Floyd wrote:Saw that tour
Buy a new Project Disinofalot t- shirt
http://www.zazzle.com/project_camelot_tee_shirt-235109131416020802On the back it says 'we feed you bullshit for breakfast'.
A snip at $23
This post was brought to you by our sponsers Hoaxland and Wilcrook and their amazing inside knowledge of predicting outrageous events that never happen. Just to keep you distracted and out of focus.
Have a nice day.
Haha, Nice one. They might sell better though if they had a picture of the Beatles 'Magical Mystery Tour Bus' printed on the back though, with your tour guides - David Wilcock & Ashayana Deane at the helm.. It's almost as honest, because for a small (or large) fee they will certainly take you on a fantastical trip round the galaxy and back..
As you know though Floyd, I don't like to throw the baby out with the bathwater, and in doing so dismiss the (few) potential nuggets of worthy information and genuine contributions that Camelot and their witnesses have made to this never ending mystery. I have no doubt that within the layers of disinformation and fantasy, we've been afforded a few worthy facts and revelations, if only a few..
Here is my official assessment of 'Camelot & Friends':
I don't want to be nasty to Kerry, because I honestly think she means well and has given things her full effort, despite some serious lapses in judgment/good taste.. Especially in becoming associated with that A. Deane character, who is undoubtedly a professional fraudster, and is simply cashing in on the 'Camelot market' because she realized she could sell her jive to the Camelot audience.. Whatever Kerry's motivations, Deane is NOT a whistleblower or a witness to anything other than her own scams, but I feel it's important to note when something is a grey area, and I really don't think Kerry herself is a conscious scammer, or at least she didn't start out that way.
Personally, I think she started out on a journey to try and uncover truth, and got waylaid by all the disinformants that were sent to her by the intelligence community. The truth-seeking was turned into a circus pretty quickly, and it turned into a search for entertainment from there on in. Like all good disinformants, they gave her snippets of truth mixed with a heavy dose of exactly what she wanted to hear, and between her, these agents, and all of their associates - they constructed an epic science fiction narrative that has become so large, layered and convoluted - that it is difficult for them to consider it might all be a farce.. Can you imagine the fallout that would result in that whole house of cards coming down? As I said before, it would be like finding out there is no god, or that you'd been living a total lie.. Not many people are willing to face that kind of pain and internal humiliation, and in some ways I can't blame Kerry for staying the course. They've built up an entire worldview, with a whole community of believable liars and amicable, but misled witnesses spinning all kinds of rubbish and constantly reaffirming their beliefs, that it would be difficult for them to believe that a lie could be so big..
As is always the case - the bigger the lie, the more readily it is believed. If the establishment wants people to be chasing reptiles, stargates and aliens; they're not going to just send one or two people out to start spinning, they're going to send a whole army out over a period of years, and they're going to keep building on that narrative with all their resources and expertise in human psychology, so that it 'must' be true..
As for Bill Ryan - whatever his deal is, I don't think anyone can trust him, especially after his part in the systematic deception of Avalon followers, and all the rubbish that surrounded that fiasco. It's clear that the spiel he dishes out about honesty and transparency is far from the truth - regardless of what the details are. He is in it for reasons other than what he claims, and from my perspective he almost seemed to be wanting to start up some kind of cult or build a new-age empire of some description, with himself as the 'humble messiah..' I could be wrong, but I got some really dodgy vibes from him, during and after the Charles fiasco.
I don't really know anything about that 'Inelia Benz' character, but the whole thing stunk to high heaven and I suspected that she was being used by Bill Ryan as a vehicle through which to promote himself and his latest business endeavor - some attempt at starting up a new narrative on which he intended to build a following of some sort. That's what it looked like anyway. Either that or a desperate attempt to reinvigorate his image and contain the PR damage in the wake of the Charles fiasco.
The other close associates of Camelot constitute a grey area though, in my opinion anyway:
I think Hoagland's work on the Moon and Mars is valid and worthy, but the roller-coaster ride of cosmic conspiracy theory that he has taken us on since then, is just him trying to keep people interested in his work. I don't think he honestly believes the incredible bunk that he dishes out on the radio etc, and he just formulates these spectacular theories to distract people from the fact that he's a dying star in the UFO circuit, with no new material left to contribute. Unlike some people though, his initial work was based on real data, and so I still have some respect for his earlier contributions. This stuff with Elenin and YU55 was a fricking circus though - he certainly knows how to spin a line..
As for Wilcock - I think in one way he has been programmed by all the new-age, 'Barbara Marciniak/Law of One' type material, so has himself been a victim of heavy new-age propaganda, which is just as powerful as any other religious brainwashing - but on the other he has willfully made some utterly ludicrous claims about 2012 and 'ascension'; re-hashing all the old myths and mixing them together with a load of flimsy pseudoscience and snippets of popular UFO culture, in order to peddle a sensational science fiction book under the guise of 'non fiction', and make some big bucks on Amazon. He's got one hell of an ego, and is also very gullible - even his buddy Hoagland has said ''David will believe anyone who says they're an insider'' Including the obviously fraudulent Ben Fulford.. Again - I don't know how conscious he is of his own fraud, but anyone who gets put on the NY Times Bestsellers list, has been placed there with the expressed authorization of the CFR, in order to entertain and distract the public, not inform them. It takes big bucks and the approval of the CFR to get published and get on that list, and so you can rest assured that his book is only going to lead people round in circles with lots of false hope about the future and unprovable theories about the past.. World shattering revelations do not get published in bestselling books - at least not before a series of lengthy court cases and some very serious opposition.
