My fevered imagination includes the probability that Andrew Jackson and stories of the Bell Witch are connected with this kind of knowledge.
“In his 1806 book Travels In America, Thomas Ashe writes of his experiences with a vast cavern originally discovered in 1783 beneath the city of Lexington, 300 feet long, 100 feet wide and 19 feet high, containing exotic artifacts, a stone altar for sacrifices, human skulls and bones piled high, and mummified remains. The mummies are very strange looking and have red hair. The local native Americans claimed that these were the remnants of an ancient civilization that died out long ago. Respected historian George W. Ranck also discusses this “lost city” buried beneath Lexington in 1872. It is said that local Native Americans identified the bodies as being from the ancient race who inhabited the area long before them.
In 1792 an early settler, General John Payne, made a strange discovery while building his house in the tiny town of Augusta, KY, 63 miles North of Lexington. From Historical Sketches of Kentucky by Lewis Collins, Maysville, Ky. 1847, page 205:
‘The bottom on which Augusta is situated is a large burying ground of the ancients…They have been found in great numbers, and of all sizes, everywhere between the mouths of Bracken and Locust Creeks, a distance of about a mile and a half. From the cellar under my (Payne’s) dwelling, 60 by 70 feet, over a hundred and ten skeletons were taken. I measured them by skulls, and there might have been more, whose skulls had crumbled into dust…The skeletons were of all sizes, from seven feet to infant.
David Kilgour (who was a tall and very large man) passed our village at the time I was excavating my cellar, and we took him down and applied a thigh bone to his. The man, if well-proportioned, must have been 10 to 12 inches taller than Kilgour, and the lower jaw bone would slip on over his, skin and all. Who were they? How came their bones here?’
‘When I was in the army, I inquired of old Crane, a Wyandot and of Anglerson, a Delaware, both intelligent old chiefs, and they could give me no information in reference to these remains of antiquity. Some of the largest trees of the forest were growing over the remains when the land was cleared in 1792.’
A few years later, on December 21, 1806, the town of Augusta, KY was visited by Harman Blennerhassett, lawyer, occultist, and member of the Illuminati. Was he aware of the ancient underground civilization in the region?
Blennerhassett was born on October 8, 1764 in Ireland {The Black and Red Lodge of Masonry and Keogh’s grandfather in my researches on this probable great great-grandfather of mine is connected I suspect.}and moved to the USA after graduating. He and his wife (who was also his niece which is in-line with the Merovingian genetic programming so long as there are adequate foreign genes put into the mix which the Hapsburgs forgot for a few centuries) lived on Blennerhassett island on the Ohio River. Blennerhassett was a friend and colleague of Adam Weishaupt {Son of a Rabbi}, and a member of his Order of the Illuminati, reaching the level of Illuminatus Magus. He was also a friend of Vice President Aaron Burr, with whom he engaged in a conspiracy to remove President Thomas Jefferson from power. The plot was discovered and Blennerhassett’s secret camp at Marietta was destroyed on December 19, 1806.
Blennerhassett fled with about 50 of his fellow initiates, leaving his wife, his sons and the rest of his guerrilla troops behind. But instead of making a direct exit, Blennerhassett risked making a mysterious side trip to Augusta, KY, arriving on the day of the solstice. Clearly, there was some occult significance to his visit to Augusta. But what? That Blennerhassett was interested in the forgotten ancient civilization is a distinct possibility.” (7)
——— About the Author
“Robert Baird’s work is profound in the extreme. His links and lateral way of thinking are enough to put Einstein to shame. I commend his writings to all those with an open heart and an open mind. If you seek deeper understanding, if you can truly say that you yearn to know more about the world of ancient man, then read Robert’s work.” www.gardinerosborn.com
The Krishnamurtis and Luciferians
by Robert Bruce Baird
Whatever Theosophy Says:
Theosophy is a serious quest for siddhis and power. The Past President of the Yale Theosophical Society who I met in New Haven, Connecticut when I was around twenty-one years of age had also been in charge of thirteen covens in New England. His knowledge was so massive that he was the only person asked to teach Silva Mind Control without having taken any of their courses at that juncture in the early 1970s and he was selected to be on the Hartford Institute of Living’s special panel on Parapsychology. I met a psychiatrist in the 1990s who was on that panel with Ed Tucker and he had been most impressed with Ed, as was I. Ed was also one of only six real astrologers (medical) in North America and he was held in high regard when he went to the conventions or New Age seminars. The interaction of Ed and myself affected the wind and rain to the amazement of my skeptical older brother who found Ed to be a salt of the earth kind of guy. Ed was only twenty-eight years old at this time and shortly after having met me he stopped all pursuits of the occult. In a letter to me in 1980 he said - “When I was young I played with the things of children.”
