The physical reality of scar tissue replicated over and over again locks in the physical reality of the phenomena. It is real. What is missing is the following:
1 Any independent explanation whatsoever except the rather obvious cover stories fed the victims. This is disconcerting because we have zero knowledge regarding their motives except in term of ourselves and that becomes taking council of our fears as the good doctor is doing.
2 A good physical model for the whole process itself. I am getting the sense that we are seeing the astral self of these agents been deployed and materialized as needed. I now think that that is going to be possible now that we are developing a clear understanding of the physical foundations of both Spirit and Soul.
I also think that this method is extremely advanced and not necessarily shared across all types of alien intervenors. I also do not think that the motives are base either but at least neutral. Nothing else makes any sense.
Space aliens walk among us? Indeed, claims retired Temple prof
Posted: July 16, 2014
http://articles.philly.com/2014-07-16/entertainment/51549419_1_jacobs-aliens-abductees
THE WAY David M. Jacobs sees it, aliens from outer space have been kidnapping humans for aeons and sexually molesting them to create human-alien hybrids that walk among us today undetected and will soon take over Earth.
He knows that sounds crazy.
But he long ago quit caring what people think of him. As director of the International Center for Abduction Research, Jacobs, 71, has made it his life's mission to investigate claims of extraterrestrial abduction.
"What I'm doing will either be an interesting but nonessential footnote to popular culture or the most important thing that's ever happened to humankind. I see it as the latter," said Jacobs, who's now working on his fifth book, tentatively titled The New People.
While most people might write off UFO believers as deluded, conspiracy-theorist kooks, Jacobs isn't your typical believer.
He
was a tenured professor at Temple University, where he taught American
history for 36 years before retiring in 2011. He's a married father of
two who lives in a picturesque, 134-year-old Victorian just over the
Philadelphia line, in Wyndmoor. He makes his case with well-reasoned,
articulate explanations and applies a scholarly approach to his
research, which he has shared in four books - printed by well-known and
academic publishers.
Jacobs has interviewed about 150 people who
say they've been abducted by aliens, the forgotten details of their
cosmic kidnappings resurfacing in relaxation sessions the self-taught
hypnotist does in his home.
Citing public polls, he estimates that aliens have abducted more than a million Americans.
He
readily admits that the evidence of extraterrestrial life and
body-snatching is "weak," muddied by an abundance of blurry photos and
confabulation (phony or misinterpreted "memories").
Yet he insists evidence exists:
*
Abductees independently report similar experiences and recall common
details, such as the humanlike or insectlike appearance of aliens and
their mission to breed.
Many abductees told Jacobs that aliens
stared deeply into their eyes, sometimes touching foreheads, in a
neurological scan that enabled them to harvest human sperm and eggs.
Women frequently claimed that aliens impregnated them, removed the
alien-human hybrid fetuses from their wombs and forced the women to
nurse the hybrid babies.
* People are physically absent during the
time they say they were abducted, Jacobs said. Some families even have
reported loved ones missing or seen them vanish, he added.
*
Abductees sometimes are taken in groups; strangers who never met on
Earth recall each other from their deep-space experiences, Jacobs said.
*
People return with unusual marks, injuries or scars - including scar
tissue that formed overnight, "a biological impossibility that I have
seen myself," he said.
His inconvenient truth
For years, Jacobs shunned speaking locally about alien abductions.
"I
knew that it was embarrassing to the university," he said, remembering
one Temple donor who threatened to end his charity unless Jacobs quit
teaching his UFO class, the only one like it in the country.
But
he didn't quit. Still, his beliefs carried a cost: Tenured in 1981, he
said he was twice rejected for promotion and never became a full
professor at Temple.
"I was not rewarded for my views," Jacobs
said. "But you do not often find yourself in the middle of a phenomenon
that allows you to make a contribution to something that could be of
unsurpassing importance in human history."
Jacobs is among a small
but surprising array of well-known folks who reportedly believe in
extraterrestrial life, including former U.S. presidents Jimmy Carter and
Ronald Reagan, former astronauts Edgar Mitchell and Gordon Cooper,
theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking and celebrities Mick Jagger, Dan
Aykroyd, Muhammad Ali and William Shatner.
On the skeptical side
Critics aren't swayed by the big names.
Even smart people can believe weird things, said Michael Shermer, founder and editor of Skeptic magazine and a Scientific American columnist.
Shermer interviewed Jacobs for his weekly NPR show, shortly after Jacobs' 1999 book, The Threat,
was published. Shermer said Jacobs "spoke like an academic" but that
his beliefs are rooted in his "circular, impenetrable argument" that
sneaky aliens have lulled skeptics into disbelief and complacency.
William
Hartmann, a senior scientist at the Arizona-based Planetary Science
Institute, described Jacobs' methods as concerning: "Dr. Jacobs' website
describes 'alien abduction' reports extracted under hypnosis, but my
sense is that most of the scientific community gives little credence to
reports coming from hypnosis," Hartmann said.
Hartmann said he and
other scientists examined "photo evidence" of UFOs as members of the
U.S. Air Force's "Condon Committee" in the late 1960s.
"I went in
hoping to find real evidence of some extraordinary phenomena, but I came
out feeling we had no convincing evidence we could take back to
Congress or the USAF or public, and that the sociology of the UFO
phenomenon was much more interesting than any actual physical evidence
like the alleged photos," he said.
The SETI Institute is a
private, nonprofit science group based in California that searches for
signs of extraterrestrial life. But a spokesman declined to comment on
Jacobs or the possibility of aliens on Earth, saying that SETI hunts for
signs of alien life in deep space, not here.
No 'gee-whiz thing'
Jacobs
himself says he has never seen a UFO nor been abducted by aliens. "I've
never been to Japan either, but that doesn't mean Japan doesn't exist,"
he said.
He remains undaunted by skeptics. He has been a believer since he first began researching extraterrestrial life in 1970.
As
a college student, he read about aliens and UFOs "for R&R" - but
became entranced when he thought: "This could be real," he said.
At
the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he switched his doctoral
dissertation from the portrayal of women in pre-1915 films to the UFO
controversy in America.
He began focusing on alien abductions in the 1980s and vows to continue that research even as it terrifies him more each day.
"I
used to think it was the most amazing, wowee, gee-whiz thing," Jacobs
said. "But the more I learn about it, the more I fear it, the more I
don't want to have anything to do with it."
That's because he suspects that aliens are intent upon planetary domination, as humans remain mired in ignorance and denial.
"This
is a clandestine phenomenon," Jacobs said. "There is one thing that I
can say for sure: They don't want us to know what they're doing -
because what they're doing benefits them and not us."
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