In Wilcock's world though, he got published because he is a reincarnation of some prophet who gets visions of the future through his dreams, and it was his synchro-mystic destiny to shepherd the world into the new-age.... However he started out - he is now right up there with the best of the new-age heroes; entertaining people and obfuscating what little truth lies in his publications with lots of flowery, utopian rhetoric that will only come back to bite him in the arse in 2013..
I would probably categorize Richard Dolan as a 'friend of Camelot' but I have to say that as a scholar, he has probably done some of the most solid and academically viable work out there on the subject of UFO's. Traditionally, he maintained his objectivity and didn't get too caught up with belief or conjecture, preferring documentation and official record over opinion or testimony - although in recent years he seems to have become much more sympathetic to the 'Camelot' brand of UFO dialogue, and we have seen reptiles start to creep their way into his repertoire.. Best way to compromise a legitimate researcher, IMO.
Bob Dean - old man with a few good tales to tell, but who has allowed his love of storytelling to overtake his concern for truth. I feel the basic facts about his early military experience are valid, but all the stuff he added in after it was pretty shady and ambiguous, and I tend to think he makes things up these days in order to maintain an audience, or is at the very least exaggerating and inflating his experiences to a very high degree.. I think he also gets fed a load of nonsense through his 'old boy network' which he unfortunately seems to take as gospel.. Heart in the right place though.
And last but not least, Kerry's latest recruit (or is it the other way round?) - Ashayana Deane:
Nothing short of a total fraudster and self styled cult leader if you ask me. Nothing good to say about her; pure, new-age hucksterism.. The internet is absolutely packed with these scheming opportunists, who seem to have a talent for convincing themselves (and others) of the most made up, contrived pseudo-spiritual nonsense, in order to boost themselves into internet stardom and make an easy buck in the process. I don't doubt that some of them have a genuine interest in some of the material, but what they seem to do is study all the popular new-age material, re-hash it with a heavy dose of their own bullshit, and then spin it back to the new-age community as if it's some kind of sacred truth. They take the most popular parts of new-age literature, UFO culture, and ancient myths, and weave them all into a comprehensive, pre-packaged belief system which they can sell to gullible new-agers who are on the lookout for a new religion to join. And that's it - it is a religion and a cult, in every sense of the word. One that has been custom made for the new-age zeitgeist by characters that know full well what they're doing..
Why in the world Kerry Cassidy has decided to openly promote this sinister character, I don't know, but I can only imagine that there might be some practical incentive for doing so. Kerry may be naive and impressionable, but I don't think she is patently stupid, and certainly not confused enough to actually buy the fraudulent religious product that Deane is peddling. I have found and observed, that many of the most 'spiritual, loving enlightened' people are actually some of the most dark, toxic and cynical creatures on the planet - once the mask is removed. Who in their right mind would be happy to manufacture a cult, and then take pleasure in being enshrined by a flock of very lost and confused people? Not to mention the blatant extortion of cash.. It takes a certain personality type, usually someone with sociopathic tendencies or personality disorders to knowingly (and happily) promote a lie as if it is the truth. Politics and finance are the usual professions for these types, as they always gravitate toward power and grandiosity, no matter what the cost, but not all of them are capable of getting to that level. The cult-leading profession is perhaps the second best thing for the career sociopath who doesn't like office hours or business dress. She's probably high on coke half the time, as she looks totally fried in all of her photos, and I have heard someone else mention that this was the case. One can only guess as to whether she's managed to convince herself of any of the claptrap she spouts, or whether the whole gig is a deliberate and conscious scam.
The other thing is that this kind of thing can be an industry in its own right too. It's always been known within certain circles and certain personality types, that you can bring in a fair wage in catering to religions or cults and/or writing books to suit their followers. There are always people around who have the right combination of cynicism, ego and cunning to plagiarize the existing literature and use it to churn out re-hashed books on the subject; making a fair bit of cash in the process. They themselves have no real interest in the subject, but they follow the rest of the literature and they know what to say to an audience to hook them in. Some people have no doubt made lucrative careers in the religious and new-age fields, writing under different pseudonyms or even speaking to groups; purely because they know what will sell. They're in it for the money and they have no care for the material, so they just keep pumping out books that tell people what they want to hear. I would put Deane in this category somewhere, although I am sure there is also a genuine element of mental delusion there as well, to whatever degree.. There is also the fact that the CIA an MI6 have been involved in creating and controlling these types of cults for decades; through the use of psychological manipulation, drugs, and covert technology, and we can only speculate as to whether there are any intelligence connections there.
Anyway, that's my official write-up on Camelot and Friends - some black and some white, with some grey in the middle. Naive at best, and consciously fraudulent at worst.. In fairness though, it probably pays to remember that many of these people are victims too. Kerry has had a constant stream of disinformants aimed at her for 5 years, many of which she has befriended in good conscience, and so it's in many ways to be expected. I respect her effort, but I'm afraid there isn't much truth or enlightenment to be had there..