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Scientists Are STUMPED! This Person Was NOT Born On EARTH! Top 20
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Many people believe in aliens, but some people swear they have met them and even traveled to their planet. Are these people con-artists, or just deranged? Join us, as we look at some of these encounters.
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Watch our “Scientists Are STUMPED! This Person Was NOT Born On EARTH! Top 20”
Elizabeth Klarer-The Alien’s Spouse
Elizabeth Klarer was a South African woman who, beginning in 1956, publicly claimed to have been contacted by aliens several times between 1954 and 1963. Her first trip allegedly occurred when she was seven years old, and she was among the first women to claim a sexual relationship with an alien. She advocated for a better world and believed in cosmic consciousness. In her book "Beyond the Light Barrier," she attempted to impart a message of peace, love, understanding, and ecology, which she attributed to the superior wisdom of a sophisticated and flawlessly utopian Venusian culture. She pushed conspiracy theories about an international cover-up that kept crucial information hidden from the public, and she said she was threatened with abduction to expose facts regarding alien technology. Experts concluded Klarer's claims were generally poorly substantiated, despite some of them being corroborated by witnesses.
George Adamski
George Adamski was a well-known Polish American novelist in UFO circles and, to a lesser extent, popular culture. He presented various images of extraterrestrial spacecraft from the 1940s and 1950s, claiming to have met nice Nordic alien Space Brothers and flown with them to the Moon and other worlds. Adamski was the first and most prominent of several alleged UFO contactees who rose to fame in the 1950s. He identified himself as a philosopher, teacher, student, and saucer researcher, but most investigators dismissed him as a charlatan and scam artist, concluding that his claims were an elaborate fraud. Adamski wrote three books on his encounters with Nordic aliens and his trips on their spaceships. The first two books were bestsellers, selling 200,000 copies each by 1960. In addition to his contributions to ufology in the United States, Adamski's work gained popularity in other nations, particularly Japan, and inspired numerous images of aliens and UFOs in postwar Japanese culture and media.
Watch our “Top 20 Most Ruthless And Feared Pirates To Ever Set Sail”
Watch our “YouTubers Who Died While Filming Videos!”
Watch our “Scientists Are STUMPED! This Person Was NOT Born On EARTH! Top 20”
Elizabeth Klarer-The Alien’s Spouse
Elizabeth Klarer was a South African woman who, beginning in 1956, publicly claimed to have been contacted by aliens several times between 1954 and 1963. Her first trip allegedly occurred when she was seven years old, and she was among the first women to claim a sexual relationship with an alien. She advocated for a better world and believed in cosmic consciousness. In her book "Beyond the Light Barrier," she attempted to impart a message of peace, love, understanding, and ecology, which she attributed to the superior wisdom of a sophisticated and flawlessly utopian Venusian culture. She pushed conspiracy theories about an international cover-up that kept crucial information hidden from the public, and she said she was threatened with abduction to expose facts regarding alien technology. Experts concluded Klarer's claims were generally poorly substantiated, despite some of them being corroborated by witnesses.
George Adamski
George Adamski was a well-known Polish American novelist in UFO circles and, to a lesser extent, popular culture. He presented various images of extraterrestrial spacecraft from the 1940s and 1950s, claiming to have met nice Nordic alien Space Brothers and flown with them to the Moon and other worlds. Adamski was the first and most prominent of several alleged UFO contactees who rose to fame in the 1950s. He identified himself as a philosopher, teacher, student, and saucer researcher, but most investigators dismissed him as a charlatan and scam artist, concluding that his claims were an elaborate fraud. Adamski wrote three books on his encounters with Nordic aliens and his trips on their spaceships. The first two books were bestsellers, selling 200,000 copies each by 1960. In addition to his contributions to ufology in the United States, Adamski's work gained popularity in other nations, particularly Japan, and inspired numerous images of aliens and UFOs in postwar Japanese culture and media.
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