I do not wish to disparage any path but I do wish that any reader of my work gets to know how much power can pervert the potential blessings of ONEness. Theosophy is Hermetic or alchemical and I have learned a great deal about these things. One inner sanctum Rosicrucian who met me when I went to Chichen Itza, was so impressed with me or my energy that he broke all their secret codes and showed me the ultimate course work in his little green book. It was shortly after this that I joined my first group or coven that included a top Dragon cadre with International Vampire-type connections. I found their petty pursuits unethical after six months and some of their Elders unsuccessfully tried to wage psychic war with me. I now know a great deal more about the Merovingian Dragons and I recommend that actual students read Sir Laurence Gardner’s Genesis of the Grail Kings as well as the SPIN of his forwarder HRH Nicholas de Vere. De Vere’s own book written earlier than Grail Kings tells the truth about Count Vlad Dracul. He says Dracula was a top adept in the Sarkeny Rend Rosicrucian Order of noble heritage to which he belongs.
Along the road to understanding why the modern Theosophy Society is headquartered in Pasadena we can also look into the Ordo Templis Orientalis and Crowley, Parsons (JPL), and L. Ron Hubbard as well as Albert Pike and the Bohemian Grove people who might try to practice what the Druids once did in a far more ethical manner. Thomas Paine and many other actual high Rosicrucians or alchemists have correctly noted that this complex of secret societies is based on the sun-worship of Druidry. Druidry is connected by the likes of Peter Beresford Ellis (author of The Druids) to the Brahmins or Vedantists like UG Krishnamurti’s grandfather who also was a lawyer like so many bureaucrats and CIA types who have spent time in New Haven at Yale University. The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn which Aleister Crowley took over was or is the coven of the Rothschilds whose family crest pronounces the occult sigil of Solomon as part of their heritage. They are Benjaminite BEES and the BEES Napoleon wore as he was invested to become the Holy Roman Emperor were from the grave of Childeric, a Merovingian King in the region that later became ruled under Occamy (alchemy) and its structure. The Cathars were a great attempt to govern and enable people to maximize their soulful potential in the Heliopolitan (sun or son-worship) tradition. You can get past fear and demons as you learn the CONstructs these people also have created inside the inner sanctums of most major religions. Then you will know Lucifer and Venus (tracking the effects of the Sun) is a large part of these traditions and I hope the reader of this book goes on to read my more in-depth books on all these things.
Thus as you check into our assertions (as you should do) and find whatever Theosophy might say as they continue the process of initiating people to these inner sanctums I hope you remember these few words. We have taken some time to contact them as well as having sent them other manuscripts. They are excellent managers or spin-doctors as are all ecclesiastical types in any religion’s bureaucracy.
MASONS AND ANNIE BESANT:
“It was not my intention to doubt that, the Doctrines of the Illuminati, and principles of
Jacobinism {Or Martinism and other Hibernian offshoots and groups including the Round Tables of Cecil Rhodes or the Bilderbergs who reach out to rich people in corporate Klavens galore for the benefit of even higher initiates of the Hibernian Milesian elite.}. had not spread in the United States. On the contrary, no one is more truly satisfied of this fact than I am… The idea that I meant to convey, was, that I did not believe that the Lodges of Free Masons in this Country had, as Societies, endeavoured to propagate the diabolical tenets of the first, or pernicious principles of the latter (if they are susceptible of seperation). That Individuals of them may have done it, or that the founder, or instrument employed to found, the Democratic Societies in the United States, may have had these objects; and actually had a seperation of the People from their Government in view, is too evident to be questioned.” The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor. Mount Vernon, October 24, 1798.
