June 01, 2020:
Aerospace engineer Folashade Adesinaa was participating in a peaceful Black Lives Matter protest at Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C.
Just before the city's 7 p.m. curfew went into effect, she and her fellow protesters were hit with flash-bang explosions and doused with tear gas. Everyone scrambled for cover, their vision blurred by the passion to survive the ordeal.
She finds safe refuge through the kindness of a slender man standing in the Narthex (lobby) of St. John's Church. "You'll be safe here," the slender man whispers to her. "The madness of your ringing ears and blurred vision is nothing compared to what's happening outside." She peers through a window to witness an Orange Haze.
Folashade mumbles, "Is this why I was gassed?" Then she passes out from exhaustion.
Folashade awakens on the soft cushions of an antique chair on the ground floor of a three-level, mid-1800's-style private library. She slowly gets up, with her eyes still foggy from the tear gas. Or that's what Ms. Adesinaa thought. She gingerly touches her face, looking for wounds, and finds her fingers stumbling over a pair of glasses that had been placed on her face. She gathers her balance and slowly walks the floor, trying to comprehend her immediate surroundings, seeking a clue explaining how she got to this place.
She is drawn to a book titled The Archive of Truth. As she reads, the upper lens of her glasses read the printed words, and the lower lenses show a video of the TRUTH.
Enter " Doctor History and the Archives of Truth." Your knowledge of historical world events and figures is about to come into real focus. Are you ready? Take your seats and note the exits at every point in the cabin. Lock your chair in the full upright position. Our cruising altitude will be the truth, and our flight duration will cover centuries.
