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The Dulce Base
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<blockquote data-quote="darwi" data-source="post: 99386" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>Many years ago I drove to San Antonio and visited the Alamo, trying to stimulate my memory from a previous lifetime. That didn't work. Then I stopped in New Orleans for Madi Gra. That was totally weird. A lot of those people could have been aliens, even if I wasn't. I left there and picked up a hitchhiker, who stayed with me about five days and that was the weirdest thing of all. He claimed to be an ex-Navy Seal and he had some strange stories. That he was shot through the head in the first Gulf war. A Navy doctor pronounced him dead, then he sat up and said, "We're not quite done yet." The doctor fainted. That in the 1970s, they actually practiced infiltrating United States military bases and even killed some Americans. And that he had been to Area 51, where they were keeping the head alive of a pilot who had 'almost' died in a plane crash and that the head had communicated to him telepathically that it didn't want to live that way, but there was nothing he could do to help. And that a homeless lady's head was being kept alive the same way. He claimed that the doctor in charge was the same doctor who had implanted a baboon heart in a girl years before in Loma Linda, CA. Eventually, in our travels we headed for the Florida Keys. He got all exited when we stopped at a memorial for Navy frogmen, somewhere in south Florida. He looked at names on the plaques and claimed he knew some of them. He also told me about killing 6 Vietcong, when he went down into one of their holes, where they hid. He was a little guy. Supposedly he got the nickname Snake, from Navy Seal bootcamp, when he bit off the head of a poisonous snake in their initiations. He also aledgedly told me his real name along with the false name he had on his ID. He claimed that he had downloaded data from a mainframe computer, whatever that means, and that they would surely kill him if they could, me too since I was with him. I could never discern how much of what he was telling me was true. He claimed to be infected with some type of cancer, then later claimed that he had been infected by a vampirish type woman in area 51. He would go in the rest room and say that he had puked the food he had just eaten. But when he let me feel the pair of fangs in his mouth, I definitely felt that was a lie. He probably bought some false fangs in a novelty store. He also claimed he was becoming very sensitive to sunlight. Even though I couldn't believe him, when we slept in my van that night, I slept in the back and made sure my feet were toward him, my head and neck far away. I finally dropped him off in Myrtle Beach, S.C., on my way back to N.J. I was concerned for his well being and gave him $50.00. To this day, I'm inclined to believe that he really was a Navy Seal, but it was impossible without reading his mind, to know how much he was lying. I wonder if they train Navy Seals to become experts in lying.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="darwi, post: 99386, member: 6291"] Many years ago I drove to San Antonio and visited the Alamo, trying to stimulate my memory from a previous lifetime. That didn't work. Then I stopped in New Orleans for Madi Gra. That was totally weird. A lot of those people could have been aliens, even if I wasn't. I left there and picked up a hitchhiker, who stayed with me about five days and that was the weirdest thing of all. He claimed to be an ex-Navy Seal and he had some strange stories. That he was shot through the head in the first Gulf war. A Navy doctor pronounced him dead, then he sat up and said, "We're not quite done yet." The doctor fainted. That in the 1970s, they actually practiced infiltrating United States military bases and even killed some Americans. And that he had been to Area 51, where they were keeping the head alive of a pilot who had 'almost' died in a plane crash and that the head had communicated to him telepathically that it didn't want to live that way, but there was nothing he could do to help. And that a homeless lady's head was being kept alive the same way. He claimed that the doctor in charge was the same doctor who had implanted a baboon heart in a girl years before in Loma Linda, CA. Eventually, in our travels we headed for the Florida Keys. He got all exited when we stopped at a memorial for Navy frogmen, somewhere in south Florida. He looked at names on the plaques and claimed he knew some of them. He also told me about killing 6 Vietcong, when he went down into one of their holes, where they hid. He was a little guy. Supposedly he got the nickname Snake, from Navy Seal bootcamp, when he bit off the head of a poisonous snake in their initiations. He also aledgedly told me his real name along with the false name he had on his ID. He claimed that he had downloaded data from a mainframe computer, whatever that means, and that they would surely kill him if they could, me too since I was with him. I could never discern how much of what he was telling me was true. He claimed to be infected with some type of cancer, then later claimed that he had been infected by a vampirish type woman in area 51. He would go in the rest room and say that he had puked the food he had just eaten. But when he let me feel the pair of fangs in his mouth, I definitely felt that was a lie. He probably bought some false fangs in a novelty store. He also claimed he was becoming very sensitive to sunlight. Even though I couldn't believe him, when we slept in my van that night, I slept in the back and made sure my feet were toward him, my head and neck far away. I finally dropped him off in Myrtle Beach, S.C., on my way back to N.J. I was concerned for his well being and gave him $50.00. To this day, I'm inclined to believe that he really was a Navy Seal, but it was impossible without reading his mind, to know how much he was lying. I wonder if they train Navy Seals to become experts in lying. [/QUOTE]
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