Sunday 27 December 2020

To See or Not to See



I don’t doubt that this world has had the odd discrete visitations, but the story of the Grays I don’t buy as extraterrestrial. There are two problems with this issue, one is covert experiments with implanting false memories through drug induced hypnosis. I know this first hand from an aforementioned acquaintance I had known since 1968 and her involvement with NICAP. As I've said before, Dr. Jacques Vallee was the expert Astrophysicist assigned to explore these  these abduction scenarios, only to find  that the majority were either hypnotically or psychosomatically induced, lacking physical evidence of anything significantly alien. There had also been complaints by other investigative bodies that covert agencies were also trying to exploit their contactees in this way. Needless to say, Dr. Vallee brought this to the table at the 1977 symposium in Geneva, much to the dismay of J. Allen Hynek. Since then, using hypnosis is no longer considered a valid means of obtaining details, regardless whether the experience was real or not. With the way the human mind is wired, it all inclines to be easily suggestive (Mandela effect). Nonetheless, I see the alien ruse as a clever way of false flagging quite earthly controversial research being advanced in secret. In this regard I’m sure conspiracy theories also have their convenience of diversion.


The second problem is the assumption that these CEs are extraterrestrial. Here again I side with Dr. Vallée’s conclusion that these creatures are gene-manipulated throw-backś from a parallel future. In the rare cases of actual CE3s, DNA samples have revealed evidence of such genetic engineering yet no trace of anything extraterrestrial in the mix (and that includes anything microbiologically relevant to such a creature and its living/working space). I find this hypothesis also makes sense with the long human history of similar abduction and loss of time scenarios in countless cultures of the past. However, that does not say that human invention back then was incapable of it’s own artistic license. These days science is discovering that time travel is certainly easier to venture than crossing the eternal void of space and its inhospitable conditions.


Aside from all this, strange lights in the sky do not mystify me. Having always had a fascination for geophysical phenomena, I am not only familiar with their wide variety of characteristics but also understand the physics of it. Particularly interesting is the behaviour of ion plasma in the atmosphere as well as on the surface. While its size and shape can vary with the quasi-hydrostatic conditions, its behaviour is not unlike what pilots have described of their encounters with the unknown. Hence, knowing their quantum nature, I would not be so foolish to pursue such a thing, especially with today’s micro-electronics. Now having said that, do not try to approach me with the subject unless you’re prepared for one hell of an argument over the nature of strange forces in extreme quasi-hydrostatic conditions. To me the Bermuda Triangle is merely the mother of all transcendental phase states like any huge body of complex tidal forces. These are things that fascinate me more than others' paranoid euphoria for mystery like it's a new kind of drug (or religion for that matter).

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