Ä Area: I_UFO ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
  Msg#: 14288                                        Date: 06-30-96  08:23
  From: Don Allen                                    Read: Yes    Replied: No 
    To: All                                          Mark:                     
  Subj: Bramley Excerpt 1/3
ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
* Forwarded from DFW_UFO
* Originally By: Glenn Joyner
* Originally To: All
* Originally Re: Bramley Excerpt 1/3
* Originally Dated: Saturday June 22 1996 12:05
__________________________________________________________________

... Excerpted from "The Gods of Eden" by William Bramley.
... Copyright 1989,1990 by the Dahlin Family Press
... Avon Books   ISBN 0-380-71807-3

        From Chapter 36 - UNIVERSE OF STONE (pages 375-383)

           "People will not die for business but only
           for ideals."  - Adolf Hitler in "Mein Kampf"


"St. Germaine" and "Jesus"  were not the only messiahs to appear in
the 1930's bearing promises of an imminent utopia.  Another messiah
was gaining a large following in Germany.  His "Coming" was said to
be the beginning of the Millennium.  Using one of the Brotherhood's
most important symbols,  the swastika,  that  German Messiah's name
was Adolf Hitler.

Adolf Hitler,  of course, was the strutting man with the toothbrush
mustache who became the absolute dictator of Germany and instigated
World War II. Hitler and his entourage would look comical to us to-
day were not the consequences of their lunacy so tragic.

During his young adulthood before rising to power,  Hitler lived in
Vienna.  One of Hitler's friends during that period was  Walter Jo-
hannes Stein.   During World War II, Dr. Stein became an advisor to
England's Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill.   Much of what Dr.
Stein had to say  about Hitler's  early life found it's way  into a
book entitled "Spear of Destiny," by Trevor Ravenscroft.

"Spear of Destiny" reports that Hitler had become a devotee of mys-
ticism during his poverty-stricken days in Vienna. Between 1909 and
1913,  when Hitler was in his early twenties,  Hitler was convinced
that he had achieved:

 ... higher levels of consciousness by means of drugs... [Hitler]
 made a penetrating study of mideival occultism and ritual magic,
 discussing with him  [Stein] the  whole span of  the  political,
 historical, and philosophical reading through which he formulat-
 ed what was later  to become the  Nazi Weltanshauung  [a special
 concept of human history].

In his autobiography, "Mein Kampf,"  Hitler affirmed the importance
of this period in shaping his ideas.

Hitler did not develop his  ideology in a vacuum.   One of his most
influential mentors was a Viennese bookstore owner named Ernst Pre-
tzsche.  Pretzsche was described by Dr. Stein as a malevolent-look-
ing man with a somewhat toadlike appearance.  Pretzsche was a devo-
tee of the  Germanic mysticism that was preaching  the coming of an
Aryan  superrace.   Hitler frequented  Pretzsche's store and pawned
books there  when he needed money.   During those visits, Pretzsche
indoctrinated Hitler in Germanic mysticism and successfully encour-
aged  Hitler to  use the  hallucinogenic drug  peyote as a tool for
achieving mystical enlightenment.

As it turns out,  Pretzsche was associated with  a man named  Guido
Von List.  Von List was a  founding member and leading figure in an
occult lodge  which  used a  swastika instead  of a  cross in  it's
rituals.   Before he was disgraced and forced to flee from  Vienna,
Von List had gained a large audience for his Germanic mystical wri-
tings.  Hitler became a member of that audience through Pretzsche.

Back in his   Viennese flophouse room,  young  Hitler avidly  pored
through pamphlets and  books expounding on the mystical destiny  of
Germany and the coming of the  Aryan superrace.   According to some
of those tracts, Aryans were created by an extraterrestrial "super-
race" of giants. Hitler became an ardent believer in those ideas as
he hawked his watercolors on the street to support his meager exis-
tence and to pay for his drug-induced enlightenments.

The notion that Hitler was a "druggie" in his youth seeking mystic-
al enlightenment through chemicals should come as no surprise.Drugs
were a major factor in shaping the persona Adolf Hitler. Hitler re-
mained a user of powerful narcotics his entire life.   According to
the diaries of his  personal physician, Dr. Theodore Morell,  which
surfaced in the U.S. National Archives, the German dictator was re-
peatedly injected with various  painkillers, sedatives, strychnine,
cocaine,  a morphine derivative,  and other drugs during the entire
four years of World War II.

