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AlienMind
The Verdants
7. - Large-Scale Disagreements
Phillip Krapf
worked as Metro Editor for the Los Angeles Times,
until retiring in the mid-1990’s. According to Krapf, less than two
years later in 1997 he was taken up for a three day visit on a
large, disk-shaped craft owned by “the Verdants”—thin, slightly
bulge-eyed aliens with large heads; roughly 5’ 6” inches tall. Krapf
says the Verdants’ skin is either white or tan, with greenish tints,
and that they have slightly pointed ear tips.
An earnest,
well-regarded journalist who speaks with no outward sign of
dishonesty, Krapf suggests that he may have been selected for the
encounter because he’s a reputable professional who had previously
been skeptical about aliens and UFO’s. Krapf won a Pulitzer Prize as
editor of what was then one of the best newspapers in the country.
He did fact checking and was responsible for steering reporters and
removing inaccuracies in their stories. Given his conservative,
mainstream stature, he may be the most well-regarded witness of his
sort, to date.
In two recent books Krapf writes that in fully conscious encounters
with the Verdants, a sexually-reproducing population of 500 trillion
individuals, the Verdants told Krapf that Verdants live for
thousands of years and that Verdants currently inhabit 246,000
different planets. Krapf was told that the Verdants are from a galaxy that is 14 million light years away. His writing is
remarkably detailed, and, in overall terms, is consistent with
reports by hundreds of persons who claim to have encountered gray
aliens. (See the writings of Dr. John Mack, Budd Hopkins and David
Jacobs for further details.)
If true, Krapf’s story would be the second full-length,
minute-by-minute account about an open alien attempt at diplomatic
interaction with fully-conscious humans. The first was
Alec Newald’s
book, Coevolution, about a ten-day journey to the planet of a
competing alien group called the Elders.
*There have been other
books about interactions that some readers might consider
diplomatic, yet they were neither as prolonged and explicit, nor as
recent as Krapf’s and Newald’s books, in which aliens appear to have
gone out of their way to accommodate the writers by providing psychotronically effected, near-total recall. Apparently, this was
done in order to facilitate publication of both stories. Given the
frequency of recent contacts and sightings, paralleled by a cryptic
dribble of human official disclosures, these three books stand out
in a fast-developing, new context. Krapf writes that he was taken
for a second visit with the Verdants three years later in 2000.
Krapf reports that, so far, Verdants have persuaded 17,000 other
non-Verdant planets to join under their umbrella, adding yet another
150 trillion aliens to their empire (which touts itself as a
collective). Each of the additional 17,000 planets is reportedly
inhabited by a different alien species. Given that a large galaxy
like our own contains roughly 150 billion stars, there should be
many habitable planets in a typical galaxy. So, we shouldn’t
conclude that Verdant numbers mean that they control a number of
other large galaxies. A single large spiral galaxy could contain
most of the Verdant alignment.
Krapf says his Verdant contacts informed him that they were the only
colonizers they knew of in the universe. If true, this would mean
they’re probably more manipulative than non-colonizing aliens. Krapf
says Verdants call their umbrella the Intergalactic Federation of
Sovereign Planets, or the IFSP. If Krapf is correct, we live within
reach of a galaxy (14 million light years away) inhabited by colonizing Verdants who speak in terms of a federated structure,
which implies a central, over-riding authority.
Verdant incursions
here, some of which reportedly involve gray alien abductions of
humans, may have accelerated our awareness of off-world dynamics. Krapf writes that in a series of meetings on a 1 ½ mile diameter,
disk-shaped Verdant ship with many windows and entry ports, Verdants
admitted that they have orchestrated years of human abductions for
scientific and breeding purposes prior to attempting a diplomatic
opening to humankind. Electrogravity was apparently used to slow
certain brain processes and render abductees semi-conscious so that
they wouldn’t remember such events.
Krapf says that Verdants have contacted roughly 800 human
“ambassadors,” persons chosen by the Verdants, not by humans, to
help initiate relations with the Verdant contingent aboard ship.
Krapf further says that while onboard he saw at least one US citizen
of national stature being led on a tour of the disk. While in the
disk, Krapf learned that a Times Mirror executive (LA Times) was
tentatively part of the program.
Krapf later spoke with the man, who
fearfully admitted involvement. Krapf saw a list plus photos of
hundreds of other human contacts for the Verdant diplomatic
initiative. For yet-unspecified reasons, the projected Verdant
opening was delayed several years past its planned date. Krapf says
the Verdants he met seemed reticent yet certain that Verdants would
succeed in setting the agenda here, which seems ironic because Verdants proposed that they be allotted 600 square miles of empty
land in the US Southwest to build a center for interaction with
humans.
