Monday, June 29, 2009

Questions To Ask About Stds

The Admiral Richard Byrd, the explorer who saw Agartha

The Admiral Byrd, THAT SAW THE EXPLORER Agartha -The Admiral Richard E. Byrd of the United States Navy flew in the 1947, to the North Pole and instead of going over the pole he actually entered the inner Earth. In his diary, he tells of entering the hollow interior of the Earth, along with others, and traveling seventeen hundred miles over mountains, lakes, rivers, green vegetation, and animal life. He found cities and a thriving civilization too. His plane was finally greeted by flying machines of a type he had never seen before. In January 1956, Admiral Byrd led an expedition to the South Pole. On that expedition he and his crew penetrated two thousand three hundred miles into the centre of the Earth. Admiral Byrd states that the North and South Poles are only two of the many openings into the center of the Earth. Byrd’s theory is that the poles of the Earth are concave, rather Than convex, and planes and ships can sail or fly right into Actually.
Richard Evelyn Byrd, was a popular admiral and explorer of the U.S. Navy that, in his diary he noted, repeatedly, that he saw and had several contacts with the land of Agartha .
Born in Winchester in 1888 and died in Boston in 1957, his writings, published by National Geographic magazine were withdrawn from the U.S. government and then censored. The same thing happened when the magazine Flying Saucer, directed by Ray Palmer, publishes his findings in full. In his diaries
, Admiral Byrd tells of being in a giant cavity North Pole, and had flown for about 17 miles through mountains, lakes, rivers and seeing a variety of vegetation. And inhabited cities. He says he observed various flying devices that until then he had never seen. Together with his crew, had a contact with those populations, very technologically advanced, said they were worried that the recent nuclear activities (there were just the two atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki). It was 1947. In January 1956, Admiral Byrd led a second expedition, this time destined to fly over the South Pole . This time he entered the Earth's crust for about 2.300 miles.
Byrd's theory (supported by the experiences he and his crew in person) claims that the land at the poles is concave, and is crossed, so far, from flying objects inhabited by people and technology advanced.
Towards the end of his life, Byrd wrote of the North Pole, "the land beyond the Pole is the center of a great unknown mystery."
Even today, the U.S. government forbids to fly over the polar area, by any means. This, coupled with the various cover-ups of the writings of Byrd, should at least make people think.

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