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George Adamski: The Untold Story

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Adamski was born in Bromberg in the Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire. He was one of five siblings born to ethnic Polish parents, Józef Adamski (1867–1937) and Franciszka Adamska (1862–1946). [6] Leslie, Desmond; Adamski, George (1953). Flying Saucers Have Landed. New York: British Book Centre. ISBN 0-854351-80-9. LCCN 53012621. OCLC 383007. He seems to have had little formal education, though the press would later refer to him as “Professor Adamski”—a habit he appears to have encouraged. Adamski's 1955 book Inside the Space Ships, which describes his claimed travels through Earth's solar system in a UFO, is considered by some critics [49] to be a "remake" of his 1949 science fiction novel, ghostwritten for Adamski by Lucy McGinnis, and entitled Pioneers of Space. It described a fictional voyage through the solar system that, critics noted, sounded very similar to the space travels described by Adamski in Inside the Space Ships. [44] Adamski photographs and Moseley investigation [ edit ] Today, the American Government has dropped its original attitude of disbelief and admitted that it has over eighteen hundred authentic cases on its files. The British Air Ministry is more cautious, but grudgingly admits that it also has a secret department to deal with or to discourage questions.

Gerard Aartsen in "Before Disclosure: Dispelling the Fog of Speculation" (full text online) (2016) p. 2/3 Adamski chronicled his alleged adventures in several books. The first, Flying Saucers Have Landed (1953), coauthored with Desmond Leslie, recounted his chat with the Venusian. Widely read at the time, it later gained a new generation of fans in the trippy 1960s. It is the purpose of this book to find out just what that something could be the authorities do not wish us to know... The following chapters will present the findings as they came. A word in passing, and a warning. This book is neither intended for, nor humbly dedicated to, the statistician, nor anyone else who mistakes figures for facts, nor does it aim to please the followers of what is called Popular Science... Circa October 1961 Adamski “had been entrusted with a written invitation for President Kennedy to visit one of the space people’s huge motherships at a secret airbase in Desert Hot Springs, California” which he was to take “direct to the White House through a side door … where a man he knew was ready to let him in. Adamski later learned that Kennedy had spent several hours at the airbase after having cancelled an important trip to New York, and that he had had a long talk with the ship’s crew…” (Zinsstag & Good, pp.63-64; see also William Sherwood’s testimony 🔗, and Grant Cameron’s PresidentialUFO files 🔗.) Ridiculed by many, some of Adamski’s descriptions in the report about his trip 🔗 clearly show this was a deeply spiritual experience for him, which may have unbalanced him for some time.By the time Adamski was living in Italy, he’d changed his recording alias to Adam Sky. As he’s the first to point out, his new name was only one letter different, but it was enough to throw people off the scent. Adam Sky found acclaim in the early 00s, when his friend Jonny Slut from cult punks Specimen began influential London club Nag Nag Nag, the centre of the hip electroclash scene. Adam Sky was releasing music on the cult Kitsuné label, whose other acts included Bloc Party, La Roux and Klaxons. The Netherlands: The Queen & the Saucers". Time. 1 June 1959. Archived from the original on 13 July 2007. Yes,” the master said, “it is very much like that, and as your scientists work on this principle, more understanding will come to them. For Nature herself will re­veal her secrets to all who seek with an open mind. A stand-in for Georg Adamski named Charles Kandinski appears in J. G. Ballard's 1963 short story The Venus Hunters, which describes transference of cultish beliefs. That doesn’t interest me. I’d rather people came to me serendipitously, like Theo Zero: his dad, Robbie Maddix, drummed for The Stone Roses, but he’s singing on the album because he’s my daughter Bluebell’s flatmate – she asked him if he knew of any good singers.

In 1917 he married Mary Shimbersky. She died in 1954; they had no children. [8] Following his marriage Adamski moved west, doing maintenance work in Yellowstone National Park and working in an Oregon flour mill and a California concrete factory. [6] [8] In the 1920s Adamski became interested in the esoteric occultist religion Theosophy, and a variant called Neo-Theosophy. [9] By 1930 "Adamski was a minor figure on the California occult scene", teaching his personal mixture of Christianity and Eastern religions, which he called "Universal Progressive Christianity" and "Universal Law." [8]

Others, like J. Allen Hynek, took a somewhat dimmer view, accusing Adamski and others like him, of discrediting the entire field of UFO research. May*: Belgian co-worker May Morlet and Austrian co-worker Dora Bauer travel with Adamski from Antwerp to Basel, Switzerland, where they meet with Lou Zinsstag. As you have seen, we travel space as easily as you cross a room. The traversing of space is not difficult to those who have mastered the laws within which all bodies live and move—planets and men alike. It is then understood that distance between two such bodies in space, or that between worlds, is no distance at all as you conceive of distance in your world.

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