Can we approach the concept of aliens, like represented in the movies, as something that has originated externally, and is not just the product of
imagination? If the idea of the 'Grey' alien is a product of mass reportings (contactees from the 1940s and on), than what involvement does
Hollywood have with that?
People often declare that Aliens are a product of Hollywood and man's overactive imagination, yet if the concept of the Grey Alien was introduced
by external accounts, what did Hollywood or 'imagination' have to do with any of it?
Wouldn't that be like people declaring there is no such thing as bi-pedal, knuckle-walking hairy primates in the Congo? Well people actually did
declare, that there was no such thing as the Mountain Gorilla. We didn't 'believe' in such things for hundreds of years. We considered the actual
reports of Mountain Gorillas to be 'fiction' or 'legend'. Interestingly enough, we still consider the thousands of annual reported sightings of
Bigfoot to be 'made-up'.
- Our nightmare idea of an unknown American primate
- another primate that was once unknown
and considered the stuff of legends and tall-tales
It's very easy for people to construe that pop-knowledge of something equates to it being made up, part of hollywood, a product of our imagination
etc. Because the concept of Aliens and Bigfoot BECAME so popular, we went from believing the phenomena was a big fat lie told by a certain individual,
to one massive hallucination on the parts of thousands of individuals. This is why we hear the argument that certain things are the product of
Hollywood, when in fact, they are the product of human experience.
That is to say, man-kind did not imagine Greys, and we did not always have them in our movies. We made cheesy, out of control foam-suit monsters and
considered that just as 'alien' as anything else, and we did this well into the early 70's when the concept of the Grey was becoming too prominent
in popular culture to ignore. At which point, we adopted the modern Grey as the archetypal alien in our pop-knowledge.
- What we once considered the typical monster/alien - used to
scare the pants off us
- Was it our over-active imaginations or Hollywood that created this new
archetypal alien? Or something else?
It was only after 30 years of constant 'contactee' whistle-blowing from the general populace that we began to see Greys as the common alien. This
trend still continues, with many things. They are exposed to us first on a seemingly 'crazy' account from a single individual, then hundreds or
thousands of separate accounts come forward, until suddenly, we are either dealing with an out-of-control product of the imagination, or we are going
to have to accept that the phenomena is real.
If such phenomena is real, it stands to reason that eventually it will become public knowledge, and part of our pop-culture, yes, even movies. People
still believe the idea of Hollywood disclosure is ridiculous : but with the logic explained earlier, Hollywood does not have to intentionally disclose
anything. They simply feed on the popular idea of something - and where does that popular idea come from? Where did the popular concept of the Grey
come from? Or Bigfoot? Or anything else 'paranormal' and seemingly imagination-land-borne? These concepts come from personal experience and
thousands of separate, corroborating accounts. In other words, Hollywood gets it's ideas from US : not the other way around. There can be no argument
that Hollywood is not disclosing popular information back into society : that is it's job. Regardless, the term 'disclosure' seems conspiratorial
to people and they stand firm in their belief that Hollywood is in the business of making up our ideas and not regurgitating them back at us.
Who is to say what is or is not disclosure? Because people really have 'disclosed' the existence of Greys, and aliens, even high-ranking government
officials have disclosed this information.
What I find interesting, is that because Greys are in movies, people think they are make-believe and that man-kind is just 'super creative and
imaginative'. But, in the big picture, what did movies have to do at all with the idea of these types of aliens?
The idea of aliens in general was not a movie invention either. It was the result of historical recordings that advanced species and civilizations did
interfere with us before.
- Just one example of historic evidence
- Closeup
So again, I ask: what do movies really have to do with anything? They are not the origination of these ideas, they are just the largest messenger to
the general populace. In that sense, yes, it is disclosure. And I do believe some of it is intentional.
I won't share my opinion on how deep and psycho-traumatic this indoctrination of the public is though. Let's just say that the art of
desensitization is perfected and used in tandem with well known forms of mind-control.
It's not a far out idea once you understand that disclosure can be anything from intentional to accidental. In either case, it is the populace, it is
the people, who are responsible for the origination of certain 'far-out' ideas. We are the creators, and Hollywood is the factory that absorbs,
manipulated, and regurgitates our experiences back out. We have to look with a very critical eye at how they are representing concepts that belong to
us, because these ideas DO come from us, and we should never have allowed Hollywood to become 'responsible' for the ideas of aliens etc. That
responsibility is ours.
[edit on 27-12-2007 by NewWorldOver]