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Thomas Horn is the CEO of RaidersNewsUpdate.com and SurvivorMall.com.

Over the last decade, he has authored three oo!s, wrote do"ens of pulished editorials,
and had several feature ma#a"ine articles. $n addition to past articles at
News%ith&iews.com , his wor!s have een referred to ' writers of the () Times S'ndicate,
MSN*C, Christianit' Toda', Coast to Coast, %orld Net +ail', %hite House Correspondents
and do"ens of newsma#a"ines and press a#encies around the #loe. Tom,s latest oo! is
-The )hriman .ate,- which fictionali"es the use of iotechnolo#' to resurrect *ilical
Nephilim.
Thomas is also a well !nown radio personalit' who has #uest/hosted and appeared on
do"ens of radio and television shows over the last 01 'ears, includin# -The 211
Clu- and -Coast to Coast )M.- %hen loo!in# for a spo!esperson to promote their film
-+eceived- starin# (ouis .ossett 3r. and 3udd Nelson, -Cloud 41 5ictures- selected
Thomas as their spo!esperson to e6plain the Christian viewpoint on U7O/
related demonolo#'.
%e Site8 RaidersNewsUpdate.com
E/Mail8 RaidersNewsUpdate9#mail.com

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 4
4
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' 4, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/ theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
Christians will not immediatel' need to renounce their faith in .od =simpl' on the asis of
the reception of >this? new, une6pected information of a reli#ious character from
e6traterrestrial civili"ations.@ However, once the =reli#ious content@ ori#inatin# from
outside the earth =has een verified@ the' will have to conduct =a re/readin# >of the
.ospel? inclusive of the new dataA@ B &atican )stronomer, Eminent Theolo#ian and
7ull 5rofessor of 7undamental Theolo#' at the 5ontificia UniversitC della Santa Croce in
Rome >Connected %ith Opus +ei?, 7ather .iuseppe Tan"ella/Nitti
=(.U.C.$.7.E.R., which stands for =(ar#e *inocular Telescope Near/infrared Utilit' with
Camera and $nte#ral 7ield Unit for E6tra#alactic Research,@ is a chilled instrument
attached to a telescope in )ri"ona. )nd 'es, itDs named for the +evil, whose name itself
means =mornin# star@ >and which? happens to e ri#ht ne6t to the &atican Oservator' on
Mt. .raham in Tucson.@E Reecca *o'le, 5opular Science Ma#a"ine
7ollowin# the release of our ;14; est/seller 5etrus Romanus8 The 7inal 5ope $s
Here, we were inundated with invitations from around the world to e interviewed on radio,
television, and in print media. These included se#ments in The Histor' ChannelDs
=Countdown to )pocal'pse,@ which premiered Novemer F, ;14;G a special feature on
CanadaDs lar#est Christian channel &isionT& titled =$ 5rophes'8 The )pocal'pse Series@
Hcomplete with re/enactmentsI that aired nationwide on Tuesda', Novemer ;1, ;14;G
invitations to Rome to discuss with $talian media our findin#s on RenJ Thiaut, a *el#ian
3esuit whose meticulous anal'sis of the 5rophec' of the 5opes predicted the arrival of
5etrus Romanus in this eraG a =est of@ interview with .eor#e Noor' on Coast to Coast )M,
and do"ens more.
*ut it was two shows in particular, which we did on The Ome#a Man Radio 5ro#ram with
popular author and radio man Steve Kua'le that prompted our visit to Mt. .raham in
southeastern )ri"ona to start our investi#ation. The first show with Steve roc!eted Ome#a
Man to the L4 *lo# Tal! Radio Show in the world for over a wee!. $t
;

focused on the ancient 5rophec' of the 5opes and the fact that the pontiff followin#
*enedict :&$ will e the final one on this m'sterious list of popes, a prophec' that was
concealed inside the secret vaults of the &atican for hundreds of 'ears and which man'
elieve points to the arrival of the 7alse 5rophet of end/times infam'. HNote that at the
start of this investi#ation, *enedict :&$ remains pope and whoever is scheduled to follow
him in the role of 5etrus Romanus is still an open Muestion, ut whoever it turns out to e,
the' are the final pope accordin# to the medieval catholic prophec'I.
$n the second Ome#a Man show, which aired %ednesda', )pril N, ;14;, we roached the
suOect of a =&atican ET@ connection. That pro#ram sent Ome#a Man into the
stratosphere for an unprecedented one/month position as the top *T radio show on the
planet, illustratin# to these authors that the world is more than casuall' interested not onl'
in the final pope, ut in the connection etween Rome and their wor! on e6traterrestrial
intelli#ence, astroiolo#', and the intri#uin# connection etween those issues and
5etrus Romanus.
Thus on a mild mornin# in Septemer, ;14;, we to#ether with our cameramanE3oe )rdis,
a.!.a. the %ild Man of the O"ar!sEdeparted the small desert town of Safford, )ri"ona
Hwhich normall' has a warm hi#h desert climate, much hotter than most places in
eastern )ri"ona due to its relativel' low elevation of ;,FP0 feetI >4? en route to the Mt.
.raham Oservator' *ase Camp, Q1 miles from Tucson and a few miles south of
Safford on State Route 0RR. (ocated near the northern limit of the Chiricahua
)pache and %estern )pache territories, +"il Nchaa Si )n, as it is !nown in the %estern
)pache lan#ua#e, is one of the four holiest mountains in )merica for the )pache, and
considered sacred to the all of the re#ionDs Native peoples. HThe San Carlos )pache Trie
had ori#inall' Ooined environmentalists who sou#ht, amon# other thin#s, to protect the
Sacred .rounds and )merican Red SMuirrel, in filin# do"ens of lawsuits efore a
federal appeals court to stop the construction of the oservatories on Mt .raham, ut
the proOect ultimatel' prevailed after an act ' the United States Con#ress allowed itI.
%e had een warned ' our #uide that the tre! up the steep mountainside from ;,FP0 feet
to over 41,211 was precarious, coupled with more hairpin turns, switchac!s and narrow
se#ments of roadwa' overloo!in# deep can'on walls than we mi#ht have ima#ined,
and, to top it off, there would e no #uardrails alon# the harrowin# windin# path. %e were
scheduled to arrive at the Mount .raham $nternational Oservator' a couple hours after
departure. %e would meet with astronomers and en#ineers at the (ar#e *inocular
TelescopeEcurrentl' one of the worldDs most advanced optical telescopesEwhere, amon#
other thin#s, the new (UC$7ER device is attached etween its #i#antic twin mirrors Heither
of which would e the lar#est optical telescope in continental North )mericaI. %e were
later told ' the (*T s'stems en#ineer who spent si#nificant time with us that da'
that another instrumentE(UC$7ER/$$Eis scheduled to arrive at the oservator' an'time
now and will complete the two multi/
0

oOect and lon#slit infrared spectro#raph ima#ers the' need for stud'in# the heavens in
search of, amon# other thin#s, e6o/planets that ma' host intelli#ent life. %e would also
visit the Heinrich Hert" Sumillimeter Telescope that da', which sets etween the (*T
and the real tar#et of our MuestEthe &atican )dvanced Technolo#' Telescope and the
3esuits who wor! there.
*efore leavin# ase camp, +ramamine for motion sic!ness was su##ested ahead of
departure, and the two men in our team that declined that offer would soon wished the'
hadnDt, as once we were underwa', it was non/stop reelin# ac! and forth, ouncin#
up and down as the driverEwho seemed a little too much to enOo' ein# in one #ear
faster than he should have een #iven the circumstancesEoccasionall' loo!ed at us
in the rearview mirror and smiled. )s we went from Sonoran +esert scru at the
mountainDs floor to alpine spruce/fir forest closer to the summit, our #uide who set in
the opposite front seat from the driver occasionall' pointed to somethin# off to one
side, descriin# how more life "ones and ve#etative varieties e6isted here than on
an' other North )merican mountain, includin# almost two do"en plants, animals and
insects that are not found an'where else. Of course this included the celerit' of
Mount .rahamEthe endan#ered Red SMuirrelEwhich )ri"ona has alread' spent at
least 4.;P million dollars protectin#. *ut it was hard to appreciate these facts while
#rowin# Mueas' and wonderin# how far down the can'on wall we would roll if at an'
moment the driver lost control and arreled off the side. Than!full', Oust when we were
startin# to thin! this had een a ad idea, we stopped appro6imatel' two/thirds wa' up the
mountain at the Columine Ran#er Station, a US+) 7orest Service )dministrative
Comple6 that had een uilt Circa 4F0P ' the Civilian Conservation Corps, a pulic
wor! relief pro#ram that was part of 5resident 7ran!lin +. RooseveltDs =New +eal@ and
that had provided uns!illed manual laor Oos for people to relieve unemplo'ment durin#
the .reat +epression.
%e had pac!ed a sac! lunch and used the Ran#er Station as a place to rest a while,
eat, and let our ellies recover a it from the roller/coaster ride. %hile munchin# on a
sandwich and loo!in# at the a#in# lac! and white pictures that hun# on the walls
here and there of the +epression/Era men who had uilt the modest encampment, we met
a volunteer, an interestin# old chap who told us how he had een comin# there for man'
'ears to !eep a fire in the fireplace and to #reet hi!ers that wandered into the par!.
%hen we told him where we were #oin#, he #ot Muiet. %hen we added that our plan was
to spea! with the 3esuits at &)TT in the restricted area further up the mountain, he lost
interest in the conversation and started stirrin# his fire a#ain.
Minutes later, lunch consumed and stomachs still uneas', we were ac! in our
vehicle. 7rom this point forward, the road, if we can call it that, ecame little more than
a #lorified #oat trail until finall', aout a mile from our destination, we arrived at a securit'
#ate with warnin#s of =No Trespassin#@ in several lan#ua#es. The #uide had a !e' to the
N
#ate. She unloc!ed then reloc!ed it ehind us after we drove throu#h the openin#. )t that
point, the driver pulled a radio out, which we had not noticed

efore, and radioed someod' that we were headin# up the incline. Evidentl' this was
necessar' ecause from this point forward the steep #ravel lane was arel' wide
enou#h for one vehicle at a time, and 'ou didnDt want to ris! runnin# up a#ainst
another vehicle that mi#ht e comin# down from the Oservatories. No one answered the
call, so he radioed a#ain, then a third time, with still no response. The silence must have
meant the road was clear, as Oust li!e that he slipped the vehicle into low #ear and we
e#an our final 01/minute crawl up the mountainside.
=)nd one more thin#,@ the #uide warned as we Oer!ed over the roc!' trac!, tires
spinnin# a#ainst the loose #ravel and dirt. =%hen we #et to the restricted area 'ouDll see
ri#htl' colored cales ropin# off most of the land around the uildin#s. +o notA $ repeat,
do not step over those lines or 'ou will e arrested immediatel' and hauled off to Oail.@ She
wasnDt smilin#, and when we #ot to the oservatories, we saw the securit' lines and
enforcement vehicles, Oust as she had descried them.
SE)RCH$N. 7OR (UC$7ER 7ROM )TO5 THE HO(< MOUNT)$N
$t was appro6imatel' 448 )M H5STI as we rounded the final end and saw Oust ahead the
towerin# edifices housin# the (ar#e *inocular Telescope H(*TI, an optical telescope
for astronom' and currentl' one of the worldDs most advanced s'stems. Near it was the
Sumillimeter Telescope HSMTI or as it is also !nown, the Heinrich Hert" Sumillimeter
Telescope uildin#, a =state/of/the/art sin#le/dish radio telescope for oservations
in the su/millimeter wavelen#th ran#eA the most accurate radio telescope ever
uilt.@ >;? )nd last ut not least aout a loc! awa' from them we oserved our primar'
reason for trud#in# to the top of this pea!Ethe &atican )dvanced Technolo#' Telescope
or &)TT.
Of course we had read the official stor' from the &atican Oservator' %esite efore
ma!in# the trip, how &)TT trul' lives up to its name8
=$ts heart is a 4.Q/m fS4.1 hone'comed construction, orosilicate primar' mirror. This was
manufactured at the Universit' of )ri"ona Mirror (aorator', and it pioneered oth the
spin/castin# techniMues and the stressed/lap polishin# techniMues of that (aorator' which
are ein# used for telescope mirrors up to Q.N/m in diameter. The primar' mirror is so
deepl'/dished that the focus of the telescope is onl' as far aove the mirror as the mirror
is wide, thus allowin# a structure that is aout three times as compact as the previous
#eneration of telescope desi#ns.@ >0?
P
Such technical lan#ua#e aside, the =Oservers@ who are approved to operate &)TT and
what the' are usin# it for these da's is what would ta!e us throu#h the loo!in# #lass.
This was confirmed minutes later ' the 3esuit 7ather on dut' that da' Hwhom we #ot on
filmI who told us that amon# the most important research occurrin# with the siteDs &atican
astronomers is the Muest to pinpoint certain e6trasolar planets and advanced alien
intelli#ence. He then proceeded Has did our #uideI to show us all

around the oservator'Efrom the personal Muarters of the ChurchDs astronomersE where
the' ate, slept, rela6ed, studiedEto the control rooms, computer screens and s'stems,
and even the telescope itself. %hile we were #iven complete and unrestricted opportunit' to
Muestion how the devices are used and what distinctives set each of the telescopes on Mt.
.raham apart, we had not e6pected the ease with which the astronomers and
technicians would also spea! of U7OsT This was especiall' true when we wal!ed up
the #ravel road from &)TT to the (ar#e *inocular Telescope H(*TI, where we spent
most of the da' with a s'stems en#ineer who not onl' too! us to all seven levels of that
mi#ht' machineEpointin# out the (UC$7ER device and what it is used for Hwhich he
lovin#l' referred to as =(uc'@ several times and elsewhere as =(ucifer@I as well as ever'
other aspect of the telescope we tried to wrap our minds aroundEut who also stunned us
as we sat in the control room, listenin# to him and the astronomers spea! so casuall' of the
redundanc' with which U7Os are captured on screens dartin# throu#h the heavens. Our
friendl' en#ineer didnDt lin! an e'e, nor did an' of the other scientists in the room, and
we were shoc!ed at this, how ordinar' it seemed to e.
R
)uthors Tom Horn and Cris 5utnam in front of &)TT.
Standin# on the platform eneath &)TT.


%al!in# from &)TT to the (ar#e *inocular Telescope.
2
(*T S'stems En#ineer in control room with Tom, Cris, and an astronomer Hout of frame on
ri#htI descriin# how often =U7Os@ are captured durin# oservations.
*ut as much as the commonalit' of U7O si#htin#s on Mt. .rahamDs telescopes
intri#ued, this was not the primar' reason for our ein# there. %e had come with deeper
Muestions concernin# hi#h/level &atican astronomers and what the' had een lea!in# to,
and discussin# with, media in recent 'ears. Captivatin# comments from 3esuit priests li!e
.u' Consolma#noEa leadin# astronomer who often turns up in media as a spo!esman
for the &atican who has wor!ed at N)S) and tau#ht at Harvard and M$T and who
currentl' splits his time etween the &atican Oservator' and laorator' HSpecola
&aticanaI headMuartered at the summer residence of the 5ope in Castel .andolfo, $tal',
and Mt. .raham in )ri"ona.
Over the last few 'ears, he has focused so much of his time and effort in an attempt to
reconcile science and reli#ion in pulic forums specificall' as it relates to the suOect of
e6traterrestrial life and its potential impact on the future of faith that we decided to contact
him. He a#reed to e interviewed from Rome, and over the numerous e6chan#es
that followed he told us some thin#s that seemed e'ond the scope. He even sent us
a cop' of a private pdf, a literal #oldmine of what he and the &atican are considerin#
re#ardin# the ramifications of astroiolo#' and specificall' the discover' of advanced
e6traterrestrials... in which he admits how contemporar' societies will soon =loo! to The
)liens to e the Saviours of human!ind.@
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT ;
Q
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' P, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
Nephilim )s =Space Saviors@ 7or Man,s Salvation
$n our last entr' top &atican )stronomer .u' Consolma#no stated how contemporar'
societies ma' soon =loo! to The )liens to e the Saviours of human!ind.@ >i? To illustrate the
theolo#ical soundness of this possiilit', Consolma#o ar#ues that humans are not the onl'
intelli#ent ein#s .od created in the universe, and, he sa's, these non/human lifeforms are
descried in the *ile. He starts ' pointin# to an#els then surprises us ' actuall'
referencin# the Nephilim8
Other heavenl' ein#s come up several times in the 5salms. 7or e6ample, loo! at the
eautiful passa#e in 5salm QF that calls out, =(et the heavens praise 'our wonders,
1 (ord, 'our faithfulness in the asseml' of the hol' ones. 7or who in the s!ies can e
compared to the (ordV %ho amon# the heavenl' ein#s is li!e the (ordV ... The
heavens are 'ours, the earth also is 'oursG the world and all that is in it /'ou have
founded them.@ (i!ewise, .od as!s 3o H0Q82I if an' human can claim to have een around
at the creation, =when the mornin# stars san# to#ether and all the heavenl'
ein#s shouted for Oo' .@
)re these =heavens,@ =hol' ones,@ those =in the s!',@ the =mornin# stars ... and heavenl'
ein#s@ more references to an#elsV Or do the' refer to some other !ind of life e'ond our
!nowled#eV
F
A)nd these are not the onl' non/human intelli#ent creatures mentioned in the *ile. ThereDs
that odd, and m'sterious, passa#e at the e#innin# of .enesis, Chapter R, that descries the
=sons of .od@ ta!in# human wives. %ith it is a frustratin#l' oliMue reference to =The
Nephilim ...the heroes that were of old, warriors of renown.@
Most *ilical scholars su##est that the Nephelim and the Sons of .od in .enesis can e
e6plained awa' as a left/over reference to the creation stories of the pa#ans who
surrounded ancient $srael, that the' were written ' the !ind of people whose

culture saw an'one Not Of M' Trie as ein# unspea!al' alien. (i!ewise, the
references to heavens and stars sin#in# and praisin# the (ord can e seen simpl' for the
eautiful poetr' that it is.
*ut whether 'ou interpret these creatures as an#els or aliens doesnDt reall' matter for the
sa!e of our ar#ument here. The point is that the ancient writers of the *ile, li!e all ancient
peoples, were perfectl' happ' with the possiilit' that other intelli#ent ein#s could
e6ist.>ii?
Read that a#ain, then as! 'ourself8 +id the &aticanDs top astronomer actuall' mean to use
the stor' of the Nephilim from the *ile as an e6ample of the !ind of =space saviors@
man could soon loo! to for salvationV This incredile assertion is onl' topped ' what he
sa's ne6t. $n Muotin# 3ohn 4184R, which sa's, =)nd other sheep $ have, which are not of
this fold8 them also $ must rin#, and the' shall hear m' voiceG and there shall e one
fold, and one shepherd,@ Consolma#o writes8 =5erhaps itDs not so far/fetched to see the
Second 5erson of the Trinit', the %ord, %ho was present =$n the e#innin#@ H3ohn 48 lI,
comin# to la' down His life and ta!e it up a#ain H3ohn 418
4QI not onl' as the Son of Man ut also as a Child of other racesV@ >iii?
+o &atican scholars actuall' elieve 3esus mi#ht have een the Star/Child of an alien
raceV +oes Consolma#no andSor other 3esuits secretl' hold that the =&ir#in *irth@ was
in realit' an aduction scenario in which Mar' was impre#nated ' ET, #ivin# irth to the
h'rid 3esusV )s incredile as that sounds, 'ou should prepare for the une6pected answer
as this series unfolds.
)ll this would seem impossile theolo#' if not for the fact that other hi#h ran!in#
&atican spo!espersonsEthose who routinel' stud' from the =Star *ase@ Has local
$ndians call itI on Mt. .rahamEhave een sa'in# the same in recent 'ears. This
includes +r. Christopher Corall', &ice +irector for the &atican Oservator'
Research .roup on Mt. .raham until ;14;, who elieves our ima#e of .od will have to
41
chan#e if disclosure of alien life is soon revealed ' scientists Hincludin# the need to evolve
from the concept of an =anthropocentric@ .od into a =roader entit'@I, >iv? and the current
&atican Oservator' director, 7ather 3osW 7unes who has #one eMuall' far, su##estin#
that alien life not onl' e6ists in the universe and is =our rother@ ut will, when manifested,
confirm the =true@ faith of Christianit' and the dominion of Rome. %hen the (DOsservatore
Romano newspaper Hwhich pulishes nothin# that the &atican doesnDt approveI as!ed him
what this meant, he replied8 =How can we rule out that life ma' have developed
elsewhereV 3ust as we consider earthl' creatures as
Xa rother,D and Xsister,D wh' should we not tal! aout an Xe6traterrestrial rotherDV $t would
still e part of creation@>v? and elievin# in the e6istence of such is not
contradictor' to Catholic doctrine. >vi?


*rother .u' Consolma#no with 5ope *enedict :&$
Such statements are ut the latest in a strin# of recent comments ' numerous
&atican astronomers confirmin# a #rowin# elief Hor inside !nowled#eVI that
disclosure will e made in the near future of alien life, includin# intelli#ent life, and that this
encounter will not challen#e the authorit' of the Roman Catholic Church.
7rom the 21s throu#h the F1s, it was Monsi#nor Corrado *alducciEan e6orcist,
theolo#ian and memer of the &atican Curia H#overnin# od' at RomeI and friend of the
5opeEwho went perhaps furthest, appearin# on $talian national television numerous
times to state that ETs were not onl' possile ut alread' interactin# with Earth and that
the &aticanDs leaders were aware of it. 7urthermore, spea!in# as an official demonolo#ist,
he said that e6traterrestrial encounters, =are not demonic, the' are not due to ps'cholo#ical
impairment, and the' are not a case of entit' attachment, ut these encounters deserve to
e studied carefull'.@>vii? He even disclosed how the &atican itself has een closel'
followin# the phenomenon and Muietl' compilin# material evidence from &atican
emassies HNunciaturesI around the world on the e6traterrestrials and their mission >later
in this research we will disclose the secret alien files the &atican has een collectin#
since the 4FP1s?. 7or e6ample, at a forum concernin# the enormous U7O flap in Me6ico,
he stated, =$ alwa's wish to e the spo!esman for these star peoples who also are part
of .odDs #lor', and $ will continue to rin# it to the attention of the Hol' Mother Church.@>viii?
%hatever 'ou ma!e of his claims, *alducci was a memer of a special #roup of
consultants to the &atican, a pulic spo!esperson for Rome on the matter of e6traterrestrial
life as well as U7O and aduction phenomenon, and his assertions have never een
contradicted ' the Church.
44
Still, perhaps most intri#uin# was Catholic theolo#ian 7ather Malachi Martin who, efore
his death in 4FFF, hinted at somethin# li!e imminent e6traterrestrial contact more than
once. %hile on Coast to Coast )M radio in 4FF2, )rt *ell as!ed Martin wh' the &atican
was heavil' invested in the stud' of deep space at the Mt .raham Oservator' we
visited. )s a retired professor of the 5ontifical *ilical $nstitute, Martin was uniMuel'
Mualified to hold in secret information pertainin# to &)TT.

MartinDs answer i#nited a firestorm of interest amon# Christian and secular
U7Olo#ists when he replied, =*ecause the mentalit'Aamon#st those who >are? at theA
hi#hest levels of &atican administration and #eopolitics, !nowAwhatDs #oin# on in space,
and whatDs approachin# us, could e of #reat import in the ne6t five 'ears, ten 'ears@
Hemphasis addedI.>i6?
Those cr'ptic words =whatDs approachin# us, could e of #reat import@ was followed in
suseMuent interviews with discussion of a m'sterious =si#n in the s!'@ that Malachi
elieved was approachin# from the north. %hile this could have een an oliMue
reference to an end time portent, the Catholic
prophec' of the .reat Comet, people familiar with
Malachi elieve he ma' have eenreferrin# to a near/
future arrival of alien intelli#ence. H$nterestin# note from the authors8 %hen we as!ed
7ather .u' Consolma#no what he thou#ht of MalachiDs claims, he seemed actuall' miffed
' the man, sa'in#, =$ have heard stories aout the late Malachi Martin which ma!e me
rather suspicious of statements that come from him. $ was at the Oservator' in
the 4FF1s, and he never visited us nor had an'thin# to do with us.@ This reaction seems
consistent with how man' other Catholic priests despised MalachiDs willin#ness to
disclose what Rome otherwise wanted uried, especiall' the Satanic caal within
the 3esuit order Malachi wrote aout in his est/sellin# oo!s.I
<et, if ET life is somethin# &atican officials have privatel'
considered for some time, wh' spea! of it so openl' now, in what some perceive as a
careful, doctrinal unveilin# over the last few 'earsV $s this a delierate effort ' church
officials to =warm/up@ the lait' to ET disclosureV )re official church pulications on
the suOect an attempt to soften the low efore disclosure arrives, in order to help the
faithful retain their orthodo6' in li#ht of unprecedented
forthcomin# !nowled#eV
%ritin# for Newswee! on Thursda', Ma' 4P, ;11Q, in the article =The &atican and (ittle
.reen Men,@ Sharon *e#le' noted that =>this? mi#ht e part of a push to
demonstrate the &aticanDs emrace of scienceA $nterestin#l', the &atican has plans to host
4;
a conference in Rome ne6t sprin# to mar! the 4P1th anniversar' of the Ori#in of Species,
Charles +arwinDs seminal wor! on the theor' of evolution. Conference or#ani"ers sa'
it will loo! e'ond entrenched ideolo#ical positionsEincludin# misconstrued creationism.
The &atican sa's it wants to reconsider the prolem of evolution Xwith a roader
perspectiveD and sa's an Xappropriate consideration is needed more than ever
efore.D@>6?

