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December 30, 2012
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[iii]
http://vaticanobservatory.org/VATT/index.php
EXO-VATICANA
(Pt 1)---Give Pt.1 & you can follow if interested ? ;0 Petrus Romanus, PROJECT LUCIFER, and the Vatican's astonishing exo-theological plan for the arrival of an alien savior. You only think you know what's coming... |
11:00 am Eastern
PART
1: THE
INVESTIGATION
BEGINS
|
Mount Graham and the L.U.C.I.F.E.R. ProjectBy Tom Horn & Cris Putnam |
“L.U.C.I.F.E.R.,
which stands for
“Large Binocular
Telescope
Near-infrared Utility
with Camera and
Integral Field Unit
for Extragalactic
Research,” is a
chilled instrument
attached to a
telescope in Arizona.
And yes, it’s named
for the Devil, whose
name itself means
“morning star”
[and which] happens to
be right next to the
Vatican Observatory on
Mt. Graham in Tucson.”—
Rebecca
Boyle, Popular Science
Magazine
Following
the release of our
2012 best-seller Petrus
Romanus: The Final
Pope Is Here,
we were inundated with
invitations from
around the world to be
interviewed on radio,
television, and in
print media. These
included segments in
The History
Channel’s
“Countdown to
Apocalypse,” which
premiered November 9,
2012; a special
feature on Canada’s
largest Christian
channel VisionTV
titled “I Prophesy:
The Apocalypse
Series” (complete
with re-enactments)
that aired nationwide
on Tuesday, November
20, 2012; invitations
to Rome to discuss
with Italian media our
findings on René
Thibaut, a Belgian
Jesuit whose
meticulous analysis of
the Prophecy of the
Popes predicted the
arrival of Petrus
Romanus in this era; a
“best of”
interview with George
Noory on Coast to
Coast AM, and dozens
more.
But it was two
shows in particular,
which we did on The
Omega Man Radio
Program with popular
author and radio man
Steve Quayle that
prompted our visit to
Mt. Graham in
southeastern Arizona
to start our
investigation. The
first show with
Steve rocketed Omega
Man to the #1 Blog
Talk Radio Show in the
world for over a week.
It focused on the
ancient Prophecy of
the Popes and the fact
that the pontiff
following Benedict XVI
will be the final one
on this mysterious
list of popes, a
prophecy that was
concealed inside the
secret vaults of the
Vatican for hundreds
of years and which
many believe points to
the arrival of the
False Prophet of
end-times infamy.
(Note that at the
start of this
investigation,
Benedict XVI remains
pope and whoever is
scheduled to follow
him in the role of
Petrus Romanus is
still an open
question, but whoever
it turns out to be,
they are the final pope according to the medieval catholic prophecy).
In the second
Omega Man show, which
aired Wednesday, April
4, 2012, we broached
the subject of a
“Vatican ET”
connection. That
program sent Omega Man
into the stratosphere
for an unprecedented
one-month position as
the top BT radio show
on the planet,
illustrating to these
authors that the world
is more than casually
interested not only in
the final pope, but in
the connection between
Rome and their work on
extraterrestrial
intelligence,
astrobiology, and the
intriguing connection
between those issues
and Petrus Romanus.
Thus
on a mild morning in
September, 2012, we
together with our
cameraman—Joe Ardis,
a.k.a. the
Wild Man of the Ozarks—departed
the small desert town
of Safford, Arizona
(which normally has a
warm high desert
climate, much hotter
than most places in
eastern Arizona due to
its relatively low
elevation of 2,953
feet) [i]
en route to the Mt.
Graham Observatory
Base Camp, 80 miles
from Tucson and a few
miles south of Safford
on State Route 366.
Located near the
northern limit of the
Chiricahua Apache and
Western Apache
territories, Dził Nchaa Si An, as it is known in the Western Apache
language, is one of
the four holiest
mountains in America
for the Apache, and
considered sacred to
the all of the
region’s Native
peoples. (The San
Carlos Apache Tribe
had originally joined
environmentalists who
sought, among other
things, to protect the
Sacred Grounds and
American Red Squirrel,
in filing dozens of
lawsuits before a
federal appeals court
to stop the
construction of the
observatories on Mt
Graham, but the
project ultimately
prevailed after an act
by the United States
Congress allowed it).
We
had been warned by our
guide that the trek up
the steep mountainside
from 2,953 feet to
over 10,700 was
precarious, coupled
with more hairpin
turns, switchbacks and
narrow segments of
roadway overlooking
deep canyon walls than
we might have
imagined, and, to top
it off, there would be
no guardrails along
the harrowing winding
path. We were
scheduled to arrive at
the Mount Graham
International
Observatory a couple
hours after departure.
