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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating stuff, November 4, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Milabs: Military Mind Control & Alien Abduction (Paperback)
Anybody with a serious interest in aliens should take a look at this book. It does a good job exploring the shady, often ambiguous connection between alien abductees and the US military. This is something other abduction books don't deal with much, but the authors present enough evidence to convince me something's going on. I came away reasonably sure that a monitoring program is in place, whereby the military re-abducts people soon after aliens have taken them (a kind of forced debriefing to find out all they can about the Greys). There are dark hints that covert research is being done into exotic mind-control and genetic management/manipulation. You get the creepy feeling from this book that no matter how wild X-FILES may get, it's not as wild as reality! It's as if there's a new Manhattan Project underway, only now it's about aliens. Very Kafkaesque. I wonder now if I want to be around the day this all comes out into the public - could get pretty ugly.
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
MILABS is a startling, eye-opening book!, January 7, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Milabs: Military Mind Control & Alien Abduction (Paperback)
MILABS is a real tour-de-force. The Lammers have convincingly argued that the United States military is very covertly kidnapping a select group of people for reasons that are very obscure. We live in a world of dark illusion, and the Lammers have shone the light of their research into a dark corner where the Pentagon's clandestine operations scuttle and scurry. This is virtually the only book of its kind on this topic, and really rips the shroud of secrecy. The relationship between mind control, covert military operations targeted against civilians and the UFO and alleged alien abduction phenomena is a strange one -- but the Lammers have made an informative and enlightening opening into this secretive arena. I give MILABS five stars and two thumbs up.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"He's saying it's in my head and it had to be unlocked and that I belong to the government", July 11, 2009
This review is from: Milabs: Military Mind Control & Alien Abduction (Paperback)
Expert opinion maintains that there are no such things as flying saucers. As for supposed alien abductions, well, this book quotes the opinion of Victoria Alexander, wife of one of the authors of The Warrior's Edge, who reckons they are the sexually repressed fantasies of lonely women, as quoted from the Dec 96 issue of the MUFON journal.
This book neatly condenses testimony from various supposed MILAB victims. The motives for military abductions? Well, there's cloning research going on, perhaps reflecting the wish of such researchers to develop synthetic, genetic superior humans. How about the evolution of the super-soldier, immune to bio-warfare? Cloned humans for infertile couples? Or chipped soldiers, immune to stress, with improved fighting capabilities? Throw in biotelemetry, GPS technology and who knows? Maybe it would be possible to create a holographic image projection which would provide enhanced military deception capability. These possibilities are mentioned in MILABS as reasons for research.
The vivid illustrations help make the book quite a livid read. According to one of the alleged MILAB victims the interrogator asked, "Tell me about the drive mechanism. What did they tell you? Tell me ... You know you are not theirs, you are ours!"
So maybe there are real flying saucers. What then?
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