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Dark Mission: The Secret History of NASA Posters
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Rating: -
This is not a history of NASA at all. Hoagland is a conspiracy theorist who sees shadows behind trees, saying they must be ghosts. ("What else could they be?") He takes "it must be" and molds it, through convoluted logic, into "fact". He has difficulty distinguishing between coincidence, opinion and fact. Don't waste your time or money on this book.
Gary Stevens Las Cruces, New Mexico June 5, 2008
Rating: -
In Dark Mission, the authors cover the U.S. government's space initiatives, the inner workings of NASA, and the missions to the Moon and Mars, over the last 50 years. They find conspiracy at work everywhere and conclude that:
1. The Brookings Report essentially defines the government's strategy to space exploration, which is to cover up any evidence of extraterrestrials.
2. NASA consists of not one, but three, secret cabals - Magicians, Masons, and Nazis - each with their own hidden agenda for space exploration. With respect to the Masons, it is specifically the 33 degree Scottish Rite Freemasons who hold the most influence and include a number of mission directors and astronauts as members.
3. NASA and its space missions are heavily influenced by Egyptian and Greek mythology, Masonic rituals, and Nazi idealism. The special numbers 19.5 and 33 are frequently manifested in space missions as star alignments, landing coordinates, tetrahedral angles, planetary anomaly orbits, etc.
4. The Moon is literally covered with the remains of immense glass domes.
5. The Cydonia area of Mars has artificial surface structures that correspond to ancient cities, tetrahedral pyramids, and one structure that resembles a human/alien face. In addition, the ruins at Cydonia embody/encode the mathematics of hyperdimensional physics.
6. Key mission images made publicly available by NASA, JPL, etc. have been "doctored" to hide their real contents.
7. JFK was assassinated because he wanted to join with Russia in the race for the Moon.
Dark Mission is an interesting book although it is written in a tedious and repetitive style. The author's conclusions that artificial artifacts can be observed on the Moon and Mars are based solely on their scientific analysis of mission images which they have digitally manipulated (or corrected in some cases) to achieve the desired result. Unfortunately, they don't seem to apply the "scientific method" in their overall approach, which is to look for supporting evidence apart from the images, or consider alternative theories for their findings, or to assume that science on Earth automatically applies on other planets. The authors simply have not provided sufficient evidence to support their conclusions of artificial/alien artifacts on the Moon and Mars.
If you check the Cydonia face images in the Epilogue of the book, and look at them upside down, you will see what appears to be the face of a "grey alien". Interestingly, one has to wonder how the authors could have missed this, even if it is due to anomalous lighting effects.
Rating: -
I have not read the entire book by Richard Hoagland but I have read about 1/3 of it and looked at all
of the Black and white photos. Hoagland claims he can see where NASA has altered many of the photos
and can see glass domes and tall glass like structures. I see very blurry -out of focus pictures that may
be structures but I can't be sure as the photos are not clear at all. This was the same thing in his other
book about Mars: "The Monuments of Mars". Lots of pictures of the "City" but is it a city or just a bunch
of pyramid shaped hills? I need to see some close up sharp photos before I can say what is in these pics.
The DARK MISSION is 545 pages long with lots of photographs and printed on good paper. The soft-
cover book is in the larger format :6" x 9" and is 1 1/4" thick.
Rating: -
I havent read this book, but i have read all the 1 star ratings and comments. I find it funny when people disregard a subject due to one read of one source of a topic. Hmm, maybe go to the the european space agency's site download some mars photos and look for yourself, or go to the nasa site, and look at the even more profound and very obvious smudging of lunar anomalies, and geometric shaped buildings. You don't need to read this book, YOU CAN LOOK For yourself! and not be another dumb F%$#&!$^ skeptic unwilling to research. wake up and smell the lies folks, peace... ( i set it as 5 star due to the fact that I have listened to hoagland many times and respect his opinion)
Rating: -
I've read almost everything there is on the subject of artificial structures on Mars and the Moon, from Hoagland, Rux, Sitchin, Hancock, Carlotto and Tonnie to even "Who Built the Moon?'' by Knight and Butler."Dark Mission'' takes that body of knowledge one step forward by speculating that NASA, essentially a government defense agency, could be responsible for hiding firm evidence about these artificial structures from the American public. Although I'm not as convinced by the photographic evidence given in the book, I'd have to admit that there MAY be things there that are artificial. For this, Hoagland and Bara are to be applauded. The science relating to hyperdimensional physics might be a bit difficult to follow (for greater depth I recommend "The Monkey and the Tetrahedron'' by David Jinks) but who's to say that it's wrong? To me, the most mind-blowing assertion has to be that JFK might have been assassinated because he had invited the Russians to participate with NASA in sending a man to the moon. And NASA's odd behaviour and delays in releasing Mars images is arguably telling. So yes, I'd say this book is a revealing and useful addition to the conspiracy, ET genre. My gripe however, is with the frequency with which the reader has to suffer punctuation and spelling errors, plus Hoagland's annoying habit of ITALICISING words or using "inverted commas" in every other sentence. The Boston University geologist who weather-dated the Sphinx is Robert Schoch and not Schock, the WW2 German missile testing facility is given as Mittelwerk first and then Mittelwork later then Mittelwerk again. "Words'' are suddenly "placed'' in inverted commas, SOMETIMES with only opening "commas but without closure. Italicising is so commonplace that it BECOMES tiresome. To be fair, I should have known - Hoagland's "Monuments of Mars'' is exactly the same and it irritated me no end when I read that book. You begin to wonder "why'' there is a NEED to keep PUNCTUATING sentences like "this'' and each time you come across an example, you have to re-read the sentence to make sure you get the intended meaning. Very tiresome indeed. So even though I think Hoagland and Bara have undoubtedly something intriguing to sell, I'd have to minus two stars for the annoyance factor.
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