Applause Applause Thanks everyone for coming today for the Kerry's event, Awaken Aware.
2021.
The first part of the talk is going to be a bit about Star Trek.
I don't know if you've got any Trekkies in here.
Any Trekkies?
Any Star Wars fans?
I have done a talk on Star Wars as well.
What wants better?
So if you like Star Wars more, put your hand up.
If you like Star Trek better, put your hand up.
That's a nice balance there.
You can like both.
It's not a crime to like one more or the other.
It's science fiction.
We all like science fiction.
It's got connections with our subject, I believe, and this is what I'm going to go into.
So, I wouldn't go, like Simon Parks can give it a prize for anyone who knows what the lyric, Does anyone know those lyrics?
Does that strike a bell with anyone?
Star Trek?
Star Trek Enterprise.
Well done, well done.
Well done.
And that's the actual lyrics from the song to the start of Star Trek Enterprise.
And just to explain, because I know some people, I mean, I'm not a massive Trekkie myself, but I have seen all the films.
I've watched Next Generation, most of that.
I've seen bits of Deep Space Nine.
That all might sound like gobbledygook to you, but Star Trek Enterprise, then.
This is the opening song to the start of the TV show.
They would have these lyrics.
It's been a long road, getting from there to here.
It's been a long time, but my time is finally near.
It's all about set around after mankind has allegedly got hold of this warp technology from someone called Zephra and Cochrane.
And basically it means that they can leave.
This world to travel the stars, basically.
And it brings on a first contact.
And one of my subjects I'm very much interested in is first contact between us and various E.T. races.
So if you watch the opening credits, a lot of Star Trek fans don't actually like that.
I didn't like that song at the beginning of that series, but I just really grew up but now I really appreciate that as a great song.
So, ET races are found in ufology and encoded into science fiction, films and TV.
This is something I've been monitoring for a long time.
I've done a talk on Star Wars.
I gave a talk, I think I gave it here, UFO Academy.
So looking at, these were four of the biggest TV shows, films related.
I believe are very much encoded with the truth on extraterrestrials and the UFO subject, as someone who studied UFOs for 30-odd years.
You are all, of course, familiar with Star Trek, the 1966, and you had obviously Kirk and Spock and Bones and all that, and that's still very much loved by lots of people.
And, of course, the brainchild of Gene Rodenberry.
He was a visionary to many people.
There's so much more deeper stuff we can go into.
Gene, I'm not going to go too much into it, but he sat in on some channeled briefings that became a book that came out by Phyllis Schlemmer called The Only Planet of Choice.
And it was deep briefings.
We've got briefings about messages from the stars, from our star brothers and star sisters.
So it's believed that he was either experiencing some contact experience himself, maybe through dreams, and a lot of these great artists, people like J.R. Tolkien, Harry Potter, Rowling, and, you know, these people are very much tapping into stuff.
So Gene Ridenbury was a very interesting person and he did actually go and attend some of these meetings and it's believed that that may have inspired him for his vision of Star Trek which is a man Star Wars, we all know about.
That's my other talk.
Babylon 5, I've done a talk about that.
Another very interesting science fiction show.
I recommend watching that.
It's arguably my favourite TV series, actually, out of all the science fiction ones, which have information encoded in it, I believe, about ufology and what's going on now, the past, the present and the future.
Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis.
You may be familiar with some familiar aliens and all sorts of characters.
But it was the main one then.
So Star Trek Enterprise, a lot of people may not know, is actually set before the original Star Trek series.
So it's, although it was only, funny enough, it came out, I think, a week after 9-11 happened.
So it was actually broadcast in America literally just a week or so later.
And it ran until 2005.
There wasn't a series, I believe, until Discovery.
I think I'm right there.
And some people don't like Discovery.
It's like a bit too woke and that and stuff.
I was never really, apart from watching The Next Generation, I was never really too much into Star Trek.
But funny enough, because I go and see Miles, you may know from the Basis Project, I visited him quite a lot during the lockdown because, you know, times was nothing else to do.
And it was great to get away to a wheelchair and see Miles Johnson.
And Miles would always have his dinner at a set time.