The =appropriate consideration@ *e#le' mentioned ma' have een somethin# alluded to '
.u' Consolma#no three 'ears earlier in an interview with the Sunda' Herald. That
article pointed out how Consolma#noDs Oo included reconcilin# =the wildest reaches of
science fiction with the flint/e'ed do#ma of the Hol' See@ and that his latest mental
meander was aout =the 3esus Seed,@ descried as =a rain/warpin# theor' which
speculates that, perhaps, ever' planet that harours intelli#ent, self/ aware life ma' also
have had a Christ wal! across its methane seas, Oust as 3esus did here on Earth in
.alilee. The salvation of the *etel#uesians ma' have happened simultaneousl' with the
salvation of the Earthlin#s.@>6i?This sounds li!e a sanctified version of panspermiaEthe idea
that life on Earth was =seeded@ ' somethin# a lon# time a#o such as an asteroid
impactEut in this case, =the seed@ was divinel' appointed and reconciled to Christ.
The curious connection etween the &aticanDs spo!espersons and the Muestion of
e6traterrestrials and salvation was further hinted in the Ma', ;11Q (DOsservatore Romano
interview with 7ather 7unes, titled, =The E6traterrestrial is M' *rother.@ $n the En#lish
translation of the $talian feature, 7unes responds to the Muestion of whether
e6traterrestrials would need to e redeemed, which he elieves should not e assumed.
=.od was made man in 3esus to save us,@ he sa's. =$f other intelli#ent ein#s e6ist, it
is not said that the' would have need of redemption. The' could remain in full
friendship with their Creator.@>6ii?
*' =full friendship,@ 7unes reflected how some &atican theolo#ians accept the
possiilit' that an e6traterrestrial species ma' e6ist that is morall' superior to menE
closer to .od than we fallen humans areEand that, as a conseMuence, the' ma' come
here to evan#eli"e us. 7ather .u' Consolma#no too! up this same line of thin!in# when
he wrote in his oo!, *rother )stronomer8 )dventures of a &atican Scientist8
So the Muestion of whether or not one should evan#eli"e is reall' a moot point. )n' alien
we find will learn and chan#e from contact with us, Oust as we will learn and chan#e from
contact with them. $tDs inevitale. )nd the'Dll e evan#eli"in# us, too.>6iii?
*ut hold on, as this disturin# rait hole #oes much deeperA
40
$n a paper for the $nterdisciplinar' Enc'clopedia of Reli#ion and Science, 7ather
.iuseppe Tan"ella/NittiEan Opus +ei theolo#ian of the 5ontifical Universit' of the Hol'
Cross in RomeEe6plains Oust how we could actuall' e evan#eli"ed durin# contact
with =spiritual aliens,@ as ever' eliever in .od would, he ar#ues, #reet an
e6traterrestrial civili"ation as an e6traordinar' e6perience and would e inclined to respect
the alien and to reco#ni"e the common ori#in of our different species as ori#inatin#
from the same Creator. )ccordin# to .iuseppe, this contact ' non/ terrestrial
intelli#ence would then offer new possiilities =of etter understandin# the relationship
etween .od and the whole of creation.@>6iv? .iuseppe states this would

not immediatel' oli#e the Christian =to renounce his own faith in .od simpl' on the asis of
the reception of new, une6pected information of a reli#ious character from e6traterrestrial
civili"ations,@>6v? ut that such a renunciation could come soon after as the new
=reli#ious content@ ori#inatin# from outside the Earth is confirmed as reasonale and
credile. =Once the trustworthiness of the information has een verified@ the eliever
would have to =reconcile such new information with the truth that he or she alread'
!nows and elieves on the asis of the revelation of the One and Triune .od,
conductin# a re/readin# >of the .ospel? inclusive of the new dataA@>6vi? How this
=more complete@ ET .ospel mi#ht deemphasi"e or si#nificantl' modif' our understandin#
of salvation throu#h 3esus Christ is discussed in the e6otheolo#' section of our
upcomin# investi#ative oo! -E6o&aticana-, ut former &atican Oservator' vice director,
Christopher Corall', in his article =%hat if There %ere Other $nhaited %orlds@ ma'
have summari"ed the most important aspect when he concluded that 3esus simpl' mi#ht
not remain the onl' %ord of salvation8 =$ would tr' to e6plore the alien ' lettin# XitD e
what it is, without rushin# for a classification cate#or', not even presumin# two
#enders,@ Corall' said, efore droppin# this omshell8
%hile Christ is the 7irst and the (ast %ord Hthe )lpha and the Ome#aI spo!en to
humanit', he is not necessaril' the onl' word spo!e to the universeA 7or, the %ord
spo!en to us does not seem to e6clude an eMuivalent =%ord@ spo!en to aliens. The', too,
could have had their =(o#os/event@. %hatever that event mi#ht have een, it does not have
to e a repeated death/and/resurrection, if we allow .od more ima#ination than some
reli#ious thin!ers seem to have had. 7or .od, as omnipotent, is not restricted to one
form of lan#ua#e, the human.>6vii?
That hi#h/ran!in# spo!espersons for the &atican have in recent 'ears increasin#l'
offered such lan#ua#e ac!nowled#in# the li!elihood of e6traterrestrial intelli#ence and the
dramatic role ETDs introduction to human civili"ation could pla' in re#ard to alterin#
estalished creeds aout anthropolo#', philosoph', reli#ion, and redemption is set to
ecome more future/conseMuential than most are prepared for.
4N
)nd then there is that (UC$7ER device at Mt. .raham, which the &atican denies
ein# connected to ut we shall illustrate otherwise later in this series. (UC$7ER is
curiousl' descried on the &atican Oservator' wesite as =N)S) )N+ THE
&)T$C)NDS $N7R)RE+ TE(ESCO5E C)((E+ >(UC$7ER?E) .erman uilt, N)S) and
The &atican owned and funded $nfrared TelescopeA for loo!in# at N$*$RUSNEMES$S.@
>6viii? %h' has the &atican Oservator' wesite allowed this caption to remainV Niiru
and Nemesis are h'pothetical planets that supposedl' return in orit close to the
earth after ver' lon# periods of time. The' have een connected in modern m'th with
=5lanet :@ and most dar!l' with the destruction of planets that some elieve occurred
durin# a #reat war etween .od and (ucifer when the powerful an#el was cast out of
heaven.

$n the oo! of 3o where the prophet details how .od destro'ed the literal dwellin# places
of the an#els that made insurrection a#ainst Him H3o ;R844/40I, it specificall' mentions
the destruction of Raha, a planetar' od' also !nown as X5ride,D from which .od
drove Xthe fu#itive sna!e.D@ )re Rome and other world powers usin# the (UC$7ER
device to oserve somethin# the rest of us cannot seeEsomethin# the' elieve
represents this ancient war Hor worse, !eepin# e'e on approachin# end/times an#elic
transportation devicesSU7Os, somethin# 7ather Malachi Martin hinted atIV
The latter theor' is interestin# in li#ht of the demonic name of the infrared device. $nfrared
telescopes can detect oOects too cool or far awa' and faint to e oserved in visile li#ht,
such as distant planets, some neulae and rown dwarf stars. )dditionall', infrared
radiation has lon#er wavelen#ths than visile li#ht, which means it can pass throu#h
astronomical #as and dust without ein# scattered. OOects and areas oscured from view
in the visile spectrum, includin# the center of the Mil!' %a', can thus e oserved '
(UC$7ERDs infrared technolo#'. >6i6? *ut what U7O researchers have fascinated aout for
some time now is how infrared technolo#' can also e used to spot and trac!
Unidentified 7l'in# OOects in the heavens that cannot e seen with other telescopes or
the na!ed e'e. $n fact, some of the most astonishin# U7Os ever cau#ht on film have een
recorded with infrared. %hat this has to do with the arrival of 5etrus Romanus and
especiall' the #loal leader he will celerate is e'ond disturin# and ultimatel' imminent.
4P
(*T en#ineer showin# authors the (UC$7ER device and e6plainin# how it uses $nfrared to
see...V
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 0
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' 41, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
)RE -THE<- ON MT .R)H)MV
)s mentioned in earlier entrees, the mountain ran#e in )ri"ona where the Mt. .raham
$nternational Oservator' and the(UC$7ER device resides is considered one of the holiest
mountains in )merica for the )pache $ndians.
4R
Histor' su##ests part of the reason native peoples considered it =hol'@ // and partl'
wh' the mountain was selected ' the M.$O consortium // involves unusual
heavenl' activit' there in ancient times when U7Os called =spirit li#hts@ moved
throu#h the s!', somethin# that seems to have contriuted to their attriution of
=powers@ to the solar s'stem, the location of metaph'sical ,portals,, and other
supernatural phenomena. The )pache Creation M'th is tellin# in this re#ard, as a
particular version involves the =One %ho (ives )ove@ and who descended in a fl'in#
disc at the start of creation. =$n the e#innin# nothin# e6istedEno earth, no s!', no
sun, no moon, onl' dar!ness was ever'where,@ the
le#end starts efore notin#G =Suddenl' from the dar!ness emer#ed a disc, one side
'ellow and the other side white, appearin# suspended in midair. %ithin the disc sat a
earded man, Creator, the One %ho (ives )ove.@
%hile no sin#le =)pache Creation M'th@ dominates all trial eliefs, most #roups share
!e' precepts as well as s'molism within their oral histories. *esides the creator who
rides in a heavenl' disc, a +ra#on with the power of speech turns up,

ar#ainin# with men, as well as supernatural #atewa's associated with mountains
HchDYnZDitYhI throu#h which spirit ein#s can come. Sometimes these spirits are
represented ' the Owl Hto an )pache $ndian, dreamin# of an Owl si#nified
approachin# death, while the Hopis see the *urrowin# Owl >[oD!o, =%atcher of the dar!@?
as the #od of the dead and the under#roundI, which is fascinatin# #iven the connection
with =alien aduction@ accounts where the Owl is a dis#uise wherein the aductee is led to
elieve the u#/e'ed alien in their memor' was actuall' an Owl the' had seen
somewhere and had lod#ed in their memor'. Owls have een associated throu#hout
Christian histor' with sorcer' and fl'in# witches and the source of these le#ends seem
to mirror man' aduction tales, which we shall consider later. Suffice to sa' these ancient
native ideas involvin# fl'in# discs, fl'in# creators, spirit li#hts, Owls, a tal!in# +ra#on or
#reat serpent, and even supernatural #atewa's tied to mountain ran#es e#an lon#
efore the &atican cast its e'es on Mt. .raham.
%HO %ERE S )RE THE< RE)((<V
$n 4FQQ, an )merican science fiction/horror film titled =The' (ive@ Hdirected ' 3ohn
CarpenterI depicted a nameless drifter pla'ed ' professional wrestler =Rowd'@ Rodd'
5iper who discovers the rulin# elite are in fact aliens that have h'pnoti"ed the human race
and are mana#in# human social affairs throu#h suliminal messa#es concealed in
memes and mass media. $n an important earl' scene, Nada, as the 5iper character is
called, enters an alle'wa' and finds a o6 containin# lac! sun#lasses. He puts on a pair
42
and soon discovers the' include a ver' special filter. (oo!in# throu#h them he can see
=the realit' of the lea! world,@ that #loal media and advertisin# actuall' contain
totalitarian commands of oedience and conformit' in consumerism, to control an unwittin#
human population ' humanoid aliens with #rotesMue s!ull/ li!e faces. >i? Thou#h a
commercial failure at the time, the film eventuall' made its wa' to the top ;P Cult
Classics, where it remains presentl', accordin# to Entertainment %ee!l' Ma#a"ine.
>ii? The film and theatrical posters can often e found toda' in moc!in# editorials
depictin# the #oals of totalitarians and elitists, ut another su##estion of the wor! that
usuall' #oes without discussion is how the world reall' mi#ht e infested with non/human
a#ents of an un!nown realit', aout which the ul! of man!ind is unaware.
7irst, from a purel' incorporeal realit', we !now that demons and their militaristic
interest in people and #eo#raph' are ontolo#ical facts, accordin# to the *ile. $n the Old
Testament, demons are seen as the livin# d'namic ehind idolatr' Hi.e.,
+euteronom' 0;842I, and in the New Testament, ever' writer refers to their influence.
E6trailical te6ts includin# ancient pseudepi#raphical wor!s li!e the first *oo! of Enoch
and post/New Testament writin#s such as the +idache, $#natiusD Epistle to the Ephesians,
and the Shepherd of Hermas a#ree with this concern. Earl' church fathers also reinforced
the elief that evil spirits see! to thwart the will of .od on earth throu#h attac!s on the
od' of Christ in particular and a#ainst societ' in #eneral, as unseen intermediariesEoth
#ood and evilEinterlope etween spiritual and human

personalities at home, in church, in #overnment, and in societ'. Understandin# how and
wh' this is true is defined in demonolo#ical studies such as the divine council Ha term
used ' Herew and Semitic scholars to descrie the pantheon of divine ein#s or
an#els who administer the affairs of heaven and earthI, where e6perts t'picall' a#ree
that, e#innin# at the Tower of *ael, the world and its inhaitants were disinherited
' the soverei#n .od of $srael and placed under the authorit' of lesser divine ein#s that
ecame corrupt and dislo'al to .od in their administration of those nations H5salm Q;I.
7ollowin# *ael, these ein#s Muic!l' ecame idoli"ed on earth as #ods, #ivin# irth to the
worship of =demons@ Hsee )cts 28N4BN;G 5salms FR8PG and 4
Corinthians 418;1I and the Muest ' fallen an#els to draw man!ind awa' from .od.
%hile the dominion of these entities and their #oals are freMuentl' overloo!ed, close
collaoration etween evil ones and unre#enerate social architects operates on a re#ular
asis outside the purview of the countless multitudes who are linded to their realit'. $n
other words, as su##ested in the film =The' (ive,@ ehind #overnors, le#islators,
presidents, dictators, and even reli#ious leaders, wic!ed spiritual powers move throu#hout
the machine of ecclesiastical and civil #overnments and media as freel' as the' are
allowed. %henever such principalities reco#ni"e a reli#ious or political od' that has
ecome a force for moral #ood, the' set aoutEthrou#h a sophisticated la'rinth of
visile and invisile representativesEto rin# that or#ani"ation down, one ri#hteous
soul at a time.
4Q
$t is within this concealed arena of evil supernaturalism that unre#enerate men are
or#ani"ed. Under demonic influence, the' are orchestrated within a #reat evil s'stem Hor
empireI descried in various scriptural passa#es as a satanic order. $n more than thirt'
important ilical te6ts, the .ree! New Testament emplo's the term !osmos, descriin#
this =#overnment ehind #overnment.@ $t is here that human e#o, separated from
.od, ecomes hostile to the service of man!ind while viewin# people as commodities to
e manipulated in the ministration of fiendish amition. Some e6positors elieve the
ori#ins of this phenomenon e#an in the distant past, when a fire in the mind of (ucifer
caused the powerful Cheru to e6alt himself aove the #ood of .odDs creation. The once/
#lorified spirit, driven mad ' an uneMuivocal thirst to rule, conMuer, and dominate,
spawned similar lust etween his followers, which continues toda' amon# a#ents of
dar! power who #uard a privile#ed, =cause/and/ effect@ s'mmetr' etween visile and
invisile personalities.
)t SatanDs desire, archons command this supernatural, #eopolitical sphere,
dominatin# !osmo!rators Hrulers of dar!ness who wor! in and throu#h human
counterpartsI who in turn command spirits of lesser ran! until ever' level of earthl'
#overnment, secular and reli#ious, can e touched ' this influence. $f we could see
throu#h the veil into this domain, we would find a world alive with #ood a#ainst evil, a place
where the ultimate pri"e is the souls of men and where le#ions war for control of its cities and
people. %ith vivid testimon' to this, Satan offered 3esus all the power and the #lor' of the
#overnments of this world. Satan said, =)ll this power >control? will $ #ive thee, and the
#lor' of them >earthl' cities?8 for that is delivered unto me8

and to whomsoever $ will $ #ive it. $f thou therefore wilt worship me, all shall e thine@
H(u!e N8RB2I.
)ccordin# to the epistle of the Ephesians, it is this dominion, not flesh and lood, where
opposition to .odDs will on earth is initiated. %hereas people and institutions often provide
the =faces@ on our prolems, the conflict ori#inates e'ond them, in this place where
unseen forces scheme. These forces ma' indeed e more influential than an'one ever
ima#ined. $n fact, there is a stron# li!elihood that the first murder recorded in .enesis
was demonicall' inspired Hin a manner which parallels the so called =alien aduction@
phenomenon in interestin# wa's.I +id 'ou ever wonder wh' =sin@ is personified when .od
warns Cain -$f thou doest well, shalt thou not e acceptedV and if thou doest not well,
sin lieth at the door. )nd unto thee shall e his desire, and thou shalt rule over him-
H.e N82, underline addedI. +oesnDt it seem odd that =sin@ is a =him@ and if Cain does not do
well he will e sinDs desireV How can =sin@ have desireV )pparentl', there is somethin#
more #oin# on here and scholars have uncovered surprisin# answers.
The wonderful thin# aout archeolo#' is that we now have a #reater understandin# of the
*ileDs conte6t than at an' other time in histor'. Scholars have translated a wealth of
4F
talets from Mesopotamia which not onl' add conte6tual clues to scriptural
references ut provide insi#ht into orrowed Semitic vocaular'. $n this case, a
careful e6amination of the Herew te6t leads man' evan#elical inerranc'/upholdin#
scholars to see the participle HHe. roeI rendered =lieth@ in the [3& Hor =is
crouchin#@ in other versionsI as an )!!adian loan word, raiu, for a demon Hancient
Herew has no vowels so XrsD offers this fle6iilit'I.>iii? Of course, there are other
scholars who al!, preferrin# a less supernatural e6e#esis, ut the conte6t of the
passa#e supports the demonic interpretation. Sin does not lie in wait ut demons do. *ilical
scholar 3ohn %alton a#rees, =The fact that the te6t mentions the desire to master Cain
favors raiu as a demon.@>iv? Thus, Oust prior to the first murder in histor', =sin@ is
depicted as a doorwa'/demon waitin# for an opportune time, an invitation which comes
all too soon.
The ancient )!!adian literature reveals more astonishin# data. $n medical te6ts,
inflicted individuals are depicted as havin# =wal!ed in the path of a raiu@ and =a raiu
has sei"ed him.@ The root meanin# of this term means Xone who lies in waitD.>v? Uncann'
parallels to modern aductions are seen in the descriptions of demons who amush their
victims in various locations8 rai uri, =the raiu of the roof@G rai nari, =the raiu of the
river@G rai arati, =the raiu of the wasteland.@ $t seems there was a raiu for Oust aout
an'where, even a rai mus\ti, =the raiu of the toilet.@ Now thatDs disturin#T $ll manners
aside, consider the rai uri, =the raiu of the road.@>vi? Mi#ht *arne' and *ett' Hill,
while drivin# late at ni#ht on that lonel' road, have encountered somethin# li!e
the latter manifest ph'sicall' in modern #arV
*ut %hat $f There $s Somethin# MoreESomethin# EmodiedV

%hat if the incorporeal or uncarnate realit' descried aove is onl' part of the stor'V %hat
if in at least some instances there is somethin# more ph'sical than the whispered
influence demons can have on the human mindV %hat if there are tan#ile human h'rids
wal!in# amon# usG fit e6tensions for incarnation or emodiment of powerful alien/demonic
entities, such as the creatures in the movie =The' (ive@ or the Nephilim of ancient da'sV $s
such a concept too incredile to e sustantiveV %ould 'ou e surprised to learn that
some ver' intelli#ent peopleEincludin# academics and scholarsEelieve Hto orrow a line
that Carol )nne so ominousl' e6pressed in the
4FQ; film 5olter#eistI =The'Dre here.@ )nd is this secret !nowled#e wh' &atican )stronomer
.u' Consolma#no Hsee entr' L;I sent us the stor' of the Nephilim from the *ile as an
e6ample of the !ind of =space saviors@ man will soon loo! to for
salvation, su##estin# that 3esus himself was the product of alien/human h'ridit'V
)mon# secular and reli#ious researchers toda' there is a contentious ehind/the/
scenes deate #oin# on in this re#ard, which has een #rowin# in intensit' over the last
;1
few 'ears amon# those who reco#ni"e first of all that #eneticall' modified plants, animals,
and 'es, humans are now realit' Hdocumented in the ne6t entr'I. Unnatural forms of life
first spran# up in ancient da's and accordin# to the *ile this is a repeatale
phenomenonEthat is, human h'ridi"ation not onl' happened in earliest times, ut was
followed ' at least a second wave durin# the da's of )raham, Moses and the +avidic
!in#dom, and, more importantl', was prophesied to erupt once more in the latter da's.
Therefore, we shall show uneMuivocall' that the Muestion is not whether humans were,
can e or are ein# h'ridi"ed, ut whether alienSdemon a#encies are involved in
the process. $f so, does this impl' somethin# ver' uncomfortale, which most of us
do not want to thin! aoutG that a form of =human@ e6ists that Muite possil' cannot e
redeemedV
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT N
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' 40, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
H<*R$+S8 THE 7$RST $NCURS$ON
Stories and le#ends e6tendin# as far ac! as the e#innin# of time in ever' maOor
culture tell the astonishin#l' consistent stor' of =#ods@ that descended from heaven and
materiali"ed in odies of flesh. Our wor!in# h'pothesis is that the so/called
e6traterrestrials are nothin# new. $ndeed, the' have een with us all alon#. The'
appear in our literature as far ac! as records e6tend.
;4
$n some of the earliest documents we see a diverse population of stran#e entities ein#
created ' the #ods. 7or instance, in the )!!adian Epic of Creation we read of the chaos
monster Tiamat emplo'in# a host of oddities8 -She deplo'ed serpents, dra#ons, and
hair' hero/men, (ion monsters, lion men, scorpion men, Mi#ht' demons, fish men,
ull men, *earin# unsparin# arms, fearin# no attle.- >i?
)s the cuneiform talets recount, the deit' En!i elieved correctl' that )psu, upset with
the chaos the' created, was plannin# to murder the 'oun#er deitiesG and so captured
him, holdin# him prisoner eneath is temple called E/)"u. This an#ered [in#u, their
son, who reported the event to Tiamat, whereupon she fashioned eleven monsters to attle
the deities in order to aven#e )psu,s death. These were her own offsprin#8 *a]mu,
=&enomous Sna!e,@ U]um#allu, =.reat +ra#on,@ Mu]mau, =E6alted Serpent,@
Mu]u]]u, =7urious Sna!e,@ (amu, the =Hair' One,@ U#allu, the =*i# %eather/*east,@
Uridimmu, =Mad (ion,@ .irtalull^, =Scorpion/Man,@ Umu darutu, =&iolent Storms,@
[ulull^, =7ish/Man,@ and [usari!!u, =*ull/Man.@ These entities are recorded in the earliest
records and find astonishin# parallels in later literature. 7rom the Sumerians throu#h the
)!!adians to the ancient Herews these le#ends have remained consistent. (ater,
=ancient .ree! and Roman m'ths were populated not onl' ' #ods, heroes, and
demons,@ *rother .u' Consolma#no from &)TT at Mt. .raham reminded us, =ut ' an'
numer of stran#e and monstrous ein#s.@>ii?
Thus, from Rome to .reeceEand efore that, to E#'pt, 5ersia, )ss'ria, *a'lonia,
and SumerEthe earliest records of civili"ation reveal an era when powerful ein#s

!nown to the Herews as %atchers and in the oo! of .enesis as the enei ha/elohim
Hsons of .odI descended to earth, min#led themselves with humans, and #ave irth to part/
celestial, part/terrestrial h'rids !nown as
Nephilim. The *ile sa's this happened when civili"ation e6panded and dau#hters were
orn to men. %hen the sons of .od saw the womenDs eaut',
the' too! wives from amon# them to sire their
unusual offsprin#. $n .enesis R8N we read the followin# account8 =There were #iants
in the earth in those da'sG and also after that, when the sons of .od came in unto the
dau#hters of men, and the' are children to them, the same ecame mi#ht' men
which were of old, men of renown.@
%hen this Scripture is compared with other ancient te6ts, includin# those ' earl'
Church 7athers such as 3ustin, $renaeus, )thena#oras, Commodianus, 3ulius )fricanus,
Clement, Tertulluan, Methodius, and )mrose, not to mention wor!s li!e the oo!s of
Enoch, 3uilees, *aruch, .enesis )pocr'phon, 5hilo, 3osephus, 3asher, The
Testament of the 4;
;;
5atriarchs, and man' more, the firml' held ancient elief ecomes clear that the
#iants of the Old
Testament, such as .oliath, were part/human, part/
animal, part/an#elic offsprin# of a supernatural
interruption into the divine order and natural propa#ation of the species.
The first/centur' Romano/3ewish historian 7lavius 3osephus descried part of the stor'
this wa'8
7or man' an#els of .od accompanied with women, and e#at sons that proved unOust,
and despisers of all that was #ood, on account of the confidence the' had in their own
stren#thG for the tradition is, that these men did what resemled the acts of those whom the
.recians call #iants. *ut Noah was ver' uneas' at what the' didG and ein# displeased
at their conduct, persuaded them to chan#e their dispositions and their acts for the etter8
ut seein# the' did not 'ield to him, ut were slaves to their wic!ed pleasures, he was
afraid the' would !ill him, to#ether with his wife and children, and those the' had marriedG so
he departed out of that land. >iii?
The earl' Church 7ather $renaeus added that the an#els used women not onl' to sire
=#iants@ ut tau#ht them enchantments specificall' for the purpose of castin# lust/ potions
to lure oth men and an#els to their eds8

