In a two-part report, Linda M. Howe interviewed retired U. S. Army counterintelligence Warrant Officer Douglas Mutschler who'd been puzzled by a USGS map in his intell work that had a large whited out area between Mt. McKinley and Nome, Alaska. Then, on an evening in November 1992 on Channel 13 in Anchorage, Alaska, he and 39 others in his unit were in a Ft. Richardson cafeteria when they all watched a news program about the discovery of a very large pyramidal structure underground between Mt. McKinley and Nome, Alaska, that was discovered when geologists studied crust images during the May 22, 1992, large underground nuclear detonation in China. After the newscast, Mutschler went to the Channel 13 TV news station to get a dub of the report and was told by the General Manager that no such broadcast had occurred. He knew that was not the truth and when he was leaving the station, a TV technician approached him and said privately that the underground pyramid in Alaska sto ry had aired, but afterward someone ordered the story erased. Later, when he sought out information on the topic at a classified archive in Fort Meade, two men showed up and told him to leave the subject alone. More here
.www.earthfiles.com/news.p...2000&category=Environment
Upcoming C2C: Thursday, August 2, 2012 : In the first half, experimental psychologist and neuroscientist, Elaine Fox , will speak about her work finding the roots of optimism and pessimism, and how we can retrain our brains to be more optimistic. In the second half, science writer specializing in chemistry and genetics, Sam Kean , will discuss his latest research on the story of human history as told by DNA, confirming that humans are not slaves to their genetic makeup as previously thought. Hosted by George Noory.