Aliens & the Paranormal
The Vatican appears to be playing a leading role in preparing the world for extraterrestrial disclosure after organizing a 5-day conference on astrobiology chaired by Bishop Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo on private Vatican grounds from November 6-10. This openness to ET possibilities is consistent with reports of secret discussion held at the UN to discuss increased UFO activity. [more info]
Despite an initial press release from the US military authorities that the army had "gained possession of a disc," the incident in 1947 in which a "flying saucer" is said to have crashed near Roswell, New Mexico, was dismissed by the military 24 hours later as a crashed weather balloon. Rumours, however, persisted, and Roswell now features prominently in UFO lore, despite an official government report in 1994 that dismissed the UFO/alien rumours. Now those rumours may at last have credible backing because, last week, Lieutenant Walter Haut, the public relations officer who issued the original and subsequent press releases on the orders of the base commander, Colonel William Blanchard, issued a deathbed testimony in which he states that a crashed metallic egg-shaped object around 3.6 - 4.5 meters in length and 1.8 meters wide was recovered by the army complete with small humanoid occupants (with large heads), which he witnessed first hand. Before his death, he never spoke publicly about the incident, dismissing the possibility that he is a publicity seeker.
A group of researchers working at the Human Genome Project believe that 97% of what scientists often refer to as "junk DNA" — the DNA that does not seem to code for anything — may be genetic sequences for extraterrestrial life forms. They postulate that our DNA encodes for much more than just human beings but that most of the program has been switched off by whoever programmed it. You can find this article here.
John
E. Mack, M.D. 1929-2004
Dr. John Mack was instantly killed by a car
while he was crossing a busy road in London on September
27th. It was a tragic end to the man who gave alien
abduction academic legitimacy. Mack was previously
a professor of psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, and he was also a brilliant writer, winning the Pulitzer
Prize in 1977 for his biography of T.E. Lawrence. This
first class background gave him the tools he needed
to tackle perhaps the most enigmatic of phenomenon — alien
abduction — which he started working on in 1990.
He wrote "Abduction - Human Encounters with Aliens" in
1994, and "Cosmos: Human Transformation and Alien
Encounters" in 1999. We have no doubt that he continues
his research, but now from a more revealing vantage
point. Thank you and God bless you Dr. Mack.