| 
	  
	  
	  
	
	
	 by
	
	
            
            
	Will Hart
 
	
	Spanish version 
	
	2002 
	Extracted from Nexus Magazine 
	Volume 9, Number 3 
	April-May 2002 
	from
	
	NexusMagazine Website 
	  
	  
		
			
				| 
	The scientific establishment tends to reject, suppress or ignore evidence 
	
	 
	that conflicts with accepted theories, while denigrating or persecuting the 
	messenger. |  
	  
	  
	  
	"The Brain Police" and "The Big Lie"
 
	Any time you allege a conspiracy is afoot, especially in the field of 
	science, you are treading on thin ice. We tend to be very skeptical about 
	conspiracies--unless the Mafia or some Muslim radicals are behind the 
	alleged plot. But the evidence is overwhelming and the irony is that much of 
	it is in plain view.
 
 The good news is that the players are obvious. Their game plan and even 
	their play-by-play tactics are transparent, once you learn to spot them. 
	However, it is not so easy to penetrate through the smokescreen of 
	propaganda and disinformation to get to their underlying motives and goals. 
	It would be convenient if we could point to a plumber's unit and a boldface 
	liar like Richard Nixon, but this is a more subtle operation.
 
 The bad news: the conspiracy is global and there are many vested interest 
	groups. A cursory investigation yields the usual suspects: scientists with a 
	theoretical axe to grind, careers to further and the status quo to maintain. 
	Their modus operandi is "The Big Lie" -- and the bigger and more widely 
	publicized, the better.
 
	  
	They rely on invoking their academic credentials to 
	support their arguments, and the presumption is that no one has the right to 
	question their authoritarian pronouncements that: 
		
			
			
			there is no mystery about who built the Great Pyramid or what the methods 
	of construction were, and the Sphinx shows no signs of water 
			damage
			
			there were no humans in the Americas before 
			20,000 BC
			
			the first civilization dates back no further 
			than 6000 BC
			
			there are no documented anomalous, 
			unexplained or enigmatic data to take into account
			
			there are no lost or unaccounted-for 
			civilizations. 
	Let the evidence to the contrary be damned! 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Personal Attacks: Dispute over Age of the Sphinx and Great Pyramid
 
	In 1993, NBC in the USA aired The Mysteries of the Sphinx,
	which presented 
	geological evidence showing that 
	
	
	the Sphinx was at least twice as old (9,000 
	years) as Egyptologists claimed. It has become well known as the "water 
	erosion controversy". An examination of the politicking that Egyptologists 
	deployed to combat this undermining of their turf is instructive.
 
 Self-taught Egyptologist John Anthony West brought the water erosion issue 
	to the attention of geologist Dr Robert Schoch. They went to Egypt and 
	launched an intensive on-site investigation. After thoroughly studying the 
	Sphinx first hand, the geologist came to share West's preliminary conclusion 
	and they announced their findings.
 
 Dr Zahi Hawass, the Giza Monuments chief, wasted no time in firing a barrage 
	of public criticism at the pair. Renowned Egyptologist Dr Mark Lehner, who 
	is regarded as the world's foremost expert on the Sphinx, joined his attack. 
	He charged West and Schoch with being "ignorant and insensitive". That was a 
	curious accusation which took the matter off the professional level and put 
	the whole affair on a personal plane. It did not address the facts or issues 
	at all and it was highly unscientific.
 
 But we must note the standard tactic of discrediting anyone who dares to 
	call the accepted theories into question. Shifting the focus away from the 
	issues and "personalizing" the debate is a highly effective strategy--one 
	which is often used by politicians who feel insecure about their positions. Hawass
	and Lehner invoked their untouchable status and presumed authority. (One 
	would think that a geologist's assessment would hold more weight on this 
	particular point.)
 
 A short time later, Schoch, Hawass and Lehner were invited to debate the 
	issue at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. West was 
	not allowed to participate because he lacked the required credentials.
 
