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Showing posts with the label einstein

“Mysteries and Secrets Abound”: A Review of The Moon’s Galactic History: A Look at the Moon’s Extraterrestrial Past and Its Connection to Earth by Constance Victoria Briggs

   (Kempton, IL: Adventures Unlimited Press, 2022). ISBN: 978-1-948803-50-2 A few months ago, I had the opportunity to review Constance Victoria Briggs’s Encyclopedia of Moon Mysteries: Secrets, Conspiracy Theories, Anomalies, Extraterrestrials and More and to have her as a guest on my weekly podcast. The author of several other encyclopedias, Briggs specializes in the mysteries of the Moon, as well as angels and the survival of consciousness after death. Her research is exhaustive and, even when dealing with controversial and fringe subjects and theories, her reporting is largely impartial, especially in her encyclopedias. During this time of the UAP Disclosure debate and launching of the Artemis 1 mission by NASA, which recently took video of the Moon and broke the record for most miles traveled (at least officially) by a human ship, more researchers than ever are considering the origins, composition of, and presence of possible structures on this anomalous satellite or...

“Physics to Help Humanity”: A Review of Master of Reality: Super Relativity – The Unified Field Theory, by Mark Fiorentino

   (2020). ISBN: 9798615149856 What if I were to tell you that much of what we thought we knew about physics was either inaccurate or only the partial truth? Or that the speed of light was not a constant? That there is ample evidence that the U.S. government has reverse-engineered UFOs/UAPs and has at least a working understanding of anti-gravity propulsion systems? Still not feeling intrigued? What if the physics and technologies that are part of Mark Fiorentino’s Super Relativity Theory could make possible interstellar time-travel? Too big of an idea? Perhaps being anywhere in the world in a matter of minutes, or protecting the planet from destruction by asteroids, climate change, or other impending disasters? Interested yet? At 490 pages, Master of Reality is a big book, full of big ideas and bigger possibilities. Fiorentino is taking a page out of Dr. John Mack’s philosophy and “subverting the dominant paradigm.” This is a difficult road to travel—Mack, an eminent, ...