A Harvard astronomer’s controversial theory about a massive object hurtling through our solar system has ignited fierce debate in the scientific community — and raised questions about whether humanity should prepare for contact.
A Harvard astronomer’s controversial theory about a massive object hurtling through our solar system has ignited fierce debate in the scientific community — and raised questions about whether humanity should prepare for contact.
The Andreasson Affair — a decades-long investigation into one woman’s otherworldly encounters, prophetic visions, and a case that blurred the line between abduction, faith, and something far more unsettling.
When Massachusetts housewife Betty Andreasson watched five grey beings walk through her solid kitchen walls in 1967, it would unlock decades of suppressed memories revealing a lifetime of alien encounters that began when she was just seven years old.
Religious scholars are finding medieval manuscripts filled with encounters that mirror modern UFO reports — and the U.S. government seems very interested in their research.
When UFO researcher Budd Hopkins discovered three women who experienced eerily similar fake job interviews before their alien abductions, he uncovered a disturbing pattern that suggested something far more calculated than random encounters.
Four billion humans nearly became alien slaves, but Earth’s salvation came from the worst possible first (drunk) impression.
A team of paranormal investigators will gather in the Scottish woods where aliens allegedly mugged a man’s trousers in 1979, hoping to summon UFOs through meditation and what can only be described as intergalactic mood music.
With advanced observatories coming online like the Vera Rubin Telescope, scientists are looking to plan for the discovery of alien intelligence and how humanity should prepare for the news.
The presence of apparent biological signatures on Venus has left UK-based researchers chasing down bacterial life in the planet’s clouds.
There are some people who believe that the President of the United States is privy to all that is going-on and, ultimately, calls the shots, while others insist they are nothing more than a face for the respective government of the time who is on a need-to-know leash, and this is very much the case with UFOs and potential alien encounters. However, it would seem that some Presidents of the United States – certainly when it comes to such matters as UFOs – know more than others.
Security cameras have captured footage of pale, stilt-legged beings moving through the darkness — creatures so bizarre that even experts can’t explain what they are.
The US military participated in the Vietnam War for reasons much stranger than just stopping the spread of communism, says lawyer Danny Sheehan, who’s spent 50 years investigating government misconduct—and whom Washington has gagged, threatened, and possibly tried to kill for it.
In a recent live broadcast on the X platform, US Congressman Eric Burlison revealed explosive details that he says were provided to him by former intelligence officer David Grusch, known for his testimony before Congress about secret programs involving non-human technology.
A self-proclaimed alien communicator believes extraterrestrial beings orchestrated recent Middle East tensions as part of their approaching arrival to Earth.
Deep within government files lies a chilling blueprint for what happens when Earth finally meets beings from another world.
While most people look to the skies for UFOs, the real alien activity might be happening in the unexplored depths beneath our oceans.
Deep in the Nevada desert, a retired Air Force colonel finally confessed to Pentagon investigators that he had spent decades fooling Americans with fake alien photos — but the real question is what other lies the government is still telling.
If fairies and aliens are just the same weirdos in different outfits, maybe all it takes to stop an abduction is a well-placed snack-cake.
Psychic spy Ingo Swann claimed he saw aliens building stuff on the Moon — and the creepiest part is, the CIA actually believed him.