THE SECRETS OF THE MOJAVE
(Or, The Conspiracy Against Reality)
Page # 3b
[7th edition]
Compiled by ‘The Group’ — Edited by ‘Branton’
Re-Edited 02,02,2020 for grammar and spelling – ‘Think’
“…My husband was on the submarine Thresher when it disappeared. I don’t consider myself a widow. I don’t believe my husband is dead. No, it’s not a matter of just not being able to believe it, to accept reality; I just can’t get over the conviction that he’s still alive somewhere. I love my husband very much. I know he loved — loves me. We were very close. We could always tell when something was wrong with each other. Intuition, I guess. I should have felt something the instant there was trouble, if he was really in serious trouble and knew it — a matter of life and death — but I didn’t.”
“What do you believe really happened?” Carson and Joy asked the attractive young woman.
“Most people think I’m crazy when I say this, but I believe the Thresher was captured.”
“By whom?”
“I can’t say for sure, but there WAS a Russian submarine spotted near there that day (that is, near where it REPORTEDLY vanished 220 miles off Boston harbor) — only I can’t imagine how even the Russians could CAPTURE a vessel like the Thresher without leaving the slightest evidence!”
John J. Williams’ source, the retired Navy officer (whose credentials Williams verified), stated that “an eccentric billionaire” (Howard Hughes!?) financed the false Thresher “recovery operation” to satisfy the public and the media.
Still, more revelations concerning the Mojave subnet can be found in Bourke Lee’s book ‘DEATH VALLEY MEN‘ (MacMillan Co., N.Y. 1932).
In his chapter: ‘Old Gold‘, Lee describes a conversation that he had several years ago with a small group of Death Valley explorers. The conversation had eventually turned to the subject of Paiute Indian legends. At one point two of the men, Jack and Bill, described their experience with an ‘underground city‘ which they claimed to have discovered after one of them had fallen through the bottom of an old mine shaft near Wingate Pass. They found themselves in a natural underground cavern which they claimed they followed for about 20 miles north into the heart of the Panamint Mountains.
To their amazement, they claimed, they found themselves in a huge, ancient, underground cavern city. This account will be quoted later on, however, in addition to this, Lee recorded yet another story of a Paiute Indian (not the same one referred to by Oga Make) who may have stumbled into the ‘deeper‘ underground kingdom of the ancient race who built the city within the Panamints, a civilization that was still alive and thriving after thousands of years.
During this lengthy conversation wherein they first revealed the secret of the underground city to Lee and others, the discussion turned to the topic of a Paiute Indian legend that they had heard which was remarkably similar to an ancient GRECIAN myth. The Paiute legend concerned a tribal chief whose wife had died, and who according to the tradition took a spiritual journey to the underworld to find her, and upon returning with her he ‘looked back’ and since this was forbidden he was not allowed to bring his wife back with him from the dead.
This legend would not be in the same vein as the more tangible story related earlier in the File, as told by the Navaho Oga-Make, concerning a Paiute chief who was allegedly PHYSICALLY taken into the underground cities of the Hav- Musuvs deep below the Panamints.
After this legend was referred to, the conversation turned to a discussion of an alleged subterranean race, who were believed to inhabit very deep caverns far below the Death Valley territory. Paiute legends of the ‘Hav-Musuvs’ indicate that these ancient dwellers of the Panamints abandoned the ancient city within the mountain itself and migrated to still deeper and larger caverns below. Could the following story tie-in with the Paiute legends of the Hav-Musuvs? We will enter the conversation with the following discourse from Bourke Lee:
“…The professor and Jack and Bill sat in the little canvas house in Emigrant Canyon and heard the legend all the way through. The professor said, ‘That story, in its essentials, is the story of Orpheus and Eurydice.’
“‘Yes,’ I said. ‘It’s also a Paiute legend. Some Indians told that legend to John Wesley Powell in the sixties.’
“‘ That’s very interesting,’ said the professor. ‘It’s so close a parallel to Orpheus and Eurydice that the story might well have been lifted bodily from the Greeks.’
“Jack said, ‘I wouldn’t be surprised. I knew Greek. I forgot his name, but he ran a restaurant in almost every mining town I ever was in. He was an extensive wanderer. The Greeks are great travelers.’
“Bill said, ‘They don’t mean restaurant Greeks. The Greeks they’re talking about have been dead for thousands of years.’
“‘What of it?’ asked Jack, ‘maybe the early Greeks were great travelers, too.‘
“The professor said, ‘It’s very interesting.’
“‘ Now! About that tunnel,’ said Bill, with his forehead wrapped in a frown. ‘You said this Indian went through a tunnel into a strange country, didn’t you?’
“‘Yes,’ I said. ‘I think I called it a cave or a cavern, but I suppose a miner would call it a tunnel. Why?’
“‘ Here’s a funny thing,’ said Bill. ‘This Indian trapper living right across the canyon has a story about a tunnel, and it’s not a thousand years old either. Tom Wilson told me that his grandfather went through this tunnel and disappeared. He was gone three years, and when he came back he said he’d been in a strange country living among strange people. That tunnel is supposed to be somewhere in the Panamints not awful far from where we’re sitten. Now! What do you make of that?’
“Jack said, ‘I think Tom’s grandfather was an awful liar.’
“I said, ‘Tom’s grandfather lived when the Paiutes were keeping their tribal lore alive. He probably knew the old legend. Powell heard it in Nevada only sixty-five years ago.’
“‘ It’s very interesting,’ said the professor.
“‘ I got an idea about it,’ said Bill, thoughtfully. ‘Tom’s grandfather might have wandered into some tunnel all goofy from chewing jimson weed and then come out an found some early whites and stayed with them. Tom told me that the people spoke a queer language and ate food that was new to his grandfather and wore leather clothes. They had horses and they had gold. It might have been a party in Panamint Valley, or even early explorers or early settlers in Owens Valley. How about that?’
“Jack said, ‘Yeah. The Spaniards were in here, too. So it might have been Spaniards or the early Greeks. And, where is this tunnel? And why did Tom’s grandfather have trouble speaking the language? This is an entirely different story than the one Buck told. We are arriving at no place at all with these Indians and Greeks… To return for a moment to our discussion of geology, professor; have you been in Nevada much?'”
From here the conversation took off in an entirely new direction…
Not only human ‘UFOnauts‘ have been encountered in the Mojave Desert region, but the so-called GRAYS as well. Is it possible that the GRAYS had their genesis on planet earth thousands of years ago the ‘Nordics‘ apparently did? This is the opinion of researcher Brad Steiger who is convinced that the GRAYS are actually descended from a mutation of the saurian race which mysteriously ‘disappeared‘ from the earth, therefore giving rise to the theory that they became ‘extinct’ in spite of the fact that other saurians like the crocodiles, alligators, and iguanas continued to survive.
In 1967, UFO researcher Brad Steiger co-authored (with Joan Whritenour – later Joan O’Connell) a book titled: FLYING SAUCERS ARE HOSTILE. Regarding the intentions of many of the occupants behind the phenomena, Steiger and Whritenour stated: