mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
668 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
668 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
-Here's the lowdown on "ALTERNATIVE 3" from a TV-movie compendium.
|
|
"ALTERNATIVE 3" (GB 1977; 52m, colour)
|
|
Amusing spoof do commentary about the disappearance of various high-IQ
|
|
citizens, allegedly to form nucleus of a standby civilization on Mars against
|
|
the coming End of the World. Sly parodies of fashionable breathless TV
|
|
journalism sweetened the joke, ex- newscaster Tim Brinton held it all
|
|
together with po-faced gravity and needless to say some supernature fanatics
|
|
refuse to this day to accept that it was anything but gospel truth, although
|
|
it was orignally scheduled for April 1st (1977). Written by David Ambrose;
|
|
directed by Chris Miles; for Anglia. Apparently the TV-movie was spawned by a
|
|
book (or assuming the date is accurate, vice versa) of the same name. Written
|
|
by Leslie Watkins, it was published by Sphere Books Ltd. in 1978.
|
|
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
ALTERNATIVE 003
|
|
by
|
|
Leslie Watkins
|
|
|
|
with
|
|
David Ambrose & Christopher Miles
|
|
|
|
Section 1
|
|
|
|
NO NEWSPAPER has yet secured the truth behind the operation known
|
|
as ALTERNATIVE 3. Investigations by journalists have been blocked by
|
|
governments on both sides of the Iron Curtain. American and Russia are
|
|
ruthlessly obsessed with guarding their shared secret and this obsession, as
|
|
we can now prove, has made them partners in murder.
|
|
|
|
However, despite this intensive security, fragments of information have
|
|
been made public. Often they are released inadvertently by experts who do
|
|
not appreciate their sinister significance and these fragments, in isolation,
|
|
mean little. But when jigsawed together they form a definite pattern, a
|
|
pattern which appears to emphasize the enormity of this conspiracy of
|
|
silence.
|
|
|
|
On May 3, 1977, the Daily Mirror published this story:
|
|
|
|
President Jimmy Carter has joined the ranks of UFO spotters. He sent
|
|
in two written reports stating he had seen a flying saucer when he was the
|
|
Governor of Georgia.
|
|
|
|
The President has shrugged off the incident since then, perhaps fearing
|
|
that electors might be wary of a flying saucer freak.
|
|
|
|
But he was reported as saying after the "sighting"; "I don't laugh at
|
|
people any more when they say they've seen UFOs because I've seen one
|
|
myself."
|
|
|
|
Carter described his UFO like this: "Luminous, not solid, at first bluish,
|
|
then reddish. It seemed to move towards us from a distance, stopped, then
|
|
moved partially away."
|
|
|
|
Carter filed two reports on the sighting in 1973, one to the
|
|
International UFO Bureau and the other to the National Investigations
|
|
Committee on Aerial Phenomena.
|
|
|
|
Heydon Hewes, who directs the International UFO Bureau from his
|
|
home in Oklahoma City, is making speeches praising the President's
|
|
"open-mindedness."
|
|
|
|
But during his presidential campaign last year Carter was cautious. He
|
|
admitted he had seen a light in the sky but declined to call it a UFO.
|
|
|
|
He joked: "I think it was a light beckoning me to run in the California
|
|
primary election."
|
|
|
|
Why this change in Carter's attitude? Because, by then, he had been
|
|
briefed on Alternative 3?
|
|
|
|
A 1966 Gallup Poll showed that five million Americans including several
|
|
highly experienced airline pilots claimed to have seen Flying Saucers.
|
|
Fighter pilot Thomas Mantell has already died while chasing one over
|
|
Kentucky his F.51 aircraft having disintegrated in the violent wash of his
|
|
quarry's engines.
|
|
|
|
The U.S. Air Force, reluctantly bowing to mounting pressure, asked Dr.
|
|
Edward Uhler Condon, a professor of astrophysics, to head an investigation
|
|
team at Colorado University.
|
|
|
|
Condon's budget was $500,000. Shortly before his report appeared in
|
|
1968, this story appeared in the London Evening Standard:
|
|
|
|
The Condon study is making headlines, but for all the wrong reasons. It
|
|
is losing some of its outstanding members, under circumstances which are
|
|
mysterious to say the least. Sinister rumors are circulating. At least four key
|
|
people have vanished from the Condon team without offering a satisfactory
|
|
reason for their departure.
|
|
|
|
The complete story behind the strange events in Colorado is hard to
|
|
decipher. But a clue, at last may be found in the recent statements of Dr.
|
|
James McDonald, the senior physicist at the Institute of Atmospheric
|
|
Physics at the University of Arizona and widely respected in his field. In a
|
|
wary, but ominous, telephone conversation this week, Dr. McDonald told me
|
|
that he is "most distressed." Condon's 1,485-page report denied the
|
|
existence of Flying Saucers and a panel of the American National Academy of
|
|
Sciences endorsed the conclusion that "further extensive study probably
|
|
cannot be justified."
|
|
|
|
But, curiously, Condon's joint principal investigator, Dr. David Saunders,
|
|
had not contributed a word to that report. And on January 11, 1969, the
|
|
Daily Telegraph quoted Dr. Saunders as saying of the report:
|
|
|
|
"It is inconceivable that it can be anything but a cold stew. No matter
|
|
how long it is, what it includes, how it is said, or what it recommends, it will
|
|
lack the essential element of credibility."
|
|
|
|
Already there were wide-spread suspicions that the Condon
|
|
investigation had been part of an official coverup, that the government knew
|
|
the truth but was determined to keep it from the public. We now know that
|
|
those suspicions were accurate. And that the secrecy was all because of
|
|
Alternative 3.
|
|
|
|
Only a few months after Dr. Saunders made his "cold stew" statement a
|
|
journalist with the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch embarrassed the National
|
|
Aeronautics and Space Agency by photographing a strange craft looking
|
|
exactly like a Flying Saucer at the White Sands missile range in New Mexico.
|
|
|
|
At first no one at NASA would talk about this mysterious circular craft,
|
|
15 feet in diameter, which had been left in the "missile graveyard" a section
|
|
of the range where most experimental vehicles were eventually dumped.
|
|
|
|
But the Martin Marietta company of Denver, where it was built,
|
|
acknowledged designing several models, some with ten and twelve engines.
|
|
And a NASA official, faced with this information, said, "Actually the engineers
|
|
used to call it 'The Flying Saucer."
|
|
|
|
That confirmed a statement made by Dr. Garry Henderson, a leading
|
|
space research scientist: "All our astronauts have seen these objects but have
|
|
been ordered not to discuss their findings with anyone."
|
|
|
|
Otto Binder was a member of the NASA space team. He has stated that
|
|
NASA "killed" significant segments of conversation between Mission Control
|
|
and Apollo 11, the spacecraft which took Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong to
|
|
the Moon and that those segments were deleted from the official record:
|
|
|
|
"Certain sources with their own VHF receiving facilities that by passed
|
|
NASA broadcast outlets claim there was a portion of Earth-Moon dialogue
|
|
that was quickly cut off by the NASA monitoring staff."
|
|
|
|
Binder added:
|
|
|
|
"It was presumably when the two moon walkers, Aldrin and Armstrong,
|
|
were making the round some distance from the LEM that Armstrong
|
|
clutched Aldrin's arm excitedly and exclaimed 'What was it? What the hell
|
|
was it? That's all I want to know.' "
|
|
|
|
Then, according to Binder, there was this exchange:
|
|
|
|
MISSION CONTROL: What's there? malfunction(garble).Mission
|
|
Control calling Apollo 11.
|
|
|
|
APOLLO 11: These babies were huge, sir. enormous, Oh, God you
|
|
wouldn't believe it!
|
|
I'm telling you there are other space-craft out there
|
|
lined up on the far side of the crater edge.
|
|
They're on the Moon watching us.
|
|
|
|
NASA, understandably, has never confirmed Binder's story but Buzz
|
|
Aldrin was soon complaining bitterly about the Agency having used him as a
|
|
"traveling salesman."