 This points to a questionable assumption that is part of the establishment's 
	arsenal: only degreed scientists can practice science. Two filters keep the uncredentialled, independent researcher out of the loop: (1) credentials, 
	and (2) peer review. You do not get to number two unless you have number one.
 
 Science is a method that anyone can learn and apply. It does not require a 
	degree to observe and record facts and think critically about them, 
	especially in the non-technical social sciences. In a free and open society, 
	science has to be a democratic process.
 
 Be that as it may, West was barred. The elements of the debate have been 
	batted back and forth since then without resolution. It is similar to the 
	controversy over who built the 
	
	
	Giza pyramids and how.
 
 This brings up the issue of The Big Lie and how it has been promoted for 
	generations in front of God and everyone. The controversy over how the 
	Great 
	Pyramid was constructed is one example. It could be easily settled if 
	Egyptologists wanted to resolve the dispute. A simple test could be designed 
	and arranged by impartial engineers that would either prove or disprove 
	their longstanding disputed theory--that it was built using the primitive 
	tools and methods of the day, circa 2500 BC.
 
 Why hasn't this been done?
 
	  
	 The answer is so obvious, it seems impossible: 
	they know that the theory is bogus. Could a trained, highly educated 
	scientist really believe that 2.3 million tons of stone, some blocks 
	weighing 70 tons, could have been transported and lifted by primitive 
	methods? That seems improbable, though they have no compunction against 
	lying to the public, writing textbooks and defending this theory against 
	alternative theories. However, we must note that they will not subject 
	themselves to the bottom-line test.
 We think it is incumbent upon any scientist to bear the burden of proof of 
	his/her thesis; however, the social scientists who make these claims have 
	never stood up to that kind of scrutiny. That is why we must suspect a 
	conspiracy. No other scientific discipline would get away with bending the 
	rules of science. All that Egyptologists have ever done is bat down 
	alternative theories using underhanded tactics. It is time to insist that 
	they prove their own proposals.
 
 Why would scientists try to hide the truth and avoid any test of their 
	hypothesis? Their motivations are equally transparent. If it can be proved 
	that the Egyptians did not build the Great Pyramid in 2500 BC using 
	primitive methods, or if the Sphinx can be dated to 9000 BC, 
	the whole house 
	of cards comes tumbling down. Orthodox views of cultural evolution are based 
	upon a chronology of civilization having started in 
	
	Sumeria no earlier than 
	4000 BC. The theory does not permit an advanced civilization to have existed 
	prior to that time. End of discussion. Archaeology and history lose their 
	meaning without a fixed timeline as a point of reference.
 
 Since the theory of "cultural evolution" has been tied to Darwin's general 
	theory of evolution, even more is at stake. Does this explain why facts, 
	anomalies and enigmas are denied, suppressed and/or ignored? Yes, it does.
 
	  
	 The biological sciences today are based on Darwinism. 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Pressure Tactics: The Ica Stones of Peru
 
	Now we turn to another, very different case. In 1966, 
	Dr Javier Cabrera 
	received a stone as a gift from a poor local farmer in his native Ica, Peru. 
	A fish was carved on the stone, which would not have meant much to the 
	average villager but it did mean a lot to the educated Dr Cabrera. He 
	recognized it as a long-extinct species. This aroused his curiosity. He 
	purchased more stones from the farmer, who said he had collected them near 
	the river after a flood.
 
 Dr Cabrera accumulated more and more stones, and word of their existence and 
	potential import reached the archaeological community. Soon, the doctor had 
	amassed thousands of "Ica stones". The sophisticated carvings were as 
	enigmatic as they were fascinating. Someone had carved men fighting with 
	dinosaurs, men with telescopes and men performing operations with surgical 
	equipment. They also contained drawings of lost continents.
 
 Several of the stones were sent to Germany and the etchings were dated to 
	remote antiquity. But we all know that men could not have lived at the time 
	of dinosaurs; Homo sapiens has only existed for about 100,000 years.
 
 The BBC got wind of this discovery and swooped down to produce a documentary 
	about the Ica stones. The media exposure ignited a storm of controversy. 
	Archaeologists criticized the Peruvian government for being lax about 
	enforcing antiquities laws (but that was not their real concern). Pressure 
	was applied to government officials.
 
 The farmer who had been selling the stones to Cabrera was arrested; he 
	claimed to have found them in a cave but refused to disclose the exact 
	location to authorities, or so they claimed.
 
 This case was disposed of so artfully that it would do any corrupt 
	politician proud. The Peruvian government threatened to prosecute and 
	imprison the farmer. He was offered and accepted a plea bargain; he then 
	recanted his story and "admitted" to having carved the stones himself. That 
	seems highly implausible, since he was uneducated and unskilled and there 
	were 11,000 stones in all. Some were fairly large and intricately carved 
	with animals and scenes that the farmer would not have had knowledge of 
	without being a paleontologist. He would have needed to work every day for 
	several decades to produce that volume of stones. However, the underlying 
	facts were neither here nor there. The Ica stones were labeled "hoax" and 
	forgotten.
 
 The case did not require a head-to-head confrontation or public discrediting 
	of non-scientists by scientists; it was taken care of with invisible 
	pressure tactics. Since it was filed under "hoax", the enigmatic evidence 
	never had to be dealt with, as it did in the next example.
 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Censorship of "Forbidden" Thinking - Evidence for Mankind's Great Antiquity
 
	
	The case of author 
	
	
	
	Michael Cremo is well documented, and it also 
	demonstrates how the scientific establishment openly uses pressure tactics 
	on the media and government. His book Forbidden Archeology examines many 
	previously ignored examples of artifacts that prove modern man's antiquity 
	far exceeds the age given in accepted chronologies.
 
 The examples which he and his co-author present are controversial, but the 
	book became far more controversial than the contents when it was used in a 
	documentary.
 
 In 1996, NBC broadcast a special called The Mysterious Origins of Man, which 
	featured material from Cremo's book. The reaction from the scientific 
	community went off the Richter scale. NBC was deluged with letters from 
	irate scientists who called the producer "a fraud" and the whole program "a 
	hoax".
 
 But the scientists went further than this--a lot further. In an extremely 
	unconscionable sequence of bizarre moves, they tried to force NBC 
	not to 
	rebroadcast the popular program, but that effort failed. Then they took the 
	most radical step of all: they presented their case to the federal 
	government and requested the Federal Communications Commission to step in 
	and bar NBC from airing the program again.
 
 This was not only an apparent infringement of free speech and a blatant 
	attempt to thwart commerce, it was an unprecedented effort to censor 
	intellectual discourse. If the public or any government agency made an 
	attempt to handcuff the scientific establishment, the public would never 
	hear the end of it.
 
 The letter to the FCC written by Dr Allison Palmer, President of the 
	Institute for Cambrian Studies, is revealing:
 
		
		At the very least, NBC should be required to make substantial prime-time 
	apologies to their viewing audience for a sufficient period of time so that 
	the audience clearly gets the message that they were duped. In addition, 
		NBC 
	should perhaps be fined sufficiently so that a major fund for public science 
	education can be established. 
	I think we have some good leads on who 
	"the Brain Police" are. And I really 
	do not think "conspiracy" is too strong a word--because for every case of 
	this kind of attempted suppression that is exposed, 10 others are going on 
	successfully. 
	 
	  
	We have no idea how many enigmatic artifacts or dates have 
	been labeled "error" and tucked away in storage warehouses or circular 
	files, never to see the light of day. 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Data Rejection
 
	
	Inconvenient Dating in Mexico 
	Then there is the high-profile case of Dr 
	Virginia Steen-McIntyre, a 
	geologist working for the US Geological Survey (USGS), who was dispatched to 
	an archaeological site in Mexico to date a group of artifacts in the 1970s. 
	This travesty also illustrates how far established scientists will go to 
	guard orthodox tenets.
 
