Reagan records & Space Command antigravity fleet
On April 13, the National Archive Records Administration made available almost 250,000 pages of documents from President Reagan's administration. It will take several months for researchers to read through the documents. The released material may yield insight into a curious comment found in President Reagan's Diary. The entry for Tuesday, June 11, 1985 (page 334) reads:
Lunch with 5 top space scientist. It was fascinating. Space truly is the last frontier and some of the developments there in astronomy etc. are like science fiction, except they are real. I learned that our shuttle capacity is such that we could orbit 300 people.
This is curious since the Space Shuttle holds a maximum of eight people and only five were built for space flight. Even if all five took off fully loaded it would be impossible to place and maintain 300 astronauts in orbit. Was Reagan revealing the existence of a highly classified space program that could accommodate hundreds of astronauts in orbit? Apparently so according to dozens of military and corporate whistleblowers. Hidden within one of the ten unified combatant commands of the U.S. military, Strategic Command, is a highly classified fleet of aircraft carrier sized antigravity vehicles that operate in outer space.
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The 300 people most likely refers to the idea of a space hotel, mentioned by David Adair on C2C. If you take the big orange tank to orbit instead of releasing it and letting it burn up in the atmosphere it can then be converted into accomodation. Many of these tanks could be joined together. As far as getting the people up there, yes it can be 300 at once if the shuttle payload bay is made into 'seats like ordinary airliners'. This was all planned out over 20 years ago but NASA makes more by only ever 'experimenting' as opposed to 'producing' tried and tested things. WD40 is the best we can hope for in that dept.
Sorry nothing more than that! I'm a conspiracy buff too but a realistic one. A spade is still just a spade no matter how it's cloaked.
Posted by: Stephen Penniket | 08 September 2009 at 02:05