UFO expert blasts Pentagon’s ‘bombshell’ research on physical dangers of alien encounters

UFO expert blasts Pentagon’s ‘bombshell’ research on physical dangers of alien encounters

Synopsis

Since the Pentagon published its comprehensive research into UFO reports, UFO reports have been treated more seriously, yet a notable ufologist has expressed grave reservations about the report.

UFO expert blasts Pentagon’s ‘bombshell’ research on physical dangers of alien encounters
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Since the Pentagon published its comprehensive research into UFO reports, UFO reports have been treated more seriously, yet a notable ufologist has expressed grave reservations about the report.

The multimillion-dollar report looks into what the US terms Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) and was sparked by an unexplained contact with the USS Nimitz in 2004.

While the US military’s official opinion is that the phenomenon is unknown but unlikely to be proof of alien contact, one recently declassified paper discloses odd bodily side-effects from contact with UFOs, suggesting they could pose a threat to humans.

Injuries caused by “anomalous advanced aerospace systems” are described in a 12-year-old paper created by Bigelow Aerospace as part of a $22 million US government contract.

It includes testimonies from persons who have seen or been in contact with UFOs and then experienced a variety of bodily symptoms, including migraines, temporary paralysis, and what look to be radiation burns.

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Much of the information in the study appears to have come from a 1996 dossier put together by UFOlogist John F. Schuessler.

A few from the United Kingdom are among the dozens of case reports.

A woman in Rowley Regis, West Midlands, spotted a “strange light” in her lawn, according to one report.

“She called the dog inside and he laid down as if drugged,” the report states.

Then three small entities appeared inside her house, seemingly talking with her telepathically for a brief moment before departing in a “egg-shaped” ship that left a circular dent in her grass.

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“I felt sick and had sore eyes for a week,” the woman later said. Her electric clock stopped working, and all of her videotapes were damaged, according to the report, as if they had been subjected to a strong magnet.

An alleged ‘alien abduction’ was claimed in Livingston, Scotland, in the same year, 1979.

“Robert Taylor encountered a large object while walking in the woods,” the report says. “Something came out from it and grabbed him as he lapsed into unconsciousness.

“When he came to he remembered the choking odour in the air. He had a blinding headache, burning sensation on his chin, itching on his left thigh, and he was extremely weak”

Trace marks were discovered on the ground where the occurrence occurred once again after the incident.

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A year later, a third strange occurrence occurred in Todmorden, West Yorkshire.

“Police officer Alan Godfrey was coming off duty when he found an oval-shaped object hovering over the road ahead,” the document states.

“He sketched it into his report pad and found himself down the road further than he should have been. He went back to the spot and found the road dry in a swirled pattern”.

Godfrey later recalled, under hypnosis, how a ray of light blinded him and forced him to pass out. He awoke in a chamber where he was being inspected by small, strange-looking beings for medical reasons.

“I never said I was abducted by aliens,” he later told the Huddersfield Daily Examiner.

Godfrey had been the officer in charge of the investigation into the death of Zigmund Adamski, 56, six months before. This, too, has been attributed to an alien contact.

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While some have called the recently disclosed Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP) documents a “bombshell of Pentagon revelations,” British UFO researcher Nigel Watson is sceptical.

According to the Daily Star, he said: “None of these cases were actually researched by AAWSAP, or by any official UFO investigation team in the US or the UK.

“Indeed, these and the other cases are merely culled from UFO magazines and tabloid newspapers like the National Enquirer. A rather lazy way of collecting data for a serious research document”

“The only bombshell,” from the multi-million dollar report, Nigel says, is that the Pentagon paid so much for so little!”

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