|
|
|
|
And two years after his Moon mission, following reported bouts of heavy
|
|
drinking, he was admitted to hospital with "emotional depression."
|
|
|
|
"Traveling salesman", that's an odd choice of words, isn't it? What, in
|
|
Aldrin's view, were the NASA authorities trying to sell? And to whom?
|
|
Could it be that they were using him, and others like him, to sell their
|
|
official version of the truth to ordinary people right across the world?
|
|
|
|
Was Aldrin's Moon walk one of those great spectaculars, presented with
|
|
maximum publicity, to justify the billions being poured into space research?
|
|
|
|
Was it part of the American-Russian cover for Alternative 3?
|
|
|
|
All men who have travelled to the Moon have given indications of
|
|
knowing about Alternative 3 and of the reasons which precipitated it.
|
|
|
|
In May, 1972, James Irwin, officially the sixth man to walk on the
|
|
Moon, resigned to become a Baptist missionary. And he said then, "The
|
|
flight made me a deeper religious person and more keenly aware of the
|
|
fragile nature of our planet."
|
|
|
|
Edgar Mitchell, who landed on the Moon with the Apollo 14 mission in
|
|
February, 1971, also resigned in May, 1972 to devote himself to
|
|
parapsychology. Later, at the headquarters of his Institute for noetic
|
|
Sciences near San Francisco, he described looking at this world from the
|
|
Moon: "I went into a very deep pathos, a kind of anguish. That incredibly
|
|
beautiful planet that was Earth, a place no bigger than my thumb was my
|
|
home.. a blue and white jewel against a velvet black sky...was being killed
|
|
off."
|
|
|
|
And on March 23, 1974, he was quoted in the Daily Express as saying
|
|
that society had only three ways in which to go and that the third was "the
|
|
most viable but most difficult alternative."
|
|
|
|
Another of the Apollo Moon walkers, Bob Grodin, was equally specific
|
|
when interviewed by a Sceptre Television reporter on June 20, 1977;
|
|
|
|
"You think they need all that crap down in Florida just to put two guys
|
|
up there on a bicycle? The hell they do! You know why they need us?
|
|
So they've got a P.R. story for all that hardware they've been firing into
|
|
space.
|
|
We're nothing, man! Nothing!"
|
|
|
|
On July 11, 1977, the Los Angeles Times came near to the heart of
|
|
the matter, nearer than any other newspaper, when it published a
|
|
remarkable interview with Dr. Gerard O'Neill.
|
|
|
|
Dr. O'Neill is a Princeton professor who served, during a 1976
|
|
sabbatical, as Professor of Aerospace at the Massachusetts Institute of
|
|
Technology and who gets nearly $500,000 each year in research grants from
|
|
NASA. Here is a section from that article:
|
|
|
|
The United Nations, he says, has conservatively estimated that the
|
|
world's population, now more than 4 billion people, will grow to about 6.5
|
|
billion by the year 2000. Today, he adds, about 30% of the world's
|
|
population is in developed nations. But, because most of the projected
|
|
population growth will occur in underdeveloped countries, that will drop to
|
|
22% by the end of the century. The world of 2000 will be poorer and
|
|
hungrier than the world today, he says.
|
|
|
|
Dr. O'Neill also explained the problems caused by the earth's 4,000 mile
|
|
atmospheric layer, but presumably because the article was comparatively
|
|
short one, he was not quoted on the additional threat posed by the notorious
|
|
"greenhouse" syndrome.
|
|
|
|
His solution? He called it Island 3. And he added: "There's no debate
|
|
about the technology involved in doing it. That's been confirmed by NASA's
|
|
top people."
|
|
|
|
But Dr. O'Neill, a family man with three children who like to fly
|
|
sailplanes in his spare time, did not realize that he was slightly off target.
|
|
He was right, of course, about the technology.
|
|
|
|
But he knew nothing of the political ramifications and he would have
|
|
been astounded to learn that NASA was feeding his research to the Russians.
|
|
|
|
Even eminent political specialists, as respected in their sphere as Dr.
|
|
O'Neill is in his own, have been puzzled by an undercurrent they have
|
|
detected in East-West relationships.
|
|
|
|
Professor G. Gordon Broadbent, director of the independently financed
|
|
Institute of Political Studies in London and author of a major study of
|
|
U.S.-Soviet diplomacy since the 1950s, emphasized that fact on June 20,
|
|
1977, when he was interviewed on Sceptre Television:
|
|
|
|
"On the broader issue of Soviet-U.S. relations, I must admit there is an
|
|
element of mystery which troubles many people in my field."
|
|
|
|
He added: "What we're suggesting is that, at the very highest levels of
|
|
East-West diplomacy, there has been operating a factor of which we know
|
|
nothing. Now it could just be and I stress the word 'could' that this
|
|
unknown factor is some kind of massive but covert operation in space. But
|
|
as for the reasons behind it we are not in the business of speculation."
|
|
|
|
Washington's acute discomfort over O'Neill's revelations through the Los
|
|
Angeles Times can be assessed by the urgency with which a "suppression"
|
|
Bill was rushed to the Statute Book.
|
|
|
|
On July 27, 1977, only sixteen days after publication of the O'Neill
|
|
interview columnist Jeremy Campbell reported in the London Evening
|
|
Standard that the Bill would become law that September. He wrote:
|
|
|
|
It prohibits the publishing of an official report without permission,
|
|
arguing that this obstructs the Government's control of its own information.
|
|
That was precisely the charge brought against Daniel Ellsberg for giving the
|
|
Pentagon papers to the New York Times.
|
|
|
|
Most ominous of all, the Bill would make it a crime for any present or
|
|
former civil servant to tell the Press of Government wrong doing or pass on
|
|
any news based on information "submitted to the Government in private."
|
|
|
|
Campbell pointed out that this final clause "has given serious pain to
|
|
guardians of American Press freedom because it creates a brand new crime."
|
|
Particularly as there was provision in the Bill for offending journalists to be
|
|
sent to prison for up to six years.
|
|
|
|
We subsequently discovered that a man called Harman Leonard Harman
|
|
read that item in the newspaper and that later, in a certain television
|
|
executives' dining room, he expressed regret that a similar Law had not been
|
|
passed years earlier by the British government.
|
|
|
|
He was eating treacle tart with custard at the time and he reflected
|
|
wistfully that he could then have insisted on such a Law being obeyed. That,
|
|
when it came to Alternative 3, would have saved him from a great deal of
|
|
trouble.
|
|
|
|
He had chosen treacle tart, not because he particularly liked it, but
|
|
because it was 2p(ence) cheaper than the chocolate sponge. That was
|
|
typical of Harman.
|
|
|
|
He was one of the people, as you may have learned already through the
|
|
Press, who tried to interfere with the publication of this book. We will later
|
|
be presenting some of the letters received by us from him and his lawyers
|
|
together with the replies from our legal advisers.
|
|
|
|
We decided to print these letters in order to give you a thorough insight
|
|
into our investigation for it is important to stress that we, like Professor
|
|
Broadbent, are not in the "business of speculation." We are interested only in
|
|
the facts.
|
|
|
|
And it is intriguing to note the pattern of facts relating to astronauts
|
|
who have been on Moon missions and who have therefore been exposed to
|
|
some of the surprises presented by Alternative 3.
|
|
|
|
A number, undermined by the strain of being party to such a
|
|
horrendous secret, suffered nervous or mental collapses. A high percentage
|
|
sought sanctuary in excessive drinking or in extramarital affairs which
|
|
destroyed what had been secure and successful marriages.
|
|
|
|
Yet these were men originally picked from many thousands precisely
|
|
because of their stability. Their training and experience, intelligence and
|
|
physical fitness all these, of course, were prime considerations in their
|
|
selection. But the supremely important quality was their balanced
|
|
temperament.
|
|
|
|
It would need something stupendous, something almost unimaginable
|
|
to most people, to flip such men into dramatic personality changes. That
|
|
something, we have now established, was Alternative 3 and, perhaps more
|
|
particularly, the night marish obscenities involved in the development and
|
|
perfection of Alternative 3.