)nd for a ver' lon# while wic!edness e6tended and spread, and reached and laid hold
upon the whole race of man!ind, until a ver' small seed of ri#hteousness remained
amon# them and illicit unions too! place upon the earth, since an#els were united with
the dau#hters of the race of man!indG and the' ore to them sons who for their
e6ceedin# #reatness were called #iants. )nd the an#els rou#ht as presents to their
wives teachin#s of wic!edness, in that the' rou#ht them the virtues of roots and
hers, d'ein# in colors and cosmetics, the discover' of rare sustances, love/potions,
aversions, amours, concupiscence, constraints of love, spells of ewitchment, and all
sorcer' and idolatr' hateful to .odG ' the entr' of which thin#s into the world evil
e6tended and spread, while ri#hteousness was diminished and enfeeled. >iv?
%hile the prophet +aniel called certain powerful an#els =%atchers@ in canonical
scripture H+an. N840,42,;0I, it was the apocr'phal oo! of Enoch that first descried their
cosmic conspirac'. %e read8
;0
)nd $ Enoch was lessin# the (ord of maOest' and the [in# of the a#es, and loT the
%atchers called meEEnoch the scrieEand said to me8 =Enoch, thou scrie of
ri#hteousness, #o, declare to the %atchers of the heaven who have left the hi#h
heaven, the hol' eternal place, and have defiled themselves with women, and have
done as the children of earth do, and have ta!en unto themselves wives8 <e have
wrou#ht #reat destruction on the earth8 )nd 'e shall have no peace nor for#iveness of sin8
and inasmuch as the' deli#ht themselves in their children >the Nephilim?, The murder of
their eloved ones shall the' see, and over the destruction of their children shall
the' lament, and shall ma!e supplication unto eternit', ut merc' and peace shall 'e not
attain@ H4 Enoch 4180BQI.
)ccordin# to Enoch, two hundred of these powerful an#els departed =hi#h heaven@ and
used women Hamon# other thin#sI to e6tend their pro#en' into man!indDs plane of
e6istence. +avid 7l'nn referenced an interlinear Herew *ile which offers an
interestin# interpretation of .enesis R8; in this re#ard. %here the [in# 3ames *ile sa's,
=The sons of .od saw the dau#hters of men that the' >were? fair,@ 7l'nn interprets
this as, =The enei Elohim saw the dau#hters of )dam, that the' were fit e6tensions@
Hemphasis addedI.>v? $n other words, the' wanted to incarnate themselves into the
material world. The New Testament also su##ests this idea when 3ude, the rother of our
(ord, wrote, -)nd the an#els which !ept not their first estate, ut left their own haitation
>oi!eterion?A- H3ude RI. This .ree! term oi!eterion is used ' 5aul in ; Corinthians P8; to
denote the transfi#ured od' #iven to elievers in heaven. This implies that these
fallen an#els indeed sou#ht to e6tend part of themselves into earthl' odies. The
renderin# =fit e6tensions@ seems applicale when the whole of the ancient record is
understood to mean that the %atchers wanted to leave their proper sphere of e6istence in
order to enter earthDs three/dimensional realit'. The' viewed womenEor at least their
#enetic materialEas part of the formula for accomplishin# this tas!. )ncient records
su##est the %atchers modified animals

as well. 7or instance, 3uilees implies that interspecies min#lin# eventuall' resulted in
mutations amon# normal humans and animals whose =flesh@ H#enetic ma!eupI was
=corrupted@ ' the activit', presumal' throu#h cross/#enetic inte#ration8
)nd inOustice increased upon the earth, and all flesh corrupted its wa'G man and cattle
and easts and irds and ever'thin# which wal!s on the earth. )nd the' all corrupted
their wa' and their ordinances, and the' e#an to eat one another. )nd inOustice #rew
upon the earth and ever' ima#ination of the thou#hts of all man!ind was thus continuall'
evil. H3uilees P8; underline added, cf. 28;4B;PI>vi?
Even the Old Testament contains reference to the mutations that developed amon#
humans followin# this time frame, includin# =men@ of unusual si"e, ph'sical stren#th, si6
fin#ers, si6 toes, animal appetite for lood, and even lion/li!e features H; Samuel
;N
;48;1G ;08;1I. Earl' Church 7ather Euseius adds other important details8
)nd the' e#at human ein#s, with two win#sG and then others with four win#s and two
faces and one od' and two headsA still others with horsesD hooves, and others in the
shape of a horse at the rear and a human shape at the frontA the' also made ulls with
human heads and horses with do#sD heads as well as other monsters with horses heads
and human odiesA then all !inds of dra#on/li!e monstrous ein#sA
>emphasis added? >vii?
Of the =win#ed humans@ and =dra#on/li!e monsters,@ 3. R. Church once made an
interestin# point that since this activit' was satanic in nature, it refers to the =seed of the
serpent@ that was at enmit' with Christ. =The concept of a reptilian race continues
throu#hout the *ile as a metaphoric s'mol of the devil,@ he wrote in 5rophec' in the
News ma#a"ine, 7eruar' ;11F. =(ater Scriptures add the term Xdra#on,D with the implication
that these other/worldl' creatures were desi#ned with the +N) code of a reptilian race.@
Church went on to state how some of these satanic creatures were depicted as =at/li!e
#ar#o'les, or win#ed dra#ons@ in ancient art, and that we should not e surprised that =a
humanoid/t'pe reptilian race could cohait with human women and produce a race of
#iants.@ $n what could e historical support of +r. ChurchDs premise, a document fra#ment
found in Cave N amon# the +ead Sea Scrolls contains an admonition ' )mram, the
father of Moses, to his children. $n a adl' dama#ed se#ment of the te6t, )mram sees
the chief )n#el of +ar!ness, ) %atcher named Mel!ireshaV in the form of a reptilian8
$ saw %atchers in m' vision, a dream vision, and ehold two Hof themI ar#ued aout me
and said A and the' were en#a#ed in a #reat Muarrel concernin# me. $ as!ed them8
X<ou, what are 'ou A thus A aout meVD The' answered and said to me8 X%e have
een made masters and rule over all the sons of men.D )nd the' said to me8 X%hich of
us do 'ou choose A

$ raised m' e'es and saw one of them. His loo!s were fri#htenin# li!e those of a viper, and
his #arments were multi/coloured and he was e6tremel' dar! A
)nd afterwards $ loo!ed and ehold A ' his appearance and his face was li!e that of an
adder >a venomous sna!e?, and he was covered with A to#ether, and his e'es A@ >viii?
The fact that the %atchers are descried in e6plicitl' reptilian terms ' the ancient
Herews #rounds the ufolo#ical discussion of such ein#s and their interactions with man
firml' in ancient histor'. Case in point, +r. 3ohn Mac!Ds seminal wor! on the aduction
;P
phenomenon cites man' cases involvin# entities meetin# the same description as
that found in the +ead Sea Scrolls. 7or e6ample, the description ' Sara, =The head
was the most prominent part of the od' and was Xshimmer',D loo!in# Xreptilian,D
almost Xsna!e li!e, serpent li!eD and Muite elon#ated.@>i6? 7urthermore, contrar' to
the revisionist accounts #iven ' )ncient )stronaut theorists, this implies the so/called
Reptilians are, in fact, %atchers pursuin# a more sinister a#enda than scientific
e6ploration. <et, aductee testimonies also su##est their interest in #enetic material is ver'
real.
5erhaps the most =scientific@ description concernin# the %atcher e6periments and their
#enetic modification of humans and animals comes to us from the oo! of 3asher, a
Herew te6t that adds an e6ceptional detail that none of the other te6ts is as uneMuivocal
aout, somethin# that can onl' e understood in modern lan#ua#e to mean advanced
iotechnolo#', #enetic en#ineerin#, or =trans#enic modification@ of species. )fter the
%atchers had instructed humans =in the secrets of heaven,@ note what it sa's occurred8
>Then? the sons of men >e#an teachin#? the mi6ture of animals of one species with the
other, in order therewith to provo!e the (ord. H3asher N84QI
$t does seem li!el' that the phrase =the mi6ture of animals of one species with the other@
means %atchers had tau#ht men somethin# more than natural animal crossreedin#, as
this would not have =provo!ed the (ord.@ .od made li!e animals of different reeds capale
of reproducin#. 7or e6ample, horses can propa#ate with other mammals of the
eMuidae classification Hthe ta6onomic =horse famil'@I, includin# don!e's and "eras. $t
would not have =provo!ed the (ord@ for this t'pe of animal reedin# to have ta!en place,
as .od Himself made the animals ale to do this.
$f, on the other hand, the %atchers were crossin# species oundaries ' mi6in#
incompatile animals of one species with the other, such as a horse with a human Ha
centaurI, this would have een a different matter alto#ether and ma' cast li#ht on the
numerous ancient stories of m'thical ein#s of variant/species manufacturin# that fit
perfectl' within the records of what the %atchers were accomplishin#.

Understandal', this !ind of chimera/ma!in# would have =provo!ed the (ord@ and raises
the serious Muestion wh' the %atchers would have ris!ed eternal damnation ' tin!erin#
with .odDs creation in this wa'. Several theories e6ist as to =wh'@ watchers would have
corrupted natural #enot'pes, includin# the idea that8 4I ecause <ahweh had placed
oundaries etween the species and strictl' ordered that =each !ind@ reproduce onl'
after its =own !ind,@ the %atchers as reels sou#ht to rea! these rules in order to
assault .odDs creative #enius throu#h iolo#icall' alterin# what He had madeG ;I the
;R
corruption of antediluvian +N) ' %atchers was an effort to cut off the irth line of the
Messiah.
This theor' posits that Satan understood the protoevan#eliumEthe promise in
.enesis 084P that a Savior would e orn, the seed of the woman, and that He would
destro' the fallen an#elDs power. SatanDs followers therefore intermin#led with the human
race in a conspirac' to stop the irth of Christ. $f human +N) could e universall'
corrupted or =demoni"ed,@ the' reasoned, no Savior would e orn and man!ind would e
lost forever. Those who support this theor' elieve this is wh' .od ordered His people to
maintain a pure loodline and not to intermarr' with the other nations. %hen the Herews
reached this command and the mutated +N) e#an rapidl' spreadin# amon# men and
animals, .od instructed Noah to uild an ar! and to prepare for a flood that would
destro' ever' livin# thin#, the purpose of which would e to pur#e the earth of the
contaminated #enot'pes and phenot'pes.
7inall', a third theor' as to wh' %atchers mer#ed the #enetics of various life forms
incorporates the voluminous ancient =%atcher@ te6ts into a consistent account
re#ardin# the overridin# motive for what the %atchers had apparentl' used +N) for. %hen
this is done, it ecomes clear that #enetic sustances were for them an earth/ centric
and or#anic construction material Hor as +r. 3acMues &allJe called it, =livin# ener#'@I >6? for
uildin# a composite od' that would allow them to leave their plane of e6istence and to
enter manDs Hsee 3ude 48RG ; 5et8 ;8NI. The challen#e of this theor' ecomes how
intermin#lin# various species would satisf' this #oal or provide the %atchers with a
method of departure from =hi#h heaven@ and incarnation into manDs =haitation.@ %hile we
will not ta!e time here to e6plain ever' detail, the h'pothesis involves the %atchers
cominin# species in order to create a soulless or spiritless od'Ea livin# ut empt'
=lar#e or#anism@ or =shell@ into which the' could e6tend themselves.
The rationale here is that ever' creature as it e6isted ori#inall' had its e#innin# in .od,
who wove a arrier etween the species and ordered each creature to reproduce =after its
own !ind.@ The phrase =after its own !ind@ verifies what t'pe of spirit can enter into an
intelli#ent ein# at conception. %hen the sperm of a do# meets ovum of a do# and the life
of a do# is formed, at the first spar! of life the spirit Hor =nature@ when spea!in# of an
animalI of a do# enters that emr'o and it #rows to ecome a do# in spirit and form.
The spirit of a man does not enter it, in the same wa' that a man is not orn with the
spirit of a horse or cow. This creatureSspirit inte#rit' is part

of the divine order and would have !ept the %atchers, who wanted to incarnate within
the human realm Hnot Oust =possess@ creaturesI, from displacin# the spirits of humans or
animals and replacin# them with their own. How did the %atchers overcome this
prolemV $t appears ased on the ancient records Hand li!e modern scientists are doin#
toda'I the' lended e6istin# +N) of several livin# creatures and made somethin# that
;2
neither the spirit of man or east would enter at conception, for it was neither man nor
east. )s M'sterious %orld, in its ;110 feature, =.iants in the Earth,@ noted8
The Nephilim were #eneticall' manufactured ein#s created from the #enetic
material of various pre/e6istin# animal species.A The fallen an#els did not personall'
interreed with the dau#hters of men, ut used their #odli!e intellect to delve into the secrets
of <H%HDs Creation and manipulate it to their own purposes. )nd the !e' to creatin# or
recreatin# man, as we have HreIdiscovered in the twentieth centur', is the human #enomeE
+N).
)ccordin# to this e6trapolation from the ancient accounts, the manipulation of livin# tissue
' the fallen an#els led to an unusual od' made up of human, animal, and plant
#enetics !nown as Nephilim, an =earth/orn@ facsimile or =fit e6tension@ into which the'
could incarnate. %hile this theor' si#nificantl' adds to the ancient record, it see!s to
moderni"e the ancientsD description of what the', perhaps, did not full' #rasp throu#h the
lens of a prescientific worldview and vocaular'. $nterestin#l', science has uncovered
une6pected evidence for this in the human #enome.
The %ashin#ton 5ost recentl' pulished a stor' on findin#s that a =m'ster'@ species with
partial human +N) once wal!ed the earth. The stor', titled =Se6 with earl' m'ster'
species of humans seen in +N), U% researcher sa's,@ is Oust the latest in a series of
similar recent finds, and while no fossili"ed #iant ones were found in this case, a
callin# card was left in present/da' )fricans8 snippets of =forei#n@ +N). =These #enetic
leftovers do not resemle +N) from an' modern humans,@ the article reports efore addin#
this omshell8 =The forei#n +N) also does not resemle Neanderthal +N), which
shows up in the +N) of some modern Europeans. That means the newl' identified +N)
came from an un!nown #roup.@>6i?
.iven the aove theories, the ilical stor' of Nephilim offsprin# offers the most
satisf'in# answer to this eni#ma.
One oOection occasionall' raised a#ainst the idea of part/men h'rids orn as a result
of union etween an#elic and human =#enetics@ is the elief that an#els are supposedl'
se6less, since 3esus said at the resurrection that people will neither marr' nor e #iven in
marria#e ut shall e =li!e the an#els in heaven.@ However, as 3ames Mont#omer' *oice
points out, the words recorded in Matthew ;;801 =are not the eMuivalent of sa'in# that
the an#els are se6less or that the' could not have had se6ual relations with women if the'
had chosen to do so. $n heaven human ein#s will not

;Q
marr' ut will nevertheless retain their identit', which includes their ein# either male or
female. $n the same wa', the an#els could also have se6ual identities. $t is si#nificant
perhaps that when the an#els are referred to in Scripture it is alwa's with the masculine
pronoun Xhe,D and the' are alwa's descried as men.@ >6ii? Thus, when 3esus said the
an#els =in heaven@ do not marr', this is a separate matter from what those an#els that
departed Hor were cast out ofI heaven was capale of doin# and apparentl' did. 3ude
48R/2 adds a deep and important point aout this when it sa's8
)nd the an#els which !ept not their first estate, ut left their own haitation, he hath
reserved in everlastin# chains under dar!ness unto the Oud#ment of the #reat da'. Even
as Sodom and .omorrha, and the cities aout them in li!e manner, #ivin# themselves
over to fornication, and #oin# after stran#e flesh, are set forth for an e6ample, sufferin#
the ven#eance of eternal fire@ >emphasis added?.
$t is remar!ale here that 3ude connects the sin of the fallen an#els with the se6ual sins
of Sodom and .omorrha usin# the tellin# commentar' that the' had #one after =stran#e
flesh@. This is the .ree! sar!os heteros and contains a ver' important meanin#
connected to how the men of Sodom and .omorrha wanted to have se6 with an#els Hsee
.en. 4FI. Thus their sin is compared ' 3ude to those an#els of one verse earlier, which
departed their proper haitation in heaven to comin#le with women. The )postle 5aul
also resonates these demarcations in 4 Corinthians 4P8N1 when he sa's, =There are also
celestial odies, and odies terrestrial8 ut the #lor' of the celestial is one, and the
#lor' of the terrestrial is another.@ %hen e6plainin# how the =heavenl'@ od' is made up of
somethin# entirel' different than the =earthl' od',@ is 5aul spea!in# metaph'sicall' or can
a difference in the =raw material@ of these odies e assumedV Certainl' it can, ecause in
the verse Oust efore this one he spea!s of the differences etween the flesh of men,
easts, fishes, and irds, 'et how these are all of earthl' composition, as opposed to the
followin# verse where he clearl' divides the celestial od' as =another@ t'pe of od' not of
the same =terrestrial@ Hterra firma, of the earthI !ind.
)ccordin# to the Second Centur' )postolic father )thena#oras, (ucifer had een the
an#el ori#inall' placed in char#e of the earthl' =matter@ Hsee 5lea for the ChristiansI. )fter
his fall, Satan used his !nowled#e of creation and #enetics to corrupt what .od had
made. This is interestin# in li#ht of modern science and the recent su##estion that
#enetic anormalities =ma' predispose a man to antisocial ehavior, includin# crimes of
violence.@ >6iii? One of the hottest topics in iolo#' toda' is the science of =epi#enetics,@
which involves heritale chan#es in #ene e6pression or cellular phenot'pes that can
e caused ' =mechanisms@ other than normal chan#es that occur in underl'in# +N)
seMuencesEthus the title epi/H.ree!8 epV/ over, aove, outerI/#enetics. %hether
supernaturalism can pla' a role as one of these =outer mechanisms@ is su##estive
and man' scholars elieve demonic possession, for instance, can ne#ativel' affect
chromosomal health.

;F
The New Testament is replete with connections etween sic!ness and #enetic
disorders as directl' connected to demonism. )ccordin# to theolo#ian and spiritual warfare
e6pert, +r. Neil )ndersen, =appro6imatel' one/fourth of all the healin#s recorded in the
.ospel of Mar! were actuall' deliverances.@>6iv? 7or e6ample, =the' rou#ht unto him
man' that were possessed with devils8 and he cast out the spirits with his word, and
healed all that were sic!G@ and, =when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he #ave
them power a#ainst unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all manner of sic!ness
and all manner of disease@ HMat. Q84RG 4184I.
*ut, this is onl' part of the stor'. There is a difference etween demoni"ed humans... and
what,s amon# us now.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT P
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' ;1, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
THE RETURN O7 H<*R$+ HUM)NS
On Novemer ;Qth, ;14;, durin# the third season of =Conspirac' Theor' with 3esse
&entura@ the TruT& pro#ram loo!ed into =human/animal h'rid e6periments that supposedl'
have #one e'ond the 5etri dish with rumors that a real/life X5lanet of the )pesD is ein#
created.@ >i?
01
The producers had contacted me late in ;144 with a reMuest for help. The' wanted to !now
whether scientists had secretl' crossed the Ruicon with re#ard to human/ animal
#enetic e6periments. Thou#h $ spent
numeroushours as a consultant providin# documentation and e6pert witnesses, $ turned
down repeated reMuests to e part of Season 08 Episode N =Manimal,@ descried on
&enturaDs wesite this wa'8
=Science has made maOor rea!throu#hs in dru#
research and transplant technolo#' ' e6perimentin# on XchimerasDB humanSanimal
emr'o h'rids. *ut these seemin#l' nole #oals ma' e coverin# up a much
more nefarious purpose B to create half human, half ape super soldiers, pavin# the wa'
for a real life
5lanet of the )pes showdown.@ HThe producers actuall' offered on three separate
occasions to fl' me to set locations in the United States to meet with 3esse &entura and
the film crew, ut $ turned them down for reasons that will e revealed later. Conversel',
thou#h $ declined their repeated invitation to e on the show, $ did set them up with
5rofessor %illiam *. Hurlut, Consultin# 5rofessor for the +epartment
of Neurolo#' and Neurolo#ical Sciences at Stanford Universit' Medical Center and a
memer of the U.S. 5residentDs Council on *ioethics who will e featured with m'self and
m' co/author for E6o/&aticana and over a do"en e6perts in an upcomin#
documentar' e6pose on Transhumanism, tentativel' scheduled for release in ;140I.
)mon# the scores of research papers, +)R5) ud#et line items, suspect locations where
human/animal e6perimentation ethics ma' have passed the curtain of

acceptailit', and media reports that $ forwarded to the producers was a Reuters news
article dated Novemer F, ;11F, titled =Scientists %ant +eate on )nimals with Human
.enes,@ which hinted at Oust how far scientists have come and how far the' intend to #o
with human and animal h'ridi"ation. The news piece started out, =) mouse that can
spea!V ) mon!e' with +ownDs S'ndromeV +o#s with human hands or feetV *ritish
scientists want to !now if such e6periments are acceptale,@ >ii? then continued with
revelations that scientists inside *ritain were comfortale now with up to P1SP1 animal/
human inte#ration. The article implied that not all the research currentl' under desi#n is
!ept at the emr'onic level, and that full' mature monstrosities Hli!e the creature in
the ;141 movie SpliceI are Muietl' under stud'.
04
Scene from the movie =Splice@
$t didnDt ta!e lon# to surmise if the Reuters article was simpl' speculatin# or if indeed there
were scientists alread' e6perimentin# with human/animal creations e'ond the emr'onic
sta#e. $n 3ul', ;144, *ritainDs )cadem' of Medical Sciences H)MSI admitted in a
4NQ pa#e report how such science is advancin# so Muic!l' and ein# conducted in so
man' laoratories around the world without appropriate oversi#ht that an international
re#ulator' commission is ur#entl' needed to oversee the creation of these part/human
part/animal part/s'nthetic chimeras. $nterestin#l', the )MS did not call for a prohiition
of the science, ut rather an international supervisor' od' under which the science
can full' and officiall' proceed. $n the prJcis of their anal'sis the' considered =research
that involves the introduction of human +N) seMuence into animals, or the mi6in# of
human and animal cells or tissues, to create entities we refer to as Xanimals
containin# human materialD@ H)CHMI. >iii? The' then confessed8 =Such approaches are
lon#/estalished, and thousands of different )CHM have een used in iomedical
research, 'et the' have received relativel' little pulic discussion.@ >iv? %hat t'pe ein#s
0;
did *ritainDs leadin# scientists !now of or suspect as now secretl' under stud'V 7rom the
summar' of their paper we find8

E6tensive modification of the rain of an animal, ' implantation of human derived cells,
which mi#ht result in altered co#nitive capacit' approachin# human
XconsciousnessD or XsentienceD or Xhumanli!eD ehavioural capailities.
Situations where functional human #ametes He##s, spermI mi#ht develop from
precursor cell/t'pes in an animalG and where fertilisation etween human and animal
#ametes mi#ht then occur >'es fol!s, we are tal!in# here aout animals that can
conceive from human sperm and #ive irth to human/animals?.
Cellular or #enetic modifications which could result in animals with aspects of
humanli!e appearance Hs!in t'pe, lim or facial structureI or characteristics, such as speech
>in other words, Nephilim?. >v?
Onl' one da' after the )cadem' of Medical Sciences circulated this report, the
popular U[ Mail Online pulished a stor' detailin# how in Oust one instance alone Hof
potentiall' tens of thousandsI8
Scientists have created more than 4P1 human/animal h'rid emr'os in *ritish
laoratories. The h'rids have een produced secretivel' over the past three 'ears '
researchers loo!in# into possile cures for a wide ran#e of diseases. The revelation
comes Oust a da' after a committee of scientists warned of a ni#htmare X5lanet of the )pesD
scenario in which wor! on human/animal creations #oes too far. >vi?
%hile such chimeras are supposedl' destro'ed at the emr'onic level, e6perts
involved in the field who were interviewed ' Reuters admitted =some scientists in some
places want to push oundaries.@ >vii? $n other words, there are most li!el' Splice/li!e
creatures in laorator' settin#s now, locations that these scientists have left unmentioned.
Martin *orow, professor of medical #enetics at Camrid#e Universit' hinted wh' this
is the case8 =There is a whole raft of new scientific techniMues that will ma!e it not
onl' easier ut also more important to e ale to do these cross/species e6periments@
>emphasis added?. >viii? One place where researchers ma' have alread' considered
this research to e so =important@ that it Oustifies pushin# those =oundaries@ the *ritish
scientists alluded to, is the <er!es National 5rimate Research Center at Emor' Universit'
in .eor#ia Hori#inall' located in Oran#e 5ar!, 7loridaI. $t is one of ei#ht national primate
research centers funded ' the National $nstitutes of Health, oth of which have shown
00
interest in cominin# animal and human #enetics to create a new species. The +iscover'
Channel on March
;2, 4FFQ Hin an episode of Unsolved Histor'I discussed a report ' +r. .ordon
.allup, a ps'cholo#ist from the Universit' at )lan', on the <er!es National 5rimate
Research Center in which he confessed =a human/chimp h'rid was successfull'
en#endered and orn >at the center? ut was destro'ed ' the scientists soon after.@ >i6?
This should come as no surprise, as Emor'Ds professors includin# Rai Michael *ro'de
have ar#ued ver' recentl' that 3ewish law would support animali"ed humans

so lon# as the technolo#' produces superior people. $n an Octoer 2, ;144 article on the
Universit'Ds wesite, *ro'de sa's8
.enetic en#ineerin# H.EI, in which the traits of different individuals, or animals, are
comined, alread' has resulted in ama"in# cominations... 3ewish law would support similar
intentional human/human chimerism, in which the emr'onic material of two fetuses is
mi6ed, or human/animal chimerism, in which the cells of a human are mi6ed with cells
of another mammalA. processes and technolo#ies that result in health', or healthier,
children are intrinsicall' #ood and should e emraced, not feared. >6?
5rofessor *ro'de is correct in statin# that #eneticall' alterin# =the traits of different
individualsA has resulted in ama"in# cominations.@ $n fact, the first !nown
#eneticall' altered humans were orn over a decade a#o as a result of an e6perimental
pro#ram at the $nstitute for Reproductive Medicine and Science of St *arnaas in New
3erse'. )n article at that time e6plained part of the research, sa'in#, =The aies were
orn to women who had prolems conceivin#. E6tra #enes from a female donor were
inserted into their e##s efore the' were fertili"ed in an attempt to enale them to
conceive. .enetic fin#erprint tests on two one/'ear/old children confirm that the' have
inherited +N) from three adultsEtwo women and one man.@ >6i? Concernin# these
e6periments, +r. 3oseph Mercola points out somethin# ver' important8
Toda', these children are in their earl' teens, and while the ori#inal stud' claims that this
was =the first case of human #ermline #enetic modification resultin# in normal health'
children,@ later reports put such claims of asolute success in dispute >meanin# not
all the #eneticall' en#ineered !ids were necessaril' health'?. Still, ac! in ;114, the authors
seemed to thin! the' had it all under control, statin#8
=These are the first reported cases of #ermline mt+N) #enetic modification which have
led to the inheritance of two mt+N) populations in the children resultin# from ooplasmic
transplantation. These mt+N) fin#erprints demonstrate that the transferred
0N
mitochondria can e replicated and maintained in the offsprin#, therefore ein# a #enetic
modification without potentiall' alterin# mitochondrial function.@
+r. Mercola continues8 =$tDs relevant to understand that these children have inherited e6tra
#enesEthat of two women and one manEand will e ale to pass this e6tra set of #enetic
traits to their own offsprin#. One of the most shoc!in# considerations here is that this was
doneErepeatedl'Eeven thou#h no one !nows what the ramifications of havin# the
#enetic traits of three parents mi#ht e for the individual, or for their suseMuent offsprin#.
*ased on what $Dve learned aout the #enetic en#ineerin# of plants, $Dm inclined to sa'
the ramifications could potentiall' e vast, dire, and completel' une6pected.@ >6ii?

