Whisper in the galaxy [616572]
Whisper in the galaxy
The Extraterrestrial Truth. (What You Don't Know)
This Thread is For the Truth Seekers!
Can You Handle The Truth? trerressrtresrtrrerer
Do you really want to learn the truth about ET’s?
Would it be hard for you to discover that our intelligence level as a human being is nothing more
than an animal would be to us, in comparison to most extraterrestrials visiting the planet?
Have you thought to yourself how could ET’s possibly hide their existence from mankind for so
long if they really do exist?
Has the thought ever crossed your mind, “How much farther advanced could ET’s really be?”
Though our human minds literally cannot yet grasp the concept of their true nature coming from
a higher dimensional reality as they can exist outside and inside our 3rd dimension at least we
can have a small peak into what their world is like, at least from a 3rd dimensional human
perspective.
Thanks to ATS members AlexDj and SpaceVisitor,
I have been trying to put together my experiences for a very long time now and have struggled to
even put down on paper everything I have experienced with ET’s and onboard various space
craft. Unlike many others I have been allowed to remember some of my experiences and be fully
conscious of all surrounding. The hardest part is describing and explaining the surroundings and
the things I experienced but thanks to AlexDJ and SpaceVisitor who sent me U2U’s telling me
some of my thoughts are similar to another posters experiences, I just finished reading two
documents written by this person about ET’s and their ships and can tell you this is exactly the
way ET’s and their ships are, I couldn’t have explained or put it down on paper any better than
this person did. In this light I have decided to direct you to these documents that describe to the
best of anyone’s ability what ET’s are really like and what ET ships are really like.
You won’t find these descriptions anywhere else, I have read many books on the subject out
there for a long time now but they have not come close to the detail and descriptions found in
these documents. For the truth seekers and those who are wondering how much farther advanced
ET’s really can be well this is your chance to actually get a rough draft idea. Before you read this
I will just say that this will all seem like a fairy tale to some because ET technology if you could
even really call it that operates inter-dimension ally and is like a living organism that is alive to us
in the 3rd dime nsion. You really need to drop the illusion of this world and reality with a clean
open mind in order to hear the truth because it is that far out there and will sound undoubtedly
unbelievable.
Neil Armstrong wrote: restres ttrest es esr tres
Those who can remove one of the truth's protective layers. There are places to go beyond
belief…
Our 3rd dimensional reality or the world we live in is a layer of the truth that Neil Armstrong
speaks about. It is an illusion that if we could only remove part of, we truly could go to places
beyond belief as he so eloquently put it. If we could see past our physical human eye and access
other realities, we could understand that all 3rd dimensional laws can in fact be broken. Remove
the laws of physics, science , and the world as there are no limitations only illusions.
Hard to believe? I’m right there with you, ET’s have the capability of breaking all 3rd
dimensional laws as we know them by changing matter and manipulating time and space from
other dimensions.. Can we fly like superman? Never say never.
So if you really want to know about ET’s then YOU NEED to read this document that gives you
a small peak into the inter-dimensional world of extraterrestrials.
The first part of the document gives a brief description of Roswell,
If your already familiar with that story well I suggest you skip down
A little bit and continue reading,
Keep in mind whether this story is true or not I could never
tell you or vouch for it. It may be written as a screen play to keep
the readers attention. What I can vouch for is that everything
written and said about ET's capabilities and their ships in this document is true, I have
experienced some of these things for myself among other things that I plan to later share.
Here it is:
CLICK ,
youfo.blogspot.com…
p.s.
I will be sharing my ET experiences of traveling into space on this thread eventually as I am still
in the process of writing them down but I will leave out the unexplainable that I experienced
inside and outside of ET ships because I don’t really know how to put it all down on paper, in
fact I don't think it's even possible. I have decided to just come out and share my experiences
regardless of what people think and I expect to be hammered and flamed for it all as usual here
on ATS but that is ok, I will answer everyone ’s questions anyway. I want people to understand
that I have read many contact stories out there and only a very few give the slightest clue and
reality of what ET’s and their ships really are like so I feel I owe it to at least try and get some
information out to those diligently seeking the truth. If I ever write a book on all of my
experiences I will place it online (free of charge of course) for whoever choo ses to download,
whether people believe me or not at least I put it up there for someone to read and consider. If
you have any questions feel free to ask. Peace! srdt srtdzsrdtrtsret a rsat atsertres trest sret tysrt
ytsrse yttsysey s
…………………………………………………
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Thursday, June 19, 2008
In League with a UFO
By Lou Baldin
“On that day messengers shall go forth from me in ships…”
EZEKIEL 30:9
Contents
Alien documents 9
UFO Crash 15
Cover-up 18
Strange life forms inside the ship 24
Disappearing Act 31
Psychics Attempt to Unlock the Mysteries 33
Alien Medical Instruments 45
Layers added to shield the President 54
Pandora’s Box 58
Spontaneous combustion 65
Alien cover-up 72
Power of the intangibles 76
Biodegradable alien gadgets 82
Technology, where does it come from? 85
Alien contact 90
Civilians used for experimentation 95
The myth of human autonomy 97
Second encounter 104
Envy Stymies the Com mittee 108
Gift of kno wledg e 112
Meat market 116
The journe y 131
Primed for a m ission 137
Clones 142
Back from Utopia 144
Prologue
The flying disk recov ered in Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947 is one of ma ny cont acts with
extraterrestr ial life forms hum ans have had in the last cen tury and th is new centur y. Roswell gets
the bulk of the interest because it was init ially reported by personnel in the United States
govern ment to a worldwide audi ence. Days after an of ficer from the Army/Air force rele ased the
news that an Alien ship crashed in a field near Roswell, New Mexico, a sub stantial amoun t of
repudi ation of the stor y poured out from military headquar ters debunking the orig inal account.
However , not ever yone could be silen ced. For som e of the individu als, those tha t exper ienced the
pheno mena firsthand, the cover -up did not al leviate their new paranor mal realities. During that
period many of th e people touched by the extr aterrestr ial affair like th e nurses, doctors, scient ists
and military personnel, the people with firsthand knowledge, sudden ly lost in terest in tel ling
their stories. Those peop le had been debrief ed on the consequences should the y talk about what
they saw and experien ced in Roswell in 1947.
Much of what l eaked out in the last thre e decad es ca me from such peopl e who had previousl y
sworn secrec y their involv ement while employed by the newl y developed covert society. These
peopl e lived m ost of the ir liv es working in cl andestine labora tories setup in several places around
the world. Som e of the scientists in such program s had ph ysical cont act with Aliens and Alien
technologi es, that were discovered inside the salvaged Alien spaceship at Roswell.
A few of these people eventua lly wrote book s describ ing som e of the things the y worked around,
but for the fant astic nature of th eir cl aims few be lieved them. Others, with m ore profound
infor mation and fearful of loosing cred ibility, careers, and even their life, had no int erest in going
publi c. Som e remained quiet out of dut y to countr y. Most of these people have gone to their
graves, t aking the ir Alien secre ts with the m. But not all secrets were taken to the grave. So me
remained hidden in dusty attics and da mp basem ents, stored away under old m agazines and
books inside boxe s, awai ting discover y. Much of this material was never found, and like
count less other histor ical docum ents throughout the ages has been lost to posteri ty, never to be
viewed by hum an eyes again. No one will ever know how mu ch secre t infor mation from that and
other covert projects made it to th e landfi lls, but some journals have surfaced af ter the author(s)
have passed away.
When I first wrote “In League with a UF O” I did not want to be associat ed with the UFO
pheno mena and was not sure how to put the infor mation out without admitting my personal
exper iences. So I put the m anuscr ipt awa y for two y ears before revisi ting i t again and publishing
the manuscrip t. Unbeknown st to m e at the time was that m y book w ould com e out in print two
weeks before the 50th anniversar y of the Roswell crash. M y publisher inform ed m e of that fact
and suggested that I should take advan tage of the crowds that would conver ge in Roswell, New
Mexico on J uly of 1997, to sell my books. I declin ed and m y book rem ained for the mos t part
unknown for nearl y ten y ears after publ ication. A few book s were purchased and in th e second
year I wa s inv ited to a fil ming of a docum entary concern ing UF Os and aga in I decl ined publici ty
for the book. I did however do a couple of rad io sho ws which net ted m e a few book sales.
How I cam e to have this infor mation is as strange as the infor mation itself. I wa s a hom ebuild er
at the t ime with no desire to write and little if an y writing ability to boot. I rece ived a call one
day and wa s inv ited to have lun ch by an indiv idual I did not know. I often met with cl ients and
suppliers who I did business with and didn’ t give it much thought when I accept ed the invita tion.
I met with this fellow a t an upscal e restauran t and we never once ta lked abou t construct ion,
which should have been odd, but for som e reason it was not. During our conversation he handed
me som e papers tha t he took from his briefc ase and showed the m to m e. I can’ t to this da y recall
what we talked about or what was on those papers, but not long af ter tha t day I began to write
down the material that is no w in this book.
In Le ague with a UFO
second ed ition
UFO Crash
The year was 1947, the pl ace Roswell New Mexico. On J uly 2, of that y ear, reports of a bright
disk strea ming across the sky were made my som e of the town speopl e to the loca l author ities.
The unident ified- flying-object (UFO) fell from the sk y and crashed approxi mately sevent y-five
miles northwest of town th at da y. A ranch er or far mer that heard the crash and had thought tha t
an airplane had fal len in to a fie ld a short dist ance from the house he was living in, investiga ted.
Wha t he found at the scene was noth ing he could relate to and it certa inly didn’ t look to hi m like
it was from this world! He was s o mystified about what he saw tha t he didn’ t report i t unti l five
days later, on J uly the 7th when he went into town for s ome other business. He told some friends
that the craft was made of a strange material that had no weight to it, yet seemed to have
incredibl e strength. Years lat er som e of th e material found at the crash sit e was equated to
looking like aluminum foil. Coinc identl y, aluminum foil was invent ed tha t year (1947).
However , aluminum foil is easil y damaged and destro yed, unlik e the material from the Alien
ship.
Once th e news s pread about the ranche r’s claim of finding a UFO the exc itement mixed with
appreh ension (thoughts of an Alien invasion), spread throughou t the town like a bru sh fir e. It was
not long after the ranch er sho wed the crash sit e to one of the m ilitary officers th at the rancher
suddenl y beca me silent on the top ic and spoke no m ore about it. He refused to discus s what he
had found with the m edia or his friends. Neverthel ess, the news wa s out and it quickl y traveled
around the countr y and the world as the press corps inundated that small New Mexico town.
Ironic ally, much of w hat is kno wn abou t the UFO crash wa s released to the m edia by a public
relations of ficer fro m the Army / Air Force (th e sam e people tha t later den ied it). A military
officer told the press that a flying disk had crashed and that th e Army/Air Force did recov er it.
(In 1947 the Army and the Air force was one branch.) Fro m that stat ement, people from all over
world wanted to know mo re. So me of the ta lk around town focused on topics tha t questioned the
vary nature of m ans existence, “what if we are not alone in the universe? Was this crash proof
that other life forms did exist? And if so what a scar y thought tha t was!” Those were som e of the
conc erns talked about.
Orson Welle’s "W ar of the Worlds" of a few y ears ear lier, in 1938, was still on the m inds of ma ny
of the town folks. That alleged alien crash i mplied that a real alien invasion could be i mminent.
Ther e was anxiet y mixed in with the exci tement. Those were dir e implications to that possibil ity
and the govern ment soon real ized it was not in a po sition to answer the queri es and concerns
coming at them by the poten tially panic-provoking reporters.
Not knowing what the ar my had in its possession and at the sa me time attempting to halt what
had turned into a media-circus of paranoia, the m ilitary retracted its ear lier state ment abou t a
flying disk and bla med the misunderstand ing to a misinfor med lower ranking officer. The
military’s new report simply stated tha t a new kind of weather bal loon tha t was being test ed in
the nearb y military base is a ll tha t was recovered from the now famous Ro swell crash.
The crash of a weather balloon was much easier to swallow than Aliens fro m space and a lot less
fright ening for the publi c at large. Few people doubted the military’s explana tions and welcomed
them and th e public quickl y forgot the whole matter.
Cover -up
The top brass in the military was unable to give the Presiden t of the United Stat es an y deta ils of
what they had in their possession other th an it did appear to be extr aterrestrial and not of this
world. That was enough inform ation for the President to ma ke the dec ision to keep the whole
affair a secret until further notice.
A secre t committee was for med with the sole inten tion of stud ying the Alien craf t. It was put
under the jurisdiction of the Air Force and rec eived its funding fro m them. The com mittee
opera ted under the pret ext of in tegrat ing new techno logies to develop better maneuver ability and
faster flying m ilitary aircraft (top secret stuff). The faci lity is loca ted near the Nevada Arizona
border and is popularl y known as "Area 51." It was one of the m ost hush-hush bases in the
countr y until som etime in the Sevent ies. That’s when UFO buf fs began mentioning i t in the ir
meetings, and the m edia star ted writing about it in newspapers and magazin es.
Infor mation about UF Os ca me from a multitude of sources. Fro m the average citizen that
report ed to th e Media that th ey had seen a ircraft perform fantastic feats of m aneuverab ility near
military bases and at Area 51, and profes siona ls, that claimed what they saw defied all concepts
of what military aircraft, or an y aircr aft, was capab le of doing without break ing apar t. Moving
diagon ally while trav eling at a high rate of speed was one of the m ore bizarr e instanc es reported.
Other sources or le aks ca me from former military personnel who worked at cer tain bases and
spoke under th e condit ion tha t their names would not be used. Area 51 rem ains a top-secret
facility, but ever yone knows its whereabouts. It now serves m ore as a deco y, keeping the publi c
focused on th at one place and awa y from oth er conce aled operations across the countr y,
according to a docu ment.
The military had in its possession a fl ying machine so advanced and m ysterious that some of the
scien tists involv ed in the progra m specu lated that it cou ld onl y be from other dimensions. Or that
the Alien ship wa s cap able of travel ing fro m one di mension to another as a m eans to traverse the
vastness of our Milk y Way galax y.
"The craft was like a living or ganis m," claimed a docum ent in one of the secret files. When the
ship was first recover ed, ther e was a lar ge hole on one side of it. Presum ably caused b y an
internal explosion, perhaps a leak y antimatter type com ponent of the craf t was one theor y. The
explosion annihi lated a lar ge portion of the ship (the actua l size of the Alien craf t was not found
in the docu ments). Miraculousl y, three weeks after the craft was discovered the ship com pletely
healed (repa ired) i tself. To say the least i t was a ver y mysterious event, since the craft was
monitored 24 hour s a da y and no Alien work crew ma terialized to perfor m the work. If Aliens
did repair th e ship, the y were either invisibl e or the Aliens render ed the guards unconscious and
implanted false memories into th eir m inds. The scient ists that monitor ed the craft repor ted tha t
the heal ing occurred similar to a hum an flesh wound, which hea ls within a few da ys with the
help of blood pla telets from the hum an bod y. The skin or surface of the ship sim ply grew back
over a period of thre e weeks. In real ty there is no si milarity to the hum an immunolog y and that
of the ship’ s own abili ty to hea l, had a hum an suf fered an equival ent trau ma nothing would have
grown back and the hu man would have died. At the end of the three week s there was no sign that
the ship had been dam aged, no scar , and the color m atch where the hul l had been broken blended
flawl essly with the undam aged part of the ship.
The debris fro m the explosion covered severa l acres of l and with m aterial that had the
appe arance and consistenc y of alu minum foil, excep t that aluminum foil re mains cru mpled when
crumpled. The Alien material bounced back without a wrinkle. Bec ause the craft repa ired itself
the scient ists investiga ting it were unabl e to deter mine the cause of the crash. But the size of th e
hole led th em to believ e tha t it had to be an interna l explosion and not th e crash tha t caused the
damage. The material the ship was m ade of wa s indestru ctible by human standards. After
studying the m aterial and its strength, th ey came to th e conclusion that anything earthl y could not
harm the ship in anyway, nor cause the slight est da mage to i t, inc luding tha t of a lighting strike
(one of the origin al theor ies on what caused the saucer to crash).
Of the three Aliens that were recover ed fro m the craft when it was found, one was dead and two
were a live. The three Aliens were removed fro m the ship at the time of its recover y and taken to
an undisclosed loca tion. The secret com mittee in posses sion of the Alien craf t had no knowledge
of the whereabouts of the Aliens, and at tha t time were unconcerned, they had plent y on th eir
plate with the Alien ship and the m ysterious car go tha t was in it.
Severa l months passed before the scien tists fel t comfor table working inside of th e Alien craft.
Entering it was like walking into a time warp, al l sense of real ity vanished. Wristwat ches did not
opera te inside the Alien craft and neither did an y of the five physical hu man sense s. Things
smelled dif ferently or not at all while in the ship. Bod y odor lost i ts pungenc y; however , the food
they brought into the ship gave off an of fensive odor , as if it was rancid, making it inedible while
in the ship. Perfu me and cologne was unde tectable until they stepped out of the ship and the nose
once again picked up on th e scent. From the exper iments with food the scientists det ermined tha t
it was not perm anen tly affected or alter ed in any way and the food regained its natura l smells and
taste when it was taken out of th e Alien craft. The other senses: sight, hearing, and touch,
chang ed for the bette r. If a scien tist wore glasses he needed to remove them to be able to see. It
was the sa me with hear ing. All sound w as crystal clear regardl ess of prev ious hearing abili ties of
the scient ists. Touch was sensitiv e to the point of being erot ic. The ship simply felt good!
However , the scient ists were not accusto med to feel ing opti mally good, and hea lthy, and it took
time (most never did) before the y beca me comfor table with the invigora ting sensation inside th e
ship’ s environ ment. Unfortun ately, if th ey spent long periods in the craft com ing out wa s the
worst kind of jetlag. The scien tists beca me irritable, grogg y, drain ed, and ach y and had to
readjust to feeling lous y again. Ironical ly, that was the nor mal feeling of the ir bodies that th ey
forgot abou t while in the ship.
Although the senses were on high al ert while in the ship, the descrip tion that was unani mous
among those tha t enter ed the ship was that it was surreal. They had a drea my state of m ind, y et,
they were ener gized and not at al l sleep y while in the ship. On the flip side, m uch of that
alertness turned into appreh ension, and for som e, night marish. The persistent feeling tha t
something liv ing (Aliens) was present in the ship with them, behind the m, around th em, like
wisps or s hadows that never quit e came into focus. It was unnerving for those that worked insid e
the craft. There was no doubt tha t they were not alon e while in the ship!
To compensa te for th e time distort ion the scient ists po sted two m en outside the craft and had one
of the m enter the ship ever y few m inutes, and announce the time to those inside. When the craft
was first discovered, the scientists spent hour s and sometimes days oblivious to the fac t that even
a single m inute had passed. Working for long stretches of ti me without losing ener gy or focus
was com mon, but it creat ed proble ms for those with fa milies.
The inter ior of the craft was m uch larger than its ph ysical exter ior suggested. No one is sure tha t
all the rooms and co mpar tments on the ship have been discover ed. Ever yone who entered it ca me
out with a dif feren t numbers even the same person co mes out with a dif ferent count each time
they leave the craft. Another proble m they faced was leav ing the ship with inte lligible notes.
Ever ything they wrote down ended up being a m aze of ha lf-written word s and sentences tha t
were void of an y meaning once they exited th e ship. The scien tists at tempted to take pi ctures of
the instru ments and other interior rooms of the ship, but were unsuccessful. When the film was
deve loped, i t was as if it had been exposed to light. So the y tried dif feren t systems of shielding
the camera from the unknown radiat ion. They enclosed the camera in various allo ys, plastics and
exotic cu tting- edge cera mics in vain a ttempts to insula te the film, nothing worked.
Ther e were scores of gadgets on the ship. Som e have been t aken out of the ship and
exper imented with; others even though the y are portab le could not be re moved fro m the craf t. An
invisib le force inside the craf t kept the scien tists fro m leaving the ship with cer tain alien ite ms,
no one ever figured out wh y, nor ho w to circu mvent that force.
Ever y Alien gadget somehow knew w hat its purpose was. U nlike human gadgets lik e hammers,
toast ers, etc., which are stat ic and onl y funct ion correc tly if at al l with the help of a hu man, or an
electrical outle t. Alien objects appear ed to have consciousness ( were alive), and the y perform
duties independen tly and without any known power source like ba tteries, solar cel ls, or ele ctrical
cords, and opera ted indefini tely!
The opening or doorwa y to the ship was another mystery. When a scient ist approach ed the craft
with the int ention of entering it, an opening appe ared inst antly. If there was no int ention by the
scien tist of en tering the ship, nothing opened. The ship can be en tered from any loca tion, top,
sides and fro m the bot tom of the craft. Wherever a scientist approached the ship, that’ s where
they entered. When an open ing m anifested i t led to the same centr al locat ion, regardl ess of th e
point of entr y. The craft was able to absorb s evera l peopl e into it at once. A feat that left many of
the scient ists s pooked beyond com prehension. According to one t estimony, “if all the techn icians
who were anal yzing the craft form ed a circl e around i t and in tended to enter it in mass they all
did!” There are no doors, as w e know and understand doors, onl y an opening that acco mmodates
the size of the person or person s entering the ship. The ship appeared to work s omething l ike
osmosis. The person desiring entry and standing next to the ship instantl y found hi mself inside
the ship. Yet, if there was no m ental desire to enter or exit, the ship re mained impregnab le. No
manmade machinery could break into the ship.
Strange life forms inside the ship
Ever ything in the ship posses sed unique personal ities that were also capab le, in the m ost bizarre
ways, of conve ying emotions to the scientists. The best descript ion of these gadgets b y the
scien tists was that they were l ike synthetic versions of insec ts and s mall animals. They lacked
organic quali ties in the respec t that they didn’ t eat drink or el iminate, yet the gadgets didn’ t have
static qua lities of s ynthetic human made materials. The Alien gadgets squirm ed, crawled,
levitated, jum ped, flew and walked! The size of the living gadgets ranged from a deer tick to a
basketb all, with the majori ty of the items fitting in th e pal m of the average man’s hand. The
scien tists trea ted some gadgets as del ightful toys, and occasion ally fought over the m like
children, i mpatiently waiting their turn to inspec t, explor e, and be entert ained by the gadge ts.
However , som e of the Alien thing amajigs turned out to be monst ers.
Many of the items seem ed to be m etallic (sturd y and unbeliev ably strong) and at the same time
malleable, like soft putty. The ambigui ty of the strange substance that the gadge ts were m ade of
confounded the resear ch tea ms. The consensus wa s, tha t the material from which th e ship and its
contents consisted of, ma de a mockery of hum an ph ysics. Alien gadgets didn’ t function like
human machinery with the use of gears, m otors, wheels, wiring, or even our most state of the art
microelectroni cs like nano-techno logy. Nor did the gadgets func tion ph ysiolog ically, with bone,
blood and mus cle, or like the plan t and m arine life e ither. It appe ared tha t ever y molecule of
whatev er these things were m ade of acted in unison in the sa me manner that water molecules
joined toge ther to creat e ocean waves.
Ther e are no hum an m eans avail able to dissect th e Alien gadgets, they are impervious to our
infer ior te chnolog y to penetra te and anal yze. The Alien things didn’ t have seams or edges to pr y
open, no o rgans or flesh to probe; th ey couldn’ t be weighed nor th eir cont ents m easured. They
appe ared to be cast fro m one solid pie ce with no parts, excep t that they were not solid, as we
know solid to be. One analog y describing Alien m aterial was malleable and solid, but
temperature had nothing to do with eith er state, as it does with earth metals, liquids, and gase s.
Alien gadgets transi tioned to four ph ysical stages, solid, malleable, liquid and gas, without
external heat variat ion. Change happened at the discre tion of the Alien gadge t and not the hu man
handl er. Attempts to stud y the items were further blun ted when X-ra y failed to penetra te the
Alien material. There is no hum an m eans to understand what made those gadgets work other
than paranor mally.
Nothing connected with the craft aged, wore out, or bec ame obsolete; rather , the things in the
ship and the ship itse lf, appear ed to i mprove over time. The gadgets also seem ed to learn the
habits of the hand lers. An exa mple, if a ha mmer were an Alien gadget, a ll one needed to do wa s
use it once and from then on the ha mmer would repe at the action indef initely, hitting the nai l
without the need to handl e the ham mer manua lly. The hammer would operat e on its own,
although, som eone had to hold the nai l and pra y that the ha mmer didn’ t miss. Alien technolog y,
although perfec t, is proble matic when int erfac ing with infer ior te chnolog y and understanding.
The scientists discovered tha t contro lling an Alien it em once it beca me activated was a
dangerous proposit ion. Several accidents and fatal ities due to hu man/Alien intera ctions were
mentioned in the reports.
The recovered ship had three or mo re roo ms equ ipped lik e futurist ic sur gical-looking rooms. The
rooms were brigh ter and had the fee l of a place where flesh m eets the scalp el. It wa s believed by
members of the team that many if not all of the gadgets on the ship were relat ed to or perform ed
medical functions.
After suffering a few mi shaps (loss of life and li mb) from coming into contac t with Alien objects
from experi menting on each oth er, the scientists decided to uti lize cadavers instead of the mselves
in order to reduce pain, suffering, and death among its members. After m any failed attempts to
get the Alien objects to function on cadavers (the Alien things did not respond to dead flesh), the
scien tists began using live anim als such as rats, rabbits, pigs, chi ckens, m ice, cows, horse s, toads,
fish and other t ypes of wild life. Some Alien instru ments act ivated (woke up), w hen they came in
contact with onl y certain animals. Catt le, horses and hu mans alwa ys triggered the Alien gadge ts
to perform a freak ish event.
The Alien things had no outward appearanc es or label ing tha t iden tified the functions associat ed
with them. Scientists discover ed what ea ch item did mos tly by acciden t. Decipher ing what an y
one item was cap able of doing or perfor ming was im possible using th e tried- and-true methods of
deduc tion. The scientists had to stu mble around, so metimes awkwardl y and m aybe foolishl y,
until a function or procedur e presented itself. Discoveries during testing happened b y placing th e
Alien objects direct ly on the animals or in close proxi mity to the ani mals, and then a “wait-and-
see” approach went into pla y. A respon se fro m the gadge ts might take place instant ly or it could
take hours, and in so me cases mo re than a da y before the gadge ts decid ed to do so meth ing. The
subjects, ani mal or hu man, were not sedat ed during the experi ments because tha t seemed to
compro mise th e testing. In som e cases, the Alien things were fasten ed on to th e sub jects with
straps, cl amps, and tap e or held in plac e by one of the techn icians. Although, hold ing the Alien
object had its own consequences for the experi menters because som etimes th e Alien object
perfor med its “thing” on the person holding it, “w hich was not a pret ty pictur e,” ac cording to one
memo.