We would meet with
astronomers and
engineers at the Large
Binocular
Telescope—currently
one of the world’s
most advanced optical
telescopes—where,
among other things,
the new LUCIFER device
is attached between
its gigantic twin
mirrors (either of
which would be the
largest optical
telescope in
continental North
America). We were
later told by the LBT
systems engineer who
spent significant time
with us that day that
another
instrument—LUCIFER-II—is
scheduled to arrive at
the observatory
anytime now and will
complete the two
multi-object and
longslit infrared
spectrograph imagers
they need for studying
the heavens in search
of, among other
things, exo-planets
that may host
intelligent life. We
would also visit the
Heinrich Hertz
Submillimeter
Telescope that day,
which sets between the
LBT and the real
target of our
quest—the Vatican
Advanced Technology
Telescope and the
Jesuits who work
there.
Before
leaving base camp,
Dramamine for motion
sickness was suggested
ahead of departure,
and the two men in our
team that declined
that offer would soon
wished they hadn’t,
as once we were
underway, it was
non-stop reeling back
and forth, bouncing up
and down as the
driver—who seemed a
little too much to
enjoy being in one
gear faster than he
should have been given
the
circumstances—occasionally
looked at us in the
rearview mirror and
smiled. As we went
from Sonoran Desert
scrub at the
mountain’s floor to
alpine spruce-fir
forest closer to the
summit, our guide who
set in the opposite
front seat from the
driver occasionally
pointed to something
off to one side,
describing how more
life zones and
vegetative varieties
existed here than on
any other North
American mountain,
including almost two
dozen plants, animals
and insects that are
not found anywhere
else. Of course this
included the celebrity
of Mount Graham—the
endangered Red
Squirrel—which
Arizona has already
spent at least 1.25
million dollars
protecting. But it was
hard to appreciate
these facts while
growing queasy and
wondering how far down
the canyon wall we
would roll if at any
moment the driver lost
control and barreled
off the side.
Thankfully, just when
we were starting to
think this had been a
bad idea, we stopped
approximately
two-thirds way up the
mountain at the
Columbine Ranger
Station, a USDA Forest
Service Administrative
Complex that had been
built Circa 1935 by
the Civilian
Conservation Corps, a
public work relief
program that was part
of President Franklin
D. Roosevelt’s
“New Deal” and
that had provided
unskilled manual labor
jobs for people to
relieve unemployment
during the Great
Depression.
We
had packed a sack
lunch and used the
Ranger Station as a
place to rest a while,
eat, and let our
bellies recover a bit
from the
roller-coaster ride.
While munching on a
sandwich and looking
at the aging black and
white pictures that
hung on the walls here
and there of the
Depression-Era men who
had built the modest
encampment, we met a
volunteer, an
interesting old chap
who told us how he had
been coming there for
many years to keep a
fire in the fireplace
and to greet hikers
that wandered into the
park. When we told him
where we were going,
he got quiet. When we
added that our plan
was to speak with the
Jesuits at VATT in the
restricted area
further up the
mountain, he lost
interest in the
conversation and
started stirring his
fire again.
Minutes
later, lunch consumed
and stomachs still
uneasy, we were back
in our vehicle. From
this point forward,
the road, if we can
call it that, became
little more than a
glorified goat trail
until finally, about a
mile from our
destination, we
arrived at a security
gate with warnings of
“No Trespassing”
in several languages.
The guide had a key to
the gate. She unlocked
then relocked it
behind us after we
drove through the
opening. At that
point, the driver
pulled a radio out,
which we had not
noticed before, and
radioed somebody that
we were heading up the
incline. Evidently
this was necessary
because from this
point forward the
steep gravel lane was
barely wide enough for
one vehicle at a time,
and you didn’t want
to risk running up
against another
vehicle that might be
coming down from the
Observatories. No one
answered the call, so
he radioed again, then
a third time, with
still no response. The
silence must have
meant the road was
clear, as just like
that he slipped the
vehicle into low gear
and we began our final
30-minute crawl up the
mountainside.
“And
one more thing,” the
guide warned as we
jerked over the rocky
track, tires spinning
against the loose
gravel and dirt.
“When we get to the
restricted area
you’ll see brightly
colored cables roping
off most of the land
around the buildings.
Do not… I repeat, do
not step over
those lines or you
will be arrested
immediately and hauled
off to jail.” She
wasn’t smiling, and
when we got to the
observatories, we saw
the security lines and
enforcement vehicles,
just as she had
described them.