7or those inclined to elieve the astonishin# report aove was an isolated incident,
*ritish scientists repeated the same e6periments in ;11Q, and in ;14; the Ore#on
Health _ Sciences Universit' HOHSUI conducted similar research aimed at producin#
#eneticall' en#ineered super aies. >6iii? <et re#ardless how man' times this and other
forms of human #enetic tin!erin# have een secretl' conducted outside pulic or
con#ressional review Hhistorical precedence su##ests man', man' timesI, it is
important to understand how #ermline #enetic en#ineerin# as was used in this one
e6ample where thirt' #eneticall' modified children were created reflects the ver'
modus operandi that fallen an#els used with NephilimEto introduce heritale modifications
to the human #enot'pe that #ive irth literall' worldwide to chan#es in the #ene pool
throu#h natural propa#ation. +r. MercolaDs concerns are thus hi#hl' appropriate in that
current .E models on humans carr' the same potential as when =all flesh@ was corrupted
in the Old Testament and had to e destro'ed ' .od.
)s a result, #ermline en#ineerin# is considered ' some conservative ioethicists to e the
most dan#erous of human/enhancement technolo#', as it has the power to trul'
reassemle the ver' nature of humanit' into posthuman, alterin# an emr'oDs ever' cell
and leadin# to transferale modifications e6tendin# to all succeedin# #enerations.
+eate over #ermline en#ineerin# is therefore most critical, ecause as chan#es to
=downline@ #enetic offsprin# are set in motion, the #enot'pe and phenot'pe
Hnature, ph'sical ma!eup, and ehaviorI of man!ind will e altered with no hope of
reversal, there' permanentl' reshapin# humanit'Ds future. $n spite of that, accordin# to
=ethicists@ li!e O6ford Universit' 5rofessor 3ulian Savulescu, not onl' do we have =a moral
oli#ation@ to en#ineer such people, ut emr'os that do not meet certain #enetic
improvements in the future should not e allowed to live. >6iv? +r. Richard Seed, a
ph'sicist in Chica#o went further, warnin# an'od' that has plans of standin# in the
wa' of this dream that the' had etter rethin! their oposition8 =%e are #oin# to
ecome .ods, period. $f 'ou donDt li!e it, #et off.
<ou donDt have to contriute, 'ou donDt have to participate, ut if 'ou are #oin# to
interfere with me ecomin# a .od, 'ouDre #oin# to have troule. ThereDll e warfare.@ >6v?
0P
5rofessors Seed and Savulescu are not alone in their stron# eliefs. +r. .re#or' Stoc!, a
respected proponent of #ermline technolo#' ar#ues that man not onl' has a moral
responsiilit' to =improve@ the human #enot'pe, ut powerful new technolo#' now at our
disposal for transcendin# e6istin# iolo#ical limitations is ma!in# the schemes of
transhumanists inevitale if not imminent. =%e have spent illions to unravel our iolo#',
not out of idle curiosit', ut in the hope of etterin# our lives. %e are not aout to turn awa'
from this,@ he sa's. Elsewhere, Stoc! does admit, however, that this could lead to
=clusters of #eneticall' enhanced superhumans who will dominate if not enslave us.@
>6vi?
Thus from the =Human/)pe )rm'@ plans of $l'a $vanov under Soviet dictator 3oseph Stalin
>6vii? to the earl' part of the twentieth centur' where )dolf Hitler instructed 3osef Men#ele
to perform horrific e6periments on live human ein#s in concentration

camps to test their #enetic theories, to the U.S. where up until the 4F21s more than
si6t' thousand )mericans were sterili"ed after ein# deemed of inferior #enetic stoc!, the
dream of one da' advancin# the ne6t step in human evolution throu#h en#ineerin#
homo/superior has alwa's had its champions. The difference until latel' has een the
7ran!ensteinian visionaries lac!ed iotechnolo#ical s!ills and the pulicDs will to enale
=lar#e/scale #enetic and neurolo#ical en#ineerin# of ourselves.@ >6viii? Toda', that has
chan#ed, the technolo#' has arrived, and the will to irth a new form of man has at least
entered its fled#lin# state if not secretl' advanced alto#ether. Even the recent Ol'mpics
underscored this science, pointin# out the specter of clandestinel' modified humans.
Chinese swimmer <e ShiwenDs superhuman/li!e performance led 3ohn (eonard, the
director of the %orld Swimmin# Coaches )ssociation, to descrie the 4R/'ear/oldDs
world/settin# feat as XsuspiciousD,
Xdisturin#D and XunelievaleD. )uthorities who tested <e Shiwen for dru# ause should
have also chec!ed to see Xif there is somethin# unusual #oin# on in terms of #enetic
manipulation,D he said. >6i6? +r Ted 7riedmann, chair of the #enetics panel of the %orld
)nti/+opin# )#enc', a#reed, sa'in# he Xwould not e surprised at allD if
#enetic enhancements were not now ein# secretl' used on humans. >66?
$n other words, )ldous Hu6le'Ds d'stopian X*rave New %orldD is alread' slippin# in
under most of the pulicDs radar. Human pre/natal dia#nosis,screenin# foetal #enomes, and
desi#ner children were Oust the first crac!s in the dam holdin# ac! incremental
chan#es due the human #enetic reservoir this centur', and e6perts are now admittin# it.
This includes the )cadem' of Medical Sciences mentioned earlier, the same astute
science od' that more recentl' Ooined the *ritish )cadem', the Ro'al )cadem' of
En#ineerin# and the Ro'al Societ' to produce a narrower Ooint stud' in ;14; titled8
=Human enhancement and the future of wor!@ wherein the' documented the alarmin#
trend aimed at au#mentin# humans oth co#nitivel' and ph'sicall'. $n this new stud',
the collaorative team characteri"ed serious concerns over the ur#eonin# =h'rid a#e@ as
0R
havin# alread' started and in which the arrival of a new form of man is upon the
hori"on. %hat new reeds of
hominid do the' foreseeV )n e6ample from pa#e ;R of their wor! hi#hli#hts how people
could e en#ineered to have serpentine Mualities8
5articipants discussed how these !inds of techniMues ma' in the future aid research into
the e6tension of the ran#e of human vision to include additional wavelen#ths. E6amples
e6ist in animals, such as sna!es that can detect infrared wavelen#ths, which mi#ht provide
a source of research for developin# approaches that can e used in

humans. 5otential applications could e envisa#ed in the militar', ut also in other
emplo'ment, from ni#ht watchmen, safet' inspectors, #ame!eepers, etc, includin# the
possiilit' of enhanced vision at ni#ht. >66i?
To assure tomorrowDs sna!e people not onl' see in the dar! ut are appropriatel'
plu##ed into the end/times #rid the' will serve, the loomin# reptilian/humans will also
have *or#/li!e =ph'sical and di#ital enhancements such as c'ernetic implants and
advanced machine/interfacin# technolo#ies@ accordin# to the stud'. >66ii?
%henever these authors spea! on the suOect of transhumanism and the loomin#
=human enhancement@ era, people are surprised to learn the man' wa's in which the
United States #overnment has committed ta6pa'er mone' to institutions such as the Case
(aw School HCleveland, OhioI for developin# the actual #uidelines that will e used for
settin# #overnment and pulic polic' around the ne6t step in human evolution
throu#h #enetic alteration. Ma6well Mehlman, the professor of ioethics at the Case School
of Medicine, received nearl' a million dollars not lon# a#o to lead a team of law
professors, ph'sicians, and ioethicists over a two/'ear proOect =to develop standards
for tests on human suOects in research that involves the use of #enetic technolo#ies to
enhance XnormalD individuals.@>66iii? 7ollowin# the initial stud', Mehlman e#an travelin#
the United States offerin# two universit' lectures8 =+irected Evolution8 5ulic 5olic' and
Human Enhancement@ and =Transhumanism and the 7uture of +emocrac'.@ These tal!s
are desi#ned to inform and persuade colle#e students on the need for societ' to
comprehend how emer#in# fields of science have alread' set in motion what some are
callin# =the H'rid )#e,@ a time when what it means to e human will e forever chan#ed.
$tDs revealin# that man' of these technocrats admit ein# influenced ' the wor!s of
men li!e 7riedrich Niet"sche Hfrom whom the phrase =.od is dead@ derivesI and
.oethe, the author of 7aust. Niet"sche was the ori#inator of the `ermensch or
=Overman@ that )dolf Hitler dreamed of en#ineerin#, and the =entit'@ that man
accordin# to Niet"sche will eventuall' evolve into. (i!e the ancient %atchers efore them,
02
transhumanists dream of #ivin# life to Niet"scheDs aermensch ' remanufacturin# men
with animals, plants, and other s'nthetic life/forms throu#h, amon# other thin#s, the use
of recominant dna technolo#', #ermline en#ineerin#, and trans#enics, in which the
#enetic structure of one species is altered ' the transfer of #enes from another.
%hile in the United States, .eor#e %. *ush once called for le#islation to =prohiitAcreatin#
human/animal h'rids, and u'in#, sellin#, or patentin# human emr'os,@ >66iv? the
prospect of animali"ed humans =is a suOect of serious discussion in certain scientific
circles,@ writes senior counsel for the )lliance +efense 7und, 3oseph $nfranco. =%e are
well e'ond the science fiction of H. .. %ellsD tormented h'rids in the $sland of +octor
MoreauG we are in a time where scientists are seriousl' contemplatin# the creation of
human/animal h'rids.@>66v? The former chairman of

the 5residentDs Council on *ioethics, (eon [ass, ma' have said it est in the
introduction to his oo!, (ife, (iert' and the +efense of +i#nit'8 The Challen#es of
*ioethics8
Human nature itself lies on the operatin# tale, read' for alteration, for eu#enic and ps'chic
=enhancement,@ for wholesale redesi#n. $n leadin# laoratories, academic and industrial,
new creators are confidentl' amassin# their powers and Muietl' honin# their s!ills, while
on the street their evan#elists >transhumanists? are "ealousl' prophes'in# a posthuman
future. 7or an'one who cares aout preservin# our humanit', the time has come for
pa'in# attention.>66vi?
Even so, from this part forward in this series, thin#s start #ettin# reall' interestin#.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT R
*' Thomas R. Horn
0Q
3anuar' ;0, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
)RE ,THE<, $N&O(&E+ %$TH ,THEM,V
*ased on facts detailed in the previous entries, we started this part of the
investi#ation sa'in# the Muestion is not whether humans were, can e, or are ein#
h'ridi"ed, ut whether alienSdemon a#encies are involved in the process.
Toda', what some call =alien aduction,@ in which a reedin# pro#ram alle#edl' e6ists
resultin# in alienShuman h'rids, seems ut a contemporar' retellin# of similar +N)
harvestin# and #enetic manipulation ' thosem'sterious
ein#s called =%atchers@ whose #enetic modification
activities we have discussed.

0F
+a's of Noah8

$n his oo!, ConfrontationsE) ScientistDs Search for )lien Contact, hi#hl' re#arded
U7O researcher, +r. 3acMues 7. &allJe, once ar#ued8 =Contact with >aliens is? onl' a
modern e6tension of the a#e/old tradition of contact with nonhuman consciousness in
the form of an#els, demons, elves, and s'lphs.@>i? (ater, &allJe more closel' identified
the operative power ehind these =aliens@ as eMuivalent to the fallen %atcher an#els of
the

)re these races onl' semi/human, so that in order to maintain contact with us, the' need
crossreedin# with men and women of our planetV $s this the ori#in of the man' tales and
le#ends where #enetics pla's a #reat role8 the s'molism of the &ir#in in occultism and
reli#ion, the fair' tales involvin# human midwives and chan#elin#s, the se6ual overtones of
the fl'in# saucer reports, the ilical stories of intermarria#e etween the (ordDs an#els,
and terrestrial women, whose offsprin# were #iantsV>ii?
)nother hi#hl' respected and often/Muoted U7O researcher, 3ohn [eel, echoed the same
when he stated in Operation TroOan Horse8

+emonolo#' is not Oust another crac!pot/olo#'. $t is the ancient and scholarl' stud' of the
monsters and demons who have seemin#l' coe6isted with man throu#hout histor'.A
The manifestations and occurrences descried in this imposin# literature are similar, if not
entirel' identical, to the U7O phenomenon itself. &ictims of demonomania >possession?
suffer the ver' same medical and emotional s'mptoms as the U7O contactees.A The
+evil and his demons can, accordin# to the literature, manifest themselves in almost an'
form and can ph'sicall' imitate an'thin# from an#els to horrif'in# monsters with
#lowin# e'es. Stran#e oOects and entities materiali"e and demateriali"e in these
stories, Oust as the U7Os and their splendid occupants appear and disappear, wal!
throu#h walls, and perform other supernatural feats.>iii?
)ssociate professor of ps'cholo#' Eli"aeth (. Hillstrom was even more infle6ile on
comparisons etween =alien@ e6periences and historical demonic activit', Muotin# in her
oo! Testin# the Spirits an impressive list of scholars from various disciplines who
concluded that similarities etween ETs and demons is unli!el' coincidental. Hillstrom
cites authorities of the first ran! includin# 5ierre .uerin, a scientist associated with
the 7rench National Council for Scientific Research, who elieves, =The modern
U7Onauts and the demons of past da's are proal' identical,@>iv? and veteran researcher
3ohn [eel, who rec!ons, =The U7O manifestations seem to e, ' and lar#e, merel' minor
variations of the a#e/old demonolo#ical phenomenon.@>v? Harvard ps'chiatrist and 5ulit"er
N1
5ri"e/winner 3ohn Mac! ris!ed his career when he announced that the aduction
phenomenon is ver' much real aleit an assault of a Muasi/spiritual nature. The followin# is
a chillin# e6cerpt from Mac!Ds 5assport to the Cosmos8
Some aductees feel that certain ein#s seem to want to ta!e their souls from them.
.re# told me that the terror of his encounters with certain reptilian ein#s was so
intense that he feared ein# separated from his soul. =$f $ were to e separated from m'
soul,@ he said, =$ would not have an' sense of ein#. $ thin! all m' consciousness would
#o. $ would cease to e6ist. That would e the worst thin# an'one could do to me.@>vi?
Mac! recorded pa#e after pa#e of such transparentl' demonic phenomenon. )nother victim
descried her horror sa'in#, =$ !new instinctivel' that whatever that thin# was ne6t to me
wanted to enter me. $t was Oust waitin# to enter me.@>vii? Of course, this screams demon
possession, ut, a#ainst the evidence, Mac!Ds naturalistic worldview steered him toward
the e6traterrestrial h'pothesis. $n contrast, &allJe connects the dots8 =The Xmedical
e6aminationD to which aductees are said to e suOected, often accompanied ' sadistic
se6ual manipulation, is reminiscent of the medieval tales of encounters with demons.@>viii?
%ith these sorts of characteri"ations comin# from the secular scholars, it should e no
surprise that we also connect U7OSET phenomenon with demonic activit'.

$ncui, Succui, +aemons, and Elementals
$n contrast to the =demons@ of later 3udeo/Christian elief, 7rench U7O researcher, )imJ
Michel H4F4FB4FF;I, preferred the daemons of earlier .ree! antiMuit' as the culprits of
U7O and ET activit'. The difference etween what most people toda' thin! of as a demon
Han incorporeal, malicious spirit that can seduce, ve6, or possess a humanI and the
daemons of ancient .ree! Hellenistic reli#ion and philosoph' is that daemons were
corporeal Hthou#h often invisile and constituted of material unli!e human or animal
#eneticsI and could e #ood HeudoaemonsI or evil HcacodaemonsI. Eudoaemons Halso
called a#athodaemonsI were sometimes associated with enevolent an#els, the
#hosts of dead heroes, or supernatural ein#s who e6isted etween mortals and #ods Has
in the teachin#s of the priestess +iotima to Socrates in 5latoDs S'mposiumI, while
cacodaemons were spirits of evil or malevolence who could afflict humans with mental,
ph'sical, and spiritual ailments. H$n ps'cholo#', cacodemonia or cacodemomania is
the patholo#ical elief in which the patient is convinced heSshe is inhaited, or possessed,
' a wic!ed entit' or evil spirit.I
This delineation, and its potential spiritual and ph'sical ramifications on humans, was
reflected in the wor!s of $talian 7ranciscan theolo#ian, e6orcist and advisor to the Supreme
Sacred Con#re#ation of the Roman and Universal $nMuisition in Rome, (udovico Maria
Sinistrari H4R;;B4214I. Sinistrari, who was re#arded as an e6pert on se6ual sins, wrote
N4
e6tensivel' of individuals accused of amorous relations with demons. His wor!, +e
daemonialitate, et incuis et succuis, ma' e considered toda' amon# the earliest
accounts of what could otherwise e called =alien aduction@ resultin# in h'rid offsprin#
ecause the incui and succui of SinistrariDs opinion were neither evil spirits nor fallen
an#els, ut corporeal ein#s =created midwa' etween humans and an#els.@>i6?
Sinistrari found that mon!s and nuns were of particular interest to the
incuiSsuccui, presumal' due to pent/up se6ual frustrations resultin# from celiac'
oaths that made them easier tar#ets Hwhich ma!es one wonder what the venerated
St. Cecilia reall' meant when she said to &alerian, =There is a secret, &alerian, $ wish
to tell 'ou. $ have as a lover an an#el of .od who Oealousl' #uards m' od'@>6?I. 5h'sical
evidence, includin# semen, left on site followin# intercourse with the phantoms was
often copious, ne#atin# the possiilit' in at least some cases that the event was
ps'cholo#ical. One such incident etween a sleepin# nun and an incuus in the form of
a spectral ='oun# man@ had multiple e'ewitnesses and was recorded ' Sinistrari in his
wor!, +emonialit'. The Catholic 7ather writes8
$n a Monaster' H$ mention neither its name nor that of the town where it lies, so as not to
recall to memor' a past scandalI, there was a Nun, who, aout trifles usual with women
and especiall' with nuns, had Muarrelled with one of her mates who occupied a cell
adOoinin# to hers. Kuic! at oservin# all the doin#s of her enem', this nei#hour noticed,
several da's in succession, that instead of wal!in# with her companions in the #arden
after dinner she retired to her cell, where she loc!ed herself in. )n6ious to

!now what she could e doin# there all that time, the inMuisitive Nun etoo! herself also
to her cell. Soon she heard a sound, as of two voices conversin# in sudued tones, which
she could easil' do, since the two cells were divided ut ' a sli#ht partition. >There she
heard? a peculiar friction, the crac!in# of a ed, #roans and si#hs, her curiosit' was
raised to the hi#hest pitch, and she redouled her attention in order to ascertain who was
in the cell.
*ut havin#, three times runnin#, seen no other nun come out ut her rival, she
suspected that a man had een secretl' introduced and was !ept hidden there. She
went and reported the thin# to the )ess, who, after holdin# counsel with discreet
persons, resolved upon hearin# the sounds and oservin# the indications that had een
denounced her, so as to avoid an' precipitate or inconsiderate act. $n
conseMuence, the )ess and her confidents repaired to the cell of the sp', and heard the
voices and other noises that had een descried. )n inMuir' was set on foot to ma!e
sure whether an' of the Nuns could e shut in with the other oneG and the result ein# in
the ne#ative, the )ess and her attendants went to the door of the closed cell, and
!noc!ed repeatedl', ut to no purpose8 the Nun neither answered, nor opened. The
)ess threatened to have the door ro!en in, and even ordered a convert to force it
with a crow/ar. The Nun then opened her door8 a search was made and no one found.
*ein# as!ed with whom she had een tal!in#, and the wh' and wherefore of the ed
crac!in#, of the si#hs, etc., she denied ever'thin#.
N;
*ut, matters #oin# on Oust the same as efore, the rival Nun, ecome more attentive and
more inMuisitive than ever, contrived to ore a hole throu#h the partition, so as to e ale to
see what was #oin# on inside the cellG and what should she see ut an ele#ant
'outh l'in# with the Nun, and the si#ht of whom she too! care to let the others enOo'
' the same means. The char#e was soon rou#ht efore the ishop8 the #uilt' Nun
endeavoured still to den' allG ut, threatened with torture, she confessed havin# had an
intimac' with an $ncuus.>6i?
These entities were associated with the forest s'lvans and fauns ' )u#ustine in his
classic, +e Civiatate +ei H=Cit' of .od@I8
There is, too, a ver' #eneral rumor, which man' have verified ' their own e6perience, or
which trustworth' persons who have heard the e6perience of others corroorate, that
s'lvans and fauns, who are commonl' called =incui,@ had often made wic!ed assaults
upon women, and satisfied their lust upon themG and that certain devils, called
+uses ' the .auls, are constantl' attemptin# and effectin# this impurit' is so
#enerall' affirmed, that it were

impudent to den' it.>6ii?
The incuus in Henr' 7useliDs famous 42Q4 oil paintin# The Ni#htmare
These devils usuall' appeared at ni#ht as either a seductive demon in a male human form
Hincui, from the (atin incuo, =to lie upon@I havin# phantasma#oric intercourse
with women, or elsewhere as a sensual female presence HsuccuiI who collected semen
from men throu#h dream/state copulation. Some elieve these entities are one and
the same. That is, the same spirit ma' appear as a female in one instance to collect male
seed, then reappear elsewhere as a male to transfer the semen into a wom. The et'molo#'
Hthe stud' of the histor' of words, their ori#in, form, and meanin#I of the word =ni#htmare@
actuall' derives from the Old En#lish maere for a =#olin@ or =incuus@ and variousl'
referred to an evil female spirit that afflicted sleepers with a feelin# of suffocation
and ad dreams andSor elsewhere as a seductress. %hile reli#ious credo involvin#
incui and succui was widespread in m'tholo#ical and le#endar' traditions, Sinistrari
defied estalished church theolo#' on the topic when he wrote8 =SuOect to correction '
our Hol' Mother Church, and as a mere e6pression of private opinion, $ sa' that the
$ncuus, when havin# intercourse with women, e#ets the human foetus from his own
seed@ Hemphasis addedI.>6iii? $ronicall', Sinistrari considered the worst part of this sinful
intercourse to e that the incuusEa morall' superior ein# in his mind Has currentl'
su##ested ' modern Catholic theolo#ians re#ardin# ET and documented in the upcomin#
N0
oo! E6o/ &aticanaIEhad lowered itself ' ta!in# up with a humanT =The incuus, Hor
succuaI however, does, he holds, commit a ver' #reat sin considerin# that we elon#
to an inferior species,@ notes twentieth/centur' writer %illiam *utler <eats from
SinistrariDs own writin#s.>6iv? $n this sense, SinistrariDs interpretation of the incui and
succui is similar to the alien aductors of modern tradition and the daemons of Hellenistic
.ree! reli#ion.
The' also reflect the eliefs of the alchemists who preceded Sinistrari, especiall'
.erman/Swiss occultist 5aracelsus, who elieved in the )ristotelian concept of four
elements Hearth, fire, water, and airI,>6v? as well as the three metaph'sical sustancesE
mercur', sulfur, and saltEthe finest of which were used ' the entities to constitute the
more maOestic =odies@ of those elemental ein#s. Elementals are referred to '
various names. $n the En#lish/spea!in# tradition, these include fairies, elves, devas,
rownies, leprechauns, #nomes, sprites, pi6ies, anshees, #olins, dr'ads, mermaids,
trolls, dra#ons, #riffins, and numerous others. )n earl' modern reference of elementals
appears in the si6teenth/centur' alchemical wor!s of 5aracelsus. His wor!s #rouped
the elementals into four )ristotelian elements8 4I #nome, earth elementalG ;I undines
Halso !nown as n'mphI, water elementalG 0I s'lph, air elemental Halso !nown as
wind elementalIG and NI salamander, fire elemental. The earliest !nown reference of the
term =s'lph@ is from the wor!s of 5aracelsus. He cautioned that it is harmful to attempt
to contact these ein#s, ut offered a rationale in his wor!, %h' These *ein#s )ppear to
Us8

Ever'thin# .od creates manifests itself to Man sooner or later. Sometimes .od
confronts him with the devil and the spirits in order to convince him of their
e6istence. 7rom the top of Heaven, He also sends the an#els, His servants. Thus these
ein#s appear to us, not in order to sta' amon# us or ecome allied to us, ut in order for
us to ecome ale to understand them. These apparitions are scarce, to tell the truth. *ut
wh' should it e otherwiseV $s it not enou#h for one of us to see an )n#el, in order for all of
us to elieve in the other )n#elsV >6vi?
) oo! that populari"ed this concept in the late si6teenth centur' was the wor! (e
Comte de .aalis, ou entretiens sur les sciences secrete H=Count .aalis, or Secret
Tal!s on Science@I, which helped the revival of the third/centur' m'stical philosoph' ased
on the teachin#s of 5lato and earlier 5latonists !nown as Neoplatonism. $t e6plained8
The immense space which lies etween Earth and Heaven has inhaitants far noler than
the irds and insects. These vast seas have far other hosts than those of the
dolphins and whalesG the depths of the earth are not for moles aloneG and the Element of
7ire, noler than the other three, was not created to remain useless and empt'. The air is
full of an innumerale multitude of 5eoples, whose faces are human, seemin#l' rather
NN
hau#ht', 'et in realit' tractale, #reat lovers of the sciences, cunnin#, oli#in# to the
Sa#es, and enemies of fools and the i#norant. >6vii?
=)ccordin# to Count .aalis,@ Roert 5earson 7lahert' e6plains, =these elementals were
Eli!e SinistrariDs incui and the ETs of current loreEcorporeal and capale of e#ettin#
children with humans.@>6viii? This occult concept holds potential for deep deception and
near future malevolence, as, accordin# to the doctrine, it was =the ori#inal intent of the
Supreme .od that humans should Ooin in marria#e with the elemental races rather than
with each other, and the Xfall of manD occurred when )dam and Eve conceived children
with each other rather than with elemental ein#s. Unli!e humans, elemental ein#s had
mortal soulsG hence, the' had ut one hope of immortalit'Eintermarria#e with
humans.@>6i6? 7lahert' compares this to modern ET aduction stories and the messa#es
received ' those who are part of the =alien@ reedin# pro#ram8
Throu#h h'ridi"ation with humans, ETs of current lore do not see! immortalit' ut rather to
avoid e6tinction. Historian of reli#ions Christopher 5artrid#e descries how the concept of
malevolent ETs is rooted in Christian demonolo#' Helief in evil spiritsI. Here, =ET
reli#ion@ is used to refer to the positive valori"ation of ETs, who are portra'ed not as
fallen an#els and schemin# demons, ut as >li!e &atican theolo#ians ar#ue in the
upcomin# oo! E6o/&aticana? our saviors, creators, and Hin the h'ridi"ation m'thI
partners in continued evolution and survival.>66? Hemphasis addedI

Comin# up ne6t8 Close Encounters of the S!inwal!in#, Shapeshiftin#, +emonic
%erewolf [ind
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 2
*' Thomas R. Horn
3anuar' ;0, ;140
NP
News%ith&iews.com
Close Encounters of the S!inwal!in#, Shapeshiftin#, +emonic %erewolf
[ind H5t 4I
The histor' of elemental ein#s includin# incui and succui or =alien/demons@ ' an'
other name is often closel' associated with a variet' of shapeshiftin# monsters and
=cr'ptids@ Hfrom the .ree! =VVVptV@ >!r'pto? meanin# =hide@I, whose e6istence is difficult to
prove ' means of their ailit' to apparentl' move in and out of EarthDs dimension or
manDs visile spectrumEthe human ran#e of si#ht.
E6amples of these would include the <eti in the Himala'as, the famous *i#foot or
SasMuatch of mainl' the 5acific Northwest re#ion of North )merica and Canada, and
the (och Ness Monster of Scotland. Hoa6es aside, literall' tens of thousands of people
throu#hout histor' and around the world Hincludin# reputale individuals such as cler#',
professionals, militar', law enforcement personnel, and even anthropolo#istsI have
seen, found iolo#ical samples of such in hair and footprint evidence, and even
filmed and recorded the creaturesD unidentifiale lan#ua#e vocali"ations, ut
have up until now failed to capture a sin#le ph'sical specimen...that the pulic !nows of.
%itness testimonies often include reports of fantastic si"esEfrom enormous dra#ons
in the sea to #iant ipeds ran#in# in hei#ht from ei#ht to twelve feet, with footprints up
to twent'/four inches. )nd then there are the phenomena freMuentl' connected with the
appearance of cr'ptids that are t'pical of occult activit'Ea retchin# or sulfuric odor,
m'sterious rappin# on walls and windows, shadows and #hostl' li#hts inside or
outside homes, disemodied voices, the levitation or disappearance of furniture and
other household items, etc.
5ossil' the earliest account of a *i#foot si#htin# in the US was pulished over 4;P 'ears
a#o in a historical pamphlet that told of frontiersmen comin# across a =wild man@ in the
Sis!i'ou Mountains of Northern California. =The thin# was of #i#antic si"eEaout seven
feet tallEwith a ulldo# head, short ears, and lon# hairG it was also furnished with a
eard, and was free from hair on such parts of its od' as is common amon# men.@>i?
)nother arel' !nown confrontation with a lar#e, hair' iped was

actuall' reported ' 5resident Theodore Roosevelt, an avid outdoorsman. Noah
Hutchin#s writes of this event8 =The stor' appeared in The %ilderness Hunter
pulished in 4QF0. The account #iven ' Roosevelt related that some !ind of a wild east
had !illed a man and had eaten half his od' in a mountain ran#e etween the Salmon
and %indom rivers. The followin# 'ear, two hunters were campin# in the same area
when the' ecame aware that the' were ein# watched ' a stran#e creature
NR
wal!in# on two le#s. The ne6t da', the hunters separated. One of the hunters arrived at
camp to find the other hunter dead with his nec! ro!en and severe wounds to the
throat area. $n the article, Mr. Roosevelt reported his elief that the hunter was !illed '
Xsomethin# either half/human or half/devil, some #reat #olin/ east.D@>ii? There are even
reports of apeli!e creatures shot and !illed followed ' similar creatures comin# to
retrieve the corpse. One such stor' tells of a *i#foot ein# put down and afterwards,
similar lar#e, hair' ein#s comin# out of the woods to recover the od'. The same
creatures returned a#ain later to attac! the cain of those miners who had !illed the east.
)n account of this event states8
)t ni#ht the apes counterattac!ed, openin# the assault ' !noc!in# a heav' strip of wood
out from etween two lo#s of the minersD cain. )fter that there were assorted poundin#s
on the walls, door, and roof, ut the uildin# was uilt to withstand heav' mountain snows
and the apes failed to rea! in.A There wasAthe sound of roc!s hittin# the roof and
rollin# off, and >the miners? did race the heav' door from the inside.
The' heard creatures thumpin# around on top of the cain as well as atterin# the walls,
and the' fired shots throu#h the walls and roof without drivin# them awa'. The noise went
on from shortl' after dar! till near dawn.A The cain had no windows and of course no
one opened the door, so in fact the men inside did not see what was causin# the
commotion outside.
Nor could Mr. *ec! sa' for sureAthat there were more than two creatures outside.
There were >at least? that man' ecause there had een one on the roof and one
poundin# the wall simultaneousl'. However man' there were, it was enou#h for the
miners, who pac!ed up and aandoned their mine the ne6t da'.>iii?
One of the more disturin# and etter documented cases concernin# lar#e nonhuman
primates occurred on Octoer ;P, 4F20, near .reensur#,5enns'lvania, when a 'oun#
farmer named Stephen 5ulas!i and more than a do"en others oserved a ri#ht red all
of li#ht accompanied ' lar#e humanoids. The twent'/two/'ear/ old farmer with two 'oun#er
o's watched from a hilltop as a ri#ht, =dome shaped@ oOect, ma!in# a =sound li!e a lawn
mower,@ settled over a field. He #uessed it measured aout one hundred fift'
feet in diameter.