When dorm ant, the gadge ts were usuall y spheric al and had the appearanc e of black ball bearings,
although ther e were other shapes and colors the y reverted to while inert as w ell. Mo st of the
items were s maller than a baseba ll and larger than a golf ball, but new gadgets appear ed and
disappe ared regul arly. The majorit y of the objects were bla ck in co lor while dorm ant. Some were
multicolored or tr anslucent and had no colo r. Touching certa in ite ms sucked the heat from the
finger tips, and in some instanc es caused a few scien tists to lose parts of their fingers fro m
frostbit e or exot ic Alien radi ation. At times the gadget’ s physical weigh t (referred to as obstinac y
in the docu ments) was s uch that th e scient ists could not pick up or m ove the gadgets, even with
the use of ma chines. At other times those sam e objects were lighter than a ir, and bobbed around
the labora tory like heliu m balloons at a birthda y party.
During the experi ments with the ani mals the y discovered that some instru ments responded when
they came within one inch fro m touching the ani mal. Other instru ments needed to have full
contact with the animal before activ ating. What was considered activ ation was when on Alien
object reacted in an y number of wa ys, such as chang e color , change size or shape, or outr ight
perfor m its funct ion on tha t animal (e.g., rem ove a specific body part; perform a biops y, or an y
number of strange transa ctions th at the scient ists didn’ t understand. What these Alien instrum ents
did was uncl ear with the ear ly experi menters. In s ome of the early notes that surviv ed was
writt en tha t the Alien objects mutilated the ani mals by removing t issue and som etimes or gans
from them, for no apparent reason. The ani mals were hea lthy before the experi ments and m ight
have remained so had the scientists known how to reverse, or somehow com municate their
desired outco me to the gadget. For inst ance, “please put the bunn y’s head back on.”
Exper imenting on hu mans wa s not taboo in the 1940s, and was practi ced in many countr ies as
well as in the United Stat es, albe it cover tly. But even before tests were begun on hum an guine a
pigs, som e scientists who fiddled with these Aliens too ls un wittingly were m aimed, and in a few
instan ces, kil led b y the instru ments. At the onset of the program , accidents did get record ed
“officially,” but as the y ears went b y and the program became increasing ly shrouded in secrec y,
infor mation was shared “unofficially,” through the grapevine. It was forbidden to write cer tain
things down, never theless, som e scientists secre tly did. Inform ation that made it to paper or other
storage devices such as tap e recorders and photograph y, was never meant for sharing with oth er
scien tists in th e progra m, but was to be forwarded dire ctly to the com mittee onl y. Ther efore, how
many scient ists lost their lives from contac t with the Alien things no one will know .
One of the first injuries recorded took pla ce ear ly in th e progra m. It happened to a m etallurgist.
He was stud ying the bizarre behavior of exotic Alien metal while it transfigured during a test. He
and a colle ague were mon itoring a bat ch of Alien gadgets that were assigned to the m that
morning. Scient ists doing exper iments with Alien objects were loca ted in a separat e build ing
from were the Alien craf t was stored (divide and concur was the theme). By putting distanc e
betwe en the craft and the Alien objects the scientists were hoping to e liminate any interferenc e or
poten tial influ ence that th e craft might have on the gadgets. The scientists were concerned that
the ship som ehow rem ained in com munication with its spawn. Another reason the y experi mented
off the ship was that the craft was too strange a pla ce to work inside of. Inside the ship was real
life "Alic e in Wonderland" stuff. It was near ly impossibl e to ge t anything meaningful done while
strange creatur es jumped around and harassed the scient ists w orking inside the ship.
The metallurgist and a col league had scat tered the Alien objects around a large tab le in his lab.
They then rel eased a rabbit in the m idst of the objects to see if an y of the m would activ ate due to
the presence of the ani mal. They observed and wait ed. They watched for the slightest respon ses
from the objects as the rabbit mov ed around the table eating the lettuce. The lettuce was
strategica lly placed around the table so tha t the rabbit would make maximum cont act with all the
items tha t were put out that day. The rabbit didn’ t seem both ered b y the Alien things. The rabbit
was unaware tha t any one of the m Alien gadgets it brushed up against could snatch it up, skin
and gut it, and have it fully cooked in l ess than a coupl e of m inutes! The job had m any hidden
dangers, but the scien tists did eat well.
Knowing the hazards of m ishandl ing the Alien things, it was inco mprehensib le tha t scien tists
working with such volati le objects took the risks that they did. As the rabbit hopped about the
table the scient ists notic ed that one of the Alien things changed color as the rabbit got nea r.
Believing that the m etal was about to chang e shape the scientist wanted to hold the Alien object
in his hand to get a feel for what was taking place. The m etal quivered, so he took it to his desk
where th e ligh t was bette r. As he studied it under the ligh t of his desk la mp som ehow his face
made conta ct with the object. The thing activ ated and instant ly scooped out his e yeball! It
happen ed so quickl y that he didn't have time to drop the object, which was still holding his
eyeball securel y in its scoop-like- claw. His colleague, after seeing what had happened thought
that the Alien thing was att acking his friend and summoned the guard that was po sted outside the
room in the hall. The guard reluc tantly grabbed the instru ment with the e ye attached to it and
slowl y removed it from the injured scientist ’s hand. The scien tist let go of it as he col lapsed to
the floor , daz ed, as if he were hit b y a baseball bat over the head. No blood spilled from the
scien tist’s eye socket, but he was in severe pain and went in to shock. His colle ague was
perpl exed of what to do with the eyeball, he told the guard to re main with the injured m an and
took the e yeball along with the Alien object, which was remained attached to it, and put the m
into the refrigerator in the lunchroo m.
They were unable to save the eye, even though it was not dam aged in an y way. The doctors tha t
examined the injured m an were baf fled by the prec ision in which the e ye was removed. No
doctors or technique that they were aware of could perform that kind of opera tion. The Alien
instru ment, on its own, com pleted a com plex procedure in a split second. The Alien gadge t
cauterized al l the blood vessels without dam aging the e ye-socke t or the eyeball!
Disappear ing Act
The first week tha t the scientists started exper imenting with the Alien objects the gadgets began
disappe aring. At first, it was though t that a trickster (one of the scien tist) was pla ying pranks on
them, perhaps tak ing the objects from the laborator ies and return ing the m back to the ship. But
that scenario was im possible bec ause al l the labs were equipped with personal ized lock s ystems,
and none of the labs were broken into. The scient ists were baf fled, but after a few weeks a
pattern e merged. Ever y item from the ship, regardl ess of w here it was, whether i t was in another
part of the coun try, or som e oth er plac e in th e world, vanished exactl y three days from when
taken out of th e ship. Ite ms then e merged back on the ship prec isely the moment they vanished,
or ther eabouts, since time was trick y business on the ship and dif ficult to gage. As the scientists
had suspected the Alien ship somehow re mained in cont act with its brood, no m atter the distan ce
or loc ation from the mother ship.
Ther e was s o much magic in tha t craf t that it was prac tically impossible for the scient ists to
remain focused on their work. At times, the scient ists sho wed sign s associat ed with psychosis.
Their personali ties gyrated fro m gidd y with del ight to frustration and de monic despai r. On
severa l occasions, guards were called into the labs to restrain a bell igerent scient ist who wa s
making preposterous ac cusations and dem ands on one of his assistants. One scien tist
commanded a coworker to knee l and kiss a ring on his finger , than cried hysterically when his
colleague refused the dem and. Another thre atened to kil l a co lleagu e’s family if he didn't rec eive
a birthda y card from him. Two others played like chi ldren singing and clapp ing the ir hands while
talking to ma ke-believ e friends.
Those cases are a s mall sampling of strange happenings tha t took pla ce and affected many of
those involved with the cover t projects. Those were not episodes of bored scient ists, horsing
around with their colle agues, m any of those af fected had to be restrain ed and tak en of f the base.
Some of the m recovered within a few da ys and or w eeks, and had lit tle recoll ection of what
happen ed to the m. But in a few cases the scientists had to be inst itutional ized perm anent ly.
The scientists were never abl e to m aster the Alien instru ments because th e instru ments seem ed to
play mind gam es with the m, kind of a “ Simon Says” rout ine, “do as I s ay, not as I do.” The
instru ments didn’ t talk, verball y anyway, which would not have been surprising since the y
seemed to be able to do ever ything else, in cluding sending m essages to other devic es and to the
technic ians via extra sensor y means.
Psychics Attempt to Unlock th e Mysteries
The com mittee tried using ps ychics to unlock som e of th e secrets of th e Aliens. The expec tation
was that clairvo yants would be l ess intimidated working in areas that were paranor mal in na ture,
and too strange for down to ear th types like scien tists to handle. Fro m the onset som e of the
psychics cou ld not cope with what th ey were shown and put in con tact with and hand led som e
situa tions m uch worse than the scientists. Man y of the clairvoyants si mply "freaked out," as one
scien tist put it. Ther e were a few who overca me the initial shock and actu ally com municated
with the Alien objects, but shortl y after doing so mor e than half of the m deve loped ps ychosis,
and were dropped from the program .
Ther e are many layers of scientists who work on these highl y classifi ed projects. Som e know the
truth and the origin of what they are working on, others are kept in th e dark and believe that they
are working on highl y advan ced (hu man based) scien tific projects for the m ilitary and private
industr y. Of the thir ty plus groups that partic ipated in the program none com municate with ea ch
other, or even knew of th e others’ exist ence. All the groups reported th eir find ings and results to
a single co mmittee.
Each unit had two or three special ists chosen fro m div erse fields such as, ph ysics, m edicine,
engin eering, psychiatry, astronom y, paraps ychology, mathematics, and even th e cler gy. All the
scien ces and philosophi es were represented. The co mmittee to which these specialists reported
was com prised of seven individu als. That num ber chang ed through th e years, as did th e numbers
of scien tists in th e progra m. Some of the com mittee members represented and ca me from the
ranks of the military. The rest were civil ians. All were personall y recrui ted b y the President of
the United Sta tes (that polic y changed in the Sixties, and now no one knows ho w peopl e get in).
After reviewing m any of the first reports given to the m by the scientists the committee as a
whole was cert ain about onl y one thing, tha t whatev er the Aliens are they allowed the hum an
race to keep the Alien craf t with all its ma rvels, as a gift. But perhaps of the Trojan horse varie ty
was the conc ern of som e in the co mmittee. Com mittee members were well aware that the Aliens
had the capa city to take back th eir ship at anytime, yet, “why didn’ t they?” The com mittee knew
the Aliens could do this af ter the y learned how independen t each individu al gadge t on the ship
was, as wa s the ship itself. The ship was capabl e of operat ing indep endent ly without the
assistance of the Alien crew , but som e in the co mmittee believ ed tha t the gadgets were the Alien
crew.
It was apparen t to the co mmittee that after the craft fixed i tself tha t ther e was nothing tha t could
keep it fro m leaving on its own. What puzzled them was wh y they were allowed to have the ship
in the first place. The mission of the com mittee was to find a weakness in the Alien ship. But the
more they probed the m ore they realize how weak hum an technolog y was in com parison to the
Alien techno logy. One scient ist in the m emo excl aimed, “There was no com parison to hum an
and alien technolog y, we are m erely ova, the Aliens are Einstein to the nth degree ”. That is w hy
every president starting with Harr y Truman, was unable to confir m the ex istence of U FO's, but
was forced to deny their existenc e. No president was going to co me out and te ll the world tha t
there are Aliens fro m other worlds on our plane t that can "squash" the hum an race as if it were
nothing more than a gnat!
Two of the ps ychics that were brought into the progra m did what the ir col leagues couldn’ t and
after ini tial failur es, began to excel at braking through a few of th e complexities of how Alien
objects opera ted. The psychics com municated te lepath ically on a very basic lev el, like a first-
grader direct ing questions to a col lege profe ssor, the Alien objects. The professor s (Alien
gadge ts) were a mused and sometimes made an ef fort to explain com plex m aterial to th e first-
graders (ps ychics). However , big discoveri es com e from many little steps, and throughout the
years severa l little steps fell into place like pieces of a puzzle.
One of the small steps led the scientists towards a huge breakthrough. They figured out how to
unlock the secre ts to a cer tain batch of Alien devices th at most of the scien tists had given up on.
One of those gadge ts made openings appear where none exist ed. That device made it possible to
walk through walls or other barriers regard less of the co mposi tion or th ickness. There are no
manmade or natural materials that didn't y ield to tha t “instant” Alien-door -maker. The operation
of it was ef fortless. The scien tists si mply willed themselv es through the barrier whil e in
posses sion of that pecu liar item. That device did not change shape, as did many of the other
Alien items. It was about the size of a piece of chalk, the kind th at teachers use for writing on
blackboards, excep t that it was black. The gadge t had a strange absorption quali ty to it and gave
the person that was holding it the sensation that he could be sucked into it lik e being sucked into
a miniature bla ck hole. When the chalk l ike object activ ated, lights it the area di mmed and it
seemed to also pull ener gy from its surroundings. Ele ctrical items in the vi cinity such as
appliances, telev isions, radios, ligh ts, and to som e degree, hu mans and pets, since hum ans and
animals are electrical, were also af fected. The dev ice pulled th e heat out of the room or area that
it was u sed in as if a cold front had m oved through. Scien tists using the device often wore
suitab le clothing (for the sudden chi ll), which was awkward when te mperatur es outside were hot
and stick y. The person holding it had the sensation of suction similar to hold ing a vacuu m
cleaner nozzle to bare skin.
Another interest ing devic e the psychics brought to life served to immobilize a person or ani mal
and kept the victi m para lyzed for an indefin ite length of ti me. The devise was similar to a laser
point er excep t for the fact that the bea m projected three fee t then stopped, like a sli m version of
the Star Wars light saber. That Alien light saber instant ly para lyzed man or beast the m oment the
light came in contac t with th e craniu m. Under the paral ysis the person or ani mal remained fully
conscious, but were unable to m ove in an y way excep t for blink ing of the eyelids. People
touch ed by this bea m were l iterally frozen in th eir strides and had to be kept fro m falling (if the y
were of f balance) and let down gen tly, otherwise the y sustain ed injuries fro m falling. They
remained in that frozen sta te as long as the bea m made contac t with an y part of the head. Once
the beam was turned off or awa y from the person, the person rega ined m obility in one or two
minutes. Additional ly, the person af fected by the ray suffered a mild case of am nesia, and
disorien tation, also the y never rec alled what happen ed to th em moments before, during, and aft er
the paral ysis. One scien tist who succu mbed to the paral ysis during on experi ment equa ted it to a
high pitch ringing in the ears, ac companied by a mild dizzy spell, which lasted less than a
minute, once the beam was re moved from his head.
Ever y new breakthrough wetted th e appet ite of the co mmittee and when the discoveries waned
they beca me impatiently hungr y for mo re. It was in one of those lul ls that the co mmittee
seriousl y began discussing the use of c ivilians as guinea pigs. The ps ychics weren’ t produc ing
the consistent results the com mittee was hoping for . There was too much down ti me betwe en
discover ies, which lef t large gaps in the workloads of scientists and techni cians. That was
unac ceptab le due to the vast Alien cargo tha t begged to be unlock ed, and its secret m ysteries
unleashed. Putting pres sure on the ps ychics onl y quickened their burnout rate (which was high),
and qualifi ed repla cements were dif ficult to find. Therefor e, alt ernat ives were explor ed. Had the
psychics m ade bet ter progress it might have al levia ted the co mmittee from making the dreadfu l
decisions the y were faced with. Experi menting on un suspect ing peopl e was put on the front
burner .
The decision to experi ment on people posed a dilemma for s ome of the co mmittee members.
How w ould they carry out experi mentation on hum an sub jects and stil l be abl e to sleep at night ?
And that was the compassiona te co mpon ent of the proble m. There were potent ial legal issues
should tha t evil deed ever get out into the publi c. The legal ity of it all presented more of a
challenge, “would the y be tried as war cri minals or m onsters, if not both?” Those kinds of
questions surfaced more often as the decade of the forti es, w here viola tions aga inst hu mans were
easier to hide and were also more acc eptab le by certain governm ents. However , as the cause for
the “great er good” era, turned into the fifties, Sixties, and Seventies, where the m ood of the
nation change radic ally against Big-brother t ype govern ment insti tutions as benef actors of th e
peopl e to outr ight m istrust of higher authorit y. Amer icans bec ame more cynical and su spicious of
the military and the governm ent in genera l as a consequen ce of the Vietna m War.
Even the m ost hard-boiled among the co mmittee members knew tha t it was onl y a matter of ti me
before their covert organization would be discover ed and exposed. “When tha t day comes, heads
will roll, like at the French revolut ion with the guil lotine,” procl aimed one of the scient ists in the
report. None believ e it would happen in their lifetime, but there was alwa ys that possibil ity.
Ther e were no eas y answers, especia lly since the com mittee itself was venom ously divid ed on
that one issue. Bec ause of the rift, it was feared tha t som eone on the te am might leak tha t
infor mation to the pres s.
Concerns over using hum an speci mens in the labs were preva lent in the Seventies, but it was also
an issue a t the onset of the cover t progra m. After reviewing severa l options conc erning the use of
peopl e to exper iment on in the la te Forties, the first com mittee resolved th eir di lemma rather
easily. They would take th e Alien gadgets and do experi ments in the bat tlefield. The idea was
proposed b y two of the military personnel tha t were m embers of the com mittee. They made tha t
suggestion to their colle agues on the com mittee after returning from a White House briefing with
the President and his Chiefs of Staf f. At the brief ing, the y learned that the possibili ty of Amer ica
going to war with Korea was highl y probable. They were told at the meeting tha t such a scenar io
would solve severa l proble ms. The co mmittee could set up a MASH uni t near the frontl ines and
take in th e wor st casualt ies of the war. Man y things can be hidden in batt le zones when th e
obvious dangers are overlooked. Few in the co mmittee were exci ted about going into the
battlefield, or exposing the scientific peopl e who w orked for the co mmittee to that kind of
dange r.
Dead soldi ers tell no tal es. That was the botto m line, secrecy was para mount, and fresh m eat
plentiful in the hellho le of war . The use of mo rtally wounded soldiers was no less repugnant back
then as it is now , unless the y were ene my soldiers. The co mmittee subjected solders and other
victims of the war to exper iments “for the better ment of ma nkind,” and onl y those with a low
probabi lity of survival were taken.
The war provided the m with multiple opportun ities. They had the use of captured prisoners and
enemy casual ties to experi ment on. They also tested the Alien devices for suitab ility as weapons.
But before the operation got of f the ground the y had m any obstacl es to work out. The Alien
gadge ts regrouped back on the ship ever y three days, so the y had to figur e out a way to get th e
ship near er to the war zone. Moving i t crea ted other proble ms. Various unrela ted resear ch
progra ms existed tha t requir ed the ship to re main where i t was (the site was not disclosed).
Hum an experi mentation was a fract ion of the whole progra m that was tak ing plac e around the
Alien craft during those y ears. Cut ting of f other inter ested ent ities wa s a strategi c night mare and
lots of toes got stepped on in the scram ble to reta in influ ence over the ship. How and to what
extent th e Alien gadgets affected the hu man anato my was of the grea test conc ern to the “powers
that be.” Therefore, it was that research group tha t contro l of the ship was given over to. The
Alien ship went wherever that uni t of scient ists was s ent.
Okinawa, Japan was that plac e. It was just minutes awa y by air fro m Korea, and there was
already a large Amer ican military presence on tha t island. At tha t time, Okinawa belonged to the
American m ilitary after the defeat of Japan during World War Two. The Japanese econo my on
the mainland, as well as some of the islands, wa s under going a massive revam ping of the
econo my and infrastru cture with the help of the United Sta tes Governm ent. The insta llation of a
highl y classifi ed operat ion as tha t one was, took pla ce without anyone not icing.
Ther e were Amer ican scientists in Japan that were stud ying th e affects of radiat ion poisoning on
the victims of the atomic war . Only five y ears ear lier in 1945, ato m bom bs were dropped on
Nagasaki and Hiroshim a. The devastat ion of tha t war was still apparent in 1950, when the
committee set up its headqu arters in the region. The exac t location the co mmittee chose for the
harbor of the Alien ship was never disclosed, and was onl y loca ted on the island for th e duration
of the Korean War. There were those in th e committee who had co mpassion for the Japanese
peopl e after witnessing the effects of the bom bs on that countr y. They hoped to learn enough
about the Alien instru ments to undo s ome of the radiat ion da mage tha t infl icted thousands of
Japanese people. They did not perfor m experi ments on th e Japanese. They waited until there was
conc lusive evid ence on w hat the instrum ents were capable of doing before any attempt was made
to treat civilians with the al ien te chnolog y.
In a war situ ation, were life and death, misery and brutali ty, flashed b y at a rapid pac e dai ly, few
committee members felt th at what they were about to do in Korea was wrong. They knew tha t
humanity was given a gift, the Alien craf t filled with untold possibili ties, and it was their job to
put those gadgets to good u se. Others in the co mmittee felt that what they had in the ir pos session
could also be subverted and m ade into a weapon that would unleash a night mare onto the world,
a night mare that would ecl ipse the horror of the Atom bom bs that were dropped on Japan.
As the co mmittee had expect ed fro m inform ation given to the m by sources in the ir organiza tion,
the Soviet- trained forces of North Korea invaded South Korea in th e sum mer of 1950. Within
days of tha t invasion, United Nation troops led b y Genera l Douglas Macarthur entered the
fight ing and began pushing the North Korean troops back behind the 38th Paralle l.
Two and a half years earl ier th e committee had com e into posse ssion of th e Alien craft. Now,
with the war started, they knew they were on the verge of unlock ing som e of the mos t fant astic
secre ts in the universe.
It was not a smoo th going opera tion. Just as the y set up ca mp, advancing North Korean troops
overran them. More than once they ended up loosing doctors and techni cians, as well as the
Alien instru ments. The dif feren ce was that the instru ments alwa ys returned to the ship
unda maged, where they were retr ieved again and again, not so for the scien tists.
The experi ments were hapha zard. The stres s of being minutes from the frontlines and alwa ys in
fear of being overrun by enem y troops took its tol l on the staff. Of the three years that the war
lasted, onl y a few mon ths of it was considered productiv e. The bulk of w hat had been studied
was lost in transit fro m having to move so often, and the rest was lost when th e camp came under
fire and was destro yed. Much of what was salvaged was suspect bec ause of the brutal conditions
under which it was coll ected.
The team members chose to work close to the front lines so that they could work with injured
soldiers that were fresh o ff the battlefield and with som e remaining life in the m. The MA SH unit
did serve in its tru e capa city and doctored wounded soldiers without experi menting on the m. The
scien tists and doctors only experi mented with the soldiers who were found to be beyond hope.
Neverth eless, progress w as made during those years. The co mmittee was able to forward a
breakdown describ ing the usefulness of certa in Alien gadgets in trea ting disease like malaria, and
dysenter y instant ly, and reversing the affects of frostbit e and restoring eyesight by perform ing
delicate sur gery. According to a report hundreds of m iraculous recov eries fro m ever y
conc eivabl e ailment and war wound, took pla ce without the time and abil ity of the te chnici ans to
docu ment how the y actua lly achieved those results. Those tha t were help ed by the Alien gadgets
included North and South Korean civilian refuges, and soldiers fro m both sides of the conflic t.
That part icular com mittee was not priv y to the na ture or ext ent th at the Alien items were used as
weapons, or even if the y were. Any such tests were carri ed out by other covert units and
monitored by other co mmittees.
The President of the United States was briefed daily on a ll find ings regarding this pro ject. He
was given a summery that described in det ail some of the more pro minent find ings and
occurr ences fro m the co mmittee. The report gave a descrip tion of the gadgets and what som e of
their funct ions were. A sketch of what the gadgets looked like when they “morph ed” in to
opera tion (ac tivated), and perform ed their m agic was sent a long with the reports. The sketches
were of l ittle help and onl y served to sho w what the it em look ed like for a brief time during the
period it took to sketch it. Change was the onl y constan t concern ing the Alien gadgets. Once they
activated the y oscill ated continuousl y from one shape to another , and som etime the ir color would
do the same. One scien tist describ ed the m as having similar attributes as squids and cha meleons,
with their abili ties to change co lor rapidl y. All of the objects in the report were ident ified with at
least one funct ion, al though, the report stat ed tha t ever y gadget cou ld pos sibly perfor m dozens
even hundreds of other roles.
One report stres sed that it would tak e years of stud y just to scratch the surface of w hat these
things are capab le of doing. For that reason, some on the co mmittee made suggestions to the
President that certa in items, those dee med not to pose a nat ional securit y breach, be release on a
limited basis to th eir civ ilian count erparts. They were convinced it was time to let the scien tific
community have ac cesses to a few of the Alien gadgets. Their thoughts were tha t som ething of
this magnitud e needed to be studi ed by a broad range of insti tutions, so that the benefits could be
discover and put to use in the near future, not som e far and distant future, which i t would be if
they had to con tinue working under the c ivilian rada r.
Others in the co mmittee disagreed and felt th at this could be a "T rojan Horse," ration alizing th at
the Aliens might be tr ying to "lure" the Hum an race into thinking they are benevolen t or wor se,
to intimidate mankind b y letting hum ans know w hat they are up against!
The President was briefed on both views and dec ided tha t it was bad polic y to acknowledg e a
power tha t was infini tely superior to an ything on this pl anet. The reason, he to ld the com mittee
members, "was that the sense of balan ce and securit y that Americans enjoyed cou ld be disrupted
by that kind of revelat ion, possibl y damaging th e America econom y and throwing it, and then th e
rest of the world, into chaos." He em phasiz ed to the co mmittee that he wasn’t being
"melodra matic." The al iens were far too strange and unkno wabl e, and the public was not read y to
be awaken ed to that pheno mena. He then added, "The co mmittee and all of its subordinate units
would beco me more shrouded in its operations, not less."
It was no coin cident that expendi tures in m ilitary spending in creased with each succeeding
President. The discover y of the Alien ship in 1947 had ever ything to do with it. The Cold War
with the US SR (Sovie t Union) was mor e of a "Red Herring" than a real fear of Co mmunism. Not
that Russia weren’ t dangerous and unpredict able, they were, …. and did deserve keeping on e ye
on…" (A quote in the memo from the president).
