When Aliens Dined on Humans: If You Believe the Tale.

nivek

As Above So Below
When Aliens Dined on Humans: If You Believe the Tale…
By Nick Redfern

A couple of days ago I wrote an article here at Mysterious Universe on the sensational and over the top story of the “alien underground base” at Dulce, New Mexico. You might think a story like that couldn’t be topped in the unlikely stakes. You would be very wrong. Check out the following. It was in the late 1980s when Ufologist Leonard Stringfield – still highly active in Ufology at the time – received the astonishing and terrible “facts” concerning an incident which supposedly occurred in early 1972, in Tong Li Sap, Cambodia, which is situated in south-east Asia, and when the Vietnam War was still raging. The story is told in Stringfield’s UFO Crash / Retrievals: The Inner Sanctum, which was self-published in July 1991.

A group of expert marksmen were secretly and silently parachuted in late one night to an area that bordered closely on North Vietnam. The operation was a vitally important one: to take out a North Vietnamese facility that, U.S. Intelligence had been able to deduce, was clandestinely listening in on top secret conversations between high-ranking American personnel in South Vietnam. The team camped down for the night, fully prepared to make a full assault on the North Vietnamese team as dawn broke. It never happened. Rather, it didn’t happen the way that it was envisaged. The group made a skillful and stealthy approach on the area, using the dense foliage for cover. Only to find to their terror that something unearthly had changed the situation – and drastically so, too.

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As the team got closer to the area in which the North Vietnamese unit was hunkered down, they suddenly found themselves confronted by a large, ball-like craft that sat atop three, sturdy, metallic legs. The craft suddenly began to hum – something which caused instant sickness, dizziness and disorientation on the part of the U.S. troops. Fighting the need to throw up and get out of the area quickly, they were suddenly rooted to the spot by a group of strange-looking, humanoid creatures that, today, we would call “the Greys” of UFO lore.

Barely believing what they were seeing, the group was even more horrified by what the creatures were doing: handling various human body parts and placing them into large containers: arms, legs, torsos, heads; the grisly list went on and on. Some were the remains of white people, others were black. Several looked like Vietnamese. Managing to keep the sickness and dizziness under some degree of control, the team crawled forward on their stomachs. The commanding officer silently gave the order to fire: salvos of bullets slammed into bodies of the creatures – who barely seemed fazed by the assault. That is, aside from one, which was said to have been killed by a shot to the head. Several of the U.S. troops lost their lives, and others were left severely burned by the effects of an unknown weapon. The aliens then quickly retreated, loaded the containers into the craft, and vanished into the skies above.

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In no time at all, another team was on the scene – “CIA types,” as one of the survivors told Stringfield. All of the surviving men were given certain, mind-altering drugs to try and make them forget the incredible affair – which, apparently, worked (so we’re told…). At least, for a while it worked. In the late 1980s, however, two members of the team started to experience dramatic and nightmarish flashbacks to those events of April 1972, which prompted one of the team to contact as many of the others who could be found. Two were dead, three could not be located, but the rest were able to meet up in August 1988 and decided that the story needing telling.

After being approached with the story, Stringfield did exactly that: he published it for anyone and everyone that wanted to see it. Yep, that’s quite a story – and that’s the underestimation of the month. Possibly of the year. And I don’t care how credible the source might have been, let’s see some evidence. If it can’t be found, I suggest that we lay the whole thing to rest.

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nivek

As Above So Below
When and Where Aliens Just Might Eat You – So Some Say
By Nick Redfern

