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Critical Omissions with Douglas Dietrich

Started by Walks_At_Night, April 11, 2017, 08:01:43 PM

Pelayo

Quote from: sneaksie-taffer on March 04, 2020, 10:07:44 PM
I listened to all 4 parts of Gunner's Operation Highjump talks. He was articulate in trying to convince the listeners that nothing unusual happened during the operation in Antarctica. But the one thing he does not convincingly explain to any satisfactory conclusion is what purpose did this massive operation serve? It could not be to lay historical claim to Antarctica by the U.S. since that would be disputed by other nations such as Germany, Russia and China as well as others. Antarctica's resources is another explanation for why the interest but if there are any of value, it is mostly buried under ice that is over 2 miles thick in some places and to get to it to explore it would be a daunting proposition in the extreme. My personal take on this based on watching more recent videos and documentaries about discoveries of an archeological nature in Antarctica suggests that something unusual or shocking in nature may have been discovered in Antarctica by the Nazis and the U.S. which might have been a reason that Operation Highjump was used as a cover story to justify the presence of so much U.S. personnel there to provide cover for scientists that might have been engaged in further archeological research and excavation at these discovered sites. If true it could change current historical knowledge about ancient civilizations.
I've said this before, and I will say it again, all the military hardware used in this operation were already bought and paid for. Better to use them for exploration missions than simply put the hardware in mothballs.

pate

Quote from: Pelayo on March 01, 2020, 07:13:43 PM
You know that title that ddd has bestowed upon himself, the renegatus humanus ab massa-eruditio? That is such pidgin latin. Not even close to what a Roman would say. Here's a hint ddd, nouns are DECLINED in latin.

mmm...  Point; your t(e)-reply: counter-point?

-p

ediot: nueu-muffin?

But the people required to run all this paid for hardware must have been quite expensive. What was the payoff you think for exploring such a frozen wasteland like Antarctica?

pate

Quote from: Gunner65 on March 04, 2020, 08:05:44 PM
...
I believe t...

Huh, conviaving.  Spulling ash wide;  wood yew Hari-Carrie?

-lp

Pelayo

Quote from: sneaksie-taffer on March 05, 2020, 12:29:10 AM
But the people required to run all this paid for hardware must have been quite expensive. What was the payoff you think for exploring such a frozen wasteland like Antarctica?

https://youtu.be/gIU3HrCCT2k?t=134


Quote from: Pelayo on March 05, 2020, 01:08:59 AM

https://youtu.be/gIU3HrCCT2k?t=134
Haha, I saw this episode. The aliens ( Sargon and others ) were in a deep underground chamber, their non-corporeal forms housed inside a machine waiting for bodies to inhabit. Perhaps something similar is waiting in Antarctica?



pate

Quote from: username on March 04, 2020, 09:00:15 PM

You really are a dumb fuck lol


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2xfpMMQIJ8

Nuffin, muffin.....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLGxWPtgodo

Is theri Foc, inDadhaus?

Corona Kitty

I'll tell you what's really amazing, that you're still upset over me shitting all over your embarrassing appearance on the gabcast.

I've been living in your head rent free ever since. (LOL)


Pelayo

Hey Gunner, while listening to part 4 you guys were talking about chase planes that filmed the JATO tests. Check out Boeing's classic photographic chase plane that they still use:                   
https://youtu.be/RTpp8d9uWY4

The Air Force used it as a trainer then later used the T-38.

Gunner65

Quote from: Pelayo on March 05, 2020, 01:08:59 AM
But the people required to run all this paid for hardware must have been quite expensive. What was the payoff you think for exploring such a frozen wasteland like Antarctica?
Probably the mapping.  It was the actual objective of Highjump - not so much the exploration and training of Navy in severe climate.  It was so important that a follow-up mission was sent back in 1948 to establish ground control points - Operation Windmill.  There was also another mission (privately funded) in 1947-48 operating 3,000 km west of Little America 4 -

That was the Ronne Expedition.  They also conducted photo mapping of the Palmer Peninsula and coastal areas of the Weddel Sea and Margarite Bay.  They arrived at Stonington Island on March 12, 1947, just after Highjump ended in February.  They stayed over the winter and left the following year. 

The icebreaker arriving for Operation Windmill broke up a path in the ice for them so they could leave.  That story is also on my blog,

https://rkcolejr.blogspot.com/




Had they waited a few years then satellites could have done the mapping for them...LOL.

