AlienMind
The Verdants
9. - A Mega-Population Problem Case
Phillip Krapf reports that when he visited the Verdant ship he was
told that in the past, Verdants opted for a genetically selective,
non-sexual reproduction strategy but later chose to return to
sexuality. A Verdant told Krapf that the reversion to sexuality cost
them a significant part of their intellectual ability. If such is
the case, then why did they do so? For some strange reason, no
single Verdant explained their reasoning. The omission speaks
volumes about the larger Verdant outlook.
A closer look at the case suggests that Verdants may have done so in
order to outnumber a competing population in their home galaxy.
Given recent developments in human astronomy, plus non-IFSP aliens’
comments about Verdant history, we can now construct a scenario for
that phase of Verdant history.
Those who briefly studied the website showing our location in the
universe (above
images or visit
this website) will certainly
appreciate the following. The beautiful, star-studded swirl that we
call the Milky Way is part of a group of some 40 galaxies in the
local group, which features our galaxy at one end, and the equally
inspiring spirals Andromeda and M-33 at the other end.
The two Magellenic Clouds and numerous smaller ellipticals complete the
picture. Moving counter clockwise as seen from above, the next
nearest galaxy groups (all similar in size to our group) are:
Sculptor, Maffei, M-81, and the Canes I
group - which billows out
into the Virgo supercluster, a relatively small supercluster, as the
universe goes.
The fifth closest galaxy group is Centaurus A, which may hold the
answer to why grays and other Verdant-related aliens have abducted
humans on a massive scale. If, as Krapf reports, the Verdant galaxy
is 14 million light years away, then the most likely candidate, in
terms of size and habitability, would be the large spiral galaxy
M-83 (click image left). Competing aliens have repeatedly suggested that M-83 is the
Verdant home galaxy.
While interacting with the pre-noted human
telepathic community, one advanced alien communicated an explicit
map in such regard. Another advanced alien remarked that the Verdants
have prematurely “cooked” M-83 by overusing electrogravity
on a massive scale. He suggested that, by doing so, the Verdants may
have caused certain supernovae in M-83 to explode prematurely, thus
decimating biological planets. When this last remark was stated,
there was a brief exchange between a Verdant and the alleging alien.
The allegation stood unchallenged. Again, this was observed by a
number of different humans.
Some may ask whether we should trust such aliens’ reports. In
response, I should note that some of the alien contingents who visit
our vicinity are on serious, and in some cases, potentially
life-threatening watch (for other aliens). To even be here, in our
vicinity tending to such matters from a distance can be risky. No
alien wants to be responsible for a Verdant seizure of their
technologies, which Verdants reportedly study and sometimes try to
copy. For example, a few years ago, Elder aliens specifically
reported a previous Verdant seizure of an Elder craft, the hull of
which was made of hybridized living materials that allowed it to
reconfigure in cold, empty space.
Apparently, given that the ecology of our planet and that of
surrounding galaxy groups may be jeopardized by a colonial’s
incursion, competing alien sources feel a need to tell the truth
about Verdants. Some alien contingents are so much more
advanced
than the Verdants that they don’t feel threatened. Instead, they
appear to tend to the Verdants in terms of a larger ecological
context.
Should recent reports prove wrong, however, the next most likely
candidate for the Verdant galaxy would be NGC 4945, M-83’s close
neighbor. NGC 4945 (click image right) is a slightly larger spiral than is M-83.
Meanwhile, the galaxy that clearly dominates spiral M-83’s galaxy
group is Centaurus A, a much larger elliptical (nearly round)
galaxy.
According to recent astronomers’ data, Centaurus A is the
product of a merger between two large galaxies that was completed
some 10 million years ago---before the present view, that is. Centaurus A is some 12.4 million light years away from us.
Astronomers say the merger may have begun as much as 500 million
years ago. Some suggest that it is now a large elliptical with a
strange dust lane around its perimeter because it’s a large
elliptical that absorbed a modest spiral galaxy about the size of
our close neighbor galaxy, M-33.
