Truck Driver Confirms Underground City Beneath US. 2013, page 1


Pages: <<  1    2    3  >>
ATS Members have flagged this thread 27 times
Topic started on 3-3-2013 @ 09:23 PM by loam


Came across this, and well, it's interesting...

This has to be a hoax, right?
edit on 3-3-2013 by loam because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:25 PM by kettlebellysmith
reply to post by loam



most definitely a hoax. It's the entrance to Cheyanne mountia,



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:31 PM by captaintyinknots
Originally posted by loam
reply to
post by captaintyinknots



This video wouldn't be evidence of that, though.

Im sure its not-I gave up on all of the 'underground city' videos out there, and didnt watch this one. I just find it odd that people still arent convinced.


reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:37 PM by Wrabbit2000
I wouldn't quite call it a hoax.... Not exactly.. but they don't go more than a few miles.

Want some better views?



The angle is a bit weird here but it's the best Google Earth does. One of these days, I'll get over there in my car and shoot some direct photos since it is right here in town. Those are the limestone storage 'caverns' from the mining which form the Springfield Underground. There is another like it at Carthage Missouri and a MASSIVE complex covering a many many square miles in Kansas City.

This is what it looks like inside the one here.





O&S Trucking as well as Prime Inc (The Bobtails at the end were all Prime. The numbering on the back of the cab tells me that much) are both based in Springfield, and within a couple miles of those underground Kraft Cheese storage vaults. It's an enormous series of warehouses for cheese...among other things. The underground nature of it keeps a stable year around temp so it's the ultimate in low cost storage of mid-cool range stuff on temps, actually.

It's also VERY low humidity so some areas, rumor has it, are National Archives and other things around Missouri.

It kinda brings back memories because I recognize the trucks and the facility.

If it HAD been of a military nature, I can say with certainty, no one with a camera and without official clearance would be that close to a controlled entrance. It's almost stupidly overboard for security, or was, when I got out a couple years ago.
edit on 3-3-2013 by Wrabbit2000 because: spacing change



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:38 PM by loam
reply to post by captaintyinknots



I don't discount the possibility.

In fact, I think it an entirely rational thing for a country to do something like this in defense of its interests.

But it just sounds really expensive to build on the scale you hear people assert. So much so, that I start there with finding the stories hard to believe.

Then there is the technology issue. What's the longest commercial tunnel? See my point?


reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:39 PM by kdog1982
Did I miss the location of the entrance?

There are a few complex's around ,heck I have one within a few miles from me that are selling bunker space underground.
But thousands of miles of tunnels?
Maybe what all these folks keep saying about rumbling noises has some merit.

Here is one complex,Raven Rock......

The Raven Rock Mountain Complex (RRMC) is a United States government facility on Raven Rock, a mountain in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. It is located in Liberty Township, Adams County, about 14 km (8.7 mi) east of Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, and 10 km (6.2 mi) north-northeast of Camp David, Maryland. It is also called the Raven Rock Military Complex, or simply Site R. Other designations and nicknames include "The Rock", NMCC-R (for National Military Command Center Reservation), ANMCC (for Alternate National Military Command Center), AJCC (for Alternate Joint Communications Center), "Backup Pentagon", or "Site RT"; the latter refers to the vast array of communication towers and equipment atop the mountain. Colloquially, the facility is known as an "underground Pentagon".[1] The facility runs more than 38 communications systems for its users. The Defense Information Systems Agency computer operations staff provides computer services to the National Command Authority, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and other U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) agencies. Its largest tenant is the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.[2] RRMC also houses the emergency operations centers for the Army, Navy and Air Force.


en.wikipedia.org...
edit on 3-3-2013 by kdog1982 because: (no reason given)




reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:40 PM by loam
reply to post by Wrabbit2000



Ok. That's different than a network that runs across the country.

Fascinating subject.

ETA: Maybe I'm wrong.

Truth is, I know much about this subject.