After the discover y of the Alien ship in Roswell, many at the top echelon of govern ment were
more fearful of things not of th is world than an ything fro m this world. Unfortunate ly, the
Soviets, who were a lread y paranoid about the western world, and looked upon the United States
as the only countr y that could keep them from swallowing Europe whole, mistook the Amer ican
military build up as a direc t thre at to them. Ther efore, th e Cold War escal ated to a point that the
two Superpowers beca me the real threat to this pl anet, more so than an y threat from the Aliens.
Alien Medical Instrum ents
One Alien object describ ed in one of the reports discovered during the Korean War was a
rectangular devic e with s mooth rounded edges. It was one inch wide b y two inches long and had
the thickn ess of one- forth of an inch (some gadgets such as tha t one held its shape longer than
most Alien gadgets). The co lor was sapphire, and s mooth to the point tha t it was slipp ery, which
made it extre mely difficult to hold on to. It was described as an incredib ly beau tiful object. “It
looked like a lar ge precious stone, one that would rivaled anything found in an y prestig ious
jewelr y store,” remarked one co mmittee m ember. Howeve r, ever y gadget in the ship equa lly
charmed those who saw the m and worked with the Alien things. The Alien gadgets were al l
seduct ively beautifu l, which be lied their immense power to do both good and evil.
When that particu lar item was placed on a living body, it det ected tu mors, both malignant and
benign ones. O nce the tumor was ident ified, the Alien object projected an exac t image of i t on its
screen- like surfac e. The projected image was three-di mensional and could be viewed on all sides
as the image rotat ed slowl y. The gadget onl y needed to touch th e skin once; it then glid ed a few
centimeters over the skin. If tu mors were not present, and if the body was free of cancerous
growth, the object remained stationar y and a cr yptic message appeared on its surface. The object
did not need to scan over the entire body to loc ate a tumor; it knew the loca tion of an y
malignan cy instant ly as soon as the object touched th e skin. If the cancer had spread in the body,
the object moved about the body ident ifying and presum ably catalog ing ea ch area the can cer had
spread too.
The scientists believ ed that the Alien scanner was ma pping th e loca tion of each tu mor and
making notes of a ll pert inent infor mation abou t the kind of abnor mal growth it was and storing
that infor mation somewher e. But they never discovered how or where the inform ation was being
stored, whether it was accumulated within the object itself or if it trans mitted the dat a back to the
Alien craft.
Severa l gadgets took on the appearanc e of earth ly objects, especi ally in the surgical categor y.
Often a surgeon on one of the te ams would get the surprise of the ir liv es when an instru ment that
looked like a scalpe l, suddenl y chang e into something else during use. One object that was on the
report from the Korean experi ments looked more like a kitchen utensil, a cheese slicer , and not a
surgical tool. It had a four -inch long tubular handle attached to a spatula with a sli t in the middle
of it. The object appeared to be m ade of the same stuff as the bod y scanner , excep t that its color
was rub y red. The fl at part of the item was about two inches wide with the length of two and a
half inches. The thickness was less than a double-edged razor blade. It effortlessly removed skin
from one part of th e bod y and m iraculousl y grafted it to another par t of the body. No sutures
were requ ired to hold the skin in place. As soon as the skin wa s app lied, the wound com pletely
healed itself in less than five minutes. The instru ment accelerated the hea ling process at the
injur y site as it fused the grafted skin to the wound. The cond ition of the person rece iving the
skin did not have an effect on the hea ling process of the grafted area, even when there were
lesions or other wound s that would not heal due to som e underl ing il lness such as cancer or
diabetes.
With tha t devi ce the y were able to graft skin from one person onto another with the sa me rate of
success; skin color likewise did not m atter. Skin fro m Blacks, Cauc asians and Asians were al l
interming led with the sa me astonishing resul ts. The rece iving bod y never rejected the graft ed
skin. The skin from the donor a ssumed the color and m atrix of tha t of the recip ient at the same
rate tha t it healed.
Many of the mistakes and injuries that occurred early in the progra m were actu ally due to the
exper tise of the doctors and scien tists, not the la ck of it. Man y times the doctors tr ied to assist or
force the instru ments to perform in ways they thought the gadgets should perfor m, often with
fatal consequen ces. Also, the mood and the attitude of the scien tist see med to dicta te what and to
what extent the gadge ts functioned.
Ther e are markings on som e of the instru ments, but probabl y the m arkings had no m ore
signifi cance than the m arkings on our o wn ear thly tools and utensi ls (e.g. trade marks). We don't
need written instructions on our knives and forks, screwdrivers and ha mmers, to understand their
funct ion. The culture we live in teach es us about those th ings.
One of the mos t bizarr e instru ments discovered by the t eam was a tr iangular shaped abject about
the size of a quarter (twen ty-five- cent pi ece). When the i tem was placed on a persons head, it
instan tly embedded itself in the skull, rendered the person unconscious, then lifted hi m up
headf irst and vanished, taking the bod y with it. At first, those perfor ming the experi ment
assum ed th at the body was transported back to the ship. This wa s before the advent of "Star
Trek," so none of th em were familiar with the fa mous words, “ Beam me up, Scott y.” This
exper iment was one that was done in Korea during th e war (to a wounded prisoner). The Alien
craft was parked som ewhere in Okinawa, so the y flew back to where it was to see if that person
was in the Alien ship. They presu med that like th e other Alien objects connected with the ship
that maybe they had discovered a unique and quick wa y to get back to the ship from any plac e on
the plane t. But the person wa s not transported back to th e ship. Ho weve r, three days later, the
triangular device was back on the craft. The person or his bod y was never found. The prevai ling
theor y of what m ight have happened to him was that he was transported to som e other Alien ship
in earth’ s orbi t or pos sibly to th e inter ior of the plane t, where it was suspected by one of the
clairvo yants that the Aliens had an outpost. A second ps ychic stated that the bod y was carried
into the sun to be destro yed, for reasons he could not understand or explain to the com mittee.
Like all the experi ments tha t have been carri ed out using th e Alien gadgets, it too only worked on
the living.
One other theor y that came from the research team, who studied tha t devi lish devi ce, was that the
soul, or essence of w hat hum ans are, had som ething to do with th e destina tion of the person.
Another team supported that theor y when the y discovered in the course of their experi ments tha t
those who lost brain act ivity during the experi ment also lost the function of the Alien
instru ments. The gadgets si mply beca me dormant. Even when th e man was kept alive artif icially,
the lack of brain waves rendered the dev ices useless. In ever y situation, the Alien devi ces
stopped working the m oment the brain waves stopped. It appeared that the Aliens had
jurisdiction over hu mans onl y to the extent they remained alive.
It was painfu lly obvious to the co mmittee that the Aliens were capab le of doing whatever they
desired to do when it came to hu mans. So what were the Aliens up to ? Some of the questions th at
were tossed around by com mittee members: "How ma ny Aliens are on this planet? Dozens ?
Hundreds ? Thousands ?" "Did the y want hum ans to part icipate by letting us have one of their
vessels ?" "Ships fil led with superna tural instrum ents and gadgets?" "Wh y are the y being
secre tive and not m aking som e kind of form al contac t with ear thlings?" " Did they stage the Alien
shipwreck?" "W as it a means of introducing their infini ty superior rac e to our fragi le inferior
race?" "Perhaps the Aliens wanted to le t us kno w that we could not survive or hand le full
disclosure with the m?" "Are the y sowing the seeds for our destruction right under our nose s?" “ If
the Governm ent is keeping this lit tle project under tigh t raps, are there other projects going on
simultaneousl y?” “How ma ny cover t projects, and do other countri es have the m too?” There
were pl enty of questions such as those, but few if an y definit ive answers.
As fragm ents of th e puzzl e came toge ther, the co mmittee deduced fro m the Alien gadge ts that the
Aliens had a defini te interest in the hum an ana tomy. To what ex tent, they didn’ t have a clu e.
Since many of th e instru ments had benef icial features to the m, were the Aliens a kind of behind-
the-scene para medic unit? If s o, wh y are they selec tive? Thousands of people die ever y day of
accidents and diseases that could easi ly be treated with the gadgets tha t the Aliens have.
For a period of a few m onths, the committee switched gears and spent more time brainstor ming
on what was the purpo se of the Intruders, espec ially in th e area of nationa l securi ty. Did the
Aliens pose an immediate risk to th e countr y or to the world? That was the botto m line for th e
committee to deter mine. The co mmittee enlisted the aid of addit ional clairvo yants and had them
conc entrat e solel y on ma king contac t with ex traterr estria l beings.
The com mittee had no ac cess to the captured Aliens af ter the discover y of the saucer . At the time,
they didn't care. They had plent y on th eir pla te with the Alien craf t and its car go. But during the
late sixt ies and ear ly seventi es the co mmittee needed to understand th e connec tion be tween the
two. The Aliens had some fantasti c stuf f, but wh y did the y have th is stuf f? The co mmittee was
denied acc ess to the Aliens that pilot ed the ship, and was not allowed to know their locat ion or
even if the y were still alive. Therefore, to get answers to why the aliens had that stuff they had to
find their own Aliens and ask the m. They tried using the clairvo yants in various num erical
groupings to see if the y could conc entrat e and dir ect their power to locat e Aliens. That failed to
produce any results so the y were back to square one and the y let them work indiv idual ly again.
Of the six or s even clairvo yants on the team, one was predict ing with 65 percent accurac y on
where Alien sight ings w ould occur , the rest m issed ever y time.
Throughout the sixt ies and sevent ies, m embers of the co mmittee crisscros sed th
htings. Memb ers of the co mmittee photographed the UF Os; the y chased the m with fighter jets
and choppers, and when the t errain allowed and there were no civil ians in the vic inity, they
attempted to shoot the UF Os down. They never cam e close to hi tting a UF O, but no one in the
committee thought the y would. Their intent ions where strict ly to see if the Aliens would
respond–acknowledg e the m in so me way, by blinking their lights or zapp ing the com mittee’s
aircraft with a ra y-beam , someth ing! "Hum or us" was the cr y of one frustrated co mmittee
member.
After two disappointing decades of seeing UFO's, withou t making any actual contac t, the
committee decided to change their approach and focus on " what" or "who" the Aliens were
visiting. The com mittee members read the papers and the tablo ids, so the y were aware of all the
stories of Alien abductions. They even int erviewed some of the m ore pro minen t peopl e abduct ed
but cam e away with no answers.
Even thought the co mmittee was part of a secret governm ent agenc y with virtua lly unlimited
resources, high level contac ts and acc ess to a m yriad of public and priva te inst itutions, the y ran
into the same brick- walls that stymied ever yone who at tempted to get classifi ed infor mation
about secret projects. Ther efore, other covert com mittees that had m ore knowledg e about
extraterrestr ials remained unavai lable to the m.
That committee was financ ed through the depart ment of the Air Force, and as ever yone know s
(those high up who w ork for the governm ent), there can be no favoritis m of one Branch of the
govern ment over another by the Congress of the United States. That's doubl y true for the
Pentagon. If one depart ment of the m ilitary had a secret governm ent com mittee, then all of the m
have one or two, or perhaps dozens.
The com mittee didn't want to get involved with those peopl e who clai med to have been abducted
by Aliens (no specifi c reason was given). They were hoping tha t if th ere were ano ther
depar tment that already did tha t that perhaps the y could borro w tha t infor mation from that group.
Obviousl y som eone had pos session of the Aliens (dead or aliv e), and th at co mmittee had
infor mation that might benefit this co mmittee. Whether it was polic y or bureaucrac y committees
were not allowed to share infor mation with each other . Unable to breach those hidden barri ers,
the com mittee had to do their own inv estigat ions.
The com mittee avoid ed deal ing with abductees even though the committee knew tha t som e were
telling the tru th. The few peopl e tha t did ge t interv iewed see med to have ulter ior m otives for
their claims. So me were onl y interested in a govern ment pa yout (they would talk a ll day long
about their experien ces for a fee) or the y were looking to blam e their mental proble ms on the
Alien abduct ions, or the govern ment, who m any believ ed were behind the abduc tions. Overal l,
many of the abduc tees were looking for at tention and of fered little if an y reliable infor mation.
The com mittee needed to know wh y these people was being abduct ed and those claiming to have
been had no clue to wh y.
Dete cting a UFO was mu ch easier than finding out what the Aliens were up to. Locat ing a UF O
was onl y a matter of coordina ting th eir best psychic with th eir ground and air te am. Once the
psychic pinpoint ed the locat ion were he felt a UFO mi ght be, the ground tea m scoured that area
until they confir med it. After verif ication, th ey dispatch ed a speci ally equipped airplan e that
carried a multitude of radar and other sophistica ted tra cking dev ices to that secto r. When the Air
Force survei llanc e plan e loca ted a UFO, the y kept on e ye on th e craft from a dist ance of severa l
miles and tr ansm itted pert inent inform ation to the ground vehi cles. They never used m ore than
two ordinar y cars (civi lian), and re mained incognito throughout th e surveill ance.
The com mittee knew the y were not sneaking up on the Aliens or able to fool th em in any way;
they were m ore concerned with tipping off ordinar y citizens but m ostly UFO buf fs, who
regul arly showed up at many of the same pla ces the com mittee did.
Layers added to shield the President
The com mittee began reporting all new find ings and other discoveries to a newl y crea ted agenc y
rather than direct ly to the President as the y had done in the past. The new procedure was put into
place betwe en 1974 and 1976 for the sole purpose of isola ting the Execu tive Branch fro m certain
cover t operat ions.
In the com mittees’ first report to the new agenc y, which was dated Jul y 30, 1976 (the date itself
is a coded m essage, and had no signific ance to an ac tual day or year), the y described the fai lure
of the com mittee to identif y anyone who the Aliens were m aking cont act with on this pl anet. The
durat ion of the surveillance was eight months and it produced 271 sightings, but not once was an
Alien craft observed taking or leaving hum an subjects.
Alien ships w ere observed in residen tial neighborhoods, in open fields, and sometimes in the
midst of lar ge cities hovering a mid skyscrapers. The sight ings lasted from a split second to one
of the longest record ed by the com mittee, which was five hour s. The com mittee beli eved th at
time had no relevan ce to the sightings. They came to tha t conc lusion when the y noticed that on
more than one occasion, when the y had visual and radar contact of an Alien craf t, people on the
stree t were co mpletely unaware of w hat was taking place a short distance above th eir heads.
"We were ei ther hav ing m ass hallu cination a mong ourselves, and/or the radar and other
equip ment malfunc tioned simultaneousl y. We had visua l conta ct as well as equip ment cont act!"
Expl ained one of the com mittee members at th e sighting. The logic al conclusion was that the
Aliens were dem onstrat ing to the co mmittee their supernatur al abili ties to be seen or not to be
seen, and by whom! It was a disturbing realiz ation to the com mittee when the y conte mplated the
implications of what the Aliens were capab le of doing.
The whole operat ion ca me to a halt before the y were done bec ause of an e motiona l breakdown
that struck near ly ever y member on the team. Two co mmittee m embers had a nervous
breakdown; three others developed similar ps ychosom atic illnesses and were absent for several
weeks and two qui t the program . Wheth er it was a coinciden ce or not, this al l happened the week
they ended the surveill ance cam paign. That entire week was dedica ted to hash over and reviewed
most of the m aterial from the previous e ight m onths of fieldwork. The detai ls were incre asingl y
more disturbing as they tried to ponder over and over aga in what i t all meant! They knew the y
did not have a ll the facts or possibl y none of the fac ts, but what l ittle the y had was disturbing.
Ther e are hundred s of m ental hospitals in the world th at are fill with peopl e who have cl aimed to
see th ings that no one else (nor mal peopl e) sees. "Are the hospitals full of the wrong people?"
They wondered. "Is it possible that m any of the so called mentally disturbed people are ac tually
peopl e who have been abducted and don’ t know it?" O r are the co mmittee members the mselv es
psychotic and l iving th is grand allusion that they have possession of a fant astical Alien craf t.
A number of co mmittee m embers throughout the progra m have lost touch with reali ty. Or
perhaps th ey came in tou ch with rea lity and therefor e were no longer capab le of funct ioning in
the chaot ic world "nor mal" peopl e call reality. Nonetheless, the y were insti tutiona lized with what
was described as irreversible psychosis (how many scientists succu mbed was not m entioned).
At first it was beli eved tha t cont act with som ething on the Alien craf t might have brought on
their mental disease. Ent ering the ship lit erally alters the mind. All concep ts of ti me and space
are skewed while inside the ship, "tru ly a mind-altering exper ience." The proble m with that
theor y was that many other scientists who worked around the same Alien things were not
affected. The subject was dropped when i t was pointed out to the com mittee tha t their job w as
not to figure out "wh y psychosis happens but why Aliens happen!"
Ther e was litt le doubt in an y of th e committee m embers’ minds that secrecy is the only policy. A
consensus agreed to by the new reor ganized com mittee. The thought that there could be
thousands of these Alien ships fl ying around, showing the mselves selec tively to who mever they
wanted to, was unnerving for those who knew about it. If those in the secret progra ms could
barely maintain their focus with tha t kind of knowledge, much less their sanit y, how then would
the countr y or th e entir e world reac t if suddenl y such inform ation bec ame public? That m ankind
is under some giant microscope and being observed by higher in telligent beings.
If tha t infor mation were to get out would peopl e continu e in their da ily routines of working,
buying, playing, investing, and doing the millions of things tha t keep the econo mies of the world
churning along? H ow would the news af fect the stock ma rkets? Any signific ant disrupt ion would
rippl e across world m arkets and perhaps cause them to coll apse, destro ying whole econo mies.
The end result would be anarch y. The plane t would be prim ed for a dicta torship. A New World
Order would fil l the void on the planet, possibly a new order insta lled by Aliens!
Pandora’ s Box
Although the co mmittee was unabl e to ca tch th e Aliens in the act of abduc ting hum ans, som e of
their research ers were m aking substantial discoveri es with the items found on the craf t. One ite m
that was discovered inside the Alien craft was shaped lik e a cigar box. It perform ed a similar
funct ion as the black chalk, b y creating door ways through barriers, excep t that this box allowed
more than one person at a t ime to penetr ate walls. It had symbols on the top and three slight
impressions on the cover or the lid of the box. That box had appar ently been overlook ed, or it
was placed there by Aliens dec ades after the crash. N o one could be sure.
The box did not have a lid that swung up or an y moving parts to it. It operated like the opening
of the Alien spacecraf t, an opening happened, but not b y simple desire concerning the box. The
three impressions on the top ac ted like a com bination lock. Once the correct sequence was
entered, an opening appear ed and reve aled a varie ty of geo metrically diverse objects. No
mention was made on how the y broke th e code or ho w long it took them to figure out how to
open the box. When the box opened, i t auto matically engulfed ever yone in its vic inity into an
enve lope of what was described as a "strange cloud of el ectricity." One could easil y walk in and
out of its ele ctric field without being har med by it, but it left an eerie feeling with those who
exper ienced it. The envelope resem bled an el ectrified celloph ane m embrane that made it easy to
defin e the boundaries. The envelope’ s capaci ty seemed endless, ther e was no apparent fixed
range to it; it simply expand ed to the task requir ed. If ther e were two peopl e, it enco mpassed the
two. When there were more people, it embraced the larger group.
It did not rea ch out to an individu al or follow hi m if he or she stra yed from the m ain cont ingent.
It sensed what was requir ed and perfor med accord ingly. The envelop e allowed those within it to
walk through an y barrier as well as walk on air . They didn’ t hover; they walked on an invisib le
platform.
Barri ers disobe yed the laws of ph ysics when the strange mist tha t emanated from the box
engulf ed the m. That box wa s the key to how the Aliens abduc ted peop le fro m the m ost bizarre
situa tions: from moving cars, airplan es while in flight, and from the upper stories of sk yscrapers
through sealed glass. Those were happen ings and situa tions tha t would give the m ost daring of
stunt men night mares. The abducted that were interv iewed b y committee members insisted tha t
doors were never opened; lo cks were not broken, and that the Aliens sim ply perm eated through
the walls and in to their bedroo ms and carr ied them , or let the m walk on invisible bridges to the
waiting spacecr aft.
Among the items in the box, the scien tists iden tified one tha t subdued hu mans in a sim ilar wa y as
the laser poin ter discover ed earl ier in the progra m. Only this it em was smaller and looked lik e a
sewing thi mble. The thi mble-like object had a green glow that deliver ed a para lyzing sting to any
animal or ma n regard less of their size. During test ing a lar ge bull elephan t touched by the tip of
the thimble on i ts truck froze instant ly, and beca me like a statue. The para lysis lasted about five
minutes before wearing of f. It had the sa me exact affect regardless of the size of the animal or
human without any notice able side ef fects. The Alien thimble only had to co me into brief contact
with skin on an y part of th e bod y to para lyze the sub ject. It could be repe ated several t imes on
the same subject with the sa me affect without appar ent har m to the animal or ind ividual.
The cigar box contain ed m any odd-s haped objects. O ne of the objects, a round m etallic wafer no
bigger than an Indian-head- penn y, kept a hu man paral yzed indefin itely when it was placed on
that person’ s forehead. The wafer at tached itself to the head l ike a refrigerator magne t, and kept
the recip ient inert until the object was re moved. There were dozens of those devic es inside the
cigar-box.
Taking inventor y of ite ms in the eer ie Alien box w as hopeless. The contents never remained the
same (num erically speaking). So metimes the box was full and other ti mes near ly empty. One
theor y was that the box existed in m ultiple plac es or dim ensions at the same time, making the
contents avai lable to oth er unknown entit ies. The scientists did not describe much of the other
gadge ts in the box in great deta il so li ttle is known about the m.
The one predic table ano maly of near ly ever ything Alien was the return ing of it ems tha t came
from the craf t back to the ship in sevent y-two hours. Since objects were not re moved at the same
time, but were check ed out ind ividual ly at different times of the da y, the i tems return ed in th e
sequence they were taken out of the ship. At the ver y instant the it ems returned to the ship the y
were ava ilable to be check out again, and the interna l clock would reset itself and begin anoth er
sevent y-two-hour countdown. There didn’ t seem to be a l imit on how often it ems could be taken
off the ship.
Unlike hum ans, who pride the mselves on keep ing som e kind of order in th eir ho mes – the pots
and pans in one designat ed plac e or cab inet, the dishes and silverwar e in ano ther, etc. The Aliens
had no s uch neurosis. Alien objects, gadge ts and things are never found in the sa me place twice,
inste ad the y occup y differen t spaces, nooks, cavi ties, or voids in the ship ea ch time the y return.
This made find ing parti cular gadgets a frustrating cha lleng e.
Even though Alien gadge ts changed appe arance on a regul ar basis, the technic ian that worked
with a parti cular item for a leng th of ti me knew its abili ties and functions b y simply touching it.
The people working with these i tems bec ame intimate with the m. The long er the relat ionship the
easier it was to recognize the specialized tr aits ea ch gadget possessed.
The changes in configurat ion of the objects were not subtle. Round ite ms becom e square, or a
combination of shapes, and one end of a gadget could be geom etrically defer ent than the other
end. Item s that had the shape of a cube may have the shape of a blowfish the nex t day or next
minute. They even chang ed shape while in use, which was a dire sight to witn ess. So me
technic ians passed out while watching an ite m mutate in the bod y of a person being
exper imented on. Witnessing on Alien ite m "swim " just under the skin of hum ans wa s on
exper ience none of the scientists ever beca me comfor table with. It brought to l ife the cliché' "It
makes my skin crawl". As bad as that was to witness, ther e was nothing m ore grotesque th an
watch ing the Alien thing chang e geo metrically while inside the person, espec ially if th at person
woke up while the transfor mation was in progres s.
The Alien gadgets tha t entered the body were less than two inches long and looked lik e small
carro ts. O nce they were placed on a liv ing bod y, they entered through the abdom en. The end tha t
burrowed into the skin e longates itself and then for med a tip that was finer than a hypoder mic
need le. Within seconds of pla cing the thing on the person’ s bod y, the thing inserted its tip into
the skin, creat ing an incision th e size of a pinprick. After the tip inserted i tself, i t sucked the
remainder of its liquef ied mass through the s mall incision.
A comment from one aston ished scient ist who watched it: "At first it was a solid object. It then
chang ed into a worm- like creatur e and began to ent er into the bod y like a parasite. After the
creature’ s tenta cle anchored i tself under the skin, the creatur e beca me bal loon-lik e. What
appe ared to be solid instan tly turned into a liquid, which was held in place by a thin membrane,
like a water balloon. The crea ture transferred its liquefi ed conten ts to the inside of th e human
body, where it solidif ied. The creatur e then moved free ly under th e skin."
The incision was small and th ere was no blood fro m it and i t heal ed at the sa me rate that a
pinpri ck to the skin would. The "Crea ture" (as it was call ed fro m that poin t on) ca me out of th e
body the same way that it entered, but not necessaril y from the same loca tion.
The time that it spent inside th e bod y varied from one ind ividua l to the next. Wha t the creatur e
did inside the body was not known, but the bel ief among the com mittee was that it was u sed as a
kind of transport, carr ying things in to the body and probabl y removing th ings from the body.
It was a bl essing that in mos t instan ces, the subject who underwent this procedure was
unconscious and barel y holding onto life, but that was not alwa ys the case. There were a few
episodes when the subject regained consciousness during an exper imental procedure and was in
excru ciating pain from the Alien object “swim ming” inside of him . Fortuna tely for the scien tists,
the person as sociated his pain to his in juries and assum ed tha t the techni cians around him were
doctors and nur ses, since they were dres sed up in the sa me white and green garb th at the medical
professionals used.
The Aliens appar ently don't beli eve in anesthesiolog y, or the scien tists had yet to id entify the
item that perfor med tha t specif ic funct ion. From all the experi ments tha t were done, the scient ists
discover ed that when the y anesth etized a person u sing the standard procedure used b y doctors
every day, the experi ments were co mpro mised. In each case the Alien instru ments stopped what
they were doing and went dorm ant. The Alien gadgets acted as if the person had died.
Because of that, the scien tists concurr ed that the Alien objects m ust operate on the e lectrical
impulses of the bod y. When the ce lls are anesthet ized, the neurons give off conflic ting and
inaccurat e stimuli, making th e task of the Alien object impossibl e. Apparent ly, the Alien objects
use the cells of the bod y like a network of phone lines b y which they navig ate the whole body.
From then on the scientists did what the Aliens probabl y did during abduc tions, zap the person
with the stun ra y and paral yzed the m.
While under the Alien para lysis, the person re mained conscious s ome of the time. When he was
conscious, he experien ced the pain, as well as the t error that came from "not knowing" what was
happen ing to hi m. But he could not interfer e with the procedure since he was co mpletely
immobilized. Once the person was rele ased fro m the paral ysis, in ever y case, they had no
recollection of w hat happened to the m, or that anything out of the ordinar y took place.
