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Worlds Beyond the Poles: Physical Continuity of the Universe

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Increase of speed and power would hasten the development whereby it would become lost outside the Universe the luminous terrestrial sky-curves each cover a land area one hundred miles in length and width. Then “cover” the CONTENl'S Preface Scene II 1be 13 1 to 2 1Db~e CrocaD:eet:ed;UD~t1hve-emne~, MIstress o~f~ 33 4 ~ -rile Heavens Above\" !III 5 Stratosphere Revelations IllS 6 A Journey 0 - the Earth', Sky.Llght Road rrr of illusions 11. l34 7 \"On Earth A3 It Is In Heaven\" 148 151 8 Into the Unknown lell 189 9 2,000 MIles 0 - Land Beyood the Ncrth Pole 208 10 A Compo.rison of Values 11 The Magnetic Respiration of the Umv- 12 The Master Builder's LumInous S~ts 13 Fulfillment of Prophecy', Eodless orIds aDd Mansions, and Tribes That Mark the Way I'm pleased to have this book in my personal collection, but unless there are some mind-shattering revelations to come about our universe, this volume will remain just a conversation piece, a brain-teaser, a relic from the mind of the twentieth century's most progressive thinker - or perhaps just the ravings of a man inflicted by deep psychosis.

s nn: urnn:IlsE d r1lY d, might inf~nt f2b~~ no~ lik~~~u('ar. 'SIC,u, co/'l'l'l the rnnTY of hich she ha p I You have I do of my of '\" et,,,\", of \",,,bi\"'\" h,ye d..tro) ed th\", to ,,\"ow\"J ~g d to the 0 stork You e expect that mo lity she praye c0' OUaway~s. .. Would on whereby the rea d to decry the I,k~ood ~o~e u lfdors haell bteh expect,e s that could do the medIUm e illUSIOn chJ condemnht to light? ...'\" ,,,,u'h d\"\"n~'?1. [or \\ , age 0Idhi,gm,aenalictoyns ght from earlie,.t.,Mdo.f d \" ,Ib,e,,cgram\"\"m,dgimblteoan th,directei,d '\"to\"wa,d th. , \"qeruuia,t,e\"ownodd The tan tivity is \",IE~%:~h d\"d\",~ I~::;'ould o~:,~ dep'~i.knowledge dwelL And w facts of the Hnm vise? Has h,.e it th of the Sun th manner ill •w~:';,::\", ligh'.w d ::fbowledg, \" tow dedl'P'''''kyd? the e h acquISltion th is . mediate s , ated thrtl°uf light and wann illl because re- obtshee~eSd ~a1d'gsarlienessdst, whICh 1a Has the golden wherever one rcaetnhter than predc~estera~rderbe consldetrhee pos- stratosphere causes an ted from than dreams be and isfIbwleeportent the human withm h blood were tfo less t an i- mbroavme?mCenotul0d Iat \"st~si0tfm. I'tslacboomraptoosr\"y if and when Your tion and are away.h ir origmal ende' avor? I oafntcieent gentIbe- No, dear ~tIetinue to be 0 will continue cO~,e gcl~modern classificatIOn, by mers. The man named the e be~as~Ittrioiiu>naonwdae~rst~a?diGbn}e)g(it)h,0re- served unto lenses ar will chan~g~ ~Utl~)Ugh7~e~~estlemen with dergowho on~g~ry~t\"pphsuritenartprga\"otls.vtoeoanlelusu0esnf' ialalnluldsisotuhncehofpoints of celestial sky lig I On 2 February 1947, columnist Bob Considine wrote up Giannini’s ideas for the Washington Post, using as a hook Giannini’s exhortation that Byrd should continue past the South Pole and onto Mars. Considine—who would write a biography of Robert L. Ripley in 1961—made it clear he thought Giannini was a kook. Giannini seems to have drifted from the Fortean fold by this time, as Thayer only heard about the articles from other Forteans who sent in clippings (Doubt 18, July 1947, 268). THE CHANGING SCENE 1927-1957 1927: August. \"If it Is so the world wiD. lcnow of it.