Let’s continue our scenario about the Verdant home galaxy. For the
sake of the argument, let’s assume that the Verdant galaxy is M-83,
as has been repeatedly suggested by the alien sources noted above.
As such, we may now have enough data to posit an explanation for the Verdants’ aggressive population growth.
According to
Phillip Krapf’s
report, the Verdants developed electrogravity technology some
229,000,000 years ago. Given that other advanced populations
probably existed near M-83 at the time, Verdants could have copied
electrogravity technology from such aliens, much as humans copied
downed gray alien technology more recently.
According to astronomers, M83 has a double nucleus, a double center,
which suggests that, like our neighboring galaxy Andromeda, M83 has
nearly completed a merger with a smaller galaxy. Assuming that there
were intelligent residents in both of the merging components, the
merger may have spurred the Verdants to be more competitive.
Verdants may have worried that merging aliens might out-populate the
Verdants in M83. That, in turn, may be why Verdants ended their
non-sexual status in order to out-populate competitors.
Other pressures may have sped Verdant population growth (numbering
500 trillion, at present, writes Krapf). Beginning as much as
229,000,000 million years ago, Verdants may have seen the pending
merger of two nearby galaxies (now combined in the galaxy Centaurus
A) as a threat to their domain—for one simple reason. Some residents
of the soon-to-merge galaxies would have scouted M-83’s stars for
future homes because their soon-to-form large elliptical galaxy
would be hot and dangerous. Beginning as much as 100 million years
ago, an incursion into M-83 by populations fearing the merger would
have alarmed Verdants.
Had encroaching aliens taken unoccupied
systems in M-83, the Verdants would have wondered whether Verdants
would control their own fate or see their galaxy sped toward a
habitable end in advance of its “normal” lifetime (due to Bearden’s
*t, the speeding of time caused by the use of electrogravity).
Acting out of fear, Verdants may have been further motivated to
overpopulate and expand their domain in order to ward off further
incursions. Perhaps they saw that Centaurus A refugees
might gain
footholds in other large spirals of the vicinity: the galaxies
NGC4945 and E274-01.
Refugees fleeing Centaurus A (click
image left) would have had good reason to be
afraid. Earth astronomers see two huge, cone-shaped remnants of what
is called a “hyper-nova” extending out from opposite sides of a
massive black hole in the center of Centaurus A, which is now a
large elliptical (round-shaped) galaxy. Hyper-novae caused by the
merger of two star-sized black holes are the most violently
explosive events yet observed within the universe. The hypernova
that reportedly exploded in Centaurus A more than 10 million years
ago probably involved black holes that contained millions of solar
masses, hence the event was cataclysmic.
Given that two merging
galaxies deform as they merge, causing some stars to plunge toward
hot central regions of the new galaxy, the Centaurus A hypernova
would have been alarming. If left unshielded, thousands of
potentially habitable planets would have been rendered unlivable.
In
fact, the Centaurus A hypernova suggests what may happen on a lesser
scale during a future merger of black holes within M-83’s double
center. *M-83 is considered an “active galaxy” because it emits more
radio and infrared energy from its central active region, perhaps
due to its double center. M-83 is known for an unusual number of
supernova explosions.
Let’s continue the scenario. Presumably, according to one NASA
report issued several years ago, “life is ubiquitous” throughout the
universe. Early life forms eventually evolve into higher
intelligence in all habitable regions of all habitable galaxies.
Given that the vast majority of visible stars lie within galaxy superclusters, it’s only logical to assume that supercluster social
forms and supercluster constraints on overpopulation should, in
theory, prevail across the universe. In a sense, in much the same
way that New York and the world’s major population centers figure in
comparison to Waco, Texas, for example, superclusters should be more
challenging, yet more integrated and urbane than are outlying areas
like the Verdant galaxy group.
Of course, the two-cities analogy falls short in illustrating likely
differences. Suffice it to say, the Verdants may be an oversized but
relatively backward population (socially, albeit not necessarily
technologically---Verdants are highly intelligent). It’s possible
that in some respects, the Verdants may have failed to accord with
the larger supercluster ecology because they didn’t organize a
collective accommodation of Centaurus A refugees within their galaxy
group. Instead, Verdants may have bred to an extreme over the last
100 million years in order to outnumber competitors in M-83 and keep Centaurus A incursions to a minimum.