|
|
|
|
We are not suggesting that the President of the United States has had
|
|
personal knowledge of the terror and clinical cruelties which have been an
|
|
integral part of the Operation, for that would make him directly responsible
|
|
for murders and barbarous mutilations.
|
|
|
|
We are convinced, in fact, that this is not the case. The President and
|
|
the Russian leader, together with their immediate subordinates, have been
|
|
concerned only with broad sweep of policy.
|
|
|
|
They have acted in unison to ensure what they consider to be the best
|
|
possible future for mankind. And the day to day details have been delegated
|
|
to high level professionals.
|
|
|
|
These professionals, we have now established, have been classifying
|
|
people selected for the Alternative 3 operation into two categories: those
|
|
who are picked as individuals and those who merely form part of a "batch
|
|
consignment."
|
|
|
|
There have been several "batch consignments" and it is the treatment
|
|
meted out to most of these men and women which provides the greatest
|
|
cause for outrage.
|
|
|
|
No matter how desperate the circumstances may be$and we reluctantly
|
|
recognize that they are extremely desperate$no humane society could
|
|
tolerate what has been done to the innocent and the gullible.
|
|
|
|
That view, fortunately, was taken by one man who was recruited into
|
|
the Alternative 3 team three years ago. He was, at first, highly enthusiastic
|
|
and completely dedicated to the Operation. However, he became revolted by
|
|
some of the atrocities involved. He did not consider that, even in the
|
|
prevailing circumstances, they could be justified.
|
|
|
|
Three days after the transmission of that sensational television
|
|
documentary, his conscience finally goaded him into action. He knew the
|
|
appalling risk he was taking, for he was aware of what had happened to
|
|
others who had betrayed the secrets of Alternative 3, but he made telephone
|
|
contact with television reporter Colin Benson and offered to provide Benson
|
|
with evidence of the most astounding nature.
|
|
|
|
He was calling, he said, from abroad but he was prepared to travel to
|
|
London. They met two days later. And he then explained to Benson that
|
|
copies of most orders and memoranda, together with transcripts prepared
|
|
from tapes of Policy Committee meetings, were filed in triplicate in
|
|
Washington, Moscow and Geneva where Alternative 3 had its operational
|
|
headquarters.
|
|
|
|
The system had been instituted to ensure there was no
|
|
misunderstanding between the principal partners. He occasionally had
|
|
access to some of that material although it was often weeks or even months
|
|
old before he saw it and he was willing to supply what he could to Benson.
|
|
He wanted no money. He merely wanted to alert the public, to help stop the
|
|
mass atrocities.
|
|
|
|
Benson's immediate reaction, after he had assessed the value of this
|
|
offer, was that Sceptre should mount a follow up programme, one which
|
|
would expose the horrors of Alternative 3 in far greater depth.
|
|
|
|
He argued bitterly with his superiors at Sceptre but they were adamant.
|
|
The company was already in serious trouble with the government and there
|
|
was some doubt about whether its licence would be renewed. They refused
|
|
to consider the possibility of doing another programme. They had officially
|
|
disclaimed the Alternative 3 documentary as a hoax and that was where the
|
|
matter had to rest.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, they pointed out, this character who'd come forward was
|
|
probably a nut$ If you saw the documentary, you will probably realize that
|
|
Benson is a stubborn man. His friends say he is pig obstinate. They also say
|
|
he is a first class investigative journalist.
|
|
|
|
He was angry about this attempt to suppress the truth and that is why
|
|
he agreed to co-operate in the preparation of this book. That co-operation
|
|
has been invaluable.
|
|
|
|
Through Benson we met the telephone caller who we now refer to as
|
|
Trojan. And that meeting resulted in our acquiring documents, which we
|
|
will be presenting, including transcripts of tapes made at the most secret
|
|
rendezvous in the world, thirty five fathoms beneath the ice cap of the
|
|
Arctic.
|
|
|
|
For obvious reasons, we cannot reveal the identity of Trojan. Nor can
|
|
we give any hint about his function or status in the Operation.
|
|
|
|
We are completely satisfied, however, that his credentials are authentic
|
|
and that, in breaking his oath of silence, he is prompted by the most
|
|
honourable of motives.
|
|
|
|
He stands in relation to the Alternative 3 conspiracy in much the same
|
|
position as the anonymous informant "Deep Throat" occupied in the
|
|
Watergate affair. Most of the "batch consignments" have been taken from the
|
|
area known as the Bermuda Triangle but numerous other locations have also
|
|
been used.
|
|
|
|
On October 6, 1975, the Daily Telegraph gave prominence to this
|
|
story:
|
|
|
|
The disappearance in bizarre circumstances in the past two weeks of
|
|
20 people from small coastal communities in Oregon was being intensively
|
|
investigated at the weekend amid reports of an imaginative fraud scheme
|
|
involving a "flying saucer" and hints of mass murder.
|
|
|
|
Sheriff's officers at Newport, Oregon, said that the 20 individuals had
|
|
vanished without trace after being told to give away all their possessions,
|
|
including their children, so that they could be transported in a flying saucer
|
|
"by UFO to a better life."
|
|
|
|
"Deputies under Mr. Ron Sutton, chief criminal investigator in
|
|
surrounding Lincoln County, have traced the story back to a meeting on
|
|
September 14 in a resort hotel, the Bayshore Inn at Waldport, Oregon$
|
|
Local police have received conflicting reports as to what occurred (at the
|
|
meeting).
|
|
|
|
But while it is clear that the speaker did not pretend to be from outer
|
|
space, he told the audience how their souls could be "saved through a UFO.
|
|
|
|
"The hall had been reserved for a fee of $50 by a man and a woman who
|
|
gave false names. Mr. Sutton said witnesses had described them as "fortyish,
|
|
well groomed, straight types."
|
|
|
|
The Telegraph said that "selected people would be prepared at a special
|
|
camp in Colorado for life on another planet" and quoted Investigator Sutton
|
|
as adding:
|
|
|
|
"They were told they would have to give away everything, even their
|
|
children. I'm checking a report of one family who supposedly gave away
|
|
150-acre farm and three children."
|
|
|
|
"We don't know if it's fraud or whether these people might be killed.
|
|
There are all sorts of rumours, including some about human sacrifice and
|
|
that this is sponsored by the (Charles) Manson family."
|
|
|
|
"Most of the missing 20 were described as being "hippie types"
|
|
although there were some older people among them."
|
|
|
|
People of this calibre, we have now discovered, have been what is
|
|
known as "scientifically adjusted" to fit them for a new role as a slave
|
|
species.
|
|
|
|
There have been equally strange reports of animals, particularly farm
|
|
animals, disappearing in large numbers. And occasionally it appears that
|
|
aspects of the Alternative 3 operation have been bungled, that attempts to
|
|
lift "batch consignments" of humans or of animals have failed.
|
|
|
|
On July 15, 1977, the Daily Mail under a "Flying Saucer" headline
|
|
carried this story:
|
|
|
|
Men in face masks, using metal detectors and a geiger counter,
|
|
yesterday scoured a remote Dartmoor valley in a bid to solve a macabre
|
|
mystery. Their search centred on marshy grassland where 15 wild ponies
|
|
were found dead, their bodies mangled and torn.
|
|
|
|
All appeared to have died at about the same time, and many of the bones
|
|
have been inexplicably shattered. To add to the riddle, their bodies
|
|
decomposed to virtual skeletons within only 48 hours.
|
|
|
|
Animal experts confess they are baffled by the deaths at Cherry Brook
|
|
Valley near Postbridge.
|
|
|
|
Yesterday's search was carried out by members of the Devon
|
|
Unidentified Flying Objects centre at Torquay who are trying to prove a link
|
|
with outer space.