 McIntyre used state-of-the-art equipment and backed up her results by using 
	four different methods, but her results were off the chart. The lead 
	archaeologist expected a date of 25,000 years or less, and the geologist's 
	finding was 250,000 years or more.
 
 The figure of 25,000 years or less was critical to the Bering Strait "crossing" 
	theory, and it was the motivation behind the head archaeologist's tossing Steen-McIntyre's results in the circular file and asking for a new series of 
	dating tests. This sort of reaction does not occur when dates match the 
	expected chronological model that supports accepted theories.
 
 Steen-McIntyre was given a chance to retract her conclusions, but she 
	refused. She found it hard thereafter to get her papers published and she 
	lost a teaching job at an American university.
 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Government Suppression and Ethnocentrism
 
	
	Avoiding Anomalous Evidence in NZ, 
	China and Mexico 
	
	In New Zealand, the government actually stepped in and enacted a law 
	forbidding the public from entering a controversial archaeological zone. 
	This story appeared in the book, Ancient Celtic New Zealand, by Mark Doutré.
 
 However, as we will find (and as I promised at the beginning of the 
	article), this is a complicated conspiracy. Scientists trying to protect 
	their "hallowed" theories while furthering their careers are not the only 
	ones who want artifacts and data suppressed. This is where the situation 
	gets sticky.
 
 The Waipoua Forest became a controversial site in New Zealand because an 
	archaeological dig apparently showed evidence of a non-Polynesian culture 
	that preceded the Maori--a fact that the tribe was not happy with. They 
	learned of the results of the excavations before the general public did and 
	complained to the government. According to Doutré, the outcome was "an 
	official archival document, which clearly showed an intention by New Zealand 
	government departments to withhold archaeological information from public 
	scrutiny for 75 years".
 
 The public got wind of this fiasco but the government denied the claim. 
	However, official documents show that an embargo had been placed on the 
	site. Doutré is a student of New Zealand history and archaeology. He is 
	concerned because he says that artifacts proving that there was an earlier 
	culture which preceded the Maori are missing from museums.
 
	  
	
	He asks what 
	happened to several anomalous remains: 
		
		Where are the ancient Indo-European hair samples 
		(wavy red brown hair), originally obtained from a rock shelter near
		Watakere, that were on display 
	at the Auckland War Memorial Museum for many years? Where is the giant 
	skeleton found near Mitimati? 
	
	Unfortunately this is not the only such incident. Ethnocentrism has become a 
	factor in the conspiracy to hide mankind's true history. Author Graham 
	Hancock has been attacked by various ethnic groups for reporting similar 
	enigmatic findings.
 The problem for researchers concerned with establishing humanity's true 
	history is that the goals of nationalists or ethnic groups who want to lay 
	claim to having been in a particular place first, often dovetail with the 
	goals of cultural evolutionists.
 
 Archaeologists are quick to go along with suppressing these kinds of 
	anomalous finds. One reason Egyptologists so jealously guard the Great 
	Pyramid's construction date has to do with the issue of national pride.
 
 The case of the Takla Makan Desert mummies in western China is another 
	example of this phenomenon. In the 1970s and 1980s, an unaccounted-for 
	Caucasian culture was suddenly unearthed in China. The arid environment 
	preserved the remains of a blond-haired, blue-eyed people who lived in 
	pre-dynastic China. They wore colorful robes, boots, stockings and hats. 
	The Chinese were not happy about this revelation and they have downplayed 
	the enigmatic find, even though Asians were found buried alongside the 
	Caucasian mummies.
 
 National Geographic writer Thomas B. Allen mused in a 1996 article about his 
	finding a potsherd bearing a fingerprint of the potter. When he inquired if 
	he could take the fragment to a forensic anthropologist, the Chinese 
	scientist asked whether he "would be able to tell if the potter was a white 
	man". Allen said he was not sure, and the official pocketed the fragment and 
	quietly walked away. It appears that many things get in the way of 
	scientific discovery and disclosure.
 
