Communists in Outer Space

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Communists in Outer Space Page 2

by Isabella Davies


  ***** ‘we must’ as referred to in the text implies a status of no choice. Is Zhivkov aware that Leninite will retaliate militarily if the de-atomisation chamber becomes activated? Is this in fact a declaration of war?

  This translation from the original source is courtesy of Radoslav Denchev.

  Surprisingly very little else is said. The remainder of the recorded speech continues with countless breaks for applause and time schedules and action planning for the completion of the Buzludzha Communist House. Then it settles into a formal, and quite normal, business meeting. Whatever there is to read within the blueprints, the secret files as discussed initially, is certainly not referred to at any further point – though it is abundantly clear from the closing statement of the meeting, some eight hours later, when Todor Zhivkov adds, “…and there we conclude, gentlemen. Files will now be collected and destroyed… (laughter is heard) …tell the people (inaudible due to magnetic tape damage) …good luck.” Many references and numbers were given out, and it is reasonable to assume that these numbers were references designed to identify text within the files. I conclude that what is heard on the tape in reality, has no reference to the text that was being read at the same time. As to the reason for recording the gathering at all, I have no idea. I am aware that all meetings had to be recorded during this era of regime suspicion. Perhaps the sole purpose was to comply with Communist protocols of the time, but to hold a secret meeting in full public view is, well frankly, quite the achievement - thus being beyond any public suspicions. Only those hand-picked and loyal trusted confidants of the Todor leadership would have had any knowledge of the truth behind the Buzludzha files. Of this I am certain. I too consider that the files were never destroyed at all.

  The socialists believed that demonstrating civilian applications for nuclear power before the Americans would prove the expertise of Soviet scientists, demonstrate to the populous how personal living standards would improve under socialism, and defend them against the decadent waste of the capitalist West. Giant nuclear power stations of the future would soon become reality. Electric meters to measure power consumption were to become a thing of the past because power would be too cheap to meter. Whilst in the States, the Shippingport reactor went online in 1957, with electricity now costing ten times that of the coal-fired generation. In Bulgaria, the Socialist had won the hearts and minds of the people. Nuclear energy and power was Socialist energy and power. The (British) Thunderbirds children’s TV series was based on a series of space and moon vehicles that ran entirely on nuclear power. This English science-fiction marionette television series of 1964 – 66, created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, was based on socialist ideals. The Americans were outraged at its broadcast, slamming the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) saying, “So now the communists are brainwashing the minds of our children with the help of those Tommies.”

  In the West, public opposition (given safety and environmental concerns) to nuclear power was growing, none more so than during the late 1970s. This was also exasperated by international destabilisation following the cover story of February 11th, 1985, in Forbes magazine, commenting on overall management of United States nuclear power programs: “The failure of the U.S. nuclear power program ranks as the largest managerial disaster in business history, a disaster on a monumental scale … only the blind, or the biased, can now think that the money has been well spent. It is a defeat for the US consumer and for the competitiveness of US industry, for the utilities that undertook the program and for the private enterprise system that made it possible.” The Bulgarians looked on with bemusement for, after all, one particular reactor, Buzludzha, was now online and the realisation of outer space time travel, imminent. However, incidents that followed such as Chernobyl in Ukraine, 1986, and 2011, Fukashima Daiichi in Japan, demonstrated that nuclear chain reaction is not a simplistic process. So what happened? How did Buzludzha become the unwanted derelict relic it is today?

  When democracy returned to the country in 1989, the site was looted by many seeking Soviet era trophies, or just plain old plunder for financial reward. The roof was originally covered in copper and unsurprisingly went first. Many believe it was used as scrap metal, but this fine copper sheeting was actually in fact relocated to Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire (CERN). The metal was not copper but copoid, an energy charging super-copper that generated an internal magnetic field. The Soviet Star, the largest glass star ever constructed and supplied by Moscow was smashed. The star was made of pure Romanian bixbite or red beryl, as more commonly called today, and Bulgarian citizens would fire rifles from the ground, hoping that fragments of the glass would fall for personal collection. The myth at the time was that the windows were constructed of red ruby and thus most precious. But closer examination would prove this to be untrue. Believing it to be no more than red glass, this amazing socialist icon was destroyed for little financial gain. Had these looters tested the fragments for bixbite, many today would have become extremely wealthy. Bixbite was mined to exhaustion in Romania by the Soviets and is now, as a result of the Space Race, one of the most precious and rarest members of the red gemstone family. Today it can only be found in two states of America, Utah and New Mexico. It was the nano-crystal-valleys within the Beryl that received and channelled the de-atomisation code radunas to the central activator. Needless to say, the main frame and hub still remain intact within the basement floors below, those now sealed off by the Bulgarian military.