The mystical philosophy so eagerly  adopted by the young Hitler was
the same  which had  already deeply affected  the Kaiser and  other
German leaders.   In fact,  Houston Stewart Chamberlain, the mystic
who had so influenced the Kaiser, years later declared Hitler to be
the prophesized  German Messiah.   On September 25, 1925,  the Nazi
newspaper, "Volkischer Beobachter," celebrated Chamberlain's seven-
tieth birthday and declared his work, "Foundations of the Twentieth
Century," to be  "the Gospel of the Nazi Movement."   As we recall,
the Kaiser considered the same book to have been sent by God.


>>>>>CONTINUED NEXT MESSAGE<<<<<
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... "It's not the years, it's the mileage." - Indiana Jones
-!- FMail/386 1.02
 ! Origin: A bad day at the beach beats a good day at work (1:3618/2)

Ä Area: I_UFO ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
  Msg#: 14289                                        Date: 06-30-96  08:24
  From: Don Allen                                    Read: Yes    Replied: No 
    To: All                                          Mark:                     
  Subj: Bramley Excerpt 2/3
ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
* Forwarded from DFW_UFO
* Originally By: Glenn Joyner
* Originally To: All
* Originally Re: Bramley Excerpt 2/3
* Originally Dated: Saturday June 22 1996 12:05
__________________________________________________________________

>>>>>CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS MESSAGE<<<<<

Hitler's road to politics began  as a  German soldier during  World
War I.  When that war broke out, Hitler enlisted.  He remained very
concerned about the  mystical destiny of  Germany and  continued to
ponder the Aryan question while fighting in the fields.   This made
him very unpopular with his fellow soldiers,who were more concerned
with food, leave, women,  and an end to the war which nearly all of
them detested.Hitler, on the other hand, flourished in the war-torn
environment and  distinguished himself as a  soldier.    He won the
highest award a soldier of his rank (corporal) could earn; the Iron
Cross, First Class.

About two months after winning the  Iron Cross,  Hitler was blinded
by mustard gas during a battle.  He was taken to the Pasewalk mili-
tary hospital in northern Germany,where he was mistakenly diagnosed
as suffering from "psychopathic hysteria."  (The symptoms were pro-
bably caused by the mustard gas.)    Hitler was consequently placed
under the care of a psychiatrist, Dr. Edmund Forster.  What exactly
was done to Hitler while under  Dr. Forster's care is uncertain be-
cause years later,  in 1933,  Hitler's secret police,  the Gestapo,
rounded up all  psychiatric records related to  Hitler's  treatment
and destroyed them.   Dr. Forster  "committed suicide" in that same
year.

The mystery of what was done to  Hitler at  Pasewalk is deepened by
Hitler's own statements.  According to Hitler, he had experienced a
"vision" from "another world" while at the hospital. In that vision
Hitler was told that he  would need to restore his sight so that he
could lead Germany back to glory.   Hitler's  latent anti-Semitism,
which had already  been planted by his mystical readings in Vienna,
emerged at Pasewalk.

What _did_ happen at that hospital?

In a shrewd piece of detective work published in the journal, "His-
tory of Childhood Quarterly,"  psychohistorian  Dr. Rudolph  Binion
suggests that  Hitler's visions may have been  deliberately induced
by the psychiatrist,  Edmund Forster,  as a means of helping Hitler
recover from his blindness.   Hitler's  mystical beliefs were well-
known, and  they would certainly  have come out in his  psychiatric
interviews.    Dr. Binion cites a book completed in  1939 entitled,
"Der Augenzeuge"  ("The Eyewitness"),  written by a  Jewish  doctor
named Ernst Weiss who had fled Germany in 1933. In "Der Augenzeuge"
the author tells a thinly fictionalized story of a man, "A.H.," who
is taken to  Pasewalk hospital for  psychiatric care.   A.H. claims
to have been hit by mustard gas.   At Pasewalk, the psychiatrist in
charge  deliberately induces  visionary  ideas into the mind of the
hysterical  A.H. in order to effect a cure.   The "miracle cure" is
successful and years later, in the summer of 1933, the psychiatrist
attempts to send the records of the treatments abroad, to keep them
out of the hands of the Gestapo.  In his article, Dr. Binion points
out that Hitler's psychiatrist,  Edmund Forster, had been abroad in
Paris that summer,  and it is  Dr. Binion's guess that  Forster may
have  revealed the facts of  Hitler's  treatment to someone at that
time, resulting in the book, "Der Augenzeuge." Forster may have al-
so been the  person who  revealed that two  other very high-ranking
Nazis,  Bernhard Rust  (Prussian Minister of Education) and  Herman
Goerring, both had histories of severe mental problems.  Rust was a
certified psychopath and Goerring was a former morphine addict.

