UFOs, ANGELS, and a NEW SPIRITUALITY
If you’re into UFOs and aliens, the last five years or so have been fantastic.
There’s been a big shift in the public discourse around UFOs and alien life, thanks in large part to a 2019 story published in the New York Times about reports of UFOs — also known as unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs) — off the East Coast a decade ago. Since then, the whole topic of UFOs feels considerably less fringe than it once did.
We still don’t have anything like evidence of actual aliens, but it is, at least, a live question in a way it wasn’t before. I’m still inclined to believe that there are far more plausible explanations for UAPs that don’t involve extraterrestrial creatures. The possibility, however, that aliens might exist raises all sorts of fascinating questions. Read more at UFOs, God, and the edge of understanding
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What is KONA BLUE?
Information has recently surfaced shedding light on an ambitious program that would have researched UFO technology in southern Nevada, aiming to exploit the tech, interview witnesses to extraterrestrial activities, and study the physical and psychological effects of the encounters.
Code-named “Kona Blue,” Las Vegas would have been in the eye of the storm when it came to UFO technology investigations if the program had come to fruition. But why the transparency now? Dr. James Lacatski, formerly a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) analyst and missile expert, has some insight.
“It was completely UFO-related,” Lacatski said regarding Kona Blue. In 2007, Lacatski became interested in reports of UFO activity at certain hotspots, including a property in northeast Utah known by its nickname Skinwalker Ranch. Read more at What is Kona Blue? The proposed Las Vegas UFO technology program unveiled
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Mysterious LEY LINES
First proposed by amateur English archaeologist Alfred Watkins during the 1920s, ley lines are theoretical energy lines that connect key landmarks across the globe, joining sacred sites from Stonehenge to the Egyptian Pyramids. According to Watkins, whose work focused predominantly on the English landscape, the lines were interconnected via certain ‘terminal points’ such as churches, beacons, mounds, and holy wells. Over the following decades, the concept of ley lines gathered pace, with a core group of enthusiasts arguing that the lines were interconnected around the entire world. Some believed these lines were joined with the rhythms and patterns of nature, organized in alignment with the sun and stars, and even carried energy or psychic power. Even today, a small number of enthusiasts still believe in the interconnected nature of civilization and the earth, with a handful connecting ley lines to supernatural or extraterrestrial forces. Read more at Ancient Pathways: What Are Ley Lines?
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