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The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5

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<strong>The</strong> Fourth Interview of Dr. Jamisson <strong>Neruda</strong><br />

WingmakersTM<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Again, I don’t want to disclose the details of this.”<br />

Sarah: “Okay. Since we landed on the topic of the artifacts, I’m reminded that in our last<br />

session you mentioned that you’d like us to talk about the artifacts from the Ancient Arrow<br />

site. This might be a good time to do so. Where would you like to begin”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “One of the most interesting artifacts was the original homing device.”<br />

Sarah: “This is the one found by the students at the University of New Mexico”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Yes. It was enigmatic in all respects.”<br />

Sarah: “Give me some examples.”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “When it was first discovered, it was laying on top of the ground as if it had<br />

been placed there. This was not a buried object—as it should have been. It was left in the<br />

open, albeit in a very non-descript section of northern New Mexico. When the students<br />

handled it, it immediately induced vivid hallucinations, which they couldn’t understand.”<br />

Sarah: “What kind of hallucinations”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “<strong>The</strong>y saw images of a cave-like structure. It later turned out to be the Ancient<br />

Arrow site, but of course they didn’t know what it was, and were afraid of it because they<br />

linked the hallucinations to touching the object. So they wrapped the object up in a jacket,<br />

stuck it in their backpack, and took it to a professor at the University, who examined it. We<br />

discovered it within hours afterwards and dispatched a team to secure the artifact.”<br />

Sarah: “How exactly did you find out about the artifact I assume the ACIO isn’t listed in<br />

the phone directory.”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “<strong>The</strong>re are certain keywords that are monitored in e-mail and phone<br />

communications—especially within academia. <strong>The</strong> ACIO simply taps into this technology<br />

that was developed by the NSA, and can intercept e-mails and phone calls anywhere in the<br />

world that relate to key words that it monitors.”<br />

Sarah: “Like Alien or Extraterrestrial”<br />

Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Yes. It actually works a little differently because the ACIO can define how<br />

many characters—in the case of e-mail, or how much time—in the case of a phone<br />

conversation—it wants to monitor on either side of the key word, and then extracts entire<br />

sentences or even paragraphs in an effort to verify context. It also correlates this to the e-<br />

mail’s IP address or phone number to a credibility index. If all of these variables meet a<br />

specified level, the communication event is relayed to analysts at the ACIO who then<br />

perform more invasive techniques to ensure context and content are matched and verified.<br />

All of these steps can take place in a matter of an hour or two.”<br />

Page | 165

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