NHIs and UAPs might be psy-ops, but contact is real and dreamlike
People say that the world changed in 2017 when the New York Times published a front-page article about a secret government program to study UFOs. In reality, a small group of circularly-reporting individuals promoted alien abduction mythology using new language. They replaced aliens and ETs with NHIs (non-human intelligence) and flying saucers or UFOs with UAPs (unidentified anomalous phenomenon). They leaked videos of balloons and sensor failures, called them UAPs, and implied that space aliens were a national threat. These people seem to reject evidence about encounters in favor for faith-based belief that is confirmed through circular reporting using appeal to authority claims that are confused by government secrecy.
Contemporary UAP Disclosure narratives appear to be an iteration of 1990s alien abduction myths. These myths appropriated natural, yet not well understood, sleep and dream phenomenon as evidence for alien abduction. The 1990s abduction myths relied upon hypnosis, which spawned a series of confusing claims about the reality of UAPs and NHIs. While the connection between UAP Disclosure and alien abduction myths is obvious when you do the research, the intentional shift of language to NHI and UAP obscures the connection on purpose.
Even though UAP Disclosure and alien abduction myths are based on deception and the manipulative appropriation of shamanic dreaming, DSETI affirms the dreamlike reality of NHI/UAP contact phenomenon. Something is truly happening that can not be reduced to psy-op or media manipulations.
Key Concepts
Selected Resources
Reference
Lucid dreams and OBEs can emulate alien abduction and UFO encounters
Research Article
Alien Abduction is a Special Dream Phenomenon with Anomalous Physical Effects
Research Article
Alien Abduction Believer Syndrome
Research Article
The Universal Language
Research Article
The Monroe Institute UAP and ETolomy
Reference