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another reality that is formed by energies operating on another frequency, or vibrationary level. There has also been a great deal of discussion about light and rays of light. The lore of the “‘seven rays” goes back to the most ancient of times. The Bible’s Book of Revelation repeats the number seven in many ways, and the Seven Sisters, or the Pleiades (seven stars in the sky), form an important part of this ancient lore. The color spectrum is also most important in the context of the overall picture painted by religion and occultism. God and Christ are “The Light’’ in most of this literature. The ‘‘source’’ has made repeated attempts to explain all of this in terms that we might understand. On January 8, 1968, ‘‘Mr. Orlon,”’ of the Ashtar Intergalactic Command, passed this message along to a contactee: ‘‘The saucers which you speak of as such are in reality the space bodies of certain aggregates of consciousness. They exist duodi- mensionally; that is, they penetrate both the third and fourth dimensions simultaneously or can, if they wish, confine themselves to either one of these. Their purpose has been, and still is, for the time being, to interlace these two realms of consciousness which are seemingly separate. How- ever, the time quickly comes when the veil is torn aside and what is One is perceived as One. It is at this moment that the saucers seen by the few will be seen by the many. It will appear that they have suddenly arrived in your skies in great number. In reality this is untrue. For in reality they are where they have always been, but man sees with new eyes.” Man’s old eyes aren’t very good. We can actually see only a very small part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Light waves are really visible vibrations of the spectrum, somewhat akin to radio waves. The different frequencies register as different colors on the cones in our eyes. You could say that our visual apparatus really consists of thousands of tiny radio receivers carefully tuned to a minute portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. We really can’t see very much at all, but we can see enough to cope adequately with our immediate environment. The accompanying chart is a rough outline of the basic electromag- Netic spectrum. Cosmic rays—high-intensity, high-frequency rays of energy that radiate throughout the universe—occupy one end of the spectrum. They are followed by potent gamma rays, the energy forms that do so much damage when we set off our atomic bombs. Next we have x-rays, short waves which penetrate matter, ionize gases and cloud up photographic film. These blend in with gamma rays on our scale. 48 / Operation Trojan Horse