This is the most in-depth book by Dr. Richard Sauder, the world's premier investigator of underground bases and tunnels. In these pages, Dr. Sauder asks, and often answers, such questions - Where are the secret underground bases? - How far down do they go? - What leaks are coming from the classified world? - What has the U.S. Navy planned for beneath the ocean floor? - Are there bases beneath the ocean? - What's going on beneath Washington, D.C.? - Are there high-speed, underground maglev systems? - What is the connection with UFOs and the alien question? This is a book that truly goes where no other book has gone before. It is a must-read for any and all who are seeking to understand the full magnitude of the Matrix-like reality of our civilization. Using a combination of archival research, on-the-scene investigation, and first-hand interviews, Sauder takes the reader into a world that is under the ground and under the ocean. It is a world that we are supposed to think is impossible, and yet -- after reviewing his evidence -- seems all-too-likely. Jim Marrs, author of bestsellers "Crossfire," "Rule by Secrecy," and "The Rise of the Fourth Reich," said that "Hidden in Plain Sight" should be on your "must-read shelf." Timothy Good, author of the bestseller "Above Top Secret," called Sauder's book "brilliant, fascinating and revealing ... a must for all those interested in, and concerned about, the clandestine underground and undersea world beneath us."
Very interesting book on the possible secret underground bases that might have been built in the last fifty years. I don't know if I believe it or not, but it's interesting how many people in the underground tunneling and construction industry were talking about this in the 1960s and then suddenly nobody was talking about it.
I read it as research for a techno-thriller that I'm working on. Wouldn't it be interesting if there were large, underground government and military installations that we don't know about? Dr. Sauder argues that, with so much money disappearing into military "black budgets," funding isn't a problem. So, if something is technologically feasible and money is no object, did the military build a massive underground bunker under Washington D.C. for "continuity of government" projects?
The world beneath our feet may be bigger than we thought
Saunders lays out a compelling case for a vast amount of underground construction. Bases on the ocean floor, tunnels connecting the Coasts, etc. The government had the means, motive, and opportunity to construct these bases, but did they? I would think that if they did to the scale that Sauder suggests then tens of thousand of people must have in these bases. Shouldn't we personally know someone who knows about these bases?