Chapter 142: The Beginning (3)

There are always some crazy people in this society, who are not only looking for trouble for others, but also for themselves. Pen? Interesting? Pavilion wWw. biquge。 info Every time Falklin sees these reports, he feels the same in his heart. While the madmen abroad attracted the attention of Mr. President, the overzealous madmen at home also told the president to devote some energy to them from time to time. Although the Bont II Bureau of the State Intelligence Agency, which Falklin controlled on behalf of the committee, could refuse to be questioned by many good people on the grounds that it did not require Congress to allocate a budget, the bill proposed by a few people in Congress really put a certain amount of pressure on the Second Bureau. The Open Information Act, something strange that Falklin and his colleagues on the committee spent most of several gatherings discussing, was finally passed in Congress. The clear general statement of the bill makes it difficult to raise objections. The Public Foundation Committee couldn't do it, so it could only coordinate action in Congress and vote in favor, and Falklin gradually learned from this incident that the lawyer named Kim behind the bill, Kim was a qualified opponent, and it was not Faulklin's, but the entire committee and even the mysterious master. After all, the existence of the committee has exceeded the trend of Kim or his representative for many years, and after the initial tension, the committee still gave its own countermeasures, and the reason behind it is very simple: if it is 100% mysterious, then it will eventually fall into passivity, and if the so-called open information bill can be used reasonably, then the future may not be clouded. So, the bill was passed after the members of the committee proposed amendments to individual articles several times in succession during the sessions of Congress. The Act provides no explanation as to what is considered to be an exemption from the interests of the United States. On the spot, Kim loudly raised his objections, but apparently he was also a frequent visitor to the venue, and he was very aware of his situation at that time, in order to smoothly pass the bill, Kim chose to protest and then leave, with a clear attitude, but it had no impact on the outcome.

King came into the sights of Bont 2. Ignorance of this opponent can only lead to no controllable future coming soon. After discussion, the committee worked out a plan and content for a secret investigation into King, which was probably the first time since the establishment of the committee, and the plan did not violate the basic terms of the Bont Compact, so that even if King turned out to be a member of the agent organization alongside the committee, and even if a surprising agent organization was unearthed from King, there was no need to worry about the master's interference. The actions of the Bont Second Bureau have always been effective, which Faulklin greatly appreciates. The report was carefully presented to Faulklin and the committee according to different types of information, but Faulin could not see what was in it. King himself was an orphan who was found on his way to grazing by his adoptive father, who owned a typical western farm, and picked him up from the dust trampled by the cattle. Because the adoptive father thought that the galloping cows did not hurt the baby in the slightest, and the adoptive parents had no children in their lives, then God must have given them in return for the pious faith of the old couple. Kim became the baby of his adoptive father, who wanted him to inherit the farm, but Kim went on to earn a law degree in college and eventually became a lawyer. According to the information, it was at that time that Kim's adoptive parents died suddenly, and Kim quickly transferred the farm to someone else after inheriting it, and he devoted himself to becoming a lawyer. After two decades as a private rights advocate and successful candidate for Congress, King joined a political party and authored the Disclosure of Information Act. The inconspicuous opponent didn't seem to need any more time, and Faulklin wanted to smile wryly at the thought that the committee had to meet to discuss the investigative plan. He ordered a temporary freeze on the Kim investigation and put more effort into the countries of Europa.

The preliminary investigation has already begun, whether it is Brees, Frans, or the Germanic Empire, there is a shadow of the Ruler's interference everywhere. Europa's focus is on Blûz, not because of the grudge between the two countries, nor because of its special position on the continent. Rather, it is because of a strange twist that if the modern United States no longer needs to be declared the first power to the whole world, then hundreds of years ago Breech was also in a state of flux. The crux of the matter, then, is that if the Dominator's control of the Earth has been underway for countless years, Breez should have come into the Juggernaut's sight before the United States. There are several obscure places in the memoirs of the founders of the United States, Curris and Warman, that the founding of the United States was in part aided by occult forces. Although they did not specify it, and many people, including historians, believed that it was a favor from heaven, the members of the committee knew in their hearts that the Lord had brought about the birth of the United States. If these histories are explained only by the fact that the rulers have established a number of proxy organizations for the sake of some kind of balance, then why should they abandon the United States in favor of the United States? Faulklin looked at the information with a magnifying glass for hours, and even forgot about his other plans, and the secretary rang the doorbell several times, but he deliberately ignored it, until his wife called her husband's name outside the door to call the president back from his concentration. Madame came in with the secretary and pushed him in a wheelchair. As you walk, you're going to be attending a lecture by the naturalist Maines, a scientist you admire very much. Faulklin patted his forehead, remembering this important arrangement. He seemed to be laughing at himself, if it wasn't for my abnormal performance in the joint entrance examination that year, maybe I would have become an excellent naturalist.