In one alternative scenario based upon direct quotes by more
advanced “hyperversal” aliens of our vicinity who pre-date humans by
billions of years, the Verdants were greedy, self-rationalizing
expansionists. In late 2004, the given hyperversals explicitly
stated that the Verdants embarked on their population blitz due to a
struggle for control of the original Verdant galaxy. For example,
according to Krapf’s figures taken from direct Verdant quotes,
Verdants take 14 planets for themselves for every 1 occupied by
another species in the IFSP. Worse yet, Verdants populate at 4 times
the rate that all of the other IFSP (Intergalactic Federation of
Sovereign Planets) populations do, on average, a
dangerously unbalanced ratio.
Faced with a potential problem, it
appears that a categorically more advanced population decided to
steer Verdants outward as part of a strategy of eco-tensions---in
part to give eco offenders reason to moderate, in part to show the
Verdants as a teaching example of a failing ecology. There have been
specific remarks by more advanced, “hyperversal” aliens to this
effect (see later chapter about hyperversals).
Another hyperversal
alien faction that’s highly critical of the Verdants pointed out
that a Verdant-abetting hyperversal faction has gone out of its way
to find and identify emerging planets for the Verdants to target in
search of conscripts. After learning of this, I and other humans
probed and queried the Verdant-abetting hyperversal aliens, who
monitor the Verdants closely. They eventually admitted that Verdants
have, in fact, been steered toward planets like Earth.
There seems to be a statistical spread in the given hyperversals’
scheme. They appear to encourage intergalactic interactions, in part
to cultivate a better awareness between galaxies, in part to develop
a check on offenders like the Verdants. As a result, when the people
of a planet like Earth begin to learn about aliens and
electrogravity, we quickly gets a sense of intergalactic politics,
plus the need for a larger universal ecology. Apparently, Verdants
are also expected to learn by their encounter with humans, a kind of
lesson that seems to proceed but one world (or galaxy) at a time.
In short, both of the Verdant expansion scenarios above appear to
have at least some validity. Judging by all reports, millions of
years ago the Verdants decided to outnumber their local competitors.
Fateful ironies would have followed. Overpopulation leads to greater
needs: career pressures, resource grabs, the wayward impulses of
those who want to participate in exotic foreign adventures.
According to
Phillip Krapf’s remarkable journals, the
Verdants are
sexuals who are prone to territoriality and the sometimes clouded
judgment that sexuality engenders. In this respect, as in most
others, we see a subtler shading than is noted in humans.
Nonetheless, we can assume that some in the Verdant bureaucracy
suffer neurotic pitfalls that surround the circus-like manipulation
of lesser, off-world peoples. Due to the internal preoccupations of
their far-flung government, in times of crisis Verdant crews will be
pressured to conform to a colonial paradigm. As sometimes happens
within intelligent sub-cultures, the sexually-related weaknesses of
the Verdant elite can be flipped, in a sense, and come to be
regarded as positive attributes, rather than impulsive failings.
As a result, a typical Verdant may regard humans as minor neophytes
from a backward planet and think that Verdants are perfectly right
to intervene here because Verdants are more knowledgeable. After
all, Verdants engage in a vastly larger endeavor. Judging from the
reports of numerous sources, Verdant IFSP propaganda says that
humans need to be “saved” from the ravages of their lesser nature
before planet Earth is ruined. However, few Verdants will confess
that part of the breeding program seeks to infiltrate and gain
control over vital human sectors. In Krapf’s books, Verdants admit
having done that to other planets, and competing aliens allege that
Verdants are doing it here, also.
So, how do Verdants rationalize their aggressive strategy millions
of years after their home galaxy power struggles? Without realizing
it, Verdants sometimes communicate internal assumptions about their
elite qualification to administer others’ affairs, plus other
messages relating to a culture of fear surrounding bureaucratic
challenges to any given Verdant’s competency. Within the vast
colonial heirarchy, such challenges are de rigeur because
Verdants
are often seen supervising younger, less technologically advanced
aliens from non-Verdant planets.
