Tuesday, December 08, 2009

There are only two sides to mutiny.














http://www.navy.mil/management/photodb/photos/091207-N-7586B-063.jpg

091207-N-7586B-063 PEARL HARBOR (Dec. 7, 2009) Lt. j.g. Daniel Conley walks through the USS Oklahoma Memorial during a ceremony on Ford Island. The National Park Service hosted a memorial ceremony to commemorate the 68th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor. The USS Oklahoma Memorial honors the 429 men killed aboard Oklahoma on December 7th, 1941. (U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Bart Bauer/Released)


http://www.navy.mil/view_photos_top.asp

091207-N-7586B-063










2008 film "The Day the Earth Stood Still" DVD movie:

01:24:14


Jacob Benson: This is it. This is where we're supposed to meet her. Come on! Hurry up. It's this way.










"Space: Above And Beyond"

"Stardust"

April 19, 1996

Episode 20 DVD:

00:26:22


Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: They're dead, aren't they?

Commodore Ross: The Five Eight? Don't tell me you've succumbed to those bizarre rumors.

Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: In World War 2, prior to D-Day, the British placed false information about the European invasion on the body of a man who just died of pneumonia. They dressed him as a high-ranking officer, and put him in the English Channel via submarine. The Germans discovered the body, and re-deployed several Panzer divisions away from the area. It was a crucial deception that aided the Allied victory. The passengers in the APC are dead.

Commodore Ross: If I knew, I couldn't confirm.

Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: While looking into the Second World War I found something else. Operation Naye'i. Naye'i is a Navajo word for "alien gods." During the war we used Native Americans as radio operators. Navajo was the only native language the enemy couldn't crack. I assume any disinformation regarding the location of Operation Roundhammer would be written in code, to make it appear to the enemy to be top secret information.

Commodore Ross: We are not at liberty to discuss this.

Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: I have no problem with the mission - if that's what it is. But there is something that bothers me, Commodore. For disinformation to be effective, we would want the Chigs to crack the code. Why would the code be written in a language that even other people on Earth couldn't crack? Unless we knew the enemy was familiar with the language.


00:28:42

1LT Cooper Hawkes: Colonel.

Colonel Klingman: Lieutenant.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: I was wondering if you could answer a few questions about a-all this.

Colonel Klingman: Telepresence has been around for quite some time. The Russians first used it in 1998 to explore Mars. Telepresence is an interactive computer graphics system which provides the operator with the illusion of being immersed in a simulated environment.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: My question isn't really about the system. It's about you.

Colonel Klingman: You got a problem with me?

1LT Cooper Hawkes: Yeah.

Colonel Klingman: Sit down.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: You won't be there. I mean, you yourself? You seem okay to me. You seem like you know what you're doin' with this stuff. But a machine - all this? It can't feel what we do out there. When we're under enemy attack and it just becomes one big hairy fur ball and you don't know up from down and your heart's pounding 'cause you're taking enemy fire from your 6:00 and 12:00 and you barely have time to think for yourself - somehow we all just know. We feel where each other are. And I'm there for them and they're for me.

Colonel Klingman: You're talking about situational awareness.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: Yeah! And I don't see how you can have it sitting on a closet on the Saratoga. Now, I'm not trying to rag on you but have you ever had your wingman - a good buddy - blown out of the sky then have to drive on while g-forces are tearing you out of your seat?

Colonel Klingman: I'm an engineer, Lieutenant.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: And then puke all over yourself when you came out of the roll?

Colonel Klingman: Yes, but not in an airplane.

1LT Cooper Hawkes: Have you ever been shot at?

Colonel Klingman: No. I've never been in a dogfight. But why must I have taken a life in order for you to trust me? This machine - these wires - will save millions of lives. This plan - my idea - is my part to bring everyone home soon. Safe. And I would think you could believe in and trust someone who's working to be able to spend a night with you back home rather than going out to look up your name on some war memorial wall. I believe in my plan. I believe in myself.










}}}}} JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess

To: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Friday, May 19, 2006 10:21:01 PM

Subject: Re: Journal May 19, 2006


When I hear my real name, that is probably the key to unlocking all those blocked memories.


Kerry Burgess wrote:


In Star Trek: The Next Generation, and possibly others, I have been noticing familar clues. Today I suspect that those clues represent my false history. They serve as indicators to the people monitoring me that I still believe in my false history. If I start pointing out clues to my real history, they will know what I know.

I was thinking today about something I read recently in the novel 2001: Space Odyssey. Clarke wrote something about the progress of man from femur-wielding ape-man to man's use of guided missiles.


I wonder where the divergence point is in history? When did I become Kerry Burgess and who am I really? There was probably a real Kerry Burgess, someone that looked like me.

{{{{{










http://www.cswap.com/1984/Star_Trek_III:_The_Search_for_Spock/cap/en/25fps/a/01_34

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock


1:34:41
Jim.

1:34:44
Your name is Jim.