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Originally posted by Cutwolf
Are we sure this is a clue as opposed to a redesign?
Originally posted by IsaacKoi
Originally posted by Cutwolf
Are we sure this is a clue as opposed to a redesign?
I'm 99% sure it's just a redesign.
But...
One of the possibilities that ran through my mind yesterday about the "seeders" is that the term could be used in relation to those that allegedly seeded alien technology into american industries (per Corso et al).
Colonel Corso
In his controversial book ‘The Day After Roswell’ Col. Philip J. Corso (Ret.), the former head of the Foreign Technology Desk at the U.S. Army’s Research and Development department, described his own experience of examining similar material alleged to come from the 1947 crash site:
“There was a dull, greyish-silvery foil-like swatch of cloth among these artifacts that you could not fold, bend, tear, or wad up but that bounded right back into its original shape without any creases. It was a metallic fibre with physical characteristics that would later be called “supertenacity,” but when I tried to cut it with scissors, the arms just slid right off without even making a nick in the fibres. If you tried to stretch it, it bounced back, but I noticed that all the threads seemed to be going in one direction. When I tried to stretch it width-wise instead of length-wise, it looked like the fibres had re-orientated themselves to the direction I was pulling in. This couldn’t be cloth, but it obviously wasn’t metal. It was a combination, to my unscientific eye, of a cloth woven with metal strands that had the drape and malleability of a fabric and the strength and resistance of a metal. I was on top of some of the most secret weapons projects at the Pentagon, and we had nothing like this, even under the wish-list category.” (The Day After Roswell, p49 Pocket Books 1997)
Although this appears to be a variant on the metallic artifacts reported by Roswell witnesses, Corso’s account is no less interesting for that, particularly given his claims about what happened to this material. In keeping with his own role as the ‘seeder’ of the Roswell technologies to the giants of American industry, the ‘supertenacious fibres’ allegedly found there way to the research departments of Monsanto and Dow (p235). Furthermore, Corso claims that the material had previously been delivered to the Air Materiel Command at Wright Field (p236). Wright Patterson Air Force Base, as it is now known, is famous in UFO circles for its Foreign Technology division, purported to hold extra-terrestrial craft and artifacts (See ‘Above Top Secret: The Worldwide UFO Cover-up by Timothy Good, 1988).
Originally posted by Cutwolf
Aha! Interesting...
If you right click and click "save page," the default name is "Corso"
Originally posted by Fiverz
Originally posted by Cutwolf
Aha! Interesting...
If you right click and click "save page," the default name is "Corso"
Actually I think that's just the last term you entered in. Mine saves as whatever the last thing in the URL box is. For instance I tried "roswell.html" as an answer and when I go to Save Page As... it tries to save it as "roswell.htm".
EDIT: This is in Firefox btw.
[edit on 15-8-2006 by Fiverz]