Miami Maybe coffee is not so bad after all.

____ ,.... e::::::o.w •. . , . . . . . . . ..;~.~ "We II:"

5S·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - ~993

5g
REVIEWS ~
years) in tenns of1behind the scenes
THE GEMSTONE FILE THE MONTAUK PROJECT-
IEdited by Jim Keith power brokers. Experiments in Time
IISBN 0962653454 Names like Kennedy, Onassis, By Preston B. Nichols with Peter
Publ: IIlumiNet Press, GA, USA Hughes, Nixon are mixed in with ver- Moon
sions of the Vietnam War and other Published by: Sky Books,
Price: $14.95
international events that will leave you Westbury, NY, USA, 1992
Available: Adventures Unlimited, wondering what is real, and what is
Box 22, Stelle, IL 609119-9989, Price: $15.95
really real.
USA Available: Adventures Unlimited
Well worth reading!
This book is a must for conspiracy Box 22, Stelle, IL 609119, USA
theorists. If Project Rainbow, The Philadelphia
The infamous Gemstone File is prob- Experiment, John von Neumann and Al
ably something many of us have had in Bielek strike chords with you, you'U
our filing cabinets for many years. PliiiIDB PROalla,
EXI'EAIMErtlS IN ffME
want to read this book! Forthose unfa-
miliar with these names but with more
A couple of years ago another type of

.,~«,
than a passing interest in time travel,
Gemstone File appeared on the scene.
telekinesis, mind manipulation, and
This file dealt with Australian and New conspiracy theory, this book will con-
Zealand corruption and complicity with ~'.
rUin your suspicions about what is pos-
the powers that be. It was very specific, t"~_
/~ rl.(.~\, sible, and, indeed. whaD may have been
and gave names, dates, times, places ~'.' <>:i:L··V......-1'l
/ K going on for many years under a dark
and even Swiss bank account numbers. ~ . _ ,A,
This file was popularly referred to as -::-:1'Z·-. ~/
~'I'Y_~'"
R 1
veil of secrecy.
The story of the Montauk Project is
the Opal File.
~'fj ~~, one of the most incredible of all time!
This book contains all of the '\t. l~J Author Preston J. Nichols stymble<.l

~ """ ~:f'
Gemstone File and all of the Opal File across his own alleged involvement in
that we have man'aged to scrounge here

:-e~_ .\ \.• ':~


'". the research in 1984, the year after the
at NEXUS, plus it has some very inter- :' • ~ l project was abandoned. An estimated
esting interviews to pad out the book.. 3-10,000 people never returned.
For those who don't know what the The Montauk Project is a chronicle
heck I am talking about, these files, and of one of the most amazing and secre-
this book,. give an alleged blow-by- tive research projects in recorded histo-
blow account of recent history (last 40 ry. Read it at your own risk!

( -- - -- ~---~ .
Vol 2, No 13 - 199,3 NEXUS·S9

S'T
REVIE,WS~
MEN & GODS IN MONGOLIA

~
by Henning Ha_slund
Publ: Adventures Unlimited Press
Price: $19.95 (includes postage)
Available: Nexus Magazine, Box
1, Kempton, IL 60946-0001, USA
This is a very rare and hard-to-get
book. It was first published in 1935 by
Regan Paul of London.
It follows the adventures and discov-
eries of Henning JIaslund, a Swedish
explorer who accompanied Sven Hedin
into MQngolia and Central Asia in the
1920s and '308.
This book takes you to the 10-.5t city
of Karakota in the Gobi Desert. You
meet the Bodgo Gegen, a god-king in
Mongolia similar to the Dalai Lama of
Tibet. There is even material in this
incredible book on the Hi-mori, an
'airhorse' that flies through the air (sim-
ilar to a Vimana) and carries with it the fusion' experiment could produce
sacred stone of Chintamani. tremendous heat without fusion; ,and
Aside from the esoteric and mystical • How certain experiments might
material, there is plenty of just plain produce a gravitational anomaly.
adventure; caravans across the Gobi The theories of the zero-point energy
desert; kidnapped and held fOIi ransom; show there are tremendo_us fluctuations
initiation into shamanic societies; of electrical field energy embedded
encounters with warlords; and the vio- within the very fabric of space itself.
lent birth of a new nation. We strongly en-courage all of the
Truly, a very rare look at a very Adams Pulsed Electric Motor
unusual country. You will not be dis- Generator researchers to obtain this
appointed with this book. book.