To stay on top, Verdants must be
coldly manipulative, especially during an intervention. In numerous
disputes with Verdants, I’ve noted this pattern repeatedly. For
example, when intruded upon personally, or when I note a violation
of humans in general, I sometimes probe and remotely test an entire
Verdant crew for details of their past and present intentions here.
This is done in flash-like bursts across a larger configuration
space (not in the sense of visible bursts) because it’s a
hyper-dynamic involving the negative cycle outlined in previous
pages.
Sometimes, in response, lesser crewmembers try to demonstrate their
skill at diverting me from identifying a Verdant overseer, all the
while resonating in masculinized, subcultural terms. Their version
of masculinized resonance is less rough-edged and usually more
intelligent than what one might expect among contained-craft humans,
yet it occurs fairly often and has been noted by a number of human
observers.
Sometimes I even encounter non-sexual aliens whose
intermediaries verge on masculinized characterizations, albeit
infrequently. In particular, there is one hyper-advanced population
of larger circulation that I refer to as the –X3’s, who, along with
hybrid intermediaries, tend to the Verdant case in a variety of
ways.
* More about the –X3’s and other “hyperversal” aliens in a
following chapter.
Speaking for myself, having long been identified as critical of
Verdant-gray intentions here, I’ve endured thousands of hours of
mostly uninvited remote interactions with IFSP aliens— sometimes of
a passive nature. However, some of it has been threatening and has,
at times, been tangentially framed in terms of a Verdant connection
to one leading US military-industrial family (formerly French
monarchists named Biderman and
Du Pont) in part known for its ties
to organized crime plus a previous family affinity for fascism and a
leading role in what is known as the anti-alien black budget
“Cabal,” ironically---which suggests an attempt to play both sides
of the fence off of each other for advantage.
Native Milky Way and
other advanced aliens have repeatedly pointed out that part of the
given US family (the formerly Swiss branch: Biderman) was “direct”
Verdant operative, possibly a result of the breeding program. The
news caused quite a stir, here, among the human community because it
corroborated a long-running pattern of thinly veiled verbal threats
to humans, a strategy of tension that such aliens have pursued for
years to the chagrin of a growing host of humans. As a result, there
have been sustained, finely networked efforts to probe the suspects
in such regard. The results have been disturbing, frankly.
As is reported in following chapters, non-IFSP aliens who criticize
Verdant overkill have repeatedly reported that the IFSP has “direct
operatives” in a number of specific cases on this planet, one of
whom is reportedly within “the Biderman part of the
Du Pont
family”---the largest, perhaps most reactionary arms manufacturer in
the United States with a long history of supporting death squads and
underworld finance. Another reported “direct operative” is a noted
French financier named “Rothschild,” whose family first appeared on
a major scale by funding both Napoleon’s adventures and his British
opponents.
At first glance, reports about “direct operatives” of the sort high
in the human economy may sound strange, yet given the large,
long-term strategy of the IFSP, we should expect to see
highly-placed direct human operatives. From the Verdant perspective
they would be useful and would help to assure that long-term IFSP
mobilizations (and abductions for breeding purposes) achieve their
desired goal. Earth wouldn’t be the first case of the sort. One
Verdant told Krapf that the Verdant IFSP inserted direct operatives
high into the social line-up on (at least) two other planets.
*Those familiar with US history will recall that
the Bush family has
long been a willing, if not obedient, part of the Du Pont-Dulles
faction of the CIA, perhaps the most corrupt of factions.
Non-federation aliens have gone so far as to state that George Bush
Sr. is also, in some way, a “direct operative” of the IFSP, as weird
as that may sound to some readers. The point has been stated
repeatedly and with emphasis, so it may be important. The subject
was later probed by a broad network of humans, with deeply
disturbing results.
I’ll explain how this is done, in later pages.
Having done graduate study in US history, and having worked as an
investigative reporter, I wouldn’t report the quotes unless they
were:
a) repeated numerous times so that a variety of humans could
pick up on them
b) were later investigated to check for direct
personal indications let slip by
Bush Sr., himself
Informative
alien mention was also made of a direct operative named “Gold,”
apparently a Jewish financial figure in New York City. A leading
Saudi family was also noted. It would appear that Verdants have a
multi-fold strategy for manipulating the human situation, at
present. They may be more ruthless than some might expect.
More generally speaking, Verdants appear to have a foreign policy
that places their empire-of-sorts at the center of all related
consideration, from which all other concerns are imagined to radiate
outward. Some Verdants seem to have been spoiled by the luxury of
distant travels, the option to live and work on literally thousands
of planets, plus the chance to study and manipulate lesser
populations up-close. I’ve detected a subdued but droning kind of
lust for sexual adventure among the most coldly dysfunctional old
stalwarts. Apparently, some of the worst cases of the sort are
shipped out to work on the most distant, most primitive planets
targeted for colonization---like planet Earth, for example.
After years of working in such places, some old Verdants become
almost hopelessly corrupted. Imagine what they go through: first
they must breed an obedient surrogate population to help tend to,
and mix with the peoples of the target planet. Such projects involve
the inculcation of primitive belief systems, delusional constructs
prone to schizophrenic pitfalls. Wars must be influenced toward an
eventually pro-federation outcome.
IFSP operatives must be
positioned to gain influence over organized crime structures on the
target planet, and breeding program operatives must be placed so
that they control the maximum amount of money and resources without
being exposed for their loyalty to the Verdant colonial scheme. To
some readers this surely sounds strange: corrupt aliens. To those
who know the history of colonialism, it should come as no surprise,
however. Humans aren’t the only kind that can do wrong.
In the end, Verdants who tend to colonial targets can, themselves,
be casualties because they become too dangerous to return to more
psychologically refined postings elsewhere. Some are relegated to
barren outposts like the planet that Phillip Krapf’s Verdant contact
described, a Verdant way station, here, in the Milky Way.
Ultimately, we must ask, how can Verdants maintain so large yet
isolated a string of planets?
How do they prevent the peoples of such planets from assimilating
with their neighbors? Stark differences between crude Verdant
colonial operatives and other, more finely-cultured Verdant
specialists suggest that, like destructive cases of militarism on
Earth, Verdants, too, have devised a stifled, if not infantile kind
of citizenship. To publish ugly details about their most aggressive
foreign policy failures would loosen the cohesion of the larger
empire. So, presumably, they glaze the cake---they overwhelm the
Verdant citizenry with more positive news and scientific reports
about their many planets.
The patronizing attitudes of Verdant crewmembers I’ve encountered
speak volumes in this regard. I’ve seen Verdants who will directly
and intrusively impinge upon any human, irregardless of stature,
i.e. the long-running pattern of thinly-veiled threats noted above
(which, to say the least, has become cause for concern among human
officials). At one time, pre-emptive impulses of the sort may have
helped the Verdants maintain their independence in the face of a
challenge. However, that was during a relatively primitive age,
compared to the current inter-alien context. In a sense, humans are
lucky to begin within a more advanced time.
In the end, like the human disaster of WWII, the mergers within M-83
and Centaurus A would have contributed to a burgeoning Verdant
security apparatus that ultimately defeated its own original
purpose: to preserve the long-term ecology. Worse yet, in order to
maintain their hold on non-Verdant conscript planets, Verdants would
have to surround such planets with an overbearing defense and
technology structure in order to cut them off from neighbors with
whom they might otherwise affiliate, then stray.
This may be why
Verdants and grays have reportedly developed limited human-hybrid
offshoot colonies on several planets near our solar system,
ironically. Ultimately, to proceed at such effort and expense would
be costly, tempting Verdants to “mine” the vicinity’s resources in
order to profit by the interaction.
Unlike what happened in the Verdant case, well-managed galaxy
mergers will hasten mixed alien integrations and the refinement of
electrogravity technologies, while placing a limit on population
growth. Indeed, some newly-merged ellipticals galaxies may be
exemplary in this regard. By reducing their populations in advance
and by jointly sharing a newly-merged galaxy, they can set a higher
standard.
