The "tunnel" itself, Hellyer notes, is lined with lies. He dedicates several pages to the "Roswell Incident" (1947), claiming the US government initially admitted to a "flying disc" but then retracted it. Hellyer uses declassified Canadian documents (from his tenure) to argue that NATO allies were kept in the dark about the true nature of UAPs. The tunnel walls represent the psychological barrier preventing the public from realizing we are not alone.
Believers argue that Hellyer’s political rank gives him heuristic authority. They note that the Canadian government never sued him for libel, suggesting his claims contained a core of classified truth. For them, the "static" of criticism is just more tunnel darkness. light at the end of the tunnel paul hellyerpdf work
The light grew not by brightness but by insistence. It was not steady; it pulsed as though breathing. Colors that did not belong underground — a pale, wet blue tinged with gold — freckled the dark. Curiosity picked at him, an itch he could not ignore. He followed. The "tunnel" itself, Hellyer notes, is lined with lies
Eli March had spent his life underground. He knew the hiss of a geode settling and the small betrayals of old timbers. He also knew how sound altered with depth — a cough became distant as a bell, a laugh folded into the stone. When the accident came, it arrived without ceremony: a ceiling gave way on the sixth level, and the world narrowed to dust and cane. Eli felt the shove and then the drop, followed by a darkness so complete it seemed to press against his teeth. For them, the "static" of criticism is just
In his book Light at the End of the Tunnel: A Survival Plan for the Human Species , former Canadian Minister of National Defence Paul Hellyer