TAPPING THE ZERO-POINT SPACESHIP CONSPIRACY-The


ENERGY-How IIFree Energy" True Story Of The Inventor Of
and N Antigravitylf Might Be
Orbital Propulsion Powered
Possible With Today's Physics
Spaceships And His Fight For
by Moray B. King ~ecognition
Publ: Paraclete Publishing, USA
by George Knap
Price: $9.95
Publ: Knap Publlishing, Canada
Available: Adventures Unlimited,
Price: $9.95
Box 22, Stelle, IL 60911: 9-9989
This is another hard-to-get book. Available: Adventures Unlimited,
First published in [989, this book is a Box 22, SteJlle, IL 609119-9989
must for researchers and inventors. Another book for the mad, and the not-
The principles outlined in this book, so-mad scientists out there in. NEXUS
with abundant citations to the physics reader-land. This book documents the
journals, explain: author's search, success and struggle
• How in the 1930s the inventor T. for Ith_e recognition of space exploration
Henry Moray could produce a fifty- technology.
kilowatt "free energy" machine; I think you will be pleasantly sur-
• How the Pons & Fleischmann 'cold prised with this book.

60·NEXUS Vol 2, INa 13 - 1993


LOST CITY ADVENTURES
PitES£Nn

VIDEOS HI"""'" Bon Kol'T AaCfllO£OlOGlCAl. SOCRET

HOAGLAND'S MARS
with Richard Hoagland
83 mins VHS
Price: $28.95
Availab:le: Ad'ventures Unlimited,
Box 22, Stelle, IL 609119-9989
This new-release video features
Richard Hoagland's presentation to THE FLYING STONES OF
NASA scientists and engineers de~l­
ing his ongoing V~-year research decod- NAN MADOL
ing the mysteries on Mars. fOR THE FIRST TIME ON TELEVISION
HiE ANCIENT LOST CITIES
It contains official NASA footage Of HIE SOUTH rACine
showing the face and pyramids, and a
recently released simulated fly-over of
the Cydonia region. The video comes THE FLYING STONES OF
with a two-color map of the Martian NAN MADOl
monuments.
This' is an essential adjunct Ito Richard Hosted by David Hatcher
Hoagland's updated ,book, The Childress
Monuments ofMars: A City on the Produced by: Norman Baldwin
Edge ofForever (revised edition, 1992, for Lost City Productions
$16.95, also available through
Adventures Unlimited.
50 mins VHS
Hoagland's latest analysis and decod- Price: $28.95
ing of the Martian mysteries is required Available: Adventures Unlimiteo
viewing and reading. Box 22, Stelle, II 609t9-9989,
USA
One of1history's best-kept archaeolo~
ical secrets is the mysterious megalithil

THE city of Nan Madol on the remote


Polynesian island of Pohnpei. This
MONUMENTS city, featured in David Hatcher
Childress's book, Lost Cities ofAncieni
OF -
MAR
i. S·
._-'.
Lemuria & The Pacific, has now been
captured on video in this pilot episode
Aca. for an upcoming Lost City Adventures
OII~ television series.
Ilf~ The video highlights Nan Madol's

~
8~>
unique magnetic basalt crystal con-
struction. Host Childress speculates
. ··.. that the crystals were levitated into
/ . ~ position-not unlike ilhe Tibetan
. )

. \ monk..s' process, also featured1here.


Input from other lost c!ties experts on
//~ Nan Madol's secrets is included. Plus,
-=;.\
never-before-seen underwater footage
li'[i3tMi!tl.... :1-Un'Jli t ] of an ancien~ sunken city near Nan
Madol. Far out!