Suddenl', 5ulas!i cau#ht si#ht of two lar#e creatures, which at first he thou#ht were ears
Eone aout seven feet tall and the other taller than ei#ht feetEwal!in# ' a fence
line. He was ale to appro6imate their si"e fairl' accuratel', ecause the' were silhouetted
a#ainst the railin# oards. The' were covered with lon#, dar! hair and had arms that hun#
down li!e a #orillaDs. The ein#s were ma!in# a sound li!e aies whimperin#, and a
terrile odor li!e urnin# ruer was waftin# up the hill from them. The entities saw
N2
5ulas!i and the two 'oun# men and started toward them. )s the 'oun#er o's ran
toward the farmhouse, the twent'/two/'ear/old fired a warnin# shot over the creaturesD
heads with his huntin# rifle. %hen the' continued forward, he shot three more times,
this time directl' at the lar#er of the two. The i#, hair' iped acted li!e it was hit, raised
its ri#ht hand, and the dome/shaped oOect went silent, disappearin# instantaneousl', ut
ein# replaced ' a #lowin# area on the #round. )t that, the ein#s turned and headed
into the woods. ) few minutes later, a state trooper arrived to investi#ate the shootin#. He
went with the farmer down onto the field to within two hundred 'ards of the incident area.
The officer later reported that the #round was still #lowin# when the' #ot there. Trees
e#an rea!in# in the forest, and the men thou#ht somethin# lar#e was movin# towards
them from the woods. $t aruptl' stopped, then, thirt' minutes later, it started movin#
a#ain. ) lar#e, rown fi#ure could e seen comin# their direction, so the' Oumped into
the patrol car and sped to safet'.
Earl' the ne6t mornin#, memers of the %estmoreland Count' U7O Stud' .roup
arrived at the farm to e#in an investi#ation. The' noted that 5ulas!iDs do# seemed to e
trac!in# somethin# the' couldnDt ma!e out in the woods. )s the' were tal!in# with the
'oun# farmer and his father, 5ulas!i ine6plical' e#an ehavin# as if he were demon
possessedEconvulsin#, #rowlin#, and flailin# aout. His own do# ran at him, and he
attac!ed it. )t the same moment, two of the investi#ators started feelin# li#htheaded and
were havin# difficult' reathin#. 5ulas!i suddenl' !noc!ed his father down as he fainted
onto the #round, face first into manure. %hen he snapped out of it a few moments later, he
started #rowlin# li!e an animal and warned, =.et awa' from me. $tDs here. .et ac!.@ )
sulfuric aroma filled the air as 5ulas!i reported seein# a fi#ure cloa!ed in all lac! #ars
sa'in# somethin# to him aout a man =who is comin# to save the world.@ 5ulas!i was
suseMuentl' evaluated ph'sicall' and ps'cholo#icall' and found to e of sound mind and
truthful. Numerous witnesses at various phases of the incident also testified that the event
actuall' happened as reported.
The 5ulas!i farm is one e6ample of thousands of comparale events wherein cr'ptids have
appeared accompanied ' spiritualistic and demonolo#ical characteristics. $n another
account, oth a #iant and small creature teamed up to torture a 'oun# woman. This
was not onl' captured ' multiple e'ewitnesses, ut also was pla'ed out repeatedl' in a
prison cell efore dumfounded police officers, prison #uards, medical staff, and do"ens of
reporters in the heart of Manila, capital cit' of the 5hilippines. $n this case, ph'sical
evidence was even captured in the form of lon#, lac! hair from a east that was never
identified. )t the center of the episode was one of )mericaDs

most well/!nown ordained ministers, +r. (ester Sumrall, who formed the (eSE)
roadcast networ!.
NQ
$n the earl' 4FP1s, +r. Sumrall was in Manila uildin# a church, which toda' is !nown
as the Cathedral of 5raise. On Ma' 4;, 4FP0, the +ail' Mirror in Manila pulished a
startlin# stor' under the headline, =5olice Medic E6plodes *itin# +emons <arn,@ in which
a most unusual stor' unfolded of law enforcers and medical e6aminers ein#
m'stified ' an inmate whose od' continuousl' ore deep teeth mar!s. The fri#htened
#irl claimed that two ein#s were appearin# and itin# her. One of the devils was i# and
dar! with lon# hair all over his head, chest, and arms. He had fan#s li!e a do# and
lar#e, sharp e'es, and his feet were at least three times lar#er than normal. He was
dressed in a lac! roe with what appeared to e a hood on the ac!. His voice was
deep, with a tunnel/li!e echo. The second ein# was sMuatt', ma'e thirt' inches tall,
and it was also dar!, hair', and deformed. )s the witnesses watched, the #irlDs facial
e6pressions would suddenl' chan#e, and she would e#in #lancin# aout, as if she
was seein# somethin# the others could not. H%hat she was seein# was dued =The
Thin#@ ' the press.I Then the #irl would start screamin# and stru##lin# a#ainst an invisile
force, efore collapsin#, half/conscious, into the arms of the prison staff memer holdin#
her. )t that moment, there would e teeth mar!s wet with saliva mar!in# her od'.
+r. Mariano *. (ara, then chief medical e6aminer of the Manila 5olice +epartment
and a universit' professor of patholo#' and le#al medicine, was convinced of the
#enuineness of the possession and e6orcism and provided his own description, recounted
in this e6cerpt from the official medical report filed at the prison8
$ find it difficult and near impossile to accept an'thin# of a supernatural character.A
EMuipped with a ma#nif'in# lens and an unelievin# mind aout this itin#
phenomena, $ scrutini"ed carefull' the e6posed parts of her >Clarita &illanuevaDs? od',
the arms, hands, and nec!, to find out whether the' had the itin# impressions. $ saw the
reddish human/li!e ite mar!s on the arms.A )t that ver' instant, this #irl in a semi/trance
loudl' screamed repeatedl'.A $ saw, with m' unelievin# e'es, the clear mar!s or
impressions of human/li!e teeth from oth the upper and lower Oaws. $t was a little moist in
the area itten on the dorsal aspect of the left hand, and the teeth impressions were
mostl' from the form of the front or incisor teeth. Seein# these with m' unelievin#
e'es, 'et $ could not understand nor e6plain how the' were produced as her hand had all
the time een held awa' from the reach of her mouth.A
$n full possession of her normal mind, $ as!ed her HClarita &illanuevaI who was
causin# her to suffer from the ites. She answered that there are two who are
alternatel' itin# herG one i#, lac!, hair' human/li!e fellow, ver' tall, with two sharp
e'es, two sharp canine teeth, lon# eard li!e a Hindu, hair' e6tremities and chest,
wearin# a lac! #arment, with a little whitish piece on the ac! resemlin# a hood. His
feet are aout three times the si"e of normal feet. The other fellow is a ver' small one
aout two or three feet tall alle#edl' also lac!, hair' and u#l'.>iv?

)fter first hearin# the report on the radio then readin# the newspaper stor' the ne6t da',
+r. Sumrall, who elieved the #irl was demon possessed, #rew convicted that the (ord
wanted him to procure permission from prison authorities to pra' for the prostituteDs
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deliverance. Throu#h his church architect, who was a friend of the ma'or of Manila, he
received the o!a' to visit with the chief medical advisor of the police department, +r.
Mariano (ara. %hile tal!in# with the doctor inside the prison mor#ue, (ara
ac!nowled#ed to Sumrall that somethin# e'ond his professional !nowled#e was
happenin# and that he was actuall' afraid of =The Thin#@ after witnessin# the ite
mar!s appear efore his own e'es. %ith (araDs approval, Sumrall was allowed to pra' for
the #irl while oservers watched. She was ver' resistant, cursin# him in En#lish Hwhich
she could not spea!I, screamin#, and fi#htin# ever' moment to #et awa'. The first da'
of pra'er failed to provide healin#, and Sumrall elieved he needed to fast and pra'
for another da'. That evenin#, the newspaper pulished his picture on the front pa#e,
three columns wide, with the headline, =The Thin# +efies 5astor.@>v? The ne6t da' would e
different. 7ollowin# a spiritual attle reminiscent of an Old Testament prophet challen#in#
the followers of *aal, and with repentance of her sins and acceptance of 3esus as Savior,
the #irl was delivered, 'et, that was not the end of the stor'. Sumrall e6plains what
happened ne6t8
)s $ was leavin# $ told Clarita that $ was sure these devils would return. =)fter $ am
#one,@ $ said, =the' will come. Then 'ou must demand them to leave without m' ein#
present. <ou must sa', X.o, in 3esusD name,D and the' will oe'.@ %ith this $ left the
compound.
%e as!ed the newsmen not to write aout the mornin#Ds events, ut the' said the'
were oli#ed to. The stor' had run for two wee!s and it must e concluded. Since the
Methodist Church is the oldest 5rotestant denomination in the islands, the'
presumed $ was a Methodist, and it was in the papers that wa'. The' did not !now how to
write of such an e6perienceG therefore, some of what the' said was not correct. *ut $ feel
mostl' responsile for this, as $ #ave them no interview and left the cit' to #et awa' from
pulicit'.
The devils did return to attac! Clarita, and a stran#e thin# happened when she called on
them to leave. She was en#a#ed in a mortal stru##le and went into a coma, her fists
clenched. The doctor pried her hands open and to his astonishment, there la' some lon#,
lac!, coarse hair. +r. (ara placed this hair in an envelope and put it in a #uarded
place. Under the microscope he found that the hair was not from an' part of the human
od'. The doctor has no answer to this m'ster'Ehow an invisile ein#, presumal' a
devil, could have lost hair ' a visile ein# pullin# it out.>vi? Hemphasis addedI
The notion of ph'sical material li!e hair havin# een pulled from a wraithli!e demon opens
the fascinatin# proposal that ultraterrestrial ein#s Hcall them an#els, demons, or aliensI
can mi#rate ac! and forth etween different realities and ta!e forms that

P1
are oth material and immaterial. This sounds cra"' to the natural mind, 'et the
concept is ilical. The writer of Herews reminds us to =e not for#etful to entertain
stran#ers8 for there' some have entertained an#els unawares@ HHe. 408;I, and when the
disciples of 3esus saw His return from the #rave, the' =were terrified and affri#hted,
and supposed that the' had seen a spirit.@ 3esus told them to touch Him and see that
=a spirit hath not flesh and ones, as 'e see me have@ H(u!e ;N802B0FI. Similarl',
)raham was visited ' three an#els in the plains of Mamre H.enesis 4Q84B
QI. The' appeared as men and wal!ed, tal!ed, sat, and ate. *ut the truth was the'
were not human at all, ut spirit/ein#s from heaven, illustratin# one of the most
d'namic facts of Scripture8 that otherdimensional life forms have power to assume
tan#ile matter whenever it fits their cause. +oes this e6plain how cr'ptids can e there
one moment and #one the ne6t, leavin# man perple6ed ' their appearance and
disappearanceV +oes this not remind of the Rephaim, which e6ist in the spirit world ut
could also have the ailit' to manifest on Earth as #iant, hair' ipeds !nown in
the *ile as Nephilim and perhaps toda' as *i#footV
$ncidentall', hair from the Manila =Thin#@ is not the onl' e6ample found.

$n Octoer ;14;, a headline in the U[Ds Mail Online read8 =SasMuatch in SieriaV Hair
7ound in Russian Cave X*elon#ed to Un!nown Mammal Closel' Related to Man.D@ The
stor' claimed that +N) tests on suspected =<eti hair@ found in a Sierian cave

durin# an international e6pedition in ;144 was of an un!nown mammal closel' related
to man, ut not a human. Nor did the hair elon# to an' !nown animal from the re#ion
such as a ear, wolf, or #oat, the article said. )nal'sis was conducted in Russia and the
US, which =a#reed the hair came from a human/li!e creature which is not a Homo sapien
'et is more closel' related to man than a mon!e'.@>vii?
Then, on Novemer ;N, ;14;, another press release was issued involvin# a team of
e6perts in #enetics, forensics, ima#in#, and patholo#' led ' +r. Mela S. [etchum of
Naco#doches, Te6as, and their five/'ear lon# +N) stud' Hsumitted for peer reviewI,
which claimed =the e6istence of a novel hominin h'rid species, commonl' called
X*i#footD or XSasMuatch,D livin# in North )merica.@ The +N) seMuencin# su##ested that the
le#endar' SasMuatch is actuall' =a h'rid cross of modern Homo sapiens with an
P4
un!nown primate species.@ +r. [etchum reported that her team seMuenced three
complete SasMuatch nuclear #enomes and determined the species is a human h'rid. =Our
stud'Autili"ed ne6t #eneration seMuencin# to otain 0 whole nuclear #enomes from
purported SasMuatch samples,@ [etchum said. =The #enome seMuencin# shows that
SasMuatch mt+N) is identical to modern Homo sapiens, ut SasMuatch nu+N) is a novel,
un!nown hominin related to Homo sapiens and other primate species. Our data indicate
that the North )merican SasMuatch is a h'rid species, the result of
males of an un!nown hominin species crossin# with female Homo sapiens.@>viii?
[etchum, a veterinarian whose professional e6perience includes twent'/seven 'ears of
research in #enetics, includin# forensics, continued8
The male pro#enitor that contriuted the un!nown seMuence to this h'rid is uniMue as its
+N) is more distantl' removed from humans than other recentl' discovered hominins li!e
the +enisovan individual. SasMuatch nuclear +N) is incredil' novel and not at all what
we had e6pected. %hile it has human nuclear +N) within its #enome, there are also
distinctl' non/human, non/archaic hominin, and non/ape seMuences. %e descrie it as a
mosaic of human and novel non/human seMuence. 7urther stud' is needed and is
on#oin# to etter characteri"e and understand SasMuatch nuclear +N).>i6?
That [etchum and her teamDs findin#s were reported efore ein# peer reviewed is
suspect and ma' turn out to e erroneous. On the other hand, if validated, it could e
another afflin# evidence fra#ment connected to that m'sterious creature we call
=*i#foot@ and =SasMuatch.@
%e ramp up this investi#ation into ,S!inwal!in#, Shapeshiftin#, +emonic
%erewolves, in the ne6t entr'...
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT Q
P;
*' Thomas R. Horn
7eruar' P, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
Continued from 5art 2...
)nother cr'ptid sometimes associated with *i#foot, which was first reported in the
4FQ1s on a Muiet countr' road outside of El!horn, %isconsin, is called =The *east of
*ra' Road.@
) rash of si#htin#s etween the DQ1s and DF1s prompted a local newspaper H%alworth
Count' %ee!I to assi#n one of its reporters named (inda .odfre' to cover the stor'.
.odfre' started out s!eptical, ut ecause of the sincerit' of the e'ewitnesses, ecame
convinced of the creatureDs e6istence. $n fact, she was so impressed with the
consistenc' of the reports from disparate oservers Hwhom the Histor' ChannelDs T&
series MonsterKuest suOected to lie detector tests in
which the pol'#raph administrator could find no
indication of falsehoodsI that she wrote not onl' a series of articles for the
newspaper ut later a oo!, titled Real %olfmen8 True Encounters in Modern
)merica. $n her oo!, she claims that =the U.S. has een invaded ' upri#ht, canine
creatures that loo! li!e traditional werewolves and act as if the' own our woods,
fields, and hi#hwa's. Si#htin#s from coast to coast datin# ac! to the 4F01s compel us
to as! e6actl' what these easts are, and what the' want.@>4? Her oo! presents a
catalo#ue of investi#ative reports and
first/person accounts of modern si#htin#s of
anomalous, upri#ht canids. 7rom .odfre'Ds witnesses, we learn of fleetin#, as well as
face/to/face, encounters with literal werewolvesEcanine ein#s that wal! upri#ht,
eat food with their front paws, interact fearlessl' with humans, and suddenl' and
m'steriousl' disappear. %hile .odfre' tries to separate her research
from Holl'wood depictions of shapeshiftin# humans pla'ed ' actors li!e Michael
(andon or (on Chane' 3r., she is convinced there reall' are e6tremel' lar#e, fur/
covered, anthropomorphic, wolf/li!e creatures that chase victims on their hind le#s.

P0
RETURN O7 H<*R$+ HUM)NS//werewolf
Ei#hteenth/centur' en#ravin# of a werewolf
%erewolves, li!e other cr'ptids, are deepl' connected in histor' not onl' with occultic lore
ut with the alien/similar fauns and incui that sou#ht and otained coitus from women.
$n the ancient *ohemian (e6icon of &acerad H)+ 4;1;I, the werewolf is vil!odla!, on
whom the deauched woman sat and was impre#nated with eastl' seed.>;? St. 5atric!
was said to have attled with werewolf soldiers and even to have transformed the %elsh
!in# &ereticus into a wolf. HThe stran#e elief that saints could turn people into such
creatures was also held ' St. Thomas )Muinas, who wrote that an#els could
metamorphose the human form, sa'in#, =)ll an#els, #ood and ad have the power of
transmutatin# our odies.@>0?I (on# efore the Catholic saints elieved in such thin#s, the
#od )pollo was worshiped in ('cia as ('!eios or ('!os, the =wolf@ #od. The trance/induced
utterances of his priestesses !nown as 5'thoness or 5'thia prophesied in an unfamiliar
voice thou#ht to e that of )pollo himself. +urin# the 5'thian trance, the mediumDs
personalit' often chan#ed, ecomin# melancholic, defiant, or even animal/li!e, e6hiitin# a
ps'chosis that ma' have een the ori#inal source of the werewolf m'th, or l'canthrop',
as the 5'thia reacted to an encounter with )polloS('!eiosEthe wolf #od. 5ausanias, the
second/centur' .ree! traveler and #eo#rapher, a#reed with the concept of )pollo as the
ori#inal wolf man who, he said, derived his name from the pre/+'nastic )pu/)t, an
E#'ptian #od of war. *ut &ir#il, one of RomeDs #reatest poets, held that =the first werewolf
was Moeris, wife of the fate/#oddess Moera, who tau#ht him how to rin# the dead
ac! to life.@>N? Romans of that era referred to the werewolf as versipellis, or the =turn/s!in,@
reminiscent of later indi#enous peoples of )merica who still elieve in =s!inwal!ers,@ or
humans with the supernatural ailit' to turn into a wolf or other animal.
)ccordin# to local le#end, a ranch located on appro6imatel' four hundred ei#ht' acres
southeast of *allard, Utah, in the United States is Hor at least once wasI alle#edl'
the site of sustantial s!inwal!er activit'. The farm is actuall' called =S!inwal!er
Ranch@ ' local $ndians who elieve it lies in =the path of the s!inwal!er,@ ta!in#
its name from the Native )merican le#end. $t was made famous durin# the DF1s and
earl' ;111s when claims aout the ranch first appeared in the Utah +eseret News and
later in the (as &e#as Mercur' durin# a series of rivetin# articles ' Oournalist .eor#e
[napp. SuseMuentl', a oo! titled Hunt for the S!inwal!er8 Science Confronts the
Une6plained at a Remote Ranch in Utah descried how the ranch was acMuired ' the
now defunct National $nstitute for +iscover' Science HN$+SI, which had purchased the
propert' to stud' =anecdotal si#htin#s of U7Os, i#foot/li!e creatures, crop circles,
#lowin# ors and polter#eist activit' reported ' its former owners.@>P? ) two/part article
' [napp for the (as &e#as Mercur' was pulished Novemer ;4 and ;F, ;11;, titled,
=$s a Utah Ranch the Stran#est 5lace on EarthV@ $t told of fri#htenin# events that had left
the owners of the ranch efuddled and ro!eEfrom i"arre, ulletproof wolf/thin#s to
mutilated pri"e
PN

cattle and other instances in which animals and propert' simpl' disappeared or were
oliterated overni#ht. )s elsewhere, these events were accompanied ' stron# odors,
#hostl' rappin#, stran#e li#hts, violent ni#htmares, and other paranormal
phenomena. *esides the owners of the S!inwal!er Ranch, other residents throu#hout the
count' made similar reports over the 'ears. 3unior Hic!s, a retired local school teacher,
catalo#ued more than four hundred anomalies in near' communities efore the 'ear
;111. He and others said that, for as lon# as an'one could rememer, this part of Utah
had een the site of une6plained activit'Efrom U7O si#htin#s to SasMuatch
manifestations. $t was as if a #atewa' to the world of the e'ond e6isted within this
asin. Some of the S!inwal!er Ranch descriptions seemed to indicate as much. 7or
e6ample, in one event repeated ' [napp, an investi#ator named Chad +eet!en and the
ranch owner saw a m'sterious li#ht8
*oth men watched intentl' as the li#ht #rew ri#hter. $t was as if someone had opened
a window or doorwa'. >The ranch owner? #raed his ni#ht vision inoculars to #et a etter
loo! ut could hardl' elieve what he was seein#. The dull li#ht e#an to resemle a
ri#ht portal, and at one end of the portal, a lar#e, lac! humanoid fi#ure seemed to e
stru##lin# to crawl throu#h the tunnel of li#ht. )fter a few minutes, the humanoid fi#ure
wri##led out of the li#ht and too! off into the dar!ness. )s it did, the window of li#ht
snapped shut, as if someone had flic!ed the =off@ switch.>R?
$n 4FFR, S!inwal!er Ranch was purchased ' real/estate developer and aerospace
entrepreneur Roert T. *i#elow, a wealth' (as &e#as usinessman who founded
N$+S in 4FFP to research and serve as a central clearin#house for scientific
investi#ations into various frin#e science, paranormal topics, and ufolo#'. *i#elow
planned an intense ut ver' private scientific stud' of events at the farm. He was
Ooined ' hi#h/ran!in# militar' officials, includin# retired US )rm' Colonel 3ohn *.
)le6ander, who had wor!ed to develop =3edi@ remote viewin# and ps'chic
e6periments for the militar' as descried in 3on RonsonDs oo!, The Men %ho Stare )t
.oats, former police detectives, and scientists includin# Eric %. +avis, who has wor!ed
for N)S). $n the 'ears efore, *i#elow had donated 0.2 million dollars to the Universit' of
Nevada at (as &e#as =for the creation and continuation of a pro#ram that would attract to
the universit' renowned e6perts on aspects of human consciousness.@>2? *i#elowDs Chair for
the universit' pro#ram was paraps'cholo#ist Charles Tart, a man =famous for e6tended
research on altered states of consciousness, near/death e6periences and e6trasensor'
perception.@>Q? *ut what *i#elowDs team found at the S!inwal!er Ranch was more than
the' could have hoped for, at least for a while, includin# =an invisile force movin#
throu#h the ranch and throu#h the animals.@>F? On this, the (as &e#as Mercur' reported
in Novemer of ;11;8 =One witness reported a path of displaced water in the canal, as if a
lar#e unseen animal was ris!l' movin# throu#h the water. There were distinct splashin#
noises, and there was a foul pun#ent odor that filled the air ut nothin# could e seen. )
nei#horin# rancher reported the same phenomena two months later. The >ranch owners?
sa'
PP