Since mos t who were experi mented on b y the scientists were on their deathbed, the
exper imenters felt that they (the experi mented on) had li ttle to lose. In some instanc es, the
victims had ever ything to gain. A number of the wounded and injured, whether fro m a war zone
or fro m a car ac ciden t, recover from their wound s onl y because of the Alien instru ments and the
exper imentations that were done on the m.
When the co mmittee was formed, the pol icy was that if an y of th e people working in tha t covert
project beca me mortally ill or bec ame dam age from an ac ciden t and were dying, that they would
consent to being subjects for exper imentation. The think ing of the com mittee was that no one
should do to others what the y themselv es were unwilling to under go. After carefu lly reviewing
that proposal, m any objections ca me to the fore. The mos t preva lent of those ob jections was
outrigh t terror! Com mittee members would not put them selves into a position where "so meda y"
they might find the mselves under the experi menters knife, with Alien creatur es placed inside of
them, and para lyzed so that the ir screa ms for help could not be heard by anyone, and so the
proposal failed.
Spontaneous com bustion
After years of handling the Alien tools, the tools bec ame more intimate with their handlers, a
kind of "bond" form ed between the gadgets and the scient ists. As bizarre as it sound s, the tools
shared secre ts with tenur ed scient ists that they withhe ld fro m new or unfam iliar scien tists. All the
Alien items perform ed more than one function, discovering addit ional traits of Alien stuff came
easier to so me than to others.
Personali ty played a major role in the rate of success a techni cian was able to ach ieve. If his or
her dem eanor was friend ly and the y were slow to anger , they tend ed to be mo re successful th an
colleagues with short fuses and hot te mpers. Ironica lly, those chosen for that progra m were
usuall y from the type "A" personali ty, very aggres sive and goal- orient ed, unsatisfied if the y did
not get quick results. They were profe ssiona ls recruit ed fro m the top ranks in their fields of
exper tise. But they were a lso people with integr ity and tended to be be yond reproa ch. Me mbers
of the com mittee and those w ho professionals that worked under them were vigorousl y screened
and needed to have the highest lev el of securi ty clearanc e before they were hired. All of the m
were be lieved to be of good char acter and good will, with one exclusive objective, "to serve their
countr y." Stil l, those who hired them were mere mortals, with the m ortal tendenc y to fail when it
came to knowing what’s inside an individu al’s soul, whether it be good or bad. But so meth ing as
simple as an Alien too l or gadget, knew com pletely the hear t and mind of a m an or wom an, and
allowed itse lf to be used accordingl y. In other words, it was believed by the m embers in th e
committee that an evil person could not subvert the Alien th ings, at le ast not the ones the y were
toying with. The Alien things could not fall into th e wrong hands as plutoniu m or germ s used for
germ warfare. The Alien objects simp ly did not function when spite or m alice was a mo tive, and
often the gadge ts turned on those w ho attempted such use.
Nonethe less, no deter mination was ma de regarding whether the Aliens were benevo lent or evil
beings. Ther e was evidenc e indic ating that they could be ei ther one, or both. Mo st of the it ems
that were ca talog ed and iden tified with perfor ming a particu lar funct ion were found to be
benef icial to hum ans. Other it ems perfor med in wa ys that seem ed pure ly wicked and
contr adictory to the earlier find ings.
One it em that see med evi l was a 1-inch cube shaped object tha t looked like it was m ade of the
stuff diamonds are m ade of and had a sm all sphere the size of a pear l suspended in its cente r. The
sphere pulsa ted with ever y color in the rainbow . "It was a beau tiful sight to see," was a co mmon
utterance of those who gazed upon it. But its beaut y hid its dastard ly purpose. Unlike many of
the other Alien objects onl y one function was identified for tha t object. When it was plac ed on
the chest of a person, the sphere lef t the cube and penetrat ed the chest cav ity and entered the
lung. It could be adm inister fro m the front or the back of a person but it would not dischar ge into
anything but a living hum an lung. It left no puncture wound or an y other sign of entr y on the
body. It was never deter mined whether the sphere had m ass or if i t was a ball of photons or s ome
other form of m atter or anti matter. After it com pleted its task, it reappear ed back into the cube.
The whole episode lasted onl y sixty seconds. Not enough ti me to stud y what exac tly was taking
place in the lung. Once it pene trated the lung, the whole body went into a state of transm utation.
The sphere appeared to use the oxygen in the lungs to ac celer ate its function. Exac tly fifty-two
seconds after the injection m ost of the bod y vapori zed in to a whif f of s moke. On one occ asion,
all that was left was a few ext ernal body parts: fingers and toes. Interest ingly, the scien tists who
where th ere when this first happened where not injured in an y way even though th ey were a few
inches awa y from the body.
It was a horrif ying sight and supposedl y was onl y perform ed twic e. They only did it a second
time so the y could see what was taking pla ce in the bod y after the injection. Spontan eous
combust ion had been a mystery for ma ny decades and stil l will be for the general populat ion.
The com mittee now know s that it was not spontan eous, but caused for a purpose. That purpose
remains a m ystery. The dev ice did not have a trigger ing m echanis m. The cube func tioned like all
the other i tems fro m the Alien ship it was s elf-direct ing, and kept m ost of i ts secrets secret. How
did the object know not to penetra te the lung of one of the scien tists? It probabl y would have if it
were pl aced on their chest. The scien tists learn ed fro m the m istakes of their colleagues, "never
come into direct conta ct with any Alien object!" Cloth ing m ade from an y material, as well as
ordinar y gloves, see med sufficient protec tion fro m many of Alien instru ments. To function, the
Alien instru ments often need ed to co me into direc t conta ct with exposed liv ing skin.
Certain Alien objects onl y operated inside the Alien craft. When those gadge ts activ ated, they
trigg ered a corresponding response on the ship; an opening might occur reve aling hidden roo ms
or small mysterious s paces. Som e of the rooms contain ed futurist ic look ing sur gical tables and
equip ment. Others were dark, e mpty spaces or voids tha t resonated with m ystifying sound s and
vibra tions. Few scient ists ever ent ered those rooms, and the few who did were never able to put
into word s what they found inside them.
Some door ways and open ings inside the ship rem ain hidden and unknown. Ther e is no hint to
where th ese spaces are, except when by acciden t or coin cident a scien tist happen ed to walk by
the area where the hidden room is loc ated while in possession of the tr iggering Alien device.
Such devi ces see med to be in ternal ly coded to open cer tain rooms and freak y spaces.
One hidden room that was discovered b y acciden t revea led a small cham ber with a single seat in
it. The seat was molded to support a hum an for m. There were no cu shions on th e seat. The seat
was ma de of the sa me material as the ship, a soft metallic sub stance. The chamber had a glowed
to it tha t was hard to describ e but one techni cian said that it had a heav y feel. The color inside the
chamber was y ellow, and the air thi ck like Jelly.
The chamber was the scariest space discovered on the craft m entioned in the docum ents. It gave
all who sa w it the chills. None of the scient ists stud ying the chamber dared sit in the seat. The
chamber was not m uch bigger th an a nook in the wall with ju st enough room for one seat and
space for an average size m an.
The scientists that were detai led to stud y the cha mber sub mitted a request to the co mmittee for a
human guinea pig to pla ce in to the seat. They needed a living body to test a theor y. They
believed that once a person was placed into the cha mber seat the cha mber would c lose, "And
only god kno ws what it will do to that person." H ow the y cam e up with that theor y wasn’t
mentioned.
The unluck y victim who wa s placed into the cham ber seat was a m an in his fifti es. He had no
living fa mily members or friends. He w as a transi ent hit b y a car. The search co mmittee which
was in char ge of procuring l ive hu man bodies for the scientists found him through a network of
Govern ment hospita ls that were set up to provide that service. Hundreds of peopl e with no
known rela tives end up in sanitar iums ever y year, without anyone ever showing up to cla im
them. From that pool of the for gotten the co mmittee made use. The man procured for that
exper iment suffered m assive injuries from the car accident. He w as stil l alive but barel y when
the com mittee rec eived him. Ever ything possible to save his lif e was done. When it was
determined that he would die, his w ounds were sutured and mos t of the bleeding was suppressed.
He was deliver ed to the co mmittee two hour s after leav ing the hospital and was placed into the
chamber m inutes aft er he arriv ed. The man could not sit up b y himself and there were no strap s
to hold hi m in plac e. Apparent ly, none were needed. Once he was placed on the seat, the seat
held him there as if he were a pie ce of m etal in cont act with a m agnetic surface.
Seconds aft er plac ing the injured ma n into the clutch es of the Alien seat, the re mote unit tha t
activated the opening of th e cha mber made an indescr ibable sound. The sound s eemed to trigger
the chamber to close. Once closed, th e Alien trigger ing devi ce m ade other sounds and so me kind
of process in th e cha mber began. After a few minutes passed (no one rea lly knows how long he
was in ther e but i t didn’ t seem long), the remote devic e made more sounds and the chamber
opened like a cla m standing on its side. The man inside the cha mber stood up and walked out of
the nook. There was no eviden ce of his wounds and his heal th appear ed perfec t. For an instan t
everyone there though the y had discovered the cure for all major injuries. But the euphoria was
short-liv e. As they watched the man or what they had hoped w ould be a m an, the m an walked
directly into ano ther roo m in the craft. It was anoth er mysteriousl y hidden room that reveal ed
itself when the living hum an bod y approa ched it.
They soon rea lized the y were witnessing a nigh tmare and not a miracle. They watched the m an
walk pass the m without acknowledging any of the m. The scien tists could tell by the look in his
eyes that someth ing terr ible had taken place. His e yes never wondered, but stared straigh t ahead
as if he were a Zo mbie. The room that he ent ered was mu ch larger than the cha mber th at
transfor med him. The roo m was circu lar and had som ething similar to a bench seat that
protruded from the curved walls. After the man ent ered th e roo m, he sat on the bench and
continued to stare with a blank expression towards the cent er of the room . The scien tists tri ed
speaking to the man but he did not respond, a lthough his e yes blinked a t normal interv als and his
breathing was nor mal. He wa s opera ting on autopilo t. Whoever was pilo ting the bod y before he
was put into the nook e ither bailed out or was kick out; in ei ther case nobod y was home. The
body was given a com plete ph ysical and was found to be in perfec t heal th. It wasn't unti l they X-
rayed him that the y found som ething abnorm al surrounding his intern al organs, m ainly the
stomach, int estinal track and his kidne ys.
Since the bod y did not eat or drink nor did it perfor m the nor mal bodi ly functions and still
remained in top ph ysical hea lth, the y surm ised tha t the foreign object in the bod y was a kind of
Alien life support system. The Alien or gan kep t the body alive, but what purpose could there be
for a body with the l ights out? The body stayed in that room for weeks, and then months. It did
not age or deter iorate and re mained in a dor mant stat e (sitt ing upright) the whole time.
The ship was like the fountain of youth the scientists who worked in i t felt like their aging
mechanis m was turn off; it was as if the ir biolog ical clocks stopped and turned back when the y
entered the craft. Einste in's theor y about time slowing down when m ass approa ches the speed of
light did not appl y because the craft was stat ionar y, unles s it took of f and they were fl ying
around the solar s ystem without knowing it!
The same week th at the y discovered the "zo mbie machine," as it was cal led, th ey brainstor med
on what purpo se the bod y could have. Ideas ranging from using it to cl ean up the lab to working
around nuclear waste sites were not taken seriousl y by the m ajorit y in the com mittee. They
consider ed doing an autops y on the bod y and removing the Alien or gan tha t was s ustaining i t,
but orders from higher -up told them not to ta mper with it. They were told to mo nitor the body to
see if it was being incubat ed by the craft for a purpo se that they could not y et grasp.
Wha t they did understand was that ever ything about the Alien craf t was self-direc ted. It seem ed
that they where only there to observer and were allowed to part icipa te on a li mited basis. After a
few y ears had passed and the bod y remained the sa me, the scien tists were given permission by
the com mittee to perform a few exper iments with it.
Alien cover -up
Concern over the increasing media inquiri es and the public’ s persistence to know mor e about the
"Alien cover up” which snowbal led in the la te sevent ies, forced the m ilitary to clamp down and
make it virtua lly impossible for le aks about extr aterrestrial craft to happen. Ever y docu ment and
report that was not essential to the com mittee was destro yed. A new procedure was adopted for
the docum ents that were kept. The chronologic al order of ever ything that happened, ever y event
that took place, was coded and the time sequence scra mbled. The com mittee was not al lowed to
keep records and docu ments for m ore than a week at a t ime. It didn't m atter what the y were
working on or whether they felt it signific ant enough to carr y a particu lar project into th e next
week. At the end of each week, ever y note, folder and all docu mentation was removed from the
posses sion of the co mmittee. The com mittee could request infor mation it required of past
exper iments and pro jects and get access to the m with little difficult y, but th ey could no longer
keep their own fi les as the y had in the past.
Securi ty was ma de tighter due to th e changing times. Specific ally because of the new legisl ation
that went in to effect in the decade of the seven ties, “the Freedo m of Inform ation Act,” which was
adopt ed in 1966 and amended to al low mo re infor mation to be ac cessed in 1974, due in lar ge
part to the Nixon Watergate scandal.
Those who worked on the com mittee or under its jurisdict ion were not allowed to bring an ything
to work with them. Nor were the y allowed to leav e with anything, not even a pencil. All th e
things they would need while at work w as provided to the m. Personnel indep endent of the
committee were the onl y ones allowed to rem ove and provide office supplies and other
miscellaneous ite ms to the com mittee and th eir staf f. The com mittee was not al lowed to shred or
destro y anything. Their trash was taken and incin erated by those sa me people. Ever yone
associa ted with the co mmittee had to pass through a screen ing roo m before they could enter their
assigned work areas or leave them.
They had to le ave c lothing and all personal belong ings, walle ts, pur ses, et c., in the locker rooms.
They wore a specia l garb m ade of paper , and it was collected fro m them whenever they left th e
build ing and burned.
Ever yone who left the build ing had to go through a bod y check. Their bodies were che cked to
make sure no one m ade notes or sketch es on the m. If someon e was incl ined to take infor mation
out of the fac ility, they needed to have a photographic memory. But, for the nature of w hat they
were stud ying, it was highl y improbabl e tha t even that would work. As one scien tist to ld a
colleague, "easier it would be to emerge from a torn ado with a hand full of sand th an to grasp
what was in our l abs and still make any sense of it once we left the bui lding."
It was difficult enough to co mmunicate with coll eagues about “Alien stuff” let alone so meone
who had no ide a of what the y were deal ing with.
For those reasons, m any of the m questioned th e need for the strong securit y measures the y had to
endure. How could they possibl y go out and pratt le about the things the y had discovered, when
they themselves didn’ t comprehend what they had in their possessions. When the y went hom e
after work, it was as if the y emerged out of a drea m-state. They were forbidden to discus the ir
work with the ir spouse s and they didn’ t. Not for fear the y will be found out (the y had no doubt
they would be), but for th e fear that th eir loved ones would think them insane.
Part of the contr act they agreed to when the y signed on for the job was that they would be kept
under constant surveil lance at work and at ho me. The surveill ance techniqu e was not unfa miliar
to governm ent personnel, espec ially those who were adept at working under high securit y
clearanc es. O ne system used m icrowaves as a me ans of surveil lance. The s ystem worked b y
bouncing microwaves off windowpanes. The microwaves det ected m inute vibra tions on the glass
surface caused b y talking and other noises. Mo st vibrat ions are so sm all they canno t be de tected
by the naked e ye. It doesn't m atter how many conversations are going on a t the same time or
other background noise in the room with the m. A com puter synthesized the vibra tions and
recreated any or al l the conversations tha t took place. Stored in a com puter’s memory banks are
the voicepr ints of ever yone involved in the covert progra ms. With that infor mation the
surveil lance team can zero in on a particu lar m ember and listen to his or her conversa tion
whether they are in a ca r, office building, at ho me, or out on the town.
In the weekl y pep classes given b y the com mittee to depart ment heads, security was the main
topic. At one of the m eetings a securit y officer fro m the CIA infor med the m that before the ato m
bomb was dropped on Japan there were less than a dozen individu als in th e world who
understood the princ iples requir ed to bui ld tha t kind of devi ce. To this da y, few understand how
nuclear part icles can be manipul ated to m ake a powerful explosiv e. Yet, the knowledg e was
leaked out and in a short time many countr ies had nuc lear capabil ity. The CIA agen t told the
committee, “It is foolish to think that America is the only countr y to have an Alien spacecraft in
its possession.” With that assumption he told the m, it’s plausibl e tha t the countries with Alien
knowledge, regardless of the extent of their extra terrestri al inv entor y, would use all the ir
resources to acquire more of i t.
The fear tha t this inform ation would fal l into the hands of the general public was secondar y.
Wha t the com mittee feared mos t was that a com peting countr y would acquir e that material. The
gener al publ ic was fed m isinfor mation since the ti me the committee ca me into pos session of the
Alien craft. This wa s done to confuse the public and at th e sam e time make it more difficult for
foreign agents to acquire reliab le alien knowledg e. Much of the misinfor mation about UF O's wa s
leaked out by an agenc y that worked closel y with the co mmittee and not the com mittee.
Ther e was am bigui ty in that are a because those who control led the direc tion of the committee
members had given them specific instruct ions to withhold ever ything about the UF O pheno mena
from the publi c. And then they contr adicted the mselves when the y gave orders to release certa in
true infor mation vi a the under ground for the purpose of m isinfor mation. Som e of th e rele ased
material was accura te and truthful, but because of its bizarr e natur e, it was among the first to be
denounc ed and reject ed by the critics of the UF O pheno mena. The campaign to discredit the
entire civilian UF O resear ch groups wa s funded on a sm all budget. The incredib ility of "Beings"
from outer space or from other dimensions al lowed the cam paign to literally perpe tuate itse lf and
requir ed little effort b y the committee.
Power of the intangib les
Though there are thousands and pos sibly millions of peopl e who beli eve without doubting the
exist ence of extrat errestria ls, there are m illions who don't bel ieve. Likewise, a large part of
humanity does not believ e in anything, espec ially if it can't be seen, tasted, or touched. Tangible
things are what l ife is al l about to the vast m ajorit y of hum ans. "Kook s who talk about m iracles
and the “n uts” who see l ittle Green Men with big e yes should be locked up. With preva iling
publi c opinions such as those, the co mmittee should not need to take many securi ty measures a t
all.” Co mments found in a docu ment.
Securi ty measures are pri marily used to keep infor mation fro m fal ling into the hands of agents
from other govern ments. Governm ents who not only believe in the strange and unexpla inable,
but also spend lar ge su ms of m oney and ti me gath ering up as m uch of that "hoke y-poky" stuff as
they can get their hands on!
Nations and people who are caught up in the "tangibl e" things of the world m iss out on a whole
lot of m agic and m ystery–the only real stuff in life.
During the Nineteen Seventi es, com mittee members beca me hungr y in their search for answers.
Not nec essarily because of incre ased de mands fro m higher ups, but fro m a strange and
exaspera ting craving to learn more about extrat errestri als. It was a fee ling al l the members held
jointl y. As if the y were on the brink of a major discover y conc erning th e craft. There was no hard
evidence for the m ass craz e other than ther e were periods that no one wanted to go hom e at the
end of the da y. They were working the mselves to dea th in the quest for m ore understanding of
the Alien mystic and onl y wanted more.
In the mean time, vocal UFO groups per suaded a few in th e Media to put pressure on cert ain
congress men to shed light on the UFO Cove r-up. The wolf of disclosure was beat ing at the door .
Would the door be kicked down before the com mittee was able to cull the pert inent inform ation
they needed or wanted fro m the craft? There was a lo t of concern about th e pos sibility of
disclosure and the m losing the ir edge. If the world found out about such projects and other secret
projects it would be over for the m and perhaps ma yhem for the coun try.
However , they had li ttle to fea r. Some politi cians did pound their fists and vowed to get to the
botto m of tha t conspirac y but onl y for s how–to pla cate that small element of their UFO-nut,
consti tuenc y. Norm al Americans were uninterest ed in the UF O fant asy, as the y believed it to be.
Most polit icians kno w there is a limit to the fruits of th eir inqu iries and don't expect to get factual
answers on certa in topi cs, U FO's being one of those topi cs. They did manage to get the Air F orce
to release some files, a lbeit insignifi cant dum my files that were crea ted specif ically for th at
purpose.
Politicians know , or s hould know , they are only rece iving junk, but the y don't care bec ause it
makes the m look like they are tr ying to get to the truth. All de mocr acies have li mits and the
United States with the best version of dem ocracy in the world will never rea ch the point where
the com mon people have acc ess to what goes on in govern ment backroo ms.
Neverth eless, there is alwa ys a firebr and freshm an from the House of Represent atives or in the
Senat e who will co me along and tr y to kick the door down, believ ing the y will expose the
conspira cy behind UFOs. But within a week or two, or perhaps a few m onths, l ike al l the rest
before them, they emerge with the proverbia l tail between the ir legs, no long er looking for a fight
and gladl y taking the crumbs of decep tion that was thrown to th em originally.
"Ther e are things in the real world that the genera l popula tion need not know about;
extraterrestr ials is one of the m," a quote from a memo that was s ent anon ymously to one Senator
who tried and fai led to get infor mation about the UFO conspirac y.
The com mittee as a whole was painfu lly aware that they posses sed secrets and knowledge that
they and hu manity were not read y to accep t and it was a real dilemma for m ost of the m. Man y
involv ed with the progra m, if the y had to do it over again, would not. Unfortunat ely, leaving the
progra m was impossible; they knew too much. Ironica lly, if the y were allowed to leav e with no
consequenc es for doing so, mos t would not. Leaving would not re move the knowledge of the
Aliens from their minds, and l iving a norm al life with the th ings the y knew was not pos sible.
Their onl y link to sani ty was their abili ty to be around other people l ike the mselves who were
stuck in the sa me predic ament.
Once a connect ion between the Aliens and the hum an abductions was m ade, the co mmittee was
sure tha t it would unlock the secrets of hu man evolut ion, and perhaps a few other m ysteries
about the univ erse. The co mmittee thought the y were close to m aking that connect ion several
times but the Aliens ma naged to elud e the m. The co mmittee had given up chasing after UFO’s
and was ant icipa ting that th e Aliens w ould somehow guide the m to th eir next stage of discover y.
They knew the Aliens were watching them (they could feel their presents). There was su spicion
in the ranks tha t som eone on their t eam conspired with th e Aliens, or perhaps wa s an Alien in
human form and sit ting in on their secret m eetings. After the chamber on the ship restored the
damaged hu man body, the idea that Aliens could take hum an for m was a stark and scar y reality.
It was possible th at the Aliens were steering the co mmittee to that conclusion. The co mmittee
suspected that the Aliens could use the body they had in the Alien craft as a vehicl e to en ter into
the hum an rea lm. “Perhaps it was a wa y for the m to en ter our hu man world unnotic ed!” Was one
of many questions brought up a t committee m eetings. The body was like a machine tha t was on
idle; the engine was running but no one was at the contro ls. It sat in the incub ation room wait ing
for som ething or som eone to act ivate its cir cuits and put it into gea r.
People under h ypnotic suggestion will do things the y have no reco llection of doing once they
come out of th e hypnotic state. That not ion was the i mpetus tha t got one com mittee member to
suggest tha t it was possible to m ake the bod y "perfor m" even though it had no conscious m ind of
its own. That idea opened the door to use ESP (extra sensor y percep tion) as a possible way of
contro lling the l ifeless bod y they had in th e ship. Could the Aliens control the bod y in th at
manor? Would they need to ent er into it or could they do it re motely somehow?” If so then
perhaps th ey, the scientists, could contro l the body with the help of ps ychics and hypnosis. Those
were quest ions the co mmittee tossed around. Their first approach to stud y that theor y was to see
if the bod y would reac t to psychic thought waves. After severa l trials, one of the psychics
working with the bod y was able to get the bod y to m ove som e of its fingers. Unfortunate ly, that
was the ex tent of his achieve ments and the y gave up on that project after six mo nths of
exhaust ive test ing.
The experi ment did produce so me negativ e consequences for the scien tists. A few weeks aft er
they had stopped those specific experi ments, two scient ists working near th e bod y reported that
the body came to lif e, “as if com ing out of a co ma.” Said one report. According to the test imony,
"The body got up and danc ed and in one instanc e it turned around and looked righ t at me and
then it screamed a strea m of profanit y at m e." There was another inciden t where the body
attacked one of the techni cians who had tak en it out of the craft for a short ti me during a different
exper iment. No other det ails were given.
Those who were personal ly affected b y the antics of the "bod y" have refused to ent er the Alien
craft since those incid ents. One skeptic on the co mmittee attributed what allegedl y took plac e to
fatigue b y those who m ade those c laims. He told the members that the “s o cal led co ming to life”
of the body could be explain ed by the fact that th e craft affects peop le in a varie ty of
psychologi cal ways, and altered reality as we hu mans under stand real ity. That did not expla in the
incident that supposedl y took plac e outside the craf t, but the committee m ember reviewing the
matter did not be lieve that inciden t took place eithe r.
Other com mittee members were convinc ed that som ething did happen but the y questioned wh y
the body that hadn't m oved for two y ears “out of the blue” began pla ying pranks on the
scien tists. One on the com mittee beli eved th e claims and a ttribu ted the phenom ena to the
exper iments that were perform ed by the ps ychics. He postula ted th at the psychic exper iments
somehow opened up on opportunit y for polter geist to ent er the vacat ed space in the bra in that
once housed the spirit of the man who se body it orig inally belonged to.
"If ps ychics are able to have limited success in penetra ting and activ ating the brain, as wa s
shown b y the m oving fingers, than who was to sa y a ghost or so me other spirit couldn't enter the
body too?" He told the committee.
The com mittee was divided between those who bel ieved in the possible existen ce of ghosts and
those who thought it was a lud icrous idea. It is bizarr e tha t anyone on the co mmittee could be
skepti cal of the exist ence of "strang e pheno mena" aft er witnessing al l that they had. Nonethel ess,
there were those in the co mmittee that were not convin ced of the existen ce of polt ergeist.
They all agreed th at more testing would be done before they made an y judgm ents. After a few
weeks of observing the body in and out of the ship, th ey conclud ed tha t the body did, in fac t,
come under paranor mal influenc es, but onl y when i t was out of the incubator room and of f the
ship.