 The existence of the Olmec culture in Old Mexico has always posed a problem. 
	Where did the Negroid people depicted on the colossal heads come from? Why 
	are there Caucasians carved on the stele in what is Mexico's seed 
	civilization? What is worse, why aren't the indigenous Mexican people found 
	on the Olmec artifacts?
 
	  
	
	Recently a Mexican archaeologist solved the problem 
	by making a fantastic claim: that 
	
	the Olmec heads -- which generations of 
	people of all ethnic groups have agreed bear a striking resemblance to 
	Africans -- were really representations of the local tribe. 
	  
	  
	  
	
	STORM-TROOPERS FOR DARWINISM
 
	
	The public does not seem at all aware of the fact that the scientific 
	establishment has a double standard when it comes to the free flow of 
	information. In essence, it goes like this... Scientists are highly 
	educated, well trained and intellectually capable of processing all types of 
	information, and they can make the correct critical distinctions between 
	fact and fiction, reality and fantasy. The unwashed public is simply 
	incapable of functioning on this high mental plane.
 
 The noble ideal of the scientist as a highly trained, impartial, apolitical 
	observer and assembler of established facts into a useful body of knowledge 
	seems to have been shredded under the pressures and demands of the real 
	world. Science has produced many positive benefits for society; but we 
	should know by now that science has a dark, negative side. Didn't those meek 
	fellows in the clean lab coats give us nuclear bombs and biological weapons? 
	The age of innocence ended in World War II.
 
 That the scientific community has an attitude of intellectual superiority is 
	thinly veiled under a carefully orchestrated public relations guise. We 
	always see Science and Progress walking hand in hand. Science as an 
	institution in a democratic society has to function in the same way as the 
	society at large; it should be open to debate, argument and 
	counter-argument. There is no place for unquestioned authoritarianism. Is 
	modern science meeting these standards?
 
 In the Fall of 2001, PBS aired a seven-part series, titled Evolution. Taken 
	at face value, that seems harmless enough. However, while the program was 
	presented as pure, objective, investigative science journalism, it 
	completely failed to meet even minimum standards of impartial reporting. The 
	series was heavily weighted towards the view that the theory of evolution is 
	"a science fact" that is accepted by "virtually all reputable scientists in 
	the world", and not a theory that has weaknesses and strong scientific 
	critics.
 
 The series did not even bother to interview scientists who have criticisms 
	of 
	
	Darwinism: not "creationists" but bona fide scientists. To correct this 
	deficiency, a group of 100 dissenting scientists felt compelled to issue a 
	press release, "A Scientific Dissent on Darwinism", on the day the first 
	program was scheduled to go to air. Nobel nominee Henry
	"Fritz" Schaefer
	was 
	among them. He encouraged open public debate of Darwin's theory:
 
		
		Some defenders of Darwinism embrace standards of evidence for evolution that 
	as scientists they would never accept in other circumstances. 
	
	We have seen this same "unscientific" approach applied to archaeology and 
	anthropology, where "scientists" simply refuse to prove their theories yet 
	appoint themselves as the final arbiters of "the facts". It would be naive 
	to think that the scientists who cooperated in the production of the series 
	were unaware that there would be no counter-balancing presentation by 
	critics of Darwin's theory.
 Richard Milton is a science journalist. He had been an ardent true believer 
	in Darwinian doctrine until his investigative instincts kicked in one day. 
	After 20 years of studying and writing about evolution, he suddenly realized 
	that there were many disconcerting holes in the theory. He decided to try to 
	allay his doubts and prove the theory to himself by using the standard 
	methods of investigative journalism.
 
 Milton became a regular visitor to London's famed Natural History Museum.
	He 
	painstakingly put every main tenet and classic proof of Darwinism to the 
	test. The results shocked him. He found that the theory could not even stand 
	up to the rigors of routine investigative journalism.
 