|
|
|
|
They believe that flying saucers may have flown low over the area and
|
|
created a vortex which hurled the ponies to their death. Mr. John Wyse,
|
|
head of the four-man team, said:
|
|
|
|
"If a spacecraft has been in the vicinity, there may still be detectable
|
|
evidence. We wanted to see if there was any sign that the ponies had been
|
|
shot but we have found nothing. This incident bears an uncanny
|
|
resemblance to similar events reported in America."
|
|
|
|
The Mail report concluded with a statement from an official
|
|
representing The Dartmoor Livestock Protection Society and the Animal
|
|
Defence Society:
|
|
|
|
"Whatever happened was violent. We are keeping an open mind. I am
|
|
fascinated by the UFO theory. There is no reason to reject that possibility
|
|
since there is no other rational explanation."
|
|
|
|
These, then, were typical of the threads, which inspired the original
|
|
television investigation. It needed one person, however, to show how they
|
|
could be embroidered into a clear picture.
|
|
|
|
Without the specialist guidance of that person the Sceptre television
|
|
documentary could never have been produced, and Trojan would never have
|
|
contacted Colin Benson.
|
|
|
|
And it would have been years, possibly seven years or even longer,
|
|
before ordinary people started to suspect the devastating truth about this
|
|
planet on which we live. That person, of course, is the old man$
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Section 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THEY Realize now that they should have killed the old man.
|
|
|
|
That would have been the logical course to protect the secrecy of
|
|
Alternative 3. It is curious, really, that they did not agree to his death on
|
|
that Thursday in February for, as we have stated, they do use murder.
|
|
|
|
Of course, it is not called murder, not when it is done jointly by the
|
|
governments of America and Russia. It is an Act of Expediency.
|
|
|
|
Many Acts of Expediency are believed to have been ordered by the
|
|
sixteen men, official representatives of the pentagon and the Kremlin, who
|
|
comprise the Policy Committee.
|
|
|
|
Grotesque and apparently inexplicable slayings in various parts of the
|
|
world in Germany and Japan, Britain and Australia are alleged to have been
|
|
sanctioned by them.
|
|
|
|
We have not been able to substantiate these suspicions and allegations
|
|
so we merely record that an unknown number of people, including
|
|
distinguished radio astronomer Sir William Ballantine, have been executed
|
|
because of this astonishing agreement between the super-powers.
|
|
|
|
Prominent politicians, including two in Britain, were among those who
|
|
tried to prevent the publication of this book. They insisted that it is not
|
|
necessary for you, and others like you, to be told the unpalatable facts.
|
|
|
|
They argue that the events of the future are now inevitable, that there is
|
|
nothing to be gained by prematurely unleashing fear.
|
|
|
|
We concede that they are sincere in their views but we maintain that
|
|
you ought to know. You have a right to know.
|
|
|
|
Attemps were also made to neuter the television programme which first
|
|
focused public attention on Alternative 3. Those attemps were partially
|
|
successful. And, of course, after the programme was transmitted, when
|
|
there was that spontaneous explosion of anxiety, Septre Television was
|
|
forced to issue a formal denial.
|
|
|
|
It had all been a hoax. That's what they were told to say. That's what
|
|
they did say.
|
|
|
|
Most people were then only too glad to be reassured. They wanted to
|
|
be convinced that the programme had been devised as a joke, that it was
|
|
merely an elaborate piece of escapist entertainment. It was more
|
|
comfortable that way.
|
|
|
|
In fact, the television researchers did uncover far more disturbing
|
|
material than they were allowed to transmit. The censored information is
|
|
now in our possession. And, as we have indicated, there was a great deal
|
|
that Benson and the rest of the television team did not discover, not until
|
|
after their programme had been screened.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Copies of Alternative 3 are rare. There is a source in ENGLAND which
|
|
we do not currently know, however, you may purchase an imported copy for
|
|
about $11.00 from Metaphysical Book Store, 9511 E. Colfax, Aurora, CO
|
|
80010 (303) 341-7562. Please mention that you got the address from VANGARD
|
|
SCIENCES or the KeelyNet Bulletin Board System. Thanks.
|
|
|
|
Placed in the public domain from the
|
|
|
|
VANGARD SCIENCES archives on October 28 1989.