there were several instances where somethin# invisile moved throu#h their cattle,
splittin# the herd. Their nei#hor reported the same thin#.@>41?
<et of all the anomalous incidents at the ranch, there was one that too! the pri"e. On the
evenin# of March 4;, 4FF2, ar!in# do#s alerted the N$+S team that somethin# stran#e
was in a tree near the ranch house. The ranch owner #raed a huntin# rifle and Oumped
in his pic!up, racin# toward the tree. Two of the N$+S staffers followed in a second truc!.
[napp tells what happened ne6t8
Up in the tree ranches, the' could ma!e out a hu#e set of 'ellowish, reptilian e'es.
The head of this animal had to e three feet wide, the' #uessed. )t the ottom of the tree
was somethin# else. .orman descried it as hu#e and hair', with massivel' muscled
front le#s and a do#li!e head.
.orman, who is a crac! shot, fired at oth fi#ures from a distance of N1 'ards. The
creature on the #round seemed to vanish. The thin# in the tree apparentl' fell to the #round
ecause .orman heard it as it landed heavil' in the patches of snow elow. )ll three men
ran throu#h the pasture and scru rush, chasin# what the' thou#ht was a wounded
animal, ut the' never found the animal and saw no lood either. ) professional
trac!er was rou#ht in the ne6t da' to scour the area. Nothin#.
*ut there was a ph'sical clue left ehind. )t the ottom of the tree, the' found and
photo#raphed a weird footprint, or rather, claw print. The print left in the snow was from
somethin# lar#e. $t had three di#its with what the' #uessed were sharp claws on the end.
(ater anal'sis and comparison of the print led them to find a chillin# similarit'Ethe
print from the ranch closel' resemled that of a velociraptor, an e6tinct dinosaur made
famous in the 3urassic 5ar! films.>44?
Such stories of anomalous cr'ptids movin# in and out of manDs realit', the openin# of
portals or spirit #atewa's li!e those descried at S!inwal!er Ranch, and the idea that
throu#h these openin#s could come the sudden appearance of un!nown intelli#ence was
elieved as fact in ilical times, a phenomenon we will continue to investi#ate in the ne6t
entr'.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
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5)RT F
*' Thomas R. Horn
7eruar' 4R, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/ theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
Stories of anomalous cr'ptids movin# in and out of manDs realit' such as descried in the
previous two entries were once considered fact in ancient times. Earl' people around the
world viewed =them@ as coe6istin# with man and who could e seen whenever the
netherworld ein#s willed it. This included the openin# of portals or spirit #atewa's and
the idea that throu#h these openin#s could come the sudden appearance of
werewolves, #hosts, #olins, trolls, and those m'thical ein#s of le#end that have an
even more interestin# connection to modern U7O lore !nown as fairies.
7air' variet' is considerale and listin# each t'pe here is e'ond the scope of our
interest. However, some of them are virtuall' identical with ancient descriptions of
demons includin# a particular one called the o#ie or =o#e'man@ who haunts the dar!
and enOo's harmin# and fri#htenin# humans. These fairies appear ver' similar to
traditional descriptions of =*i#foot@ with the same furr' odies to#ether with fier' red e'es.
Other 7air' classifications are practicall' indistin#uishale from the fl'in# witches of
Classical )ntiMuit' and the )ncient Near East. Olaus Ma#nus, who was sent ' 5ope
5aul $$$ in 4PNR as an authorit' to the council of Trent and who later ecame canon of
St. (amert in (iJ#e, *el#ium, is est rememered as the author of the classic 4PPP
=Historia de .entius Septentrionalius@ HHistor' of the Northern 5eoplesI, which
chronicled the fol!lore and histor' of Europe. $n it, he provided en#ravin#s of fair'/
demons carr'in# women awa' for intercourse. *efore him, in
4NQF the le#al scholar Ulrich Molitor did the same, providin# etched plates in his (atin
tract on sorcerous women H=+e laniis et phitonicis mulierius@I depictin# demons
aductin# women for coitus. *esides such similarities to current U7O and alien/aduction
activit', these fairies often left =the devils mar!@Ea permanent spot or scar elieved to
have een made ' the demon Hor the devil himselfI ra!in# his claw across the flesh
or ' the red hot !iss of the devil lic!in# the individual. This
P2
happened at ni#ht, at the conclusion of the nocturnal aduction episode.
This mar! was also !nown as =fair' ruisin#@ and as the =witcheDs teat@ and appeared as a
raised ump or scoop mar! in the flesh often on the most secret parts of the od'.
$n modern times, alien aductees often ear the same mar!s as those descried

in olden da's as the +evilDs Mar!Ecuts or scoops on the ac!s of the le#s, arms, nec!,
purplish circular spots around the adomen and #enitals, and in patterns consistent with
those from medieval times ascried to witches, incui and fairies. Thus the actual
m'tholo#' of these creatures and the =little people@ that traveled with them etween our
realit' and fair'land or =Elfland@ portra's an ima#e Muite different than that of cutes'
=Tin!erell@ flutterin# overhead at +isne'landT 7air' le#end includes the identical alien/
soundin# roles of aduction, inducin# some t'pe of paral'sis in which the victim can see
what is happenin# ut is powerless to intervene Hthe O6ford +ictionar' of Celtic M'tholo#'
sa's the colloMuial En#lish usa#e of Xstro!eD for cereral hemorrha#e derives from its
relationship with =paral'sis@ and ori#inated with the =fair'/stro!e@ or =elf/stro!e@ of le#end
>i?I, levitatin# of people and fl'in# them awa' to =fair'land@ Hor what some toda' call
=Ma#onia@I, and travelin# in U7O/ li!e discs or circular #loes of li#ht.
$n the 4FR1s, le#endar' 7rench U7O researcher +r. 3acMues &allJe e#an to e6plore these
commonalities etween U7Os, alien aduction, and faled fi#ures li!e fairies in his oo!
5assport to Ma#onia8 7rom 7ol!lore to 7l'in# Saucers Hthis wor! ' &allJe is no lon#er
availale ut will e provided free in di#ital format
with the release of the oo! E6o/&aticana that this series isased onI. Out of this
research he developed a =multidimensional visitation h'pothesis@ e'ond space/time that
would allow for undetected coe6istence etween humans and non/human ein#s, which
have een seen and detected
for thousands of 'ears and that seem to present themselves
in a wa' that su##ests8 4I either the' are mutatin# their persona to match our current
elief s'stems Hi.e. the' once were called the little people of Elfin lore who stole and
replaced children with =chan#elin#s@ while toda' the' are the little #ra's of ET aduction
who steal and replace emr'os with h'rid aiesIG or ;I the' are doin# what the'
have alwa's done and we are the ones interpretin# their presence
in wa's that accommodate our current understandin# of science and reli#ion. 7or &allJe,
the comparisons etween the ancient fair' stories and modern alien/ aduction
phenomenon were too similar to e coincidence. He cites the wor! of
%alter <eelin# Evans/%ent" H4Q2QE4FRPI, an anthropolo#ist and e6pert on =fair'/
faith@ in Celtic countries Hwhose 4F44 oo!Sdissertation on the suOect is also free with the
data pac!et that comes with E6o/&aticanaI, as powerful evidence for consistenc'
PQ
of the phenomenon throu#hout histor'.
Evans/%ent", also a theosophist, is famous for compilin# and editin# the sacred te6ts on
Tietan *uddhism which were pulished ' O6ford Universit' 5ress in the earl' twentieth
centur'. ConseMuentl', he is widel' credited with pioneerin# western *uddhism associated
with )stroiolo#ist Chris $mpe' Hwhom we discuss laterI. However, efore his
travels to Sri (an!a and $ndia, Evans/%ent" wrote his doctoral

thesis at O6ford Universit' on the Celtic elief in fairies. He approached the suOect as a
scholar e6aminin# the histor' and fol!/lore of the *ritish $sles throu#h the lens of
anthropolo#' and ps'cholo#'. $t is perhaps one of the most thorou#h and scholarl'
endeavors ever conducted on the suOect.
)s the nineteenth centur' rolled over into the twentieth the industrial revolution was drivin#
the populations toward the cities and the population was oomin#. Evans/ %ent" did
e6tensive ethno#raphic fieldwor! interviewin# fol!s in $reland, %ales, Scotland, *rittan'
and the $sle of Man. Encounters with fairies were plentiful enou#h to e commonplace in
the earl' nineteenth centur', ut as modernit' approached the' waned. Toda' fairies
are lar#el' for#otten, rele#ated to old wives tales and le#end, aleit the phenomenon still
e6ists.
3acMues &allee is convinced that the fairies were not onl' real ut that the' currentl'
endure under the modern #uise of e6traterrestrials. %hat Evans/%ent" was ale to
capture was the time of transition when the entities pla#ued ' the encroachment of
modernit' transformed themselves. Throu#h his field wor! Evans/%ent" noted that the
nearl' all of the older fol!s had witnessed fairies or elieved in them. $t
transcended le#end as a commonl' accepted fact. However, the ne6t #eneration,
influenced ' the industrial "eit#eist, lac!ed fair' elief. 3ohn *runo Hare, founder of the
internet Sacred/Te6t.com archive, surmised, =%e come awa' from this stud' with a multi/
dimensional view of the fairies, who, much li!e the #re' aliens of U7O elief, inhait a
narrative which seems too consistent to e the product of insanit', 'et too i"arre for
conventional e6planation.@>ii? This su##ests a line of con#ruence etween the accounts of
fairies and that of toda',s so/called e6traterrestrials. &allJe writes8
%e have now e6amined several stories of aductions and attempts at !idnappin#s ' the
occupants of fl'in# saucers. These episodes are an inte#ral part of the total U7O prolem
and cannot e solved separatel'. Historical evidence, #athered ' %ent", moreover, once
more points in the same direction.
PF
This sort of elief in fairies ein# ale to ta!e people was ver' common and e6ists 'et in a
#ood man' parts of %est $reland. . . . The .ood 5eople are often seen there Hpointin#
to [noch Ma#hI in #reat crowds pla'in# hurle' and all. )nd one often sees amon# them
the 'oun# men and women and children who have een ta!en Hemphasis in ori#inalI.
Not onl' are people ta!en, utEas in fl'in# saucer storiesEthe' are sometimes
carried to farawa' spots ' aerial means. Such a stor' is told ' the 5rophet E"e!iel, of
course, and ' other reli#ious writers. *ut an ordinar' $rishman, 3ohn Campell, also told
%ent"8
) man whom $ have seen, Roderic! Mac Neil, was lifted ' the hosts and left three
miles from where he was ta!en up. The hosts went at aout midni#ht.

Rev. [ir! #ives a few stories of similar e6traordinar' !idnappin#s, ut the most
fantastic le#end of all is one attached to [ir! himself8 the #ood reverend is commonl'
elieved to have himself een ta!en ' the fairies.
Mrs. 3. Mac.re#or who !eeps the !e' to the old church'ard where there is a tom to [ir!,
thou#h man' sa' there is nothin# in it ut a coffin filled with stones, told me [ir! was
ta!en into the 7air' [noll, which she pointed to Oust across a little valle' in front of us, and
is there 'et, for the hill is full of caverns and in them the =#ood people@ have their
homes. )nd she added that [ir! appeared to a relative of his after he was ta!en.
%ent", who reports this interestin# stor', made further inMuiries re#ardin# the
circumstances of [ir!Ds death. He went to see the successor to [ir! in )crfo'le, Rev.
Ta'lor, who clarified the stor'8
)t the time of his disappearance people said he was ta!en ecause the fairies were
displeased with him for disclosin# their secrets in so pulic a manner as he did. >iii?
Some U7O researchers #o so far as to call the Reverend Roert [ir! =the first #enuine
mart'r of the e6o/politics movement.@>iv? His seminal The Secret Commonwealth of Elves,
7auns and 7airies provides a wealth of parallels to modern U7Olo#ical research Hwhich is
also included in the free data pac!et that will come with E6o/&aticanaI. %as [ir! spirited
awa' to the ever/eni#matic place called Ma#oniaV
R1
&allJe documented how =the ph'sical nature of Ma#onia, as it appears in such tales, is Muite
eni#matic. Sometimes, it is a remote countr', an invisile island, some farawa' place one
can reach onl' ' a lon# Oourne'. $ndeed, in some tales, it is a celestial countr'A. This
parallels the elief in the e6traterrestrial ori#in of U7ODs so popular toda'. ) secondEand
eMuall' widespreadEtheor', is that Elfland constitutes a sort of parallel universe, which
coe6ists with our own. $t is made visile and tan#ile onl' to selected people, and the
XdoorsD that lead throu#h it are tan#ential points, !nown onl' to the elves. This is somewhat
analo#ous to the theor', sometimes found in the U7O literature, concernin# what some
authors li!e to call the Xfourth dimensionDE althou#h, of course, this e6pression ma!es
much less ph'sical sense than does the theor' of a parallel Elfland. H$t does sound
more scientific, howeverTI@ >v?
&allJeDs ar#ument is persuasive #iven the histor' of demonic entities and their
deceitful record of assumin# an' appearance that #ains them acceptance into societ'.
Recall the creatures in the film =The' (ive@ and their ailit' to appear Muite human.
)ccordin# to ; Corinthians 4484N even Satan himself can manifest as =an an#el of
li#ht@T &allJe also notes this deception on the part of the modern alien/fairies seems to e
for the purpose of ta!in# and replacin# aies or smaller children with
=chan#elin#s.@ $n alien aduction man' women report the removal of their fetus
followed later ' introduction to Hsupposedl'I the post/#estational a'. $n fair' lore

the child is removed and replaced with a =chan#elin#,@ a human/loo!in# cop'
especiall' of %estern European fol!lore and fol! reli#ion. Numerous theories were
developed etween the 40th and 4Pth centuries to e6plain the reason for this
aduction and replacement of children includin# that the earthl' child was a =tithe to Hell@ or
triute paid ' the fairies to the devil ever' seven 'ears. *ut &allJe updates this point,
notin# how the modern alien/aduction phenomenon and the numerous accounts of
aductions ' the fairies focused =especiall' on pre#nant women or 'oun# mothers, and
the' also are ver' active in stealin# 'oun# children.@ He sa's8
Sometimes, the' sustitute a false child for the real one, leavin# in place of the real
child Aone of their children, a chan#elin#8 *' the elief in chan#elin#s $ mean a elief that
fairies and otherA ein#s are on the watch for 'oun# childrenAthat the' ma', if the' can
find them un#uarded, sei"e and carr' them off, leavin# in their place one of them. >vi?
&allJe then points to a television series that capitali"ed on the aspect of U7O lore and the
connection etween modern and ancient aductions8
$n the show, the human race has een infiltrated ' e6traterrestrials who differ from humans
in small details onl'. This is not a new idea, as the elief in chan#elin#s shows. )nd
there is a well/!nown passa#e in Martin (utherDs Tale Tal!, in which he tells the 5rince of
R4
)nhalt that he should throw into the Moldau a certain man who is, in his opinion, such a
chan#elin#Eor !illcrop, as the' were called in .erman'.
%hat was the purpose of such fair' aductionsV The idea advanced ' students of fol! tal!s
is a#ain ver' close to a current theor' aout U7ODs8 that the purpose of such contact is a
#enetic one. )ccordin# to Hartland8
The motive assi#ned to fairies in northern stories is that of preservin# and improvin# their
race, on the one hand ' carr'in# off human children to e rou#ht up amon# the elves
and to ecome united with them, and on the other hand ' otainin# the mil! and
fosterin# care of human mothers for their own offsprin#. >vii?


*a' switched with a chan#elin# in =The le#end of St. Stephen@ ' Martino di *artolomeo
Thus the idea of deceptive ni#httime creatures proin# humans to #ather #enetic material
for use in #eneratin# h'rid offsprin# a#rees with &allJe and his
contemporaries who, followin# e6traordinar' research, determined that whatever the modern
alien aduction encounters represent, its #oal is a repeat of ancient activit' involvin# the
collection of +N) for 4I a *reedin# 5ro#ram, followed ' ;I a H'ridi"ation
5ro#ram, and finall' 0I an $nte#ration 5ro#ram, e6actl' what %atchers accomplished with
Nephilim in ancient times.
*ut wh' would =aliens@ e involved in such a pro#ramV Over the last few decades
secular alien aduction researchers li!e *udd Hop!ins and +r. +avid 3acos have
posited that the aliens are a d'in# race and must pass on their #enetic material
throu#h h'rids to maintain their species. The *arne' and *ett' Hill case of
Septemer 4FB;1, 4FR4, mar!ed the first widel'/pulici"ed claim of such alien
aduction and the e#innin# of the pulicDs !nowled#e of the phenomenon. <et the part of
their stor' often overloo!ed is how ova was reportedl' retrieved from *ett' HillDs od'
and sperm from her husand *arne', presumal' for use in the h'ridi"ation
scheme. $n the 'ears since, tens of thousands of people have slowl' emer#ed from
around the world to claim the' too have een suOect to a m'sterious alien procedure in
which human #enetic material is harvested includin# sperm and e##s for a reproductive
a#enda involvin# human hosts as surro#ates and

R;
incuatoriums for fetuses wherein alien/human h'rids are produced. Entire communities
have #rown up around the idea that children now e6ist on earth that are part/human and
part/alien.
Some claimin# to e parents of h'rid children have their own wesites, host
conferences, and are uildin# social networ!s across the we. These people include
academics, ph'sicists, ps'cholo#ists, attorne's, actresses and school teachers.
7urthermore, accordin# to researchers, it isnDt Oust child h'rids that are now amon# us.
)dult versions have spread throu#hout societ' too. *udd Hop!insEwho, efore he died of
cancer at the a#e of Q1 in ;144, was considered the father of the alien/ aduction
movementEclaimed that he and +r. 3acos especiall' were uildin# new case files
containin# disturin# evidence related to specific entities and their inte#ration within
human societ'.
He was plannin# to illustrate that the science fiction/horror film =The' (ive@ was not that far
off after all, and that, from local read factories to halls of con#ress, alien/ human h'rids
are now firml' entrenched within earthDs cultures. Not lon# efore he passed awa', he
wrote on the 3ournal of )duction/Encounter Research H3)RI wesite8
$ investi#ated the reports of two women who descried seein# an adult male h'rid
wearin# #lasses. Each made a drawin# of the h'rid, and the two drawin#s are
ama"in#l' similar. *oth portra' a stran#e/loo!in# man, with sharp chee!s, wearin# oddl'/
shaped #lasses. The two women independentl' drew the same person. Some of these
h'rid ein#s have een seen ' more than three people at once and the' are
descried ' the witnesses the same wa'. )s far as h'rids operatin# in the human world,
we have man' reports of them drivin# automoiles, shoppin# in stores, and ehavin#
more or less naturall' in other mundane places, ut manifestin# the !inds of powers
aliens seem to have, i.e., the ailit' to control minds, and to communicate telepathicall'.
The powers the #ra' aliens possess in the world can entail a comple6 series of
repeated similar events, as if these adult h'rids do not reall' understand our world and
our ehavior ut are tr'in# to learn e6actl' how we act and what we sa', all of which
#ives us an uneas' feelin# of what their a#enda mi#ht e leadin# to. There definitel' is
stron# evidence that an infiltration into human societ' is ta!in# place. >viii?
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 41
R0
*' Thomas R. Horn
7eruar' ;;, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/ theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
>NOTE8 +ue to the resi#nation of 5ope *enedict Has Tom Horn predicted on radio 0/ wee!s
efore it happenedI, events are acceleratin# around the world and we have een forced
to Oump forward in this series to the final
half/do"en or so entries. %e are wor!in# hard to #et the
investi#ative oo! -E6o/&aticana- out as fast as possile // hopefull' ' mid/
march // ri#ht when conclave will e in session to elect 5etrus Romanus //
the final 5ope.?
7rom the ver' e#innin# of this arduous investi#ation, we !new we were facin# a dauntin#
tas!. To reach that la'rinthine monument to reli#ion, the Roman Catholic
Church, and to ascertain suterranean secrets concealed eneath its la'ers of
classified documentation had een tried and failed ' thousands efore us. The
&atican is impenetrale, we were warned, the ver' inventor of the term =aove
top secret.@ )s the worldDs oldest/runnin# ureaucrac', it is an amal#amation of secrets,
vaults, and esoteric traditions datin# ac! to the +ar! )#es. Steeped in
comple6it' and #uarded ' a procession of popes, cardinals, and multileveled priests, it is
osessed with maintainin# =the need to !now.@ %hen spo!esmen for the Church do
tantali"e the outside world with commentar', it often turns out to e duplicit' desi#ned to
!eep researchers runnin# in circles and in the wron# direction. )nd 'et, of late, we had
heard enou#h consistenc' from 3esuit astronomers to wonder now if, for some reason,
Rome was intentionall' movin# the reli#ious world toward acceptin# a definite revelation, a
period in time coupled with a momentous disclosure that somehow reMuired specific
pulic comments and the development of theolo#ical ar#uments concernin#
e6traterrestrial intelli#ence that ultimatel' will, the' elieve,
impact the reli#ion of Christianit'.

RN
On this, we will e providin#8 4I first/person testimonies ' hi#h/ran!in# authorities that
a#ree with the assessment aoveG ;I documents and newl' drafted scholarl' papers '
&atican academics that sustantiate our conclusionsG and 0I the threshold of what is
called in the court s'stem =a presumption of fact.@ %hen readin# E6o/ &aticana, readers
will find the numer of documents and the amount of commentar' evidence on the part of
RomeDs astronomers and the &aticanDs emer#in# theolo#' as conve'ed therein to e
conclusive e'ond reasonale dout that the &atican has intentionall' positioned itself
to e the reli#ious authorit' on, and ecclesiastical enefactor of, Official +isclosure8 the
imminent and authori"ed pulic admission ' world #overnments of advanced
e6traterrestrial intelli#ence.
%h' the &atican has ta!en this carefull' desi#ned and delierate course overthe
last few 'ears is the #reater m'ster', ut implies !nowled#e on their part of facts
'et hidden to most of the world that ma' hold far/reachin# and historic implications. $t
also illustrates how Rome has wittin#l' or unwittin#l' set itself up to ecome the a#ent
of mass end/times deception re#ardin# =salvation from aove.@ ThatDs ecause, historicall',
there e6ists a clear pattern wherein manDs ps'cholo#ical need of a savior is displa'ed
durin# times of distressEa time li!e toda'Ewhen people loo! s!'ward for divine
intervention. )s Ted 5eters, professor of s'stematic theolo#' at 5acific (utheran
Theolo#ical Seminar', wrote, =%ith the constant threat of
thermonuclear destruction in the post/%orld %ar $$ era leavin# our planet in a state of
insecurit' and an6iet', it is no wonder man' have e#un to hope for a messiah to save
us. The holiness of the s!' and the need for a salvation conver#e and lend when the
ri#ht clean powerful U7O "ooms up onto the hori"on. Could it e our celestial
saviorV@>i? 3esuit *rother .u' Consolma#no must thin! so, as he assured us that if hi#hl'
advanced ET saviors from outer space touch down on planet Earth soon, it will not mean
what Catholics elieve is wron#, ut rather, =%eDre #oin# to find out that
ever'thin# is truer in wa's we couldnDt even 'et have ima#ined.@>ii?
$n truth, Consolma#noDs advice for the reli#ious faithful could e leadin# man!ind into a
#i#antic setup, as man' reli#ions have at least one apocal'ptic m'th descriin# the end
of the world accompanied ' a redeemer who appears in the s!' at the last minute to
rescue the chosen from annihilation or wrath. Ma'ans, )ss'rians, E#'ptians, and
.ree!s held similar eliefs, while the Hopi $ndians foresee times of #reat hardship
when the' will e preserved ' the =power@ of a lue star, far off and invisile, that
suddenl' ma!es its appearance in the heavens. Toda', even factions of the New )#e loo!
for a techno/savior to arrive in the atmosphere in the nic! of time to save man!ind. )lthou#h
3esus, Himself, is prophesied to appear in the clouds durin# an era of #reat earthl' trials H4
Thessalonians N84RB4QI, predominant amon# prophec' scholars is the idea that
coupled with an' heavenl' appearin# and concurrent

RP
salvation of elievers from chaos will first e the materiali"ation of a false Christ or =man
of sin.@ %here Hopi see a lue star and &atican astronomers see their =space rothers@
en route to #uide us into the li#ht, evan#elical Christians understand the )ntichrist will
initiall' assume the role of a faricated end/times messiah who mimics the return of Christ
with a false second comin# that also happens to e attended ' heavenl' =si#ns and
l'in# wonders@ H; Thessalonians ;8QBFI. Could these deceptive =wonders@ e8 4I the
discover' of artificial structures on another worldG ;I a =contact@ scenario, orG 0I ma'e
even somethin# more dramatic, li!e a fl'in# saucer armada piloted ' creatures who
appear to e advanced humanoids ut who are in fact evil supernaturalism on a Muest to
mislead and destro' the human raceV Even secular ufolo#ists suspect demonic activit' in
the interaction etween humans and =aliens.@ %hitle' Streier, author of Communion and
other oo!s on the suOect, once wrote8 =There are worse thin#s than death, $
suspected. )nd $ was e#innin# to #et the distinct impression that one of them had
ta!en an interest in me. So far the word demon had never een spo!en amon# the
scientists and doctors who were wor!in# with me. )nd wh' should it have eenV %e
were e'ond such thin#s. %e were a #roup of atheists and a#nostics, far too
sophisticated to e concerned with such archaic ideas as demons and an#els@ Hemphasis
addedI.>iii?
)lien Saviors, +emonic 5lots, Hidden Codes
To understand what is drivin# &atican scholars into such stran#e astro/theolo#ical
territor', a sutle #ame of cat/and/mouse has een pla'in# out ehind the scenes over the
past few months etween the authors of E6o/&aticana and the church,s theolo#ians
over the need to determine wh' Rome,s authorities suddenl' need alien/ friendl' do#ma.
)t times responses to inMuests have come in coded replies instead of strai#ht forward
answers. 7or instance, 3esuit astronomer .u' Consolma#no pointed Tom to a peculiar novel
pulished in 4FPQ under the title, ) Case of Conscience, ' 3ames *lish. $n the stor', a
3esuit priest named 7ather Rui"/Sanche" and a team of scientists travel to a newl'
discovered planet dued =(ithia@ to stud' the (ithians who live there. Un!nown to the
science team, the &atican secretl' advises the Catholic father to investi#ate whether the
aliens have redeemale souls. %hat he finds in the (ithians are intelli#ent creatures
whose moralit' fits perfectl' with Christianit' ut who are devoid of an' concept of reli#ion
or .od. This dilemma #rows, and soon the priest is invited to visit with a (ithian famil'. He
writes8
Here was the first chance, at lon# last, to see somethin# of the private life of (ithia, and
throu#h that, perhaps, to #ain some in!lin# of the moral life, the role in which .od had
cast the (ithians in the ancient drama of #ood and evil, in the past and in the times to
come. Until that was !nown, the (ithians in their Eden mi#ht e onl' spuriousl'
#ood8 all reason, all or#anic thin!in# machines, U(T$M)Cs with tails and without souls.>iv?

