163 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
163 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: ALIEN IMPLANTS IN HUMANS FILE: UFO2747
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Filename: Omni-8.Art
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Type : Article
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Author : Paul McCarthy
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Date : 06/01/91
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Desc. : Alien Implants in Humans
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The following article was originally published in the science magazine
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OMNI. It is reproduced here exactly as it appeared in its original
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form, without so much as a misplaced comma, period, or question mark.
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From "OMNI"--June 1991
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CAN UFO RESEARCHERS PROVE THAT ALIENS ARE TAGGING AND TRACKING
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HUMANS WITH TINY DEVICES IMPLANTED IN THE BODY OR BRAIN?
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by Paul McCarthy
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One of the most insidious forms of alien technology ever reported by
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UFO buffs is the implant--a BB-like object said to be inserted in the
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brains or bodies of UFO abductees. According to some UFO advocates,
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E.T.'s use these tiny devices to tag and track human abductees just as
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earthbound wildlife specialists tag and track animals.
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But how can anyone know whether a reputed implant is real or not?
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How, some UFO investigators have begun to wonder, can they authenticate
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an implant should a sample emerge?
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One person addressing this issue is David Pritchard, a physicist at
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the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. According to Pritchard, no
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matter how strange the structure or material of an alleged implant, if
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it is not some "out of this world" material like "heavy metals or quark
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matter" it won't be possible to convince a lot of people.
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But, Pritchard adds, there are other ways to skin the cat. For
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example, researchers could peg an insert as such if it worked like a
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flashlight but was a hundred times brighter than any flashlight on
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Earth. If the implant sent complex but unrecognizable signals, he says,
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"that would be pretty convincing as well." Finally, Pritchard believes,
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evidence would mount if investigators found the exact same type of
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implant in numerous people making abduction claims.
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Yet another means of studying the so-called alien implant is a high-
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tech imaging technique called magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI. The
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technique was tapped by reputed abductee Whitley Strieber, who says he
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remembers the insertion of needles in his head. His MRI brain scans, he
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adds, now show strange white spots. "Are the unknown objects in my
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brain an outcome of such intrusions?" Strieber asked in his recent
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book, TRANSFORMATION. Pritchard says the dots prove nothing; they could
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be air bubbles. But a statistical argument could be made he adds, if
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researchers can show that professed UFO abductees have significantly
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more dots than a random control group.
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Longtime UFO skeptic Phil Klass, who doesn't believe that aliens have
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ever come to Earth, takes a different tack. First, he says, he would
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want to know "where the implant came from," and would feel more
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confident if it had been removed by a surgeon. Then, if it were
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something "that could not form naturally in the body," he would want to
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know if it could be made with terrestrial technology. If the answer to
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that is no, says Klass, "I think you have your proof."
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Even more skeptical is Robert Sheaffer, author of THE UFO VERDICT,
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who says the whole question of UFO abductions is dubious and that the
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idea of alien implants is "certainly rubbish." According to Sheaffer,
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the UFO is a slippery phenomenon that always manages to fade away
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before the evidence becomes too convincing, and alien implants are an
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example of this. "Some people might be saying they were kidnapped by
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aliens for the money," says Sheaffer. "Others might be doing it because
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they really believe that they were abducted. But there is not a shred
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of evidence to substantiate this claim. Alien implants are just too
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good to be true."
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According to UFO abduction expert Budd Hopkins, author of MISSING
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TIME, and INTRUDERS, a number of radiologists are privately doing MRI
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scans on people who claim they have been abducted by aliens--and that
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the aliens have inserted devices in their bodies or brains. But a
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neurosurgeon advised him that if, as claimed, implants exist somewhere
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above the upper nasal passages, then they are near the optic nerve. In
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that case, he says, "it would be very risky for a surgeon to try to get
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one out." What does Hopkins say about the prospect of actually
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validating these wierd alien implants? "It'd have devastating societal
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impact," he says, "I am not looking forward to something like this."
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|
|
One of the most insidious forms of alien technology ever reported by
|
|
UFO buffs is the implant--a BB-like object said to be inserted in the
|
|
brains or bodies of UFO abductees. According to some UFO advocates,
|
|
E.T.'s use these tiny devices to tag and track human abductees just as
|
|
earthbound wildlife specialists tag and track animals.
|
|
|
|
But how can anyone know whether a reputed implant is real or not?
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|
How, some UFO investigators have begun to wonder, can they authenticate
|
|
an implant should a sample emerge?
|
|
|
|
One person addressing this issue is David Pritchard, a physicist at
|
|
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. According to Pritchard, no
|
|
matter how strange the structure or material of an alleged implant, if
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|
it is not some "out of this world" material like "heavy metals or quark
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|
matter" it won't be possible to convince a lot of people.
|
|
|
|
But, Pritchard adds, there are other ways to skin the cat. For
|
|
example, researchers could peg an insert as such if it worked like a
|
|
flashlight but was a hundred times brighter than any flashlight on
|
|
Earth. If the implant sent complex but unrecognizable signals, he says,
|
|
"that would be pretty convincing as well." Finally, Pritchard believes,
|
|
evidence would mount if investigators found the exact same type of
|
|
implant in numerous people making abduction claims.
|
|
|
|
Yet another means of studying the so-called alien implant is a high-
|
|
tech imaging technique called magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI. The
|
|
technique was tapped by reputed abductee Whitley Strieber, who says he
|
|
remembers the insertion of needles in his head. His MRI brain scans, he
|
|
adds, now show strange white spots. "Are the unknown objects in my
|
|
brain an outcome of such intrusions?" Strieber asked in his recent
|
|
book, TRANSFORMATION. Pritchard says the dots prove nothing; they could
|
|
be air bubbles. But a statistical argument could be made he adds, if
|
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researchers can show that professed UFO abductees have significantly
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more dots than a random control group.
|
|
|
|
Longtime UFO skeptic Phil Klass, who doesn't believe that aliens have
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ever come to Earth, takes a different tack. First, he says, he would
|
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want to know "where the implant came from," and would feel more
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confident if it had been removed by a surgeon. Then, if it were
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something "that could not form naturally in the body," he would want to
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know if it could be made with terrestrial technology. If the answer to
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that is no, says Klass, "I think you have your proof."
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|
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Even more skeptical is Robert Sheaffer, author of THE UFO VERDICT,
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who says the whole question of UFO abductions is dubious and that the
|
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idea of alien implants is "certainly rubbish." According to Sheaffer,
|
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the UFO is a slippery phenomenon that always manages to fade away
|
|
before the evidence becomes too convincing, and alien implants are an
|
|
example of this. "Some people might be saying they were kidnapped by
|
|
aliens for the money," says Sheaffer. "Others might be doing it because
|
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they really believe that they were abducted. But there is not a shred
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of evidence to substantiate this claim. Alien implants are just too
|
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good to be true."
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|
|
According to UFO abduction expert Budd Hopkins, author of MISSING
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TIME, and INTRUDERS, a number of radiologists are privately doing MRI
|
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scans on people who claim they have been abducted by aliens--and that
|
|
the aliens have inserted devices in their bodies or brains. But a
|
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neurosurgeon advised him that if, as claimed, implants exist somewhere
|
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above the upper nasal passages, then they are near the optic nerve. In
|
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that case, he says, "it would be very risky for a surgeon to try to get
|
|
one out." What does Hopkins say about the prospect of actually
|
|
validating these wierd alien implants? "It'd have devastating societal
|
|
impact," he says, "I am not looking forward to something like this."
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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********************************************** |