Vo/2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS·61


THE FOURTH REICH - TOWARDS AN AMERICAN POLICE STATE
Continued from page 22 YOUR RIGHTS IN A HEARING ABOUT A POLICE
The DEA then demanded that Bill pay a $66,000 fme (which he SEIZURE ARE VERY LIMITED
did not have) to get the plane back. Meanwhile, the plane had
incurred $50,000 in damage wh,ile in_government custody. In the As Ithe Financial Privacy 'Report points out, "in some states, yoU'
meantime, under DEA pressure, the FDA revoked Bill's flight cer- have no right to trial by jury. Your case is heard by a judge who
tificate. Bill neva got the plane back. His business is gone, and he often has a direct finaJ:!Qal stake in the seizure. If they take your
now drives a truck to support his f~ly. But, the informant whos'e assets, and you can't afford a lawyer, that's your tough luck. You
tip led to Bill's jet being seized is eligible for a reward up to 25% of don't have a.right to a court-appointed anorney. In some cases y.ou
the value of the plane. do Qot get to testify on your own behalf. Hearsay evidence, not
According to a recent l)rtiCle in USA l'oday, in 1992, 65 infor- admissible for crimin.al cases, can be used against you. You do not
mants made over $100,000 each by simply alleging to police agen- have the right to confront your accusers.
cies that the» friel:lds, neighbours, an9l0r business associates had "And worst of all, there is no presumption of irmocen.ce. These
commined ctil1le~. And no, when you go to trial, you don't have the 'forfeiture' hearings, which harken back to the days of the Spanish
right to confront the informant in court. The reason: it's a civil, no~ Inquisition, work the other way - you are presumed guilty until you'
a criminal PlPCeeding. prove your irmocence."
To seize yOllr property, the government need not ac.cuse you of a
crime. All that is n~ssary is that the judge agree with a prosec.utor
that 'probable cause' imIicates that a crime was committed in or on WHO PROFITS FROM THE PRESENT SEIZURE LAWS
your property. Or a policeman, or sheriff, or federal drug agent can Certainly local, city and federal governmept(s) lire helping to
make that determination on the spot and seize YO.ur car, your boat, cover some of their fmancial s_hortfall from the loot they steal from
your home, your bank lfCcOunts, etc. According to The Pittsburgh their victims. Informers and spies are profiting handsomely from
Press, over 80% of the victims of 25,000 such seizures they seizures, with some airline ticket clerks, security guards, bank
analysed were never accused of any crime. clerks, etc. comfortably supplementing their income with fmder's
fees for tips leading to seizures. Typically, infonnants (slli-tehes)
LOOKING SUSPICIOUS CAN GET YOUR ASSETS SEIZED get lO to 25% off the top. There are some snitches with horrible
A 'suspicious' customer or transaction at a bank or fmancial insti- criminal records who are now millionaires from these seizures and
tution goes to the top of the seizure list. There is Ii box on the top of 'snitch fees'. You will be happy to know that no Form 1099s are
the CTR (cash reporting form) and if a person looks nervous, or issued on these fees, so the 'snitches' are apparently enjoying tax-
protests having the form filled out, or is too inquisitive about the free income. Incredible!
form, that Oox may be checked. The bank is sup~ed to notify the More than 90% of the search warrants granted to law enforce-
TreasUry Department but cannot te'll you, they're just supposed to ment agencies are based on information supplied by infonnants.
spy. Should the Treasury IDepartrnent fmd your actions suspicious, The government pays out more than $60 mimon per year in fmd-
it can freeze your account ,and it's up to you to prove the seizure is er's fees to informants. One wonders wh:o is mQre corrupt, the
improper. informant or the bribing officials?