-- Wj1Ilam Cardinal o'Connell, Archbishop of Boston 1928: July. \"Giannini, since ~ C8DDot confirm you, oollwords cannot deny you. It Is your work, and you CIDl give it.\" -Dr. Robert Andrews MlIljkan, PresiAt, ecrU- fomIa Inltitute of Technology (Pa.wlena) -Giannini, if you prove your concept it will establish the l::memost complete Physical Continuity in the bistory of man.- -The Rev. Professor S. Riccard, S.J., Physicist 6: Seismologist. Santa C UDioer8lty (CaUfoml4) December. \"The memorable December 12th discovery of heretofore unknown land beyond the South Pole, by Capt. Sir George Hubert Willdns, demands that science change the concept it has held for the past four hundred years concerning the southern contour of the Earth.-- Dumbrova, Russian Explorer 1929: - .. . Physical Continuity of the Universe more daring than anything Jules Verne ever conceived.--:-BOIfon American (11earst) 19(7: February. \"I'd lilce to see that land beyond the Pole. That area beyond the .Pole is the center of the great UD- knownlw-Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, U.S.N., Nfon his seven-hour flight over land beycmd the North Pok. 1955: April 6. \"Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd to Establish Satellite Base at the South Pole.--International News Service April 25. \"Soviet ScIentists to Explore Moon's Surface With Caterpillar Tank.w_United Press November 28. '\"This Is the most important e~oo in 13

Endless flat earth beyond north and south poles

Our luminous outer sky, deceptively appearing as millions of rounded and isolated “bodies,” would present to the the following is taken from the book Worlds Beyond the Poles, I don't have original sources for these

Wrighfl' FoDy'\"; JUCh a term deIc:ribecl the wapiti' \"l\"'- ian Of 0rvtDe aDd Wilbur Wright. Yet .,rbIJe. the . ...... majority ridiM,led the DeW eoterprtae beyoDd tIM4r .....- 1taDdmg. the Wright m()4t.... thiew tradIttoa', J_bl«Sool to the wfDdt IDd Da'ipted the 8m crude a OJ:\"ane 0Ya' .w.Tbeae aDd aD . .hwtw lilt of odM, wIao DtyHawlc. m-mpopular dreamed their IDd1vIdual IIIIt aDd made that cberttbecl !IDd protected, be they evw 10 be· 1 k .• faulty. \"My tnJ~ is the truth. 10 My we.n.\" Tbai.1Ib the i,.and llnl....PWh the oral quilla of ,bptIcMm, oyrd' d8nr.porcupine p*ofecting itt qut11t III II wWg Fe 'b'& \"hPthe majority becoane a\"tgmeti I Ii to tluow the DeWWOlU. Uruverse depicted by the B DS liE\" e~tendU \" cortu!\"rn to further desc'npti'on 0 f the illustrati.ve un!- tt\" ;'5 we ret Id be borne in m ind that nothing has been said su;btenOtrhisu\"eeet,rips5ta:s~eht:tOi:tcU~eu0rlIntaehr. etWocewwleeihsdwtitiichalhll of unknown celestial are;lS of the r b be 4]lt;t6 ~~ uyocwfoancvTdierihstci,ehorbnneegsa,awrrtoenWelai,gvherest,awlbisrat~vel7eesn7'Uw..'h'vaahenvtiaehfts~~,wana,_vdes00'ther0sl;'f- acnodrdeev~e1sryo.me~_c_a_n_b_e_S___________________________ - WORLll8 BEYOND THE POLES sory globularity and isolation of celestial sky areas. The same illlllOr)' conditions have been {lroved to develop from ob- servation of luminous outer sky areas of the tellesbial. \"Outer sky- means the sky as it is observed against strat0- sphere darkness. The conce.em\": the Universe is comprised of globular and isolated .. originated hom the curvature that \" developed b¥ all Umse8. And that lens-developed curvature fosters the