 The veteran science writer took a bold step and published a book titled The 
	Facts of Life: Shattering the Myths of Darwinism. It is clear that the 
	Darwinian myth had been shattered for him, but many more myths about science 
	would also be crushed after his book came out. Milton says:
 
		
		I experienced the witch-hunting activity of the Darwinist police at first 
	hand - it was deeply disappointing to find myself being described by a 
	prominent Oxford zoologist [Richard Dawkins] as "loony", "stupid" and "in 
	need of psychiatric help" in response to purely scientific reporting. 
	
	(Does this sound like stories that came out of the Soviet Union 20 years ago 
	when dissident scientists there started speaking out?)
 Dawkins launched a letter-writing campaign to newspaper editors, implying 
	that Milton was a "mole" creationist whose work should be dismissed. Anyone 
	at all familiar with politics will recognize this as a standard 
	Machiavellian by-the-book "character assassination" tactic. Dawkins is a 
	highly respected scientist, whose reputation and standing in the scientific 
	community carry a great deal of weight.
 
 According to Milton, the process came to a head when the London Times Higher 
	Education Supplement commissioned him to write a critique of Darwinism. The 
	publication foreshadowed his coming piece: "Next Week: Darwinism - Richard 
	Milton goes on the attack". Dawkins caught wind of this and wasted no time 
	in nipping this heresy in the bud. He contacted the editor, Auriol Stevens, 
	and accused Milton of being a "creationist", and prevailed upon Stevens to 
	pull the plug on the article. Milton learned of this behind-the-scenes 
	backstabbing and wrote a letter of appeal to Stevens. In the end, she caved 
	in to Dawkins and scratched the piece.
 
 Imagine what would happen if a politician or bureaucrat used such pressure 
	tactics to kill a story in the mass media. It would ignite a huge scandal. 
	Not so with scientists, who seem to be regarded as "sacred cows" and beyond 
	reproach. There are many disturbing facts related to these cases. Darwin's 
	theory of evolution is the only theory routinely taught in our public school 
	system that has never been subjected to rigorous scrutiny; nor have any of 
	the criticisms been allowed into the curriculum.
 
 This is an interesting fact, because a recent poll showed that the American 
	public wants the theory of evolution taught to their children; however, "71 
	per cent of the respondents say biology teachers should teach both Darwinism 
	and scientific evidence against Darwinian theory". Nevertheless, there are 
	no plans to implement this balanced approach.
 
 It is ironic that Richard Dawkins has been appointed to the position of 
	Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.
	He is 
	a classic "Brain Police" stormtrooper, patrolling the neurological front 
	lines. The Western scientific establishment and mass media pride themselves 
	on being open public forums devoid of prejudice or censorship. However, no 
	television program examining the flaws and weaknesses of Darwinism has ever 
	been aired in Darwin's home country or in America. A scientist who opposes 
	the theory cannot get a paper published.
 
 The Mysterious Origins of Man was not a frontal attack on Darwinism; it 
	merely presented evidence that is considered anomalous by the precepts of 
	his theory of evolution.
 
 Returning to our bastions of intellectual integrity, Forest Mims was a solid 
	and skilled science journalist. He had never been the centre of any 
	controversy and so he was invited to write the most-read column in the 
	prestigious Scientific American, "The Amateur Scientist", a task he gladly 
	accepted. According to Mims, the magazine's editor Jonathan Piel then 
	learned that he also wrote articles for a number of Christian magazines.
 
	  
	
	The 
	editor called Mims into his office and confronted him. 
		
			
			
			"Do you believe in the theory of evolution?" Piel asked.
			
			Mims replied, "No, and neither does 
			Stephen Jay Gould." 
	
	His response did not affect Piel's decision to bump Mims off the popular 
	column after just three articles.
 This has the unpleasant odor of a witch-hunt. The writer never publicly 
	broadcast his private views or beliefs, so it would appear that the 
	"stormtroopers" now believe they have orders to make sure "unapproved" 
	thoughts are never publicly disclosed.
 
