White Sands Launch Complex 33
Launch Complex 33 is where the Nazis brought over after WW2 under Project Paperclip inaugurated America’s space program. Note: there is only one launch complex in the vicinity.
Launch Complex 33 was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1985. This is where captured V-2 rockets were launched under the leadership of Dr. Werner von Braun.
I have always been amazed at how quickly these “scientists” went from being war criminals responsible for the deaths of so many people in London who should have been tried and hung for crimes against humanity to the heros of the American space program.
It’s shocking how short the public’s attention span is. Dark Mission, the book by Richard Hoagland and Mike Bara is a real eye opener to the secret history of NASA in how it is run by a cabal of Nazis, Masons, and Magicians (those in Crowley’s Order of the Golden Dawn).
Sturmbannführer Werner von Braun received the National Medal of Science in 1975. His stance looks like the mirror of this famous gesture (as above so below):
Note the all seeing eye within the triangle in background. Everything with Hitler was symbolic.
It’s fascinating to me that Werner von Braun went to Antarctica in 66-67 on NASA’s dime. It reminds me of the Nazi’s Neuschwabenland in Antarctica where they discovered warm freshwater lakes…
…and Operation Highjump, officially titled The United States Navy Antarctic Developments Program (46-47). Highjump was a United States Navy operation organized by Admiral Richard E. Byrd Jr. which included 4,700 men, 13 ships, and multiple aircraft. The “primary mission” of Operation Highjump was to establish the Antarctic research base Little America IV. The secondary mission may have been to track down the fleeing Nazis who may have made it to the hollow earth where they met with Innerterrestrials.
Some say Highjump was “a covert US military operation to conquer alleged secret underground Nazi facilities in Antarctica and capture the German Vril flying discs, or Thule mercury-powered spaceship prototypes.”
“As Werner Von Braun related to Dr. Carol Rosin, his spokesperson for the last 4 years of his life, a maniacal machine – the military, industrial, intelligence, laboratory complex – would go from Cold War, to Rogue Nations, to Global Terrorism (the stage we find ourselves at today) to the ultimate trump card: A Hoaxed Threat From Space.” Steven M. Greer MD, Director, The Disclosure Project. See here for more info.
Whatever the case von Braun was into some heavy duty stuff. Here he is with Walt Disney.
Disney and von Braun made a series together called Man in Space in 1954. This series made the former Sturmbannführer a family friendly figure, selling the idea of space travel to the public.
Richard Hoagland has pointed out that in one scene in “Man in Space” they show an alien base on the far side of the Moon which they say in the film is located “at 33 degrees…”
Disneyland Club 33
The Magic Kingdom has a mysterious private organization called Club 33. Perhaps it is no wonder because Walt Disney himself was a 33rd degree freemason, although he died just before Club 33 was opened.
Officially maintained as a secret feature of the theme park, the entrance of the club is located next to the Blue Bayou Restaurant at “33 Royal Street” with the entrance recognizable by an ornate address plate with the number 33 engraved on it. When riding Pirates of the Caribbean, just as the ride departs, the Blue Bayou restaurant is visible, but the balconies above it are actually a part of Club 33…To enter Club 33, a guest must press a buzzer on an intercom concealed by a hidden panel in the doorway. A receptionist will ask for their name over the intercom and, if access is granted, open the door to a small, ornate lobby.
(Fair use logo of Club 33)
As of 2010, there is a 14 year wait list for membership and it is closed to new additions. It only allows 487 members. Members pay an initiation fee of $27,500 (if they are a corporation) or $10,450 (for individuals). On top of that, they pay annual fees of about $6,100 or $3,275, respectively.
NASA Runway 33
The single runway at Kennedy Space Center in Florida is called Runway 33. It has a heading of 330 degrees that matches the angle of the coastline at Cape Canaveral. Perhaps they chose this spot because of the 330 degree bearing of the coast?
This is where the space shuttle has landed many times. Its immediately adjacent to the two launch complexes where all Apollo and Space Shuttle mission left Earth.
Here’s a letter from Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin wrote on NASA letterhead sent to the Sovereign Grand Commander of the Supreme Council, 33° regarding the Scottish Rite Flag he supposedly carried to the moon.