It was possible th at the psychic resear ch had l ittle to do with trigger ing the ghostly shenanigans
as was previousl y cont emplated. The researchers were able to mo ve the bod y to an y locat ion b y
simply taking it by the hand and guiding it to the place they wanted it to go. When the body was
left unat tended for mor e than ten m inutes at a time, it simply walked back to the incubator room
by itself. If the researcher working with the body was not through with the experi ments al l he
need ed to do was take the bod y by the hand and guid e it back to where the exper iment was
taking pla ce. The body was completely obedi ent, for th e most part.
It was believed by the co mmittee that the eeri e yellow glow in the incubator room had so mething
to do with shielding the bod y from unwanted spirits. After the incid ence with the ghosts, the y
decided to leave the bod y in the incub ator roo m for several mon ths. They thought that if the
poltergeists were ind eed at tracted b y the psychic exper iments (in the same way sharks are
attracted to blood dropped into the oce an) then removing the bod y from the unprote cted area
(outside of the in cubator and the ship), m ight pur ge whatever re mnants of transien t polt ergeists
and ultimately solve the proble m.
Apparent ly it worked ; there were no m ore strange behaviors from the body that were reported.
Still, no one felt at ease working around the bod y after those freak ish episodes whether real or
imagined. All who ca me in contac t with the body were aware that i t was a vehic le tha t did
facilitate the entry into this world (fro m who know s where?) "Evil and strange things." The bod y
up unti l then was never named; it was alwa ys referred to as the "bod y," but after those reports it
was cal led "Frankenste in."
Biodegr adable alien gadgets
"It was possible th at noth ing ever left th e ship," one person on the com mittee offered that
hypothesis one da y as co mmittee m embers pondered how the Alien craft kept tra ck of its cargo.
During ext ensive test ing, the y buried Alien i tems hundreds of fee t under ground; they shot the m
into space on a one-wa y trajector y toward Jupiter (no m ention on w hy they sent al ien objects
towards Jupiter). They encased them in concre te, le ad, stee l and a host of other al loys; they sank
them into the deep est parts of th e ocean, and stil l each and ever y item reappear ed back on board
the craft three days later. The i tems tha t were enc ased vanished from the m aterial they were put
into without a trace or hint that they were ever there. It was a s if nothing had been encased at all.
The items did not displa ce th e material covering them; no cav ities were found. H ow could it be
possible? And of w hat godl y material were the Alien it ems made of that they simply could not be
scrat ched, dent ed or burned? Even at tempts to flat ten th e items under thousands of pounds of
pressure fai led. The hydraulic pres ses were not dam aged during the testing, the m aterial simply
bounced back as if it were a cartoon char acter!
Cera mic figurines or m odels were m ade of som e of the Alien items. The items that continua lly
chang ed shape and size a histor y of their evo lution was attempted. The task of m aking a
gene alogy of the items that constantl y changed was ver y difficult and in some cases i mpossible
and pointless. Moreover , some items are not "a llowed" to be photographed, or their likeness and
image preserved in an y manor. Ther e was no me ans of infring ing on the Alien patent!
Some items never repea ted the same shape twice; others c ycled through dozens of odd s hapes,
sizes and dimensions and then repea ted fa miliar pat terns and tra its.
If the items never lef t the ship, where did the y go? When on it em was carri ed of f the ship, it was
no longer on the ship, a logica l conc lusion. Excep t the com mittee knew there was nothing about
the ship or its cont ents that was logica l. Therefore, appl ying logic to find a solution to all the
questions that an y of the m had wa s their biggest drawback.
On one of the panels on the craft, locat ed in th e area believ ed to be the contro l cen ter, there were
icons depict ing ever ything tha t belonged to the Alien ship. The size of each i con was roughl y one
half inch square; the area tha t enco mpassed all of the icons was approxi mately three feet by three
feet. There were 5184 icons. When the Alien items transform ed the icons that represen ted th em
transfor med at the exa ct same time, they were s ynchron ized as if the y were one. When it ems
were t aken of f the ship, the icons representing them gave of f a soft greenish glow .
Some scientists be lieved that the icons were exact working repli cas of the items th ey depic ted.
Ther e was no wa y to find out because the icons were ina ccessible. Unlike our hu man type
contro l pane ls, w hich have ac cess to instru mentation via an opening in the back, front or side, for
servic ing, or upgrading, there was no m eans of entr y to the Alien instru mentation pane l.
The spaceship rese mbles a kind of living metallic organism . It had no visible rivets or screws to
hold things togeth er, nor were th ere an y seams, joints and overlaps of an y kind. Nor was the
location of the windows and doors percept ible. The ship and its contents see med to be more
organic than synthetic; there were no hinges, la tches, knobs, rollers or w heels, onl y a smooth,
even, one-piec e skin tha t enco mpassed the whole craft.
The ship extrac ted inf initely more infor mation about the researchers than the resear chers could
ever hope to col lect from the ship. That was a forgone conclusion b y the committee. Ther e was
no m echanis m that was clicking away in the craft to indic ate the craf t was gathering infor mation
on the scient ists. But the craft adap ted to som e of the awk wardness of the researchers as the y
fumbled around l ike the blind, attempting to extra ct some understanding of w hat they were
dealing with. The ship often gave clu es on w hich items activated certa in devi ces and openings on
the craft by making the it em the scient ists were working with give off a glow or sound or both. If
and when a particu lar scien tist was slow at pi cking up on the infor mation that dea lt with a
specif ic project they were working on the y rece ived subtle hints fro m the objects the mselves.
Ther e was a correla tion to how the ship help ed scient ists and the way we s ometimes solve
proble ms as hum ans. If we stud y a proble m long enough, many times a solut ion presents itse lf in
a dream or inspira tion. Presumably the answers co me to us fro m our subconscious m ind. On the
ship the subcon scious mi nd re mains unconscious and so does the conscious m ind–nothing
makes an y sense. Therefore, it was theori zed tha t the answers, when the y did co me, came from
the ship or from its brood, the gadgets!
The subconscious mind, lik e a nav igation al com puter , work s non-stop to help us hum ans bett er
understand and function in the 3 dimension al rea lity we are confin ed to on th is planet. The Alien
craft was mu lti-dimension al, which is a contrad iction to a ll we hu mans know and understand
about physics. The Alien ship see med to co mprehend the shortcom ing of the hu man inquisitors,
and provided the m with a few s olutions to the ir queries via bab y steps.
Why did the Aliens du mp so m uch mysterious stuf f on earth lings al l at once ? Did the y
overest imate the ability of hu mans to co mpreh end an advan ced socie ty as the ir own ? Highl y
unlik ely, in eviden ce of the ir superior and com pletely beyond our understanding techno logy it
would see m they are incapab le of ma king th at kind of mi sjudgment.
Technolog y, where does it com e from?
How mu ch new techno logy was gathered from that part icular Alien craft and then funneled in to
practical earthly use re mains unknown. At what rate the techno logy was dispersed is also
unknown. Assuming that the docum ents don’ t exagg erate how were the scien tists abl e to reverse
engin eer an ything at all from such a co mplex ship? Ma ybe the answer is not so complicated. Our
aircraft are designed on the princ iples of th e aerod ynamics of birds and insects. Yet, our best
engin eers cannot build a bird or an insec t. Despite the co mplexities associa ted with birds and
insec ts we are abl e to extr act enough infor mation from them and use that infor mation to build
flying craft such as airplan es and heli copters.
How did we integr ate Alien technolog y into our own? Like things manufactur ed in factories, the
finished product is th e result of ma ny dissi milar processes. The raw materials co me from one
source and the knowledge of ho w to processes from other sources. It’ s not necessar y to know
where one technolog y ends and another one begins or for tha t matter, from where i t came; the
impor tance is the end result. The technolog y or bits of infor mation com ing from covert
committees and labs are col lected and mixed with other bi ts of inform ation fro m other sources
like universi ties and corporations, which spend billions of dollars ever y year on scien tific
research. That com mittee is ju st one of ma ny sources tha t are secretly working on " who knows
what?" and truthful ly, "who cares?" as long as new technolog y keeps co ming and i mprov ing the
way we liv e our lives.
One scien tist bel ieved that he cracked the puzzle on ho w the Alien things vanished and then
return ed to th e ship. He felt that the icons were not onl y symbols on th e control panel but also the
actual items. He propo sed th at the items that were carri ed out of the craft and studied by the
scien tists were disposable replic as of the i cons. If that were true the life span of the repl icas
would be approxim ately 72 hour s. He theor ized that after 72 hours the items dissolved into th e
atmosphere, le aving no evidence that they ever existed. That theor y fit well with the reports
made by people who clai med the y were abduct ed. Abduct ees reported that Aliens inser ted m etal
objects into various parts of the ir ana tomy, but when the y were asked to produce these objects b y
the skeptics, the y were unable to do so. Up to that point no one on the co mmittee had proved tha t
the Alien items vaporized, but it was one of their better hunches at that t ime. It also expl ained
why no one has ever found an Alien artif act, and wh y there is no evid ence that Aliens visit ed the
planet. It answered the big question tha t UFO skepti cs alwa ys ask, "If Aliens are visit ing Ear th,
where is th e Alien litter?" O ne answer to that question was cle ar to so me. The Aliens aren't
litterbugs. However , not all Alien objects followed the 72 hour vanishing rul es, and lit tle was
discussed about those ite ms.
The possibility that the icons replica ted endless copies of the mselves with the sa me ease as
microbiolog ical cells dividing was astound ing. What kind of world would be possible if we
learned to harness a fraction of that magic from the ship and appl ied it to food and ener gy
product ion? After on ite m was taken out of the craft and it expir ed, onl y then did ano ther one
appe ar and tak e its pl ace, which was a drawback for hu man applic ations. There was no me thod
of knowing if the icons rep licated new i tems ever y three days autom atically, or if onl y the ones
that left the ship were renewed. They were unable to test the theor y by marking the it ems
because the Alien material was impervious to hu man markings.
The moment “Frankenste in” bec ame part of the inventor y of the ship an icon of hi m appeared on
a separa te panel. If the theor y held tha t the icons were the protot ypes of al l the items on the ship,
then perhaps the com mittee could subject the bod y to m any kinds of experi ments and limiting
the need to harvest addi tiona l damaged hu mans to experi ment on.
To test that theor y, the scient ists ma de a drastic decision, "kill the bod y." They could not test tha t
theor y on an y of the other Alien objects because they were indestruct ible. The bod y, on the other
hand, was flesh and blood, or so the y believed it was, but aft er it was modified by the Alien ship
they were not sure. The scientists presu med that the bod y could be da maged or ki lled.
None of the scientists volunteer ed to ki ll the body, even though the body was in a vegeta tive
state–no brain activ ity and presum ably not a liv ing ent ity. Ther efore, th e committee m ade a
request for a professional assassin, a hit man, to do the dastard ly deed. The request was approved
by those mysterious people that ruled over the co mmittee members. The com mittee was told to
draft a procedure on how the y wanted that assign ment carr ied out. The deta ils were sketch y and
not very clear other than the body was shot in the head at close range using a revolver .
The hit was done som ewhere outside of the secret com pound b y a hit man that believ ed he had
killed a ma n over mon ey due th e mob. The scientists did an autops y shortl y after the bod y was
killed expecting to find and rem ove the Alien lif e-support crea ture that was wrapped around
some of the hu man organs giv ing lif e to the body. But th e thing was gone. The autops y did not
find anything mysterious or unusual about the dead bod y, apparen tly it vanished like the other
Alien gadgets. The body showed the same amoun t of deco mposing tha t a nor mal human cadaver
under goes shortl y after dea th.
The stud y raised m ore questions and answered none. It did not prove that the Alien objects
decay, only that th e human body with the Alien contrapt ion re mained m ortal. The icon of the
body vanished from the panel on the ship. No eulog y was given or sorrow sho wn fro m anyone
who worked with the body. Instead, m ost of the scien tists were rel ieved at not having it around
anymore. Once the body was gone, a notic eable jump in m orale occurred, but those happ y days
were short. Orders fro m the top stipul ated the desire to produce and add to the inven tory
additiona l bodies.
Alien contac t
One m orning one of the com mittee members revea led to his colle agues that he had been
abduc ted the preced ing night! That reve lation brought a sense of excite ment to the rest of the
members. He told his colle agues that the abductions had been going on before he ca me to the
progra m. He then to ld the m that they also have been abducted and taken many times since their
childhood. The Aliens al lowed hi m to re member th at abduc tion because, as the Aliens put it, "i t
was ti me."
He was abducted while in bed during the night from his hom e. Ther e were other hum ans on the
ship with him who had been abducted moments before the y took hi m. They allowed hi m to
"observer" and for the first time in his lif e not be the sub ject of whatever procedure they were
there to perfor m. The other hum ans with him that night were not so luck y, and he had to endure
the torment they were put through. He did not have freedom to move about the ship and wa s told
telepathica lly were to go and he did. The Aliens had tot al access and control of his subcon scious
mind. Under the Alien co mmand his bod y mov ed as if he were a robot. All he cou ld do was
mentally sit-back while his bod y instantl y took ps ychic com mands fro m the Aliens. He was not
sure which of th e Aliens wa s talking to hi m or ho w many Aliens th ere were on th e ship that
might have been influ encing his mo vement.
The Aliens were friendl y and treat ed hi m kindl y and constantl y assured him he did not need to be
afraid. When he had a question and the y were willing to answer it, it was ans wered quicker than
it form ed in his m ind. If it was a question they would not answer, they told him so, and then let
him know that possibly he w ould be given an ans wer to that question sometime in the future.
Even when their intent ions were to never revea l a cer tain secret th ey avoided using negat ive
responses with hi m.
It was a good th ing tha t they had hi m on autopilo t, he to ld his coll eagues, bec ause his knees were
like jell y and he couldn’ t keep the m from shaking. After working on the Alien project for m ore
than twent y-five years, he cou ld not bel ieve how unprepar ed he was to m eet the Aliens face to
face. He nearl y wet his pants ju st thinking about his abduc tion.
He knew tha t what he experienc ed tha t night was onl y the ini tiation and that he wa s not expect ed
to understand an y of the things tha t went on. He did remember tha t there were four adult men
there with hi m. They w
hey were not co mpletely paral yzed; he watched two of the m turn their heads and look direct ly at
him. He recogniz ed the fear he saw in th eir eyes, "it was the sa me fear he had in his!"
He told his coll eagues tha t the stars are m uch brighter when viewed fro m a vantage point above
the earth ’s atmosphere, and he ra mbled on abou t how gidd y he fel t despit e his fear . While the
Aliens did their work, th e craft was parked som ewhere in earth’ s orbit. He wanted to go to one of
the portals for a better look at the stars and to see what ear th looked like from space, but they
told him he could not during this visi t.
The Aliens were strictl y busines s, unl ike a doctor ’s office here on earth, where a pati ent has time
to read through severa l magazines before the visit begins, there was lit tle waiting for the anxious
souls who were in the Alien ship. One at a t ime, they got up and walked in to a roo m that seemed
to be as bright as the sun itself. Ther e was no s ound and only the individua l who wa s summoned
knew what th e Aliens were sa ying or co mmanding them to do. After entering the bright room
strange objects (some similar to the ones he exper imented with back at the lab) materialize all
around the m an and att ached themselv es to various parts of the m an’s bod y as if he was
magnetic. Soon after and seem ingly from nowhere (like a ll the gadgets) a frail- looking Alien
appe ared and with the he lp of two other Aliens tha t had been standing there the whole ti me, in
freak ishly rapid motion assisted the m an onto the table. Ever ything in the roo m was polished and
orderl y. Instrum ents seem ingly appeared did things and then evapor ated out of the area when
they were done with whatever the y were doing. The Aliens rare ly handl ed the objects, the objects
seem to have autono my or perhaps the Aliens control led th em telepathica lly.
The room the four me n walked into th at nigh t was sim ilar to the one that was aboard the craft
they had in th eir posses sion, except that they never witnessed instru ments perm eate fro m the
walls or appear in flight out of thin air. That was the onl y room that was fam iliar to him. This
ship was mu ch larger, eigh t to ten ti mes lar ger. He ph ysically did not see m any Aliens, but
somehow he knew ther e were dozens of them on th e craft.
He watched the Aliens work at speeds tha t made him dizz y and it was the most frightful thing he
ever witnessed, all he could think of was gett ing out of that pl ace. It wa s iron ic; he waited his
whole life for th is mo ment and now that he had i t he didn’ t want to ever experien ce it again.
Although, after th e initial shock of seeing hu mans manipul ated in wa ys that would have left them
parap legic had it occurred in the hum an real m–and they walked away with no apparen t harm,
he beca me less apprehensive about the ordeal.
After hearing his stor y some on the co mmittee wondered if the y should go through regression
therapy to exp lore what kind of experien ces the y had with the Aliens and to confir m that it did
happen. None of the m knew for s ure if they had been abduct ed, the y only had the word of their
colleague.
The com mittee member (Bi ll) who was abducted and revea led tha t fact to his col leagu es advised
them not to go through regression. He told them that from what he had seen, that he could attest
that the procedures the Aliens used on the abduct ed were extr emely painful, and tha t they were
better of f if they did not reliv e the experienc e.
Despite the horror the four m en were put through Bi ll was awed at how prec isely the Aliens and
its machines perform ed their dut ies. In a biz arre wa y it was mi raculous and co mical, he told his
colleagues. Had he not been terrifi ed, he m ight have died fro m laughing at what he saw . The way
the Aliens tossed th e men around "like rag dolls" was perversel y amusing. It was like being in a
den of "m ad" m agicians. Strange objects flew and hovered around the room , som etimes stopping
over the tab le were l aid the abduct ed, perfor m a jig or ritual istic dance, then m ove about the
room swaying and dancing in the air lik e sham an.
Some Aliens looked hum an, or perhaps they were hu man like him, on s ome kind of int ernship,
observing the m adness around them as he was. If the y were hum an, they were at a more
advan ced lev el than he bec ause the y walked around free ly and causa lly withou t apparen t fear.
Some instrum ents appeared to be or ganic and m oved and looked l ike lar ge worms, about the
diameter of a vacuu m cleaner hose. They emerged from what looked like solid surfaces, y et left
no hole after emerging or after retreat ing back into th e surfaces.
Regard less of w hat was perform ed on the abduct ed, the outco mes were never hit and m iss, it was
"known." The Aliens lit erally split one of the men down the m iddle, cutting him com pletely in
half like a side of beef ; seconds lat er the y had put hi m back tog ether. All this was done with no
blood loss or visibl e scars. The blood appeared to be solidif ied (frozen ?) it did not flow , spill, or
squirt out from the mutilations or bod y parts when one of the men was dism embered. One m an
had his arms and legs cut off with som e type of lazar –he wa s conscious the whole t ime!
Screa med and yelled in horror but did not pass out (presum ably the Aliens kept him from passing
out or going into shock). Bill had the fee ling he wa s going to vo mit but didn’ t, that too was
contro lled by the Aliens. The Aliens didn’ t tell Bill that this was a dem onstrat ion for hi m and
possibl y others, but that was the only conc lusion he ca me awa y with.
For the abducted it was strict ly outpa tient; ther e was no l ying around convalesc ing under the care
of nurses for da ys or weeks. O nce they emerge fro m the sur gical room they were read y to be
return ed to th eir bedroo ms, or to wherever the y were origin ally picked up from.
Because of the pain tha t was endured b y the abducted, it may have seemed lik e the y were there
for hours, but fro m what Bill could rec all, none of the abducted were under the "knife" for m ore
than two or three minutes. The actu al time it took may have been longer or shorter, since the
passage of t ime is dif ficult to judge while inside on Alien ship.
Civilians used for exper imentation
Ther e were no proble ms obtain ing injured or sick peopl e for experi mentation by the co mmittee.
Thousands who have no i mmediate family or friends fil l the rooms of nur sing hom es and stat e
hospita ls across the countr y and the world. This wa s the pool of choi ce for the committee. The
nursing ho mes were chosen over the hospitals bec ause, as one co mmittee member said, "the y are
like warehouses of the dam ned. The luck y ones are barel y aware of their surroundings. M any are
only alive because of a ll the drugs that are pu mped into the m daily by the nursing hom es." The
majorit y in the com mittee bel ieved that experi menting on these peopl e was mor e humane than
the life they had while at the nursing ho mes. “Taking the m out of the nursing ho me was like
rescuing them from a fai th worse than dea th. Nothing can be worse than a nursing hom e,”
anon ymous quote. Even in fail ing hea lth and barel y conscious, s ome of the old people perked up
when one of th e techn icians w orking for the co mmittee came there to pick them up. At the
beginn ing of “o peration gray hair” (not real code na me) the com mittee setup a medical team to
intercep t cert ain cr itically ill patients fro m unna med nursing ho mes.
The old and decr epit were a pit iful sight, no one on the com mittee had an y intent ion of adding to
their misery, and so onl y those who were not cognizan t of their surroundings and on the ver ge of
dying were u sed to experi ment on. It sound s horrib le tha t anyone would do s uch atrocious things
to defenseless people however many of them were miraculousl y heal ed fro m their ph ysical and
mental ailments. Most of the m suffered from severe forms of dem entia, arthr itis, diabet es, liver
and kidne y proble ms and when the y were returned to the nursing or conva lescent hom e, they
were in excel lent health. That beca me a proble m and a dilemma for th e committee, which had
not antic ipated those t ypes of resul ts. The co mmittee had expect ed to be making runs to the ci ty
morgue not returning rejuvenated elderl y people back to the nursing ho me. Furthermore, the
elderly made a fuss about going back! The super secret under ground co mmittee was not setup to
be a wa y station for reestabl ishing the lives of the miraculousl y cured elderl y. Nor did the y want
to turn the m loose into society–the y wanted to m onitor the m for a few y ears to gage the ir
progress and verif y if the healing was per manent or te mporar y. The progra m was put on hold
until they sorted out th e can of w orms the y had opened.
Return ing peopl e who were froth with problem s of the aging when the y were taken away and
then heal thier than m ost of the at tendants that car ed for the m eventu ally caught the at tention of
the media. One such episode near ly blew th e lid off the whole cover t opera tion. The com mittee
moved quickl y and severed a ll links that could le ad the events to th em. They then i mplemented a
new poli cy and relo cated those who were stil l in th e pipel ine of being cured- –giving the m new
lives and iden tities far fro m where they might attract attention.
The elderl y themselves never suspected a thing. They assum ed tha t when the y beca me ill
paramedics cam e and took the m to a local hospital. They had no reason to think otherwise. There
was no me ntion in th e docu ments on how the co mmittee handled the memory question–perhaps
they erased the ir old memories and i mplanted new ones. The scient ists were in posses sion of
Alien equip ment tha t could do that. The nursing ho me would have been notified that the pa tient
died and was cre mated. Ex tensive background checks were done to m ake sure there was no
family or friends alive that might take an inter est in th eir newl y revived kin before bringing
anyone into th e progra m. The media soon lost int erest when the y failed to find anyone who could
give them proof of w hat happened. A few hea lthy old people (those returned to the hom e before
the com mittee chang ed that polic y) with no stor y to tell was not enough to keep the m edia
interested for long.
The myth of hu man autono my
Understanding the Aliens was a slow and dif ficult process; however , that was not the
committee’s biggest cha llenge instead it was the arrogance that had developed over the years
amongst com mittee m embers due to their untouchabl e status. That kind of power was dif ficult to
contro l and i t threa tened to undue the covert operation many times bec ause of the power struggle
betwe en the members. They were not invin cible, although that had beco me the mood. What
happen ed at the nursing ho me could never have been tied direct ly to them; they were under far
too many layers of bureaucrac y to ever get caugh t. What concerned their superiors was the
possibili ty of the media giants taking a serious interest in what took place at th e nursing ho me
and snowball ing it into a full blown inqu iry, and possibl y resul ting in to a “real” Senate
invest igation.
With the equip ment the committee had in its posses sion they had the means to beco me more
secre tive than the y alread y were, techn ically they were invisib le. Onl y a handful of peopl e in the
world know of their existenc e, but with the use of the Alien equip ment they would beco me
“liter ally” invisibl e, lik e the invisible man. For a time they were fearful of using the arsenal of
Alien gadgets the y had up the ir sleeve, especia lly outside of the ir comfort zone, outsid e of their
prote cted base of operat ions. They were afra id that if the y bungled a mission and exposed th eir
opera tion th at the y and ult imately the whole organization could be destro yed.
All those involved with the program , committee members and the scien tists are shadowed by
what is appropriate ly called "the cl ean up te am." The job of tha t team is to dispo se of the m along
with their equipm ent in a matter of m inutes should a m ission be com promised and exposure to
the program imminent.
Killing one or all of th em on the spot was not a last resort, but a certain ty if they were unabl e to
be removed fro m the scene expedien tly. The part about “expedient ly” bother ed the com mittee
members the mos t. Ho w can the scien tists or co mmittee members in the fi eld be untouchabl e and
at the sa me time dispensable? It was a dif ficult reali ty for the pre-Madonna co mmittee members
to swallow . As a result of tha t reality (expendabl e), the y limited their exposure and avoided
whenever possible risky assignm ents outsid e of their compound. Fear of being found out was not
the only factor that held them back, there were other reason s they dela yed taking the Alien
equip ment off the base and into the hom es of unsu specting civil ians. The co llective belief in the
sanct ity of one ’s hom e did stir in the souls of the co mmittee members. The abili ty to enter a
person’ s house and go in to their bedroo m without the ir knowledge took gett ing use to.
Wha t made the whole thing ac ceptab le was tha t the com mittee was aware that thousands of
peopl e are visited (some call it violat ed) b y Aliens ever y day. A few people know the y are being
abduc ted, but the vast majori ty of hu manity has no clu e tha t it is happening at al l.
The com mittee felt compelled to ent er the realm where “no m an had y et gone,” a pla ce where up
until then the Aliens alone inhabi ted.
We humans pla ce th e highest value on priv acy. We naive ly think that our inner most thoughts
belong only to us. We are l iving in a fantas y, an illusion with such thoughts. Priva cy of bod y and
mind is a hu man delusion (ac cording to com mittee docu ments). The co mmittee members cam e
to that realiz ation shortl y after the y were brought into the progra m, and have since conc luded
that one canno t break a trust of a fellow hu man being when truth and trust are il lusions.
After a few mo nths or y ears, no one knows ho w long the harvest ing of old people was continu ed,
the com mittee dec ided tha t peopl e from nursing ho mes were still the best and safest to t est and
exper iment with. The old people were docil e and a mbival ent to the hand ling, poking and
prodding, of the scien tists who experi mented on the m. However , the scien tists went about it
differen tly than the y did with th eir first trials and abducted their subjects fro m the car e faci lities.
