“Ancient man was living in clay huts, using stone tools,” Jason said. “They didn’t have the mathematical knowledge to build the pyramids of Giza or the Stonehenge.”
I’ve watched several documentaries and read many articles about how the pyramids around the world were built. Jason Martell and other UFO enthusiasts believe that aliens jumpstarted our evolution by teaching ancient man how to build the famous landmarks we have today. Perhaps the most interesting part of this video is the footage of the “face” on Mars’ surface, which has an eerie resemblance to our infamous Sphinx.
At 7:15am on June 30, 1908, a blue-white fireball flew over the remote region of central Siberia near the Stony Tunguska River and exploded with the force of a 10- to 15- megaton hydrogen bomb. The explosion wiped out approximately 60 million trees across an area of 2,000 square kilometers. Witnesses from hundreds of miles away saw an immense pillar of fire and heard thundering claps. Those closest to the blast were deafened by the noise and knocked off their feet when the thermal wave swept through the area. Miraculously, no one was killed.
Since then, the scientific community has come up with a plausible reason for the blast––a mid-air comet or meteor explosion. Despite this, there are those who believe that the explosion was caused by a very large UFO, although there was no evidence of spacecraft debris. Scientists did find rocks embedded in the ground and the trees that are consistent with the material found in meteorites.
According to a new study, people who believe that they have lived past lives are more prone to what is called “source monitoring errors.” This means that they have difficulty recognizing where a memory came from.
Researchers recruited people who had come to believe that they had experienced a past-life regression through hypnosis, as well as those who did not believe in reincarnation. They were put through a test where they had to read 40 non-famous names aloud. After a two-hour wait, they were to identify famous names out of the list they were given, plus a list of famous names and another list of non-famous names that they hadn’t seen.
Believers were twice as likely as their counterparts to misidentify the non-famous names they had seen on the first list as famous. Lead researcher, Maarten Peters of Maastricht University in The Netherlands thinks that people who are prone to making source monitoring errors can’t distinguish between things that have really happened and things that have been suggested to them. When put under hypnosis and repeatedly asked to talk about the potential idea of a past life, the risk of that idea turning into a false memory is greatly increased.
Past life memories are not the only memories being studied. Richard McNally of Harvard University conducted a similar study on alien abductees and found that they are also prone to commit source monitoring errors. McNally says that these errors occur with people who are more creative than the average person.
The Lumber Baron Inn & Gardens was originally built by John Mouat, a Scottish lumber tycoon in 1890. In 1970, the 8,500 square foot mansion was converted into an apartment complex. One of the tenants was a seventeen year-old runaway, who was raped and murder inside her apartment. A friend of hers happened to stumble upon the murder as it occurred and was also killed. Their killer(s) was never caught.
Dina Everling and Christopher Moon of The Haunted Times Magazine have visited this place many times in order to learn the details of this brutal double murder. Using a specialized piece of equipment, the team was able to pick up EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomena) recordings from the girls, who gave them details about the double murder.
“The Lumber Baron experiences are always tough. We want so desperately to help the two murdered girls come to some peace with their deaths. Until the murderer is finally arrested and convicted, I don’t think that will happen. The girls replay their attack every day, and you can always feel the horror they felt on that fateful day.â€