SEARCHING FOR LUCIFER FROM ATOP THE HOLY
MOUNTAIN
It
was approximately 11:
AM (PST) as we rounded
the final bend and saw
just ahead the
towering edifices
housing the Large
Binocular Telescope (LBT),
an optical telescope
for astronomy and
currently one of the
world’s most
advanced systems. Near
it was the
Submillimeter
Telescope (SMT) or as
it is also known, the
Heinrich Hertz
Submillimeter
Telescope building, a
“state-of-the-art
single-dish radio
telescope for
observations in the
sub-millimeter
wavelength range…
the most accurate
radio telescope ever
built.” [ii]
And last but not least
about a block away
from them we observed
our primary reason for
trudging to the top of
this peak—the
Vatican Advanced
Technology Telescope
or VATT.
Of course we
had read the official
story from the Vatican
Observatory Website
before making the
trip, how VATT truly
lives up to its name:
“Its
heart is a 1.8-m f/1.0
honeycombed
construction,
borosilicate primary
mirror.
This was
manufactured at the
University of Arizona
Mirror Laboratory, and
it pioneered both the
spin-casting
techniques and the
stressed-lap polishing
techniques of that
Laboratory which are
being used for
telescope mirrors up
to 8.4-m in diameter.
The primary mirror is
so deeply-dished that
the focus of the
telescope is only as
far above the mirror
as the mirror is wide,
thus allowing a
structure that is
about three times as
compact as the
previous generation of
telescope designs.” [iii]
Such
technical language
aside, the
“Observers” who
are approved to
operate VATT and what
they are using it for
these days is what
would take us through
the looking glass.
This was confirmed
minutes later by the
Jesuit Father on duty
that day (whom we got
on film) who told us
that among the most
important research
occurring with the
site’s Vatican
astronomers is the
quest to pinpoint
certain extrasolar
planets and advanced
alien intelligence. He
then proceeded (as did
our guide) to show us
all around the
observatory—from the
personal quarters of
the Church’s
astronomers—where
they ate, slept,
relaxed, studied—to
the control rooms,
computer screens and
systems, and even the
telescope itself.
While we were given
complete and
unrestricted
opportunity to
question how the
devices are used and
what distinctives set
each of the telescopes
on Mt. Graham apart,
we had not expected
the ease with which
the astronomers and
technicians would also
speak of UFOs! This
was especially true
when we walked up the
gravel road from VATT
to the Large Binocular
Telescope (LBT), where
we spent most of the
day with a systems
engineer who not only
took us to all seven
levels of that mighty
machine—pointing out
the LUCIFER device and
what it is used for
(which he lovingly
referred to as
“Lucy” several
times and elsewhere as
“Lucifer”) as well
as every other aspect
of the telescope we
tried to wrap our
minds around—but who
also stunned us as we
sat in the control
room, listening to him
and the astronomers
speak so casually of
the redundancy with
which UFOs are
captured on screens
darting through the
heavens. Our friendly
engineer didn’t
blink an eye, nor did
any of the other
scientists in the
room, and we were
shocked at this, how
ordinary it seemed to
be.
Authors
Tom Horn and
Cris Putnam in
front of VATT.
|
space |
Standing on the platform beneath VATT. |
space |
Walking from VATT to the Large Binocular Telescope. |
space |
LBT Systems Engineer in control room with Tom, Cris, and an astronomer (out of frame on right) describing how often “UFOs” are captured during observations. |
But
as much as the
commonality of UFO
sightings on Mt.
Graham’s telescopes
intrigued, this was
not the primary reason
for our being there.
We had come with
deeper questions
concerning high-level
Vatican astronomers
and what they had been
leaking to, and
discussing with, media
in recent years.
Captivating comments
from Jesuit priests
like Guy Consolmagno—a
leading astronomer who
often turns up in
media as a spokesman
for the Vatican who
has worked at NASA and
taught at Harvard and
MIT and who currently
splits his time
between the Vatican
Observatory and
laboratory (Specola
Vaticana)
headquartered at the
summer residence of
the Pope in Castel
Gandolfo, Italy, and
Mt. Graham in Arizona.
Over the last few
years, he has focused
so much of his time
and effort in an
attempt to reconcile
science and religion
in public forums
specifically as it
relates to the subject
of extraterrestrial
life and its potential
impact on the
future of faith
that we decided to
contact him. He agreed
to be interviewed from
Rome, and over the
numerous exchanges
that followed he told
us some things that
seemed beyond the
scope. He even sent us
a copy of a private
pdf, a literal
goldmine of what he
and the Vatican are
considering regarding
the ramifications of
astrobiology and
specifically the
discovery of advanced
extraterrestrials...
in which he admits how
contemporary societies
will soon “look to
The Aliens to be the
Saviours of
humankind.”
Coming
up next: What the
Vatican and it's
theologians are
preparing for...
What Does Petrus Romanus Have To Do With The LUCIFER Project? Follow The New Series (Part 1 Above) To Find Out! |
[i]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safford,_Arizona
[ii]
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2000yera.confE..64D
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