“A Journey thru Cosmic Frequencies”: A Review of One Million Miles ‘till Midnight: Between the Mirror and the Lens by Solaris Blueraven
(Glannant Ty Publishing,
2016). ISBN: 978-1539080763
A few months ago, I reviewed Solaris Blueraven’s Alien Intelligence. Although One Million Miles ‘till Midnight uses
much of the same subject matter (the abuse of technology to create a
Matrix-like false reality on Earth and unlocking our true nature as cosmic
beings), Alien Intelligence was
Blueraven’s nonfiction account of what she experienced at the hands of operators
of “synthetic telepathy” and artificial intelligence. In her words, it is “a
reflection and parallel of an event I was inducted into in 2004 involving
exotic technology and artificial intelligence” (from the Foreword).
Blueraven’s story is provocative, as well as controversial. Considering, however, the debate about secret-society symbolism in pop culture
(especially music); that, through Operation Paperclip, the US State Department
brought Nazi scientists to America after World War II; and the existence of
nefarious government-sponsored programs like MKUltra is well documented, we
would be foolish not to believe possible all that Blueraven has shared through
her writing, DVDs, and radio shows.
It worked out well that I read the nonfiction material first
and I recommend that to the reader, although One Million Miles ‘till Midnight can stand on its own as a work of
science fiction that is a little bit Philip K. Dick (who is mentioned in the
Acknowledgments) and a little bit Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. The
subtitle is “Between the Mirror and the Lens,” evoking Dick’s A Scanner Darkly. Like Alien Intelligence, the text is
nontraditional, feeling as though it has been channeled or, at the very least,
is stream of consciousness. The frequency and vibration of the writing well
suits the subject matter.
Speaking of frequency and vibration, Blueraven also mentions
Nikola Tesla in the Acknowledgments. Tesla famously said that, in order to
understand the Universe, we must understand energy, frequency, and vibration.
This is the core matter of One Million
Miles. Although there is a story arc, a sense of movement to the narration
and by the narrator, this is a book of ideas. It is also a book that gives hope
to our potential as “star beings” if we can break away from the “veils of
illusion” that entrap so many humans on this techno-crazy planet.
The story begins with the narrator, Nova X1, aboard a space
station called Avatar One, which is a future iteration of Earth. Humankind’s
misuse of technology, religion, and governments has resulted in disaster.
Avatar One is run solely by code and fractal programs as it moves through
space, allowing its occupants to access information from the past that we would
call memories.
It’s helpful but not required to be familiar with certain
terms and ideas, such as fractals,
quantum, event horizon, akashic, star gate, harmonic, psychotronic, and chakra. If you’re unaware of them, the
text gives clues for the start of your education. I recommend that everyone get
familiar with them. As the Corporate Oligarchy Military–Industrial–Intelligence
complex rolls out the version of Disclosure that best suits their current agenda,
these terms will become more prevalent in the daily news cycle.
The Universe of this story (almost certainly like ours) is
one of multiple, parallel dimensions. There are terraformed planets. There are
Ascended Masters (in “reality,” those in contact with these Celestial Beings
call them the Council of 12) and the “inferior creators” who, instead of using
technology and consciousness to make things better, have succumbed to avarice
and greed. They create Black Sun portals (the Nazis were all about this) in
places like Antarctica for their nefarious purposes. This is a matter of high
and low vibration, which makes all the difference. Tones, signals, sound
modulation, geometric light patterns, the “music of the spheres,” frequencies,
and vibrations are the language of the Universe: to what are you tuned to
receive? To see what can be achieved when tuned to the highest levels, I
recommend chapter 13, “The Travelers.” This is sci-fi and reality all rolled up
into one. And it might one day be a User’s Manual.
When the narrator writes of “several fleets available for
the privileged during the final war,” I immediately think of Musk, Bigelow, and
Besos and the plethora of secret, private government contractors that make
their space programs possible. Outsourcing to private contractors (who often
change their names) makes Congressional oversight and transparency all but
impossible, since their work is proprietary. It is clear to anyone paying
attention that the half-percent are readying themselves for off-planet
habitation. Their secret histories and distortions of the history of the
planet—from giants, to the age of ancient structures—are beginning to be
exposed. In the meantime, they are squeezing everyone who they will left behind
all the harder, playing a game of sensory overload, manufactured Us–Them
scenarios, and social media distraction. This seems to be what occurred in the
story—humankind created a Hell all on its own, without any aliens, gods, or
demons—although, as they manipulated the truths of our Origins and History on
Earth, they invented false gods and idols aplenty.
Will the half-percent with their Space Force and private
space programs funded from their billions be allowed to succeed on the Moon,
Mars, or elsewhere? Blueraven is not the only one to tell us the answer is no—the
Ascended Masters won’t allow it.
Another chapter I recommend paying close attention to is the
final one, “The Living Glass Virtual Antarctica.” Many researchers, including
my fringe theory team the Red Thread Collective, are closely studying the many
mysteries of Antarctica, from odd structures to airbrushed NASA geo-survey
photos, strange illnesses, to star gates, to rumors of Nazi bases and a deadly attack
on US Navy fleet.
Nova X1 is almost certainly an avatar of Blueraven herself,
detailing the nefarious dealings of her “operators” through the synthetic
telepathy I mentioned earlier.
The final paragraphs of this enlightening book read like a
mix of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Dr.
Who.
Read on, and start asking questions. About everything you think
you know.
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