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It is
the last days of World War Two....
The Allies are closing in....
Berlin is crumbling under the weight and impact of hundreds of Allied bombs....
Deep in his fortified bunker, Adolf Hitler, once unshakable in his confidence in
Nazi world domination, now admits that defeat is at hand. But Hitler is determined never
to suffer the humiliation of being captured by his enemies. There is only one escape route
- one he has planned for should he ever face just such a turn of events. Suicide is out of
the question. Instead, Hitler and his corps of elite traverse through an underground
tunnel to an isolated airstrip. There they board an unmarked plane and fly south. South to
the pole. To the opening at the South Pole where they will enter the hollow Earth and
disappear from history.This alternate scenario
to history is actually accepted as fact by some proponents of the hollow Earth theory. And
as incredible as
it sounds, the genesis of this story lies in some facts that carry
some merit: some of Hitler's top advisors - perhaps even Hitler himself - believed
that the Earth was hollow; and there was at least one expedition by the Nazi military to
exploit that belief for strategic advantage during the war.
As with all such stories, it's often difficult to sort out
facts, exaggerations, and outright fabrications. But it's an intriguing tale, and one that
requires a little background.
Hitler's Nazis were convinced that they were destined to rule the world, and they came to
this warped conclusion through the acceptance of many occult beliefs and practices,
including
astrology, the prophecies of Nostradamus, and the hollow/inverted Earth theory... hohlweltlehre.
Because they suspected that our surface is on the interior of a concave Earth, Hitler sent
an
expedition in April of 1942, including Dr. Heinz Fischer and powerful telescopic
cameras, to the Baltic island of Rugen to spy on the British fleet. Fischer did so not by
aiming his cameras across the waters, but by pointing them up to peer across the
atmosphere to
the Atlantic Ocean. The expedition was a failure, of course.
Fischer's cameras saw nothing but sky, and the British fleet remained safe.
When the Nazi exponents of the Hollow Earth hypothesis sent the expedition to
the island of Rugen, they had complete confidence in their pseudo-scientific vision. Those
nearest the Fuehrer shared his belief that such a coup as discovering the entrance to the
Inner
World would convince the Masters who lived there that the Nazis were truly
deserving of mixing their blood in the hybridization of a master race.
An important element in the Nazi mythos was the belief that representatives of a
powerful, underground secret race emerged
from time to time to walk among Homo sapiens. Hitler's frenzied desire to breed a
select race of Nordic types was inspired by his obsessive hope that it should be the
Germanic peoples who would
be chosen above all other humans to interbreed with the
subterranean supermen in the mutation of a new race of heroes, demigods, and god
men.
Nazi UFOs
Then there's the legend... that Hitler and many of his Nazi minions escaped Germany
in the closing days of World War II and fled to Antarctica where at the South Pole they
had discovered an entrance to the Earth's interior. According to the Hollow Earth Research
Society in Ontario, Canada, they are still there. After the war, the organization claims,
the Allies discovered that more than 2,000 scientists from Germany and Italy had vanished,
along with almost
a million people, to the land beyond the South Pole. This story gets more
complicated with Nazi-designed UFOs, Nazi collaboration with the people who live in the
center of the Earth, and the explanation
for "Aryan-looking" UFO pilots.

whatif ?
Is it possible that the list of secret weapons produced by Nazi Germany included
flying saucers? Did they actually deploy disc shaped fighters or at least experiment with
them?
Victor Schauberger
Some of the earliest stories about German flying saucers date back to an inventor
named Victor Schauberger. Schauberger was born in Austria in 1885 and was considered by
many to be a crackpot. Schauberger himself said, "They call me deranged. The hope is
they are right..." Schauberger believed that machines could be designed better so
that they would be "going with the flow of nature" rather than against it.
One of Schauberger's projects was to produce a flying machine, saucer shaped, that
used a "liquid vortex propulsion" system. His theory was that "if water or
air is rotated into a twisting form of oscillation, known as a 'colloidal,' a build-up of
energy results, which, with immense power, can cause levitation."
According to stories Schauberger built several models, one of which was almost five
feet in diameter and was powered by a 1/20 hp electric engine. Some reports indicated that
one of the models actually flew. There are also reports that, according to letter Victor
Schauberger wrote to a friend, a full-sized prototype of one of his designs was
constructed using prison labor at the Mauhausen concentration camp. This craft flew on
February 19th of 1945 near Prague and obtained an altitude of 45,000 feet in only 3
minutes. The letter goes on to say the prototype was destroyed by the Nazis before it
could be captured by the Allies.
