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Carl Jung became fascinated or even obsessed with one of the most picturesque and interesting contactees of the UFO era. Jung put Orfeo Angelucci in his last book: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Sky (1959). Even he said that Orfeo had made up a "new bible." It is possible that if it hadn't been for Carl Jung, most people would never have read Orfeo Angelucci's.But Orfeo's FBI file was destroyed by the FBI years back. However, another contactee has almost completed his FBI File, which seems to be Angelucci's twin soul; he is Buck Nelson. Nelson was one of the most unusual…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Carl Jung became fascinated or even obsessed with one of the most picturesque and interesting contactees of the UFO era. Jung put Orfeo Angelucci in his last book: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Sky (1959). Even he said that Orfeo had made up a "new bible." It is possible that if it hadn't been for Carl Jung, most people would never have read Orfeo Angelucci's.But Orfeo's FBI file was destroyed by the FBI years back. However, another contactee has almost completed his FBI File, which seems to be Angelucci's twin soul; he is Buck Nelson. Nelson was one of the most unusual of the mid-1950s so-called contactees. We don't know why Jung missed Buck. Nelson was one of the most flamboyant contactee of the modern UFO era. He achieved some celebrity status as the guy who sold Venusian dog hair from his giant 385-pound dog, "Big Bo," and his trips to Mars, the Moon, and Venus, which he chronicled in a 1956 booklet with the same title, My Trip to Mars, the Moon, and Venus. Buck Nelson was the subject of an FBI investigation in 1958 due to the claims made by Reverend Bill Britton in a letter sent to J. Edgard Hoover, Director of the FBI. In this letter, Britton stated that Nelson was "using the FBI to authenticate his story of having gone toVenus, Mars, and the Moon in a fly saucer." According to Britton, Nelson said that he was taken by FBI agents from his farm to Washington D.C., for interrogation, and he gave a negative of a picture of these flying saucers. Also, Britton added that Nelson mentioned that the FBI forgave him for speaking about certain military secrets told to him by these "space brothers". Buck Nelson's completed FBI file has around 62 pages, including his book entitled: My trip to Mars, the Moon, and Venus. It seems Hoover's Men in Black took the writings of this Ozark Mountain farmer seriously. This is the first time the Nelson FBI File has been made public. ___Copy and paste the links for our books: https://saucerianbooks.blogspot.com
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Autorenporträt
This book is an authentic reproduction of the original Nelsons' FBI File printed text in shades of gray. IMPORTANT, despite the fact that we have attempted to accurately maintain the integrity of the original work, the present reproduction has missing and blurred pages, poor pictures and FBI censorship's pencil markings from the original scanned copy. Many of the original FBI documents pages are shadowy, and faint. Withhold information are generally marked with white boxes where something should have been in the file that is considered by the Bureau censor "sensitive". In other cases, the information has been blacking out.These documents have been formatted from their original version for publication.