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(Note: This is a condensement of Jack Schulman's claims. I have yet to gather all citations, but I felt obliged to post it without too much waiting)
Jack Schulman grew up in the cradle of the industrial revolution. He fell in with the budding science crowd, and learned the trades. But he couldn't understand the gap between the brilliance of the technology, and the apparent lack of brilliance in their "inventors." His speculations gained evidence when he was asked to look over some files of an extraterrestrial space-capable craft. Then skeptical, he noticed a great deal of security around the subject.
Unwilling to keep such a secret, he publicized it, and became tightly wound in heavy military violent interrogation. Believing at that point that exposure more than privacy, might save his life; he spread it far and wide. He received anonymous collaborations, and connected the dots of a story that went from the depression to the Nazis, to Roswell, to the industrial revolution. His association with Bell Labs would pave the way for exposing a secret military operation called Z-division.
Now a little less of a whistleblower, Schulman still holds suspicion as though all those miraculous inventions just fell from the sky, or appeared out of nowhere in terms of the invention process. He retains advanced technology at the forefront of public development, and maintains that all of it came from over half a century ago.
Schulman grew up in New Jersey at the home of Jack Morton, and befriended Jack's son- through the early 60s. One day in 1972, Dr. Morton was found knocked unconscious and set afire in his volvo, without explanation. By the early 90s as a reputable computer hardware pioneer, Schulman was given the opportunity to investigate the Shopkeeper's Notebook of Bell Labs. All of it was centered around what could only be described as the reverse engineering of a craft in Roswell. The carbon-dating of the pages matched the date of the 1947 Roswell incident. The notebook was a centrepiece between computer technology and the nuclear age. After publishing his findings, he'd received anonymous faxes on a "Sky Station"- a nuclear hardened, nuclear equippable space station presumably existant since the late 40s. He'd also receive a smashed office window with this entire office destroyed and the contents stolen. He'd receive a constant array of death threats to his family and his life.
If all of this seems too fantastical- the unsolved mystery remains as to how the invention of the integrated circuit and the dawn of the nuclear age could have suddenly appeared with a few men in New Jersey going from Bell Labs to the most secretive military operations through the Cold War.
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