I'm not sure what to make of this tale. I've followed it off and on since the 1980 Berlitz book, but over time it has morphed and changed to the point of being more of a tale "tree" than a tale in itself, with varying and often contradictory branches going off in all directions. That could either indicate a myth in the making, OR a successful government disinformation campaign, putting out so many different versions that no one knows at this point which, if any, is the "real" version.
I don't believe in "aliens from the stars", which is not to say that I don't believe in any aliens at all - just not aliens "from the stars". Current physics seems to preclude any such possibility, but as history has shown, current physics may be overturned in a heartbeat, so I can't close that potential altogether. Likewise, I don't believe in governmental "reverse engineering" of alleged alien craft "from the stars", but that doesn't mean that I don't think that SOME sort of technology has not been partially deciphered - just not interstellar technology. It naturally follows from that that I don't believe the US government, or any other, has current tech that will allow them to travel through interstellar space.
With that said, it's obvious - to me - that there is something to the tales, just not the something that is being dribbled out for public consumption... i.e. "UFOnauts from the stars".
I know nearly nothing of it from personal experience, and only clues from second-hand experience.
in the early 1990's, I saw an autopsy report alleged to have been conducted on an "alien cadaver". I don't recall much in the way of details, but the internal arrangement of organs was different than in humans, with some missing, some in multiples, and some that mammals from here do not posses, and the function of which was only speculative. I do recall the assertion that the cadaver in question was only partially animal, but also partially plant - a "hybrid" or "symbiosis" of the two. It was asserted in the report that the creature had no real alimentary system, did not "eat", and acquired it's energy via photosynthesis of some kind. That's all I recall of it.
I worked for Wackenhut for a while (which no longer exists in reality - it was bought out by foreigners, split into two factions, and re-named accordingly. I quit working for them when they allowed foreign purchase, as I did not think it proper for US Security and government contracts to be entrusted to foreigners), and recall rumors among the troops that we "secured Area 51", which made no sense to me - does the military have no competent in-house guards? On the other hand, we DID work a lot of government contracts, and I do know that the State Department farms out some embassy security to contractors and locals, so who knows?
Also while with Wackenhut, I know that we did have a government contract with at least one of the companies alleged to be developing this "alien tech", and while I was there I recommended two young ladies for receptionist duties at their local facility. Both were accepted, and both had to undergo security backgrounding for a Top Secret clearance - it always struck me as odd that a RECEPTIONIST, at the front desk, would need a Top Secret clearance. In any event, the guards (to include the receptionists) had no access to any inner workings - their job was simply intruder detection and interdiction.
This link should take you to the coordinates I've been told are for the actual crash site via the Google Earth web interface. It shows a government facility on the ground nearby with the actual crash site (marked) offset from the government facilities, but surrounded by government fencing. I can think of no reason the government would fence in such a small undeveloped tract - there appears to be nothing there requiring a fence. Things that make you go "hmmmm...".
So, I dunno. Something is afoot, but I don't believe it is what any of the various tales put out for public consumption would lead people to think it is. "Aliens" not from this existence I might be convinced of at some point, but aliens "from the stars" I find to be a vanishingly small possibility, so not so much something I can be convinced of.
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I don't believe in "aliens from the stars", which is not to say that I don't believe in any aliens at all - just not aliens "from the stars". Current physics seems to preclude any such possibility, but as history has shown, current physics may be overturned in a heartbeat, so I can't close that potential altogether. Likewise, I don't believe in governmental "reverse engineering" of alleged alien craft "from the stars", but that doesn't mean that I don't think that SOME sort of technology has not been partially deciphered - just not interstellar technology. It naturally follows from that that I don't believe the US government, or any other, has current tech that will allow them to travel through interstellar space.
With that said, it's obvious - to me - that there is something to the tales, just not the something that is being dribbled out for public consumption... i.e. "UFOnauts from the stars".
I know nearly nothing of it from personal experience, and only clues from second-hand experience.
in the early 1990's, I saw an autopsy report alleged to have been conducted on an "alien cadaver". I don't recall much in the way of details, but the internal arrangement of organs was different than in humans, with some missing, some in multiples, and some that mammals from here do not posses, and the function of which was only speculative. I do recall the assertion that the cadaver in question was only partially animal, but also partially plant - a "hybrid" or "symbiosis" of the two. It was asserted in the report that the creature had no real alimentary system, did not "eat", and acquired it's energy via photosynthesis of some kind. That's all I recall of it.
I worked for Wackenhut for a while (which no longer exists in reality - it was bought out by foreigners, split into two factions, and re-named accordingly. I quit working for them when they allowed foreign purchase, as I did not think it proper for US Security and government contracts to be entrusted to foreigners), and recall rumors among the troops that we "secured Area 51", which made no sense to me - does the military have no competent in-house guards? On the other hand, we DID work a lot of government contracts, and I do know that the State Department farms out some embassy security to contractors and locals, so who knows?
Also while with Wackenhut, I know that we did have a government contract with at least one of the companies alleged to be developing this "alien tech", and while I was there I recommended two young ladies for receptionist duties at their local facility. Both were accepted, and both had to undergo security backgrounding for a Top Secret clearance - it always struck me as odd that a RECEPTIONIST, at the front desk, would need a Top Secret clearance. In any event, the guards (to include the receptionists) had no access to any inner workings - their job was simply intruder detection and interdiction.
This link should take you to the coordinates I've been told are for the actual crash site via the Google Earth web interface. It shows a government facility on the ground nearby with the actual crash site (marked) offset from the government facilities, but surrounded by government fencing. I can think of no reason the government would fence in such a small undeveloped tract - there appears to be nothing there requiring a fence. Things that make you go "hmmmm...".
So, I dunno. Something is afoot, but I don't believe it is what any of the various tales put out for public consumption would lead people to think it is. "Aliens" not from this existence I might be convinced of at some point, but aliens "from the stars" I find to be a vanishingly small possibility, so not so much something I can be convinced of.
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