Meanwhile, the coalescence of M-83’s double nucleus is long past and
the Centaurus A hypernova crisis was more than 10 million years ago,
yet Verdants haven’t managed to correct their specious impulses.
What single voice, what given Verdant planet would be sufficient to
change the expansionist policy of so large and unwieldy a
population? None, of course. The most likely solution would be a
collective security arrangement between all of the galaxy groups
that surround the Verdant home group, an arrangement that should
eventually include us.
Alternatively, the greatest chance for reform
of the Verdant empire may lie within a coalition of disparate,
non-Verdant planets who may try to democratize the Verdant-dominated
“federation” from within (even if they are a minority). There are
other, more advanced possibilities, including the largely veiled
interventions of hyper-advanced populations who greatly exceed the Verdants.
In my own experience, Verdant males have figured in coldly detached
manipulations intended to take advantage of human misconceptions.
Meanwhile, Verdant females, like human females, seem to be better
adjusted than are their male counterparts. Were Verdant females to
control their government, it would probably be more ecological.
Nonetheless, in a lighter moment, one hyper-advanced
(non-federation) alien remarked that Verdant females are
characterized by an unusual “presence” of mind—a tongue-in-cheek
criticism of the more immediate, stimulus-seeking awareness that
sexuality engenders.
Like Michael Moore’s recent argument that the United States is
really a progressive people just waiting to prevail (64% female and
non-white), most of the universe is probably either female or
non-sexual, which should help to tilt the scales toward larger,
nonviolent interactions.
The Verdant case helps to underscore the differences between sexuals
and non-sexuals, the problems that can arise among populations who
fail to control their growth. Indeed, we now hear competing aliens’
criticisms of the Verdants stated in precisely such terms. Milky Way
aliens should be concerned: the Verdant incursion here is neither a
legitimate case of need, nor does it appear to be entirely
consistent with a supercluster ecology. Instead, it has been
criticized as a security risk to this galaxy, which brings us back
to planet Earth, where abductions continue.
To place the Verdants in context, it helps to remember that Verdants
reportedly number 500 trillion individuals, in total. In the year
2000, one alien of a Milky Way coalition noted above reported, here,
that the largest single population native to the Milky Way numbers
“38 trillion” individuals. Assuming such numbers (essentially the
only ones that we have to date) the largest reported mega-population
in the Milky Way would occupy some ten or thirteen thousand planets,
if the Verdant ratio of advanced aliens per planet holds true here,
also.
In addition, we can assume that some more advanced
“hyperversal” aliens (part of a universal network of various hyperversals) reside within the Milky Way. They may interact with,
and at least partly constitute every major galaxy’s largest
coalitions. As such, the Milky Way would more closely approximate a
desired universal ecology.
Reckless population growth like that of the Verdants (reportedly 13
times more numerous than the largest Milky Way population) would be
destabilizing. Moreover, if Krapf’s figures are correct, Verdants
take 14 planets for themselves for every new member planet that
joins them, a dangerously skewed and undemocratic ratio.
*Note: In
late May 2004, one hyper-advanced alien mentioned that a neighboring
population of hyperversals (who I refer to as “the –X3’s”) is either
1.5 times as numerous as the Verdants, or some 1.5 quadrillion in
number—yet this last quote was so fleeting, albeit resonated
variously later, that it should be regarded as tenuous. There may be
more to the story. A later chapter discusses the –X3’s and other
“hyperversals.”
Over time, Verdants could easily tax the resources of their home
galaxy, which may be why Verdants now spill out in search of other
galaxies’ raw materials. Worse yet, Verdants may want to speed the electrogravity clock on other galaxies, thus
shortening their
duration, rather than expend the energy lifetime of their home
galaxy.
Phillip Krapf quotes one Verdant as saying that Verdants
have tentatively occupied at least one planet in the Milky Way,
which suggests that, in part, Verdants seek human affiliation in
order to rubber stamp their expansionist policy. Human capitulation
to such a scheme could put us at odds with native Milky Way and
other aliens, if not cut us off altogether.
Why is that?
Consider
the following.