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NEXUS MAGAZINE Volume 17, Number 1 DECEMBER 2009 — JANUARY 2010 PUBLISHED BY NEXUS Magazine Pty Ltd, ABN 80 003 6ll 434 EDITOR Duncan M. Roads CO-EDITOR Catherine Simons ASSISTANT EDITOR/SUB-EDITOR Ruth Parnell OFFICE ADMIN/EDITORS' ASSISTANTS Jenny Hawke; Susie Foster MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Richard Giles; Susie Foster WEB MISTRESS Jenny Hawke CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE Project Censored; Charu Bahri; Len Saputo, MD, with Byron Belitsos; Lawrence Broxmeyer, MD; Jerry W. Decker; Philip Coppens; Michael E. Salla, PhD; Steven M. Greer, MD CARTOONS Phil Somerville COVER GRAPHIC Jeff Edis, jeff_edis@hotmail.com PRINTING eaudesert Times, Queensland, Australia AUSTRALIAN DISTRIBUTION Newsagents Direct Distribution HEAD OFFICE - All Correspondence PO Box 30, Mapleton, Qld 4560, Australia. Tel: (07) 5442 9280; Fax: (07) 5442 9381 Website: http://www.nexusmagazine.com NZ OFFICE: RD 2, Kaeo, Northland. Tel: +64 (0)9 405 1963; Email: nexusnz@xtra.co.nz USA OFFICE: PO Box 1248, Walterboro, SC 29488. Email: nexususa@earthlink.net UK OFFICE: 55 Queens Rd, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RHI9 IBG. nexus@ukoffice.u-net.com EUROPE OFFICE: Postbus 10681, 1001 ER Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Email: nexus@fsf.nl STATEMENT OF PURPOSE NEXUS recognises that humanity is undergoing a massive transformation. With this in mind, NEXUS seeks to provide ‘hard-to-get’ information so as to assist people through these changes. NEXUS is not linked to any religious, philosophical or political ideology or organisation. PERMISSION-TO-REPRODUCE POLICY While reproduction and dissemination of the information in NEXUS is actively encouraged, anyone caught making a buck out of it, without our express permission, will be in trouble when we catch them! Editorial here has been an increase of late in the number of people seeking to work at or for NEXUS Magazine. I'd like to think that this is because there is a growing number of people who are interested in peering behind the veil of manufactured information that is presented via mainstream media outlets as "reality". While this may be true, there is also a rising number of researchers, writers and sub-editors being made redundant by the ever-changing media landscape. The Internet, while enabling millions of people to access all sorts of information, is causing the demise of the current media empires as we know them. As I've mentioned before in this column, all media empires have been sustained financially by revenue from advertising. But now, people are putting their classified adverts online instead of in newspapers, and more and more consumers have stopped buying papers and magazines and watching TV altogether. Their mobile phones/iPhones/mini-computers are giving them all they want in terms o! the information they prefer—which is mostly to do with sport, finance, music, films and gossip. Thus my observation is that people, despite being able to access more information electronically, are becoming even more ignorant of the world around them. Even worse, this excess of information seems to have resulted in a reduction in attention span, especially among younger people. The downside o! this is that the emerging techno-society is far more compliant and susceptible to manipulation by governments, corporations and the ruling elites. eanwhile, in this latest issue of NEXUS we have lots of information that you are guaranteed not to find in that babble of "pap" called "the mainstream". Project Censored has released its latest round-up of the most importan underreported news stories. Admittedly most of them are US-based, but res assured that they are reflected in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and Europe: same issues, just different names. he problem of genetically modified (GM) plant pollen causing widespread contamination of other plants is yet to be fully appreciated by society. We are only just beginning to grasp the impact on interrelated ecosystems, let alone the legal and health implications. This is one genie that can never be put back into the bottle. Our article this issue examines the link between pollen from GM crops and the collapse of honey bee colonies around the globe. is fair to say that modern medicine has approached the point where it is almost equal to a faith-based religion. Even the priests/doctors are ignorant of the full facts available to them—and woe betide those who search or practise outside of approved scriptures/prescriptions! Our article examines how evidence is no longer a factor in the make-up of so-called "scientific medicine". Being a fan of pleomorphism—which involves the idea that our blood contains micro-organisms that mutate into totally new life-forms under certain (toxic) conditions (e.g., E. coli > candida fungus —> TB bacterium —> cancer microbe, to put it very crudely)—I was pleased to receive an article examining yet more evidence of the fact that cancers result from micro-organisms. n January 2009, Dr Steven Greer of The Disclosure Project joined with other key figures to provide a briefing document for US President Barack Obama, urging him to become informed on the issue of UFO secrecy and disclosure. Hopes still run high amongst many that this disclosure may occur, but some fear that the process is stalling. We publish that briefing in this issue; it is definitely worth reading. Several years ago | received a letter from a person who once did work which would clearly describe him as a "Man in Black". It is very detailed, and until now | have held off publishing it for fear of reprisals against him. His letter is interesting on many levels, not least of which is the revelation that we have been "visited" more often than most UFO "researchers" would care to acknowledge. Best wishes to you all for the festive season and beyond. EDITOR Duncan M. Roads CO-EDITOR Catherine Simons OFFICE ADMIN/EDITORS' ASSISTANTS Jaa) Hawke; Susie Foster MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Richard Giles; Susie Foster WEB MISTRESS Jenny Hawke CARTOONS Phil Somerville COVER GRAPHIC Jeff Edis, jeff_edis@hotmail.com Duncan WARRANTY AND INDEMNITY Advertisers upon and by lodging material with the Publisher for publication or authorising or approving of the publication of any material INDEMNIFY the Publisher and its servants and agents against all liability claims or proceedings whatsoever arising trom the publication and without limiting the generality of the foregoing to indemnify each of them in relation to defamation, slander of title, breach of copyright, infringement of trademarks or names of publication titles, unfair competition or trade practices, royalties or violation of rights or privacy AND WARRANT that the material complies with all relevant laws and regulations and that its publication will not give rise to any rights against or abilities in the Publisher, its servants or agents and in particular that nothing therein is capable of being misleading or deceptive or otherwise in breach of the Part V of the Trade Practices Act 1974. All expressions of opinion are published on the basis that they are not to be regarded as expressing the opinion of the Publisher or its servants or agents. Editorial advice is not specific and readers are advised to seek profes- sional help for individual problems. The publisher reserves the right to refuse any advertising material for any reason. © NEXUS New Times 1987-2010 2 «NEXUS ASSISTANT EDITOR/SUB-EDITOR Ruth Parnell DECEMBER 2009 - JANUARY 2010 www.nexusmagazine.com