| Subject: Exopolitical Press Release |
| From: prime137@hotmail.com (ß’ ¹¹) |
| Date: 05/01/2004, 06:08 |
| Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo |
Press Release - Jan. 4
University Researcher Argues Kissinger's Power Politics Drives
Government Policy
on Extraterrestrials
Dr Michael E. Salla, author of Exopolitics: Political Implications of
the Extraterrestrial Presence (Dandelion Books, 2004), argues that Henry
Kissinger developed the strategic philosophy used by political elites in
responding to extraterrestrials. Dr
Salla, a researcher based at American University, Washington DC., has
been studying the political implications of an undisclosed
extraterrestrial presence since May, 2001.
In a recently released research paper he argues that the secret defense
system that has emerged as a result of Kissinger's 'power politics' or
realpolitik, has led to the complete exclusion of the general public
from extraterrestrial affairs and from playing any significant role in
planetary defense.
Salla argues that rather than viewing the general public as a strategic
asset in developing a successful response to the extraterrestrial
presence, policy makers have viewed the general public as a strategic
liability that needed to remain uninformed of the extraterrestrial
presence.
The role of the general public became a passive one of merely remaining
a provider of basic resources for the extensive network of
compartmentalized black projects designed to provide a successful
response to the extraterrestrial presence.
Salla argues that there is an inherent flaw in Kissinger's development
of the power politics strategy that relegates the general public into a
passive role in any global defense system. The development of a
classified compartmentalized network of secret projects funded by a
black budget has been subverted by extraterrestrials who have been
infiltrating national security agencies for at least the last 50 years.
Salla claims there is a need for full disclosure of the extraterrestrial
presence so that global humanity can play an active role in global
defense by developing human capacities in a range of so called
'non-strategic' areas such as: `consciousness raising´; galactic
history and education; health; poverty; and incorporation of
environmentally friendly extraterrestrial technologies.
Salla argues that the strategic doctrine underpinning the global defense
of the planet is unbalanced and skewed towards a military and
technological response to a phenomenon that requires balancing
military/technological projects with grass roots human capacity
building. He claims that finding this balance will enable policy makers
and the general public to deal with a range of global problems that
provide a cover for subversion of human affairs by those
extraterrestrial races seeking to control the Earth´s population and
resources.
He concludes that to ignore the failure of power politics as an
appropriate strategic response to the extraterrestrial presence is to
invite the same sequence of policy mistakes that led to the First World
War, but this time at an interplanet ary level that would be a direct
threat to human sovereignty and freedom.
The complete paper is available at:
http://www.exopolitics.org/Study-Paper-7.htm
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