After the war Schauberger moved to the United States, where some contend he worked
on secret projects for the U.S. government. He died in 1958, apparently claiming his ideas
had been stolen.
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did the germans have secret bases at the south pole?
Hitler and
Occultism
One should not underestimate occultism's influence on Hitler. His subsequent
rejection of Free Masons and esoteric movements, of Theosophy, of Anthrosophy, does not
necessarily mean otherwise. Occult circles have long been known as covers for espionage
and influence peddling. Hitler's spy apparatus under Canaris and Heydrich were well aware
of these conduits, particularly from the direction of Britain which had within its MI5
intelligence agency a department known as the Occult Bureau. That these potential sources
of trouble were purged from Nazi life should not be taken to mean that Hitler and the Nazi
secret societies were not influenced by mystical and occult writers such as Madame
Blavatsky, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Guido Von List, Lanz Von Liebenfels, Rudolf
Steiner, George Gurdjieff, Karl Haushofer and Theodor Fritsch. Although Hitler later
denounced and ridiculed many of them, he did dedicate his book Mein Kampf to his teacher
Dietrich Eckart.
A frequent visitor to Landsberg Prison where Hitler was writing Mein Kampf with
the help of Rudolf Hess, was General Karl Haushofer, a university professor and director
of the Munich Institute of Geopolitics. Haushofer, Hitler, and Hess had long conversations
together. Hess also kept records of these conversations. Hitler's demands for German
"Living Space" in the east at the expense of the Slavic nations were based on
the geopolitical theories of the learned professor. Haushofer was also inclined toward the
esoteric. as military attache in Japan, he had studied Zen-Buddhism. He had also gone
through initiations at the hands of Tibetan Lamas. He became Hitler's second
"esoteric mentor", replacing Dietrich Eckart.
In Berlin, Haushofer had founded the Luminous Lodge or the Vril Society. The
lodge's objective was to explore the origins of the Aryan race and to perform exercises in
concentration to awaken the forces of "Vril". Haushofer was a student of the
Russian magician and metaphysician Gregor Ivanovich Gurdyev (George Gurdjieff).
Both Gurdjeiff and Haushofer maintained that they had contacts with secret
Tibetan Lodges that possessed the secret of the "Superman". The lodge included
Hitler, Alfred Rosenberg, Himmler, Goring, and Hitler's subsequent personal physician Dr.
Morell. It is also known that Aleister
Crowley and Gurdjieff sought contact with Hitler.
Hitler's unusual powers of suggestion become more understandable if one keeps in
mind that he had access to the "secret" psychological techniques of the esoteric
lodges. Haushofer taught him the techniques of Gurdjieff which, in turn, were based on the
teachings of the Sufis and the Tibetan Lamas- and familiarized him with the Zen teaching
of the Japanese Society of the Green Dragon.
Rudolf Schriever
Another German designer involved with the Nazi effort during the war was Rudolf
Schriever. Schriever, along with some other engineers named Habermohl, Miethe and
Bellanzo, apparently came up with several disc-shaped aircraft designs that used more
conventional power sources than those Schauberger envisioned. One of Schriever's drawings
shows an egg-shaped cockpit surrounded by a rotating fan-like disc that provided the lift.
A Mieth drawing depicts a smooth flat saucer with an elongated hump on its back for the
cockpit. Both would have been powered by jet engines.
As with Schauberger, there were reports that some of these designs were actually
built. The Schriever machine was said to have been tested in 1945 and to have reached an
altitude of 12 kilometers in a little over three minutes. It had a top speed of 2000
kilometers an hour.
There is no real, solid evidence, though, that a test flight ever took place and
Schriever himself, who relocated to the United States after the war, indicated that any
prototypes of the craft were destroyed, before flying as the Germans abandoned their
facilities in the face of advancing Allied troops.
Drones
Stories also persist that the Germans's also had developed small automatized flying
discs. One version was called the Feuerball. Another, capable of vertical takeoff,
was referred to as the Kugelblitz. According to stories, these craft were only
armed with devices designed to interfere with the electronics of nearby airplanes.

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