Some of the things we learn in the new UFO documentary "The Age of Disclosure" premiering this weekend
Lue Elizondo, former Pentagon counter-intelligence official, claims:
• He ran a Pentagon UFO program (he didn't)
• UFOs lived inside his house for years (but he admits he never took photos)
• He used his psychic powers to turn himself into an angel (which then shook the bed of a sleeping terrorist).
• That "aliens" could actually be angels and/or demons
• He wears a bulletproof vest and fears retribution from the CIA for vaguely talking about aliens without evidence.
Jay Stratton, former Pentagon intelligence official, claims:
• A poltergeist attached itself to him at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah and then followed him to his home in Maryland
• His house was/is haunted by malevolent "shadow people" and spooky "orb" UFOs
• A werewolf (or "wolfman") stalked his backyard
• That a spooky tree's shadow once "paralyzed" him, overwhelming him with fear.
Tim Gallaudet, former US Navy official, claims:
• Spirits from "the other side" haunt his home
• His daughter is a "medium" that can see and communicate with these spirits
• He filmed tiny ghost UFOs inside his house (he's never provided this footage but it was probably just dust)
• UFOs are living inside the oceans
Eric Davis, scientist and former military contractor, claims:
• While ghost hunting at Skinwalker Ranch, he heard a voice inside his head saying "We are watching you"
• Skinwalker spooky things followed him home and haunted him
• Poltergeists and UFOs are connected to each other
Hal Puthoff, scientist and former government contractor, claims:
• He has psychic powers
• UFOs could be people from the lost city of Atlantis, who've been secretly hiding somewhere on Earth with advanced technology
Tim Burchett, Republican Congressman, claims:
• The Bible contains evidence of flying saucers
• The literal devil is trying to stop UFO disclosure
teachings of the Bible are so muddled and self-contradictory that it was possible for Christians to happily burn heretics alive for five long centuries. It was even possible for the most venerated patriarchs of the Church, like St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, to conclude that heretics should be tortured (Augustine) or killed outright (Aquinas). Martin Luther and John Calvin advocated the wholesale murder of heretics, apostates, Jews, and witches. - Sam Harris, "Letter To A Christian Nation"