Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Nixon shows Jackie Gleason aliens
"To the moon, Alice!" There was a time when you
could say that phrase and immediately most everyone knew exactly who you're
talking about: 'The Great One."
The fine actor and comedian Jackie Gleason will
forever be associated with his role of bus driver Ralph Cramden on the popular
TV series, "The Honeymooners." But there was another side to Jackie that few
people know about. Gleason was an extremely serious armchair UFO researcher, and
prided himself on his huge collection of UFO-related books, which numbered into
the thousands. As soon as a new title came out, even in Europe or the UK, Jackie
had a copy. Little did he suspect that his interest in that topic would one day
gain him access to something that most people would never even believe, and
would leave others who shared his interests either skeptical or forever
jealous.
It was a chance conversation one afternoon, back
in 1974 in Florida, while Jackie was playing golf with one of his regular
partners, President Richard Nixon. Jackie had mentioned his interest in UFOs and
his large collection of books, and the president admitted that he also shared
Jackie's interest and had a sizeable collection of UFO-oriented materials of his
own. At the time, the president said little about what he actually knew, but
things were to change drastically later on that same night.
One can only imagine Gleason's surprise when
President Nixon showed up at his house around midnight, completely alone and
driving his own private car. When Jackie asked him why he was there, Nixon told
him that he wanted to take him somewhere and show him something. He got into the
president's car, and they ended up at the gates of Homestead Air Force Base.
They passed through security and drove to the far end of the base, to a
tightly-guarded building. At this point, I will quote directly from Gleason
himself, from an interview he gave to UFO researcher and author Larry
Warren:
"We drove to the very far end of the base in a
segregated area, finally stopping near a well-guarded building. The security
police saw us coming and just sort of moved back as we passed them and entered
the structure. There were a number of labs we passed through first before we
entered a section where Nixon pointed out what he said was the wreckage from a
flying saucer, enclosed in several large cases. Next, we went into an inner
chamber and there were six or eight of what looked like glass-topped Coke
freezers. Inside them were the mangled remains of what I took to be children.
Then - upon closer examination - I saw that some of the other figures looked
quite old. Most of them were terribly mangled as if they had been in an
accident."
Gleason was understandably excited by all of
this, but also quite traumatized, and said he couldn't eat or sleep properly for
weeks afterwards, and found himself drinking heavily until he was able to regain
his composure. His wife at the time, Beverly, recalls him being out very late
that night and speaking excitedly about what he had seen when he returned home.
Later on, however, when she and Gleason were splitting up and she told the story
to a writer at Esquire Magazine, which printed it in an article, relations
between her and the entertainer deteriorated and Gleason became very upset and
angry that the story had been made public. For this reason many people,
including Beverly herself, have wondered at the truth of the story. However, in
his interview with Larry Warren, who was invited to Jackie's house in person
because Gleason wanted to hear firsthand about Warren's experience at Bentwaters
Air Force Base in England, it was clear that Jackie was being honest and
sincere:
"You could tell that he was very sincere - he
took the whole affair very seriously, and I could tell that he wanted to get the
matter off his chest, and that was why he was telling me all of this. Jackie
felt just like I do, that the government needs to 'come clean,' and tell us all
it knows about space visitors. It time they stopped lying to the public and
release all the evidence they have. When they do, then we'll all be able to see
the same things the late Jackie Gleason did."
The United States government's knowledge about
UFOs and their occupants exists at the very highest levels of security, above
even atomic weapons and things of that nature. Information is imparted on a
strictly "need to know" basis, and this has left even many presidents in the
dark on the subject. Obviously, Richard Nixon wasn't one of them. One can only
imagine what technology and evidence of life outside of this Earth exists in the
back corners and hidden labs of the American military, but for anyone who
doesn't believe that this situation is real, this story about Jackie Gleason is
just the very tiny tip of the iceberg. We may be waiting a very, very long time,
indeed, until Jackie's dream of government disclosure comes true.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment