
UFO expert claims aliens are MURDERING innocent people
One of the world's most revered UFO experts claims the beings behind UFO phenomena are not just observing us but are in fact killing innocent people.
Jacques Vallée, a man whose six-decade career has put him at the epicenter of every serious UFO debate, is sounding the alarm.
'I can tell you that in my files… some of which I contributed to the database of, there are at least half a dozen well-documented cases where the injuries that resulted in death were deliberate,' Vallée said.
According to Vallée, chilling warnings that humanity has long brushed off as the stuff of science fiction are real - and governments have known for years.
In a stunning and unsettling disclosure, Vallée revealed that the files he personally helped assemble while working with a secret Pentagon-linked UFO study include evidence of human deaths caused deliberately by encounters with UFOs.
The files were pulled together in the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP).
Vallée, the man who first proposed that UFOs might originate from other realities rather than distant planets, insists his warning is not speculative hysteria.
Indeed, Vallée is no fringe figure. He is the scientist who advised the US government, contributed to seminal investigations like Project Blue Book, and inspired the French researcher character in Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
During the AAWSAP investigation, based inside a Las Vegas aerospace facility, teams painstakingly gathered horrifying evidence from around the globe.
Among the most disturbing: hundreds of severe human injuries in Brazil linked directly to UFO encounters.
While Vallée remains guarded about specifics, he confirmed that the injuries were not accidents, but acts of aggression.
Other investigators from the program, like Dr. Colm Kelleher, have stated it bluntly: 'UFOs are bad for human health.'
The chilling truth appears to have buried behind layers of classified reports, corporate secrecy, and government indifference.
Vallée believes the real truth has been kept secret because if the public knew that not only are we not alone, but that extraterrestrial or extra-dimensional forces have killed humans with impunity, the very fabric of society could unravel.
The UFO experts believes the shocking revelations could shatter world religions, see trust in governments collapse and set off global panic.
Vallée's newest book, Forbidden Science 6: Scattered Castles, lifts the veil even further.
It chronicles his private exchanges with shadowy insiders, including the billionaire Robert Bigelow and a cabal of CIA-affiliated scientists dubbed the Lonestars, who claim the US has recovered crashed vehicles of unknown origin.
These secretive defense contractors, operating in remote desert bases, have spent decades desperately trying to reverse-engineer alien technologies.
Their adversaries abroad, it seems, have been doing the same.
The implications would mean National security is no longer just a terrestrial concern but an interdimensional arms race.
Despite the uncomfortable truth lurking in the files, Vallée believes full disclosures must be made, but not in a clumsy or haphazard way.
He fears that a sloppy admission such as a clumsy 'Yes, aliens exist' announcement could plunge civilization into chaos.
'If we want to disclose… something as simple as saying, "Yes, we acknowledge the phenomenon and it seems to be from space," we would have to… answer a hundred other questions, that this is not the end of the story,' Vallée said to KLAS. 'There are religious questions… there is a religious side to all this.'
Fear, suspicion, and religious upheaval could destroy societies faster than any foreign invasion.
'I think… that we should disclose with a structure,' Vallée suggested, adding, 'The structure hasn't been invented yet.'
As congressional hearings, mainstream media, and academics inch closer to forcing the issue into the open, Vallée's plea grows more urgent.
In more recent years, Vallée, now a Silicon Valley venture capitalist and computer scientist, published a study of physical evidence from a UFO crash in a peer-reviewed science journal, Progress in Aerospace Sciences.