In the tlargest effort of this type, Operation Polar Cap, the In 1984, 'bounty hunter' provisions were added to the federal
Treasury froze more than 700 'suspicious' accounts. Ultimately only forfeiture laws that permit local police to keep most of the pro-
about 10% of these were shown to be possibly tied to illegal activi- ceeds of the property they seize under federal authority. Since
ty. The other 90% were erroneously (but 'legally') confiscated. Yet then, government seizures have soared 2,047%, a Congressional
each @positor whose account was wrongfully seized had to prove, report has noted (approvingly).
at their own expense, that their assets had been earned by legitimate The laws governing how the seizure booty is split up vary from
means. state to state. A typical state split for the balance (after paying the
As the Financial Privacy Report writes, "Forfeiture laws were informant's finder's fee) might run 70% to the local police, with the
expanded inl 1984 to allow the government to take possession with- district attorney's office, judges' chambers and the Feds splitting
oU~ first charging the owner. The proce~ fmaJ}ce more investiga-
the balance. In Louisana, for example, every official involved in
tio.ns and are :helping to fmance the financial shortfall of local, ~t~te 'justice' is given a direct fmancial stake in upholding tthe seizure.
and federal governments. Eliminating the need to prove a crime has The police bringing the case get 60%; the prosecuting DA's office
moved mQst action to civil CQ\l,rt, where the government accuses !be
gets another 20%; and the judge signing the forfeiture order gets
item, not tl\e owner, of being tainted by crime. As a result, jury tri-
the remaining 20% for his or her court fund
als can be refused, illegal searches condoned, and rules of evidence
ignored.
"In up to 80% of the cases, no charges are ever med. If they are THE INNOCENT OWNER DEFENCE
med, you have plenty of time to fight them. But you only have a In a case now before the Supreme Court, the JUstice Department
very limited time to fight a seizure. In California, for example, you is seeking to virtually eliminate what is ca11ed the 'irmocent owner
only have 10 days to file your challenge to seizure. 1bere you are: defence' in tederal forfeiture cases regarding seizures of real est!!-e,
you have been thrown out on the street, your home and bank cash, vehicles, bank accounts, etc., allegedly tainted through drug
accounts seized, no money to pay a lawyer, and you have to prepare activity or any of more than 100, other 'crimes'.
your case. A 1984 law states that federal ownership of property begins the
"You also usually have to file a bond with the court. That bond is instant an activity punishable by forfeiture takes place on it. Now,
about 10% of the value of the property seized. Where do you get the Department of Justice interprets that won:ling .!!S allowing it to
the money fQr the bond, if they ,have seized all of your financial deny the claim of any innocent owner to whom the property is later
assels (as they did to a friend of this writer)? But if you don't come
transferred. In other words, the alleged illegal act eliminates any
up with the money for the bond, your property is gone. And what is
subsequent rights to t@ property by any party other than the iUS
the bond for? It's hard to believe, but it's to cover THEIR cost of
government.
fighting YOU in court. They seize your property without a trial,
andl then force you to finance their case against you. It's like being The Justice Department holds that once property is tainted by a
sentenced. to the firing squad, but your executioners make you pay crime, it is tainted forever. The implications of the elimination of
for the bullets and the burial, and dig your own grave." the 'irmocent owner defence' are staggering. Example: a series of