After Hitler's discharge from Pasewalk in November of 1918, he tra-
veled back to Munich. He remained in the army, and in April of 1919
he was  assigned to espionage duties.   A  communist revolution had
just  occurred in southern  Germany and a  Soviet Republic had been
declared there after the regional government collapsed.  Hitler was
one of the  soldier-spies selected  to remain behind  in Munich and
and circulate among the pro-Communist soldiers to learn the identi-
ties of their leaders. When a German Reichswehr force moved in from
Berlin and  crushed the rebellion,  Hitler walked down the ranks of
captured soldiers and singled out the ringleaders.  The German sol-
diers who were identified by  Hitler were taken away for  immediate
execution without trial. Hitler watched as many of his victims were
put before the wall and shot.

Hitler's stellar performance in Munich earned him a promotion.   He
was assigned to the highly secret  Political Department of the Army
District Command.   Hitler's new unit was an intelligence operation
that engaged in acts of domestic terrorism. The unit refused to ac-
cept Germany's defeat in World War I and so it assassinated some of
the German leaders who had negotiated Germany's surrender.

A prominent leader of the District Command was  Captain Ernst Rohm.
Rohm was a  professional soldier  who served as  liason between the
District Command  and the  German industrialists who  were directly
funding the  District Command to help it fight Communism.   Captain
Rohm and many other leaders of the District Command were members of
a  mystical organization known as the  "Thule Society."   The Thule


>>>>>CONTINUED NEXT MESSAGE<<<<<

-+- FMail/386 1.02+
 + Origin: The DataBank * Exploring the Unknown * (214)363-2896 * (1:124/7015)

... "It's not the years, it's the mileage." - Indiana Jones
-!- FMail/386 1.02
 ! Origin: A bad day at the beach beats a good day at work (1:3618/2)

Ä Area: I_UFO ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
  Msg#: 14290                                        Date: 06-30-96  08:24
  From: Don Allen                                    Read: Yes    Replied: No 
    To: All                                          Mark:                     
  Subj: Bramley Excerpt 3/3
ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
* Forwarded from DFW_UFO
* Originally By: Glenn Joyner
* Originally To: All
* Originally Re: Bramley Excerpt 3/3
* Originally Dated: Saturday June 22 1996 12:05
__________________________________________________________________

>>>>>CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS MESSAGE<<<<<


believed in the  "Aryan superrace" and it  preached the coming of a
German  "Messiah" who would lead  Germany to glory and a new  Aryan 
civilization.   In "Spear of Destiny," we learn from Dr. Stein that
the  Thule group was financed by some  of the very same industrial-
ists who supported the District Command. The Thule was also direct-
ly supported by the German High Command.

Many  assassinations perpetrated by the  District Command  may have 
been inspired by the Thule. According to Dr. Stein, the Thule was a
"society of assassins."  It held secret courts and condemned people
to death.   It is likely that many victims murdered by the District
Command  had been  convicted earlier  in the  secret courts  of the 
Thule. Many prominent Germans supported this violence and were doc-
mented members of the Thule.   For example, the Police President of
Munich, Franz Gurtner,was a reported member of the innermost circle
of the  Thule.   He later  became  Minister of Justice of the Third 
Reich.  

After joining the  District Command, Corporal Adolf Hitler became a
good friend of Ernst Rohm.  It was Rohm who took Hitler to see Die-
trich Eckart,a morphine addict who headed the German Thule Society.
Rohm had a purpose for arranging this meeting.  He felt that Hitler
had strong  leadership potential and that  Hitler was the  man that 
the Thule was looking for.   Eckart agreed,  and Hitler's career as 
the new German Messiah was launched.