  CERN: The European Organisation for Nuclear Research, Organisation Européene pour la Recherche Nucléaire, operates the world’s largest particle physics laboratory and was established in 1954, a date that needs no further examination. Stolen Soviet technology was readily available. It is situated on the French/Swiss border, below ground extended over both territorial boundaries and consists of 21 European member states plus Israel (the only non-EU member granted full membership). CERN’s existence is well documented, even its precise location, 46°14′3″N 6°3′19″E, is public domain knowledge and with a research team consisting of over 12,000 employees (schools of science and engineering) represents 608 universities and over 100 spoken languages. It main purpose is to provide the Earth with a particle accelerator used for high-energy physics (atomic-particle) research. Experiments conducted at CERN are facilitated as an international concern. But an interesting side-fact is that CERN was also the birthplace of the World Wide Web. The internet we love and use today was also of Marxun origin. The main site is called Meyun and was created from two words, Marxun (from Marxus) and the Maya, from the original calendar of the pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, a calendar system that too owes its birthright directly to the Leninites and the Milky Way’s own Line of Orion.

  Experiments at CERN have, as we now know, achieved ground-breaking landmarks in particle-physics analysis. As early as 1973, we witnessed the discovery of neutral currents inside the Gargamelle bubble chamber and later in 1983, the discovery of W and Z bosons in UA1 and UA2 chambers. 1989, following the dismantlement of Buzludzha, bought us a huge leap forward in our ability to determine the number of light neutrino families of the Large Electron–Positron (LEP) collider. This same electronic collider, though now considerably expanded, was originally sited as the Buzludzha Halo. Now all that remains of its original position is an open to all weathers circular balcony at the perimeter of the old doomed copoid roof structure. The discovery of the light neutrino led science to the creation of antihydrogen atoms during the PS210 experiment in 1995 followed by direct CP violation (notice the similarity of the name to Marxun origins) in 1999 and, finally, NA48 in 2010 that resulted in the isolation of 48 atoms of antihydrogen. The maintenance of antihydrogen was completed during 2011 for a staggering 15 minutes. A boson with mass 125 GeV/c2 consistent with the long-sought Higgs boson was also discovered at CERN more recently in 2012. Source: Wiki-Leaks (Peterson, C. J. 2014).

  In 1984, the Nobel Prize (physics) was awarded to Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer for developments, often
implied to have involved Stalingus-Buzludzha Files that were secretly smuggled out of Bulgaria, and possibly led to the discoveries of the W and Z bosons both of which were huge technical strides for Earthlings.

  But 1992 must be the year of firm focus in de-atomisation circles, for here the Nobel Prize was given again to CERN (named staff researcher Georges Charpak) for “his invention and development of particle detectors, in particular the multiwire proportional chamber.” De-atomisation has, however, never been achieved at CERN, for the vital coding required to disassemble and re-assemble dark matter was never discovered during the looting of the Buzludzha complex. Perhaps this error was due to the lateral or logical thinking of the scientific mind, a cultural inability to spot the obvious, or just to believe in and accept the impossible. As we know, everything is round. We think in round-terms from our original evolution, just as we seek God, we instinctively seek circles in everything we do. Noah’s Ark was round, this is now proven, and Buzludzha site was built to be round, not only to give the satirical comic appearance of a UFO, but to directly accommodate and house its particle accelerator, the first blueprint for a Marxun Large Hadron Collider. How better to keep a secret than to be so open and obvious? In a speech to congress, during the 1990s, when all but a handful of Socialist regimes had fallen, the USA Chief-of-Staff (Gordon R. Sullivan) was noted to say, “The Soviets were clearly very good at keeping secrets by not making the most top-secret secrets secret at all – akin to alien life forms arriving to live among us today, what better camouflage would there be other than to dress up or disguise yourself as a supermarket shopping trolley?”

