





New Christian Book Claims Aliens Part of Satanic Plot To Eat Human Souls Bruce Wilson print page Sat Oct 02, 2010 at 02:28:24 PM EST well, I stand corrected - I got this book about 180 degrees wrong. Mainly, I was thrown by Redfern's writing tone, which I now recognize as, very likely, tongue-in-cheek. This is one book I'll be purchasing! I yet can't speak to the validity of the research, but I can say this - having done some work on fringe evangelical belief in the United States Military, in my opinion the topic area is quite a valid area of inquiry.] Here's a description of Nick Redfern's new book Final Events - Final Events, by Nick Redfern, discloses his interviews with Ray Boeche (an Anglican priest and paranormal researcher) who was allegedly made privy to a secret government project within the Department of Defense. The project began in the 1950's as research into remote viewing and the military applications of psychic powers, and ended in the conclusion that such powers - including extensive contacts with entities claiming to be aliens from outer space - were in fact demonic in origin. As Nick described to me when interviewing for this book, the group (Collins Elite) was afraid to publicize these findings as it could cause massive social upheaval and unrest - i.e., an official government study that concluded that demons are real, and are behind the UFO phenomena for the purposes of deceiving mankind. This would obviously equate to government proof ( i.e., an endorsement) that the Judeo-Christian and Biblical worldview(s) are correct, and perhaps lead to no little end-times hysteria, as well as mass conversions to Christianity. With former government officials holding widely noted press conferences to attest to UFO interference in America's nuclear missile bases, the timing for Redfern's book is very good indeed. Since a good portion of the text is available at Amazon.com through the "look inside [this book]" function, I've had a chance to peruse a bit of Redfern's writing and I'll be the first to admit - I'm intrigued, not because I take the book all that seriously. Rather, it reads like a solid sci-fi thriller packed with details on a vast secret government conspiracy ("The Collins Elite"), witches, demons, and demon possession, astral travel, remote viewing, and a malevolent alien plot to eat our souls. As Final Events describes, the ghastly plot came to light when government researchers approached a British witch named "Sybil Leek" who the book states had been dubbed "Britain's most famous witch" by the BBC. Needless to say, Leek owned a pet crow. As Redfern detailed, Leek's occult indoctrination included being taught by her father "about nature, about the secret lives of animals, and about the magical powers of herbs." But there's worse. Leek's father also conversed with her "on matters of Eastern philosophies." Applied with a restrained British touch, such sweeping bigotry seems quaint and almost charming when compared to its knuckle-dragging American counterpart but bigotry it is nonetheless. With awesome efficiency Redfern has dispatched, as clearly satanic, 1) the study of nature in its entirety, 2) the study of animals, 3) the study of plants, and 4) much of the pre-scientific intellectual heritage of Asia. A page or two later, we learn that Leek "was one of the first of modern-day witches to pick up environmental causes." It's quite genteel in tone as compared, say, to the utterances of John McCain endorser (and "dear friend" of Joe Lieberman according to the US senator) John Hagee, who in a 1992 sermon claimed that the 1992 United Nations environmental summit in Rio De Janeiro had been commandeered by minions of a demonic "Macumba cult" who during the event held occult rituals that included sacrificing animals to satan. But, I digress. As the chapter describes, Sybil Leek played a pivotal role in exposing the grand demonic conspiracy against humankind when she channeled a demon: "Certainly the most significant development came in September 1972... when, surrounded in her home by eager-but-apprehensive players in both Operation Often and the Collins Elite, Leek entered a trance-like state, and reportedly channeled a demonic entity that described itself as Caxuulikom - a venomous, spiteful, and overwhelmingly evil and negative being whose origin could be traced back to ancient Babylon, and who outrageously mocked those present, laughed and spat in their frightened faces, and bragged in a literally hysterical and maniacal fashion about the way in which the world was being fooled into believing that aliens were among us when, in reality, the forces of the Prince of Darkness were readying and steadying themselves for the final confrontation with the powers of good... Caxuulikom informed those present that the Earth was a farm and nothing else, that energy derived from the souls of the Human Race and indeed from every living creature on the planet was being harvested as a means to feed the minions of Satan, and that the E.T. motif was merely the latest ingenious ruse under which such actions were being secretly undertaken." So there we have it. We're just psychic kibble for the snarling, slobbering minions of Satan. Case closed.



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