The theory about Amelia Earhart's survival and secret repatriation as Irene Bolam is known since 1965, but no bit of proof of any kind was ever presented to support it. Moreover, in many aspects the theory contradicts both well proven facts and logic. Several certified forensic professionals studied the case in different times and all came to the same conclusion: Irene Bolam wasn't Amelia Earhart
Surely not. Her parents or grandparents (not sure which ones) allowed runaway slaves stay in their house some nights. She also was a big inspiration to theTuskegee Flyers of ww2. She proved that women could fly, so the Tuskegee Flyers knew they could too. (context pulled from Susan Butler's book - East to the Dawn)
I believe her husband George put this film together. She was reading what he wrote for her to say. He constantly reminded her to speak slowly, as she normally spoke pretty fast.
Scientology is a bait-and-switch scheme, and bait-and-switch is the point of the personality test. It is deceptive to let the people who take the test think that the analysis they receive of their results are based on their test results, when in fact the analysis is scripted, written before they ever take the test. The recommendation is always the same: Scientology. It is deceptive to offer this as a genuine test of personality.
This is super. A great testimonial to history. Funny, you can tell she's reading her own narration towards the end at the 3:30 mark. It's great she did live and return to the U. S. with a new name. when one watches the press conference she held in 1970, it's plain to see the same person... who is is shown here.
See upper left channel description box at neilnils for website. She actually did survive to change her name to Irene during the WWII era. She married a British MI6 fellow in 1958. In 1970 a book tried to expose her. It was called Amelia Earhart Lives. She held a press conference to deny the allegation. She died in 1982. In 1997 a forensic study displayed who she really had been. In 2002 another discovery showed how three different women had shared the same Irene identity.
The theory about Amelia Earhart's survival and secret repatriation as Irene Bolam is known since 1965, but no bit of proof of any kind was ever presented to support it. Moreover, in many aspects the theory contradicts both well proven facts and logic. Several certified forensic professionals studied the case in different times and all came to the same conclusion: Irene Bolam wasn't Amelia Earhart
LindMarcus 1 year ago 2
There were many UFO reports during the time of the gyro plane.
appapo3 1 year ago
you are hot!
VIKING33NY 1 year ago
Comment removed
localibran 3 years ago
Surely not. Her parents or grandparents (not sure which ones) allowed runaway slaves stay in their house some nights. She also was a big inspiration to theTuskegee Flyers of ww2. She proved that women could fly, so the Tuskegee Flyers knew they could too. (context pulled from Susan Butler's book - East to the Dawn)
FlyinRyans35 2 years ago
I believe her husband George put this film together. She was reading what he wrote for her to say. He constantly reminded her to speak slowly, as she normally spoke pretty fast.
merrywivesofwindsor 3 years ago
@merrywivesofwindsor
Scientology is a bait-and-switch scheme, and bait-and-switch is the point of the personality test. It is deceptive to let the people who take the test think that the analysis they receive of their results are based on their test results, when in fact the analysis is scripted, written before they ever take the test. The recommendation is always the same: Scientology. It is deceptive to offer this as a genuine test of personality.
OpenComments 2 years ago
Cool...I've never seen any footage of Amelia Earhart where she was actually speaking. Wow, YouTube is something else. Thanks for sharing.
ladyvee7110 3 years ago
This is super. A great testimonial to history. Funny, you can tell she's reading her own narration towards the end at the 3:30 mark. It's great she did live and return to the U. S. with a new name. when one watches the press conference she held in 1970, it's plain to see the same person... who is is shown here.
neilnils 3 years ago
What press conference in 1970 do you speak of?
ebayerr 3 years ago
See upper left channel description box at neilnils for website. She actually did survive to change her name to Irene during the WWII era. She married a British MI6 fellow in 1958. In 1970 a book tried to expose her. It was called Amelia Earhart Lives. She held a press conference to deny the allegation. She died in 1982. In 1997 a forensic study displayed who she really had been. In 2002 another discovery showed how three different women had shared the same Irene identity.
neilnils 3 years ago