	  
	  
	  
	
	Taboo or Not Taboo?
 
	
	So, the monitors of "good thinking" are not just the elite of the scientific 
	community, as we have seen in several cases; they are television producers 
	and magazine editors as well. It seems clear that they are all driven by the 
	singular imperative of furthering "public science education", as the 
	president of the Cambrian Institute so aptly phrased it.
 
 However, there is a second item on the agenda, and that is to protect the 
	public from "unscientific" thoughts and ideas that might infect the mass 
	mind.
 
	  
	
	We outlined some of those taboo subjects at the beginning of the 
	article; now we should add that it is also "unwholesome" and "unacceptable" 
	to engage in any of the following research pursuits: 
	 
		
	 
	...and all the rest of the "pseudo-sciences".
	
	 
		
			
			
			Does this have a familiar ring to it? 
			
			
			Are we hearing the faint echoes of 
	religious zealotry?
			
			Who ever gave science the mission of engineering and directing the 
	inquisitive pursuits of the citizenry of the free world?  
	
	It is all but 
	impossible for any scientific paper that has anti-Darwinian ramifications to 
	be published in a mainstream scientific journal. It is also just as 
	impossible to get the "taboo" subjects even to the review table, and you can 
	forget about finding your name under the title of any article in Nature 
	unless you are a credentialed scientist, even if you are the next Albert 
	Einstein.
 To restate how this conspiracy begins, it is with two filters: credentials 
	and peer review. Modern science is now a maze of such filters set up to 
	promote certain orthodox theories and at the same time filter out that data 
	already prejudged to be unacceptable. Evidence and merit are not the guiding 
	principles; conformity and position within the established community have 
	replaced objectivity, access and openness.
 
 Scientists do not hesitate to launch the most outrageous personal attacks 
	against those they perceive to be the enemy. Eminent paleontologist Louis 
	Leakey penned this acid one-liner about 
	 
	
	
	Forbidden Archeology:
 
		
		"Your book is 
	pure humbug and does not deserve to be taken seriously by anyone but a 
	fool." 
	 
	
	Once again, we see the thrust of a personal attack; the merits of the 
	evidence presented in the book are not examined or debated. It is a blunt, 
	authoritarian pronouncement.
 In a forthcoming installment, we will examine some more documented cases and 
	delve deeper into the subtler dimensions of the conspiracy.
 
	  
	  
	  
	  
	References and Resources: 
		
		
		Cremo, Michael A. and Richard L. Thompson,  
	
	
	Forbidden Archeology, Govardhan 
	Hill, USA, 1993.
		
		Cremo, Michael A., "The Controversy over 'The Mysterious Origins of Man'", 
	NEXUS 5/04, 1998; Forbidden Archeology's Impact, Bhaktivedanta Book 
	Publishing, USA, 1998, website 
		
		http://www.mcremo.com.
		
		Doore, Kathy, "The Nazca Spaceport & the Ica Stones of Peru",
		http://www.labyrinthina.com/ica.htm ; see website for copy of Dr Javier 
	Cabrera's book, The Message of the Engraved Stones.
		
		Doutré, Mark, Ancient Celtic New Zealand, Dé Danann, New Zealand, 1999, 
	website 
		 
		http://www.celticnz.co.nz.
		
		Milton, Richard, The Facts of Life: Shattering the Myths of Darwinism, 
	Corgi, UK, 1993, 
		 
		http://www.alternativescience.com.
		
		Steen-McIntyre, Virginia, "Suppressed Evidence for Ancient Man in Mexico", 
	NEXUS 5/05, 1998.
		
		Sunfellow, David, "The Great Pyramid & The Sphinx", November 25, 1994, at
		http://www.nhne.com/specialrepots/spyramid.html.
		
		Tampa Bay Tribune, October 12, 2001 (Darwinism/evolution quote),
		http://www.tampatrib.com
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