Maines, a top scientist at United Kings University. In his own words, in the temple of science, he dragged his tireless steps around many corners. What is surprising is not how many corners he turns, but in each corner he has achievements that no one else has achieved. In the twenty years that he lectured to students on a three-foot podium, people could not see that this shy man still had such a wild side in his heart, so when he suddenly resigned from his position as department chair to become a person who traveled the world to investigate matters of interest, many people were shocked, and some colleagues and family members came to dissuade Maynes's crazy decision, but in the end no one succeeded. Maynes was like a wayward child, with a small amount of money, set off along the designed route, and went in and out of the continents of Esnia, Everyerek, etc., several times without being favored by everyone but worried by many people, and each time he brought back a lot of strange scientific expeditions, and Maynes also wrote dozens of reports that can be said to have caused an uproar. The bizarre and varied content of the report really attracted the attention of many people, and naturally attracted the attention of the Public Foundation Committee. Faulklin knew about Maines at an early age, and it stemmed from a common hobby between him and the madman of science, and the two were interested in the history of certain primitive peoples south of Emmeric.

In his early years, when Faulklin was just beginning his career, as a trainee lawyer and being called from breathless cubicles, his real leisure time was to read a few chapters of the work of Mains after dinner, and he became interested in the bold ideas he had already begun to assert, and Mains had long asserted that there were great differences from the beginning among earthlings of all colours. The reason for this difference cannot be asserted, but after careful analysis of many historical events, it is easy to find that there is a pyramid-shaped structure in various civilizations, but this structure is divided into two levels, the outer level is accustomed to people, and the inner level is hidden and concealed. Isn't it a series of nonsense that makes people laugh and cry because of the theory of Maines? As a result, several copies of Maines's book remained on the shelves of bookstores until they were covered in thick dust. Perhaps it was because of these factors that he thought he had been fooled, and Mains resigned from the school and went out into the field to investigate. Faulklin was both interested in McNes's vision and admired the professor's attitude to life, so he did not interrupt the professor's attention for a long time. By the time Falklin had been absorbed into the Public Foundation Committee shortly after he had lost his legs, he knew that Maynes's assumption was somehow correct, that the professor had not only touched on the signs of the Juggernaut's existence, but that some of the discoveries themselves had revealed some truth. Naturally, the eyes of the Public Foundation Committee will not miss this powerful human being, and I don't know what jaw-dropping remarks this stubborn old man will make tonight. Faulklin stopped pondering, and was helped out of the car and into the hall in a wheelchair. The existence of the Public Foundation Committee cannot only rely on the form of mystery, sometimes in fact, the more open it is, the safer it is to hide something.

As soon as I entered the hall, Mr. President was greeted by a large crowd of people who gathered around the photographs arranged close to the walls of the hall, some with glasses and some with elegant fingers holding the handle of the magnifying glass and slightly bent down to observe, which obviously attracted their attention. The crowd blocked the photos, the president didn't see what was taken, the speech was about to start, and he didn't have time to explore it, so he directly asked his aides to push him to the VIP area on the side of the rostrum. Mr. McNes was dealing with a large crowd of reporters, and as soon as he saw Mr. President, he humorously and politely interrupted the conversation and came over to shake hands with the president to welcome him. The old man must have made a more showy discovery, for he seemed to be very excited tonight. After a brief pleasantries, the moderator invited Professor Maynes to begin his presentation. Maines looked at the president, who looked at him and smiled, and the speech began. Maines cleared his throat, but instead of speaking, he clapped his hands, and the curtain behind him slowly opened, and it turned out that he was signaling to the staff. Behind the curtain was a sketch, and the old man had become interested in painting, and the corners of Faulklin's mouth were curled even more. Maynes explained that although it was a sketch, the source was a photograph he had taken on another trip to the continent of Ephyrex. In the center of this photograph is a mountain peak, which is called the Fall of Korors, as the locals call it. At this point, Mains asked the people in the room what Crown represented. Some of the people at the scene answered the stars, some answered the meteorite, and some answered the gods. Maines smiled and waited, and when no one came up with any more answers, he put the question aside and began to continue his story. The fall of Korors is located in the center of the continent of Ephyreic, and in the past people used to think that Mount Kellies was the highest mountain there, but in fact the fall of Korors was not lower than that of Mount Kelly. He took out a thick pile of photographs, and the people at the scene were so excited that they said, "I climbed the Fallen Mountain, and although the natives along the way were very unfriendly, I got to the top of the mountain and took these pictures." The summit of the hill, which is as flat as an airport, has a distinctly linear rocky distribution.

