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Phil Schieder 1995 Three Lectures

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Three lectures by Phil Schneider, rumored to be what got him killed. Healthy skepticism and an open mind is encouraged.

From AboveTopSecret.com

UNDERGROUND BASES LECTURE, MAY 1995
Lecture By Phil Schneider

Phil Schneider, the lecturer of this article, was executed under mysterious circumstances in January 1996. According to some, he had been tortured repeatedly before his death. Phil Schneider was an ex-government engineer who was involved in building underground facilities. He was one of three people to survive the 1979 fire fight between the Greys and the U.S. intelligence/military forces at the Dulce underground base in New Mexico. In May 1995, Phil Schneider lectured on what he had discovered during his career. Seven months afterward, he was tortured and killed by those whom he had previously been employed by.

Comments

Does anyone have this somewhere?

There is a lot of gold in the old ConCen archives that has long since disappeared. I had tons of torrents from back in the day as well. The "Search Entire Site" function here can find tons of stuff. But I am unable to re-seed most of it.

I was only able to find a documentary about Schneider called The Underground and another obscure lecture by him. I reckon all of his stuff is somewhere on YouTube as well...

However your suggestion is good, it does look like most of his stuff should be on there...
There was a documentary I got from somewhere, maybe here, something like
"Hitler's saucers from the third reich" or something like that, which was interesting...
The fella there said (it was a long lecture), that the U.S. has had technology to dismantle mail,
read the contents, evaluate/translate them, then re-assemble the mail and that within a fraction of a second, since the fifties or something...
Very interesting to consider and this could mean many things, anything from intercepting present e-mail (the most easily graspable concept here) to the more outrageous ones...I'm assuming it's more on the outrageous spectrum. Another thing to consider is that while these newspapers and other things were allegedly perfectly translated in these times, now our most expensive AI algos and machines usually (allegedly) fail to do even the simplest translations to satisfaction. What does that tell you? Maybe it just reflects us people...

Has anyone else said the same as Phil though, ever?