Found Goat |
24-10-2020 05:08 PM |
The late Charles Fort was of the opinion that humans were like cattle: owned in a sense by a higher life form and utterly unaware of it. The message contained in Nick Redfern's Final Events (published in 2010), which I have just finished reading for the second time, echoes what Fort had speculated on almost a century earlier. The book makes readers wonder: What if Hell exists but just not as traditional religion portrays it as? What if it involves, say, soul-harvesting ufonauts: human souls abducted upon bodily death and tranferred to UFOs or to hellish ET worlds? Final Events begins with the story of two early 20th-century occultists who, via arcane rituals, may have opened a portal to the close encounter phenomenon, in effect being indirectly responsible for the UFO flap of the early 1950s and later the activity of CEIVs in general. The Collins Elite was the official name of a group within the U.S. government that after investigating close encounters reached the conclusion that UFOs and their occupants were by and large sinister, on par with or equivalent to evil misanthropic spirits. In Final Events, we are told of how a few intelligence agents and some scientists, believing in a demonic realm, were at one time interested in learning more about these supernatural entities, in the hope of understanding and acquiring similar powers for the purposes of military use and espionage. We learn of how a number of Contactees had dabbled in or were practitioners of the occult, prior to their encounters with the so-called Space Brothers. In Chapter 4, the account is given of a man who described UFOs harvesting human souls on some hellish planet during an horrific NDE of his. The crux of the book seems to be that as nefarious space visitors or disembodied Nephilim are concerned, whether the Earth may be like a farm to such ones, with our souls a fuel source, providing these beings with vital energy. All this may be why official Disclosure of the alien presence has yet to take place -- for the truth may be too much to handle. Light reading this is not, but potentially of utmost importance.
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