deceptive appearance of globular and isolated \"bodies\" com~~ Universe. The \"bodies- are illusory. The ancient co 'on of Galileo Galilei, that luminous celestial areas are isolated from each 'other and are \"circling or ellipsing in space\" was founded on the inescapable errors of lens functioning. The \"cirClingN movement apparent to Galileo is an illusion. In an endless land and sky Universe of reality, the undulating. or billowing. of luminous sky gas enveloping the entire Universe must deceptively appear as a circling or eUipsing movement. The deceptive appearance develops hom the fact that such E&SeOUs sky movement is detected by a circular lens. Hence there is necessarily repro- duced the circular and therefore globular-appearing lens image. . Under the mobile sky gas. which extends throughout the celestial realm, there is undetectable but very factual land, water, vegetation, and life like that common to this Earth. Therefore the so-called \"stars- and \"planets- of astrooom1caJ designation are in reality lens-produced apparently globular and isolated areas of a continuous and unbroken luminous celestial outer sley surface. It envelops every land area of the celestial in the same manner that it envelops the terres- tria1land, One may question how such features were known when science was without record of them. If 10, one has but to finish reading this chapter, which adequately desc:ribes how, when, and where. It was October, 1926, when he who sought the answers to the Universe mysteries wandered through a woodland vale of old New England, lavish with the scented breath of WonLDS B more arbculate, you will never b l;;Y°Nn ~o contulUmg illusory appearance f to \"wink and blink\" at you 0 e denied l'lQ; Your little ..pleasUre m tile stillness of.the .nigh't ' and hold stea1tshtayrs\" ''L''atOf . T1Ie so·called stars above\" . rend see t~mH~liarOo;nUn:n.SrefBr\"lusoI.tnntartwfh\"oehrviiracthhltureueaenuwincmihdlaalerlvsaeeXc~I.tSeedtr~ibwnli.lewl~:bitlWelsakreyenXmolCSwato:in:nJ,p•t,ao',l_riadablllteh0eb.~esezpT\"rove en not old enough to h c1uId mind WIthOUt b t1) t.hiTrhde_~n.dsad J~6- cann.~~concept of mass or b dave acquir a ness of animals and property must be drawn witho t blects. Hence tl perce,ve thension produce the anuna u ody fullness Ie anima l e full. t1u: And all eLF Or ee dimeDsio Orts 01 t~r ~sw~iodWtihn, ganthdetlaurcukmness1, or object of object pemut of no to reo c!:esncpttthItsoh,efothcuththeIiclcdnoJgunflcd~e;pcVtaSn0nIoldteree,xobpItbOrlededsecysvtetwIolllonJlcaktnceossnOc0m-edfpi?matrneednuotsnlelJaOa1;sn:aaSilnhelpdelanlion?nbtee-hs, taobruatShmdteyraa!unfnoogdrremeovab~sI~~Irtfef~ulrlIcentahe;issllsZdreamstThzthhen:rd~thtlahtneISapasnsauItbtnhlaareetlselti-oardsnitrmdes~eOnrbso}sl~Ocnuntocsatelhhcatoohvlnede: modern SOClet may seem to' emed to be ~dveaptleeaCSdr5temao.g.eba1osibioefy~,t~ht0heaednrEredaawaratrhertuielmwenaItlai~rsee0mtr;enibmteehmbsreebIrneesrrdse0lmEIan~Oe:uerIa~encnadlpIagubnhlcteeunltoei_fd gamTehdutshroIuI'O~d One cODsld nlInal or ob' DslOns They Ject w:rtilout body ilirapewrcoerl,vdeotfbeg that Dleasur er tilat the c. had lost or of mental gr whtihld ea1J.ty of thin e ~tehnetaclondsecvieenlot'oeues dimeOsio gs and conditi:ns enabling it to teacher Os? Could the d as they exist in ecome Ie pment? W ulbe expected t evoten parent or ansWers ss real to tl 0 d tile Patti ul° decly tile child' child's lI!ainred most ObVioIue adVancing chc'Idar. aru.mal or objects and the s. Nothing IV I mtelligence? The meaSUre oE am as subtracted from the usement derived from Martian and all other inhabitants of the Universe the identical so-called “Heavens above” which we see as their