The black op techni cians gain ed entr y by using the Alien devi ce tha t allowed the m to per meate
solid objects and walk through walls. They used an un marked passenger van to carry them and
the equip ment the y needed to the site. The Alien gadgets easil y fit into a bri efcase with room to
spare (and the gadge ts behaved for the m ost par t, which was not alwa ys the case). The nursing
home they picked for the ir first field assign ment was loca ted in a rural are a, miles awa y from a
large city. They didn’ t have opera tives at the nursing hom e as the y had in the past; th is wa s a test
to see ho w they would perfor m in an uncontro lled environ ment. They had sim ple instructions,
abduc t a pat ient, and take her back to the base or j ust drive around for a short ti me, then return
her to the exa ct spot they picked her up fro m, two hour s later. They hoped to acco mplish this
without anyone at the hom e knowing tha t she was missing. They had no plans to do an ything to
her, other than give her a two-hour ride in the coun try, they were to return to the base (a
temporar y hideout) if they had unfore seen complications.
They arrived at the destinat ion an hour after nigh tfall. One of the co mmittee members who drove
in a separate unm arked car ent ered the building first. He enter ed through the front en trance posed
as a sta te inspec tor, and told the attend ing nurse at the front desk that he wa s ther e to perform a
"surprise" inspec tion. He was equipped with all the necessar y credent ials, and if the y called an y
of the heal th depart ments for ver ification, com mittee members mo nitor ing the calls com ing and
going from that building would have in tercep ted the phone ca ll.
While he kept the staff distrac ted thre e of the com mittee members in the van looked for a dark
area close to the bui lding and out of view of the of the front office. Having select ed a spot for
their entr y they activated the Alien equip ment and instantl y permeated through the brick wall, or
as one of th em said, “We were sucked through the building. ” They emerged in to a roo m that was
occup ied b y an elderl y woman that looked to be in her nineti es. She wa s sitting a lone in a wheel
chair in one corner of the two-bedroom unit. There was no one e lse in the room with her; she
appe ared to be sleeping. The tel evision was on, but th e sound wa s turned down.
When they passed through th e wall, they did not feel a thing; the com position of the wall beca me
as a whif f of s moke. But the ener gy field that emanated fro m the box caused the te levision and
the lights in that room and those in the hall adjacen t to the roo m to flicke r. They had rehearsed
entering a similar building back a t the base before at tempting th is exercise, but the y did not
anticipate having the attend ants conver ge on the m all at once as the y did during that exercise.
Ther e were six at tendants on dut y that night at the nursing hom e. When the ligh ts started
flickering in tha t wing of the building all six of them went running to tha t location. The
committee member who se job it was to distr act the at tendants instead had them so nervous fro m
the surprise inspection that they overre acted.
As the at tendants conver ged on the room where the com mittee m embers had ju st entered through
the brick wal l, the com mittee members had no choic e but to subdue and paral yze the attendants
one by one as the y entered the room . One touch of the Alien wand to the head of the at tendan ts
render ed the m paral yzed. The com mittee members then pl aced penn y sized discs on the temples
of the attendants and the at tendants remained standing and full y consci ence but unable to m ove
or talk. The com mittee had never paral yzed heal thy normal people before and never out of a
contro lled setting. They had six peopl e standing limp inside of tha t room and looked l ike liv ing
manikins with nothing but their e yes mov ing. Bec ause the com mittee had not planned to
interfere with an y of the staff or of the operation of the nursing ho me, they abor ted the mission.
This was a tra ining mission, a wa y to judge the difficulty they might encounter when entering a
priva te bui lding with the in tention of re moving a person without rousing suspicion. In the past
they harvested from hospitals and nur sing hom es the numb er of peopl e the y needed with the help
of insiders install ed covert ly into the m anage ment of those institu tions. The new strat egy allowed
them to harvest without any inside connection. The m otivation being that they could borrow
peopl e from an y locat ion at the t ime of their choo sing. It also reduc ed the ir exposure b y placing
fewer opera tives in the fi eld and in the manage ment of private institu tions.
The com mittee members re moved the discs fro m the heads of th e attendants free ing the m from
the paral ysis. Although the attend ants were wide- awake they dropped like a ton of bricks as their
legs gave awa y from under the m the instan t the discs were rem oved. They were disorien ted
which was good because the four co mmittee guys were in a pani c and need ed the extra t ime for
damage contro l. Fift y or mo re pat ients were suddenl y left unattend ed, and th e fact that anyone
could at an y moment walk into the bui lding and find all the attendan ts piled in one of th e roo ms
was a near disaster .
The paral ysis wore of f about one or two m inutes after the re moval of the Alien buttons fro m the
heads of th e attendants, but each attendan t was af fected dif feren tly. Some took longer to co me
out of the para lysis according to the one m ember who rem ain behind to ma ke sure all the
attendan ts revived. According to him it took m ore than five m inutes for al l the attend ants to snap
out of their dazed and disoriented minds. They remembered nothing of w hat happened to the m
(not why they were all in one locat ion of the building or w hy they were all laying on the floor).
As each ind ividual regain equil ibriu m soon aft er the com mittee members left, the first of the m to
reach a phone called the fire depart ment. The at tendant had surm ised th at carbon monoxide or
some other poisonous gas had leak ed into the build ing fro m one of the furnac es. None of the
members of the staff rem embered th ere was an inspect ion in progres s prior to the m passing out.
Apparent ly the discs not onl y para lyzed people, but also left them with a mnesia about what the y
exper ience during and just prior to the ti me the y were paral yzed.
The com mittee members who were mo nitor ing the phone lines the whole t ime continued to do
so. They listened in on the conversa tion be tween the staff member and the fire and police
depar tments. They made sure things were under control before they left. Onl y two of th e
attendan ts were taken to a hospita l for observat ion and were re leased th at same night; the oth ers
had no problem s and dec lined to go to th e hospital.
No da mage was done, and the final police report ind icated tha t none of the elder ly patients were
affected. The report stat ed tha t the staff might have succu mbed to the fumes fro m a clean ing
solution that was found near the area the y had the ir dizz y spells.
Shortl y after that fi asco, those in char ge of the program pulled the plug on the use of nur sing
homes for good (no one will ever know). They did so for two reasons; first, th ey knew that all
the newl y rejuvenated old peopl e would eventu ally draw atten tion and po ssibly give cred ence to
the UFO pheno mena. Secondl y, the cost of reestabl ishing the lives of hundreds or thousands of
peopl e was prohibit ive. The mon ey that was ear mark ed for the com mittee was s ufficient for the
committee’s covert operations; there was no cont ingenc y fund for hum anitarian services to
reest ablish rejuvenat ed hu mans. If the y incre ased their budget b y an addition al few million to
allow for the added services, the y risked beco ming visib le to the congress, which ult imately
funds all governm ent progra ms, even those the y know nothing about.
In the years during the cold war it was sim pler to financ e cland estine operations, but after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, funneling mon ey to th e committee was a cover t operat ion in itself.
Incre asingl y, the funding sources had becom e the co mmittee’s "Achi lles Heel." The co mmittee
was told that th e funding the y rece ived was still appropria ted fro m the Nation al Treasur y, but that
would not be the source in the future.
Second encounter
Bill the com mittee m ember that was abduct ed and al lowed to observe the Aliens, had his second
encoun ter. It happened four mo nths aft er his first. They took hi m while he was working in his
office during da ylight hour s. There were others in the build ing at the ti me, but he was w orking
alone when it happened. It was around noon that he wa s taken. He was eating a sandwich tha t
one of his colleagu es had picked up for hi m in the cafeter ia down the hall. He w as eat ing his
lunch while going over a report he had to turn in tha t afternoon. An instan t later he was in an
Alien ship without his s andwich. They did not give hi m an expl anation of wh y he wa s not
allowed to fin ish his lunch before whisking hi m away. Not that he asked, but it was certa inly on
his m ind, and he knew he could keep no secrets fro m them.
Ther e was a wom an in th e craft with hi m. She wa s on a surgical tab le, and he was standing
nearb y. She was y oung, and s omehow he knew her exac t age ; she was nineteen years old. She
was naked, y et he fel t no sexual desires toward her (despit e her at tractive features). She was
lying on the surgical table with a horrified look on her fac e. She was terrif ied and confu sed with
no clu e of what was going on. She was not abl e to ta lk, but he knew all her thoughts, a privileg e
he did not have the last time he was abduct ed.
She kept her e yes on hi m, and in her mi nd kep t asking, "Wh y are you doing this to m e?" S he was
not sure if she wa s being raped or if she had been in some accident and was in the e mergenc y
room of a hospital.
He knew her though ts, but it wasn't m utual; she did not know his. He had the urge to speak to her
and give her co mfor t, but he wa s unab le to, verball y or telep athically.
He knew she was three m onths pregnant, but he didn't know how he knew those things, or w hy.
As he stood there watching her, her whole l ife was m ade known to him. He then realized why the
Aliens where giving hi m infor mation graduall y, while letting the hundreds of questions that
popped into his head go unans wered. No human mind is big enough to hold but a fraction of
what there is to know , and onl y piec emeal at that! The li ttle infor mation that he did rece ive about
her was overwhel ming his m ind. But wh y did he need to know all about her? He felt he knew her
but did not rec all ever m eeting her.
He watched as the Aliens re moved the fetus from her bod y, and then carr ied it to an adjacent
room. Another Alien ca me back moments later and insert ed another fetus into her. He was not
told if it was the sa me fetus the y took out of her or if it was a dif feren t one. If i t was the sa me
one, what had been done to it?
They told hi m it was not yet time for him to know tha t answer . He was allowed to know that this
girl was genetic ally linked to hi m. In fact, he wa s her biologic al father , even though he never m et
her mother. Her mo ther was implanted with his se men on board tha t same ship ninete en years
earlier. That fetus was his grandson! H e was told that he father many others like her , and it was
not importan t for hi m to have contac t with an y of the m, nor w ould it be possible for him to have
contact with the m, even if he was allowed to know who the y all were.
He was not al lowed to know the identi ty of the girl, his daught er, other than what they had
already let him know , or from which ci ty she was from . She could be from anywhere in the
world, the y told him, and af ter the y returned him to his of fice he would never see her again.
The Aliens to ld Bil l that the physical bod y was of li ttle import ance. It was a me re vessel that held
the essence of what hu mans are. It made no dif ference that th e girl and countl ess oth ers are
related to his bod y and DN A, the ident ity of a person had no bearing to the physical bod y other
than looks. His genes did not pass on an y part of the m ind or soul, which is one and the sa me.
However , disposition and som e traits tha t a child shares with its parents are learn ed fro m the m as
they grow up and are influ enced by the paren ts, and not nec essarily a part of the gene pool. The
ambiguity of that last stat ement was not expla ined to Bill and the Aliens did not feel they need ed
to clarif y it.
The whole scope of what th e Aliens are doing hear on earth would never be revealed to
humanity, although there would be limited inform ation given to som e, like the infor mation Bi ll
received. Ther e have been m any throughout histor y that was given knowledge b y the Aliens,
mostly in the form of new techno logy and ideas. From whom the inform ation was com ing from
was not told to Bil l. Som e of the things th at were divulged to him seemed point less and m ade no
sense and sounded ver y bizarre, “Eat bananas on Wednesday, feed the lions ever y Frida y.” Other
statements were unclear and confusing, “Save the rain forest, destro y the tre es.” Bill felt that
many of the answers to his questions (when he receiv ed the m) were purposel y vague ; others
completely puzz ling, and occasiona lly some were me an-spirited. He believed that they had tried
to provoke anger in him a few ti mes.
After he wa s return ed to his o ffice he look ed at the clo ck on the wall and de termined he was
gone for one hour . He had no reco llection of the m taking him or return ing hi m. He found him self
sitting at the desk in the sa me position he was in before his abduct ion. His half- eaten sand wich
was still there. If it weren't for the fact that he was in an are a with Alien objects strewn al l around
him, he would have chalked it up to having fal len asleep at his desk and drea mt it all.
The experien ce and his me mory of it were cl ear, and he pondered what the Aliens told him abou t
his of fspring not be ing his. He had two chi ldren at hom e with whom he had a strong bond and
felt chea ted and overwhel med at th e thought that he sired untold num bers of other children who
are all strangers to hi m. He wa s depressed af ter tha t encoun ter. No one in his depart ment noticed
that he had been abduc ted. He took the rest of tha t day off and told no one in his of fice what had
happen ed to hi m. As he drove ho me, he couldn't help but see a li ttle bit of hims elf in ever yone he
passed. He never felt th at his bod y was "all that special." Why then did they use him as a
human stud ?
Envy Stymies the Com mittee
Two weeks went b y before he told the com mittee m embers about his last abduc tion. When he did
rather than being exc ited about tha t reve lation, his coll eagues were env ious and puzzl ed wh y no
others in the group had been given the priv ilege he see med to be enjo ying. Ther e was s ome
jealous y in the co mmittee, and his colle agues were less int erested in what he had learned from
the latest encount er. One of his co lleagu es accused hi m of m aking up the stories. They could not
understand why he was singled out fro m the rest of the m. Was he sm arter than the y? Was he
better look ing? Was his blood t ype special? They wanted to know w hy the Aliens could not m ake
themselves known to the whole co mmittee. After al l, “the y were in this togeth er,” they remind ed
Bill.
The com mittee members had no doubt that Aliens exist ed, but the y had a dif ficult time believing
Bill’s abduc tion stori es. They thought he was becom ing delusional from the many years of
working around the freak- show that had beco me their labs and their lives.
Bill was accused of dom inating the com mittee meetings bec ause he cl aimed to have more
knowledge about the Aliens than the rest. During that time his col leagues voted to have him
expe lled from the com mittee. The higher -ups who felt his link with the Aliens was real ve toed
that vote. They then made matters w orse b y putting hi m in char ge of the co mmittee. His
colleagues rebell ed, and a mediator was brought in to patch-up th e rift. But it didn’ t work. Lack
of cooper ation between th e members caused the program to be su spended and ever yone went
home.
Two mo nths passed before th e committee was reac tivated. Presum ably the depar tment cont inued
opera ting during that time, probabl y under the le adership of one of the higher -ups. An opera tion
of the magnitude could not easi ly be brought to a stop. None of the docum ents indica ted what
went on w hile the com mittee was absent. Bil l Smith was again put in char ge of the new
committee. Some of the original members were reinsta ted; others were transferred to dif feren t
depar tments. Bill spent the two mon ths vacat ioning in the Hawai ian Islands. Whil e he was there
the Aliens visited with him ever y day.
He advanc ed to where he was allowed to roam freely aboard the Alien craf t. The craf t moved at
speeds tha t are inconceiv able if taken out of the realm of scienc e fict ion he told the com mittee.
The Aliens l et him chose the destinat ion, and as qui ckly as it form in his mi nd the craft was
halfwa y there. He visited ever y countr y on earth and even spent t ime on earth’ s moon and other
moons in the solar s ystem, but the y were not m entioned by nam e. The Aliens dec lined his
request to visit the plan et Jupiter, a favorite of his since chi ld hood, his father had bought him a
telescope when he wa s nine and he spent countless nights watching the night skies and the rings
around Jupiter blew hi m away. They told hi m that other parts of the solar system were stil l off
limits to hi m, but that possibly in the future he would be able to visit a few of the pl anets.
It frustrated Bi ll that the Aliens did not indulg e others on th e committee. It made it dif ficult for
him to share his exc itement with the m since they remained suspicious of hi m and his ta les of
adven ture.
All the co mmittee members did spend time with the Aliens and presum ably been to oth er plane ts,
but they were not allowed to rem ember the ir adven tures (probabl y a good thing). Bi ll told the m
that they were trea ted no dif ferent than the majori ty of those who are abducted, except that he
was able to verif y that it did happen to the m. His coll eagues question ed hi m on w hy they were
taken but not allowed to re member like he was able to. Bil l could not give them answers; he
could only relay to the m what happened to him, and only what the Aliens al lowed hi m to know
happen ed to hi m. Man y of his experi ences re main block ed, he to ld his col leagues.
The Aliens to ld Bil l to discourag e his col leagues from going to anyone for regression ther apy.
Since the t ime Bill told his col leagu es that they had been abduct ed, som e of the m did not beli eve
him and were consider ing under going regres sion to confir m that it did take place. The Aliens
point ed out to Bill that they can implant whatev er memories the y wish into the subcon scious
mind of hum ans, and th at many of the episodes that are reca lled by those who have been
abduc ted are inten tiona lly painfu l and misleading. They are program med that way, to dissuade
the abducted from learning th e truth of w hat really happened to the m. “A truth tha t is not for
them to know, and is none of their business to know!” Bill was told that hum ans in the western
world have the i llusion of “personal rights." That belief is not prevalen t in the rest of the world.
Hum ans do not own the ir bodies; they are on loan to them. “To own so meth ing,” the Aliens told
Bill, “m eans y ou have total control of it.” Wha t human has control of his bod y or an ything else
for tha t matter? No hum an can keep his bod y from dying, or from beco ming ill. The only thing
that humans can do is feed and take care of the ir bodies, not much m ore complicated than putting
fuel in a car and chang ing the oil once in awhile. “Hum ans are not even in dom inion of their own
soul!” All the bodies on this pl anet belong to the Aliens. The Aliens did not disc lose to Bil l, who
owns the soul, ju st that they, the Aliens, had no clai m to that part of hu manity.
On his last two encounters with the Aliens, the y showed hi m how to perform som e of the
medical procedures th at he and the co mmittee had been struggling with during som e of the ir
exper iments. The new infor mation helped to convince his colle agues tha t he was eith er a genius
or did, in fact, have cont act with the Aliens. Bec ause of the com plexity of what the Aliens
demonstr ated to hi m, Bill could onl y perform the procedures on the Alien craft. The craft
provided a leve l of purit y that did not exist an ywhere outside of it. It was also less strenuous
working in the craf t, similar to being on the moon with i ts reduced gravita tional pull. Working in
the ship allowed them to perfor m with ease and speed that was impossibl e anywhere else. The
purit y of the air helped them to think clear er, and they perfor med superhum an feats while in the
ship.
Bill showed his coll eagues how to repa ir a severe ly damaged heart. They opera ted on a woman
badly injured in a one- car acc ident. She wa s drunk and ran of f the road after l eaving a bar . Like
the rest of the people that th e committee acqu ired, she had no fam ily, and no friends that could be
identified. The hospit al tha t she was taken to had given up on her and expe cted her to die that
morning.
When the co mmittee receiv ed her , she was alre ady decl ared brain dead b y her physician. Her
body was still alive, but her heart and liver were dam aged beyond hu man abili ty to repair th em.
The com mittee was going to repa ir her heart and then repa ir her da maged l iver. Bill and two
others on the co mmittee were acco mplished sur geons prior to co ming to the progra m. Bill was
good at his me dical profes sion, but an invisib le force far superior to his earthl y knowledge
guided his hands, plus he had the use of s ome of the Alien gadgets.
During the open-hearth surgery Bill left the craf t for onl y a moment to get more sutures. They
didn’ t have a nurse, so the y took turns fetch ing things. He lef t at a point where the woman was
stabi lized. When he returned thre e minutes la ter, he found the other two su rgeons standing over
the dead bod y. They both had a confused look on the ir faces. Outside the craf t they told Bi ll that
everything th at the y were doing during the opera tion seemed cl ear and made sense unti l he left
the craft. They then reverted to knowing onl y what they had l earned in me dical school and in
their prac tice before co ming into the program . There was no m ention whether the woman was
conne cted to life- support, pum ps and IV s to keeper her stable during the operation.
Gift of kno wledg e
Apparent ly the Aliens gave Bill a gift that he was not aware of. He had a reservoir of knowledge
insta lled into his subconscious m ind that the oth ers didn’ t have. The infor mation only came to
him as he needed it, and wa s somehow shared with those who need to know while assisting hi m.
It was obvious to Bill that he was being primed for s omething larger than himself, but he wasn’ t
sure for what purpose.
Much of what was stored in his head b y the Aliens was not ava ilable to anyone but hi m. He was
not aware of all his capab ilities and only beca me so when he actu ally needed the infor mation. He
was the best doctor in the world and ge tting better by the da y. He wa s able to diagnose and repa ir
afflictions that baffled the best doctors. But he could not publish an y of it. The knowledge was
not at his disposal to do as he wished. It ca me when he need ed it for a work in progress and left
as soon as the job wa s done. He tried m any times to write down s ome of the procedur es soon
after he perfor med the m but was unable to m ake any sense of what he acco mplished. Therefor e,
he was unable to share his knowledge with his col leagues. Which served to intensifi ed the
distrust that alread y existed be tween hi m and the other m embers. Som e committee members saw
that as confir mation that Bill was isol ating himself.
At som e point Bil l dec ided it was counterproduct ive for him to work with the others. He knew
the feeling was mu tual. All the co mmittee members had beco me uncom fortab le working around
him. They witnessed a marked change in Bill and weren’ t sure if he was man, machine, or a
combination of the two. In their colle ctive eyes he was not hu man anymore. Bill resigned fro m
the com mittee and told his superiors he would work on his own pro jects.
Bill was absent fro m the of fice mos t of the time. When he was ther e, he brea ched the securit y
system with his unusual m ode of com ing and going. He li terally popped in and popped out as if
he had ma stered the Alien powers of tel eporta tion. The securit y system that monitor ed ever yone
entering and leaving the pre mises sho wed that Bi ll, who once was the first to arr ive at work and
the last to leave, was now b ypassing the securit y system and the guard s at the gate. This violat ed
all the rules that ever yone else had to conform too. It was prohibited, not to mention impossible
for an yone to enter or leav e the building without passing through security first. Yet Bill was
observed working in his of fice m any times, even when the securit y roster indic ated that he was
not in the building.
Bill’s supervisor approach ed hi m with tha t concern. Assuring Bill that he understood how he was
able to brea ch the securit y envelop, and asked hi m to tr y and adher e to the sa me rules i mposed
on the rest of the depart ment for th e sake of m orale. Although Bil l was a mu ch humb ler person
than he once was, he fe lt tha t his speci al cir cumstan ces allowed him certain privil eges. He
explained to his superior tha t because of his new abil ities the Aliens expect ed m ore from him and
requir ed m ore of his ti me. He ca me and lef t by way of the Aliens supernatur al means ma ny times
during the da y and night and could not be restrict ed by jealous bicker ing. He was not bea ming up
and down fro m the Alien spaceship like th ey do on Star Trek, he simply appe ared and
disappe ared and did so onl y in his of fice, “so as not to disrupt anyone’s sensitiv ities or feelings.”
He said.
Bill’s boss recognized the fact tha t no one could stop hi m from doing what he needed or wanted
to do. Bill was the only genuine connec tion to the Aliens the com mittee had, so he conced ed to
his requir ements. Bill had beco me the com mittee. No other m ember made an y substant ial
contr ibution to the program . At the weekl y meetings the whole focus wa s on hi m and what he
had discovered, and most import ant, what he was willing to divulge to the rest of the members.
At one of the co mmittee meetings, Bill suggested that they should not add an y more people to
the program . "The num ber of people tha t were invo lved with the Alien craf t was alread y
excessive," he told them. Since i t was im possible to shift peopl e into other less secret ive
progra ms, he suggested that the progra m shrink through at trition. And though he was exem pt
from the high security measur es, he was against lower ing the m and had so me suggestions on
how to m ake the m more secure and less burdenso me on the m embers.
The Aliens gave Bill som ething that was similar to a co mputer chip to be implemented in the
new securi ty system he was proposing. It was the size of a period at the end of a sentence. The
chip could be placed anywher e on the body. It m onitored the loca tion of the rec ipient twent y-
four-hours a da y. When pl aced on the bod y, the chip e mbedded itself be low the skin and
remained visible as a freckle or sm all blemish. That Alien devi ce eliminated the need to do a
body search and allowed the m embers to com e and go with considerab ly less restrain t. The Alien
unit that monitor ed the chip was fashioned to look and perfor m as if it was a man-made machine.
The chip cont ained all applic able inform ation about the ind ividua l and al lowed tha t person
access onl y to his or her assigned place of dut y.
Surprisingl y, there was no objection by com mittee m embers or fro m an y of the peopl e who
worked ther e. Ever yone was happ y to do awa y with the old and hum iliating system that often
included bod y cavity searches. Those in the program had beco me accusto med to th eir ever y
movement being m onitored, so insert ing a t inny devic e under th e skin was a mu ch less intrusive
part of the job.
How mu ch contro l Bill had over his s uperiors at the covert base was not known. But when Bill
suggested so mething ther e were few tha t cha llenged him anymore. Those tha t did, usually yield
to his point of view before the com mittee meeting adjourned. It was obvious tha t his insight was
much keener than an yone there, which could expl ain why they deferred to his ideas. His m anor
was so gentle that it was dif ficult to get m ad at hi m. He never lost his te mper and was alwa ys
cool, calm and col lected.
Did he have the com mittee under a spell? He hi mself was under Alien influen ce. The person that
was known a s Bill faded slowl y away. And so meth ing m uch more than he ever was or could
have been on his own e merged. In ever y physical aspect he was the sa me person. For those w ho
didn't know him before his conversion, the slow transfor mation he went through was hardl y
noticeable. He see med norm al, except for the fact tha t his IQ and other abilities were of f the
charts.
Meat market
The com mittee added five liv ing hu man bodies to i ts inventor y. They procured the five mortally
injured m en from across the countr y. Deta ils about where they were taken from or from what
they were d ying was not m ade known. They kept them stored in the incubator room until a
decision was ma de on w hat to do with th em. The military requested tha t four bodies be released
to them upon conversion. Mo st on the co mmittee were in favor of giv ing the military what they
asked for . It was enough that they had to keep one Frankenstein in their midst, five Frankenste ins
made ever yone who w ork around th em extremely unco mfor table. The dec ision to give up the
bodies to the m ilitary was m ade while Bi ll was awa y for a few weeks. When Bi ll discover ed
what was about to take place, he int ervened. He w as against giving the m ilitary possession of the
bodies (there was no explan ation to wh y he was against i t). He was the onl y one who was able to
stop the bodies fro m be ing taken. The m ilitary had m ade plans to acquire the zo mbie bodies and
had no intent ion of dela ying tha t transac tion. However , the ac tion was dela yed indefin itely.
Apparent ly Bill had inf luenced the high com mand in other then ear thly means. Bil l never made it
part of the record, but he told one of his trust ed friends tha t he was with the Aliens when they
dropped in on a cert ain army General and abduct ed hi m.
During the abduct ion, Bil l was not priv y to all that was "suggested" to the General by the Aliens,
but he wa s made aware that the General would put on hold his request for the living bodies.
Ther e was nothing else done to the General at tha t time, and the whole episode took less than ten
minutes, inc luding th e time it took to return hi m to his bedroo m.
