|
Of stars and bonfires
"Extraterrestrials are kidnapping human beings in order to harvest sperm and ova and create a new species. Their subjects/victims descend from previously abducted family members in a timeline that spans generations. How and why certain families are targeted remains a mystery."
Like a drooling chimera locked away in the cellar, alien abduction has been thumping against the floorboards of the UFO controversy for nearly 60 years. John Fuller’s seminal The Interrupted Journey broke the ice in 1966, with notable additions by Travis Walton (The Walton Experience) in 1978, Budd Hopkins in 1981 (Missing Time), Whitley Strieber’s Communion in 1987, and John Mack’s Abduction in 1994. Simultaneously horrific and the object of standup comedy ridicule, voluminous first-person accounts of getting snatched for medical and breeding experiments by spindly little lightbulb-headed |
"It’s only when you meet other abductees that you start to make some sense of it, because you recognize that these people don’t want to feel the way they do any more than you do" |
In 2022, retired British entrepreneur Steve Aspin produced an exceptionally confident take on the phenomenon called Out of Time: The Intergenerational Abduction Program Explored. It rolled decades of testimonials, surveys and anecdotal patterns into the scope of his own personal waking nightmare. The ordeal inspired a unified field theory, of sorts, regarding the end game of the abduction “program.” Aspin predicted the truth as he saw it would be received with the sort of disconnect expressed by former SCOTUS Justice Felix Frankfurter to an eyewitness briefing on Nazi death camps.
In 1943, Polish resistance fighter Jan Karski huddled with Frankfurter in hopes of persuading him to alert FDR to the industrial-grade extermination of Jews in occupied Europe. Frankfurter’s reply: “I don’t believe you.” The Associate Justice quickly clarified for Poland’s ambassador, who was in on the meeting and vouched for Karski’s credibility: “I did not say that he is lying. I said that I did not believe him.” Aspin’s truth, however, makes Karski look like a piker.
“A race of extraterrestrial visitors,” he writes in Out of Time, “has been executing a covert program of subtle genetic modification of a small percentage of the human race for more than a century with the prime objective of quietly taking over control of human societies on Planet Earth.”
As Aspin makes his case, hardcore abduction researchers acquainted with the work of retired Temple University history professor David Jacobs will note familiar themes in Aspin’s narrative; other threads, however, are a bit more novel. Broadly speaking:
Extraterrestrials are kidnapping human beings in order to harvest sperm and ova and create a new species. Their subjects/victims descend from previously abducted family members in a timeline that spans generations. How and why certain families are targeted remains a mystery.
Also:
multiple ET species, often characterized by hierarchies and divisions of labor, participate in this racket. The most common are little humanoid greys. These guys are the frontline worker bees, presumed by some to be manufactured biologically. They appear to be genderless and incapable of reproducing. Less common are the taller greys. They come across as mid-level managers, and abductees often report “male” or “female” vibes emanating from the taller ones. At the top of the ladder are the “mantis-like” beings, seven feet tall or more. These insectoid-looking omnipotents are the ones running the show.Exchanges between abductors and subjects are intensely telepathic. Through stare-downs with the intruders’ spellbinding and massive black eyes, details of abductees’ interior lives are extracted through “mindscan” sessions. From the opposite direction flow information “downloads” – false or screen memories, amnesia, rote reassurances that things are OK – which obscure or disfigure accurate recall of the event.
Out of Time also reviews trace evidence, scars, scoop marks and other dermal aberrations associated with the alleged implantation of tracking devices. At last glance, 16 tiny metallic curiosities removed from digits and extremities by the late podiatrist Roger Leir emitted radio frequencies in the hertz, kilohertz and megahertz bands – only to cease transmission within weeks of excision. A 2009 analysis on one sample revealed that the isotopic ratios in four component elements – nickel, copper, magnesium and boron – suggested non-terrestrial origins. Scanning electron microscopy also detected “nanoscale” structures in the material, hinting at a potential for electrical current conductivity.
he real kicker, however, is the stealth ascendancy of the hybrids, or “hubrids,” into human society, perhaps the culmination of the program’s final phase. Ringing with cultural echoes from the Red Scare to Robert Heinlein’s The Puppet Masters, the abduction scenario is, of course, unthinkable. And it’s also suspected of being the ultimate firewall against UFO transparency. If the defense establishment were to formally confirm its inability to prevent UFO/UAP from making a joke of restricted airspace, then literally anything could be possible. Literally anything.
Last month, Aspin, and his wife Janis, crossed the ocean and traveled to the middle of nowhere in order to speak freely with fellow draftees into the “program.” The author turned out to be right about at least one thing. These are stories that the uninitiated are not likely to embrace.
[...]
Continue Reading ►
See Also:
REPORT YOUR UFO EXPERIENCE
No comments :
Post a Comment
Dear Contributor,
Your comments are greatly appreciated, and coveted; however, blatant mis-use of this site's bandwidth will not be tolerated (e.g., SPAM etc).
Additionally, healthy debate is invited; however, ad hominem and or vitriolic attacks will not be published, nor will "anonymous" criticisms. Please keep your arguments "to the issues" and present them with civility and proper decorum. -FW