As he told Wired, Vallée hopes that research will become 'a template for what serious UFO research could be in the future, if one plays by the rules.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Dramatic move by Pentagon hint Trump could be siding with another billionaire amid Musk fallout
The Pentagon appears to be contemplating pivoting away from Elon Musk 's SpaceX following the almighty blowup between President Donald Trump and the world's richest man earlier this week. The fallout appears to be impacting the nation's space program as the Trump administration looks toward another billionaire to replace Musk in the race to Mars. Officials at NASA and the Pentagon quietly reached out to SpaceX's competitors, urging them to accelerate development of alternative rockets and spacecraft. Decisions appear to have been taken quickly after Musk made a defiant threat to pull SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, a lifeline to the International Space Station, after Trump first threatened to cancel SpaceX's lucrative government contracts. 'It turned really terrifying,' one NASA official admitted to the Washington Post after initially finding the feud 'entertaining.' Although Musk eventually walked back his threat, the damage was done. Officials from NASA and the Pentagon, already uneasy with their reliance on SpaceX, were rattled to the core. SpaceX has become indispensable as it transports astronauts and cargo to the ISS, launches sensitive military satellites, and operates Starlink, the world's largest satellite constellation. The flare-up served to remind officials of the risks of tying national interests to a mercurial billionaire. 'When you realize that he's willing to shut everything down just on an impulse … that kind of behavior and the dependence on him is dangerous,' a former space agency official said. NASA insiders said Musk's threat 'crossed a line,' invoking memories of the 2018 episode when Musk smoked marijuana during a podcast interview, which prompted NASA to launch a safety investigation into SpaceX. The clash was also inflamed by the White House's decision to abruptly withdraw Jared Isaacman's nomination as NASA Administrator. Isaacman, closely aligned with Musk, had twice flown to space aboard SpaceX vehicles. In the aftermath, government officials reached out to Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin, RocketLab, and Stoke Space, querying when their rockets might be ready to shoulder critical missions. Fatih Ozmen, CEO of Sierra Space, which is developing the Dream Chaser spaceplane, confirmed that NASA was 'working closely' with his company stating, 'NASA mentioned to us that they want diversity and do not want to rely on a single provider.' For some insiders, it wasn't hard to connect the dots: Jeff Bezos, the founder of Blue Origin, has long been a rival to Musk. Now, with the Biden-era antagonism between Trump and Bezos thawing, some see a political recalibration. Bezos' Blue Origin has lagged behind SpaceX for years, but its New Glenn rocket is finally gaining traction, albeit slowly. The Pentagon's recent 'lanes' strategy to diversify launch providers now looks prescient, with officials seeking to avoid 'overreliance on any single provider or solution.' A source familiar with the Defense Department's strategy said the White House sees an opening to back Bezos as a counterweight to Musk's volatility. 'They want someone who's predictable,' the person said to The Post. Even Congress appeared to be spooked by the behavior. A key committee demanded updates on Boeing's long-delayed Starliner capsule, which has struggled to match the reliability of Musk's Dragon. NASA, under pressure, said Friday that Starliner's next mission could come 'early 2026,' though it remains unclear whether it will fly astronauts or cargo only. Indeed, just how reliant NASA were on SpaceX was illustrated last year when American astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were left on the International Space Station by Boeing's troubled Starliner capsule. Wilmore and Williams had set off for an eight-day Starliner test flight that swelled into a nine-month stay in space Boeing, which has taken $2 billion in charges on its Starliner development, faces a looming decision by NASA to refly the spacecraft uncrewed before it carries humans again. Boeing spent $410 million to fly a similar uncrewed mission in 2022 after a 2019 testing failure. Reflying Starliner uncrewed 'seems like the logical thing to do,' Williams said, drawing comparisons with Elon Musk's SpaceX and Russian capsules that flew uncrewed missions before putting humans aboard. She and NASA are pushing for that outcome, Williams added. 'I think that's the correct path,' said Williams, who is 'hoping Boeing and NASA will decide on that same course of action' soon. Results from Starliner testing planned throughout the summer are expected to determine whether the spacecraft can fly humans on its next flight, NASA officials have said. Todd Harrison, a defense analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, likened Musk's social media post to 'an embargo of the space station.' 'Musk was saying he is going to cut NASA off from its own laboratory in space,' he added. Harrison also recalled Musk's refusal to activate Starlink Internet for a Ukrainian military strike in 2022, a decision that raised alarms about national defense being at the mercy of a single CEO. 'The nation's missile defenses could be held hostage to the twittering whims of Elon Musk,' Harrison warned. Former NASA astronaut Garrett Reisman, who worked at SpaceX, voiced the fears of many in the astronaut corps: 'When your hopes and dreams are tied up in this, you can't help but think, "Oh my goodness, am I going to fly in space?"' Meanwhile, Trump, who once championed Musk as a visionary, appears to be cooling. His allies note that the president has no tolerance for perceived disloyalty and Musk's defiance has not gone unnoticed. Some aides believe Trump's sharp pivot is personal as much as political. RocketLab's CEO Peter Beck had previously warned how Musk's acquisition of Twitter, now rebranded as X, and his flirtation with politics could backfire. 'It certainly makes people uncomfortable. At the end of the day, if you're delivering important national security missions, the buck stops with the CEO,' Beck said. Pentagon officials remain wary, not least because few companies have rockets certified for critical national security missions. Blue Origin's New Glenn has flown once, and United Launch Alliance's Vulcan only twice. RocketLab's Neutron has yet to launch at all. SpaceX's Falcon 9 still dominates, launching with near clockwork precision. But now, Trump's administration appears ready to gamble on fostering competition, even if it means leaning more heavily on Bezos. 'Sierra Space stands ready,' Ozmen declared. Others in the sector are similarly jockeying for position, sensing that Musk's once-unshakable grip may be loosening.