RR
5ETRUS, 5RO3ECT, _ &)T$C)N//Case of Conscience
Ori#inal cover of ) Case of Conscience ' 3ames *lish
R2
*ecause the pulisher of E6o/&aticana is #ivin# awa' ) Case of Conscience in the data/
dvd provided with the first release of this oo!, we will not spoil the endin#E which
includes the 3esuits Hdescried as =the cereral corte6 of the Church@I dealin# with the
!nott' moral, theolo#ical, and or#ani"ational issues surroundin# a papal proclamation and
the seed of SatanEfor those who want to read the novel. However, it is important to note
that the fictional 7ather Rui"/Sanche" warns the &atican to classif' (ithia as :/4Ea
planet to e forever Muarantined from Earth and humans due to its potential for #reat
deception.
=%hat we have here on (ithia is ver' clear indeed. %e haveEand now $Dm prepared to e
luntEa planet and a people propped up ' the Ultimate Enem'. $t is a #i#antic trap
prepared for all of usEfor ever' man on Earth and off it. %e can do nothin# with it ut reOect
it, nothin# ut sa' to it, Retro me, Sathanas. $f we compromise with it in an' wa', we are
damned.@>v?
%hen Rui"/Sanche" uses the phrase, =Retro me, Sathanas,@ he is annunciatin# the
medieval Catholic formula for e6orcism, =&ade retro Sathanas@ H=.o ac!, Satan@I, a clear
rec!onin# that the aliens on (ithia are part of a satanic plot to e avoided at all costs, an
astro/theolo#ical conspirac' desi#ned to mislead man!ind. He eventuall' convinces the
pope H5ope Hadrian in the stor'I of the satanic strata#em, ut, ironicall', he is
unale to convince all of the ChurchDs theolo#ians. +id the author of ) Case of Conscience
foresee how such #reat deception would eventuall' e emraced ' the &atican as a
result of some of RomeDs celerated scholars and astronomersV

%hen science/fiction writer 3o %alton as!ed 3esuit *rother .u' Consolma#no
Hwhom we also interviewed from Rome with this Muestion and a lot moreI what he
made of these issues posed ' *lish in his novel, Consolma#no admitted that the
3esuits are8 4I the stron#est advocates of =inculturation@ Hallowin# alien cultures to
maintain their pa#anism while modif'in# e6pressions of Christian ideas within those
eliefsIG ;I acceptin# of =alien cultures for who the' are@G and 0I willin# to adapt alien
=reli#ious practices into a form and a lan#ua#e that can e accepted.@>vi? So, if
*rother Consolma#no had een on (ithia, %alton concluded, weDd alread' e in
contact with aliens =and findin# out as much as we could aout them.@>vii?
7rom what we have seen, %alton ma' not have to wait much lon#er for contact, which
raises a hidden aspect of ) Case of Conscience involvin#wordpla' around the term
=(ithia.@ %hile *lish ma!es an ovious connection to the name of the planet and its
inhaitants as reflectin# the aundance of =(ithium@ ore on the alien world Hore that
could e mined and e6ploited for use in ma!in# nuclear weaponsI, mention of the #oddess
$/(ithia or =$lith'ia@ is stran#el' missin# from the wor!. This stands out as possil' a
RQ
secret code in the oo! that specificall' relates to the deductions of 7ather Rui"/
Sanche" and the =seed of Satan@ ein# deated ' the
Church ac! on Earth. $f the similarit' etween (ithia and the #oddess $lith'ia is
coincidental, it is e6traordinar', as it was the Oo of this #oddess in antiMuit' to protect
the ver' =seed of the serpent@ that in turn #enerates the irth of the =serpent child@ and
future =serpent/savior.@ So important was the #oddess $lith'iaDs role in ancient da's as
the preserver of this serpent seed toward the irth of the serpent/ savior that shrines
were erected to her ' cult followers across .reece Hincludin# at )thens, Me#ara,
[orinthos, )r#os, M'cenae, Sparta, etc.I in which terra/cotta fi#ures of immortal nurses
were depicted watchin# over the divine children in whom the loodline would survive.
7or e6ample, on the mainland at Ol'mpia, a shrine dedicated to $lith'ia Hcalled
Eileith'ia ' the .ree!sI was witnessed ' traveler and second/centur' #eo#rapher,
5ausanias, in which a small inner chamer HcellaI sacred to the serpent/savior hosted a
vir#in/priestess who =cared for a serpent that was fed on hone'ed arle'/ca!es and
water.@>viii? The shrine memoriali"ed the appearance of a Marian/li!e woman with a ae in
her arms who, =at a crucial moment when Elians were threatened ' forces from )rcadia,@
was placed on the #round etween the contendin# forces and chan#ed into a terrif'in#
serpent, =drivin# the )rcadians awa' in fli#ht, efore it disappeared into the hill.@>i6?
$nterestin#l', the m'th of $lith'ia is also connected in ancient histor' with the irth of )pollo,
whose comin# as =the promised seed@ formed the novus ordo seclorum prophec' of
the .reat Seal of the United States Has thorou#hl' documented in )poll'on Risin#I.
This =messiah@ who returns to rule the Earth in the latter da's is also descried H' the
same nameI in the oo! of ; Thessalonians as the )ntichrist

who ecomes the pro#en' or incarnation of the ancient seed Hor spiritI of )pollo. The
warnin# in ; Thessalonians ;80 reads8 =(et no man deceive 'ou ' an' means8 for that da'
shall not come, e6cept there come a fallin# awa' first, and that man of sin e
revealed, the son of perdition >)poleiaG )poll'on, )pollo?@ Hemphasis addedI.
Revelation 428Q also directl' ties the comin# of )ntichrist with the seed of )pollo,
revealin# that the *east shall ascend from the ottomless pit and enter him8 =The
*east that thou sawest was, and is notG and shall ascend out of the *ottomless 5it, and #o
into perdition >)poleia, )pollo?8 and the' that dwell on the Earth shall wonder, whose
names were not written in the *oo! of (ife from the foundation of the world, when the'
ehold the *east that was, and is not, and 'et is@ Hemphasis addedI. >E+$TOR,S
NOTE8 RE)+ MORE )*OUT THE CONNECT$ON *ET%EEN THE &)T$C)N,
%)SH$N.TON +C, )N+ THE COM$N. SEE+ O7 THE SER5ENT $N )N E:CER5T 7ROM
THE *OO[ ,5ETRUS ROM)NUS, HERE.?
The verses aove elucidate a ver' important and central eschatolo#ical issue
concernin# how all of the *ile is reall' a stor' aout the ancient and future stru##le
etween the =seed@ of the woman H3esusI and that of the serpent. .enesis 084P sa's,
=)nd $ will put enmit' etween thee and the woman, and etween th' seed >"era,
RF
meanin# =offsprin#,@ =descendents,@ or =children@? and her seed.@ *esides the pre/
preachin# of the .ospel of Christ in this verse H!nown in theolo#' as the
protoevan#eliumI, another incredile tenet emer#es hereEthat Satan has =seed@ and it is at
enmit' Hhostilit', hatred, anta#onismI with Christ.
%e elieve an e6ample of SatanDs hostile seed can e found in .enesis chapter R,
where fallen an#els min#led with humans and produced Nephilim. More importantl', in E6o/
&aticana we will discuss how Church leaders includin# Roman Catholics from the Middle
)#es forward elieved the )ntichrist would e spawned of this demonic seed. Saint
)u#ustine wrote aout this in the Cit' of .od,>6? and in the +e +aemonialitate, et
$ncuis, et Succui, 7ather (udovicus Maria Sinistrari de )meno H4R;;B4214I ar#ued
how the comin# of )ntichrist represented the iolo#ical h'ridi"ation of demons with
humans. =To theolo#ians and philosophers,@ he wrote, =it is a fact, that from the copulation
of humans with the demonA)ntichrist must e orn.@>6i? Thus, as 3esus Christ was the
=seed of the woman,@ the =Man of Sin@ will e the =seed of the serpent.@ )nd if the serpent
seed represents the second comin# of )pollo as prophesied ' the )postle 5aul, not
onl' will he e the e6act opposite of 3esus HSon of .odI, ut the forerunner of the return of
these Nephilim.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 44
*' Thomas R. Horn
7eruar' ;2, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5etrus Romanus, 5RO3ECT (UC$7ER, and the &atican,s astonishin# e6o/ theolo#ical plan
for the arrival of an alien savior. <ou onl' thin! 'ou !now what,s comin#...
%e ended the last entr' discussin# the important and central eschatolo#ical issue
concernin# how all of the *ile is reall' a stor' aout the ancient and future stru##le
21
etween the =seed@ of the woman H3esusI and that of the serpent. The connection
etween the comin# clash etween these =seeds@ and emer#in# Catholic e6o/theolo#' will
shoc! most, as it directl' involves the arrival of serpent/saviors and the irth of )pollo
Ha.!.a. OsirisI from =the promised seed@ of the novus ordo seclorum prophec' on the .reat
Seal of the United States.
How could the &atican e associated with the pa#an prophec' on the .reat Seal of the
United States, 'ou as!V The li#htnin# that struc! St. 5eterDs *asillica immediatel'
followin# 5ope *enedicts, resi#nation points the wa', ut more on that in a moment.
7irst, understand the deepl' occultic and important role the three/hundred/thirt' ton Oelis!
in St. 5eterDs SMuare in the &atican Cit' was desi#ned to pla'. $t is not Oust an' Oelis! ut
one that was cut from a sin#le loc! of red #ranite durin# the 7ifth d'nast' of E#'pt to
stand as OsirisD Ha.!.a. )polloDsI erect phallus at the Temple of the Sun in ancient Heliopolis
Hbbbbbb, meanin# cit' of the sun or principal seat of )tum/ Ra sun/worshipI, the cit' of =On@ in
the *ile, dedicated to Ra, Osiris, and $sis. The Oelis! was moved from Heliopolis to
the 3ulian 7orum of )le6andria ' Emperor )u#ustus and later from thence Happro6imatel'
02 )+I ' Cali#ula to Rome to stand at the spine of the Circus. There, under Nero, its
e6cited presence maintained a counter/vi#il over countless rutal Christian e6ecutions,
includin# the mart'rdom of the apostle 5eter Haccordin# to some historiansI. Over fifteen
hundred 'ears followin# that, 5ope Si6tus & ordered hundreds of wor!men under
celerated en#ineer/ architects .iovanni and +omenico 7ontana to move the phallic pillar
to the center of St. 5eterDs SMuare in Rome. This proved a dauntin# tas!, which too!
over four months, nine hundred laorers, one hundred fort' horses, and sevent'
winches. Thou#h worshipped at its present location ever since ' countless admirers,
the pro6imit' of the Oelis! to the old *asilica was formerl' =resented as somethin# of a
provocation, almost as a sli#ht to the Christian reli#ion. $t had stood there li!e a false idol,
as it were vain#loriousl', on what was elieved to e the center of the accursed

circus where the earl' Christians and St. 5eter had een put to death. $ts sides, then as
now, were #raven with dedications to >the worst of ruthless pa#ans? )u#ustus and
Tierius.@>i?
The fact that man' traditional Catholics as well as 5rotestants perceived such idols of stone
to e not onl' oOects of heathen adoration ut the worship of demons Hsee )cts
28N4BN;G 5salms FR8PG and 4 Corinthians 418;1I ma!es what motivated 5ope Si6tus to
erect the phallus of Osiris in the heart of St. 5eterDs SMuare, located in &atican Cit' and
orderin# St. 5eterDs *asilica where prophetic li#htnin# struc! it twice last wee!, ver'
curious. To ancient Christians, the ima#e of a cross and s'mol of 3esus sittin# atop Hor
emittin# fromI the head of a demonic #odDs erect manhood would have een
at a minimum a ver' serious lasphem'. <et Si6tus was not content with simpl'
24
restorin# and usin# such ancient pa#an relics Hwhich were elieved in those da's to
actuall' house the pa#an spirit the' representedI ut even destro'ed Christian
artifacts in the process. Michael %. Cole, )ssociate 5rofessor in the +epartment of the
Histor' of )rt at the Universit' of 5enns'lvania, and 5rofessor Reecca E. corach,
)ssociate 5rofessor of )rt Histor' at the Universit' of Chica#o, raise critical Muestions
aout this in their scholarl' oo! The $dol in the )#e of )rt when the' state8
%hereas .re#or', to follow the chroniclers, had rituall' dismemered the cit'Ds
ima#ines daemonem >demonic ima#es?, Si6tus fi6ed what was in disrepair, added
missin# parts, and made the =idols@ into prominent uran features. Two of the four
oelis!s had to e reconstructed from found or e6cavated piecesA The pope was even
content to destro' Christian antiMuities in the process8 as 3ennifer Monta#u has pointed
out, the ron"e for the statues of 5eter and 5aul came from the medieval doors of S.
)#nese, from the Scala Santa at the (ateran, and from a ciorium at St. 5eterDs.
>Si6tus? must have reali"ed that, especiall' in their wor! on the two >ro!en oelis!s?,
the' were not merel' repairin# inOured oOects, ut also restorin# a t'peA $n his classic
oo! The .othic $dol, Michael Camille showed literall' do"ens of medieval ima#es in
which the freestandin# fi#ure atop a column
eto!ened the pa#an idol. The sheer Muantit' of CamilleDs
e6amples ma!es it clear that the device, and what it stood for, would have een
immediatel' reco#ni"ale to medieval viewers, and there is no reason to assume that, '
Si6tusDs
time, this had ceased to e true.>ii?
The important point made ' 5rofessors Cole and corach is that at the time Si6tus was
us' reintroducin# to the Roman pulic sMuare restored ima#es and statues on columns,
the elief remained stron# that these idols housedtheir patron deit', and further that, if
these were not treated properl' and even placed into service durin# proper constellations
related

to their m'th, it could ec!on evil omens, such as li#htnin#. Most people includin# even
perhaps 5ope *enedict himself, were lissfull' unaware of the ancient si#nature last
wee!Ds dual stri!es atop St. 5eterDs *asilica represented, especiall' as it involves the
loomin# papal inau#uration of 5etrus Romanus. 7or a few adepts of histor' and secret
orders, the si#n from heaven was deliciousl' sta#ed. The term =inau#urate@ is from the
(atin =inau#uratio,@ and refers to the archaic ceremon' ' which the Roman au#urs
Hsoothsa'ersI approved a !in# or ruler Hor other actionI throu#h omens as ein#
=sanctioned ' the #ods.@ )s for 5etrus Romanus, his =inau#uration@ was sealed ' the
same omen the ancient au#urs used in determinin# the will of the #ods for a !in#E
2;
thunder and li#htnin# as the most important auspice and si#n that 3upiterEthe father of
)polloEwas watchin#.
There is stron# indication that 5ope Si6tus not onl' elieved in such omens ut that he
=worried aout the powers that mi#ht inhait his new uranmar!ers.@>iii? This was clearl'
evident when the cross was placed on top of the Oelis! in the midst of St. 5eterDs
SMuare and the pope mar!ed the occasion ' conductin# the ancient rite of e6orcism
a#ainst the phallic s'mol. 7irst scheduled to occur on Septemer 4Nth to coincide with
the litur#ical 7east of the E6altation of the Cross and not coincidentl' under the "odiacal
si#n of &ir#o H$sisI, the event was dela'ed until later in the month and fell under the si#n
of (ira, representin# a "enith event for the 'ear. On that mornin#, a pontifical Hi#h
Mass was held Oust efore the cross was raised from a portale altar to the ape6 of
*aalDs Shaft Has such phallic towers were also !nownI. %hile cler#' pra'ed and a choir
san# 5salms, 5ope Si6tus stood facin# the Oelis! and, e6tendin# his hand toward
it, announced8 =E6orci"ote, creatura lapidis, in nomine +ei@ H=$ e6orci"e 'ou, creature of
stone, in the name of .od@I. Si6tus then cast sanctified water upon the pillarDs middle,
then its ri#ht side, then left, then aove, and finall' elow to form a cross, followed ', =$n
nomine 5atris, et 7iliO, et Spiritus sancti. )men@ H=$n the Name of the 7ather and of the Son
and of the Hol' .host. )men@I. He then crossed himself three times and watched as the
s'mol of Christ was placed atop OsirisD erect phallus.

&atican +ome facin# Oelis!

<et if what Si6tus estalished in the heart of &atican Cit' #ives some readers pause
Hnumerous other si#nature events ' Si6tus ali#ned the Sistine cit' with
constellations sacred to Osiris and $sis, which we are not ta!in# time to discuss here ut
that caused 5rofs. corach and Cole to conclude that, in the end, Si6tus wanted to remain
in the #ood #races of the pa#an #odsI, in %ashin#ton, +C near the west end of the
National Mall, the Oelis! uilt ' 7reemasons and dedicated to )mericaDs first president
rin#s the fullest meanin# to the nephilim/ori#inated and modern porn/ industr'
impression that =si"e matters.@ This is no crude declaration, as adepts of ritual se6/ma#ic
!now, and dates ac! to ancient women who wanted to #ive irth to the offsprin# of the
#ods and who Oud#ed the si"e of the male #enerative or#an as indicative of the =#iant@
#enetics or divine seed needed for such offsprin#. %hile such phallic s'mols have een
and still are found in cultures around the world, in ancient E#'pt, devotion to this t'pe
=oscene divinit'@ e#an with )mun/Min and reached its crescendo in the Oelis!s of
Osiris.
20
Throu#hout .reece and Rome the #od 5riapus Hson of )phroditeI was invo!ed as a
s'mol of such divine fertilit' and later ecame directl' lin!ed to the cult of
porno#raph' reflected in the more modern sentiments aout =si"e.@ This is important
ecause, in addition to the %ashin#ton Monument ein# intentionall' constructed to e the
tallest Oelis! of its !ind in the world at R,RRR Hsome sa' R,RR1I inches hi#h and RRR
inches wide alon# each side at the ase, one of the ori#inal concepts for the %ashin#ton
Monument included )pollo Hthe .ree! version of OsirisI triumphantl' returnin# in his
heavenl' chariot, and another illustratin# a tower =li!e that of *ael@ for its head. )n' of
these desi#ns would have een eMuall' appropriate to the thirt'/ three/hundred/pound
p'ramidal capstone it now displa's, as all three concepts carried the meanin#
necessar' to accomplish what late researcher +avid 7l'nn

descried as =the same secret !nowled#e preserved ' the m'ster' schools since the
time of the 5elas#ians >that? displa' modern $sis Osiris worship.@>iv? This is to sa', the
=seed@ dischar#ed from a Tower/of/*ael/shaped head would ma#icall' issue forth the
same as would proceed from the e6istin# E#'ptian capstoneEthe offsprin# of
)polloSOsirisSNimrod.
The #reatest minds in 7reemasonr', whose eliefs set the tone for the desi#n of the
capital cit', its .reat Seal, its +ome, and its Oelis!, understood and wrote aout this
intent. )lert 5i!e descried it as $sis and OsirisD =)ctive and 5assive 5rinciples of the
UniverseAcommonl' s'moli"ed ' the #enerative parts of man and woman,@>v? and
7reemason writer )lert Mac!e' descried not onl' the Oelis!, ut added the
importance of the circle around its ase, sa'in#, =The 5hallus was an imitation of the male
#enerative or#an. $t was representedA' a column >Oelis!? that was
surrounded ' a circle at the ase.@>vi?
%ashin#ton +ome facin# Oelis!

$n E#'pt, where the parodies and rituals for raisin# Osiris to life throu#h these ma#ical
constructs was perfected, 5haraoh served as the =fit e6tension@ for the reorn #od to ta!e
residence in as the =se6 act@ was rituali"ed at the temple of )mun/Ra. The all/seein# e'e of
HorusSOsirisS)pollo aove the unfinished p'ramid on the .reat Seal forecasts the
culmination of this eventEthat is, the actual return of OsirisEfor the United States. This
ancient occultism is troulin# when harmoni"ed with the two mottoes on the .reat Seal
E=annuit coeptis@ and =novus ordo seclorum@Eta!en from ancient te6ts related to the
#od )pollo. The motto =annuit coeptis@ is from &ir#ilDs )eneid, in which )scanius, the son
2N
of )eneas from conMuered Tro', pra's to )polloDs father, 3upiter >ceus? whose thunder and
li#htnin# mar!ed &atican SMuare on the resi#nation of 5ope *enedict. Charles
Thompson, desi#ner of the .reat SealDs final

version, condensed line R;P of oo! $: of &ir#ilDs )eneid, which reads, =3uppiter
omnipotes, audacius annue coeptis@ >X)ll/powerful 3upiter favors HtheI darin#
underta!in#sD?,@ to =)nnuit coeptis >XHe approves HourI underta!in#sD?.@ %as
Thompson instructed to do this to conceal the true identit' of the =he@ of the .reat SealE
the m'thical father/#od 3upiter, who #ives )pollo lifeV The second and most indisputale
authentication that the .reat SealDs s'mols and mottoes are in fact a hidden prophes'
concernin# the return of )pollo is =novus ordo seclorum@ H=a new order of the a#es@I,
adapted ' Charles Thomson in 42Q; when desi#nin# the .reat Seal. )ccordin# to the
official record, ThomsonEa friend of the Masons and #reat supporter of *enOamin
7ran!linDs )merican 5hilosophical Societ'Ecreated the phrase from inspiration he found in
a prophetic line in &ir#ilDs Eclo#ue $&8 =Ma#nus a inte#ro seclorum nascitur ordo@ >&ir#ilDs
Eclo#ue $& Hline PI?, the interpretation of the ori#inal (atin ein# =and the maOestic roll of
circlin# centuries e#ins anew.@ This same Cumaean Si'l is even prominentl' featured
alon#side Old Testament prophets in Michelan#eloDs paintin#s in the Sistine Chapel at
the &atican. <et upon readin# &ir#ilDs te6t, it is aundantl' clear whom the prophetess of
)polloEdirectl' tied to %ashin#ton and the &aticanEwas tal!in# aout. The divine son,
which comes of the Si'lDs prophec', is to e spawned of =a new reed of men sent down
from heaven@ when he receives =the life of #ods, and see Heroes with #ods commin#lin#.@
)ccordin# to the prophec', this is )pollo, son of 3upiter HceusI, who returns to earth
throu#h m'stical =life@ #iven to him from the #ods when the deit' returns to rei#n over
the earth in a new #olden a#e.
7rom the e#innin# of the prophec' we read8
Now the last a#e ' CumaeDs Si'l sun# Has come and #one, and the maOestic roll Of
circlin# centuries e#ins anew8 3ustice returns, returns old SaturnDs rei#n, %ith a new reed
of men sent down from heaven. Onl' do thou, at the o'Ds irth in whom The iron shall
cease, the #olden race arise, *efriend him, chaste (ucinaG Xtis thine own )pollo rei#ns.
He shall receive the life of #ods, and see Heroes with #ods commin#lin#, and himself
*e seen of them, and with his fatherDs worth Rei#n oDer a worldA
)ssume th' #reatness, for the time draws ni#h, +ear child of #ods, #reat pro#en' of
3ove >3upiterSceus?T See how it tottersEthe worldDs ored mi#ht, Earth, and wide ocean,
and the vault profound, )ll, see, enraptured of the comin# timeT >44?
2P
)ccordin# to &ir#il and the Cumaean Si'l, whose prophec' formed the novus ordo
seclorum of the .reat Seal of the United States, the new world order e#ins durin# a time
of chaos when the earth and oceans are totterin#Ea time li!e toda'. This is when the =son@
of promise arrives on earthE)pollo incarnate. His comin# was au#ured ' thunder and
li#htnin# Oust hours after 5ope *enedict resi#ned, and now the +omes and Oelis!s at
the &atican and %ashin#ton stand read' for the secret, metaph'sical

ritual to e performed to assure his arrival. %e use the phrase =performed in secret@
ecause what the vast maOorit' of people throu#hout )merica and Rome do not !now is that
the =raisin#@ ceremon' of )polloSOsiris is conducted inside the headMuarters of the
Scottish Rite 7reemasonr' in the House of the Temple ' the Supreme Council
00rd +e#ree over %ashin#ton, +C followin# the election and inau#uration of ever'
)merican 5resident HOust as their E#'ptian forefathers did at the temple of )mun/Ra in
[arna!I in !eepin# with the tradition of installin# within him the representative spirit of
Osiris until such time as the #od himself shall fulfill the .reat Seal prophec' and return in
fleshEin other words, now. The most recent Osiris/endowed US 5resident, Oama, is
headed for $srael to announce =peace, peace@ at the ver' same time the Colle#e of
Cardinals will e assemlin# in Rome for conclave to elect the
prophesied final popeE5etrus Romanus.
5reparin# Reli#ious 5eople to )ccept the $ncarnation of )polloSOsiris as a Newl'
)rrived =)lien@ Serpent/Savior
$nitiall', when readin# the material aove in li#ht of the coded oo! that 3esuit .u'
Consolma#no pointed Tom Horn to, ) Case of Conscience, one is tempted to pu""le wh' a
novel written in 4FPQ furtivel' touched on Hor
was #uided ' a warnin# or moc!in# spirit to forecastI how some of
RomeDs then/Muiet 3esuit astronomers and theolo#ians mi#ht later ecome the
ones to ar#ue in favor of what could ecome end/times deception involvin# the
=fertilit'@ of Satan as an =alien@ serpent/savior from the prophesied seed
H)polloSOsirisS)ntichristI of the Evil One. Upon further contemplation, however, this
is reall' not that astonishin#. $t was, after all, the
Roman Catholic theolo#ians who provided the =liveliest speculation@ on the e6istence and
nature of e6traterrestrials four 'ears after *lishDs oo! was printed, when the e6ecutive
secretar' of the
)merican Roc!et Societ' pulished conOectures on the suOect.>vii? Since then, other
&atican authorities have further contended the e6traterrestrials mi#ht actuall' e6press
the #lor' of .od etter than we humans do, even leadin# man!ind to venerate them as
2R
#ods, a recurrent theme articulated amon# numerous 3esuit astronomers. 7ather +aniel
C. Raile thou#ht the eventual acceptance of aliens as oOects of worship mi#ht
naturall' occur as a result of them havin# #odli!e Mualities and
preternatural #ifts ascried ' humans to divinit'8
7or e6ample, the' mi#ht enOo' infused !nowled#e Hthe' would literall' e orn with
e6tensive !nowled#e and would find the acMuisition of further !nowled#e eas' and
enOo'aleIG the' mi#ht e lessed with harmon' and concord in the wor!in# of their odil'
and spiritual facultiesG the' mi#ht e spared the ultimate dissolution of death,

passin# to their reward at the end of their time of trial as peacefull' as the sun sin!s
elow the hori"on at the end of the da'. The' mi#ht possess all these preternatural #ifts
or onl' some of them in an' of various cominations that are limited onl' ' the
omnipotence and providence of .od.>viii?
7ather +omenico .rasso not onl' thou#ht such ein#s would e =far ahead of us in
science and related fields,@>i6? ut that their version of salvation mi#ht e ased on a
savior other than 3esusAeven a messianic memer of their own race. These ein#s,
closer to .od than man Hperhaps even unfallenI, would possess superior theolo#' that
could =e6pand mar!edl'@ our terrestrial understandin# of redemption and !nowled#e of
.od, somethin# current &atican theolo#ians such as professor of fundamental theolo#'
at the 5ontificia UniversitC della Santa Croce in Rome >connected with Opus +ei?, .iuseppe
Tan"ella/Nitti, a#ree with. )nother Church scholar, 7ather Thomas 7. ODMeara, a
theolo#ian at the Universit' of Notre +ame, ima#ined these #odli!e ein#s spread out
across universes =on untold planets called to a special relationship with .od@ and that =it is
a mista!e to thin! that our understandin# of Xcovenant,D the Xrei#n of .od,D Xredemption,D or
Xshared lifeD e6hausts the modes ' which divine power shares somethin# of its infinite
life.@>6? Such Catholic leaders elieve these spirituall' superior aliens ma' even have
een created ' .od with the future redemption of humanit' in mindEein#s who !now
their place in the eternal scheme of thin#s to evan#eli"e humans when the time is ri#ht.
This disturin# and potentiall' prophetic elief is partiall' ased on theolo#ical
ar#uments made ' such priests as Monsi#nor 3anuaris +e Concilio, professor of
theolo#' at $mmaculate Seminar' in New 3erse', who elieved =that the immense
distance in intellect etween human ein#s and the an#els su##est that .od would
create intermediate species to fill in the #ap, and these species would e ET$
>E6traterrestrial $ntelli#ence?.@>6i? Monsi#nor Corrado *alducci Hwho durin# his life was the
official mouthpiece of the Roman Catholic Church concernin# the realit' of aliensI
a#reed with +e Concilio, sa'in#, =$t is entirel' credile that in the enormous distance
etween )n#els and humans, there could e found some middle sta#eEthat is, ein#s
with a od' li!e ours ut more elevated spirituall'.@>6ii? %hen ima#inin# how this issue
could finall' e settled, 5aul Thi#pen for The Catholic )nswer section of Our Sunda'
22
&isitor resolved that =nothin# short of a pulic, thorou#hl' documented encounter
etween earthlin#s and aliens Hor their relicsI will e conclusive.@>6iii? )ccordin# to the
Kuran, the primar' reli#ious te6t of $slam, this encounter ma' happen sooner than most
suspect and at a specific and hidden time that .od Himself has alread' chosen. $n
Revelation, Rationalit', [nowled#e _ Truth, Muslim scholar Mir"a Tahir )hmad Muotes
verse N;801 of the Kuran, which sa's, =)nd amon# His Si#ns is the Creation of the
heavens and the earth, and of whatever livin# creatures >daDah? He has spread forth in
oth.A )nd He has the power to #ather them to#ether >Oam/Di/him? when He will so
please@ Hemphasis addedI.>6iv? )hmad sa's of this8