That same week, w hile on board the Alien craf t, Bil l found hi mself in the same roo m with one of
the bodies tha t the com mittee had rec ently converted. Bill was told that they were going to le t
him leav e his bod y and ent er into the other body.
At first, the whole id ea terr ified Bill. The Aliens as sured him that it was stri ctly his choice. If he
was not read y for that kind of experi ence, it was fine with them, and the y would put it off for
anoth er time. He dec ided to do it. They instructed him to enter into an adjacent roo m; the room
glowed with the sa me color of yellow as did the room he and the co mmittee called the incubator
room. The Aliens wasted no ti me and quick ly placed hi m under a tr ance. After a few seconds he
felt himself beco me detached from his bod y, and then it was as if so meone lifted hi m out through
the top of his head.
It happened exa ctly like what he had read about in books de scribing out- of-bod y experien ces.
These people claimed to have had what was called a "near dea th exper ience." They are
docu mented cases detai ling events on how people who have died fro m an acc ident or illness, and
than resu scitated back to life, or sent back by an om nipot ent being due to some unfinished
business the y had on earth. Ther e were hundreds of these reports throughout the world.
As with an y pheno mena, ther e are plent y of skeptics. Bil l was one of the bigg est skeptics. Like
many, he bel ieved that near -death- experienc es were pure nonsense, “that the whole thing could
be explained by the chem icals tha t are released natural ly by a dying body." One of Bills favor ite
stories (one that was popular in the eight ies) was that when the body was going through the
trauma called "death," the person d ying simp ly reca lled the m oving through th e tunnel as the
birth experi ence from the bir th cana l (moth er’s womb). According to the skepti cs, the brigh t ligh t
of the deliv ery room is what the d ying person sees as he despera tely tries to keep fro m sliding
into the dark ab yss of dea th.
The stories described how the person who died found hi mself floa ting to the top of the roo m and
looking down at his own bod y. Som etimes the y observed the doctors and nurses w orking
frant icly trying to revive them. Some of these peopl e who died re mained on this plan e of
exist ence for a period of t ime and then got sucked back into the ir bodies when the doctors
succeed ed at reviving them. Others reported tha t the moment they died the y were sucked through
what look like a tunnel, and m oved through the tunnel at a high rate of speed. At the end of that
tunne l loved ones, aunts, grandparen ts or friends that had passed awa y greet ed the m. The
depar ted than visited with a be ing that radia ted warn ligh t and pure love for the m. That being
then reveal ed to them their ent ire life withou t judging the m.
Bill did not die and get whisked awa y, but he did experienc e the same curiosi ty of his own bod y
as he hovered above i t. He knew it was his bod y, but seeing hi mself fro m a new perspective was
shocking. He look ed dif feren t from what he had expec ted. Wha t horrified him the m ost about the
exper ience was the sensation of the other body sucking him into it. If it weren 't for the Alien
sedat ive, his m ind would not have been strong enough to survive tha t transfor mation.
Once he was in the other body, it felt natural to hi m. He wa s aware that the bod y he ent ered did
not need to ea t or drink, and that the Alien contr aption inside of i t sustained it. He could not feel
the Alien object that was inside the body and was onl y aware of i t because he knew it was there
from the X-ra y they had taken of it back in the lab. The body radiat ed with vital ity. He w asn't
sure if it was because th e bod y was that of a y ounger man or because it was ener gized by the
Alien battery-pack.
The body was fully cloth ed, so he didn't need to get dres sed. He took his personal be longing,
wallet and keys out of the pants of his dorm ant body, and he was read y to go. Before he could
ask the Aliens abou t the picture on his driver ’s license, they told him to look in his wallet. It was
already taken care of; his iden tity fit his ne w persona.
The Aliens to ld him to have fun with his new self and to take a week to explor e how the bod y
felt. To get co mfortabl e using the new bod y he m ingled with people who were strangers l ike at
the super ma rket. He then set out and went to som e of the favorite hangouts where his friends
and colleagu es might be. When he encountered som eone he knew , he struck up a conversation
with them. He was surprised that his coll eagues fro m the co mmittee who were fa miliar with the
body he was in had no clue that th ey were ta lking to him or th at the body that they worked
around for mon ths wa s now having a drink and a conversation with the m.
He tri ed to giv e himself away by using som e of his own m anner isms. When tha t failed, he tr ied
talking about som e of the same likes and dislik es that their mutual friend Bill had. N othing
worked; his colleagu es never suspected who he was. They merely assume that they had
encoun tered a talk ative and friend ly strange r.
His wife and fa mily did not m iss hi m during tha t week. It was not uncom mon for him to be awa y
from hom e for da ys and weeks at the t ime. He w anted badl y to disclose to some of his friends
who he was, j ust to see the expressions on the ir faces. But after giving it som e thought he
realized the insanit y of th e idea, and the repercussion it could have on the m. Bill walked around
the city looking a little closer at the peopl e he passed on the street and wondered how ma ny of
them where count erfeits like him.
Ther e was no hum anly way of knowing th at answer . The Aliens never gave him a clue to that
question, but the y did te ll him he would know som etime in the future. He thought that if anyone
could detec t a spark of hi m it would be his fa mily, so he posed as an insuranc e sales man and
went to his house. Hi s wife refused his solici tations and did not let him inside the house. He was
glad she refused hi m entry. It was a "stupid idea," he re mind ed hi mself. If an yone made the
conne ction it could only prove harm ful to their psyche.
That was the lesson the Aliens wanted him to learn. They sent hi m down to m ingle with people,
knowing tha t he would want to share his secrets with the m. Secrets tha t he thought were too
fantastic to keep locked up inside of hi m. At times he thought he would go m ad! He felt a strong
need to te ll someone what he was capab le of doing.
After the week passed, Bil l returned to the spot where he was to m eet with the Aliens. The
encoun ter took place at a house that had a “For Sale” sign on it and was vac ant. He m et with two
Aliens who were disguised as real esta te agen ts, the y looked and ac ted to tally human, and
perhaps th ey were. In the house he found his real body waiting for him . It had been kep t aliv e
with an externa l appar atus that covered its m outh and nose. Bill was still not com fortab le seeing
his bod y with that contrapt ion covering his face. The Aliens gave hi m a sedativ e and quick ly
return him to his own bod y. They perfor med a dif feren t procedure than th ey did in the craf t. This
time they used a portab le uni t that fit into a briefcase. As he stood next to his bod y, they simply
fitted a device over his head and siphoned hi m out of the temporar y body and deposited him
back into his old self. It was a tot ally different sensation fro m the first time; it was quick er and he
hardl y knew it happen ed. But after the transfer he did need to la y down for a few m inutes to get
use to his bod y again.
Days later Bil l returned to the office and convened a meeting with the co mmittee. He told the m
what he had done and what the i mplications of that new infor mation meant to th em. For those
who didn't bel ieve him, he described the deta ils of his encount er with them . Still skeptical, his
colleagues replied that he could have gotten that infor mation fro m the ind ividual that he cla imed
to be. He told th em exactly what they were thinking at the time he m et with them. Finall y he told
them that he would dupl icate what had been done to him using one of the bodies th at the y had in
storage. He asked for volunte ers. D uring the ti me Bill occupied the other body he was
clairvo yant. He knew the though ts of people simp ly by visual izing their faces or looking at the m.
He had a feeling that the pheno mena was part of being det ached from one’ s own bod y, and not
necessarily because he was in a m utated hum an bod y. He w as not sure if that was true.
Four fro m the committee volun teered to go through th e procedure. That surprised Bi ll. He didn't
expe ct an y one of the m to tr y it. Bil l had never done the procedure on ano ther person. He
assum ed and hoped that the know-how w ould com e to hi m as he needed it. He expla ined to those
who volunte ered tha t the results of what the y were going to do were not absolut e and he could
run into unforeseen co mplications. After tha t revel ation, three volunteers chang ed the ir minds
and withdrew . Tim, the one who didn’ t, was eager to proceed with the experi ment. Bi ll took no
chan ces and dec ided to perform the transfer in the incub ator roo m rather than use the portable
system that see med less co mplicated. He fel t comfor table working in the craft, unlike the others
who got the willi es while working inside the spaceship. He sen sed what the others didn’ t, tha t
Aliens were in the craft a t all times, but the Aliens re mained invisibl e. Perhaps the others sen sed
the same thing, but since they hadn’ t been for mally introduced to the Aliens, the y remained
uneas y abou t working in the ship.
The Aliens l eft the portabl e system with Bill, and disposed of the bod y that he had used. They
gave him no exp lanat ion about why they left the portable unit with him or wh y they dispo sed of
the body rather than return it to the in cubator room.
The Aliens uplo aded co mplicated inform ation dire ctly into Bi ll’s subconscious m ind. The Aliens
did so bec ause the amount and the t ype of infor mation th ey needed him to know cou ld never be
learned b y the hum an mind on its own.
Tim, who had volunte ered to go through the out-of-bod y process, wa s told by Bill to lie down on
the surgical table next to the bod y that he pick ed fro m the four tha t were ava ilable. As the
process to re move Tim’s soul and plac e it into th e other body started, Bi ll felt the sensation th at
time was slowing down. At first he though he was having the biggest panic attack of his life and
feared he was about to pass out. He had the sick feeling that one gets when sub jecting a friend or
family member to m ortal danger and powerless to to do an ything abou t it. His crisis occurred
when he ca me to the rea lization of w hat the heck he was about to do–rem oving the soul of a
fellow hum an be ing and pla cing i t into a brain- dead bod y. What if the soul slipped awa y, how
would Bil l catch it and put it back into Tim? The weigh t of that responsibili ty crea ted anxiet y in
Bill. He was respon sible for ini tiating something th at onl y he out of the four me n there
supposedl y knew how to perfor m, yet he had never done it before.
In the blink of the e ye and to Bil l’s relief, he saw the same two Aliens that returned him to his
body days earlier appeared in the room with the m. The Aliens quick ly immobilized all of his
colleagues and perform ed the procedur e on Tim, removing his soul and placing it into
Frankenste in nu mber three. Bill was allowed to watch the whole thing and in mo re de tail. The
Aliens wanted hi m to learn how to do it. The event lasted two or three m inutes, and the two
Aliens disappeared as qui ckly as the y appeared. Bill found hi mself standing in the sa me spot he
was before the Aliens played interferen ce for hi m. He was back to nor mal, composed, and no
signs of the stress he had moments earlie r. His coll eagues were not aware of what happened,
although the y were astonished th at the body swap was done so ef fortlessly and congratu lated Bill
on his astounding abilities. Tim was in his new bod y and jum ping around the roo m with
excitement, he could not believ e tha t it actua lly happened!
Tim went to his old bod y and m arveled at it, yelling in disbel ief as he looked at his old bod y and
repeatedl y yelled, "IS THAT WHAT I LOO K LIKE!" His exc itement overwhel med him, and he
passed out. No sooner than he wa s rev ived b y his col leagues and he again worked hi mself up and
fainted aga in. After the second time, they decided to let him com e out of it on his own, which he
did after a few mi nutes.
During tha t time Bill asked the others in the roo m if the y saw an ything out of th e ordinar y. Did
they feel anything while the y huddled around Tim during th e bod y exchang e? They all responded
with a negat ive. All three of the m remembered watch ing Bil l perfor m with the precision of a
machine. They told him how the y were am azed with th e leve l of exper tise he had achiev ed fro m
working with the Aliens. They expressed ad miration for his know-how , but the y also recogniz ed
that his abi lities where gifts from the Aliens and not his o wn. “The y had to be,” the y told hi m.
They did not hid e the fact th at the y, as well as others in the com mittee, were envious of his Alien
conne ction, and reit erated the fact tha t they didn’ t appre ciate being excluded from direct cont act
with the Aliens.
Bill told them that he e mpathized with but that it wasn’ t his cal l or in his power to give the m
face-to-fac e acc ess with the Aliens. Then he revealed what rea lly happen ed in th at roo m during
Tim’s out of bod y exper ience. “He (Bil l) was not the one w ho perfor med lik e a m achine," he told
them. What ever the y had witnessed m ust have been a ma ss illusion creat ed in th eir m inds b y the
Aliens. They argued with Bill and s wore tha t they saw what they saw, and nothing could be an y
clearer , especia lly in the ship. It then occurr ed to the m that nothing is ever cl ear in the ship. They
told Bill what the y saw. That he a lone worked on Tim while Alien gadge ts buzzed around him
like hone y bees around a picn ic tab le in June.
Bill told them what actu ally happened. He w as not even at the tab le when the body snatching
took place. Neither were they! The Aliens had paral yzed them and m oved them out of the wa y as
one mov ed chairs away from a tab le in order to sweep under it. As a m atter of fact, all thr ee of
them were put into one corner of the room facing away from the surgical table altoge ther. The
committee members looked lik e mannequ ins bunched up aga inst a wal l in tha t room, a frightful
sight for Bill.
Bill told them that he was allowed to watch and was not bunched up in the corner with the thre e
of the m, but the Aliens did not co mmunicate with hi m. The Aliens did the job, then moved the
three committee member’s back to the spot they occupi ed around th e tabl e, and disappe ared. He
figured that they let him watch so tha t he would know what rea lly goes on when the going gets
tough and com plicated. Bil l was a super nice guy, but his abi lities co mbined with the privi leges
that were given to hi m by the Aliens had m ade hi m a little arrogant, so he beli eved tha t the
Aliens brought hi m down a few notch es.
Tim told Bill and the oth ers that he wa s able to read the ir minds. He knew what th ey were
think ing while he was unconscious, but bel ieved he wa s drea ming. The committee det ermined
after som e test ing tha t extr asensor y percept ion (ESP) wa s enhan ced when the soul beca me
detached from its bod y. Apparentl y, when in a host bod y, the soul never com pletely gets wired in,
and remains det ached enough so that the soul or the essence of what hu mans are is free to roam
the "psychic air waves."
The success Tim had and the knowledge that the Aliens were keeping on e ye on the m to make
sure things went right gave the other three members the courag e to jum p out of their skins and
test the paranor mal waters. After the other three converted they discover ed tha t they could al l
communicate without verba lly talking to each other . It was as if the y had two-wa y radios in the ir
heads. On the down side, no wa y of turning the m radios of f. That was the drawback; ever y
thought they had wa s ava ilable to the other members.
It took discipl ine and time before th ey were abl e to focus and limit their thoughts to constructiv e
and meaningfu l dialogu e. Distance was not a proble m, neith er were barri ers like under ground
build ings, plac es the y often frequented. They were a lso locked into co mmunication around the
clock and never got use to th at invasion of privac y.
Bill had an understanding of the Aliens that his colle agues lack ed. He didn't be lieve that the
Aliens were capabl e of doing har m to hu mans, despite the fact that they claimed ownership of all
human bodies on this pl anet. Still, he wasn ’t sure exactl y what the y meant by ownership. Bill ’s
colleagues were concerned about where and ho w the Aliens acquired the bodies that they use
when the y mingle “incognito” amongst the hum an population. He told the m that it was probab le
that they either grew the bodi es in one of the ir ships or the y did what the com mittee was doing
and harvested hu mans from the end less reserve of people that are d ying at an y given time.
With the equip ment tha t the Aliens possessed, they could keep hu mans from death. Why didn’ t
they? Asked one co mmittee member. Bill had no an swer other than the obvious one, rapid
overpopul ation. The Aliens told Bi ll that the y do not int erfere with the soul, but the y had
equip ment that allowed them to remove the soul and pl ace it into another body or contain ers on
Alien ships. F or reasons the y would not disclose to Bill. Bill had asked the Aliens about the
exist ence of G od. And were the Aliens god’ s little helpers? They didn’ t respond to ei ther
question.
Bill received good vibes for the m ost part fro m the Aliens he encoun tered, but there were som e
Aliens that re mained in the background and out of com munication with him. He wasn’ t sure
why, but he was thankfu l that they kept the ir distan ce. Bil l felt shield ed fro m the bad vibra tions
from that segment of extr aterrestrials. Nevertheless, those ETs managed to get the little hairs on
the back of his neck to stand up, and he pra yed that he never had to meet them.
The Aliens never disclosed th emselves as ange ls, nor did the y mention tha t there were de mons
among them. That was a sub ject that remained unan swered for Bill. It was po ssible that they
answered i t when the y revealed to hi m that their prim ary concerns for hu mans were th e physical
part of the m. Their ab ility to m ove the soul in and out of th e bod y was me rely a necessar y
funct ion of the ir work, sim ilar to m oving the furniture out of a roo m before cleaning the carpe t!
Bill was taken aboard the Alien craft shortl y after he and his col leagues experi ment with the
bodies. They let him dictate the contents of that meeting. His first question to the Aliens was,
“why did they not he lp people who w ere dying in hospita ls from sickness and ac ciden ts? Since
they the Aliens had the capab ility to cure illness and repair all kinds of da mage that did happen to
humans.
Their response was, " we take orders fro m someon e higher than ourselves, and just like hum ans
manage to alwa ys find som eone higher up the ladder to pass the buck, Aliens too fol low orders
and are passing the buck." He asked the m if Aliens are both good and evil. They said, “unlike
humans, who m ake decisions based on w hat they perceive to be righ t and wrong, in the realm
that the Aliens occup y there is no confusion for the m in tha t depar tment. In other words good and
evil are illusions and exist for a purpose.
On the ship, located in a separa te level from where Bil l was visiting with one of the Aliens, there
was a m an that had been abduc ted ear lier that day. Even before Bil l had this visit with the Alien,
the Alien knew exact ly what was going to take place. He kne w what Bill’s questions were going
to be before Bi ll had form ed the m in his m ind. What then was the poin t of the session ? Bill asked
the Alien. There was no point, the Alien repl ied, or need for the m to have a discussion with
humans. The meeting was strict ly for the benefit of Bill, to give him the opportuni ty of feel ing
comfor table working with the m. They wanted to giv e him a sense that he could com municate
with them face to face if he wished to do so, the wa y humans do.
The discus sion ended, and Bi ll fol lowed the Alien to the room where the other m an was kept.
The man was l ying on the sur gical table and was prepped for so me kind of operat ion. This m an
was in his ear ly fifties and in good health. But not for long!
Bill knew what was taking plac e without anyone saying an ything. He had watched and was
allowed to t ake part in several similar procedures that were done in the past. Mo st of his
internship involv ed the removal of tu mors or fixing other a ilments that plagued the bodies of
those the ET s worked on. Ho wever , the sur gical procedure that was taking pla ce at this ti me
seemed
to see into th e future, the future of the m an who wa s lying in front of him . He could see the m an
dying, his bod y racked with cance r. He could see the m an’s wife in tears when she learns of her
husbands’ prognosis. H e saw the man’s thre e childr en, two daught ers, one sixteen the other
eighteen, and a son who w as ten. He witnessed the agon y that the m an and his wife would go
through as the y struggled with how to break the news to their childr en. He then saw the
devast ation on the fac es of the chi ldren when the y were told about the ir fath er’s illness.
Bill did not want to see anymore all he could think about was his own fam ily and how the y
would be affected if that happened to hi m or one of the m. Bill was angr y. He s houted at the
Aliens, "How could th ey do an evi l thing as this ? Are they ange ls from Hell?”
The Aliens re minded Bill that it was not the ir will to do an ything bad or good. The ETs simply
carried out orders from above, th ey were passing the buck. They could not el aborate more abou t
the incid ent. They hinted that there was mo re at stake in that parti cular family than just the d ying
of a man. Lik e many things that the Aliens stil l had to reveal to Bil l, he was not y et read y to
understand the ful l implication of this one inc ident. Still, his biggest question was wh y are they
showing all this good and bad stuff to hi m? Was he expe cted to be a l iaison betwe en the m and
humans? H ow could he pos sibly fulfil l such a role now that he perceiv es what is being done to
humans by extraterr estria ls as pure m adness? Until that episode, m ost of w hat was revealed to
him was prom ising and good.
“Is ther e invisib le requisi tion forms stam ped on peopl e’s foreheads like at a car assembly line to
indicate what ea ch hu man will have done to the m in their lifetime? Ho w do the Aliens de termine
who gets a tu mor or who has one re moved? Do Aliens cre ate car acc idents or an y accid ent?” Bill
asked. Bi ll had not y et reached the lev el where he had that kind of knowledge. Each new step
that the Aliens took Bill through, the y allowed him time to adjust. So me lesson s requir ed m ore
time than others. The idea of taking a health y hum an be ing and m aking hi m or her il l was the
tougher lesson he had to endure.
The journe y
Bill was told he w ould be going to another planet for two mo nths and tha t he should m ake
arrang ements with his fa mily and th e committee. His wife was acc limated to the l evel of securit y
he worked under and accep ted his w ord tha t he could not disclose where he was going. But she
was a bit perplexed that he would be unabl e to have communications with her and the ch ildren
for tha t leng th of ti me. In the past he a lways found wa ys to com municate with her .
The com mittee members, who sa w ver y little of Bi ll anyway, were indif feren t about his
sabbat ical. His s uperiors were excit ed about his going and asked if the Aliens would let him take
a film cam era with hi m. He told th em that he didn't need to ask the Aliens about th at, he knew
the answer. Bill did not need to physically be present with the Aliens for the m to give him
answers or instruct ions. All he needed was to have a question on his mi nd. If i t was pres sing, he
received the answer instant ly.
While Bi ll was awa y, the com mittee m embers tha t had m ade the leap into the strange world of
body swapping dec ided the y needed to m ake a few discoveri es on their own (without Bill). In
reality the co mmittee had few other choices. It was either tha t or disband the operat ion, since it
was obvious to the ir superiors that they were adding li ttle to the progra m com pared to Bil l’s
contr ibutions. Tim allud ed to the fact that perhaps the y were ignored b y the Aliens because of
their hesit ation to embra ce the freak y ETs. Man y in the progra m lived in terror of the Aliens and
the ship with its thousand s of paranor mal Alien devices. Their appreh ensions interfer ed with
their abi lities to understand and m ake use of what the Aliens put into the ir hands. Although Tim
had the m ost respec t for Bil l, he sti ll felt tha t Bill need ed som e competition fro m them. “Why
should the y be Bil l’s lack eys?” Tim asked his coll eagues.
Tim was certain the com mittee as a whole would m ake more progres s if they were running on
more than one cylinder. Bill was the onl y cylinder that was consisten tly firing conc erning al ien
knowledge. The rest of the committee was along for the ride. They needed to fire up their own
cylinder. Tim had on idea on how to do i t.
His plan was tha t the four of the m that had cros sed over the paranor mal line by entering the
bodies while in th e incuba tor roo m needed to forge a little further in to tha t mysterious rabbit-
hole. He s uggested they make a bold mo ve and go on a m ission of f the base while inhabit ing the
bodies. As expe cted, he found lit tle enthusias m among the other thre e men for that adventure.
The rest of the com mittee thought it was risk y to ent er the bodies without the aid of Bill, and did
not like the idea of taking the bodi es far from the ship or of f the base. Tim remind ed his
associa tes that they were stifled by fear. He was willing to tak e the risk and wanted to know who
else was going to m ove ahead with him. The proble m that Tim faced was that most in the
committee had beco me completely dependen t on Bil l, even though the y despised him . A few of
the com mittee bel ieved that the Aliens were not ther e to mon itor their ac tivities when Bi ll was
not around, which was a reli ef but a lso a concern.
Tim disagreed. He had an indescrib able feeling that the Aliens were not only watching them
during their experi ments on and of f the ship, but were present with the m in the room during
committee meetings. And that the ET s were sil ently placing ideas and strateg y into the minds of
the members. It was during one such m eeting that Tim got a strong feeling that he would have an
encoun ter with the Aliens.
Soon after Tim found hi mself inside a spacecr aft. The craft was nothing like Bill described i t. In
fact, it was so fantast ic that he was convin ced he would not be able to describ e it correct ly to th e
committee. The Aliens told hi m that Bill never was on that parti cular craft and that was part ly
why he could not describe it. The real reason that Bill nor Tim or an y hum an cannot fully
remember the inside of an Alien craft is because some Alien ships are in a constant sta te of flux.
The changes were subtle and few hu mans ever notic e the transform ations taking place in front of
their eyes. The environ ment that Tim was in while in th e ship alt ered con tinuousl y, yet he was
obliv ious to the changes. Tim was on the ship less than one hour , but for hi m that night was the
longest in his lif e. The Aliens revea led m ore to hi m on his first conscious abduction than the y did
to Bill. Tim had benef ited from what Bi ll had alread y learned and was able to take in mo re
infor mation because of the m entoring fro m Bill.
Tim did not see the ext erior of the craft, but fro m what he observed of the inter ior the ship was
very large. It easil y surpassed the size of two footbal l fields on the lev el he wa s on, and there
were m any leve ls. Unlike so me of the show s on te levision and the mov ies, he didn’ t see Aliens
scurr ying about the ship, or lounging around in an int erstel lar tav ern. Apparen tly these Aliens
remained in seclusion. Aliens didn't seem inclined toward s cof fee breaks and gossiping abou t co-
workers or “ doing lun ch.” Alien lif e style is light years dif ferent from how hum ans int eract and
carry on dail y activ ities. The size of the craf t indic ated to Tim that there had to be hundreds of
Aliens onboard the spaceship. He asked but didn’ t get a response for what purpo se that ship
served. It didn't appear that it was used for ferr ying hum ans around because he had not seen any
humans. It wa s possible that just as he was unaware of the changing features of the craft that he
was also unaware of all th e Aliens and hum ans on the spaceship.
During his explor ation of the ship, he saw on several occasions Aliens in the distanc e, but once
he arrived at the place where he thought he saw them like a mirage there was nothing there. He
remembered that the craf t had a huge inner court with a lar ge atrium that was about eleven
stories high. At the top was a cle ar bubble dom e tha t was like a window to the universe. The
glass do me appeared to m agnify the size and bri lliance of th e stars and gal axies. The ship was
not in mo tion, or at least Tim didn't think it was. If it was, Tim felt no sen sation of m ovement.
Looking out through the top of the m assive structure th e view of ear th with i ts single m oon was
exquisi tely spectacular. The onl y other time Tim felt nearer to heaven was while vacat ioning in
Europe and visit ing som e of the massive Gothi c churches. The ship he was in re mind ed hi m of
those magnifi cent buildings with their dazzling profusion of arches and colu mns. The only thing
missing was the motifs and paintings from the Renascence masters. Man y of the designs in the
spaceship were unfam iliar to hi m, yet very impressive. Judging fro m the decor the Aliens
defin itely had a deep apprec iation of beaut y. The a trium glass ma de it appear that the stars and
the plane ts drifted inside of the ship or perhaps the y were holographic images, he was unable to
distingu ish. It was wonderfull y perp lexing experienc e he to ld his envious crew .