The Masons have had about fifteen women in their men’s club. Annie was one of those special fifteen. Annie is a great person who had a major impact in freeing India as a nation. I could argue she was more important than Gandhi in this regard. Her involvement in the life of Jiddhu is paramount.
Remote viewing (RV) is the purported ability for a person to gather information on a remote target that is hidden from the physical perception of the viewer and typically separated from the viewer at some distance, a form of extra-sensory perception. The term was introduced by Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff in 1974.
As with other forms of extra-sensory perception, the objective validity of remote viewing has not been proved, and critics such as Randi and Clarke in An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural explain RV by normal means. From World War II until the 1970s the US government occasionally funded ESP research. When the US intelligence community learned that the USSR and China were conducting ESP research it became receptive to the idea of having its own competing psi research program. (Schnabel 1997)
Early SRI experiments
The report of a low-key psi experiment conducted in 1972 by SRI laser physicist, Hal Puthoff, with purported psychic Ingo Swann led to a visit from two employees of the CIA’s Directorate of Science and Technology. The immediate result was a $50,000 CIA-sponsored project. (Schnabel 1997, Puthoff 1996, Kress 1977/1999, Smith 2005) As research continued, the SRI team published papers in Nature (Targ & Puthoff, 1974), in Proceedings of the IEEE (Puthoff & Targ, 1976), and in the proceedings of a symposium on consciousness for the American Association for the Advancement of Science (Puthoff, et al, 1981).
The initial CIA-funded project was later renewed and expanded. A number of CIA officials including John McMahon, then the head of the Office of Technical Service and later the Agency’s deputy director, became strong supporters of the program. By the mid 1970s, facing the post-Watergate revelations of its “skeletons,” and after internal criticism of the program, the CIA dropped sponsorship of the SRI research effort. Sponsorship was picked up by the Air Force, led by analyst Dale E. Graff of the Foreign Technology Division. In 1979, the Army’s Intelligence and Security Command, which had been providing some taskings to the SRI investigators, was ordered to develop its own program by the Army’s chief intelligence officer, Gen. Ed Thompson. CIA operations officers, working from McMahon’s office and other offices, also continued to provide taskings to SRI’s subjects. (Schnabel 1997, Smith 2005, Atwater 2001)
The program had three parts (Mumford, et al, 1995). First was the evaluation of psi research performed by the U.S.S.R. and China, which appears to have been better-funded and better-supported than the government research in the U.S. (Schnabel 1997)
In the second part of the program, SRI managed its own stable of “natural” psychics both for research purposes and to make them available for tasking by a variety of US intelligence agencies. The most famous results from these years were the description of a big crane at a Soviet nuclear research facility (Kress 1977/199, Targ 1996), the description of a new class of Soviet strategic submarine (Smith 2005, McMoneagle 2002) and the location of a downed Soviet bomber in Africa (which former President Carter later referred to in speeches). By the early 1980s numerous offices throughout the intelligence community were providing taskings to SRI’s psychics. (Schnabel 1997, Smith 2005)
The third branch of the program was a research project intended to find out if ESP — now called “remote viewing” — could be made accurate and reliable. The intelligence community offices that tasked the group seemed to believe that the phenomenon was real. But in the view of these taskers, a remote viewer could be “on” one day and “off” the next, a fact that made it hard for the technique to be officially accepted. Through SRI, individuals were studied for years in a search for physical (e.g., brain-wave) correlates that might reveal when they were “on- or off-target”.