ref-. it _ deocrIbed as om- da1Dg thaa ~ Juleo Verne ever ClOIICeIved.\" . III that 1nltIal1927 redtaI, It __ obowD that the ~ of IJoIated ~stan\" and \"pIaDeta\" \" fOUDded edIats_the =f~thaantd;oUucIDh Ip..h.y. ac\".'lWeH..._..'witht thoef cweiItehottIhael .I.e..m..!.starnladl..th..e..pahfywSaIYcall oCfO\\aIIDIIdet,tI_oao o,f ceIeotW . .. . or Ice. It _ further dIoclooed how at that time c:ooqueot of the ceIeotW c:ould be accompl!sbecl by peoetratloD of Imd 8IdIIIDg b. yood the imaginary North foIe and South Pole, or.the true geopphlc centen of the IUpposedly \"1JoIated globe\" Earth. Sucl!. movement from polar ........... deoc:dboid as IeadiDg directly Into celesti.al ...... appMring \"up,\" or out, from the Earth. , 'That first day's .uclirDce with the c:udInal 0CCUJTed UD- der the burning InteDIIty of an August Sun which too ar- dently embraced. the c:udInal'. Brlgbtoo garden. ADd the Sun's warmth, In OODjUDCtlQn with a dnIamer'. dyamnic recltaJ. soon Ured the aged prelate. The audlmce _ ad- journed In mldaftemooo. On the ~onowlng.day, the tmp\"\"\"'dented rectta_r _ COlI- ttoued with • description of what every ana of the Earth'. outer sky rurlace would presez>t to oboorvation from _ sphere darIcnea and from other Imd _ of the Um_ It was exp\\alned that the unl6ed tenestrial outs' sky ..-- face would be detected as luminous and deceptfwly idobu- Iar and Isolated ....... Hence the terrestn.l sky wOuIC1 :i'!'\" IeIIt the Identical \"star and planet\" pattern psotectec1 by JumlDOUl c:eIest!aI. sky ..... , an It was then d.IscJOoed that the obIenable lumiDoIIly of \"\"lestJal ...... results from the fact that f1WItY eeIeItIai area \".,..._ flo. ....... tIai /mown to ....,.,.\". flo. t _ trial. It was claimed that tLe EMtb'. blue aIty II ~ when observed against the darIc atratoapben by InhabitaDb anof c:elestialland terrltosy. Hence It Is the eaIsIeace of a blue . ley enveloping \"\"lestIal areas Which pennlb temIotrIIoJ bere is alao shown the region of at:moopberic cI.qoiIy between land owface and the Inner blue .ky. 'The cIiItaDce . - tIs the .....\" at ceIeot!al \\evel U It II at lAIITeItrial \\eveI, and the osygen II rufIIcIeot to IUStain vegetation and life at celestial level. In the CopemIcan coacept of pIanetuy isolation the SlID II usumed to occupy the ceater of the darlt stratosphere, and ~ outer sky areas of the Unlvene are as- sumed to he Isolated UDlII. ADd they are usumed to pm\" fOlm a rotative movement around the SUD ceater 01 a mathematically prescribed UDi~ subdivision known u the Solar S)'1tem. That Solar Syrtem arrugement, whkh embraces the Earth. represents something 01 a combined celestial and temostrial pinwheel. To malee foe easier com- prebensloa of Pbysleal Continuity, the pinwheel Solar Sys- tern center. or S..... has In a _y been pUlled out to dford It reasonable placement u a guide or leader for the. entire connected fIDivene. M the iIIustnotion shows, rtvery P\"'\" v!ously usumed Isolated ..... of the UDivene wboIe, in- cluding the Earth. bolds III orlglnal pDIItJollln the UDivene stJuctwe, and every area maintalnllII da!Ir and ~y rela- tion to the S..... AcconIin~ !liuJtration sbows bow the land and the . \" of the ·extend to and \"\"\"\"'\"\"\" wtth the Earth', imaginary Pole points, It .bows that we may move beyoad tile EArth withont \"falIIa& 01 the ..tg.