I find it rather odd that this reptilian business is relatively new to the field
of UFO research. I was a bit of a UFO buff in the early 70s, as a child. I never
read a single mention of reptilian phenomenon. This is perplexing, considering
the proliferation of reptilian stories being bandied about now.
As near as I can tell, belief in reptilian aliens snowballed with the release
of David Icke’s “The Biggest Secret”. As it turns out, an
associate of Mr. Icke’s has an interesting story to tell regarding the
genesis of that publication.
The colleague, to hear him tell the tale, has been ostracized for asking questions
regarding the source of some of the book’s most controversial material,
Arizona Wilder. Ms. Wilder (not her real name), was put in touch with Mr. Icke
as he was writing his seminal work. It really is a fascinating book that runs
the gamut from Freemasonry to the New World Order to (gulp) reptilians.
Ms. Wilder, it seems, confirmed to Mr. Icke many of the ideas contained in his
then unreleased, unfinished manuscript. It was as if she had already read it,
the aid claims. And it was Ms. Wilder, he continues, that introduced the idea
of reptilian aliens to Mr. Icke.
The implication is that some one leaked or stole Mr. Icke’s manuscript,
and sent Ms. Wilder in as a plant. This theory, of course, assumes Mr. Icke
was important enough in the minds of certain people to be targeted. I suppose
that is not outside the realm of possibility.
The whole reptilian scenario reminds me uncomfortably about qualms I had with
the work of the late, great Mr. William Cooper. Mr. Cooper revealed a lot of
factual, damaging information regarding our secret government. However, he interspersed
it with details about Nazi flying saucers, bases on the dark side of the moon,
and alien-military interactions.
I cannot definitively say such things are not true, of course. But I believe
mixing aliens in with known government actions tends to make the whole thing
less believable in the minds of the average reader. In other words, disinformation
designed to discredit other conspiracy research.
We see this occurring with 9/11 research, which has become rife with theories
regarding holograms and advanced weaponry, to the detriment of more sober examinations,
such as the extremely thorough work of individuals such as Mr. Dick Eastman.
Imagine some people did view the release of Mr. Icke’s next book with
some trepidation. What better way to taint his research than with false stories
about shape-shifting reptilian aliens?
Perhaps that is why David Icke, Arizona Wilder and Cathy O’Brien are allowed
to say in words and print that the President and Vice-President of the U.S.
are child-molesting, shape-shifting reptilians. These stories take the focus
away from real-world, known issues concerning our world leaders, and instead
present stories which are viewed as ludicrous by the general public.
Of course, there is credible evidence of child sex involving world leaders that
was revealed in what is known as The Franklin Cover-up. Throwing reptilians
into the mix only instills doubt in the minds of many. That, I feel, may be
a grave disservice to the world.
Consider the evidence presented in favor of reptilians: anecdotal, at best.
Certainly, the ancient people and religions of the world told tales involving
reptiles. Or, more specifically, snakes. But this is scarcely surprising when
you consider how dangerous snakes must have been in ancient times: no doctors
or hospitals, no anti-venin. Snakes were representative of all their darkest
fears, it would seem.
I concede that there is an interesting body of work out there regarding the
possibility of reptilian aliens. But as I have told my own children to allay
their fears of the dark, the monster you need to fear most is human. Hearsay
evidence doesn’t hold up in a court of law, and neither should mere supposition
influence our belief systems to a large degree.
To better illustrate the concept of reptilians as disinformation, I highly suggest
you read “The Greenbaum Lecture”, available online. This speech
details several aspects of trauma-induced mind control, which we know is effective
- it was used on American soldiers in the Korean War.
If human beings are indeed traumatized via electroshock and Demerol to instill
behavioral patterns and belief systems, and are used as sex slaves, what better
way to instill doubt as to the veracity of their tales than by introducing false
memories regarding alien abductions? Claim you were abducted and raped by military
personnel, and few would doubt it. But say it was “greys” or “reptilians”,
and your credibility goes out the window. And that would benefit these human
monsters to no end.
It seems we are rather damned if we do, and damned if we don’t. If the
reptilian researchers are incorrect, an enormous amount of time and effort has
been wasted chasing phantoms. And if they are correct, I rather doubt there
is much we can do about it anyway.
As always, I keep an open mind, and continue to research these things. But I
don’t believe we should allow our thought processes to become too clouded
with “maybes” to the degree that we lose focus on the here-and-now,
real world problems facing the world today. War, starvation, disease - people
are dying by the tens of thousands; we don’t need to lay the blame at
the clawed feet of some reptilian overlords, when the perpetrators are on the
television daily.