Flat Earth Clues Part 2 - Byrd Wall
This is part of a series of clues that can
help you get your head around both the design
of the flat earth system we live in, and who
has been involved in the deception to hide
it from you.
This clue revolves around one of the most
remarkable men you may have never heard of,
Richard E. Byrd and his relationship with
Antarctica, and the secretive missions he
carried out there until his dying day.
Some of you have followed the legend of Richard
Byrd through the hollow earth theory. We aren’t
going to be covering any hollow earth in this
video, but instead focus on the man and his
involvement with the South pole.
The readers digest version of Richard Byrd
is as follows: Born in 1888, he became an
American naval officer who specialized in
feats of exploration. He was a pioneering
American aviator, medal of honor winner, polar
explorer, aircraft navigator, expedition leader
in the worst environments in the world, and
the youngest Admiral in the history of the
navy.
In addition, his list of awards takes up several
pages in Wikipedia, including three ticker
tape parades in his honor. In short, he was
Indiana Jones on steroids. Some people will
say that Roy Chapman Andrews was the real
Indiana Jones, and you might be right, but
Richard Byrd beat Indy six days a week and
twice on Sunday.
I mention all his accolades to paint a picture
of credibility and trust. The governments
of the US and the world trusted his judgment
and leadership, and they took advantage of
every chance they had to put him in charge
of special missions.
The first large scale mission was an expedition
to Antarctica in 1928. This was noteworthy
because even though he had just flown over
the North pole in 1926, all expeditions from
1928 on were focused on the South. The expedition
lasted two years, and during it, at the age
of 41, was promoted to Admiral.
His second Antarctic expedition ran from 1933
to 1935, and his third from 1939 to 1940.
While in Antarctica he also was an advisor
for other countries who had their own expeditions,
including England, France, Germany, and building
off previous countries expeditions from Belgium,
Japan and Sweden.
He then helped lead US Navy fleet operations
in World War 2, was present during the Japanese
surrender in 1945, but then something strange
happened.
He went back to Antarctica. Now some of you
aren’t surprised, because he’d been there
since 1928, and I agree with you, it’s the
how that’s interesting here.
His fourth trip to Antarctica wasn’t an
expedition, it was a military operation called
operation “High jump”. Commanding an entire
aircraft carrier group that included 13 support
ships, Admiral Byrd led 4700 men to the South
Pole, for reasons that are still shrouded
to this day.
Some say they were chasing the remaining Nazi
fleet, even though Germany had surrendered
a full year earlier. Others say that there
was a Nazi base established in Antarctica
during the war, when Admiral Byrd was absent.
None of these theories are important for this
video.
What we do know is that the US had sent an
excessively large military force to the ice,
all under the guise of peaceful intentions.
During this operation, Admiral Byrd told a
Chile newspaper this:
The most important result of his observations
and discoveries is the potential effect that
they have in relation to the security of the
United States. The fantastic speed with which
the world is shrinking – recalled the admiral
– is one of the most important lessons learned
during his recent Antarctic exploration. I
have to warn my compatriots that the time
has ended when we were able to take refuge
in our isolation and rely on the certainty
that the distances, the oceans, and the poles
were a guarantee of safety.
After the operation, Admiral Byrd toured the
states, and gave interviews. The most interesting
of which as a national television show in
1954 called the Longines Chronoscope, a horrible
name, but a decent show. I’ve added a segment
of it at the end of this video and linked
it in the description.
During this television interview, he first
spoke of an area beyond the South pole as
large as the United States, which no one had
set foot on yet. He then went on to say that
there would probably be expeditions year after
year because the US government had really
become interested.
The interviewers then probed as to why the
interest in the South, when any perceived
military threat from Russia (keep in mind
this was 1954) would be from the North. He
went on to say that it was the most valuable
and important place in the world for science.
It involved the future of the nation, an untouched
reservoir of untapped resources, including
coal, oil, minerals, and uranium.
He added that at the time of this interview,
there were seven nations currently engaged
in Antarctica including Russia, Australia,
Argentina, Chile, and New Zealand.
During the interview the Admiral talked about
planning the next military mission to Antarctica.
It was called Operation Deep Freeze, and ran
from 1955 to 1956.
The mission was completed, and he supposedly
returned home.
Now this is where you come in and say, so
what, and normally I’d agree with you, except
for what happened next. Nothing happened next.
The missions just suddenly stopped, and that
was it. No other expeditions, military or
otherwise were conducted on the continent,
ever.
Then a treaty was put in place banning any
country from doing basically anything. The
end.
And if you’re wondering what your missing,
it’s this:
Admiral Byrd goes on television, says that
this massive body of land, most of which sits
on a plateau 2 miles high, is rich with every
resource you could ever want, ENERGY rich,
pristine, with no indigenous population or
plant life, and every country that has sent
teams is ready to carve it up like a big turkey,
not to mention there’s a expanse of land
larger than the United States they haven’t
even LOOKED at yet, and out of the blue everyone
just calls the whole thing off? There are
no environmentalists in 1959, this is the
land of Diner food and 20 cent gas!