This show was being broadcast.
So we would literally sit down and everything stopped and Miles would stop his editing.
We'd watch Star Trek Enterprise.
And funny enough, I hadn't seen it from the beginning.
So when I joined it, it was from season three.
So this is what I'm going to just talk about very briefly, but it's very interesting because Just wanted to say about the reptilians, because V, I don't know if you've all seen V, and the reptilians are brought forward in that.
Early 80s, I think it was like 1984 or so, and there was another great film which was, that was a very much like a negative that these reptilians are here.
This is way before David Icke would start talking about all these things, okay?
So we're just going to show that people can tap into these things.
You don't have to be slightly esoteric stuff.
They're sort of giving these great stories.
And I believe V was the start.
There was a brilliant film, if you're interested in Reptilian.
A more benevolent Reptilian was shown in the film Enemy Mine.
It came out in the mid-'80s with Dennis Quaid.
A human in the future and an alien crash land and a reptilian and they sort of come together.
They sort of coexist and it's actually a very good positive film because I don't necessarily believe that all the reptilians are negative.
I know they get a bad rap.
So I just wanted to make that point.
So what's so interesting about this is in season three they brought forward these...
What was interesting for me from a ufologist's point of view was they consist of five species resembling familiar Earth animals and six resembling humans.
At first they appeared as violent enemies wanting no interaction with humanity.
But common ground gradually emerged as the crew of the Enterprise discovered that the Zindi were being manipulated into this enmity by the sphere builders.
Some Zindi became important recurring characters.
It's just like a meeting.
You'll see some of it.
You hear about galactic meetings.
I found this quite profound because you have this very much like an insectoid type.
You've got a reptilian there, and I'll go into some of the species.
So what was very interesting for me, when you look up the details of the various AT races, the avians, you may have heard about avians, very controversial Corey Goode type thing, and I'm not a big fan of Corey Goode, don't get me wrong.
I'm a bit wary of what he says.
I accept there is a secret space program.
I'm just a bit wary of what he says.
Wary of what is, you know, the trouble he's going through with Gaia now.
But that's not to say there isn't some information, truthful information there.
And I know he talks about the blue avians.
So the fact that the avians is one of these races, and I'm not denying, you know, I think there probably is a bird race, just as all these other ones have very much truth to them.
So the avians were now extinct but not forgotten species.
We have the primates, a species known for their advanced intellect who are commonly viewed as honest but arrogant, seemingly convicted of their intellectual superiority.
The Arborials, they are often calm and even lethargic, attacking only in self-defense.
They are also naturally afraid of water.
We've got our favorites, the reptilians there, the most emotive and warlike species.
They are notably proud and distrustful, and that's how they're often portrayed in most films, as I said.
The insectoids, again, you could sort of lump them in with the mantids and the greys.
So this is a hive-based asexual species which spreads in huge numbers, bringing their nurseries along in their ships.
They are also aggressive and distrustful and often allied with the reptilians.
So from a ufological point of view, that's very interesting because you do hear about the greys being on board.
Reptilian ships or at least reptilians employing the greys to do their work because they're just like drone-type creatures, clones, whatever.
So it's very interesting that you make this point also in this Star Trek series.
And then the Aquatics, which is very interesting.
You've heard my Star Wars talk.
I go in to talk about the Star Wars among Calamari and Admiral Ackbar and I bring relevance to that to the Star System series because there's a lot encoded with the serious mysteries.
If you read Robert Temple, If you read his, yeah, The Serious Mystery with the Nomo, he talks about these aquatic beings visiting the Dogon many, many years ago in Africa.
So again, these are quite famous, you know, types you hear about a lot in ufology.
So it's very weird that they sort of all come up in this TV show.
And there's, again, a reptilian, an insectoid.
That's the primate and that's the arboreal.
I hope I've got that right.
And there's the Aquatics.
It's funny, when you watch this TV, and I do recommend you get the box six, you can get it very cheap.
I've heard the first two seasons of Star Trek Enterprise are a bit slow, but it really picks up in the third and fourth.
So I've kind of watched it from halfway through season three to the end of season four, and I'm just watching it from the beginning.
But it already kicks off sort of in season three.
And yeah, these water beings, it's very good how it's portrayed in the film.
They have like a glass window and obviously they can't come onto land so you see them sort of OK, so this is just a bit about the biology.
Having evolved in the same planet, the Zindi species share more than 99% of their genetic makeup with each other.
They differ widely, however, both in appearance and behaviour, with the reptilians and insectoids being noticeably more belligerent than the others.
All Zindi species possess a pair of characteristic bony ridges on their cheeks.
The presence of this structure in at least five distantly related species suggests that it is of some biological importance, possibly a sensory organ.
Until the 21st century, the six Zindi races operated separately and were engaged in conflict with each other.
This eventually evolved into a full-scale war for dominance, which resulted in the literal destruction of their geologically fragile home planet.
The avians, which were the less technologically advanced species, became extinct, whilst the five others managed to escape and colonize other worlds.
So this is all very interesting.
It's another little meeting of the Zindi.
So they were united by the unintended destruction of their planet, Zindus.
The five species resolved their differences and formed a political alliance and integrated their societies into a single government by the name Zindi.
By the 22nd century, they had made contact with temporal travelers from the extra dimensional species of the sphere builders, which we'll go into in a minute, which were engaged in reconfiguring the laws of physics in the Delphi expanse to create a realm which would be habitable for themselves.
They also had interest in creating a new timeline, eliminating the United Federation of Planets before it was formed, and thus allied themselves with the Zindi by making them believe that humans would go to a war and destroy the Zindi Alliance in the future.
So they were basically tricked by this other race, these sphere builders, that human, once they got this warp drive technology, would start a war in the future, and that's why...
And there we have our friendly reptilian guy who looks quite mean there.
Like I said, they're not saying all reptilians are bad guys, but they are portrayed as the more very aggressive in ufology and not having our best interests of heart, working alongside the greys.
and possibly obviously with an alliance, no doubt, with some military and shady characters on this planet.
So despite the radically different appearance of all six species, they all share identical ridges on their cheekbones, very similar DNA.
All six species were involved in a war lasting about 100 years and ending in the 2030s, which is interesting.
Alliances among the Zindi species were forged and changed continuously throughout the war, so much that 50 to 60 years into the war, most Zindi forgot what started it.
Sounds about right.
However, everyone remembers how it ended.
In an act of desperation, the insectoids and reptilians detonated several charges beneath the eight largest seismic fissures of the geologically unstable planet Zindi, leading to its destruction and ultimately the extension of the avian ray.
Okay.
After the war, the Zindi scattered throughout the expanse into several colonies.
As a whole, they have a passionate desire to establish a new homeworld and unify all of Zindi, but differ greatly on how to accomplish this and on who should hold the ultimate reins of power.
The Zindi then spent the early part of 2153 deciding how to confront the threat of humanity and planned a biological weapon based on the human genetic profile.
That's interesting.
This was ultimately rejected by the Zindi Council.
The weapons went along with the bioweapon but were eventually foaled, thank God.
And so they worked on a weapon to destroy Earth.
They technically succeeded.
However, the timeline in which this occurred was undone.
And you see that a lot in Star Trek where they'll sort of go back and forth in time.
Again, you may have heard the sphere being alliance.
I know Corey Goode, again, it's very interesting how these words sort of crop up again.
you know if you study UFOs you kind of wonder where they're getting these names from it looks like a sort of more benevolent sort of Lord Voldemort there which I thought was interesting So these were the races that sort of interfered with the Zindi.
So the Zindi were actually pawns in this temporal Cold War as interference in their history began shortly after the ending of the Civil War with the appearance of a trans-dimensional alien race who guided them to a new homeland and resources.
So the Zindi basically came to revere these sphere builders as the Guardians, whom they later understood to be the same species as the sphere builders.
The Zindi were also informed by the Guardians, at least as early as 2152, that they would be victims of a genocidal attack.
Humans in the 26th century.
We've got some more aquatic action there.
So delving a bit deeper in it, I found this very interesting, but it's a description for the aquatic race, which I liken to the beings from Sirius, who seem to have a connection to water, and I've talked about this before.
They resemble This is quite interesting, even though I've done a lot of research in Sirius.
I never heard the word Cyrenians before, but it's actually a word, and I think it's a do of the sea cow, and the dugong is the sea mammal, the sea cows.
They were swimming underwater and speaking through echolocation.
Aquatics have a reputation for taking a very long time to make a decision but are more readily convinced by visual evidence.
And that really made me actually laugh.
I won't go into why.
The Zindi have a saying, it's easier to count the stars than it is for an aquatic to reach a decision.
And again, there's a bit of a joke there that I won't go into for my own personal reasons.
Even though the aquatics are peaceful, they have a strong military.
These ships resemble large earth manta rays and are filled with water.
However, there is at least one section of the ship that is sealed and filled with air for land-based races.
Okay, so there's a little look at the arboreals.
There's not too much info on that.
They're covered with hair, resemble earth sloths.
They run chemicite production facilities throughout the Delphic Expanse.
They've shown the least interest in destroying humanity.
Arboreals are also afraid of the water.
They are well-known as scientists.
That's the extinct race of the avians.
That's the closer you're going to get to a bird-looking one.
So they were literally taken out by the insectoids and the reptilians.
The avians were, yeah, bird-like with the ability to fly, although all that is ever seen in this series, a single skull identical to that of a giraffe.
They were once dark in the sky as the Zindus, the Zindu homeworld.
They fought to be extinct since the reptilians and insectoids planted explosives that destroyed the Zindi homeworld after the hundred-year war.
The avians have primitive technology, could not leave the planet and were wiped out.
Because of this, the reptilians say that their lair in which the Zindi council now convenes has a stench of failure.
And there's the good old insectoids.
I guess that could look a bit like your Simon Parks mantard type, or, you know, the greys seem to be very insect-like.
A lot of the UFO crashes, but I'm very much into the interest of UFO crashes.
I'll be talking a little bit about the alien autopsy after this.
The Zindi insectoids are then walled across between a six-foot-earth praying mantards, flies, and ants.
Insectoids have an average lifespan of 10 to 12 years.
They reproduce asexually by laying eggs, which take about a week to mature.
They speak a clicking language.
And you do hear this in ufology and so on, of which there are 67 known dialects.
Insectoid iconography is radically different from that of other Zindi.
Insectoid personnel names get longer with age.
Insectoids have a reputation for rushing into decisions, unlike the aquatics, which is the opposite.
Insectoid chairs and assault vehicles are designed for insectoid and anatomy and not humanoids.
They have a long-standing alliance with the reptilians.
There you go.
and together they destroyed the Zindi homeworld of the Hundred Year War.
And you hear about these And, you know, people say, well, this is-- they model it on insect-like creatures who can withstand all the, you know, the G-forces or whatever.
Primates-- this is more human, obviously, type ones.
Primates resemble Earth humans and have a similar brain structure to the Zindi reptilians.
They were one of the first Zindi species, including reptilians, to be informed of the threat posed by humanity.
Degra, a Zindi primate, was assigned to develop the weapon which was to destroy Earth.
Like humans, Zindi primates have a difference in skin tone.
The chairman of the Zindi council was a Zindi primate.
Now we're on to the good old reptilian here.
So there's Indy Reptilians.
They resemble a cross between several Earth lizards.
This species is responsible for pre-emptive attack on Earth in 2153.
Aided by trans-dimensional beings, reptilians also traveled to 2004 to collect blood samples for their bioweapon in the future, but were foiled by Jonathan Archer and Tupol, who's the captain of the Enterprise then, and Tupol was the Vulcan.
Reptilians prefer to be loaded to the ground as opposed to high-rise building.
They use weapons with regenerative biometric power cells for overload if another species tries to use them.
They use thermal chambers on board their ships to keep their energy.
They are the most aggressive race of Xindi and seem to be more interested than the other races in destroying Earth.
The military leadership of the reptilians appear to be obsessed with eugenics.
That's interesting, isn't it?
I think Xindi insectoids are the race that the So, just something like this part of the talk there.
