07-05-2014, 09:30 AM
Peter Lemkin Wrote:There may or may not be more and hidden aspects to this story - or connected to this story. I have long [below radar of the public or even most of the research community's limelight] been researching the strange story of Hans Kammler [a high level SS Officer who skyrocketed to higher positions and increasingly into the inner trusted circle around Hitler in the last years and months of the War]. Most of that research I'll omit here..but one aspect...that Kammler may well have been involved [with other things such as construction of the underground Nazi facilities and positioning of the Nazi secret weapons systems and research facilities for them] with some movement and procurements of art for Hitler. That is NOT my own research, but that of a research friend of mine, Kristian Knaack, who wrote [only available in German] der Kust-Schatz des Fuhrer. Much of the mystery about Kammler related to how, where, and when he died and under who'd control he was under. There are seven 'official or semi-official' versions, and I have an eighth one. However, the art dealers mentioned in Knaack's book do not mention the one who just died - or his father....but there was a small cadre of SS men and art dealers who handled the plundered art and architecture for the Nazi leaders.
It's a strange thing Pete, but about 5 years ago you could barely find a single mention of Kammler on the internet. Now he's all over the place.
The writer Phillip Kerr in one of his Bernie Gunther novels features SS General Hans Kammler in his "A Quite Flame" first published in 2008. Kammler has escaped to Argentina and has been helping Peron with his nuclear programme.
Apart from these novels being an excellent read I am impressed with the author's first class research, and do wonder if Argentina was Kammler's destination, where - like so many other fled nazis - he worked also for the CIA?
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14