Decline and Termination
Parallel with the work at SRI, Stephan A. Schwartz, who had just left government as Special Assistant to the US Chief of Naval Operations, developed almost the same protocol which he called Distant Viewing To study this, he began a research laboratory known as Mobius. A central question in the seminal IEEE paper (Puthoff & Targ, 1976) was whether RV was electromagnetic in nature, or something else. Schwartz had begun to consider how this might be studied in 1973, after reading the work of Soviet Academician Leonid Vasiliev, the tutor for Russian psychic Nina Kulagina, . This work had eliminated all of the EM spectrum except for very low frequency ranges, known as ELF.
Testing in the ELF range required a submarine, because the only shield for ELF is hundreds of feet of seawater. In 1976, Schwartz was offered access to a small research submersible capable of going to the depths required by University of Southern California Institute for Marine and Coastal Studies. In 1977, just as the experiment was about to go to sea, he invited SRI to assist him in carrying out his study. The Project, known as Deep Quest, and carried out with logistical support from the USC Institute. It took place in the waters off Santa Catalina Island. Two Remote Viewings, one by Hella Hammid, one by Ingo Swann described where target individuals were hiding in California. Both sessions were conducted while the submarine was at depth, and both were successful.
The experiment also tested a protocol Schwartz had devised involving five multiple viewers. Four were given charts of the Pacific ocean and were asked to locate an unknown wreck on the seafloor. They chose as their location a 10 mile square area near Santa Catalina. The sunken vessel was determined by the Bureau of Land Management Marine Sites Board to be previously unknown. A documentary was shot as the events took place of the entire project was made.[Schwartz, 1977, 2007][citation needed] But the riches which Schwartz and his investors have sought in their many undersea expediditions have never been found. The ship Schwartz’s team found on the Bahamas Banks was carrying molasses, not the treasure that was their goal.
Schwartz also claims he was involved in the discovery and the first modern mapping of the Eastern Harbor of Alexandria and the discovery of numerous shipwrecks as well as Mark Anthony’s palace in Alexandria, the Ptolemaic Palace Complex of Cleopatra, and the remains of the Lighthouse of Pharos, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Much of this was discounted by two on-site Egyptian scholars whom Schwartz had listed as research associates, Dr. Shehetta Adam, head of Egypt’s Department of Antiquities and Dr. Mostafa El Abbadi
In 1995, the CIA hired the American Institutes for Research, a perennial intelligence-industry contractor, to perform a retrospective evaluation of the results generated by the remote-viewing program, the Stargate Project. Most of the program’s results were not seen by the evaluators, with the report focusing on the most recent experiments, and only from government-sponsored research. One of the reviewers was Ray Hyman, a long-time critic of psi research while another was Jessica Utts who, as a supporter of psi, was chosen to put forward the pro-psi argument. Utts maintained that there had been a statistically significant positive effect, with some subjects scoring 5%-15% above chance.]Ray Hyman argued that Utts’ conclusion that ESP had been proven to exist, “especially precognition, is premature and that present findings have yet to be independently replicated”. Based upon both of their collected findings, which recommended a higher level of critical research and tighter controls, the program was officially terminated.
The Stargate Project was one of a number of code names for government “remote viewing programs”. Others included Sun Streak, Grill Flame, Center Lane by DIA and INSCOM, and SCANATE by CIA, from the 1970s, through to 1995. It was an offshoot of research done at Stanford Research Institute (SRI).
The project was eventually terminated, according to the official report at the time, because there was insufficient evidence of the utility of the intelligence data produced. David Goslin, of the American Institute for Research said, “There’s no documented evidence it had any value to the intelligence community.”
In 1995 the project was transferred to the CIA and a retrospective evaluation of the results was done. The CIA contracted the American Institutes for Research for this evaluation. An analysis conducted by parapsychologistJessica Utts showed a statistically significant effect, with some subjects scoring 5%-15% above chance, though subject reports included a large amount of irrelevant information, and when reports did seem on target they were vague and general in nature. Skeptic Ray Hyman concluded a null result Based upon both of their collected findings, which recommended a higher level of critical research and tighter controls, the CIA terminated the 20 million dollar project. Time magazine stated in 1995 three full-time psychics were still working on a $500,000-a-year budget out of Fort Meade, Maryland, which would soon be shut down, which occurred in 1996.