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Penetration:The Question of Extraterrestrial and Human Telepathy

Ingo Swann

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Chapter 11 UFOs EVERYWHERE - DENIALS EVERYWHERE, TOO As the years passed, two later developments changed my mind about making a written record of what I could remember of the Axelrod Affair. Both developments somewhat jolted me, but also inspired a certain astonishment about how EASY it had been to forget about that affair. Indeed, one would think that the Axelrod sequences would have been indelibly etched in one's memory. But this was not the case at all. And because this was not the case, I slowly became aware that there was something associated with the sequences - something perhaps best described as a kind of amnesia. The first jolt of memory, however, came about as follows. I am a subscriber to FATE magazine, which for a long time was the only publication in the United States that reported on phenomena the modern mainstreams denied could exist. In late January, 1991, I came across an article by a certain Felix A. Bach, whom I had never heard of. His article was entitled "Can Moon Illusions MOVE?" The article was headed by a blurb: "For many years one of our readers has been contributing unique illustrations to objects on the Moon's surface. Now he reveals how he is able to see them - and how you can see them, too!" According to the article, all one needs is a reasonably powerful telescope. Mr. Bach recommended one with high resolution powers up to 500x, which the manufacture of Celestron telescopes says allows viewing of lunar details as small across as a football stadium. Mr. Bach indicated that his telescope was a new SPC 8-inch one set at 600x, and which enabled him to see "at one whack* many towers, nets which come and go, mining equipment, "beads" and "wires/1 and whole arches, Bach noted that the structures "come and go" for reasons unapparent and inexplicable, but that they can be seen by telescope is now beyond question. The article contained sketches made by Bach, some of which more or less resembled the sketches George Leonard placed in his 1976 book
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