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Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Steven Spielberg and Disclosure

We all know Steven Spielberg has a keen interest in aliens and UFO:s, and what I've always appreciated with most of his movies is his more inquisitive, human and less action-y approach to the phenomenon with more basis in the UFO lore, where in other popular culture portrayals the aliens are more often than not just invading monsters who wants to take over our world.

Over the years there have been a growing number of theories and rumours that Spielbergs movies have more basis on real life events than we would give them credit for. The reason for this, some claim, is to acclimatize the general public to the possibility of alien visitation. If there is a truth to the phenomenon, and it's "The Powers that Be"s intent to eventually disclose this information, it actually makes kind of sense.

For example there's the "Project Serpo" which was an alleged exchange program between humans and the greys, where we sent 10 men and 2 women to planet Serpo in the Zeta Reticuli system. This is reflected in the ending to Close Encounters of the Third Kind, whose title comes from J Allen Hyneks scale to better catalog UFO reports. Hynek as most of you know worked on Project Blue Book, the US governments official investigation into UFO:s, and he served as a consultant to Spielberg on the movie, and even had a cameo in it.

The UFO landing itself in Close Encounters is purportedly inspired by the landing of a real UFO at Holloman Air Force Base. The footage was supposedly filmed and to be used in a documentary but was withdrawn at the last second, although a few seconds of it still made it out to public, which can be seen here.

Moving on from Close Encounters, Spielbergs movie ET: The Extra Terrestrial was shown in a special screening at the White House for President Ronald Reagan where he looked around the room and stated:

"There are a number of people in this room who know that everything on that screen is absolutely true.”

This was confirmed by Spielberg himself, and he shrugged it off as a joke, even though Reagan said it without smiling.

Then we have Spielbergs phenomenal miniseries Taken which I remember fondly when I was younger. I've only been really into the UFO phenomenon for the last couple of years and I read up a little about the aliens in that series#Aliens) and it caught me a little off guard how much of it seems to resonate in the really esoteric, excotic and non nuts-and-bolts UFO lore.

Then there were the interdimensional beings from Indiana Jones 4, which seems to take more inspiration from the Ancient Astronaut theory, but Spielberg was understandably against putting these in the movie.

So was Spielberg nudged to explore all these facets in his movies, even unknowingly? Or was he just someone with a keen interest in UFO:s and simply had the means to make movies about them? I would personally go with the latter, but it sure makes for a compelling conspiracy theory.

Maybe in a couple of years Spielberg could make a movie surrounding the relatively recently announced Pentagon AATIP/AAWSAP program and the incidents they investigated.



Submitted February 26, 2019 at 05:39AM by Zaptagious https://ift.tt/2SvTJeU

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