62·NEXUS Vol .2, INo 13 - 1993


r

THE FOURTH REICH - TOWARDS AN AMERICAN POLICE STATE


say 3, 4, or 5 owners of real estate, property, tracks when they begin to understand the owns it from the time the crime occ~ .in
a vehicle, a plane, a boat, etc. have bought implications of this. There may be no such 1989 and can seize it in forfeiture when it
and paid for the property or item in good thing as clear title in the US as the wishes.
faith, and are unaware of any prior criminal Dep;trtment of Justice declareS' literally mil-
activity related to that property. But if lions of properties vulnerable to potential CONCLUSION:
owner 1 or 2 dealt or kept drugs ,011 that forfeiture. We are entering an unconstitutional quag-
property (or did any other illegal activity) or There ~ a five-year statute ,of limitations mire of seizures, forfeitures, and lawsuits of
even transported them. in the car, boat, plane, in federal civil forfeitures (although the gov- incredible dimensions. [t is almost beyond
etc., the Justice Department claims that it ernment is now arguing in a case before the belief to this writer to see whllt is happening
owns the property (via forfeiture/seizure Supreme Court that there is no statute of iP America today. The government encour-
laws) from the point in time that it "became limitations, whatsoever). So, if the govern- ages Americans to spy on one another for'
tainted with the crime" and that all subse- ment gets ilhe 'innocent owner defence'
pay; the government and police unconstitu-
quent owners have no rights. It also claims thrown out·, it has five yeats after the first
tionally seize and confiscate private property
that it is entitled to aliI income from that alleged illegal us'e to make a claim against
of innocent American citizens; Americans
property from the time it was "tainted with the property, no matter how many times the
the crime" until the seizure and forfeiture, who believe in the Constitutional guarantees
property has changed hands in the interim.
whether the lapse was a year, or ten years. The last owner gets burned, but he will sue to privacy, or simply the use of cash, are
The Department of Jqstice holds that buyers all prior owners for not having gotten the impoverished, jailed, or both.
3, 4, or 5, who legally paid for the property good title he thought he got. A growing number of our police and gov-
and hold title to it, can have it seized from Let's look at a large example. Let's say ernment officials no long~ necessarily rep-
them at any point in the future. that in 1989, xyz Company dealt drugs out resent justice ,and protection, but are being
Imagine how many of us own a home or of its offices on the 32nd floor of the Empire corrupted with their new-found power and
vehicle which may have had a fonner owner State Building, which is owned by R- ability to share in the loot; and everyope is
who was a drug dealer (or who violated any Corporation. The Empire State Building is beginning to be suspicious of everyone else,
one of the more than 100 laws ,for which for- later sold in 1991 to Japanese interests (J- and especially of the police and government
feiture is permitted). The Department of Corporation). XYZ Company officials ,are officials - a growing number 01 whom are
Justice says that we do rrot have good title to arrested and indicted on drug charges in beginning to look and act more like their
that home or vehicle, that the government 1992. At what point who legally has title to Gestapo ,and KGB counterparts every day.
can seize it at any time. Mortgage lenders, the Empire State Building? According to This is not the America this writer grew up
real estate brokers (or investors), title com- the Justice Department, not R-Corporation in! Welcome to the USSA - a branch of the
panies, landlords, are going to freeze in their and not J-Corporation. The government New World Order! 00

Vol 2, No 13 - 1993 NEXUS-63'