I’m calling total BS on this one. The dollar
value of the initial resource find would have
fueled armies of greedy companies. So what
happened? They found the edge that’s what,
and the last thing they were going to do was
let unsupervised companies near it, regardless
of the money. Even if hundreds of miles away,
you couldn’t allow resource corporations
even into a safe area, and then years down
the road as they expanded, tell them, oh,
sorry, you can’t go beyond this point. When
the companies ask why, what would they tell
them?
And now the interior of Antarctica is off
limits, with no revisions until the year 2041.
You can take tours of the outer islands, but
there is a hidden line, enforced by the military,
that you will not be able to cross.
Because the interior is actually the exterior
edge. It’s there, it’s hidden, and it’s
protected.
The earth you live on is flat.
So do some of your own research, and ask questions.
Please feel free to email me at msargent23@comcast.net
or 303-494-6631.
Our very distinguished guest for this evening, is Admiral 
Richard E Byrd.
The North Pole used to be a no mans land, but these are the days 
when, by buying a ticket on a commercial airliner, you can fly 
across the North Pole and drink a cocktail at the same time.
In only three score or more years ago, about 35 years ago, our 
guest tonight, found out whether there was any land North of the 
North American continent. He made that first discovery flight, 
and I must say that Admiral Byrd, our guest tonight, is not only 
our greatest living explorer, but he's been an inspiration to 
countless Americans.
Admiral Byrd, you've been to both the North pole and the South 
pole. Is there any unexplored land left on this earth that might 
appeal to adventurous young Americans?
Yes, there is. Not up around the North pole because it's getting 
crowded up there now because they're finding out it's really 
useable, not only to live in, but militarily.
But strangely enough, there's left in the world today, an area 
as big as the United States, that's never been seen by human 
beings, and that's beyond the pole on the other side of the 
South pole, from middle America.
And I think it's quite astonishing, that there should be an area 
as big as that, unexplored, so there's a lot of adventure left 
down at the bottom of the world.
Admiral, an expedition in which you are the advisor is now en 
route, what is that expedition doing?
Well, that's the icebreaker adtka, and it's a reconnaissance 
expedition that's going down to the South pole area to make 
certain observations, and look for some bases. They will be back 
in April, and report back, and upon the information we get from 
that undertaking, we will base the bigger expedition that is to 
follow.
Is that very definitely planned? That is being planned right 
now. So I'm willing to say to you that there will be a number of 
expeditions that will follow year after year at the bottom of 
the world, because the government has really become interested.
Well Admiral Byrd I can understand how everyone is interested in 
the North pole, because it's so near our greatest challenger, 
Soviet Russia. But why this interest in the bottom of the world, 
nobody lives down there, right?
No, it's pretty cold. There is only one permanent resident, and 
that's the emperor penguin, the little ones live further North. 
I'll tell you one reason they are interested, It's by far the 
most important and valuable place in the world for science. 
That's where the scientific groups from all over the world are 
interested.
But more important than that, it has to do with the future of 
the nation, and those to come after us, even during your 
lifetime, because it happens to be an untouched reservoir of 
natural resources, and as the world shrinks with ever increasing 
acceleration, far flung places which we used to think were 
useless, like the North pole, and no mans land, become very 
useful.
The bottom of the world, will be important, not only to us, but 
our allies. I was going to ask you, does it have military 
importance? It has some. Now as the world shrinks, it will 
continue to shrink with ever increasing acceleration, thus 
bringing these places closer, and in the future, and I can see a 
time when it will become very very important strategically. 
Has the development of air power increased the strategic 
importance of places like the South Pole? Very much so, very 
much so.
Even now, if something happened, and we lost the Panama canal, 
we would have to control the islands just North of Antarctica, 
which are a part, of Antarctica.
Admiral you speak of the resources of Antarctica, what are they, 
what are the natural resources there? Well, we've found enough 
coal within 180 miles of the South Pole, in a great ridge of 
mountains that’s not covered in snow, enough to supply to whole 
world for quite a while.
That's the coal, now there is evidence of many other minerals, 
we're pretty sure there is oil, that coal shows the bottom of 
the world, now by far the coldest spot where that coal is, gets 
to 100 below zero in the winter. It was once tropical. So we 
think there is oil there, and there is evidence, probably 
uranium. 
Is it any secret, is there uranium there, that would be the only 
thing practical to actually go after I suppose. Everything else 
would be economically unfeasible wouldn't it?
Well, as we recklessly expend our resources, the time will come, 
when we'll have to go after that stuff there. You know I avoided 
what you said about uranium, I'm not sure, I don't want to fight 
over the Antarctic. 
Is there a competition among other nations as to trying to get 
information about Antarctica and to possibly secure some of 
these resources?
Well, yes. There are now several nations very much interested. 
Russia is interested tremendously that I am sure. Australia has 
an expedition down there, the Argentines, Chile, New Zealand, 
Britain, and so on. Now you can understand those people being 
interested because they live down there, the New Zealanders, the 
Argentines, the Chileans, and the Australians, and so, we don't 
do much about claiming anything.
Admiral, you make it sound crowded. Are there that many 
expeditions down there or in route there? Well you know, as I 
said, it's the most peaceful place in the world, but I don't 
think it will be for long because of this intense interest on 
the part of other nations and this nation.