While marveling at th e stars and in a state of bliss the Alien tha t had su mmoned Tim to the ship
made his approach. The being announced his arrival telep athically before appe aring, to m inimize
the shock on Tim. Tim remained rel axed. What helped Tim keep his com posure was the fac t that
the Alien reveal ed to him the many previous encounters he had with the extrat errestri als. The
Alien trigger ed som ething in Tim's m emory that unlocked a paral lel life he never suspected
exist ed. Tim had known the Aliens since chi ldhood.
Mixed in with m ind-expanding experien ces and the joyful reunion of past m emories were
horrifi c and disturb ing revel ations as wel l, but Tim did not elaborat e. Tim fought hard to remain
calm as he beca me more aware of his dance through life with these strange cre atures. He was
grateful for th e telepath ic mode of co mmunication bec ause it kept his voic e from break ing and
his te eth fro m chatt ering had he been expected to verba lize his thoughts. That lack of control
bugged Tim. He was proud of his fearlessness throughout his lif e, and few things scared hi m in
life, as did th at Alien encoun ter. Tim, as is true for ma ny humans, falsel y believes that control
resides with them (each of us), but he learned different ly that day. That encount er proved to him
the absolute fantas y of tha t belief.
The next da y, Tim brief ed the com mittee about his contac t with th e Aliens. The Aliens as signed
him a task, which involved four of the co mmittee members en tering into the Frankenstein bodies.
They were instruct ed to go to a house loca ted in one of the suburbs of a lar ge city not far fro m
the base. (The nam e of the city was deleted from the report). For the assignment they used a van
disguised with a phone co mpany logo and equipped to carr y certain Alien gadgets fro m the Alien
craft. There was no list given to Tim by the Aliens on w hat he needed to tak e on the mission. The
Aliens told Tim that he would intui tively know w hat to bring on the m ission when he entered the
craft. Tim inform ed the m embers that they did not need to worr y about using the equip ment to
transfer themselv es out of the ir bodies and into the Frankenstein ones. The Aliens would do the
transfer incogni to and m onitor Tim’s crew while they ventured off the base.
Once aga in the com mittee m embers were m iffed for being excluded from direc t cont act with the
Aliens. They were in deep concerning the Alien phenom ena, and if Bil l and Tim could handle i t
why not the rest of the m? Full disclosure could not be an y more horrifi c than the liv ing dead
bodies they stored in the ship, or an y weirder that the Alien gadgets that had m aimed some of
them. Two of the m ilitary guys on the co mmittee had seen the Aliens when the Air Force first
came in possession of the craft back in 1947. Although, the y only saw them from behind thi ck
glass and for a brief m oment before the Aliens were whisked awa y by another secre t govern ment
agen cy.
Tim actu ally had an answer for his coll eagues. He told them that the Aliens onl y showed
themselves to hum ans that had gone through a series of prepara tions. It was a process si milar to
human inocul ations tha t are given period ically to increase immunity from viruses or other
contagions. The co mmittee members wi shing contac t needed to have their shots before they were
allowed further awareness and Alien conta ct.
If the series of inocul ations (Alien encount ers) are successful, th e Aliens place that individua l
into a higher categor y. That categor y deter mines if and to what ext ent a hum an can parti cipat e
with the Aliens. There are hundreds of such program s where hu mans par ticipate and do jo bs for
the Aliens. But onl y a frac tion of hum ans get to the stage that Bill and Tim operate with full
disclosure. The Aliens the mselv es don't know with certa inty, which hu mans will emerge from the
immunization process, and if the y do, at what level they will be pla ced in the progra m.
Ther efore, who in the com mittee if anyone would be next to cross that threshold was an yone’s
guess. Tim was told that the inocu lations, for lack of a better word, w ere to protec t the minds of
the hum ans and to a lesser degree the ph ysical bodies. The Aliens emitted ener gy that could
damage hu man tissue and i mpede the hu man psyche. In som e cases the ener gy the Aliens
radiated triggered psychosis in hum ans. There were other el ements of the Aliens and the ir craf t
that were har mful to hum ans, but the Aliens did not disclose them to Tim.
Primed for a m ission
The Aliens to ld Tim that his three col leagu es who were previousl y primed for the bodies were on
the craft the sa me night th at he was taken. During the abductions, th e Aliens helped the three
men get over their fear of the assignment they were prepped to carr y out.
Tim and his crew ent ered th e bodies and then loaded up the van and headed to the ir destina tion.
Tim was the onl y one with the knowledg e of where the y were going. It was a four-hour drive
from the base. They made two stop s before they arriv ed at their destinat ion. Although the y did
not require food or ba throom breaks, the Aliens told Tim that they could eat and tha t the bodies
funct ioned nor mally, after all, they were hu man bodies. Part of the experi ment includ ed m ingling
in public so tha t they could beco me comfor table with th e bodies. After they arrived in the town
of the ir destin ation, they rented a roo m at a motel. The next day they toured the city.
The detai ls of the mission were revea led to Tim during that da y. This was a covert operation
within a cover t operat ion. The com mittee members w ho re mained at th e base and th eir superiors
had no idea where Tim and the other thr ee m embers were going or w hat it was the y were going
to do w hen they got th ere.
All the co mmittee members, as well as ever yone involved with the progra m had a chip
embedded under their skin. That chip was the main key to keep ing tra ck of al l personnel in the
depar tment. Ho weve r, the bodies that Tim and the other three men inhab ited had no such
tracking dev ices e mbedded into them.
It dawned on Tim that he and his crew were free from the watchfu l eye of his depart ment for the
first time in m any years. There was no "cle an-up crew" fol lowing the m around other than the
Aliens, and the y were free to do an ything the y desired. If Tim and crew m essed up, or were
involv ed in an accid ent, car or otherwise, th e Aliens w ould remove them from the scene in a spli t
second with the added benefi t of not having to kil l them.
Tim was told to familiarize himself with th e streets and alle ys that intersect ed with the house that
they were to ent er later tha t even ing. It was da ylight when the y locat ed the house. That gave
themselves enough time to m ake plans on how the y would carry out the ir objectiv e without
attracting at tention.
Working while inside the borrowed bodies was an incred ible experien ce. The bodies did not
requir e sleep or food and y et remained at opt imum ener gy leve ls. As the four of the m talked
telepathica lly amongst the mselves, the only regrets that any of the m had was that th ey could not
keep the bodies they were using. While in them they felt no pain, no fatigue and had no nagging
desires for an y earthl y stimulants such as sex, drinking or smoking. Even those that smoked did
not crave cig arettes! It was absolute freedo m from the physical de mands that hum an bodies
impose on us.
Later th at even ing, even though none of the m knew what the ir mission was, the y headed to their
assign ment. It was 3:00 AM, when their van pull ed into the drivewa y of the t argeted house. The
neighborhood was qui te, and most people were sleeping. The m oon was full, the sk y clear, and
dogs barked in the adjacen t yard. They took care not to m ake an y addition al sounds but did not
interfere with the dogs and let th em bark. They enter ed the house through the wal l nearest to the
drivewa y. Tim led the way. Somehow he knew which roo m insid e of the house they were
supposed to go to.
Tim led them up th e stairs, than entered the second bedroom that he ca me to. Tim instruc ted two
of his cohorts to sta y in th e hall and watch for an y occupan ts who m ight wake up and get out of
bed. If an yone did le ave th eir bedroo m it was the crew’ s job to stun the inhab itants with the Alien
wand and th en put the m back to bed. The four of the m wore special shoes tha t were m ade of a
sound absorbing m aterial that muffled creak ing floorboards. The men communicated
telepathica lly and ma de no s ounds during the hom e inv asion.
Inside the roo m that Tim had enter ed was a y oung bo y who had recen tly celebra ted his first
birthd ay. He was sleeping peacefu lly. Tim’s job was to pla ce a small abject into his no se and one
into his ear . Because it was a painful procedure, Time had to paral yze the boy first. Tim knew
that when he insert ed the objects that the bo y would awake and start screa ming. While para lyzed,
the boy would wake up, but be unable to screa m or cr y regardless of the pain. The boy did wake
up but fell back to a sound sleep shortly after Tim completed the procedure, which took less than
two m inutes. Because of the bo y’s young age they didn’ t have to adm inister a mnesia to him.
It was revea led to Tim during that procedure via a hidden memory that some hum ans were prone
to develop so mething akin to an aller gic reac tion when th ey come in cont act with Aliens. When
the Aliens identif y a hu man they are interest ed in th at have such sen sitivity they enlist the help of
humans like Tim, to provide a buf fer as Tim was doing with that boy. By having hum ans ma ke
the first cont act and inserting an Alien antih istamine in to the hum an’s bod y, the Aliens are free to
come into contac t with those individu als without causing the m damage.
The Aliens have emplo yed humans as int ermediaries for thousands of y ears. M ost peopl e who
are abducted do not need that procedure, but those requiring it numb er in th e thousands.
Seconds aft er Tim made the implants thre e Aliens appeared in the room. Tim had a feel ing the y
might drop in. Nevertheless, it caught him off guard. Ther e was no rehearsal fro w hat took pla ce,
no plans or blueprints. Ev erything seem ed to happen spontaneousl y.
It was the best securit y system in th e Galax y. No one could le ak infor mation because ther e was
no infor mation to get leaked. Tim received inform ation te lepathica lly, and it cam e to hi m at the
very last m oment tha t he required i t. Although he felt that the Aliens m ight sho w up, i t was not
part of the infor mation that he was given. It was more like a hunch. Tim knew that the m oment
the Aliens showed up tha t his jo b was co mpleted and that he and his co mpanions need ed to le ave
the area immediately. Tim did not know what took plac e in the boy’s room after the Aliens
entered and he and his crew depar ted. He assum ed th at the Aliens took the boy to their spaceship
were he experien ced his first of ma ny more to co me, abduct ions.
On the way back to the base, Tim told his thre e compan ions that the Aliens appear ed in the room
as the y were leav ing. He asked the m if an y of the m were aware in anyway that the Aliens
showed up. None of the m picked up on the Alien’ s ener gy vibrations nor were they aware of the
Aliens at al l.
Back on the base the discussion cent ered on the ir borrowed bodies and how the y wished the y
could keep the m. What they had acco mplished on the ir mission was not talked about and was
treated as if it never happened. None of the m wanted to re-enterer their own bodi es, it was like
giving up a fine ly tuned racing machine and going back to the old worn out fa mily station
wagon. It took ti me for the m to readjust to their old bodies, the fatigue, the m uscle ach es, hunger
pangs, and th ey needed their coffee breaks back.
During the mission the ir bodies were kept in th e incuba tor roo m attach ed to a system that was
similar to cr yonics tha t suspended bodil y functions.
Tim asked the Aliens what the drawbacks were if a hu man remained inside the Alien m odified
human body for a m onth or mo re. They told hi m that if he or an y hum an re main inside those
bodies more than a few da ys the return to the ir own bod y would be devasta ting. Tim was told
that it was not perm issible for the m to per manentl y move into a resurrec ted dead body, neither
could they be fitted with an Alien organ device. The reasons were si mple ; earth would be utop ia
if such things were allowed. Tuning earth into utopia was not on the Aliens schedule; whether it
ever would be in the future was not for th em to disclose.
Clones
Tim asked the Aliens about clones and whether the Aliens c loned peopl e? They told hi m that
there are many clon es on this plane t. Aliens that take hum an for m are not using the empty shells
of expir ed hu mans; they use hu man clones. They clone fro m cells taken fro m abducted hum ans
like Bil l and Tim. Tim told the m that he’s never run into a copy of hi mself and was not sure how
he would react if he did. The Aliens reassured him that since there is over 6 bill ion people on this
planet that his chan ces of running in to himself were sli m to none.
The Aliens divu lged to Tim in what capac ities the clon es were used. They showed him how one
Alien was able to operate several c lones at the sa me time using m ind control. E ach clon e could
be made to perform a separa te task, or w ork in unison like robots. Clones were used as laborers
to do mund ane and dangerous work, digging tren ches, building function al infr astructure for
villages, or working in or around nucle ar and other exoti c sources of ener gy that Aliens use for a
host of reasons.
The Aliens used clon es for warfare and as formidable armies, especia lly in ancien t times, but
also in mo dern t imes. Bec ause the clones look and act like th e indigenous hum ans, the Aliens are
able to pl ace them anywhere in the world without an yone taking notic e.
The clones are neither robots nor hum ans, the y have no soul and they can’ t function on their
own. Souls can be inser ted into clones but that is not a co mmon prac tice. The clon es are under
the influen ce and guidance of one or mo re Aliens who act as shepherds for the flock, or
commanders over an arm y. The clones cou ld be used and m ade to function like robots, but it’s
simpler to use hu mans with full mental capa city for j obs that require more than a zo mbie.
Hum ans are brought into the progra m just as Bil l and Tim were, because they can function on
their own, and if need be, at the discre tion of the Aliens.
During a subsequent encounter Tim learned a little more about the Aliens and was s hown som e
of the m. The prim ary Aliens, those on the frontlin e of hu man contac t were asexua l. Among them
there are beings that looked as if they fit one sex or the other , but it was not m ade clear to Tim if
they were function ing as sexual beings or if it was onl y window dre ssing. So me Aliens look ed
liked the y were a pat chwork of s pare parts, real examples of the mythologi cal hum an
Frankenste in. There were short, tal l, fat and skinn y Aliens; som e were pal e, gra y, black, blu e, and
metallic in colo r. The various Aliens walked, flew , hovered and were capab le of out landish
calisthen ics. There were hum anoids tha t had hu man featur es and were h ybrids, hu man/Alien.
Some Aliens looked exact ly like humans but they never com municated with Tim, therefor e he
was not sure if th ey were hu man or Alien.
The Aliens to ld Tim that they are one of ma ny different types of extrat errestria l speci es visiting
earth. There are la yers of other Aliens that are above them and below the m in rank, all with their
own specia l tasks to carr y out on this pl anet and throughout the solar s ystem.
Back from Utopia
Bill return ed fro m his two-m onth hia tus and found the com mittee swamped with m aterial they
received from Tim’s Alien encoun ters. The com mittee was bu sy interpret ing and ca tegoriz ing
Tim’s work and had for gotten that Bill was on le ave. However , Bill was not out of the loop as
some had believ ed. Bil l was kept up to date of Tim’s evolving status with the Aliens. He even
had an activ e part in engine ering it while he was awa y. He gave the committee plen ty of ti me to
assimilate the new data fro m Tim before burdening the m with more from his en lighten ment of
the past m onth. He told the m that he need ed to spend t ime with his fa mily and would return after
a vacation with his fa mily. His two chi ldren were in coll ege and he spent a weekend with the m,
then he and his wife went on ocean cruise.
He never divulged exact ly what he did at work to his wife, and curiousl y, she never pried into his
business af fairs. She was a peti te, shy wom an who kept to herself most of the t ime and did
volunt eer work at the loc al hospit al. Her and Bill were exact oppo sites, he was outgoing and
loved to m ingle at parti es, she preferred to sta y home and read or do need le work.
However , Bill had changed aft er his encount ers with the Aliens. Bi ll was no longer the extrov ert
he once was. He w as pensive and mo re relaxed about lif e and shunned awa y from social events
and other publi c gather ings. He stopped going to many of the “impor tant” meetings he was
invited to by the co mmittee. There was nothing he could learn fro m the co mmittee and few
things he could share with the m, so he s pent more time at ho me. At th e work w hen he did
showed up, he onl y spoke when he had s omething to conve y to the co mmittee, the rest of the
time he sat quiet ly and pretended to listen to the other m embers who were speaking. Ther e was
no m ore idle chat from him, something his trusted col leagues m issed, because he was the one
with all the good joke s and juicy stories. Bill discovered that story telling was a double edge
sword, his reputat ion for te lling tall tales in the past cost hi m som e credib ility in his earl y years
with the progra m and som e col leagues remained crit ical his Alien conta ct claims.
Even though he was a “kidder ,” his friends and coll eagues had a deep respec t for hi m. His
knowledge and abil ity to grasp and understand com plicated concep ts astonished ever yone who
knew hi m.
He was talka tive mos t of his adul t life and onl y changed aft er his first few con tacts with the
Aliens. His personal ity chang ed drastic ally after that, and his knowledge see med to quadrup le
every day. His coll eagues nickn amed him “Spock”, after the Star Trek charact er. Unlike Spock,
Bill showed com passion for al l peopl e, especi ally for those who ca me in conta ct with hi m, but he
did maintain a strictl y business me ntality.
Bill’s wife told hi m that while he was awa y she did not m iss hi m at al l. She was not being
sarcast ic. She said she fe lt his presenc e the whole time he was gone. It was as if he never lef t.
Bill could not te ll her that she was with hi m the whole time. An Alien h ybrid had taken on her
looks and personality and was left in her plac e. Because she rarel y visited with anyone it was not
a challeng ing proble m.
Bill asked th e Aliens if he could take her along with hi m and the y had one condit ion, tha t she
would not be allowed to re member and that Bill could not tell her that they went on a jo urney
together to another planet. Bill agreed, although he would have preferred that this trip be the
vacation of a life time for the two of the m. It was mor e impor tant that his wife be with hi m and
not hom e alon e.
While the y were on the ir earth ly vaca tion, Bill’ s wife told him about a strange dream she had
while he was awa y. She told him that they were at a weird and wonderful place, just the two of
them; the kids were not with the m. It was like another planet ; she knew that because i t had m ore
than one sun. The plane t had three suns all different sizes. O ne sun was a li ttle bigger than the
sun the earth rota tes around, th e other two were mu ch smaller but brighter than a full m oon.
Twelve moons circl ed the planet, each one a dif feren t color and size. The moons were inhabi ted
with vast cit ies and m illions of ma gnifi cent buildings. So me large enough to be visibl e from the
planet, and people could trave l without much effort to an y of the m oons. And she and Bi ll did.
The cities she sa w can only exist in drea ms, “their beaut y surpassed rea lity.” She told Bill. The
cities sparkled like diamonds, th e streets like e meralds. The food wa s heav enly and it was the
first time she rem embered t aste and smells fro m a drea m. Like th e cities the food wa s incr edibl y
delicious, i t had to be a drea m, food isn’ t that good on this plan et. She wished she could share
that drea m with hi m. It was so hard to describe how w onderful it made her feel. Had she not
known bett er, she’d swear it was real and not a drea m!
Bill was surprised ho w much the y allowed her to re member abou t the trip she was not aware she
went on. H e though t that the Aliens were going to m ask what had taken place with som ething
that fit more into the earthl y mode of drea ms. He wa s pleased tha t they gave her th at gif t. It
turned out as he wished; they got their fan tasy vaca tion aft er all!
Neverth eless, the y blocked m uch of what she experi enced otherwise her ab ility to live a norm al
life on this planet would be dif ficult. So me activ ities were so fantasti c that both Bil l and his wife
had to be sedated to keep their senses fro m over loading. They had to wear special bodies that
were suit ed to the alien environ ment. Bill and his wife’ s bodies re mained on a ship back in
earth’s solar s ystem. Night and da y occurr ed on cer tain moons but was nothing lik e on earth. The
planet they visited had m ostly sunn y days due to the three stars. Ea ch m oon was a unique
wonderland of adventure. One mo on was a botani cal marvel with thousands of acres of lush
rainfor est harboring num erous species of orchids and various exot ic plan ts and flowers. Som e
moons were l ike the me park s, oth ers y ear-round winter wonderlands with ski slopes and other
winter time activities. Other m oons hosted zoologic al parks with millions of ani mal group s in
natur al hab itats. Water worlds or mor e appropria tely, water moons sported endless m iles of
pristin e beach es and ever y kind of water sport in cluding deep sea explor ation that would make
Jacques Cousteau blush with env y. Endless enter tainment was avai lable to a ll members of tha t
planet and the other plane ts in that solar s ystem. The moons were not the same size but m any of
them were as lar ge as the ear th. The planet itself was enor mous, bigger than Jupiter.
Bill was forbidden to reveal these exper iences to an yone oth er than the co mmittee. The Aliens
were not afraid that Bill would leek out dam aging infor mation abou t them to the general public,
or to his wife. They were conc erned tha t Bill would look foolish to his wife and his friends if he
revealed even a s mall portion of what he was sho wn. He had the discip line to keep fro m telling
the general public. But it took extr aordinar y disciplin e to keep certain secre ts from family and
friends.
The mos t difficult time for Bill came when the Aliens took his own daughter and she woke up
with her nose bleeding. He knew w hat happened to her and what she had been put through, but
he had to m ake up a stor y about what might have caused her nose bleed ing. When he wa s young,
his paren ts told hi m it was someth ing tha t happened to m ost children, and that's what he told to
his daught er.
His daughter was twelv e when he ca me to know the Aliens personall y. He wa s present at one of
her abductions and asked not to be invited to an ymore the m. It was dif ficult enough for him to
watch someone else's chi ld crying during som e of the procedures and unab le to console the m. It
was com pletely unbearab le to watch his own child, especia lly when she looked up at hi m and
cried, "help me, dadd y,” and he cou ld do nothing but observe. Bil l understood so me of the things
that took place and wh y. The things he didn't understand were the m ost painful. If Bi ll woke up
one day and discovered that the Aliens were doing ev il things to hi m and his fa mily, it would not
matter. There is no wa y he could turn the m off. The whole of the United Sta tes Milit ary or of the
world canno t stop or hinder the Aliens in an yway.
He was glad tha t down deep insid e he bel ieved the Aliens to be good and w orked willing ly with
them. But he did have a twinge of suspicion in the back of his m ind. He never fel t like he was a
slave to the Aliens, but because the y were able to implant any reality into his m ind, he was never
completely sure of the ir true inten tions.
The Aliens understood his s uspicions and told him that his abi lity to be suspicious of the m was
proof tha t they did not have absolute control over hi m. If the y did, they could easil y mask over
any doubts in his m ind. Instead, since the Aliens have the upper hand an yway, they are able to
work with hu mans without glossing over a ll fee lings of m istrust hum ans will have.
Few hum ans are able to work with the Aliens in th e capa city that Bill and Tim did. The Aliens go
through an extensive process of eli mination before they find a hum an they can divulge
themselves to.
Bill met others l ike hi mself while visiting the oth er plane t. Not al l of the m were fro m earth;
many who w ere not fro m ear th never theless shared si milar charact eristi cs as hum ans because
they were fro m the same gene pool. Bil l only met with seven who were from others pl anets. The
seven represen ted two pl anets tha t were exa ct dupl icates of earth. There are billions of planets
that are similar to ear th in th e Milk y Way galax y, and ther e are billions of planets th at are
signifi cantly differen t from ear th. Since the pl anets tha t are different had no relev ance for Bill
and the others he was with, they were not discus sed.
On of the highlights for Bill and the others with hi m was when an Alien tr iggered a universal
langu age in them. It was the first de monstration the Aliens did for them and it took place while
he was with th e first group, "the group of seven" Bil l called them . The first m eeting was held in a
magnificent court yard som ewhere in the main city. The Alien spoke a single word to them. That
word was an access code that triggered something inside of the brains of Bil l and those with hi m.
Once th e Alien spoke the word, a s mall are a of the brain tha t was previousl y dormant in all seven
of the m was activ ated. At tha t instan t, the y all began to ta lk to each other with the same langu age
with ease.
Bill was surprise s to find out th at ther e were twelv e others l ike hi m from plan et earth. The twelve
were in the second group that his first group me rged with. Bill and the com mittee members had
theor ized earli er in th e progra m that there had to be other countries on earth with Alien
spacecr aft and technolog y, but had no evidenc e of it.
Bill was one of two earth lings tha t spoke Engl ish. The Aliens triggered that same langu age
module in the lar ger group. O ne of the hu mans at the meeting asked the Alien guide it the y, the
participants, could access this part of the hu man brain on their own once they return ed to ear th.
The Alien told th em they could not. It was not a langu age th at was current ly being spoken on
earth, al though it was spoken on ear th thousands of y ears ago.
Those fro m earth like Bill were not there to share with each oth er what the y did back on the
planet ear th conc erning secre t progra ms. The intent ion of tha t part icular visit was to broaden
awareness a mong the m embers, and to learn a little more of what is involved in being a hum an in
the galax y.
Bill, as did some of the others from earth, expressed their feelings to the Aliens tha t much was
shown to the m but li ttle was given to them to understand. The Aliens responded that not only do
many leve ls of Aliens exist, but so do m any levels of hu man awareness. The understand ing tha t
any one hum an ach ieves depends on the leve l he or she is a t. That alone, deter mines what the y
can com prehend, and keep for the mselv es when they leave and return to th eir plan ets.
On earth there are seven lev els. On other plan ets the range was in the hundreds of higher lev els.
The level a person obta ined is not deter mined b y intelligenc e alone, but co mes from deep inside
the soul. It was not for the Aliens to elabora te on what that mysterious sub stance was. It was
something tha t had to be deter mined by each ind ividua l.
Two out of the twelve hum ans at tha t conven tion were at lev el seven. Bill was not one of the m.
The rest had ach ieved the rank of l evel five or six. Who was at what level was not disclosed.
Hum ans would onl y know the ir leve l after the y had expired, that was all that the Aliens would to
tell them . Once they return ed to ear th, it was unl ikely that Bill would see or me et any of the
eleven peopl e aga in. Throughout histor y, Aliens recruit ed hu mans to do w ork for the m. Bill and
the others were the newest m embers of that fraterni ty.
One of the things revea led to Bill at the convent ion was that not all Aliens are benevol ent. So me
were ev il and spend their t ime interfer ing with hum anity. Bill was told tha t the craft he and the
committee had in the ir posse ssion was not da maged in an acc ident. It had been attacked b y one
of the ships belonging to the reneg ade Aliens.
The shipwreck could have been cleaned up with al l signs of its existen ce kep t secret by the
Aliens, but the y where direct ed by others at a higher level of the m atrix, "to let it remain." The
Aliens allowed i t to co me into the hands of cer tain chosen people that were scheduled to be
brought into the program . It also served to give the renegades a small victor y since they were
determined to give the world a sam pling of the "Alien terror th at loo med before Mankind."
The Aliens l et Bi ll Know that these renegad es ma de up a sm all band of Aliens, and are a miner
irritation in the universe. They are responsible for som e of the sightings tha t are reported.
The Aliens are not here to m ake conta ct; they were here on earth at the dawn of m icrob iologi cal
life on this planet. And the y will be here when the ti me for hum anity has expired. The renegades
have taken people, and have done har m to a few, but even they and the ir deeds have a purpose.
Posted b y Lou Baldin at 10:07 AM 7 comments Links to this post
Labels: Area 51, extraterrestr ials, New Mexico, Roswell, UFO
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In Le ague with a UFO, 2nd edition
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