After much thought, Mr. Maines said, he climbed higher on the edge of the hill with the help of his assistant, and without taking a picture, he trusted his own judgment more about what an ideal landing site. The assistant handed Maines a glass jar containing an off-white substance, and when he shook the bottle, the substance slid from the bottom to the other side. Mains said it was dust from the huge flat ground at the top of Fallen Mountain. He changed his expression, and I made an astonishing discovery in the dust. Faulklin was a little dumbfounded, and the introduction was too strong. The professor lifted the cap of the bottle, twisted some dust with his fingers, and asked, "Do you know what's in there, there's a burning compound." Then some people may be impatient, the generation of combustion, even if it is primitive humans, is not necessarily rare and strange, a huge flat land, there are burning compounds, it is not unusual. Thinking of the many indigenous tribes in the vicinity, can we imagine that it is the result of those indigenous people who often meet on the flat land to have collective barbecues? This seemingly serious ridicule sparked laughter from the audience. He continued to speak solemnly, and I had secretly observed the food they barbecued, and the food and the burning firewood that I had secretly observed as I passed by the indigenous tribes could not have produced what we found at the top of the mountain. Someone wants to ask, what is special about these compounds, I don't know. Perhaps it would be better to put it another way, either there are still undiscovered types of elements on Earth, or the mysterious components in the compounds are not original to Earth at all. Don't guess that this is a meteorite, if it is a product of the meteorite entering the atmosphere and being burned, then the distribution will be very large on the ground, where there is a very high concentration of such compounds, and these things are not found in other parts of the falling mountain.

Faulklin speculated that the climax of the lecture had passed, and that it was time for the professor to make his own judgment or conclusion. The professor did make a conclusion as Falklin thought, he thought that the so-called fall of Korols should be that the ancient local primitive natives had seen Korors, and as for what Korors was, the professor made a mischievous grimace and said that the ship could travel to and from the universe beyond the earth. The conclusion was so free-flowing that many people didn't react to it, so much so that the applause in the room rang out about half a minute after the professor finished his first part of his speech. Faulklin looked at the applauding people and thought that perhaps it was more out of politeness, and many people might not have understood the professor's words. Faulklin was of course an exception, and the members of the Public Foundation Committee in the room should also be able to understand that Mains is really not simple, he is constantly approaching the truth of the Dominator. President Bonther, as the Commission's special envoy, brought back not only the contract with the Juggernaut, but also a lot of information containing the Juggernaut's history. What Earnes said should be the traces of the history of the Dominator. After Faulklin applauded, he asked if his assistant had recorded the lecture, and the assistant said that the professor never allowed guests to record it. Faulklin nodded slightly, and began to listen to the second part of the professor's speech.

It's like a very lame story with a bland plot, the people call out, and then Adolphus comes to power. The people in Congress are roughly divided into two groups, one is that has completely fallen to Adolphus, and the other group, although they do not want Adolphus to become more powerful, but they are willing to let Adolphus as a test to try to lead German out of the predicament. If Adolphus doesn't succeed, then they can naturally come out and clean up the mess, and if they succeed, these people don't have any obvious objections to the mustache, which is the best of both worlds. Adolphus became the new prime minister after taking the oath to the laws of the Germanic Empire at the request of the Diet. One of the first things Prime Minister Adolphus did when he took office was not to revise his policy plan, but to add a number of national holidays, including the almost nonsensical riots of that year. Of course, this was not really eye-catching, and Adolphus proposed, and Congress passed, that the Guard, which had previously served as Adolphus's personal bodyguard, was recognized by the state as a military force independent of the military. At this point, Mains could not arouse the slightest interest, because these were all things that had already been published in the international news section of the newspaper. There was an expectation that Mr. Maynes would bring something unfamiliar, but fortunately the professor did not disappoint them. He shifted his tone and said that the second part of his speech was about the foreign mustachioed leader. The professor asked people to analyze some of these anomalies, what caused some events in history to take an incredible turn, can a chance be properly explained? When people fell into contemplation, the professor seemed to be enchanted, and words began to come out of his mouth, and there was no shortage of mysterious forces in the depths of history, who interfered with our souls, interfered with our bodies, interfered with our existence, interfered with our development, and we were slaves of the invisible forces that were interfered with. Faulin frowned, pretending to be unwell, and motioned for his assistant to push him out to get some air.