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Blue planet project debunked
Blue planet project debunked





blue planet project debunked

WHAT BELIEVERS THINK IT IS: An organized research project to catalog our knowledge of alien life and extraterrestrial civilization. So there you go, a conspiracy theory so silly it couldn't even be made into a Star Trek movie. Paramount rejected the idea, and Roddenberry had to go back to the drawing board, though he continued to tinker with it for years, eventually publishing it as a novel. Roddenberry's concept for what eventually became Star Trek: the Motion Picture was called "The God Thing" and involved an alien ship, hovering above Earth, that was programmed to send down people who looked like prophets, including Jesus Christ. It's likely that Monast took part of the Blue Beam concept from a recently published book about Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, who had worked for years to get a film project off the ground with a similar plot to what Monast was writing about. After all, when you're dealing with new gods, massive exterminations, mind control and 3D holograms, everything and everything can be part of your plan.

blue planet project debunked

Project Blue Beam has become a sort of Conspiracy Theory of Everything, drawing in everything from 9/11 and FEMA camps to the death of Tupac Shakur and old Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes in an effort to explain how exactly NASA is going to take over our minds. Presumably none of those people have been "taken out." Numerous websites cropped up to evangelize Monast's theories, and some are still active today. Of course, Blue Beam believers allege he was taken out by the Project, as he was getting too close to the truth. While Monast's book and subsequent lectures laid the groundwork for the Project Blue Beam conspiracy, much of the following work has been done by others, as Monast died of a heart attack in 1996. Universal Supernatural Manifestations via Electronics - mind control and the stripping of freedom Artificial Thought & Communication - the takeover of each individual mind through VLF wavesĤ. The Big Space Show in the Sky - the unveiling of lifelike hologram "new gods" designed for each region of the globeģ. Engineered Earthquakes & Hoaxed 'Discoveries' - designed to turn people away from ChristianityĢ. The book laid out, in the typical flood of gibberish that comes with conspiracy theories, NASA's four part plan to take over the world.ġ.

blue planet project debunked

He began writing about the New World Order in the early 90's, then codified his beliefs in the plan in his 1994 book, Project Blue Beam (NASA). Serge Monast had already written a number of essays, poems and French-language books when he appeared to stumble on his greatest discovery yet: the secretive plot by NASA to take over the world. WHAT IT ACTUALLY IS: A hoax created by a French-Canadian conspiracy theorist - and most likely based on unused concepts from the first Star Trek movie. Project Blue Beam, the NASA name for this heinous plot, will fake an alien invasion and the Rapture through holograms and mind control, while simultaneously destroying all knowledge on earth, capturing children to use as sex slaves and culling the population through execution and medical experimentation. WHAT BELIEVERS THINK IT IS: An incredibly deep, complicated conspiracy involving NASA leading the New World Order with its own technology-based religion, headed by the Antichrist himself. Here are three, concerning UFO's and aliens - all with fairly significant internet presence, but with little in the way of evidence to support their existence: But they have a number of devotees, and have had books, articles and even television episodes devoted to them. Most just kind of appeared on the internet in the early days of conspiracy mongering (the early 90's) and don't have much of an origin story. As a skeptical blogger, I've often found topics that are interesting enough to research, but don't really have a lot of "there there," so to speak.







Blue planet project debunked