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Have you ever found a really good page with information in it and when you go to take a look at it again the page is no longer found,or the site has been removed. Well if this happens there is a really good resource out tthere calld the WEB ARCHIVE. This was startedti see wgat the web looked like back when. It has many old pages and they are just tlike they were when you first found them. It's a free service and if you have a website and at times it's been lost or can't find the information that you had/have. You can submit url's for them to make archives for. Then that information will not only be there for you but others as well. THE URL IS Web Arcive.

SEARCH THE INVISIBLE WEB

Can't find more on mind control, torture, brain control implants and Brazil when searching the World Wide Web using your typical search engines? It's no wonder. Typical search engines only skim the surface of the Web. What they don't see is known as the "DEEP" or "INVISIBLE" Web. The deep Web contains nearly 550 BILLION DOCUMENT (May 2001), compared with about I billion on the Web's surface, according to internet content company Bright Planet. The deep Web consists of data that search engines generally miss, INCLUDING PDF FILES, streaming audio and video, and information STORED IN DATABASES, such as government records and telephone directories. If your looking for a specific piece of information, search the invisible Web by trying the following sites:

CompletePlanet Locate search engines and databases on the web

Direct Search Direct Search is a growing compilation of links to the search interfaces of resources that contain data not easily or entirely searchable/accessible from general search tools like Alta Vista, Google, and Hotbot.

Flipper.com Provides true 'Deep Web' search capabilities and categorized results.

Hidden Webs, Specialty Webs and Invisible Databases FastBoot Resources

IncyWincy: The Invisible Web Search Engine

InvisibleWeb.com The InvisibleWeb.com is a directory of over 10,000 databases, archives, and search engines that contain information that traditional search engines have been unable to access.

The Invisible Web Directory Directory of resources not visible to general-purpose search engines

Invisible Web: What it is, Why it exists, How to find it, and Its inherent ambiguity (U.C. Berkeley)

Lycos Invisible Web Catalog

Those Dark Hiding Places: The Invisible Web Revealed (Rider University)

WebData.com: www.webdata.com

ProFusion.com: ProFusion.com: beta.profusion.com




A fabulous web site on what the media doesn't tell us. The mind control-illuminati section is reachable from the home page, and links to this very site as well as to others.

The incredible feature is the super-hip search engine which fetches over 1000 items on mind control, all with reviews, from the DisInformation database! Try typing in "mind control" (opens in a new window):

Search for information on DisInformation Archive

Disinformation has awarded the Mind Control Forum its Four Grenade Site Award:






Search Tips


This page addresses the effective use of the MCF Search Form and search engines in general. Note below that the MCF Search can't do some advanced searches. You can use them on major engines such as AltaVista.
Search engine whatUseek offers the free site-specific search engine MCF uses to feature its MCF site search. Each week a "robot" seeks out new and updated pages on the MCF and creates a database for the search.
For good searches from this or any search engine it's good to use what are called "Boolean" search phrases. These are used in programming languages and so found their way naturally into searches. They narrow the search to what you want.
Certainly you've done a search such as [ burned mind ] (with the square brackets representing the input field) and come up with a report like:

Burned Tortillas
   Chef Jose's special recipes...
Mind Power Institute
   Increase your effective presence...
Ferraris Burn Rubber

   Use GripMasters on your Ferrari or Dodge Van...

Here's how to get the information you want.
If you are looking for pages which contain the phrase "burned mind", put it in double quotes like this: [ "burned mind" ]. Now you should get something like this:
Burned Mind Forum
   For remotely burned mind control victims...
Far Out Theories
   Psychotronically burned minds reside all over...
NASA Top Secret - DO NOT INDEX
   cooperation with the military to launch new satellites...

Now you're getting somewhere! As you can see, in the first example ">burned mind"> is part of the site name. In the next, it's in the page, probably text near the top. In the third example, too, ">burned mind"> is on the page.
Note that in the second example the engine reported ">burned minds">, plural, since ">burned mind"> was contained in it. This would be typical.
OK, maybe you need to find pages that have some info. about Dr. Jolyon West. He's also known as ">Jolly">. If you search for [ Dr. Jolyon West ], as we know, you could get:

Dr. West, Dentist
Jolyon Smith out West
Jolyon Smith, Surveyor

The engine may put the most likely combinations of part or all of Dr. Jolyon West at the top of the list, if you're lucky.
But, if we narrow it down by searching for [ "Dr. Jolyon West" ], we're going to miss out on ">Doctor Jolyon West">, (discerning Americans, I'm using the British way of putting the comma after the quote mark) "Jolly West", "Dr. West", and all other permutations of the name.


Introducing Boolean Logic


To catch lots of forms of Dr. West we can use Boolean logic in our searches, which, in computerese, are "queries"; we are actually searching a database, as in a program such as Access or Paradox. These would present you with a nice "query by example" interface, or a "wizard," but most search engines expect you to form the Boolean query yourself.
Boolean queries are made of AND, OR, and parenthesis ( ). The engine may also recognize NOT.
Say you'd like to find a page that contained "Jolyon" and "West". You don't care about pages that contain only Jolyon or only West. But, you want to get pages where Jolyon and West aren't necessarily in the same phrase "Jolyon West".
Of course, [ Jolyon West ] will do that with most search engines. But to take control you use AND:  [ Jolyon AND West ]. The advantage here is that the page returned must have both Jolyon and West, not just one or the other.
When the search engine runs out of pages having both Jolyon and West it will most likely list pages having either, hopefully at the bottom. You'll get something like:
Jolyon West Exposed
Jolyon West, Eminent Psychiatrist, Deceased 1-99
Out West with Jolyon Practicant
Jolyon Maps - West Texas

But he could be referred to as "Jolly". We want to ask for West with Jolly or Jolyon. Here's the Boolean query:  [ (Jolly OR Jolyon) AND West ]. Unfortunately the MCF Search engine can't handle this one. But on a stronger engine it should get you something like:

Jolyon West Exposed
Jolly Giants of the West
Jolyon West Page

   As he experimented on demented beings, he felt so jolly...

Note that what's in the parenthesis is one element, so the AND covers it as a whole.
Maybe we'd do better with  [ "Jolly West" OR "Jolyon West" ]. The MCF engine can't do that.
But how about the ultimate:  [ ( (Dr OR doctor) OR (Jolly OR Jolyon) ) AND West ]. The MCF Search can't handle this one either.
Here we require West and either one of the two forms of "doctor" or one of the first names. There are two inner OR's in parenthesis, with an OR between them and surrounded by outer parenthesis, with the result of the lot linked with an AND to "West", So we'd get:
Dr. Jolyon West Revisited
Doctor Jolly West Memorial
Dr. Bill Wests' Jolly Memoirs
Jolyon West Exposed
Jolly Giants of the West
Jolyon West Page

   As he experimented on demented beings, he felt so jolly...

I guess you get the idea! I think I do...  ;-)  Maybe the search engines will too.
You could also try using the NOT "operator". A given search engine may recognize it.
For instance, you search for [ (mind AND control) NOT (sex OR "De Silva" OR MCF) ] to avoid:

De Silva Mind Control Academy
Controlling the Opposite Sex's Mind
MCF: Mind Control Forum Home Page

Don't you wish the examples on this page were live links? Bet you tried to click on them! That's why web sites convert underlines in the text to italics or bold.
As a footnote, what a bummer being disabled by the psychotronics brigade. My computer lab teacher at junior college (post graduate work) said not to waste time being a word processor -- I should write technical manuals! Well, now I have.