Abduction phenomenon is related to the alien-human hybridization program
Subject: Abduction phenomenon is related to the alien-human hybridization program
From: "Sir Arthur C.B.E. Wholeflaffers A.S.A." <science@zzz.com>
Date: 16/08/2009, 15:01
Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors,alt.paranet.ufo,sci.skeptic

Q: You've mentioned several times that the abduction phenomenon is
vast, so let's talk numbers. How widespread do you think it is, and
where do your figures come from?

BH: That's one more thing that I don't want to get into, because it
would sound too crazy. But we have done some tests. David Jacobs has
developed a questionnaire that he uses with his students at Temple
University, which contains subtle questions suggesting UFO
experiences. The outcome of those tests would imply that a lot of
people—let's put it that way—have had these experiences. I have
identified perhaps fourteen or fifteen people who have turned out to
be abductees who were personal friends or business acquaintances of
mine for years before the UFO subject even came up. To find fourteen
or fifteen who are abductees from just that circle of people has to
tell me something. I've done enough talk shows and interviews to have
discovered that the number of people out there who respond
legitimately, in my opinion, and even people who are in the media who
have had these experiences, is staggering. It just seems impossible to
me that this hasn't involved an enormous number of people. Now, that
doesn't make any sense, but it happens to be true. A lot of the data
doesn't make sense from a human perspective, but we're not working
with a human perspective. It certainly doesn't make sense from a "CIA"
perspective, to be running around, starting in 1929, putting implants
in people's heads. The numbers are vast.

Q: Were you ever concerned that going public with your findings could
result in contaminating your future research, and have you had any
second thoughts about that since you did go public?

BH: I've had to give thought to all of these issues. It's an ongoing
process of weighing the pros and cons, as to what you make public.
Obviously, I have weighed making public my idea of numbers and decided
not to go into it. I still try to be careful about all this. But I get
letters, for instance, from people who say, "Even if I don't hear from
you, even if you don't read this letter, it has helped me enormously
to have sat down and written it." And I have no doubt at all that
there are a number of people alive today who would not be living if
those books hadn't been written. They would have been driven to
suicide just by the sense of hopelessness and confusion and self-doubt
and terror that they're living with—post-traumatic stress disorder in
some cases. Just to have been able to provide a safety valve for such
people, so that they feel, "Thank God I'm not crazy, thank God I'm not
alone," that is enough, in terms of saving lives, to have justified
the entire enterprise.

I've looked into cases where suicide attempts have been made by
teenagers prior to the parent getting hold of my book and then the
parent realizes that this child is talking about terrifying figures
with huge eyes coming in at night and doing things to the child, and
there are physical marks and so forth. The parent is then able to talk
to the child, and the child is able to hear a little bit about what
has happened to other children Putting people together so that they're
able to have someone to commiserate with and understand their plight
has been an enormously therapeutic effort for society as a whole. So I
really haven't any regrets about anything I've written.

Q: Some researchers speculate that the abduction phenomenon is
specifically related to an alien-human hybridization program. What
evidence do you have on this possibility of hybridization?

BH: In essence, I believe I'm the one who dropped this theory onto the
world's table, with Intruders, when I first dealt with the genetic
focus of the whole UFO phenomenon.

At an earlier stage of ufology, we mainly used to collect UFO
sightings and compare notes on craft. In those days, when we didn't
even accept, as David Jacobs has said, that a UFO might have an
inside, let alone people in there who are doing something, we were in
the position of trying to get the license plate number on the getaway
car without having figured out what the crime was. It was a very odd
way of proceeding, though maybe the only way we could have at the
time. I think by the early 1980s, when the abduction phenomenon became
more widely seen, we began to understand that the reason they're up
there flying around has to do with an interest they have in human
beings. They're not here looking for tungsten or something; they're
here because they're interested in us.

When I reluctantly came to take seriously the evidence I was getting,
it became very clear to me that the whole purpose behind the UFO
phenomenon from the beginning has been this reproductive focus—that
they are here because we possess certain physical, genetic, and
perhaps emotional or even spiritual things that they desperately need.
I feel that they need something desperately that they can only get
from us, whatever that may be, and that the hybridization attempts are
certainly central to it.

As to whether or not there are people walking around or earth who are
hybrids, let me put it this way. With all the


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