Gunner65

Quote from: sneaksie-taffer on March 06, 2020, 06:07:02 PM
Had they waited a few years then satellites could have done the mapping for them...LOL.
Perhaps. But that is what exploration is all about.  Establishing a precedent for something further.  There is no "sitting on ass" and waiting - it is all a process of investigation.

Gunner65

I will go into that a bit tomorrow night.

8 pm http://www.patriotoutlaws.com/

Edith "Jackie" Ronne
America's "First Lady" in Antarctica
RONNE ANTARCTIC RESEARCH EXPEDITION, (RARE) 1946-1948

A Feature Story for Patriot Outlaws Radio
March 7, 2020

https://rkcolejr.blogspot.com/2020/03/edith-jackie-ronne-antarcticas-first.html





Gunner65


Pelayo

Quote from: sneaksie-taffer on March 05, 2020, 12:29:10 AM
But the people required to run all this paid for hardware must have been quite expensive. What was the payoff you think for exploring such a frozen wasteland like Antarctica?
As far as I know, the personnel used during the expedition were already members of the armed forces and they didn't go out and conscript a bunch of sailors to perform this mission. That means they would have had to have been paid whether they were exploring Antarctica or sailing on a Westpac or tied up at a pier in San Diego painting the side of the ship.

Gunner65


Gunner65

Quote from: Pelayo on March 06, 2020, 08:01:57 PM
As far as I know, the personnel used during the expedition were already members of the armed forces and they didn't go out and conscript a bunch of sailors to perform this mission. That means they would have had to have been paid whether they were exploring Antarctica or sailing on a Westpac or tied up at a pier in San Diego painting the side of the ship.
True.  But a post-war US Navy Expedition was "good training" with max publicity.  And sailors WERE recruited for the mission! I am certain the USN had volunteers!

Pelayo

Quote from: Gunner65 on March 06, 2020, 08:05:52 PM
True.  But a post-war US Navy Expedition was "good training" with max publicity.
Exactly. My point is those guys were going to be paid whether they were in Antarctica or not. It did not cost the Navy anything extra.

Gunner65

Quote from: Pelayo on March 06, 2020, 08:08:48 PM
Exactly. My point is those guys were going to be paid whether they were in Antarctica or not. It did not cost the Navy anything extra.
It was a fucking mission of the US Navy!  Paid for by taxpayers at $350,000.00!

Nothing secret about it!  Of course, the Active duty men were paid!  ALL 4,700 of them!

Gunner65

Anyone can volunteer! But I am certain there was a USN process.  Not one of the men bitched about not being paid!

Pelayo

I know it was a Naval operation and of course they were paid. What I'm saying is, if there never was a mission to Antarctica, those very same sailors who went down to Antarctica would have still been paid. They didn't go out and round up a bunch of new sailors to do the mission.

Gunner65

The ships were chosen and men assigned to them were obligated - This is basic USN shit!  But there also were special teams assigned. And when I refer to volunteers I am stating they were taken from US Navy and NOT ONLY civilians!  They were BOTH!

Highjump was a fucking combination Exploration and "dog and pony show" for the Navy organized and planned by Byrd.


albrecht

Quote from: Gunner65 on March 06, 2020, 07:46:59 PM
Schooner "From" and Ronald Amudson








Your spellings are wrong (K_dubb etc would get)  but good you recognize real not DD crap. Norwegians great in exploration. Interestingly maybe one famous ship was a derelict in SF but then repatriated and now in museum in Norway. I heard that "hippies" were living in it before it got sent back for the great historical value.  And the NW Passage and Arctic is NOW a yuuge deal not much talked about but Russia making moves....


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gj%C3%B8a


Also would be great if that site would out an mp3 d/l of your study.

Gunner65

Yes, the spelling - Schooner "Fram" and Amundsen. I used Grammarly and sometimes it auto-corrects words unless I tell it to "ignore". I did make sure I spelled them correctly on my blog post. Glad they rescued the Gjøa from the San Fran hippies  :D

As far as an MP3 I will be live tonight presenting the story.  I will record it after post-production and then plan to create an MP4 and upload it to my YouTube channel.

I already have permission from Mack to use the audio.  I have requested permission of Jackie Ronne's daughter Karen Ronne Tupak for use of her images and await her reply.  I want to avoid any copyright issues.

http://www.patriotoutlaws.com/

Tonight at 8 pm.

Pelayo

So Gunner, did the nazis chase those Ronnies off in their UFOs?

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