Missions on which Greys deploy include personal
security, intelligence and spying, and abductions.
Most notable is their abduction work. Here, one must
understand the first and second missions through context of the third
mission description.
Abduction is successful, and continues to be successful to its
perpetrators for these reasons: first, an abduction experience is difficult
to believe, spawning controversy and credibility arguments to replace
or overwhelm the reality. Second, effective pheromone application,
combined with the genetic diversity of those abducted, guarantees
different accounts of the same experience, making the phenomena
appear more complicated than it is, sending people off course onto
many paths and tangents away from reality. Third, other terrestrial
and extraterrestrial activities and phenomena not associated with
abduction are perceived to be similar and tied in, further confusing
the reality.
The purposes of abductions are to obtain genetic materials and
hormonal secretions from human beings and animals. More recent
and newer purposes are to test medicines and drugs. Greys carry out
abduction work for human controllers. On some abduction missions,
human beings accompany Greys. A profile of these human controllers
follows:
These human beings have evolved beyond most other living in
their time. By the time of the Industrial Revolution, they had quietly
achieved wealth unknown to others by learning to integrate mind
power with budding new scientific and engineering concepts of
that time. By the 1910s and 1920s, they had advanced too quickly for
traditional organizations and society. To protect their technological
innovations, they retreated and went underground. They feared that
governments, religions, hierarchies of higher education, and other
intellectual organizations threatened to bring destruction on them for
their ideas, inventions, profits, and the effects of these in a changing
society. They decided to keep their program for biological immortality
secret, fearing that discovery would be the end of the program and
possibly them as well.
By the end of World War II, they were manufacturing good
copies of Greys, called Replicas. They also had produced crafts
with performance capabilities beyond human pilots’ survivability
boundaries. Replicas fly these craft where missions require greatest
flight performance.
The spacecraft are produced in a variety of configurations; some
are large to accommodate human beings. When human beings are
onboard, pilots, either Replicas or human controllers, must avoid nine
G’s or prolonged G forces to prevent physical damage to the human
beings onboard.
The craft are stealthy, using an advanced spectral frequency
wave-cancellation technology known as cloaking. This makes the
craft invisible to radar and people. Depending on the equipment
setting, the craft blends with the background or is invisible. Craft
are visible when the cloaking function is off. Craft operate in
open country, rural areas, suburban neighborhoods, and crowded
cities.
Rural areas and the outskirts of suburban areas are preferred.
Cities require invisibility at full power settings, resulting in higher
levels of maintenance on the cloaking equipment. If there is a system
failure in open country, the craft is vulnerable to detection by radar and
undesired encounters with military craft. A typical mission consists of
flying to a predetermined subject’s location, collecting materials from
the subject or performing tests on the subject, and then returning to
base.
To keep base locations and manufacturing places secret, human
controllers are very detail-oriented and spare no expenses. In these
places, they process materials collected from abduction subjects
and convert them into products used to keep themselves alive and
young beyond their years. Here, the controller humans use Replicas
as efficient, high skilled, low cost labor. Greys enjoy a taste or touch
reward as promised.
During abductions, Greys supervise subjects while Replicas do
the mechanical work. Most human abduction subjects faint and forget
when they see Greys and Replicas. If that does not happen, Greys
use a chemical supplied by the controllers for this purpose. If this
fails, Greys excrete a pheromone to confuse and disable the subject.
If a subject’s genetic code makes it resistant to the chemicals and
pheromones, Greys confuse or disable the subject by emitting and
focusing inaudible frequencies, sound waves, at the subject from the
lower part of its face, an area that looks like a small nose and mouth.
Controllers frequently monitor the mental development and
status of Greys and Replicas. Although physically similar, they often
change roles and names, respectively. Replicas demand little and are
easy to program. Greys integrate mission instruction variables and
demand rewards. After a long machinelike stint on a production line,
Replicas begin to want rewards and to become Greys. Conversely,
Greys become well satisfied with their rewards and find that becoming
Replicas and working on the production line is a good way to prolong
Greys’ human controllers have not yet succeeded in making lifeprolonging
products available to the mass market. To do this, they
must first determine the exact formulation of the products. This has
been accomplished, but they still must determine how to produce the
products from basic, readily available substances.
Until recently, human controllers made the products from human
and specific animal tissues only. Obtaining the needed materials was
never easy. In the early years, abortion clinics did not exist, or were
underground operations. There was no trust among those who could
reliably obtain and supply materials. Hospitals and patients did not
find the idea of harvesting umbilical cord for use as raw material for
processing appealing at any price. Religious organizations objected.
Governments wanted money to allow these things to happen.
Parts from dead bodies did not work. Obtaining material through
organizations was never an effective way to supply the research or to
keep it alive undercover. During the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, aborted fetuses
were consistently grinded with water and disposed into the sewers
from abortion clinics. This is why human controllers obtained fetuses
from the women they abducted. During the 1990s, many abortion
clinics changed their procedures to comply with new regulations that
required disposing of the materials differently, as medical waste solids.
This development, combined with the early availability of materials for
stem cell research, resulted in a decline in abduction activity by the
late 1990s, compared to the 1970s and 80s.
Greys’ human controllers continue their quest for biological
immortality. They continue to increase in wealth to bring about their
goals. Abduction activities, using Greys, have yielded substantial
profits in recent years: advances in medical procedures, equipment,
and anesthetics.
By using Greys and the abduction process, Greys’ human
controllers have bypassed multimillions in expenses that otherwise
would have had to be paid to the government agencies that regulate
food and drugs. Greys’ human controllers then use invisible tactics to
introduce the products into the manufacturing sector and use similar
tactics on the investment side of the market. These humans have
quietly made and invested money across worldwide markets since
the industrial revolution. Having acquired Greys to help them, these
humans are beyond wealthy now.
A belief that Greys fly ships in from space for some purpose helps
keep the human controllers’ secrets secret. Greys do not mean much,
or stand for anything, unless one is its controller or its controller’s
research subject. |