\" 01' on!\"falUn off the 'ends.' \" foDawtng deocriptive material, in coojUlldion with the illustration, Ibould doni ample guidaDce foe COIIlpI&' hension of the factual Unl..- u it was created. ...a1) The darlt center reprseots the perpetually darlt stratosphere NrrOUDding the IernIItrIal die ceIeotIaL It Is put of the darlt void of infinity wherein the UDi_ whOle wu created. . 2) n,e luminolll outer putial disla. to he oboerved aogpaeidns0tYsetIr' aatnooaprebaesreofdtuhlecnuenut.verenper.esAenctonthtienu.kityy Upt devel- cLthe __ blue sky we oboerve &om land surface everywhere OIl the point of flight origin. Thus the heralded spaceships would be precisely that and nothing else: any spaceship launched would return it to some land area of the terrestrial. That flight principle, always demanding consideration in the firing

and the celestial would take the hapless explorers away from the Universe structure and project him into infinite and there is no doubt that it could be launched) would either be lost in space infinite or be returned to some area of arc of flight would precipitate the spaceship away from the Universe. On the other hand, insufficient power would PlIYS!CAL CONTl! !,d,,;n.J ArrlvlDg at the.natloDal capital. the pIiartm butaIecl to the o8Ices of ScIeDce ~heA be met with 0IIII of the few open-minded men of _With ouch opoIHIIInded- .... he .... able to pen:eive beyood the tltlblithed pattaD of eormological values. Dr. Edwin E. S1auoa, tt- the feu- less DIrector of the Scleoee Service, patiently JiIteDed to a dramatic recital wltllOUt paNlleI wblch deocribed bow ODe might journey JtraI~t ahMd &an the suwc-d Earth -ends\" to urlve at celestial land ueu, bow IIIOVC>8IIt up II always relative. and appanont .up\"~ts of the UDivene would be attained by ~ftln':\" t ahead ill a DWIIIIr comparable to the western 0 Christopber Columbus to go to the East. Dr. Slosson was not an _ . DO< \",u he afraid of space phantoms. However, though be JuDy b'TllSped the import of aensational cIl.sclorweI, be was obllaed to counsel, \"GIannini, you will not find ten opeD-IIIiDaed men of scle\"\"\" throughout this entire COWtIry,- Despite such alncere couruel, ten men of tolerance were thereafter ardently lOU~t It mattered Uttle to the pIlgrtm whether they bore the I&bel of \"acIentIrt\" or aomethlDg • . If they existed and could UsIst ill the c:auae, they IhouId be found.. Zeal born of relentleas obo.olon would IxIIonte DO cessatiOll of the quest, whicb was apected to dewIop the lOeans for adequate diacIoo...... ODd uli:lmate .....sr-tIoo·of percepdon'. extraordinary 8ndings. He reelIad at an euly d.~te In tbe pUgrimage that espenslve atnllOlpMre _ t and elsborately equlpped espedItioDa beyood the North Pole and the Sooth Pole would be requlnod fot: .aIal COlI- firmatiOll of blJ dlsclooures. ADd with such reaIIzatIoa be .... poinfully aware that he WU a dIomaI. pauper. aa.ardIng to DO~ of kDoWtag this world', otandard of values. He bad then that his utmost wish would be p tbnJap the l'hyslcal initiative of othen who would _ to It tluit coa- Onnation would be cleveJOII\"d. The requited ~ ' '''''''1 and expeditiOlll wou)d be made. .