Executive producer, this Brandon Braga, he spent a very long time mulling over the concept which was later to develop into the Zindi.
His initial idea was speculating it might be like if on Earth humans had not been the only life forms to develop intelligence, but species such as dolphins, insects and primates.
And other primates had too.
Braga admitted, I always wonder what would Earth have been like if dinosaurs had evolved to become intelligent?
And not only that, but insects, birds, what if it happened there was simultaneous evolution into intelligent organisms and they all lived together?
Braga ended to these notions by imagining that such a collection of intelligent life forms, if alien, might have a grudge against Earth.
Just all kind of came together, he noted.
So that's my Star Trek.
I just thought that was very interesting as a ufologist.
I've done this before with Babylon 5, Star Wars.
There's much more deeper stuff there.
I find it very relevant that all these ET races are connected with what we see in fiction.
And with that, I'm going to go straight into...
I know time's short, so I'm going to just really rush this a bit.
I might just want to show you one video about my main research is the alien autopsy.
And I'm going to sort of shoehorn the connection between He did a TV show in 1995, which was presenting evidence of an alien autopsy.
This piece of footage was allegedly from a military cameraman that was purchased by a man called Ray Santilli in 1992.
He was in Cleveland, Ohio, looking to buy some footage of Elvis and other musicians.
And he was approached by a cameraman.
Is everyone aware of the alien autopsy?
Anyone not aware of the alien autopsy or never heard anything about it?
No one?
Just one or two?
Okay, that's cool.
I mean, it was such a big thing.
It was a huge thing at the time.
So it basically was like a 15-minute piece of footage of what looked like an autopsy of a creature.
Not so much like your typical grey alien that you see today.
More muscular and having six feet.
It's a very controversial piece of film and, like I say, it was broadcast fact or fiction with Jonathan Frakes and it was a huge Huge amount of coverage of it all around the world.
It really did.
people don't make any money out of it.
But Ray essentially, he clearly did make a lot of money out of it because it was broadcast all around the world.
But it kind of changed.
Ray Santilli was just this businessman.
He marketed it.
Ten years later, he kind of changed his story.
He said, oh, it wasn't a real autopsy.
It was like a recreation, basically.
It was some real frames, but when he bought it back from Cleveland, Ohio, albeit Florida, he went to Florida to see the cameraman who was in Cleveland because he was visiting his son.
So when he got to Florida, Clearwater, I believe, he had to get money, raise money.
It took about two years.
he finally bought the film canisters all the way back to England, supposedly at Heathrow.
When he got the film canisters out, his new story as of 2006 was that the film had degenerated and what we saw of the alien autopsy, he now claims that it had to be recreated with just some I never bought this story, and this is why I have my own Facebook group called the Alien Autopsy Analysis Group, questioning the narrative of the people who have come forward.
And that, to be fair, is Ray.
I'm not saying, you know, I don't go along with Ray's changed story.
I think he was forced to change his story to say it was a recreation in 2006.
There's a whole cast of characters.
There's so many tangents to this story.
What happened then was a year after that, another gentleman came forward, a magician.
I won't mention his name here.
I've had a few arguments with him over time.
I don't want to give him too much publicity.
But he claimed that it was all a hoax.
And Ray himself said there was a cameraman who filmed the recreation.
and there was a man called John Humphreys who'd made the models.
But what I find very interesting was that There was too much to the story.
There was too much evidence.
There wasn't just an alien autopsy.
There was another autopsy that was never shown to the world.
It was only seen by five researchers.
There was also a piece of debris footage.
Now, some people talk this about being a crash at Roswell, and it was later established.
It wasn't Roswell.
It was a crash on May 31st, 1947, at Socorro, New Mexico.
So it is unfortunate it was marketed as Roswell, but what are you going to do?
I mean, Ray Santilli didn't know about aliens and UFOs, and all we knew was that there was a crash in New Mexico in 1947.
But actually, Ray, so they marketed it as Roswell, because we didn't know any others until the cameraman said it was actually a crash at Nogle Canyon, May 31st, 1947.
