EXO-VATICANA
(Pt 8)
Petrus Romanus, PROJECT LUCIFER, and the Vatican's astonishing exo-theological plan for the arrival of an alien savior.
You only think you know what's coming...
Posted: January 27, 2013
8:00 am Eastern
[11]
Ibid
Petrus Romanus, PROJECT LUCIFER, and the Vatican's astonishing exo-theological plan for the arrival of an alien savior.
You only think you know what's coming...
Posted: January 27, 2013
8:00 am Eastern
PART
8: BEASTLY ENCOUNTERS
|
Continued From "Close Encounters of the Skinwalking, Shapeshifting, Demonic Werewolf Kind" (Pt 2)By Tom Horn & Cris Putnam |
Continued... Another cryptid sometimes associated with Bigfoot, which was first reported in the 1980s on a quiet country road outside of Elkhorn, Wisconsin, is called “The Beast of Bray Road.” |
A
rash of sightings
between the ’80s and
’90s prompted a
local newspaper (Walworth
County Week) to
assign one of its
reporters named Linda
Godfrey to cover the
story. Godfrey started
out skeptical, but
because of the
sincerity of the
eyewitnesses, became
convinced of the
creature’s
existence. In fact,
she was so impressed
with the consistency
of the reports from
disparate observers
(whom the History
Channel’s TV series MonsterQuest
subjected to lie
detector tests in
which the polygraph
administrator could
find no indication of
falsehoods) that she
wrote not only a
series of articles for
the newspaper but
later a book, titled Real
Wolfmen: True
Encounters in Modern
America. In her
book, she claims that
“the U.S. has been
invaded by upright,
canine creatures that
look like traditional
werewolves and act as
if they own our woods,
fields, and highways.
Sightings from coast
to coast dating back
to the 1930s compel us
to ask exactly what
these beasts are, and
what they want.”[1]
Her book presents a
catalogue of
investigative reports
and first-person
accounts of modern
sightings of
anomalous, upright
canids. From
Godfrey’s witnesses,
we learn of fleeting,
as well as
face-to-face,
encounters with
literal
werewolves—canine
beings that walk
upright, eat food with
their front paws,
interact fearlessly
with humans, and
suddenly and
mysteriously
disappear. While
Godfrey tries to
separate her research
from Hollywood
depictions of
shapeshifting humans
played by actors like
Michael Landon or Lon
Chaney Jr., she is
convinced there really
are extremely large,
fur-covered,
anthropomorphic,
wolf-like creatures
that chase victims on
their hind legs.
Eighteenth-century
engraving of a
werewolf
Werewolves,
like other cryptids,
are deeply connected
in history not only
with occultic lore but
with the alien-similar
fauns and incubi that
sought and obtained
coitus from women. In
the ancient Bohemian
Lexicon of Vacerad (AD
1202), the werewolf is
vilkodlak,
on whom the debauched
woman sat and was
impregnated with
beastly seed.[2]
St. Patrick was said
to have battled with
werewolf soldiers and
even to have
transformed the Welsh
king Vereticus into a
wolf. (The strange
belief that saints
could turn people into
such creatures was
also held by St.
Thomas Aquinas, who
wrote that angels
could metamorphose the
human form, saying,
“All angels, good
and bad have the power
of transmutating our
bodies.”[3])
Long before the
Catholic saints
believed in such
things, the god Apollo
was worshiped in Lycia
as Lykeios or Lykos,
the “wolf” god.
The trance-induced
utterances of his
priestesses known as
Pythoness or Pythia
prophesied in an
unfamiliar voice
thought to be that of
Apollo himself. During
the Pythian trance,
the medium’s
personality often
changed, becoming
melancholic, defiant,
or even animal-like,
exhibiting a psychosis
that may have been the
original source of the
werewolf myth, or lycanthropy,
as the Pythia reacted
to an encounter with
Apollo/Lykeios—the
wolf god. Pausanias,
the second-century
Greek traveler and
geographer, agreed
with the concept of
Apollo as the original
wolf man who, he said,
derived his name from
the pre-Dynastic Apu-At,
an Egyptian god of
war. But Virgil, one
of Rome’s greatest
poets, held that
“the first werewolf
was Moeris, wife of
the fate-goddess Moera,
who taught him how to
bring the dead back to
life.”[4]
Romans of that era
referred to the
werewolf as versipellis, or the “turn-skin,” reminiscent of later indigenous
peoples of America who
still believe in “skinwalkers,”
or humans with the
supernatural ability
to turn into a wolf or
other animal.
