The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
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<strong>The</strong> Second Interview of Dr. Jamisson <strong>Neruda</strong><br />
WingmakersTM<br />
technologies that don’t have a specific and strategic impact on BST, he’s not involved<br />
in it. He won’t even ask questions about projects of that nature, and generally within<br />
the ACIO, there are always three or four projects that are unrelated to BST. Within the<br />
Labyrinth Group, every project is related to BST.”<br />
Sarah: “What’s he look like”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “He’s about average height and has fairly long gray hair down to his<br />
shoulders which he usually wears in a ponytail. He’s always reminded me of Pablo<br />
Picasso with long hair… he has those same penetrating eyes. He’s originally from<br />
Spain, so it’s no coincidence that he looks like Picasso. His most notable feature is his<br />
eyes, they’re mischievous like you’d expect from a child who’s done something wrong<br />
on the surface, but underneath, they’ve created something wonderful, it’s just that<br />
nobody understands the wonderful part yet. That’s what you see going on behind his<br />
eyes.”<br />
Sarah: “I may have already asked you this, but how old is he”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “He’s about sixty years old I think – or at least he looks about that old.<br />
I’ve never heard anyone say his age. I know when he was a student, he was supposed to<br />
look old for his age. I think he started getting gray hair when he was in his early<br />
twenties, and that’s probably why he was often mistaken for a professor rather than a<br />
student.”<br />
Sarah: “You said earlier that he was kicked out of school. Why”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Remember, he was, even at an age when most kids are concerned about<br />
dating and parties, working on BST… or at least early versions of time travel. He’s one<br />
of those rare visionaries that enter the physical world and knew at a very early age what<br />
he came to do. Fifteen was born to time travel. Period… end of story. That’s all he’s<br />
ever cared about.<br />
“In the fifties, researching BST was considered a waste of time, no pun intended. It<br />
was simply too theoretical and disconnected from anything practical. I think Fifteen<br />
also rubbed his professors the wrong way because he was so bright as a student that he<br />
intimidated most of them. He’s also very stubborn, and when the professors told him<br />
to change his research to something more practical, Fifteen apparently told them they<br />
were small-minded… or something to that effect. Later that semester he was forcibly<br />
expelled as the story was told to me.<br />
“However, Bell Labs hired him for a short stint because his research on quantum<br />
objects and how they could be influenced by consciousness interested them.”<br />
Sarah: “Forgive me, but what exactly are quantum objects”<br />
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