What would it take to build such a thing? Are there technical barriers? What would be the expense?

Any thoughts?
edit on 3-3-2013 by loam because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:45 PM by Wrabbit2000
reply to post by loam


Indeed.. Much different. I've certainly heard rumors of what he's talking about and I have my personal suspicions about deep deep digging in relation to all this ground rumbling going on around the nation these last few years. Who knows....

What he was at was a Kraft Cheese Warehouse though. If you listen to the driver, he says Kraft, twice. lol... The guy is too enthusiastic or determined to stop and focus on that. The driver does note they do deliver to military though .. which yeah, O&S does. Most national fleets do to some degree though.


reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 09:53 PM by Wrabbit2000
It's certainly true the world's militaries have gotten very very good at digging.

Under reported: China’s 3,000 mile network of secret tunnels

Some digging will show through multiple sources that the Chinese Government has confirmed the basics of that story. It does make ya wonder. In what we don't see, how much could be made and how quickly if money is no object?

After all, we've added *TRILLIONS* in spending in just a few years. I'm not sure people still even keep mental perspective as to how much just ONE trillion actually IS. (How many COMBINED national GDP's just one trillion comes to) I've wondered for awhile if there weren't ..other directions, an enormous amount of money wasn't going. Perhaps tunneling is part of it.

* Okay.. I'll add this tidbit as an old driver. The years doing it are good for something I suppose. Stories, if nothing else.

Kansas City Subtropolis

Thats the BIG one at Kansas City. (Most of the images anyway) Now the Underground up there is presented as being unconnected, different locations around the metropolitan Kansas City area. It's more than just the Subtropolis business office on the East end of the loop, to say the least. I've been to three other parts of the K.C. Underground in places many miles in different directions from that one.

In talking to people that had worked a long time down there over the years, I've been told a couple times that more than one of those far removed entrances ARE actually connected in round about ways, underground. That would suggest a much much larger underground space up there than I've ever seen publicly indicated.

My contribution to the urban legends of the place.
edit on 3-3-2013 by Wrabbit2000 because: Added content



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 10:15 PM by kloejen
Liveleak post about the video here

Where Are All the Deep Underground Military Bases?
(Part 2)

By Dr. Richard Sauder

With Commentary By Shepard Ambellas & Alex Thomas

theintelhub.com

April 17, 2012

(This is Part 2 of an ongoing and
exclusive underground base series with excerpts from the book Hidden in
Plain Sight provided to theintelhub.com by the publisher, including
commentary by Shepard Ambellas and Alex Thomas.)

Read part 1,“Nazi Engineers, Secret U.S. Military Bases, and Elevators
To The Subterranean and Submarine Depths.”

In the continental USA there are
numerous underground bases. I will briefly list just some of the bases that my
research has uncovered over the last 17 years. There are assuredly many more
than those listed here

...


Full article
edit on 3/3/2013 by kloejen because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 3-3-2013 @ 10:27 PM by bjax9er
reply to post by Wrabbit2000



yes, most fleets do deliver to military bases.

and the security is dead serious.

i'am a driver and have delivered many a load to the military.

you can't get anywhere near the actual base without complete search of the tractor.
explosive search by dog.

a quick federal backround check.

vehicle registration and insurance checks.

and armed escorts at all times, depending on what base you are at.

if this site were military,this guy would be nowhere near an entrance like that, with his vehicle and a video camera, without having killed several MP's.
Pages: <<  1    2    3  >>    ^^TOP^^



Dumbing down reality
  Posted 5 days ago with 103 member flags
The 800 Pound Gorilla Everyone Ignores
  Posted 16 days ago with 67 member flags
The Illusion of Choice and Truth
  Posted 10 days ago with 52 member flags
A chronical of the BANKSTER WARS
  Posted 7 days ago with 42 member flags
Conspiracy Theory:The Lost Episode
  Posted 4 days ago with 39 member flags
666, NWO, Aliens and You!
  Posted 13 days ago with 36 member flags