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
Neo-Nazi group ‘actively seeking to grow in US' with planned paramilitary training event
An international neo-Nazi terrorist organization is boldly continuing to build in the US and planning a new paramilitary training event without fear of local authorities or the FBI, which once dismantled it in a nationwide effort. The Base, founded in 2018 by a former Pentagon contractor living in Russia and now suspected of Kremlin-sponsored espionage, once boasted close to 50 stateside members before the bureau made more than a dozen arrests in a years-long counter-terrorism operation. But since the presidential election campaign last year and what many then believed to be a surefire victory for Donald Trump, the Base saw an opportunity in a potential administration uninterested in policing white supremacy and went about ramping up its ranks. Now, the Base has a presence in Ukraine, performing sabotage operations inside the country against the embattled government, and new and dangerous cells emerging across Europe, and it appears to be growing in the US, where the FBI under the Maga acolyte Kash Patel has signalled it isn't prioritizing investigations of far-right extremism. In its early history, part of what first piqued the interest of authorities was the Base's courting of military veterans who could help drill its foot soldiers in a series of training camps across the US. Eventually implicated in an assassination plot, mass shootings and other actions in Europe, the Base went so far as to have a fortified compound and cell in Michigan, led by a US army dropout. Online evidence from its various accounts, several of which live on Russian servers to avoid censorship on American sites, shows the Base has real plans for a national gathering this summer where members intend to train in paramilitary drills as in years past. 'The Base in [the] USA is preparing for an upcoming national training event,' reads one of its recent posts soliciting crypto donations. 'This one might be our most attended training event in [the] USA in a while. We could really use some financial support to help our members with travel expenses.' The post continued: 'When you donate money to the Base, you're investing in a White Defense Force that's aiming to protect white people from political persecution and physical destruction.' The Base then published a new photo of armed members claiming to be in the midwest, which follows a trend in 2025 of the group bragging about its unafraid American presence. As a sort of taunt to its enemies, on the day of Trump's inauguration the Base released a photo of four members somewhere in Appalachia, in what was the largest number of American members in one photo in over a year. 'The upcoming national training event indicates that the group is seeking to grow and is willing to take the risk of advertising it publicly in advance,' said Joshua Fisher-Birch, an analyst of far-right terrorism who has been following the Base's movements for close to a decade. 'The Base appears to be actively seeking to grow in the US.' Fisher-Birch notes that even if the gathering involves 'fewer than 20 people', it is by no means 'low profile' and suggests the group sees momentum is on its side. 'An event entails planning, coordination, travel and face-to-face meetings between different regional groups, indicating that they operate in an environment where they view the potential amount of risk as acceptable,' he said. 'The group has previously stated multiple times that being a member or training with them is a risky endeavor; however, planning a meetup, which they will inevitably use for propaganda purposes, is a different approach than even a year ago, when the group advertised regional activities.' In response to queries about the Base's latest movements, the FBI told the Guardian that it only investigates people who have or are planning to commit a federal crime and pose 'a threat to national security'. Sign up to This Week in Trumpland A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration after newsletter promotion 'Our focus is not on membership in particular groups but on criminal activity,' said a spokesperson for the FBI. 'Membership in groups is not illegal in and of itself and is protected by the first amendment.' But in Michigan and in Georgia, members of the Base were charged with their criminal associations to the group. The Trump administration's security posture on the far right is to downplay its significance. Yet experts unanimously agree: it is the top domestic terrorism threat facing the country. Instead, Patel, the FBI's director, has gone about removing agents from pursuing the far right, while one of Trump's first actions in his second term was to provide unconditional pardons, en masse, to all of the January 6 insurrectionists. Fisher-Birch also pointed out that the Base had taken itself more seriously and upped its activities in Ukraine to the tune of calling for the murder of government officials and acts of sabotage – with the clearly stated goal of forming a white ethnostate in the west of the country. Already, the Ukrainian cell has uploaded geolocated videos of some of these attacks, one showing the burning of a military vehicle and what looks like a government electrical box. In a video released on a Russian video-sharing site in mid-May, Rinaldo Nazzaro, the founder and leader of the Base, who is living in St Petersburg, released a video describing the importance of new training videos proving to potential recruits that his group is not just online, but in the real world. 'It's propaganda through actions, not just words,' he said. It isn't clear where the paramilitary training will take place, but Nazzaro is known to have purchased land in the Pacific north-west that he intended to use as a headquarters for the Base and its activities.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Blind psychic Baba Vanga's world-changing 2025 prophecy set to occur at major televised event