|
|
Our mailing address is PO BOX 1031, Mesquite, TX 75150.
|
|
Voice phone (Jerry 214-324-8741...Ron 214-484-3189
|
|
KeelyNet (214) 324-3501
|
|
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
The Truth about Alternative 3
|
|
from its author, Leslie Watkins
|
|
|
|
(This article is taken from the $Windwords$ newsletter)
|
|
address not available
|
|
|
|
In our June issue, we told you about the controversial book Alternative
|
|
3, by British author Leslie Watkins. In out attempt to find out if the
|
|
shocking theories in the book were true, we called Avon Books, the
|
|
American publisher; they said the book was out of print in the states. We
|
|
called Penguin Books in London and found that it was listed on their
|
|
NON-FICTION list. A senior editor there told us that it was officially
|
|
classified as FICTION BASED ON FACT. The author's agent told us it was
|
|
most definitely fiction. We wrote to the author himself to try to get the
|
|
real story, and here is the letter he sent us.
|
|
|
|
Dear Ms. Dittrich:
|
|
|
|
Thank you for your letter, which reached me today. Naturally, I am
|
|
delighted by your interest in Alternative 3 and by the fact that you plan to
|
|
sell it in the Windwords bookstore. I will certainly cooperate in any way I
|
|
can.
|
|
|
|
The correct description of Alternative 3 was given to you by the
|
|
representative from Penguin Books. The book is based on fact, but uses that
|
|
fact as a launchpad for a HIGH DIVE INTO FICTION. In answer to your
|
|
specific questions:
|
|
|
|
1) There is no astronaut named Grodin.
|
|
2) There is no Sceptre Television and the reported Benson is also
|
|
fictional.
|
|
3) There is no Dr. Gerstein.
|
|
4) Yes, a "documentary" was televised in June 1977 on Anglia
|
|
Television, which went out to the entire national network in Britain.
|
|
It was called Alternative 3 and was written by David Ambrose and
|
|
produced by Christopher Miles (whose names were on the book for
|
|
contractual reasons). This original TV version, which I EXPANDED
|
|
IMMENSELY for the book, was ACTUALLY A HOAX which had been
|
|
scheduled for transmission on April Fools' Day. Because of certain
|
|
problems in finding the right network slot, the transmission was
|
|
delayed.
|
|
|
|
The TV program did cause a tremendous uproar because viewers
|
|
refused to believe it was fiction. I initially took the view that the
|
|
basic premise was so way-out, particularly the way I aimed to
|
|
present it in the book, that no one would regard it as non-fiction.
|
|
Immediately after publication, I realized I was totally wrong. In fact,
|
|
the amazing mountains of letters from virtually all parts of the world
|
|
including vast numbers from highly intelligent people in positions of
|
|
responsibility-convinced me that I had ACCIDENTALLY trespassed
|
|
into a range of top-secret truths.
|
|
|
|
Documentary evidence provided by many of these
|
|
correspondents decided me to write a serious and COMPLETELY
|
|
NON-FICTION sequel. Unfortunately, a chest containing the bulk of
|
|
the letters was among the items which were mysteriously LOST IN
|
|
TRANSIT some four years when I moved from London, England, to
|
|
Sydney, Australia, before I moved on to settle in New Zealand. For
|
|
some time after Alternative 3 was originally published, I have
|
|
reason to suppose that my home telephone was being tapped and my
|
|
contacts who were experienced in such matters were convinced
|
|
that certain intelligence agencies considered that I probably knew
|
|
too much.
|
|
|
|
So, summing up, the book is FICTION BASED ON FACT. But I now feel
|
|
that I inadvertently got VERY CLOSE TO A SECRET TRUTH. I hope this is of
|
|
some help to you and I look forward to hearing from you again.
|
|
|
|
With best wishes,
|
|
Leslie Watkins
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, Alternative 3 is no longer available. We (Windwords)
|
|
bought all the remaining copies from the British publisher and those quickly
|
|
sold out. If the book is reprinted, you can be sure we'll let you know and
|
|
we'll carry it in the Windwords bookstore.
|
|
|