Biography[edit]
In the 1970s and 1980s, Monast was a journalist, poet and essayist. He was an active member of the
Social Credit Party of Canada.
In the early 1990s, he started writing on the theme of the
New World Order and conspiracies hatched by
secret societies, being particularly inspired by the works of
William Guy Carr.
He founded the International Free Press Agency (AIPL,
l' Agence Internationale de Presse libre), where he published most of his work on these themes, achieving some prominence with an interview on esotericist and
ufologist Richard Glenn's TV show
Ésotérisme Expérimental, in which he repeatedly warned his audience about the dangers of a World Government.
[2] He was interviewed by Glenn a number of times up to 1996.
In 1994, he published Project Blue Beam (NASA), in which he detailed his claim that NASA, with the help of the United Nations, was attempting to implement a New Age religion with the
Antichrist at its head and start a New World Order, via a technologically simulated
Second Coming of Christ. He also gave talks on this topic.
[3] Other conspiracy theorists have noted
[4] the similarity of Project Blue Beam to the plots of
Gene Roddenberry's unreleased 1975
Star Trek movie treatment
The God Thing and the 1991
Star Trek: The Next Generation episode
Devil's Due.
...
By 1995 and 1996, Monast said he was being hunted by the police and authorities for involvement in "networks of prohibited information." He had homeschooled his two children, who were then taken away and made wards of the state in September 1996 so that they would receive a public education.
He died of a heart attack in his home in December 1996, at age 51, the day after being arrested and spending a night in jail.
[5] His followers claim his death was suspicious, suggesting he was assassinated by "psychotronic weapons"
[2] to keep from continuing his investigations,
[6] and that Jerry Fletcher,
the Mel Gibson character in the 1997 film Conspiracy Theory, was modelled on him.[2]
en.wikipedia.org
William James Guy Carr (
R.D.[1] Commander R.C.N. (R)) (2 June 1895 – 2 October 1959) was an
English-born
Canadian naval
officer,
author, and
conspiracy theorist.
Intelligence[edit]
Carr also
worked for the Canadian Intelligence Service during World War II, and in 1944 he published
Checkmate in the North, a book about an invasion by the
Axis forces to take place in the area of the
CFB Goose Bay.
[9]
en.wikipedia.org