I heard about Worlds Beyond The Poles after it was mentioned in a certain controversial debate regarding the shape of Earth. I'm sure anyone who has used the internet in their daily lives over the last few years has at least heard of this debate. It happened to be one that I was grossly interested in.HYSICAL OO'fl1NVl'l'Y or na: VNlVEI\\SE 37 _pieslens-cre.teiptlons esperleDced III obsenatIoD. Neither the Earth nor any part of the unIvene about the Earth curves III agreement with the deceptIoas of cwwture here P\"'\"\"\"ted. We may grant such curveo reolIIm. IIIIly IDIofar as they have been erected by the ,.,.... No _ CUI __pe producing a curve at the proper disW>ce an the borizonW or the perpendicular. M previnusly related, the physbl ,tructure and properties of alllenJell demand that tliecurve be created. Then the lens-aeated eurve Is accentuated by concept Into the full-bodied and Isolated globe or sphere as distance from the photographed or telescopbBy ciboerved area or object Is i~ There is III reality DO such curva- tll re to the endles, sky and land continuoul throughout the Universe. The only such cwvatwe that might poaIbly esIst, aDd wltich we could never hope to determine, would be that of a conceptional natwe, liavlng the UnIwrN 1M .. fDhoh curve in infinite time and space. GnntlDg such an UIlveri- G.ble arrangement for the COIIDeCted Unlv..... wboIe wouJd In no way interfere with the all-Important fa~ that the Universe Is connected and continuous and that jourDey may be had to all areas thereof by movement on the ....... phys- lcal level with this Earth. That iDdJaIted m~ WoU1d he 'traight ahead, north &om the North Pole and JOUth from the Soutb Pole. . 9) Photograph., taken whenever and wberever-in Peru, in AsIa Minor, or in our own Roclcy MountalDs-in DO _y prove the ao-ca1Ied \"eurvature of the Earth.. 'I1>ey prove only that the utilized lenses could DOt avoid deYeIOpIng C\\lIVes that have been mistakenly btterpreted as ~ 10 the Earth's contour. The lenl ',.,11 <;Tea/cd the _ _ in tl,e same manner that the optic lens, by poe of Its structure and functlon, creates WIVes and deceptive horI- 7.0ns within the experience of everyooe. . l! aVERS rs rill c : :1\"l-'\\\"\\,¢ of -odnt:h'eir de,\"out\"tmheemSbllelr 0 fedDaeveild. _ cO:- ' 0(15 an symbols as tl ob en 1 .'\" \".. \"'go,,,,,,,n,,\"! In~\"1tIbl1It~oeSrtt.tlJI'le,ltloshftreiaBllle'st1h0':Yle_hl[ie'gSmhalt 'lb. p,,,,'D 'Ddu\", 00' arances ect of C askpyperemIaintseraBnUallSaer' Uruverse ' dtertreetl\"e uJ\\l\\C as that as d ex- ~t11l.) JfJ rocle \\ d sen- es earch an •s oaval res in the pre _ \"O( Pi11I , an \". 'jrbe past quarvtedeotrhf.eaJU:cJselcnltoufsruy1r9e-s27f_i rsItt mandfeirms that the, co d from an) ~1~\"'rati,on has Bporoston cardin..a a0re to be obserthveough a thou- >\" f the bove H wever, d more d \"Heavens .a sal whole 0 'Ilion miles an be no iJl\"CC2..r..pe~l~rf ethxe.pUedlliIu\\le·ro3~/~:tarvaetnes ab~::les~;:la Dll •• I re WI ll The pattern. d!\"IIi\"tsorutphteI,OIn'ItIeofntohirlel 0pforeresveenrtIV'rea0mbmse. rvaas ~earc S W I.kUnopwroIe\\\"d!'de observations W into onsible 1Budt jkonuornwelyedsge of resfhat thde force a n be ate, eater phantoms .f.oirlltihnespUlIr'euvaegrsre unique Master substance which of The kingdom d Heaven, is at han , know It, And the land courses into ahead from either are the land dpOint of theory nthe 1928, and 7~eyon , ruary, 194 the penod Durtng d Evelyn f po e~' o ~ 1mtloalnrradelteRummiCbhriaotcrebdeexybPoyIOntdrhaet'i0tvna4l a,iur a.te 0 a te.elS~iafOl of p 0 Il land exten taU .5. Na UDlt nouncemen Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, U.S.N., before his seven hour flight over the land beyond the North Pole.

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