3
The Pharmaceutical Drug Racket
Continued from page 29
methods of healing the sick by means The Masters of Government
American 'Murder' Association of safe, simple and natural remedies IT to you it seems inconceivable that gov-
Tile AMA, once openly declared by Dr are sure to be assailed and denounced ernments have allowed a ruthless industry to
Richard Kunnes at an AMA convention that by the arrogant leaders of the AMA dictate health matters, 'consider what
it shouldn't be the acronym for American doctors' trust as ifakes, frauds and Woodrow Wilson s,tated during his first
Medical Association but for American humbugs.' Every practitioner of the presidential campaign in 1912:
'Murdef' Association, is, according to healing art who does not ally himse'l,f "The masters of the government Qf
Morris Beal~e, the front for the Drug Trust.u with tile medical trust is denouQced as the United States are the combined ca~
When the FDA h~ to put an independent a "dangerous quack" and impostor by italists and manufacturers of the United
operator out of Ibusines.s, they get the AMA the predatory trust doctors. Every san- States. It is written over every intima.te
to furnish quack doctors to testify that while itarian who attempts to restore the p.age of the record oJ Co_ngress, it is writ-
often knowing nothing about the product sick to a state of he-alth by natural ten aJI thrQugh the histo,ry of confer-
involved, it is their considered opinion ,that means without resort to the knife or ences at the White House, that the sug-
it has no therapeutic value. poisonous drugs, disease imparting gestions of economic policy in this
Bealle cited an example in which the serums, deadly toxins or vaccines, is country have come from one source, not
AMA furnished ten medicos to testify in at once pounced upon by these med- from many sources. The benevolent
rourt that "vitamins are not necessary to the ical tyrants and fanatics, bitterl.y guardians, the kind-hearted trustees who
denounced, vilified and persecuted to have taken ,the troubles of government
human body", in order to close down an off our hands have !become so conspicu-
independent distributor ofnattrral vitamins,'" the fu lIest extent.'on ous that almost anybody ~h write out a
J.W. Hodge, MD, of Niagara Falls, New It comes as no surprise that the Australian lisl! of them... The big bankers, the big
York, writes about the AMA: counterpart, the Australian Medical manufacturers, the big masters of com-
"The medical mQnopQlyor medical Association, in conjunction with the Royal merce, the heads of railroad corpora-
trust, euphemistically called the College of General Practitioners, as reported tions... The government of the United
American Medical Association, is not in The Australian (July 21, 1992) are push- States at Ipresent is a foster child of the
merely the mea.llest monopoly ever ing for legislation that would cause medical special interests.''''
organized, but the most arrogant, dan- doctors using natural therapies to lose Writes Ruesch:
gerous and despotic organization Medicare status. This would meap that their "Woodrow Wilson's words have
which ever managed a free people in patients would not be able to nave bills remained as true today as they were
this or any other age. Any and all rebated by Medicare. 1I when he pronounced them from his

I I

64·NEXUS Vol 2, No 13 - 1993

r U
i:"'> {
The Pharmaceutical Drug Racket
Continued from page 64 because of deals made over its head and forcing health care costs to double, a
campaign trai n. The American behind its back in the White House and leading health expert claims.
Presidents, unless they want to end up other corridors of power...'''' Dr Ron Williams says the public
li'ke John Kennedy, do not rule their 'The oU lobby, perhaps the most power- health care system is faci ng a bleak
country anymore than the official gov- ful lobby 00 eartil, is almost matched by future because governments can no
ernments of tbe other 50-called democ- hospitl!J. owners lUld doctors." - President longer afford to fund it.
racies/ fOJ the big boys in industry and Carter,. 1979." And as they are forced to sell off hos-
finance have long since taken over that Incidentally, in 1980, Exxon became pitals to private interests, American cor-
task.'''' America's largest corporation. Exxon is the porations willi step in and take over/
Morris H. IRubin, editor and publisher of new name for ,the old Rockefeller Standard leaving ordinary Australians unable to
The Progressive, writes in an article in Oil Trust. afford skyrocketing health care cosls.
January 1977: 'For a further insight on how the cartels "I see I ittle but doom and gloom/"
"Corporate power has become ,the says Dr Williams, who has spent 11
have turned democracies into private oli-
dominant force il1l our society... All years researching the Australian and
garchies, the books Naked Empress by Hans American health care systems.
attempts to check the moullting power Ruesch, and None Dare Call It Conspirat:y
of the corporate giants have failed. "I wish II could say that 'if we all
., (1971) by ,investigative journalist Gary pulled together we could avert the com-
Consider ,the two most important instru- Allen, are highly recommended.
ments forged by the progressive forces Ing brutality.... but today's reality is th~t
of the country In their crusade to curb Australia's Health System Under for the health ,ndu-stry/ compassion Will
the march of monopoly: the tegulatory Threat from US Corporations ~ive way at an increasing rate to prof-
system and the antitrust program ... It....
Because the Australian Government can
The regulatory system lies in sham- no longer afford to fund our ailing public "As public hospitals are sold to pri.
bles, and the corporations which were vates, and as nursmg homes join nation-
health care system, privatisation is
intended to be regulated in the public al chains, !IS nurses move out of govern·
interest n-ow dominate these regulatory inevitable. A major concern is that the ruth-
ment emrloyment on to contract, as
~ess US corporations will be the principal
agencies. The betrayal of the public individua dodors lose ever more con-
trust lis virtually complete... The buyers. An article appearing in The Daily trol over their practices no government
antitrust la_ws are virtually dead letters. It Telegraph Mirror (1 October, 1992), titled will say that the processes it is promot•.
is clear -from recent disclosures that the "US Giants Threat To Hospitals"', reports: ing might lead to disaste_r.· [Emphasis
Antitrust Division of the Justice "Huge American corporations soon added.]
Department is almost immobilized! will controll Australia's public hospitals
Continued on .page 66

I -- -, I ! I

Vol 2/ No 13 - 1993 NEXUS.65

ta5
The Pharmaceutical Drug Racket
Prices, Enterprise Ins.titute for Public PoIiey Research, 7&8.
Continued from page 65 Washington, D.C., 1970. Ciu:d in ref. 4, p. 77. II. Ausb'alian Consumers' Association, "PiUs for
4b. Edward M. Brecher and CoILsumer Reports Pain", Cboice, ACA, MarrickviUe, NSW, June 1991,
References and Notes Edilors, Licit and Dlicit Drugs: The Consumers Union p.D.
I. Brian Howe, "The cost of,beallh care is rocketing", Report on Narcotics, Stimulants, Depressants, 12. In 1973, $166 million was spent on OTC drugs
Suoday Telegrapb, 27 Oct. 1992. Inhalanls, HaUucinogeus and Ml!rijual1!l- Including (see ref. II) and $240 million was spent on prescrip-
2. Ivan lllicb, Limits to Medicine - Medical Nemesis: Caffeine, Nicotine and Alcohol, Little, Brown, tion drugs (Pharmacy Guild of Australia, Guild
The Expropri81ion of Heallh, 'Pelican Books, 1979, Boston, 1973. Cited in ref. 4, p. 78. Digest, 1991, tables 27 & 31). From this it was calcu-
pp.57-8. 4e. D.M. Dunlop, "The use and abuse of psychOllopie lau:d that in 1973 the cost of OTC was 69% or the
2a. Robert W. Hei.heringlon, Carl E. Hopkins, and drugs", in Proceedings eX the Royal SQCiety of cost of prescription drugs. If the rate of increase of
Miltoll I. Roemer, Heallh Insurance Plans: Promise Medicine (1970) 63: 1279. G. 1. Klerman, "Social OTC drulls is proportional to the rate of increase of
and Per(onnllllce, Wiley, New York, 1975. Ciu:d in values and the consumption of psycholropic medi- prescriptIOn drugs, then it coll1d be estimated thal
ref. 2, p. 57. cine", in Proceedings eX the First World Coogress on OTC di\lgs in 1991 would amount to 69% of $2 bil-
2b. Manin S. FeldsU:in, The Rising Cost eX Hospital Environmental Medicine and Biology, North-Holland', lion (cost of prescription drugs in 1991. See ref. 3),
Care, Inform81ioo Resources, Wasbingtoll, D.C., Haarlem, 1974. Cited in ref. 4, p. 78. which equals to $1.4 billion.
1971. Ciu:d in .reI 2, p. 57. 4d. James 1. Goddard, "The medical business", 13. See ref. 3.
2c. OREDOC (Cenlre de recherches et de documenta- Scientific American, no. 229, Sept. 1973, pp. 161-6. 14. Jim Mason & Peter Singer, Animal Factories,
tion sur Ia consomm81iPn), Evolution de la structure Cited in ref. 4, p. 78. Crown Publishers, New YorIc, 1980, p. 56.
des $Oins medicaus, 195H 972, Paris, 1973. Cited in 4e. Drug Use in America: Problem in Perspective, IS. JobnRobins, Diet for a New America, StiUpoint
ref. 2, ,p. 57. Second Report of the Nation.aI Commission on Publishing, Walpole, 1987, p. 109.
2d. 'IKrankbeitskosu:n: 'Die bombe ticln'; Das west- Marihuana and Drug Abuse, 1972, 1973, 1974,4 vols, 16. Bureau of Veterinary Medicine, Department of
deulsche Gesundheitswesen", 1. "Der Kampf urn die Govemmeut Printing Office, Wasbingtoll, D.C., siock Health, Education and Welfare, FDA 76-6012, "Drug
Kassen- Milliar;~n"; 2. ':Die Phalanx der niederge- no. 5266-0003. N81ional Commission for !.he Saudy of use guide: swine", B.V.M., Industry Relations
lassenen Arzu: ,Der Spiegel, no. 19,1975, pp. 54-66; Nursing and Nursing Education, An Al'lstract for Branch, Rockville, Md., May 1976, p. I.
no. 20, 1975, pp. 126-42. Cited io ref. 2, p. 57. Aetion, MeGraw-HiII, New York, 1970. Cited in ref. 17. Drugs in Livestock Feed, vol. 1, Technical Report,
2e. R Maxwell, Heallh Care: The Proving Dilemma; 4, p. 78. Office or Technology Assessmenl, Washington, D.C.,
Needs vs. Resouces in Western Europe, the U.S., and 5. llIich, op. cit., p. 36. June 1979, p. 3.
the U.S.S.R., McKinsey & Co., New York, 1974. Ian 6. Robert S. Mendelsohn, Confessions of a Medical 18. Food Safety and Quality Service, U.s. Department
Dou~las- Wilson and wOOn McLachlan, eds, Health Heretic, Warner Books, New York, 1980, p. 56. of Agriculture, "Industry-government 'self-help' sulfa
Servtce Projects: An InU:malionai Survey, Linle, 7. National Health Stategy, Issues in Pharmaceutical campaign underway", Nonheasl Regional Information
Brown, Boston, 1973. Cited in ref. 2, p. 57. Drug Use in Australia, Issues Paper no. 4 (Prof. R Office Newsleuer, New York, IS June 1978, p. 1.
2f. Louis..e Russell lit aI., federal HealiP Spending, Harvey, Chairman), National Heallh, Housing and 19. Drugs in Livesiock Feed, op. Cil., vol. I, p. 3.
1969-74, Center for Health Policy Studies, Nalional Canmunity Services, Canberra, June 1992, p. 50. 20. IlIich, op. cit., p. 79.
Planning Association, Washington, D.C, 1974. Ciu:d 8. ''The alu:matives to pill-popping", Sydney Morning 21. Hans Ruesch, Naked Empress or The Great
in ref. 2, p. 58. Herald, 2 July 1988. Medical FraUd, CIVIS (Latin acronym for
3."Druf
pp.20- .
doctors under fire", Bulletin, 24 Mar. 1992, 9. D. Wade, "The baclcground pattern of drug usaj:e in
Auslralia", Olinical Pharmacology and Therapeuucs,
International Ceuu:r of Scientific Information on
Vivisection) Publications, POB 152, Via Motta 51,
4. lJIich, op. cit., pp. 77-8. vol. 19, May 1976, pp. 651-6. CH-6900 MassagnolLugano, SWitzerland, 1992, p.
4a. John M. FiJ:eslone, Trends in Prescription Drug 10. Calculau:d by comparing Slatistij;s provided in refs 12.

