Mar 07 2007
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Screening the Aliens
“What the aliens are planning to do is put their own race on our planet, so their process now is to create that race that uses some human genes mixed with their genes, as fantastic as the story sounds. They start taking children when they’re a very young age. They actually have these children play with their hybrid children to teach hybrids how to be human,” says Seattle-based inventor Michael Menkin, who has worked for NASA and Boeing, and who has created what he terms the Thought-Screen Helmet. Want to know what on Earth (or off it) that’s all about? Read on….
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March 7th, 2007 at 7:44 am
Nick:
I have to get one of these thought-screen helmets. I just know it would look great with my implant prevention coveralls and my anomalous object filtering sunglasses.
March 7th, 2007 at 9:14 am
March 7th, 2007 at 9:15 am
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin-foil_hat
March 7th, 2007 at 9:16 am
from wikipedia:
“Tin-foil hats and paranoia
There have been some people who believe in the efficacy of tin-foil hats and similar devices. Reasons for use include preventing perceived harassment from paranormal beings or stopping the experience of hearing voices in one’s head. These draw on the stereotypical images of mind control operating by ESP or technological means, like microwave radiation. Belief in the effectiveness of tin-foil hats is popularly linked to mental illnesses such as paranoid schizophrenia.[1]
The delusion of “mind control rays” or other invasive mental activity may seem very real to those afflicted with severe paranoid delusions, and such persons have been known to make and wear improvised defences against the imagined invasion. While aluminium foil and tin-foil are traditional, less fragile materials such as metal window-screen mesh are now more commonly used.[citation needed] Electrical conductivity is seen as a key quality, due to the Faraday cage effect.”
March 7th, 2007 at 9:18 am
are people who make these devices crazy or are they driven to do “crazy” things because of their experiences?
March 8th, 2007 at 7:37 am
Seein: LOL, yeah I’m sure they look quite a sight!
March 8th, 2007 at 7:38 am
Ecks:
Interesting question! It actually reminds me of Greg’s “Project Beta” book with Paul Bennewitz using various shielding methods to try and prevent “the aliens” from getting to a particular abductee.
March 8th, 2007 at 7:32 pm
How funny do you think it is to the young lady drawing the pictures?
Or her Mother….
How funny was it to the kids at the Ariel School in SA?
Laugh it up. Maybe it’s your kid that will be next. I’m just sayin…
March 9th, 2007 at 10:25 am
Jonah:
I certainly was not making light of the experiences of any abductee. I am sure it is a very frightening and traumatic event for many. Mr. Menkin’s thought-screen helmet may or may not work - I do not know. I do know that we should not take any topic so seriously that we can’t find humor in it once in a while. I have no doubt that some in the UFO community get upset when people make claims like Mr. Menkin because it makes it that much harder for ufology to be taken seriously by science. But why get an ulcer when you can smile?
March 9th, 2007 at 5:48 pm
“I certainly was not making light of the experiences of any abductee.”
I’ll remember that the next time I step into my “Implant Prevention Coveralls”…
Realize that as Ufologist run around trying to prove or disprove their respective theories or somehow redeem a life spent chasing UFOs by being recognized as legitimate by mainstream science (don’t hold yer breath), there are those that have engaged the ETH in a much deeper way. And they live daily with the snickers from friends or family, most of the time secretly. What they don’t need it from is those who profess to be truth seekers, because the truth is, no one really knows WTF is going on.
As for the ulcer and finding the humor, I’ll try to remember that the next time I have a visitor. Maybe we’ll invite you over for tea and jokes.
…LOL
March 11th, 2007 at 5:51 am
Jonah:
You seem to be misunderstanding the intent of the joke. It was aimed at the claim that wearing a helmet will solve the abduction problem, not at abductees as you seem to insist. My use of “implant prevention coverall” was only to emphasis that point. If next week someone were to claim that clicking your heels three times while saying there is no place like home will cure a specific disease, are we laughing at the victims of this disease if we poke fun at how silly that sounds? Of course not.
The evidence seems to point to the fact that these beings have been visiting the Earth for hundreds if not thousands of years. Many of the things they do (walking through solid objects, levitation, etc.) appear to be so far in advance of our knowledge that we see it as breaking the laws of nature. Since the 1940’s Ufologist (and Governments) have been trying to figure out what this is all about. And as far as I know, no one has figured it out yet. I am sorry but I find it humorous that the plans of such beings can be defeated by simply putting on a helmet, even if it really works. I hope this clears up the intent of my little joke.
All the best.