Sunday, 25 April 2010

Book Review: Dark Misson, A Secret History of NASA


Dark mission is truly the work of conspirational lore. Forget the Apollo moon hoax, that's dismissed in the first chapter as a NASA disinformation campaign to deflect attention from the undeniable evidence of the ruins of an ancient alien civilization on both Mars and our own Moon. A little background knowledge of the theory of Earth's hidden history is helpful before reading this book. If Dark Mission is truly the first introduction to all material contained within it, then it will be even more astonishing for you.


The Face on Mars takes up a lot of the discussion in the book, and the first chapter discusses this and other anomalies in the Cydonia region such as 'The City' and the 'D & M' pyramid. The mathematics of the region are also looked at, a model constructed by one of the authors, Richard C Hoagalnd (see his website, enterprise mission).


Hoagland continues in chapter two (the book is written entirely in the third person) with an explanation of his hyperdimensional physics model, the foundation of which (as is my limited understanding of blowing-Einstien-and-Newton-out-of-the-water-physics) is that 3-D tetrahedrons within the interior of galactic bodies play a part in drawing in energy from other planes of existence (4th dimension and above). At 19.5 degrees the geometric shape inside a sphere would reach the planets surface, and this number is incredibly significant, as the book shows throughout.

Taking an abrupt turn the 3rd chapter is dedicated to political maneuverings and postulates that JFK was assassinated because of his wish to unite with the Soviets in a joint mission to the moon. Chapter 4, 'The Crystal Towers of the Moon', shows the evidence of incredible glass ruins on the moon through photographs taken over various Apollo missions. By careful analysis of images the authors show some of the unusual features that have been spotted in various frames. Chapter 5 is entitled 'A Conspiracy Unfolds' and is an investigation into the history of NASA, its occult ties, and the bizarre ritualistic system of numerology and star-alignments it follows. The authors submit this is based on the Egyptian Pantheon of Osiris, Isis and Horus (represented by Orion, Sirius and Leo), the pagan worship of these gods having been continued through the ages by 'initiates' - starting with the Egyptian priests, through to the Knights Templar and other secret societies and into world freemasonary at its higher orders. The story includes Alan Parsons, L Ron Hubbard and Werner Von Braum (a Nazi rocket scientist bought over in breech of Operation Paperclip) amongst others.

To be extremely brief, the remainder of the book focuses on more anomalies on Mars, and the long battle with NASA over the images and intereptation of these images released from the various Mars missions since Viking 1 in 1976. Deep analysis of the images released from NASA often showed strong implications of being tampered with in order to hide the real information in the frame. The book covers the political issues within NASA and government and the effects they had on their relationship with the alternative research community, as well as the authors sometimes troubled relationship with the aforementioned independent researchers. At times it reads like a crime novel, with inside leaks, mysterious clues and half-truths - at other times it gets very personal and you feel like a fly on the wall during heated email exchanges and scientific arguments.

This is an absolutely fantastic book, with the range of subject material covered, its hard to not be absorbed. Alien civilizations, assassination, political and professional deceptions and cover-ups, a new model of physics for our understanding of the physical universe...and lots of pictures to boot. Highly recommended for any alternative book shelf!

1 comments:

  1. Conspiracy theories set aside, you'd have to admit that there have been great advancements in the country's space endeavors. I've been looking at healing modalities like Thetahealing, state of theta. healing modalities, and the likes when I stumbled on to your site. And I got to admit you do make great points. The book in itself is definitely worth the read, and I probably would pick it up and spend time on it this coming weekend.

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