  Today (2014) CERN houses six accelerators: two Linear Accelerators, a Proton Synchrotron Booster, a Low-Energy Ion Ring (LEIR) and a (1959) 28 GeV Proton Synchrotron. Although somewhat out-dated, the Proton Synchrotron still effectively feeds the more powerful Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS). This SPS is a modern-day circular accelerator with a diameter of just under 1.6 miles in circumference. It is below ground within a guarded militarised tunnel-complex. Engineers working on the project nicknamed the Large Hadron Collider Alice in Wonderland, partly because of its magnificence and awe-inspiring technical qualities, but also because just like Alice, without good direction we all end up going around in circles. Construction was believed to have started in 1976 where, once again, we note this un-coincidental date directly links to the meeting between Todor Zhivkov of Bulgaria and Dr Rudolf Kirchschlaeger (an expert in astrophysics) of Austria, and interestingly, was just three years before the Leninite order given for the Soviet intervention of Afghanistan. Though originally designed to deliver 300 GeV, the collider was gradually upgraded to 450 GeV. Beamlines (advanced radunas waves utilising bixbite and Gabrielite-mineralite-nanocomposits) allow the LHC to be further used as a Large Electron–Positron (LEP) collider. Rudolf Kirchchaeger died in 2000 near Vienna, aged 85, of undisclosed cause – many believe, from unconfirmed sources, that he too was assassinated by former KGB agents.

  Now, whilst I appreciate that all of this is most interesting to those within the atomic-physics and astroscience communities, many of you will simply want to know what this means to you? In layman’s terms it is simply this. An Online Isotope Mass Separator can now identify and separate unstable nuclei. Radioactive ions are produced by impact of protons of 1.0–1.4 GeV from the Proton Synchrotron Booster. The corresponding Antiproton Decelerator (AD) reduces the velocity of all antiprotons to roughly 10% of the speed of light. This anti-matter with its representative dark-matter allows us to deconstruct (take apart) human matter (atoms) and put it back together again. CERN however does not possess the necessary technology to transmit this matter for later reconstruction through time and space, to the so-called known outer-worlds that we know for fact to exist.

  An atom is 99.999999% (recurrent) empty space. If we removed all of the empty space from within the human body, our entire species, that is to say every person on Earth, would now be no bigger in size than that of a single sugar cube. Imagine what you could do if you reduced our entire species to a sugar-lump’ and transmitted human coded information, DNA and data for reconstruction anywhere within the known universe? Obviously to send humans across outer space is pure nonsense and isn’t what I am suggesting here. But we can send the necessary coding blocks so that person, persons or an entire species can be rebuilt, put back together, elsewhere to effectively reopen links with Leninite and beyond and to leave the Earth and repopulate anywhere. All we need to do is intercept radunas mind-waves, locate the original transmitters and beam ourselves directly into Marxun regenerators.

  Now I end this book with an exclusive truth and I tell you only because I have it in my possession already. For during all that pomp and ceremony of 1981, when the Socialist world stood still to witness the opening of the Buzludzha Communist House, Todor Zhivkov posed for the photographers and television crews as he placed a time-capsule into the saucer’s very under-belly. This time-capsule explaining the virtues of Socialism and the countless proud statements of Communist achievement was located here, to be opened in fifty years’ time for the loyal socialist generations to follow. But it was not anything of the sort, for contained within the cylindrical (ROUND) metal time capsule existed only various random sequences of numbers. It was/is in fact, the DATA required to reactivate the de-atomisation chamber. The only decision I have left to make is: who shall I take with me?

  “The truth is obvious. You just need to look.”

  Following: Photographer’s Eye-Witness Accounts:

  Buzludzha Foundation Exhibition 3. Reports of strange electrical phenomena are nothing new as photographer Les Johnstone explains: “The building was empty. I was just taking a last holiday snap, you know. I’d been inside all day and a storm was brewing, then lightning suddenly struck. It lit up like a lightbulb, momentarily, just for a few brief moments, but long enough for me to capture this unique shot…”

  Buzludzha Foundation Exhibition 3. Les Johnstone.

 

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