This article mirrors the problem
that the abduction phenomena presented me in my attempts to come to grips with
it. Firstly there is a phenomenon. So far so good. However, it fails consistently in providing
irrefutable externals. What I mean by
that, is there are no tracks in the sands or perhaps more specifically, we receive
no data that could not have been conjured up out of the observer’s
subconscious.
The UFO phenomenon is all about
externals. There are multiple witnesses
and physical evidence however scant.
The abduction event that is
linked directly to a UFO event is often quite creditable and needs
consideration. In fact we have got some
of our best information from such situations and I have posted a couple.
Betty and Barney had the external
in seeing a craft whose memory could be recovered. That was pretty decent.
The problem is that hypnotic
recovery is unreliable and can be overlain by the subconscious.
Fortunately, certain observers
have not needed this at all and that includes Travis Walton who had superb
externals to back him up that have never been successfully debunked.
What we know is that legitimate
experiences include interaction with a UFO and that anything less is plausibly auto
induced through the subconscious and has no externals.
In both cases the information
provided to us is scant. Observing we
need to do a better job at husbandry of the Earth is a self evident truth that
we all can comprehend. Telling us how to
structure our society to achieve that laudable end would accomplish something.
To the extent that we have
creditable data, it appears that UFOs continue to collect samples and do
nothing positive for the person sampled that we can determine.
September 19 of this year will mark the 50th anniversary of the famous
Betty and Barney Hill UFO encounter – an event that, arguably, ushered in the
phenomenon that has become known as “Alien Abduction.”
But, almost half a century after the Hill’s firmly added a new category to
UFO research, what do we truly know about the real nature of abductions? Let’s
take a look.
On the night at issue, Betty and Barney, a New
Hampshire couple, were driving home from vacationing in Canada
when they were subjected to a terrifying experience. Despite viewing some form
of unusual aerial object in the night-sky, and what appeared to be living
entities that could be seen through the craft’s portals, until their arrival
back home, the Hill’s had little indication that there was far more to the
encounter than they realized.
It later transpired, however, that approximately two-hours of time
could not be accounted for. After months of emotional distress, sleepless
nights, and strange dreams pertaining to encounters with unusual, otherworldly
beings, the couple finally sought assistance from Benjamin Simon, a
Boston-based psychiatrist and neurologist. Subjected to time-regression
hypnosis, both Betty and Barney recalled what had taken place during that
missing 120-minutes or so.
Significantly, they provided very close accounts of encounters with
apparent alien creatures that took the pair on-board some form of alien vehicle
and subjected them to a series of physical examinations – a number of which
were highly distressing in nature. The experience of the Hill’s later became
the subject of John Fuller’s now-classic book, The Interrupted
Journey and a 1975 movie of the same name. And although claims have
been made (and almost certainly highly-justified claims, too) that
the phenomenon long pre-dates the Hill affair, it was certainly
this incident that paved the way for the massive interest in abductions
that ultimately developed in the 1980s and 1990s.
While abduction cases continued to surface now and again in the 1960s,
and more so in the 1970s, it was without doubt the 1981 publication of Budd Hopkins’
book Missing Time that really thrust the phenomenon into the
public-arena, big-time. Then, with the 1987 appearance of Hopkins ’ Intruders, the phenomenon
gained further publicity.
By now, there was a growing, widespread belief within the ufological
research arena that extraterrestrials from some far-away world were engaged in
a secret program to kidnap, experiment on, and exploit the Human Race –
possibly for reasons relative to genetic manipulation, and the creation of
hybrid entities of a definitively half-human/half-alien nature. And, even
though this particular theory continues to be championed beyond all
others when it comes to abductions, it is far from being alone.
Whitley
Strieber’s 1987 best-seller, Communion – while certainly not
dismissing the extraterrestrial hypothesis for abductions – demonstrated that
even if aliens were at the heart of the abduction puzzle, there was far more to
them than mere extraterrestrial scientists engaged in some other-world research
project. Communion, as well as Strieber’s subsequent titles, delved into
potential connections between the Grays of UFO lore and the realm of the dead,
the similarities (as had been noted by acclaimed ufologist Jacques Vallee in
such titles as Messengers of Deception) between modern-day abductions and
encounters in centuries-past with magical, ethereal entities like fairies, and
much more of a thought-provoking nature.
And, as time has progressed, so have the theories behind what may be
present at the heart of abductions. Before his untimely death in 2009, Mac
Tonnies was busily chasing down the Cryptoterrestrials. In
Mac’s mind, our mysterious abductors might not be from the stars, after all.
Rather, he opined, they might very well be a very ancient terrestrial race –
albeit one that exists alongside us in deep stealth.
Mac told me: “I regard the alleged ‘hybridization program’ with
skepticism. How sure are we that these interlopers are extraterrestrial? It
seems more sensible to assume that the so-called aliens are human, at least in
some respects. Indeed, descriptions of intercourse with aliens fly in the face
of exobiological thought. If the cryptoterrestrial population is genetically
impoverished, as I assume it is, then it might rely on a harvest of human genes
to augment its dwindling gene-pool. It would be most advantageous to have us
believe we’re dealing with omnipotent extraterrestrials rather than a fallible
sister species.”
Then there was the research of the late Dr. John Mack, who cited
in his published works the intriguing and disturbing testimony of a number
of abductees who believed the predatory, black-eyed beings that are so
associated with abductions were actually trying to steal their souls, rather
than their DNA.
As for me, while undertaking the research for my Final Events book, I spoke
with a variety of government-insiders who firmly believe the “aliens” are
literal demons, and that the entire abduction experience is an illusion, a
sophisticated hologram, designed to convince us we are dealing with
extraterrestrials, thus allowing the minions of Satan to get their claws into
us.
And what about the story of Jim Penniston? Formerly of the U.S. Air Force, and one of the key military
players in the famous UFO encounter at Rendlesham Forest ,
England in December
1980, Penniston – in 1994 – underwent hypnotic regression, as part of an
attempt to try and recall deeply buried data relative to what occurred during
one of Britain ’s
closest encounters. Very interestingly, while under hypnosis, Penniston stated
that our presumed aliens are, in reality, visitors from a far-flung future.
That future, Penniston added, is very dark, in infinitely deep trouble,
polluted and where the Human Race is overwhelmingly blighted by reproductive
problems. The answer to those same, massive problems: they travel into the
distant past – to our present day – to secure sperm, eggs and chromosomes, all
as part of an effort to try and ensure the continuation of the severely waning
Human Race.
So, where am I going with all this? Well, clearly all the
above-scenarios to which I have referred cannot be correct. Maybe one of
them is on target. Maybe none of them are. The fact is, however, practically
half-a-century after Betty and Barney Hill opened the floodgates, while we know
there is an undoubted phenomenon at work, it is a phenomenon that –
despite what some researchers might tell you - is still steeped in deep
mystery, with respect to its real nature.
In other words, in answer to the title of this post what we really know
is…not much at all. I sincerely hope that the next 50 years of abduction
research will bring us some definitive answers, rather than just more and more
reports. But I’m not holding my breath.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteI visited your blog. The information which you have shared in your site is very informative. I really much impressed with your blog.
I have added your blog to Blog Roll at http://boutiquerings.wordpress.com/. So would you give my links on your blog it will be useful to our visitors and also can get ideas and information from your site.
Thanking You
With Regards,
Alexis