Thursday, April 06, 2006

Here are three abduction cases I consider relevant to the "Ultraterrestrial Hypothesis":

Peter Khoury

Twenty-eight-year-old Peter Khoury was awoken by what appeared to be two females -- both striking and unearthly -- kneeling on his bed. What transpired between them was a physical assault as terrifying and disorienting, as it was unnatural. Then, as quickly as they had arrived, they vanished. Khoury had become one of a legion of alien abductees with inexplicable experiences, but this particular incident stood apart from all the others. This time, there was evidence -- two strands of white-blonde hair from one of the females.

Khoury's case would result in the very first forensic DNA analysis of "alien abduction" evidence and revealed an extraordinary biological anomaly -- one genetically close to human yet almost impossibly far from the human mainstream.


Betty and Barney Hill

The couple were then taken against their will aboard the craft by small beings with whitish skin and large cat-like eyes (similar to greys). Once on board, the couple were separated and both given medical examinations. Barney had semen extracted by a suction device, while Betty had to endure a large needle being stuck into her abdomen.






Antonio Villas-Boas

Apparently, they had two sexual encounters and performed a variety of acts together for about an hour, after which the woman pulled away to leave. "[A]ll they wanted [was] a good stallion to improve their stock," Boas would say. He said that he enjoyed the encounter, even if the woman refused to kiss. Bruce Rux remarked that after all, he had just thrown up. Instead the "woman" preferred to bite his chin, while making sounds, that in Boas' mind, sounded like "animal growls." She never spoke.


The emphasis in these selected encounters is undeniably sexual. Khoury's experience, in particular, would read like escapist fantasy if not for certain curious aspects, not least of which is the apparent discovery of unusual DNA. (The DNA analysis, if accurate, provides support for my contention: that the "aliens," far from extraterrestrial, are a human off-shoot intent on producing hybrid beings, perhaps to diversify its gene-pool.)

While the abductors are seldom forthcoming about their origin, their penchant for theater -- such as the ubiquitous "guided tour" of landed UFOs -- suggests they're perfectly content to let their human subjects assume they're from space. Betty Hill, impressed by the "star map" shown to her by what she assumed to be an ET "leader," later became a veritable ambassador for extraterrestrials, her fascination with the subject of UFOs taking on a disconcerting "New Age" bent. One could argue that this transformation was anticipated -- or even engineered -- by her captors.

7 comments:

Old Gary said...

Sounds to me like Mr. Boas had a wet dream. Similar to some of my own. >:)

Mac said...

Old Gary--

If Boas' visitors were real, I bet they'd prefer he thought the whole episode was a dream. However, I'm convinced that it was a real, waking experience. For instance, he was out plowing a field when the abduction took place, not half-asleep in bed.

The Villas-Boas encounter differs markedly from the modern rash of
"bedroom visitations." It's definitely erotic, though.

Mac said...

WMB--

Good points. I used to *want* to experience an "abduction," simply to see if the experience warranted invoking "aliens." (Now I'm not so sure; my heart could very well stop.)

My ongoing encounters with the entities I've taken to calling the "spacewomen," however, are another matter... :-)

Scott said...

The Betty and Barney Hill case I've heard of, as it's one of the most if not the most famous abduction case. The other two seem quite interesting as well.

I wonder how many of the tales of people being visited by incubi and succubi in the past were actual memories of nocturnal alien visitations. (Not that I'm actually saying that said 'demons' may not actually exist. Whether they are or not isn't the point...just that some of the phenomena might indeed be alien instead.)

Like your blog. Keep up the good work.

Mac said...

Scott,

The Villas-Boas case actually preceded the Hill case. But since Villas-Boas was reluctant to go public, the Hills had never heard of it (to my knowledge). The similarities are striking.

nitrosijo said...

It's interesting that you dismiss some common aspects of close encounters as "theatre" (the star maps and the overtly 'alien' behaviour) and yet you take the 'genetic sampling' at face value.

Mac said...

Nitrosijo--

I take *nothing* at face value. Some aspects of the encounter phenomenon occur with such frequency that I'm inclined to think they reflect an actual agenda. Other aspects are more transient, in keeping with disinformation. My delineation is far from arbitrary.