ENTER THE SKINWALKER
According
to local legend, a
ranch located on
approximately four
hundred eighty acres
southeast of Ballard,
Utah, in the United
States is (or at least
once was) allegedly
the site of
substantial skinwalker
activity. The farm is
actually called
“Skinwalker Ranch”
by local Indians who
believe it lies in
“the path of the
skinwalker,” taking
its name from the
Native American
legend. It was made
famous during the
’90s and early 2000s
when claims about the
ranch first appeared
in the Utah
Deseret News and
later in the Las
Vegas Mercury
during a series of
riveting articles by
journalist George
Knapp. Subsequently, a
book titled Hunt
for the Skinwalker:
Science Confronts the
Unexplained at a
Remote Ranch in Utah
described how the
ranch was acquired by
the now defunct
National Institute for
Discovery Science (NIDS),
which had purchased
the property to study
“anecdotal sightings
of UFOs, bigfoot-like
creatures, crop
circles, glowing orbs
and poltergeist
activity reported by
its former owners.”[5]
A two-part article by
Knapp for the Las
Vegas Mercury was
published November
21 and 29, 2002,
titled, “Is a Utah
Ranch the Strangest
Place on Earth?” It
told of frightening
events that had left
the owners of the
ranch befuddled and
broke—from bizarre,
bulletproof
wolf-things to
mutilated prize cattle
and other instances in
which animals and
property simply
disappeared or were
obliterated overnight.
As elsewhere, these
events were
accompanied by strong
odors, ghostly
rapping, strange
lights, violent
nightmares, and other
paranormal phenomena.
Besides the owners of
the Skinwalker Ranch,
other residents
throughout the county
made similar reports
over the years. Junior
Hicks, a retired local
school teacher,
catalogued more than
four hundred anomalies
in nearby communities
before the year 2000.
He and others said
that, for as long as
anyone could remember,
this part of Utah had
been the site of
unexplained
activity—from UFO
sightings to Sasquatch
manifestations. It was
as if a gateway to the
world of the beyond
existed within this
basin. Some of the
Skinwalker Ranch
descriptions seemed to
indicate as much. For
example, in one event
repeated by Knapp, an
investigator named
Chad Deetken and the
ranch owner saw a
mysterious light:
Both
men watched intently
as the light grew
brighter. It was as if
someone had opened a
window or doorway.
[The ranch owner]
grabbed his night
vision binoculars to
get a better look but
could hardly believe
what he was seeing.
The dull light began
to resemble a bright
portal, and at one end
of the portal, a
large, black humanoid
figure seemed to be
struggling to crawl
through the tunnel of
light. After a few
minutes, the humanoid
figure wriggled out of
the light and took off
into the darkness. As
it did, the window of
light snapped shut, as
if someone had flicked
the “off” switch.[6]
In
1996, Skinwalker Ranch
was purchased by
real-estate developer
and aerospace
entrepreneur Robert T.
Bigelow, a wealthy Las
Vegas businessman who
founded NIDS in 1995
to research and serve
as a central
clearinghouse for
scientific
investigations into
various fringe
science, paranormal
topics, and ufology.
Bigelow planned an
intense but very
private scientific
study of events at the
farm. He was joined by
high-ranking military
officials, including
retired US Army
Colonel John B.
Alexander, who had
worked to develop
“Jedi” remote
viewing and psychic
experiments for the
military as described
in Jon Ronson’s
book, The
Men Who Stare At Goats,
former police
detectives, and
scientists including
Eric W. Davis, who has
worked for NASA. In
the years before,
Bigelow had donated
3.7 million dollars to
the University of
Nevada at Las Vegas
“for the creation
and continuation of a
program that would
attract to the
university renowned
experts on aspects of
human
consciousness.”[7]
Bigelow’s
Chair for the
university program was
parapsychologist
Charles Tart, a man
“famous for extended
research on altered
states of
consciousness,
near-death experiences
and extrasensory
perception.”[8]
But
what Bigelow’s team
found at the
Skinwalker Ranch was
more than they could
have hoped for, at
least for a while,
including “an
invisible force moving
through the ranch and
through the
animals.”[9]
On this, the Las
Vegas Mercury
reported in November
of 2002: “One
witness reported a
path of displaced
water in the canal, as
if a large unseen
animal was briskly
moving through the
water. There were
distinct splashing
noises, and there was
a foul pungent odor
that filled the air
but nothing could be
seen. A neighboring
rancher reported the
same phenomena two
months later. The
[ranch owners] say
there were several
instances where
something invisible
moved through their
cattle, splitting the
herd. Their neighbor
reported the same
thing.”[10]
Yet
of all the anomalous
incidents at the
ranch, there was one
that took the prize.
On the evening of
March 12, 1997,
barking dogs alerted
the NIDS team that
something strange was
in a tree near the
ranch house. The ranch
owner grabbed a
hunting rifle and
jumped in his pickup,
racing toward the
tree. Two of the NIDS
staffers followed in a
second truck. Knapp
tells what happened
next:
Up
in the tree branches,
they could make out a
huge set of yellowish,
reptilian eyes. The
head of this animal
had to be three feet
wide, they guessed. At
the bottom of the tree
was something else.
Gorman described it as
huge and hairy, with
massively muscled
front legs and a
doglike head.
Gorman,
who is a crack shot,
fired at both figures
from a distance of 40
yards. The creature on
the ground seemed to
vanish. The thing in
the tree apparently
fell to the ground
because Gorman heard
it as it landed
heavily in the patches
of snow below. All
three men ran through
the pasture and scrub
brush, chasing what
they thought was a
wounded animal, but
they never found the
animal and saw no
blood either. A
professional tracker
was brought in the
next day to scour the
area. Nothing.
But
there was a physical
clue left behind. At
the bottom of the
tree, they found and
photographed a weird
footprint, or rather,
claw print. The print
left in the snow was
from something large.
It had three digits
with what they guessed
were sharp claws on
the end. Later
analysis and
comparison of the
print led them to find
a chilling
similarity—the print
from the ranch closely
resembled that of a
velociraptor, an
extinct dinosaur made
famous in the Jurassic
Park films.[11]
In
his new book "Longwalkers
- The Return of the
Nephilim",
popular author and
radio host Steve
Quayle takes us from
"Skinwalkers"
to "Longwalkers"
in describing how the
'Cryptid' phenomenon
we have been
discussing may
actually be in
fulfillment of
end-times prophecy.
Though his work is
written in a fictional
format, he includes a
personal letter that
he received from a
pilot who flew a
12-foot tall, dead,
cannibalistic giant
out of the Middle East
after destroying a
Special Forces group
hunting the Taliban in
2005. The giant had
six fingers and six
toes and the
Longwalkers book
cover is said to
be an accurate
artistic
representation of the
actual event. The
pilot related material
evidence to Steve in a
subsequent phone
conversation that only
someone who actually
observed the giant
could have possibly
known. Such stories of
anomalous cryptids
moving in and out of
man’s reality, the
opening of portals or
spirit gateways like
those described in
"Longwalkers"
and at Skinwalker
Ranch, and the idea
that through these
openings could come
the sudden appearance
of unknown
intelligence was
believed as fact in
biblical times, a
phenomenon we will
continue to
investigate in the
next entry.
Coming
up next: Fairies,
Changelings, and the
False Messiah from
Magonia
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DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT IS COMING!? |
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[1]
Linda S.
Godfrey, Real
Wolfmen: True
Encounters in
Modern America
(New York, NY:
Tarcher/Penguin,
2012). See
quote and
learn more
about the book
here:
“Summary of Real
Wolfmen,”
Penguin,
last accessed
January 14,
2013, http://www.us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,
9781585429080,00.html?Real_Wolfmen_Linda_S._Godfrey.
9781585429080,00.html?Real_Wolfmen_Linda_S._Godfrey.
[2]
“The Book of
Were-Wolves,”
Sacred-Texts.com,
last accessed
January 14,
2013, http://www.sacred-texts.com/goth/bow/bow09.htm.
[3]
“Werewolf,”
Wikipedia,
The Free
Encyclopedia,
last modified
January 12,
2013, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werewolf.
[4]
Frank Joseph, The
Lost Worlds of
Ancient
America
(Pompton
Plains, NJ:
New Page
Books, 2012),
252.
[5]
“Skinwalker
Ranch,” Wikipedia,
The Free
Encyclopedia,
last modified
January 4,
2013, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skinwalker_Ranch.
[6]
George Knapp,
“Is a Utah
Ranch the
Strangest
Place on
Earth? (Part
2),” Las
Vegas Mercury,
November, 29,
2002.
[7]
Natalie
Patton,
“UNLV
Unplugs
Program on
Human
Consciousness:
Donor Behind
its ’97
Birth Decides
to Fund
Scholarships
Instead,” Review
Journal,
November 8,
2002,
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2002/Nov-08-Fri-2002/news/20024414.html.
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
George Knapp,
“Is a Utah
Ranch the
Strangest
Place on
Earth?”
[10]
Ibid.
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