Recently, I recieved an email from a contact of mine in Italy named Luca Scantamburlo. Luca is a journalist who, since May of 2007, has been granted access to a man claiming to have been involved with several NASA Apollo moon missions. Below is an excerpt of some of Luca’s latest work:
REVELATIONS BY ANOTHER INSIDER ON THE APOLLO 19/20 CASE: “MOONWALKER1966DELTA” – A YOUTUBE USER – CLAIMS TO BE A FORMER NASA ASTRONAUT
by Luca Scantamburlo
© L. Scantamburlo – www.angelismarriti.it
Reproduced by permission.
INTRODUCTION
Since May 2007 I have been investigating as freelancer an intrigant case on which so far there is an embarrassing silence in the mass media world: the Apollo 19/20 case, about classified USAF missions – officially never occured – by NASA assistance and the collaboration of the Soviets.
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Ever since the late 1950s, Americans have been influenced by a strange, dark phenomenon that eludes us to this day. Whether it is an extension of our fears of insecurity and invasion, or some strange state of awareness that bridges the dreamlike realms of space and parallel dimensions, many believe there are personages exerting
their influence upon mankind who appear to have arrived here from the skies.
In spite of the associations we make with alien visitors descending upon us from above, the alien abduction phenomenon seems to have remained in the political and social underground of our culture. Even today, it remains a topic that is seldom afforded thoughtful, discerning interest and thorough study. Therefore, things we had begun to understand about alien abduction phenomena as early as the 1960s, looking back at reports like those of Betty and Barney Hill or Betty Andreason, we nonetheless find ourselves questioning more and more as time goes on.
By the same token, looking back over the early reports of alien abduction from time to time also allows us to glimpse elements of the phenomenon with a degree of clarity and un-obfuscated detail. Such is the case with Ann Druffel and D. Scott Rogo’s modern classic, The Tujunga Canyon Contacts, reprinted by Anomalist Books. Following Druffel and Rogo’s investigation into a series of peculiar incidents that occurred in and around the quiet Tujunga Canyon beginning in 1953 (predating Betty and Barney Hill’s famous abduction by nearly a decade), the reader is taken along on a wild, probing encounter with what is arguably one of the earliest reported abduction encounters with the “gray aliens” of popular lore.
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In what may have been a last-ditch attempt at preventing the extradition of “UFO hacker” Gary McKinnon to the US, defense attourneys have claimed his recent diagnosis of Asperger’s syndrome “would have profound implications for his mental health if he were put in a high-security US prison.”
“We’re upset and disappointed with the Home Secretary’s decision, as she has clearly not given proper consideration to Gary being diagnosed with Asperger’s,” McKinnon’s mother Janis told British news source The Guardian recently.
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Thanks to books like The Secret Life of Plants by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird which featured the work of pioneering researcher Cleve Backster (actually a polygraph expert, rather than a botanist), bizarre ways in which plants seem to communicate with each other and the world around them have been reconsidered in the last few decades. Recently, botanical research conducted at the university of Delaware suggests a scientific basis for a similar sort of communication plants use to “call for help” when under attack.

ABOVE: A microscopic image of the beneficial Bacillus subtilis bacterium.
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