66·NEXU$ Vol 2, No l3 -1993


The Pharmaceutical Drug Racket
40. Robert S. Mendelsohn, Mal(e) Pnlctice: How London, 1984,p.4.
Continued from page 66 Doctors Mani!1Ulate Women, ConteD)poral)' BooIcs, 60. Borkin, op. cit
Chicago, 1982. 61. ibid.
22. lU). lMann, Modern Drug Use, an Enquiry OIl 411. Robert S. Mendelsohn, HQw to Raise a Healthy
Historical Principles, MTP Press. 1984. 62. BealJe, op. cit, reproduced in ref. 55, p. 100.
Child... In Spite of Your Doctor, Ballantine Books, 63. Ruesch, op. cit, p. 116.
23. FDA Drug Review: Postapproval Risks 1976- New York, 1987.
1985, U.S. General Accounting Office, April 1990. 64. Bealle, op. cit repro in ref. 55, pp. 100-1.
42. IIIich, op. cit.,IP. 35. 65. Ruesch, op. cit, pp. 1.01-2.
24. Adverse Drug Reaction AdviSOlY Committee, The 43. Rue.sch, OIl. cil., p. 13.
New Epidemic; A Colkction of Case-Studies by 44. ibid. 66. ibid., pp. 103-4.
ADRAC, AGPS, Canberra, ~987, p. 3. 45. ibid. 67. ibid., p. 105.
25. 1. Lamour, R.G. Dolphin, H. Baxler et aI., "A 46. U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, 68. BeaUe, op. cit, repro in ref. 67.
prospective study of hospital admissioos due to drug Ten Leading Causes ofDealh in lite U.S., 1977, July 69. &1J:sch, op. cit, rpp. 105,-6.
ructions", AU'straiian Journal of Hospital Pbannacy, 1980. 70. BiDa Robinson (ed.), "FDA: The Aml2'ican
1991, vol. 21(2~" pp. 90-95. 47. T. McKeown, The Role of Medicine, Blackwell gestapo protector or prosecuter?", Civil Abolitiatist,
26. "A crisis of confidence", Australian Penthouse, Scientific Publications, 1979. P.O. Box 26, Swain, New York 14885, vol., IV, no.,
April 1983" p. 39. 48. T. McKeown and' C.R. Lowe, An Introduction lO 3, Summer 1992, ps 1 & 7.
27. R.D. Mann, op. cit Social Medigpe, Blackwell ScientifIC Publicalions, 71. Duncan Roads (ed.), "AIle.rnative medicine
28. Richard Taylor, Medicine Out of Control - The 11976. beware", Nexus New Times, ,vol. 2, no. 8, June-July
Anatomy of a' Malignant Technology, Sun Books, 49. J.B. McKinlay & S. McKinlay, Health & Society, ~992, p. 9.
Melbourne, 1979, p. 46. Millibank Memorial F.und, 1977"pp. 405-28. 72. Duncan Roads (ed.), "Natural medicine in the
29. Leighton Cluff in Controversies in Therapeuti.cs, 50. Wisconsin Action Coalition and Citizen Fund of
ed. Loois Lasagna, Saunders, 1980, p. 44. USA - a ~lII1ling to Australia", Nexus New Times,
WasbinglOn, D.C., Milwauk.ee Sentinel, 30 Apr. 1'990.
30. U.S. Senate, Select COIIlJ;!liu.ee on Small Business. 51. Alan S. Levin, "Co~ion in American medi- vol. 2, no. 9, Aug."Sept. 1992, p. 9.
Subcommiuee on Monopoly, Competitive Problems cine", in Dissent in Med~lDe - Nine Doctors Speak: 73. Freedom of O1oice in Health Care. circular,
in ~ Drug In.dusuy, 90lIt Congress, 1st & 2nd Oul, The New Medical Foundation, 36lh Floor, 115 FCHC - P.O. Box 2651, Alice Spripgs, NT.087@,
Sessions, 1967-8, pt. 2, p. 565. Soullt LaSalle Street, Chicago, llIinois 60603. publ. 1992.
31. LeighlOn Ouff, op. cit by Contemporary Books, Chi.ceagb, pp. 78-80. 74. See ref. 72.
32. Arabella Melville & Colin Johnson, Cured lO 52. Sec ref..3. 75. Ruesch, op. cit, pp. 108-9.
Dealh - The Effects of Prescription Drugs, Angus & 53.J-evin, op. cit., pp. 80-4. 76. ibid., p. 106.
Robertson Publishers, London, 1982, p. 123. 54. llIich, qp. cit., p. 11. 77. J.W. Hodge quote.d in reJ. 75.
33. Healllt Can: Reform Group, Compulsory 55. Hans Ruesch, Naked EmIXess or The Greal 78. "Unonhodox medicos to lose rebllles", AuslFalian,
Immunisation - A Statement of Concern, HCRG, Medical Fraud, CMS Publications, 21 July 1992, p. 3.
Glebe, NSW, 199I,Ip. 13. MassagnolLugano, Switzerland, 1992. 79. Woodrow Wilson in The New Freedom,
34. New Scientist, no. 218, 17 July 1980. 56. Morris A. Bealle, The Drug Story, Biworld Doubleday & Co., New York, 1913, pp. 57-8. Repr. in
~. WH. Inman in Monitoring for Drug Sa/ety, ed. Publishers, Orem, Utah, 1949 (original edition titled
W.H.Inman, MTPPreSS,19llD. ref. 55, p. 117.
as The Super Drug Story, pub!. by Columbia 80. Ruesch, op. cit, p. ~ 18.
36. Taylor, op. cit., pp. 46-7. Publishing Company, Washington, D.C.: also retitled
37. H. Beaty & R. Petersd.orf. "Iatrogenic factors in a~ The New Drug Story), Cited in ref. 55, pp. 98-9.
81. Morris H.,Rubin (ed.), The Progressive, Jan. 1977.
infectious di~", Annals of Internal Medicine, 57. ibid. Repr. in ref. 55, p. 119.
1966, vol. 65, p. 641. 58. JQ.~b Sorkin, The Crime lnd PuniWnen.1 of I.G. 82. Jimmy Cirter in AMA News, 8 June 1979.
38. Taylor. op. cil., pp. 47-8. Farben, Free Press, New York, 1978, p. 127. 83. Cary Allen, None Dare Call It ConllPiracy.
39. Roben S. Mendelsohn, Confessions of a Medical 59. John Braithwaite, Corporate Crime 'in lite Concord Press - P.O. Box 2686, Seal Beach,
Heretic, Warner Books, New York,198O. PbarmaceuticalInduSlry, Routledge & Kegan Paul, California 90740, 1971.

""

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