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Ecker2010 @UCm3cmYbf594S_9B0uq11rZQ@youtube.com

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I have had many individuals contact me wanting to know all o


Welcoem to posts!!

in the future - u will be able to do some more stuff here,,,!! like pat catgirl- i mean um yeah... for now u can only see others's posts :c

Ecker2010
Posted 1 year ago

FROM THE DESK OF LINDA BROWN

This is something that Linda Brown wrote for a forum that was called the Quonset hut. It was an introduction for that site where she spoke about her father, Thomas Townsend Brown. She also mentions her book which is titled the goodbye man. I am posting this here so that this will be kept for posterity. I hope that you will enjoy it.

FROM THE DESK OF LINDA BROWN:
Thomas Townsend Brown was one of the most brilliant and mysterious figures of the 20th century. He was also my father. From childhood on, I served as his virtual shadow, working first as his lab assistant and then as his secretary, on and off, until his death on Catalina Island , October 27, 1985.
At the end of his life, Dad organized his material, shut down his recorders, and saw to the final dispersal of his special papers. I wondered if he was accepting defeat after a lifelong struggle to obtain recognition for his work, but there was no sadness in his actions. He set about a purposeful completion of these final tasks and, with everything in order, he slipped away from us a few days later. It was left to me to gather up his notebooks and papers, and pack them in his well-worn black steamer trunk. Seventeen years passed before I opened that trunk again.

When author Paul Schatzkin approached me with a proposal for writing the definitive T. Townsend Brown biography, I agreed, but with some reluctance. My perspective on my father was so intensely personal that I didn't believe I'd be much help in developing the bigger picture, and both my brother and my mother had passed away in the intervening years. With Motherā€™s passing, the greatest storehouse of information on my Dadā€™s life was lost to us, and there was no one else left to help tell Dad's story. Or so I thought.

It took Paul six years to complete Defying Gravity, The Parallel Universe of T. Townsend Brown. He owes much of his epic 600-page work to the assistance of two surprising sources. And I owe them my undying gratitude. Their contributions have caused me to rethink almost all of my original assumptions about my father and his lifetime accomplishments.

First and foremost, I realize now that Dad actually saw a great many of his most cherished dreams put into action and, through them, he did indeed reach the stars. Because he was a pioneering scientist for an agency so secret that its existence was not acknowledged until 1992, much of his work remains classified even today. Nevertheless, as more Black programs are brought into the light, I am certain that we will see his distinct fingerprints in the science behind them.

Perhaps the most startling realization, though, was that my scholarly father ALSO had a long and successful career as an intelligence operative and, as such, earned the enduring respect and devotion of those who were junior to him. Seeing him through the eyes of two such men has been a most moving experience for me and has influenced my decision to continue writing the story that the previous author uncovered.

The way I know to tell it is as it has unfolded after I first heard of Mr. Schatzkinā€™s interest in my fatherā€™s life. My book, The Goodbye Man, is currently a work in progress, but from time to time, I will post selected chapters in the Reading Room at the Quonset Hut. Please drop in and see what's new there. If you are not familiar with the work of Thomas Townsend Brown, may I invite you to visit any of the links on this site.
Enjoy your stay!

Linda

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Ecker2010
Posted 1 year ago

Hi all! A little bit about my history goes like this:
After I got out of the Air Force in 71, I took some classes in Los Angeles in computer maintenance. My
first computer I ever worked on, and programmed, was a CDC 1600 mainframe. This computer was all analog, no integrated circuits and real core memory. The programming was actually in binary,
this is how I started learning programming, ones and zeros. I then moved back to my hometown of
Ann Arbor Michigan where I gave questions and answer presentations in astronomy at the
University of Michigan planetarium. That is questions from the audience and me happy to give answers. I did that for 2 Ā½ years. My next job was at a local computer company which built a mini mainframe. I did everything from soldering, while wrapping the back frame and delivery and set up of this computer. These computers were used by
Time life books with a hook it up to a typesetting machine that printed their books. While other companies were talking about networking of computers, this company was already doing it. I have just now given you just a little bit about myself but what I'm really here to tell you about actually started in 1961. At that time, I was really
into NASAā€™s Mercury manned space flight program. My interest at that time was drawing rockets and
learning about how they functioned. But one day in that year something special occurred that changed my entire outlook and direction of my life. I experienced an actual UFO experience. I witnessed two craft come in at an angle to each other, meeting in the middle and rotating around each other, then stop. A minute or so later they rotated
around each other and went out at an angle creating an X above me. They had no sound and no outward appearance of any propulsion system. Now to really get my attention they actually re-created the exact same maneuver over me a few minutes later. So now I went from learning about rockets to trying to find out how these craft function and what was causing them to fly. That incident caused me a 60+ year search to understand gravity. I hope that I can find many of you who would be interested to learn more about what I have learned. The technology is called Electrogravitics. One of Einsteinā€™s biggest disappointments in his career was that he never connected gravity to electricity and magnetism. When a man named Thomas Townsend Brown did what he was not able to. "Electrogravitics was actually publicly discussed up until about October 1958." (ā€œWhat Is Electrogravitics - by Jess Fritch - Jessā€™s Substackā€) Brown had succeeded in experiments of a lift of 110% weight plus have achieved zero stress. This last part proves that a crew operating inside a craft using this technology would have no sensation of movement whatsoever. The first manned prototype craft was flown sometime in 1961. We all know about the B-2 stealth bomber and now the B-21. There propulsion system is designed by him and if you are really interested, we can get into much more on them including a US patent which describes the whole propulsion system. So, I look forward to hearing from you!

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Ecker2010
Posted 1 year ago

How would you like to be able to travel to the stars! Not in centuries but in days or weeks. This is actually very possible because this technology has been in existence now for over 60 years. So, watch this video and subscribe to my YouTube channel. I will communicate with those who are serious.

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