The vehicle used by Hitler to gain political power was a small soc-
ialist organization known as the German Worker's Party.  In Septem-
ber, 1919, Hitler was sent by  District Command to attend a meeting 
of the Party.  Hitler was subsequently invited by the Party to join
it,  and within a year he became  the Party's leader.   At a 1920's
Party rally held in a  Munich beer hall,  Hitler announced that the 
German Worker's Party was to be renamed the  NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHE
DEUTSCHE ARBEITERPARTEI, or "Nazi" Party for short.

In "Mein Kampf," Hitler stated that he had made an agonizing decis-
ion to quit the  District Command  in order  to participate  in the 
German Worker's Party.   Many historians strongly doubt that Hitler
had left the District Command,  and believe instead that the German
Worker's Party was the vehicle by the  District Command to covertly
further it's political aims. There is good evidence to support this
conclusion.   Ernst Rohm,  Hitler's mentor in the District Command, 
had already joined and  started shaping the  German Worker's Party,
before  Hitler became a member.    Rohm greatly assisted  Hitler in 
transforming  the  German Worker's Party  into  Hitler's  political
tool.  Rohm grew with the fledgling Nazi Party and later became the
leader of the Nazi S. A. Organization -- better known as the "brown
shirts." Thule leader Dietrich Eckart, who was also closely affili-
ated with  District Command leaders,  became the editor-in-chief of 
the new Nazi newspaper, "Volkischer Beobachter."   Hitler had by no
means abandoned his  District Command  friends.   They were  all in
there turning the German Worker's Party into the Nazi Party.

Although the Thule was probably the most important mystical organi-
zation behind  the formation  of Naziism,  it was not the only one.
Another was the  "Vril" Society, which which had been named after a
book by Lord Bulward Litton  --  an English Rosicrucian.   Litton's 
book told the story of an Aryan  "superrace" coming to earth.   One
member of the German Vril was  Professor Karl Haushofer -- a former
employee of German military intelligence. Haushofer had been a men-
tor to Hitler as well as to Hitler's propaganda specialist, Rudolph
Hess. (Hess had been an assistant to Haushofer at the University of
Munich.)   Another  Vril member was the second most powerful man in 
Nazi Germany:  Heinrich Himmler,  who became head of the dreaded SS
and  Gestapo.  Himmler incorporated the  Vril Society into the Nazi
Occult Bureau. Yet another mystical group was the Edelweiss Society
which preached the coming of a  "Nordic Messiah."   Nazi  financial 
dictator,  Herman Goering, had become an active member of the Edel-
weiss Society in 1921 while living and working in Sweden.   Goering
believed Hitler to be the "nordic messiah."

Naziism was clearly more than a political movement. It was a power-
ful new Brotherhood faction steeped in Brotherhood beliefs and sym-
bols.   The emblem chosen to  represent the Nazi Party was the swa-
stika -- an important  Brotherhood symbol since antiquity.   Hitler
was  proclaimed not only a  political messiah, but also a religious
messiah whose coming signalled the  fulfillment of the  apocalyptic
philosophies espoused by  German mystical groups.   Hitler's Coming 
was to bring about  the  "Thousand Years Reich"  --  a millenium in 
mankind would be  "purified" and reach it's highest state of exist-
ence.   Naziism was a  Custodial religious philosophy as much as it 
was a political ideology.   In a speech he gave at the  Nazis' 1934
Nuremburg Rally,  Hitler said about the  Party,  "it's total image,
however, will be like a holy order."

The brutal Nazi Party as a holy order?  The idea seems laughable in
hindsight,  until we note that  this would not be the first time in 
history that a holy order was responsible for mass atrocities.  The
Dominicans who ran the Catholic Inquisition during the  Middle Ages
were another example.  

_END OF EXCERPT_

-+- FMail/386 1.02+
 + Origin: The DataBank * Exploring the Unknown * (214)363-2896 * (1:124/7015)

... "It's not the years, it's the mileage." - Indiana Jones
-!- FMail/386 1.02
 ! Origin: A bad day at the beach beats a good day at work (1:3618/2)