Same here, actually. If I had to wager one way or the other, I would bet that there is not some folder somewhere in DC labeled "Project Blue Beam" that a government employee opens up and works from every day. Rather, the idea exists and the people that work on it know what they're working on and those that assist them believe they're working on something else.
If this sounds like some airy-fairy hand-waving to preserve a "debunked" theory, you can think of it like this: were there "cool kids" in your high school? There sure were in mine and I knew for certain I was not one of them. But the cool kids themselves knew who each other were.
Was there any physical evidence of this? No, of course not. They didn't maintain public membership rosters, or have ID cards, nor did they even have a formal name for their "organization". But they existed nonetheless, and one would need to carefully observe their behaviors, activities, habits, associations, etc., to detect them.
Which is exactly what we did, and that's how we know there were "cool kids" in high school.
Sure. I was just under the impression project Blue Beam was in the vein of Operation Lockstep, Northwoods, Sea Spray, Event 201, etc. I assumed there was some sort of paper trail is all.
Even if not, I think viewing something like "aliens" with a healthy bit of skepticism is a good way to go. Better to assume you're consuming some sort of propaganda with anything you look at on the internet these days, until proven otherwise.
As for UFOs, I fairly recently discovered that Roswell was most assuredly a government psyop--that is, a faked crash and a faked coverup. Then I thought, "Well, why bother with all that unless there was something they're trying to disguise?" To me, they've muddied the waters so completely it's hardly worth the time to sort through it.
The only aliens of which I'm aware are the Anunnaki, and there's an overwhelming amount of evidence for them. You'll notice that "They" handle this one of three ways: make sure you stay ignorant, dismiss and ridicule the subject, or (as with "Ancient Aliens" or Clif High) lead you right into a black hole of nonsense.
But I think that if the Anunnaki are tooling around the Earth in flying saucers there is so much garbage around the phenomenon we'd never be able to know. Then again, maybe that's the point.
A decent collection of relevant info: A Discussion of Project Blue Beam Theory (11/11/2021)
Interesting read. I think it points in the right direction, but I was hoping for something a bit more concrete.
Same here, actually. If I had to wager one way or the other, I would bet that there is not some folder somewhere in DC labeled "Project Blue Beam" that a government employee opens up and works from every day. Rather, the idea exists and the people that work on it know what they're working on and those that assist them believe they're working on something else.
If this sounds like some airy-fairy hand-waving to preserve a "debunked" theory, you can think of it like this: were there "cool kids" in your high school? There sure were in mine and I knew for certain I was not one of them. But the cool kids themselves knew who each other were.
Was there any physical evidence of this? No, of course not. They didn't maintain public membership rosters, or have ID cards, nor did they even have a formal name for their "organization". But they existed nonetheless, and one would need to carefully observe their behaviors, activities, habits, associations, etc., to detect them.
Which is exactly what we did, and that's how we know there were "cool kids" in high school.
Sure. I was just under the impression project Blue Beam was in the vein of Operation Lockstep, Northwoods, Sea Spray, Event 201, etc. I assumed there was some sort of paper trail is all.
Even if not, I think viewing something like "aliens" with a healthy bit of skepticism is a good way to go. Better to assume you're consuming some sort of propaganda with anything you look at on the internet these days, until proven otherwise.
I certainly try to tread carefully.
As for UFOs, I fairly recently discovered that Roswell was most assuredly a government psyop--that is, a faked crash and a faked coverup. Then I thought, "Well, why bother with all that unless there was something they're trying to disguise?" To me, they've muddied the waters so completely it's hardly worth the time to sort through it.
The only aliens of which I'm aware are the Anunnaki, and there's an overwhelming amount of evidence for them. You'll notice that "They" handle this one of three ways: make sure you stay ignorant, dismiss and ridicule the subject, or (as with "Ancient Aliens" or Clif High) lead you right into a black hole of nonsense.
But I think that if the Anunnaki are tooling around the Earth in flying saucers there is so much garbage around the phenomenon we'd never be able to know. Then again, maybe that's the point.