A blind psychic, who allegedly foretold 9/11 and the COVID-19 pandemic, also made a world-changing prediction that humans will make contact with alien life this year. Baba Vanga, who died in 1996, was a Bulgarian mystic and clairvoyant who became a cult figure among conspiracy theorists after several of her pronouncements proved eerily true. This new prophecy for 2025 predicted that a 'new light in the sky' will appear during a major sporting event and people from the around the world would see it. Specifically, the Baba Vanga's vision described a UFO appearing over the event, allowing humanity to meet extraterrestrials for the first time - and the prophet said it would bring answers, not fear. Her 2025 prediction did not reveal which sporting event this would happen at, or what country it would take place in. Baba Vanga left no written records of her predictions. Most of the accounts come from her niece, Krasimira Stoyanova, or other followers who documented her alleged visions after her death who have been said to misinterpret what she said. News of the decades-old prediction comes as governments around the world have begun publicly discussing what they know about unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs). In the US, the Trump Administration has ordered the declassification of several top-secret topics, including government investigations into UFO sightings and alien life. Although the 2025 prediction was left vague, those who have interpreted Baba Vanga's prophecy believe the light clearly refers to an extraterrestrial spacecraft appearing over an unnamed sports venue. There is also speculation that the light could refer to a meteor shower, the Northern Lights, or the expected supernova of T Coronae Borealis Nova 3,000 light years away, which would be visible from Earth. Many believers thought this event would take place during the Super Bowl in February, which is one of the most viewed television events worldwide, but that did not happen. Baba Vanga's track record as a seer of future events rivaled the centuries-old reputation of Nostradamus. She is credited with predicting the destruction of the Russian submarine Kursk, which sank in the Barents Sea in 2000. Baba Vanga also said that 'two metal birds will crash into American brothers, and blood will spill,' which believers said accurately described the 9/11 terror attacks. Other prophecies that came true include the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed over 230,000, the election of Barack Obama in 2008, and the rise of the Islamic terror group ISIS in 2010. Baba Vanga even foretold her own death correctly, revealing that she would die on August 11, 1996 at the age of 85. However, there have been several misses along the way, including a prediction that there would be a nuclear war from 2010 to 2016. She also is said to have incorrectly predicted that Europe would be deserted by 2016 after many wars and chemical attacks, and that several world leaders would be assassinated during the same year in the 2000s. The question of whether UFOs exist appears to be reaching a boiling point, as more and more whistleblowers come forward to say that humans have already made contact with alien life. In the US, Arizona has become a major hotspot for UFO sightings, with one former Customs and Border Protection official saying over 100 agents have reported seeing unidentified objects flying over America in recent years. That includes a military fighter plane colliding with an alleged UFO over the US Air Force's Barry Goldwater Range in 2023. Meanwhile, scientists in South America have claimed that they are in possession of both alien bodies and a strange space probe. In Peru, scientists probing 'alien mummies' recently shared new findings that they claim proves the specimens are '100 percent real.' Dozens of these mysterious, mummified bodies were discovered in the Nazca desert by journalist and ufologist Jaime Maussan, sparking years of investigation into their origins. In Colombia, a so-called 'UFO' was spotted in March over the town of Buga, zig-zagging through the sky in a way that defies the movement of conventional aircraft. That same object was allegedly recovered shortly after it landed and has since been analyzed by scientists, who discovered it features three layers of metal-like material and 18 microspheres surrounding a central nucleus they are calling 'a chip.' Dr Jose Luis Velazquez, a radiologist who examined the sphere, reported finding 'no welds or joints,' which would typically provide a clue that humans made it. As for Baba Vanga's prediction, there are still several major sporting event still to come in 2025. Those include tennis Wimbledon championship in July, baseball's World Series in October, and the Formula 1 Championship in December.