Siege in the Davis Mountains by James Horak

31223031

A much anticipated work by James C. Horak has finally arrived and it doesn’t disappoint.

As many already know, some of his revelations can at first stretch personal limits of credulity beyond comfort. Nevertheless, they will linger in the mind until fully appreciated for what they offer. Not just the careful resolution of myriad anomalies, but the wonders that are ours to behold and experience once sanity prevails, thus ending the global misapplication of knowledge crisis and the catastrophic end it promises for us all.  –Crystal Clark

WHERE TO PURCHASE:

Currently only available as an ebook, it may be purchased at the following links (more US outlets coming soon) with excerpts found below:

  1. Amazon UK
  2. Google Play Books
  3. BOL
  4. Also available through the Apple iBooks app
Siege in the Davis Mountains Quotes (showing 1-4 of 4)

An Aside

To break with this routine I have written this manuscript in a way that challenges my reader to explore on the edge of language instead of drowning in devices intending to take for granted meanings and draw false assumptions burdened by planted biases. In your face are thrown one lie after another that defy what is actually seen and offer nothing of balance to either perspective or clarity on a daily basis… yet, it seems natural to you. Because there is no power to your sense of expectation. None. You are boxed into what is possible and what is not, even unsure of the shape of the earth. Led into debates over something as idiotic as that while you balk at having neighbors from elsewhere. So enormous is this Universe and yet you would limit its possibility to produce any of the wonders on some tiny grain of sand found on a beach in comparison. From written history anomalies have been spied and reported accomplishing what nothing today can. Trans Lunar Phenomena, recorded hundreds of years with thousands of reports demonstrate intelligent presence on the moon while nothing of this is factored into your narrow credulity. When one emerges who can answer resolution to so many anomaly, predicts events with accuracy, and offers what is needed to help you survive a planet crippled to the point of extinction, you cannot quit your routine of acquired preference for the mundane suited to a boxed-in comfort zone long enough to check him out. The few above this are too few. I feel quite privileged to have found four. Others are awakening yet still not shown to be at a point of no return to stifling group thought. If you are, then show me. Show me you are aware we near the point where nothing is left to lose. Where resolute action need not be possessed of fear. I will say this, unified consciousness would have no trouble with accepting this challenge I throw at your feet, but then conditions so favorable to enslavement here may be your problem and not that solely attributable to split consciousness. I am willing to engage with you to the very end of hope to find out. Wake up to the signs and ramifications of the trends set I have touched upon. Help awaits a world ready to receive it.”

― James C. Horak, Siege in the Davis Mountains

“Anyone mindful of one overwhelming tenet, if time travel is possible, will be possible, has ever been possible it is with us now must concur that this is the only time in history that such a banking cartel has risked its wealth on one sole adventure. Strengthening this incredible consideration was the discovery of an implant in Napoleon’s skull.”

― James C. Horak, Siege in the Davis Mountains

“SETI   Many good-hearted people allowed their computers to work on packets of data acquired by SETI dishes in the hope of being part of discovering intelligent patterns to radio signals from deep space. That such signals ARE reported from time to time from far less extensive operations and that no such were reported (supposedly) by SETI of all those thousands of packets defies probability.”

― James C. Horak, Siege in the Davis Mountains

“Few would question the would be fate of Snowden had he stayed in America once he took action to share with his country the illegal excesses of the NSA. Instead of being a whistle-blower, as he was being imprisoned, he would have been cloaked in charges of espionage and treated as a spy. That is, if he had not been killed in some “incidental” way trying to escape. But”

― James C. Horak, Siege in the Davis Mountains