Ooops, Wiki does allege opinions on Monster of Montauk
Looks like I spoke to soon. Wiki is in fact on record as alleging opinions not only about the USG's Monarch Program conducted on Montauk New York, but in a separate reference, it mentions how a thing named Montauk Monster has for years already been commemorated by way of computer games, to include, quote: The D20 Menace Manual, a sourcebook for the D20 Modernrole-playing game (RPG) by Wizards of the Coast contains a creature called the Montauk Monster. It is an elemental composed of living energy that can cause its victims to fatally fuse with nearby matter.
Before proceeding with the Wiki article on the USG variant of the Montauk Monster, it will do well to revisit and review the following:
For those who want to go the extra mile, there is a bit of text that further details circumstances involving people generally being told how to understand stuff.
http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1225111#i
As an aside intended to clear up any unintended confusion potentially caused by happen-chance puns, do not inherently associate the aforementioned RPG versions of Montauk Monster - role playing games, with the RPG - reality phobe's guide to understanding stuff. It is mere coincidence that by necessity the latter does in fact often requires reality phobes to play role games. Namely it requires reality phobes to pretend that they live a life in a world wherein they actually, truly know some stuff other than what other people tell them to know. The pun was merely happen-chance....one that sort of comes with the neighborhood of explaining reality phobes. And now, without further delay, here is what the pediaphiles at wiki allege to be The story on the Montauk Project which in it's origins was theorized to be operated mainly out of Montauk, New York. Try to avoid noticing that the same gang of pediaphiles has a lengthy record on Montauk, New York, wherein they tell of many things, except they do not talk about the theoretical Montauk Project.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montauk_Project
Montauk Project
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Due to the messy nature in which wiki opinions are officially documented for the public, the rest of the wiki article on Montauk Project is not being copied here. Please consult the referring link above. Also note that according to wiki's own stated policy on how wiki comes to allege opinions, quote: "wiki does not author any original content". Among the many implications of such a policy, it stands out that wiki seems to be saying that they originate no original content but are merely propagating material provided by some other source, be it real flesh & blood person[s], fictional corporate person[s] or other entities. The lead-in to the above article states that wiki's present opinion on the Montauk Project is currently in the condition of question on it's neutrality, and that this opinion is not made up of cited references but instead it makes a bunch of statements after which it separately implies these statements might be related to a separate bunch of references......not really the true stuff of encyclopedic reference, that, but is certainly well representative of a propagator-not-an-original-author, as it were, starting off with a conclusion and then setting about scraping up support for that conclusion if and as it can be found and subsequently documented "cited".
As a final note on an outstanding question - who/what and or how did the recent phenom come to be named "Monster", after browsing various sources, to include Gawker, Foxnews, and Wiki, the story goes something like this*. Some time ago in and or around the year 2002, a company invented a role-playing-game that included the elemental character - Montauk Monster. Subsequently, on a day in late July 2008, a person in zLos Angeles relayed the story from a person in New York who relayed the story from a friend who works as a waiter in a restaurant nearby. This friend was walking down the beach this day in 2008 when they came upon a carcass being looked at by many other people. Apparently it was of the type that this person was unable to identify. For reasons still unknown, perhaps it was just the fear factor, this person told their friend who told their friend who somehow ended up being quoted by news sources such as Gawker and Fox, that they (the waiter on the beach) reacted (paraphrased) "oh, my! I was in so much fear..... I can't imagine what I'd do if this monster thing popped up beside me while swimming".
* reference fox news:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,395294,00.html
But the tipster, whom New York magazine identified as Los-Angeles based Alanna Navitski, denied that her efforts were part of any campaign.
She said she'd gotten the picture from her sister, who'd gotten it herself from a friend in New York who actually saw the darn thing.
"I saw the monster," said another witness, a waiter at a nearby restaurant, to New York magazine. "I just came walking down the beach and everyone was looking at it. No one knew what it was. It kind of looked like a dog, but it had this crazy-looking beak. I mean, I would freak out if something like that popped up next to me in the water."