Of course, it’s difficult to imagine that the people of this planet
would want an alien colonizer to occupy our system. Verdants should
have known better, given their reported study of human affairs.
So,
in a sense, if Krapf’s story is correct, the delay in an opening by
the Verdants isn’t simply a delay. Instead, it may be due to the
fact that the Verdants have little chance here, yet due to wishful
thinking within their bureaucracy, plus the extent of their
abduction and breeding infiltration of certain human sectors, they
must go through the motions of an opening (if not some bitter,
last-minute attempts at manipulating humans toward such ends).
Apparently, further delays diminish the Verdants’ chances here
because humans become more technologically capable and informed with
time.
Note: in December of 2004 one highly advanced, non-IFSP alien who
has been critical of the Verdants reported that the Verdants have
successfully planted “between 3000 and 4000” of their direct
operatives in human societies. Of course, this number doesn’t
include common abductees and casual experiencers. Instead, it refers
to individuals who, unknown to other humans, work directly for the Verdant IFSP to bend human events in favor of IFSP (Intergalactic Federation of
Sovereign Planets) control here.
Such humans may have genetic and other IFSP contributions that go
unnoticed. The source for this report and his colleagues have
provided breakthrough information at various junctures. Leery of
damages done by IFSP manipulators, they seem to want to help humans.
We can probably assume that the IFSP would prefer to steer its
operatives toward high-level positions. In later chapters, this
primer outlines methods for distinguishing between a normal human
and an IFSP “direct operative.”
Based upon simple negative energy
aspects of remote sensing, this method can be practiced by most
humans. First, you must practice remote sensing, which uses the
human nerve structure to “feel” around those sites or events that
involve IFSP aliens and look for their signature kind of electrogravity streaming. Such
electrogravity streams stand out
starkly, compared to the ambient background, and usually trace back
to an IFSP technology site instantaneously. What makes this easy is
that fact the different kinds of electrogravity used by different
populations have different energy signatures (especially the psychotronic component).
Given that such electrogravity streams are
full of detailed information content, sorting them out is fairly
easy, once a person has learned to:
a) recognize and be sensitive to
them
b) to practice sensing them by concentrating on a given
site or by paying careful attention to electrogravity streams during
interactions with aliens
Although a less common option, the latter
method is quite effective. Advanced remote sensing can even detect
past IFSP interactions with the “direct operative” in question. This
is possible because electrogravity (and negative energy) span and
connect outwardly (and inwardly) more extensively than is often
immediately apparent.
There are variations on the theme, of course: some humans may be
unusually talented in identifying “direct operative” IFSP
individuals.
Author’s note: no direct harm is intended to any
individual, and readers should know that those who simply sympathize
with, or are more generally entranced by new alien encounters are
not considered “direct operatives.” Direct operatives would have no
compunction about doing harm to both this planet and its inhabitants
in order to serve the IFSP agenda, while a mere aficionado would
recoil at the thought. (Krapf isn’t a direct operative.)
The
situation is quite serious because Verdant resources would have
allowed them to give material and other advantages to their direct
operatives over many years’ time. Given the Verdant record
elsewhere, Verdant designs on the resources and energy environment
here could be cause for concern.
For example, as
Phillip Krapf notes in his first book, in the past,
Verdants have assigned IFSP (Intergalactic Federation of
Sovereign Planets) parties to monitor some reluctant
conscript planets (considered hostile) in order “to maintain the
(IFSP) program of sabotage in the event future generations might
once again try” to go into space.
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Verdants told Krapf they were
referring to warlike populations that Verdants had encountered, but
the same attitude may apply to all who reject a Verdant incursion.
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Verdants told Krapf that, in some past cases, Verdant sabotage has
led to manipulated warfare on some planets, the destruction of
others.
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One Verdant told Krapf Verdants infiltrated some 10,000 of
their operatives onto one planet, allowing them to become “heads of
military units, key scientists, government leaders, and chief
executives of industrial complexes, including armament
manufacturers. Through sabotage, subterfuge, misdirection,
persuasion over great masses of the host populations, and careful
manipulation of government policy,” Verdants achieved their ends on
the given planet.
(The Challenge of Contact, p. 76-77)
Phillip Krapf reports that on his first three-day visit to the
Verdants’ disk-shaped cruiser he was “shown a roster of many of the
important (Earth) people who had been recruited as Ambassadors,
which was a virtual Who’s Who of the World.” Ambassadors are humans
reportedly taken to the Verdant ship to be indoctrinated, then used
in a Verdant plan to absorb planet Earth within the IFSP. (The
Challenge of Contact, p. 13)
The matter is mentioned here because it relates to Verdant thinking
and behavior in our vicinity. Given the diversity and independence
of most human societies, the Verdants’ prospects here would seem
dim. If such is the case, then planet Earth would be a foreign
policy failure. Bad feelings and resentful last-minute gestures
could be expected. Expansionist designs of the sort do not die
pleasantly.
What do US officials have to say about aliens visiting Earth?
Perhaps the most famous commentary was written by Col.
Phillip Corso, an Army specialist who served in Eisenhower’s White House and
in the Pentagon. In his 1998 book,
The Day After Roswell, Corso
claimed that he worked on a Pentagon project to distribute and
reverse-engineer technology gathered from downed gray alien craft.
Corso’s book was the first full-length, high-level disclosure of the
sort. Senator John Stennis wrote a glowingly favorable preface for
the book, but then tried to retract it later.
Writing with co-author
and UFO magazine publisher William Birnes, PhD, Corso suggested
that, beginning with Harry Truman and climaxing with
the Eisenhower
administration, US defense and intelligence officials privy to an
alien crash at Roswell began to fear that grays and affiliated
aliens posed a threat. Part of the fear is attributed to frustration
within the military, the inability to either explain or compete with
such aliens; part of it may have been a kind of spin that was put on
the subject during the editing process.
Despite the fact that Corso says he worked on an Army project to
distribute recovered alien technology so that it could be copied by
US corporations without necessarily betraying the technology’s
origin, Corso’s experience occurred quite early in the history of
human-alien interactions. Corso wrote that military colleagues
suspected that grays were alive, yet robotic in some strange,
implanted way. Decades later, however, there is evidence that grays
are sentient beings capable of very human-like error.
More will be said about Verdants and grays later, but for now the
case provides at least one explicit example of a large alien empire,
or collective. Readers should bear in mind that in all probability,
the Verdants represent little more than the dominant population of
one large spiral galaxy 14 million light years distant from our own.
Due to their trading prowess, they may be influential in the other
galaxies that they’ve fingered into, as a minority occupier.
Verdants reportedly told Krapf they’re from a galaxy group that,
like our own galaxy group, is located out on the fringes of the Virgo supercluster of galaxies.
The Virgo supercluster contains some
2000 galaxies.
In short, Verdants would represent but one galaxy out
of a vastly larger 50 billion to 100 billion galaxies within the
larger, visible universe. Alien competitors of the Verdants go out
of their way to emphasize this fact with specific reference to the
Verdants, by the way. Further reports have partly corroborated
Krapf’s story about the Verdants. For example, hundreds, if not
thousands of witnesses say they have encountered gray aliens working
on a breeding program, which is further evidence of the current
Verdant-IFSP presence in our system. Because abducteé and
experiencer reports from all over the globe often mesh consistently,
we should give Krapf’s reports their due consideration.
The
Verdant case helps to illustrate the fact that there are noisome
disagreements on an inter-galactic scale. Along with others in the
human telepathic community (an open commonality), I have interacted
and disputed with Verdants, as strange as that may sound to some
readers.
Disputes arise because, like many humans, I’m actively
critical of Verdant-gray intentions. Prior to reading Krapf’s book I
had no clearly defined context in which to identify Verdants (who
were extant at the time) because Verdants normally try to obscure
themselves behind lesser, dependent aliens of their group, i.e. the
grays and human-gray hybrids. It’s both a matter of pride and
official priority that they do so.
After
Krapf’s book was published, specific details about numerous of
my own, ongoing interactions became clear. Although I disagree with
aspects of Krapf’s story, i.e. Verdant remarks about an “angelic”
intermediary for their contacts with humans (a sop that smacks of
Verdant propaganda), most of it is earnest and informative. At
present, Verdants can be remotely discerned, easily. As is noted
above, they can be investigated using techniques to be described in
later chapters. *Caution is advised, however.
The Verdant story is outlined in a way that brings together
important, previously unspecified pieces of a very large puzzle. One
large, native coalition of Milky Way and other, related aliens has
repeatedly issued warnings about the Verdant-gray abduction and
breeding scheme, which is described as a violation, an illegal
intervention by an oversized abuser here along the outer fringes of
the Virgo supercluster. The Verdants are cited for provoking
militarization and the infiltrated sabotage of other worlds’
ecologies.
Before delving into the subject further, I should note that the
history of alien political disputes in our small part of the
universe is mentioned here for one specific reason. It figures high
in the minds of neighboring aliens and is intrinsic to an
inter-alien dynamic that humans are just beginning to discern. It is
of epochal significance to the human population, yet may be seen as
a kind of garden variety item in larger cosmic news reports. In a
larger context, there are much greater considerations.
No respectable alien will deny that major issues are at stake in the
human struggle against an intervention that features a breeding
program and the manipulation of religious and economic conflicts.
Some readers may disagree with the assertion, yet it’s based on
numerous reports by black budget whistle-blowers, abductees and
other experiencers, plus aliens who can easily be identified.
There’s an urgent tone in such messages.
*In a larger sense, one can
imagine an alien sitting in a neighboring galaxy supercluster and
reading about the situation here, then wincing because it reminds
him/her of a similar situation there.
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The Universe
within 12.5 Light Years
The Nearest Stars |

The Universe
within 250 Light Years
The Solar Neighbourhood |

The Universe
within 5,000 Light Years
The Orion Arm |
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The Universe
within 50,000 Light Years
The Milky Way Galaxy |

The Universe
within 500,000 Light Years
The Satellite Galaxies |

The Universe
within 5 million Light Years
The Local Group of Galaxies |
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The Universe
within 100 million Light Years
The Virgo Supercluster |

The Universe
within 1 billion Light Years
The Neighbouring Superclusters |

The Universe
within 14 billion Light Years
The Visible Universe |
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click images
to enlarge
Our galaxy is just one of
thousands that lie within 100 million light years.
The above maps shows how galaxies tend to cluster into
groups, the largest nearby cluster is the Virgo cluster
a concentration of several hundred galaxies which
dominates the galaxy groups around it. Collectively, all
of these groups of galaxies are known as the Virgo
Supercluster. The second richest cluster in this volume
of space is the Fornax Cluster, but it is not nearly as
rich as the Virgo cluster. Only bright galaxies are
depicted on the map, our galaxy is the dot in the very
centre.
from
TheAtlasOfTheUniverse
Website |
Incidentally, the galaxy M-83 matches both the size, and the
location that Phillip Krapf describes as being home to the Verdants.
M-83 is a spiral galaxy located in the Centaurus A galaxy group. A
few alien sources have suggested that M-83 is, in fact, the Verdant
home.
In addition, one highly detailed map was communicated to
indicate Verdant outposts in other galaxies. In the map,
communicated by an alien significantly more evolved than the Verdants who monitors the situation here closely, Verdant IFSP
outposts are concentrated in the Centaurus A galaxy group, primarily
centering on the galaxy M-83, but fingering into other galaxies of Centaurus A.
If I’m not mistaken, the Verdants aren’t the most
numerous population in the other two large spirals of their home
galaxy group. Instead, other native populations are more numerous.
Verdant outposts also finger lightly into galaxies of the five
galaxy groups nearest Centaurus A: Sculptor, Maffei,
M-81, our own
Andromeda-Milky Way group, and Canes I, which broadens out into the
Virgo supercluster of galaxies. Apparently, as is noted later in
this book, the native populations of those five galaxy groups are
dominant there, not the Verdants. All five galaxy groups are small
groups containing but 3-7 large galaxies and a few dozen smaller
irregular or elliptical galaxies.
Although some who are new to alien studies would like to think that
aliens are all about electrogravity, interstellar travel, and
community of mind, they aren’t. The main concern communicated by
aliens, at present, is the universal ecology. Why the ecology?
Because there are no unlimited quantities in the known universe.
}
Rather than assume that unoccupied territory is simply open for the
taking, humans have been advised to remember that all large galaxies
are already inhabited by advanced civilizations. In other words, the
most important task for humans, now, is to be self-sufficient and
learn about more responsible alien populations, rather than stumble
out in pig-headed search of real estate.
Some humans assume that they have always gone about their business
without setting limits on population and wealth, yet in a more basic
sense, every family makes such decisions daily. For all humans to do
what most of us have done—to forego a life of material excess and
limit one’s family—is not a major stretch of the imagination.
Should
we continue down our present, one-way street toward global
ecological breakdown, we can expect the larger off-world community
to either distance itself from the regimes here or try to convince
humans to compel a change before we become a threat to our
neighbors. People who interact with aliens say that advisories of
the sort are an everyday occurrence.
That’s food for thought. Maybe we can learn how to avoid global
failure by studying alien social dynamics more rigorously.
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For
example, how did other planets die?
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Why did the Verdant IFSP
fail to
persuade multi-planetary mega-populations in other galaxies to join
under its umbrella?
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Does the failure of the IFSP indicate that a
larger, more effective premise already exists collectively?
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If such
is the case, how do galaxy supercluster and larger universal
interactions derive their basic conventions?
Aliens touch upon such
themes during interactions with a growing number of humans. Aliens
further suggest that such considerations are now so obvious as to be
mathematically explicit.
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