RE: Latest UFO disinfo: Aquatic Aliens /Apes
it's interesting that the leaked emails of Podesta allude to both pedophilia & alien disclosure.
Alien Abduction: Another Tavistockian Trauma-Based Mind-Control Op
Quote:Starting about with establishment of the CIA and the space program, sci-fi literature with human-alien encounters suddenly became a recurring theme.
In July 1946, “Planet Comics” ran a strip in which aliens used a luminous tractor beam to kidnap a voluptuous female earthling, who they called Specimen 9. They tell her the abduction is part of “Project Survival,” and as they steer their spaceship toward what looks like Saturn, the leader remarks, “Now home. And if you find our methods ruthless, Specimen 9, it is because our needs are desperate.”
By early 1954, Harold Tom Wilkins, in the book “Flying Saucers on the Attack,” wrote: “One wonders how many cases of mysterious disappearances of men and women in 1948–1952 might be explained as TAKEN ABOARD A FLYING SAUCER IN A LONELY PLACE.”
Perhaps the earliest alleged, physical, on-board adventure was that of Simon Estes Thompson. He said that while driving down a back road, he saw an object hovering above the ground and was invited on board by curiously naive, naked beings who said they came from Venus. Though they didn’t seem to know how their craft worked, they could talk about reincarnation, vegetarianism and similar New Age topics.
Starting about 1964, a new theme emerged in the abductions involving trauma-based mind control. The abductors would impart impressions of ambiguous Utopias versus the wasteland dystopias of the abductees. Running concurrently was a global wave of horrific animal mutilations that defied explanation. The more artistic wing of the Crime Syndicate, in turn, got their jollies by cutting crop circles into farmers’ fields.
Arthur Berlet, whose alleged 1958 encounter surfaced in 1965, details the classic abduction motifs: Stunned by a beam of light, doorway amnesia, wakes up on a bed in a strange environment. Thereafter, the story trails off into an exceptionally dull narrative of his adventures on the planet Acart (Mars), where he had been abducted by an insubordinate saucer captain who wanted him to tend the biological specimens. On Acart, the contrite leadership gave him a guided tour while expounding on the population explosion.
Regular readers know that the late ’60s by sheer coinkydink just so happened to be when the big foundations were pushing for population control.
Overpopulation was one of the themes in another 1965 story, that of the Californian TV repair man Sid Patrick. While walking along a beach at night, he said he saw an egg-shaped object flying low. He was invited on board where he met a crew of people of both sexes with dark “short but uncut-looking hair,” pointed chins and long thin fingers. One of them, the leader, spoke to him. Bullard’s motifs of tour, journey, conference and theophany followed.
The extraterrestrials who contacted him were not threatening but rather trying to help preserve both humans and planet Earth — and they wanted him to convey a message. He explains that they are concerned about humans sabotaging their own planet.
The “leader” gave his name, but it was nothing more than a buzzing sound, variously transcribed as Zno, Zienna or Zeno. They are insectoid and they “live as one” in a war- and crime-free but highly regimented world with strict birth control.
Throughout a series of “encounters,” the messaging is that humans are on the verge of destroying Earth, and so alien species have to intervene for the sake of the universe.
The novel “Star of Ill-Omen” by Dennis Wheatley came out in the ’50s, and dozens of other abduction stories graced the pages of sci-fi novels and comic books.
The alien humanoid was to be given its main characteristic: The image of The Grey. The elements of the abduction centered around themes such as doorway amnesia, time lapses and being under mental control.
A 1956 abduction was featured in the “Todd Kitteridge Affair.” Kitteridge claimed that, awoken by his dogs, he saw a golden ball descending behind the branches of a tree, as the dogs ran around barking. From it emerged three tall beings dressed in ski-suits, with long blonde hair, and strange protruding eyes. The same thing happened to a woman school teacher and to a linesman. The women later rang the investigators in hysteria, saying “they” were visiting and threatening to abduct her.
The Hill abduction from the United States (1961) was one of the first cases of UFO abduction to earn widespread attention. Beings, which later became widely known as The Greys, appeared and went on to become the most common type of extraterrestrial in abduction reports.
Enter the “experts,” such as Dr. Benjamin Simon, a psychiatrist in Boston. Simon concluded that Barney Hill’s recall of the UFO encounter was a false memory. False memory developed into a gaslighting method to counter accusation of Crime Syndicate criminality, such as the abuse of young children. This completely fails to explain how thousands have had similar abduction experiences.
In the Shaver Mystery, a man named Robinson claimed that a friend of his had been held captive by the evil Deros beneath the Earth and to have been the victim of a sort of mind control via small “earphones” and implants. These implants may have been all too real — by the Crime Syndicate’s black magicians, not aliens.
John Mack was a well-known, Harvard-trained Jewish psychiatrist and author of over 150 scientific articles. He won a Pulitzer Prize for his biography of T. E. Lawrence. Mack became interested in alien-encounter phenomenon in the late ’80s, and interviewed dozens of people. He eventually wrote two books on the subject.
Mack somehow couldn’t solve the case but, in general, believed the witnesses. BBC quoted Mack as saying, “I would never say, yes, there are aliens taking people. [But] I would say there is a compelling powerful phenomenon here that I can’t account for in any other way, that’s mysterious.” Really?
Mack the Hack then argued that the abduction phenomenon might be the beginning of a major paradigm shift in human consciousness, or “a kind of fourth blow to our collective egoism, following those of Copernicus, Darwin and Freud.” In other words, New Age hocus pocus.
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