Tales of an alleged, massive, multi-leveled underground base at the town of Dulce, New Mexico abound. Largely, the stories began during the controversial saga of Paul Bennewitz, a scientist based in Albuquerque, New Mexico at the time. We’re talking about roughly from 1979 to the mid-1980s. Bennewitz was subjected to a wave of UFO-themed disinformation – led by military-intelligence personnel – that caused him to walk away from the UFO subject and pretty much for good. Frankly, I have no faith – at all – in the theory that Dulce has a gigantic subterranean facility far below. I think it’s ongoing disinformation – and still from the world of spies and counterintelligence experts. It is, however, intriguing to take a look at the words of those who do believe the stories might have some degree of reality. That’s the subject of today’s article. If the stories coming out of Dulce really are true, then we may well be in big, big trouble. All of us. Rumors suggest there are multiple levels in the Dulce base, which is said to extend miles down into the Archuleta Mesa and where the ETs are said to be conducting bizarre experiments and procedures – which involve using us as food items. In The Dulce Base the pseudonymous “Jason Bishop III,” who also uses the name of “Tal Lavesque,” quoted an insider from the Dulce installation, who circulated his own statement to the UFO community. That man was Thomas E. Castello. He said:

“Level 7 is worse, row after row of thousands of humans and human mixtures in cold storage. Here too are embryo storage vats of humanoids in various stages of development. I frequently encountered humans in cages, usually dazed or drugged, but sometimes they cried and begged for help. We were told they were hopelessly insane, and involved in high risk drug tests to cure insanity. We were told to never try to speak to them at all. At the beginning we believed that story. Finally in 1978 a small group of workers discovered the truth.” The alien truth, that is. Another source who has revealed what he knows about the Dulce base is Alan B. de Walton, who writes under the name of “Branton.” He claims to know – from what was secretly learned by some of the workers who fled for their lives when the aliens gained complete control of the base in 1979 – something remarkable, and which has a notable bearing on the theme of this book. Branton stated in his The Dulce Book that during the course of his research he learned that the human body is, in reality, “…surrounded by the etheric ‘body,’ surrounded by the astral ‘body,’ surrounded by the mental ‘body.'”

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Now, we come to the most important part. One of Branton’s Dulce insiders revealed to him: “We also actually have an extra ‘body,’ the emotional ‘body,’ that the aliens don’t have. This part of us constantly puts out a kind of energy they cannot generate or simulate. This emotional energy…is to them, like a potent, much sought-after drug. They can take it out of us and bottle it, so to speak…Also during this ‘harvesting,’’ Greys will look directly into our eyes, as if they are drinking something or basking in light.” In a 1991 book Matrix II, Valdemar Valerian refers to one particular alien abductee at the Dulce base seeing “…a vat full of red liquid and body parts of humans and animals…she could see Greys bobbing up and down, almost swimming.”

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Joshua Cutchin is the author of a 2015 book, A Trojan Feast: The Food and Drink Offerings of Aliens, Faeries, and Sasquatch, Cutchin’s findings add to this bleak and harrowing controversy: “While abduction research does not overtly suggest that aliens are harvesting people for consumption, there may be a grain of truth to the report [contained in the pages of Valerian’s Matrix II]. ‘Nourishment is ingested by smearing a soupy mixture of biologicals on the epidermis. Food sources include Bovine cattle and human parts…distilled into a high protein broth…'” David Jacobs is the author of two books on alien abductions, The Threat and Walking Among Us. He believes that “aliens obtain fuel differently from humans, that their skin has a very unique function, and that they convert ‘food’ to energy very differently.” This may well be connected to the concept of what is known as “foyson.” It’s a centuries-old word that is directly linked to another kind of diminutive entity that, just like the black-eyed Greys of Ufology, were also renowned for kidnapping people and leading them to magical realms: the fairies. In terms of what foyson is, Patricia Monaghan, in her 2008 book, The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore, explains that, “Within every substance on earth is its foyson…The foyson of food is its nourishment, and it was this, Irish folklore contends, that the faeries stripped form food when they stole it. The milk might remain there, creamy in the milk pail, but without its foyson, it had no nourishment left.”

A fascinating, collective story, to be sure. But, I still think that – as it relates to Dulce – the whole thing was created by intelligence agencies who were trying to destabilize Paul Bennewitz – and, in the process, so many bought into it all and still do. Taking in consideration the fact that this story is filled with horror and nightmarish claims, you better hope I’m right.


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Cosmic Cat

Honorable
Interesting topic..Will read when I get some time...Kinda reminds me of some of the stuff Timothy Green Beckley writes....Here is one of the more strange ones:
 
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