So what I'm just going to show you very quickly, as I know time's short, is I'm going to show you this little clip.
I'm just going to jump over here.
And it's just an interesting bit that just appeared on the internet.
Just literally a couple of weeks ago.
And it features Reg Presley.
You may remember Reg Presley from The Trogs.
He did The Wild Thing and Love Is All Around.
He made a huge amount of money in 1994 from that song, Love Is All Around.
And he financed, because he was into crop circles, as is Colin Andrews.
And if you see Busty Taylor, he knows all about crop circles.
have a chat with him about crop circles.
So I just thought I'd show you this little video clip because it's just literally come online.
So if I just bear with me for a minute, I'll just get that running for you.
Thank you.
So I just wanted to show it because that was from the horse's mouth, and that's never been seen before until a couple of weeks ago, I believe, because there was a dispute with Channel 4 who showed the alien autopsy footage back in 1995.
It's an ongoing story.
It's such a huge story.
I'm sorry I'm in limited time, so I wanted to show you some other clips and stuff that I've got.
I've got so much stuff, but such a limited time, and I do apologise where we ran out there.
But if you want to know more about the alien autopsy, I have got a Facebook page.
It's called Alien Autopsy Analysis.
All the information there, I've been on that page since 2015.
It's going to get more controversial in the next few months because the guy who I'm arguing with, this magician guy, he's bringing out a book, apparently.
He has been saying that for the last 10, 15 years.
So we'll see what happens next.
But it's going to be an ongoing story, and hopefully I can do future talks as we go on.
And there's so much more to the story.
There's things that have happened in the last couple of years, such as Kit Green, who may know about this CIA scientist who gave it credibility.
All sorts of twists and turns.
It's a fascinating story.
It can't be a hoax, in my opinion.
There's far too much to it.
I think I've raised up so many valid points that it's going to be interesting.
So I recommend follow my page and see what happens with the alien autopsy because after 26 years it hasn't gone away and we're going to get to the bottom of it.
One day we're going to get to the bottom of it.
The truth will come out.
I do believe there's a conspiracy.
But I'd just like to end on that note then and I thank you all for coming and attending my talk and I hope to see you again sometime in the future.
Thank you very much.
I just want you to explain very briefly.
So what was the upside of that?
It sounded like now they're suddenly saying it's real.
So was Ray Santilli, because he went on for quite a while, I couldn't figure out, was he saying it's now real or was he insisting it's still fake?
I apologize for that.
Yeah, sorry, maybe I didn't make clear.
That was a footage from 1995.
That's not a new piece of film.
It's a very historic footage of Colin Andrews and Reg Presley sadly died.
He's not with us no longer.
Colin Andrews was heavily involved in it.
I just wanted to show it because it's never been seen before.
It was literally released a couple of weeks ago.
But yeah, Ray, as I said, he's retracted the story that it's now a recreation.
I've reached out to Ray.
It's kind of tentative.
I thought I was going to be interviewing him or at least I do believe he's being monitored, obviously, quite clearly.
So, yeah, Ray still goes along with the story.
It's a recreation that John Humphreys was the model maker, blah, blah, blah, and the magician was the tenement.
But, yeah, sorry, I should have made that clear.
That was 1995 Marylebone, Balcombe Street.
But it was just interesting.
It's a historic, and it's better to hear it from Ray, how the story happened, than rather me to regurgitate all the story, so I apologise for the sound.
Maybe you could write the dialogue down below it, because at least maybe these speakers are really bad.
Maybe it's better in other places.
But thank you for that very much.
It's a very complex story.
I got quite deeply into it.
I did do long interviews with Colin in which we kind of go over every little bit of it And the reason is because what they do is there's a real one and there's a fake one.
And they put out both of them.
And they back both of them.
And that's why no one knows the truth.
They're actually doing that with COVID as well.
You understand.
So they're always keeping you in a state of confusion.
That's the objective.
So I like to trace, you know, the real thing through that.
But it's a real maze, and you have to spend a great deal of time doing that.
Anyway, thank you so much, Colin.
Thank you.
And by the way, the previous part on the zindi and all of that is quite fascinating to me, really.