3am/Di/him is the )raic e6pression in this verse which specificall' spea!s of rin#in#
to#ether of life on earth and the life elsewhere. %hen this meetin# of the two will ta!e place
is not specified, nor is it mentioned whether it will happen here on earth or elsewhere.
One thin# however, is definitel' stated8 this event will most certainl' come to pass
whenever .od so desires. $t should e !ept in mind that the word OamaD can impl' either
a ph'sical contact or a contact throu#h communication. Onl' the future will tell how and
when this contact will ta!e place, ut the ver' fact that more than fourteen hundred
'ears a#o such a possiilit' was even predicted is miraculous in itself.>6v?
7urthermore, the e6pectation that aliens are headed our wa' e6tends to the
nonreli#ious worldview as well. (ewis %hite *lac!, a philosopher at the Universit' of
Rochester, writes, =$ elieve even responsile scientific speculation and e6pensive
technolo#' of space e6ploration in search of other life are the peculiarl' modern
eMuivalent of an#elolo#' and Utopia or demonolo#' and apocal'pse.@>6vi? *lac! then adds,
=E6oiolo#' recapitulates eschatolo#'. The eschatolo#ical hope of help from heaven
revives when the heavens of modern astronom' replace the Heaven of reli#ion.
That we can learn from more advanced societies in the s!ies the secret of survival is
the eschatolo#ical hope which motivates, or at least is used to Oustif', the wor! of
e6oiolo#ists.@>6vii?
This applies roadl' to other spiritualities as well. 7or instance, the founder of
anal'tical ps'cholo#', Carl 3un#, wrote concernin# ET elief8 =$n addition to their
oviousl' superior technolo#' the' are credited with the superior wisdom and moral
#oodness which would, on the other hand, enale them to save humanit'.@>6viii?
Spea!in# of the U7O as an archet'pe, 3un# descries its messianic Mualities as
creatin# =the ima#e of the divine/human personalit', the 5rimordial Man or
)nthropos, a chen/'en Htrue or whole manI, and EliOah who calls down fire from
heaven, rises up to heaven in a fier' chariot, and is a forerunner of the Messiah, the
do#mati"ed fi#ure of Christ, as well as of [hidir, the &erdant one, who is a parallel to EliOah8
li!e him, he wanders over the earth as a human personification of )llah.@>6i6?
2Q
Thus a elief in =#odl'@ aliens that will ultimatel' come in contact with man has wide
interfaith acceptance amon# secularists, spiritualists, and the worldDs lar#est
reli#ions, who seem read' and even e6cited aout emracin# their Official +isclosure
momentEsomethin# these authors elieve holds dan#erous and deceptive end/times
ramifications.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 4;
*' Thomas R. Horn
March 0, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
(ast Sunda', 5ope *enedict stood efore a crowd of P1/thousand people
andannounced8 =The time of testin# is here.@ This oliMue reference to the start of #reat
triulation reflects our previous wor!, 5etrus Romanus, in which we carefull' detailed a
prophec' ' Malach' ODMor#air, or =Saint Malach'@ as he is !nown to Catholics, havin#
to do with =the last pope.@
The 5rophec' of the 5opes, hidden for hundreds of 'ears inside the hi#hl' #uarded
vaults of the &atican lirar' contains a list of (atin verses predictin# each of the Roman
Catholic popes from 5ope Celestine $$ to the final pope, 5etrus Romanus or =5eter the
Roman,@ whose rei#n assists the rise of )ntichrist and ends in the destruction of
Rome. )ccordin# to this nine/hundred/'ear/old prophec', the pope followin# *enedict
:&$ is this final pontiff. The last se#ment of the prophec' reads8
$n the e6treme persecution of the Hol' Roman Church, there will sit 5eter the
Roman, who will nourish the sheep in man' triulationsG when the' are finished, the Cit' of
Seven Hills will e destro'ed, and the dreadful Oud#e will Oud#e his people. The End.>i?
2F
%hile investi#atin# this m'sterious prophec', we learned of the lon# line of other Roman
Catholic leaders who, down throu#h time, also foresaw Rome ein# destro'ed after
ecomin# an en#ine of the )ntichrist. ) remar!ale e6ample of this was +r. Henr'
Edward Cardinal Mannin#, who delivered a series of lectures in 4QR4 under the title, =The
5resent Crises of the Hol' See Tested ' 5rophec',@ in which he predicted a future crisis in
the Roman Catholic Church resultin# in apostas' and the rise of the 7alse 5rophet and
)ntichrist. Of the prophec' in the oo! of Revelation Hchapter 4QI concernin# the end/time
destruction of M'ster' *a'lon, Mannin# wrote8
%e read in the *oo! )pocal'pse, of the cit' of Rome, that she said in the pride of her
heart, =$ sit as a Mueen, and am no widow, and sorrow $ shall not see. Therefore shall her
pla#ues come in one da'8 death, and mournin#, and famineG and she shall e urned
with fire, ecause .od is stron# who shall Oud#e her.@ Some of the #reatest writers of
the Church tell us thatAthe #reat Cit' of Seven HillsAthe cit' of Rome will proal'
ecome apostateAand that Rome will a#ain e punished, for he will depart from itG and
the Oud#ment of .od will fall.>ii?

Mannin# continued, e6plainin# how CatholicismDs #reatest theolo#ians a#reed with this
point of view8
The apostas' of the cit' of RomeAand its destruction ' )ntichrist ma' e thou#hts so new
to man' Catholics, that $ thin! it well to recite the te6t of theolo#ians, of #reatest
repute. 7irst, Malvenda, who writes e6pressl' on the suOect, states as the opinion of
Riera, .aspar Melus, &ie#as, Suare", *ellarmine, and *osius, that Rome shall
apostati"e from the faith, drive awa' the &icar of Christ, and return to its ancient pa#anism.
MalvendaDs words are8
*ut Rome itself in the last times of the world will return to its ancient idolatr', power, and
imperial #reatness. $t will cast out its 5ontiff, alto#ether apostati"e from the Christian
faith, terril' persecute the Church, shed the lood of mart'rs more cruell' than ever, and
will recover its former state of aundant wealth, or even #reater than it had under its first
rulers.
(essius sa's8 =$n the time of )ntichrist, Rome shall e destro'ed, as we see openl' from
the thirteenth chapter of the )pocal'pseG@ and a#ain8 =The woman whom thou sawest is
the #reat cit', which hath !in#dom over the !in#s of the earth, in which is si#nified
Rome in its impiet', such as it was in the time of St. 3ohn, and shall e a#ain at the end of
the world.@ )nd *ellarmine8 =$n the time of )ntichrist, Rome shall e desolated and urnt,
as we learn from the si6teenth verse of the seventeenth chapter of the )pocal'pse.@ On
which words the 3esuit Erermann comments as follows8 =%e all confess with *ellarmine
Q1
that the Roman people, a little efore the end of the world, will return to pa#anism, and
drive out the Roman 5ontiff.@
&ie#as, on the ei#hteenth chapter of the )pocal'pse sa's8 =Rome, in the last a#e of the
world, after it has apostati"ed from the faith, will attain #reat power and splendor of
wealth, and its swa' will e widel' spread throu#hout the world, and flourish #reatl'. (ivin#
in lu6ur' and the aundance of all thin#s, it will worship idols, and e steeped in all !inds of
superstition, and will pa' honor to false #ods. )nd ecause of the vast effusion of the lood
of mart'rs which was shed under the emperors, .od will most severel' and Oustl' aven#e
them, and it shall e utterl' destro'ed, and urned ' a most terrile and afflictin#
confla#ration.@>iii?
%ith the forthcomin# election of 5etrus Romanus on ever'od'Ds mind and not 'et
!nowin# who the 7inal 5ope that leads Rome into destruction and #reat triulation
descried ' Catholic seers aove will actuall' e, we should remind readers of the
R4/'ear old code6 we uncovered in our oo! 5etrus Romanus Hthis oo! in 7rench and
En#lish comes free on the data +&+s that will e #iven awa' with E6o/&aticana / read
more hereI. $t was written ' 3esuit academic Rene Thiaut in 4FPQ and contains an
intri#uin# su##estion that the ne6t pope will either e named X5iusD or will
somehow e related to a pope of that name from the past. Commentin# on Oust one of
the hidden ana#rams he discovered in the 5rophec' of the 5opes, he oserves, =Note

that this wa' of dividin# the words to sort various meanin#s is a method dear to the
ancient $rish.@>iv? ) simple e6ample of an ana#ram is seen in the (atin te6t
=5ere#rinus apostolicus@>v? which was the prophec' for the ninet'/si6th pope on the list,
5ius &$. The ana#ram not onl' reveals the papal name, it does it twice8
5ere#$inUS a5ostol$cUS. ThatDs ri#htT The name =5ius@ is rather transparentl'
emedded in the ori#inal (atin te6t twice, which is rather astoundin# considerin# we have a
pulished cop' of the 5rophec' of the 5opes dated almost two hundred 'ears efore 5ius
&$ was elected. 7urthermore, Thiaut ar#ues the encr'pted couplet within =)postolic
pil#rim@ si#nifies oth 5ius &$ and the ver' ne6t pope 5ius &$$ who were oth forced
into forei#n e6ile Hi.e., pil#rimsI. He also su##ests that the repetition serves as a poetic
refrain. $n other words, =5iusT 5iusT@ is similar to the e6cited inar' =Ma'da', Ma'da'T@ that
sailors cr' out in dire circumstances.>vi?
%ith this in mind, we pointed readers last 'ear to the electrif'in# visions of another pope
named 5iusE5ope 5ius : who served as pope from 4F10 to 4F4N and who saw a papal
successor carr'in# the same name 5ius fleein# Rome over the odies of dead priests
at the onset of the end times. 5ius : is widel' reported to have said8
Q4
%hat $ have seen is terrif'in#T %ill $ e the one, or will it e a successorV %hat is certain
is that the 5ope will leave Rome and, in leavin# the &atican, he will have to pass over
the dead odies of his priestsT +o not tell an'one this while $ am alive.>vii?
$n a second vision durin# an audience with the 7ranciscan order in 4F1F, 5ope 5ius :
appeared to fall into a trance. )fter a few moments, he opened his e'es and rose to his feet,
announcin#8
$ have seen one of m' successors, of the same name >a future pope named 5ius?, who
was fleein# over the dead odies of his rethren. He will ta!e refu#e in some hidin#
placeG ut after a rief respite, he will die a cruel death. Respect for .od has
disappeared from human hearts. The' wish to efface even .odDs memor'. This
perversit' is nothin# less than the e#innin# of the last da's of the world.>viii?
The third part of the Secret of 7Ztima, which was supposedl' released in total ' the
&atican 3une ;R, ;111, seems to echo the visions of 5ius :. ) section of the material
reads8
Aefore reachin# there the Hol' 7ather passed throu#h a i# cit' half in ruins and half
tremlin# with haltin# step, afflicted with pain and sorrow, he pra'ed for the souls of
the corpses he met on his wa'G havin# reached the top of the mountain, on his !nees at the
foot of the i# Cross he was !illed ' a #roup of soldiers who fired ullets and arrows at
him, and in the same wa' there died one after another the other *ishops, 5riests,
men and women Reli#ious, and various la' people of different ran!s and positions.>i6?

The conceptual framewor! of these visions and their validit' is volatile amon# man'
Catholics who elieve Rome is complicit in an intentional cover/up involvin# the true Third
Secret of 7Ztima as well as other suppressed Catholic foresi#hts that are rife with wildl'
different predictions concernin# the future prophetic role of the Roman Catholic Church.
Marian apparitions, visions ' popes, interpretations ' cardinals of the apocal'pse, and
approved m'stical prophecies often stand at odds with recent &atican pulications. Even
the =Catechism of the Catholic Church@ approved ' the Church and promul#ated '
5ope 3ohn 5aul $$ Hreleased in En#lish in 4FFN, the first catechism in more than four
hundred 'earsI, which draws on the *ile, the mass, the sacraments, traditions, teachin#s,
and the lives of the saints, states under the section The ChurchDs Ultimate Trial8
R2P *efore ChristDs second comin# the Church must pass throu#h a final trial that will
sha!e the faith of man' elievers. The persecution that accompanies her pil#rima#e on
earth will unveil the m'ster' of iniMuit' in the form of a reli#ious deception offerin#
men an apparent solution to their prolems at the price of apostas' from the Truth. The
Q;
supreme reli#ious deception is that of the )ntichrist, a pseudo/messianism ' which man
#lorifies himself in the place of .od and his Messiah who has come in the flesh.>6?
Recent Catholic priests have confirmed these visions of destro'ed apostate Rome, some
pointin# to the conclave and the inevitale dan#er of the 7alse 5rophet risin# from within
the ran!s of Catholicism. These were also discussed in the ;14; oo!, 5etrus Romanus
as8
7ather E. S'lvester *err', whose oo! The )pocal'pse of Saint 3ohn foretold the
usurpation of the papac' ' a false prophetG 7ather Herman *ernard [ramer, whose wor!
The *oo! of +estin' painted a terrif'in# scenario in which Satan enters the church and
assassinates the true pope Hpossil' durin# conclaveI in order that his false pope can
rise to rule the worldG as well as similar eliefs ' priests li!e 7ather 3ohn 7. ODConnor,
7ather )lfred [un", and 7ather Malachi Martin.A $n a two/hour presentation Havailale on
+&+I, 7ather ODConnor #ave a homil' titled =The Rei#n of the )ntichrist,@ in which he
descried how chan#es within >the Roman Catholic? institution were alread' at wor!
efore his death to provide for the comin# of )ntichrist. Hrac!ets in ori#inalI>6i?
ODConnorDs worst fears have certainl' een reali"ed. )n associate of 5opes3ohn 5aul $$
and *enedict :&$ who is considered one of the most important Catholic theolo#ians of the
twentieth centur', Hans Urs von *althasar, wrote a provocative essa', =Casta Meretri6,@
H=Chaste Harlot@I that not onl' identified the Roman Catholic Church as the

.reat Harlot, ut emraced it8
The fi#ure of the prostitute >forma meretricis? is so appropriate for the ChurchAthat itA
defines the Church of the New Covenant in her most splendid m'ster' of
salvation. The fact that the S'na#o#ue left the Hol' (and to #o and e amon# the
pa#ans was an infidelit' of 3erusalem, the fact that =she opened her le#s in ever' road in
the world.@
*ut this same movement, which rin#s her to all the peoples, is the mission of the
Church. She must unite and mer#e herself with ever' people, and this new apostolic
form of union cannot e avoided.>6ii?
%hile the emrace of whoredom is astonishin#, the convictin# words of prophec', =Come
out of her, m' people, That 'e e not parta!ers of her sins, )nd that 'e receive not of her
pla#ues@ HRevelation 4Q8NI, seem to forecast such apostas'. $n the ne6t entr' we will re/
Q0
e6amine what was happenin# around the 7atima prophecies and whether 5ope *enedict
himselfEand the man that wants to e 5etrus RomanusE have, all alon#, held deep
secrets concernin# the upcomin# conclave toward world/ spannin# ramifications.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 40
*' Thomas R. Horn
March 4;, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
5ossil' at the center of the 5rophec' of the 5opes and a =&atican cover/up@ of the
complete vision of 7Ztima Hand related propheciesI is a potential papal contender for the
role of 5etrus Romanus or =5eter the Roman@ECardinal Tarcisio 5ietro H5eterI *ertone,
who was orn in Romano Hthe RomanI Canavese H=5eter the Roman@I.
)mon# other thin#s, Cardinal *ertone is, at the time E6o/&aticana heads to the
printer, second in command at the &atican. )s the Secretar' of State and the 5opeDs
Camerlen#o H$talian for =Chamerlain@I, he is
responsile durin# a papal vacanc' to serve as actin# Head of State of the &atican Cit'
until =thetime of a#reement@ and the election of a new pope. This means, if even onl'
for a few wee!s, a man whose name literall' means -5eter the Roman- will hold the most
powerful position at the &atican startin# in a few da's. Our interest for the moment is with
his ;112 oo!, The (ast Seer of 7Ztima that appears to have accomplished e6actl' the
opposite of its primar' oOective, mainl', to refute another wor! ' famous $talian
media personalit', Oournalist, and author )ntonio Socci, whose manuscript The 7ourth
Secret of 7Ztima claims the Hol' See has repressed information concernin# the true secrets
delivered in Marian apparitions to three shepherd children in the rural 5ortu#uese villa#e
of 7Ztima in 4F42. The three 'oun# people were (dcia
H(uc'I dos Santos and her cousins 7rancisco Marto and his sister 3acinta Marto,
whose visionsEcontainin# elements of prophec' and eschatolo#'Eare officiall'
QN
sanctioned ' the Catholic Church.
$n his uncharacteristicall' e6plosive response to Cardinal *ertoneE+ear Cardinal
*ertone8 %ho *etween <ou and Me is +elieratel' ('in#VEwe first discover how, after
si#nificant time and investi#ation, Mr. Socci concluded the &atican had withheld an important
part of the 7Ztima revelation durin# its celerated press conference and release of =The
Messa#e of 7Ztima,@ 3une ;R, ;111.

Socci descries in the introduction to his oo! how at first he trul' elieved the
&aticanDs official version of the 7Ztima Messa#e, prepared at that time ' Cardinal
Rat"in#er Hcurrent 5ope *enedict :&$I and Monsi#nor Tarcisio *ertone Hpossile ne6t
and final popeI, which with its release to the pulic claimed to e the final Secret.
Then Socci came across an article ' $talian Oournalist &ittorio Messori, entitled =The
7Ztima Secret, the Cell of Sister (uc' Has *een Sealed,@ and a series of Muestions cast
suspicions on the &aticanDs authori"ed pulication for which Socci had no answers. %h'
would Messori, whom Socci descries as =a #reat Oournalist, e6tremel' preciseAthe
most translated Catholic columnist in the world,@>i? want to challen#e the ChurchDs official
version of the Third Secret without #ood cause, he reasoned. Not lon# after, Socci came
across a second similar thesis pulished in $tal' ' a 'oun# and careful writer named
Solideo 5aolini, which convinced Socci to e#in a proe of his own focusin# on the
i##est Muestion of them allEwas a portion of (uc'Ds hand/written document, which
contained the principal words =of the *lessed &ir#in Mother@ concernin# end/times
conditions at Rome, ein# withheld from pulic view ' the &atican due to its potentiall'
e6plosive contentV
SocciDs suspicions onl' deepened after he reMuested an interview Hwell ahead of his wor!,
The 7ourth Secret of 7Ztima which later cast douts on RomeDs official stor'I with
Cardinal *ertone, who, to#ether with 3oseph Rat"in#er, had coauthored the 3une ;R, ;111
&atican document that purportedl' released the final se#ment of the =The Messa#e of
7Ztima.@>ii?
=$Dve searched man' influential authorities inside the Curia, li!e Cardinal *ertone, toda'
Secretar' of State in the &atican, who was central to the pulication of the Secret in
;111,@ Socci sa's. =The Cardinal, who actuall' favored me with his personal consideration,
havin# as!ed me to conduct conferences in his former diocese of .enoa, >now? didnDt
deem it necessar' to >even? answer m' reMuest for an interview. He was within his ri#hts
to ma!e this choice, of course, ut this onl' increased the fear of the e6istence of
emarrassin# Muestions, and most of all, that there is somethin# He6tremel'
importantI which needs to e !ept hidden.@>iii?
QP
Thou#h not e6pectin# to uncover such a colossal eni#ma, in the end Socci was left
convinced that two sets of the 7Ztima Secret actuall' e6ist8 one which the pulic has
seen, and another, which for reasons 'et un!nown, the &atican is !eepin# uried.
)t the e#innin# of this possile plot was a description of the Third Secret #iven '
Cardinal )n#elo Sodano a full five wee!s efore the 3une ;R, ;111 =Messa#e of
7Ztima@ was delivered ' Rome. SodanoDs comments came durin# 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$Ds
eautification of 3acinta and 7rancisco at 7Ztima, when he surprised man' in a speech,
sa'in# the vision of a =ishop clothed in white@ who ma!es his wa' with #reat effort past
the corpses of ishops, priests, and man' la' persons, is onl' =apparentl' dead@ when he
falls to the #round under a urst of #unfire.>iv?

Usin# the added lan#ua#e =apparentl' dead,@ Cardinal Sodano went on to su##est the
7Ztima vision had een fulfilled in the 4FQ4 assassination attempt a#ainst 3ohn 5aul $$. =$t
appeared evident to His Holiness that it was Xa motherl' hand which #uided the ulletDs
path,D enalin# the Xd'in# 5opeD to halt Xat the threshold of death.D@>v?
Thou#h some applauded SodanoDs presentation that da', others saw in it, and him, a
concerted cover/up, as the 7Ztima prophec' and the alle#ed fulfillment in 4FQ4 ore
si#nificant differences. The %ashin#ton 5ost was happ' to point out these #larin#
contradictions on 3ul' 4, ;111 when under the stin#in# headline, =Third Secret Spurs More
Kuestions8 7Ztima $nterpretation +eparts from &ision@ the newspaper opined8
On Ma' 40, Cardinal )n#elo Sodano, a top &atican official, announced the imminent
release of the carefull' #uarded te6t. He said the Third Secret of 7Ztima foretold not the
end of the world, as some had speculated, ut the Ma' 40, 4FQ4, shootin# of 5ope 3ohn
5aul $$ in St. 5eterDs SMuare.
Sodano said the manuscriptAtells of a =ishop clothed in white@ who, while ma!in# his
wa' amid corpses of mart'rs, =falls to the #round, apparentl' dead, under a urst of
#unfire.@
*ut the te6t released Monda' H3une ;RI leaves no dout aout the ishopDs fate,
sa'in# that he =was !illed ' a #roup of soldiers who fired ullets and arrows at him.@
Ever'one with the pontiff also dies8 ishops, priests, mon!s, nuns and la' people. 3ohn
5aul survived his shootin# at the hands of a sin#le #unman, Mehmet )li )#ca, and no one
in the crowd was harmed in the attac!. >vi?
QR
Other facts the %ashin#ton 5ost did not point out is how accordin# to the prophec' the
pope is !illed in =a i# cit' half in ruins@ while wal!in# to the top of a mountain and
!neelin# at the foot of a cross. 3ohn 5aul was ridin# in the popeDs car throu#h St. 5eterDs
sMuare, not wal!in#, there was no i# mountain or !neelin# at a cross, and the cit' was not
half/destro'ed. )nd then there is the contradictor' testimon' ' Cardinal Rat"in#er Hcurrent
5ope *enedict :&$I himself from 4FQN, which he #ave in an interview with the
5auline SistersD newsletter H3esus Ma#a"ineI and which was re/ pulished a 'ear later in
The Rat"in#er Report, titled =Here is %h' the 7aith is in Crisis.@ $n this discussion,
Rat"in#er, who had read the actual 7Ztima Secret, said the vision involved =dan#ers
threatenin# the faith and the life of the Christian and therefore >the life? of the
world@ as well as mar!in# the e#innin# of the end times.>vii? )dditionall', he said,
=the thin#s contained in >the? Third Secret correspond to what has een announced
in Scripture and has een said a#ain and a#ain in man' other Marian apparitions@ and
that, =$f it is not made pulic, at least for the time ein#, it is in order to prevent reli#ious
prophec' from ein# mista!en for a Muest for the sensational.@>viii?

Concerned Catholics have since contrasted this 4FQN testimon' with the more recent report
' Rat"in#er, and have wondered when, where, and under what circumstance his
account chan#ed. The 4FQ4 assassination attempt a#ainst 3ohn 5aul $$ certainl' did not
fulfill the pulished parts of the 7Ztima vision nor correspond to the =last times@ as
depicted in the *ile. )nd then there is the affirmation ' the &aticanDs most respected
scholars who had deduced from 'ears of stud'in# the 7Ztima prophec' that it
concerned an end/time #loal crisis of faith emanatin# from the hi#hest echelons at
Rome. Celerated Cardinal Mario (ui#i Ciappi H4F1FB4FFRI served as the personal
theolo#ian to five popes includin# 3ohn 5aul $$ and unreservedl' held that in =the
Third Secret it is foretold, amon# other thin#s, that the #reat apostas' in the Church
e#ins at the top@ Hemphasis addedI.>i6? Cardinal Silvio Oddi added in a March, 4FF1
interview with $l Saato ma#a"ine in Rome, $tal'8 =Athe Third Secret alluded to dar! times
for the Church8 #rave confusions and troulin# apostasies within Catholicism itselfA $f
we consider the #rave crisis we have lived throu#h since the >&atican $$? Council, the
si#ns that this prophec' has een fulfilled do not seem to e lac!in#.@>6? Even more
impressive in his testimon' was the late 7ather 3oaMuin )lonso who !new Sister (uc'
personall', had conversations with her, was for si6teen 'ears the archivist at 7Ztima, and
who efore his death in 4FQ4, stated the followin# concernin# the Third Secret8
Athe te6t ma!es concrete references to the crisis of faith within the Church and to the
ne#li#ence of the pastors themselves >and the? internal stru##les in the ver' osom of the
Church and of #rave pastoral ne#li#ence ' the upper hierarch'A terrile thin#s are to
happen. These form the content of the third part of the SecretA >and? li!e the secret of (a
Salette, for e6ample, there are more concrete references to the internal stru##les of
Catholics or to the fall of priests and reli#ious. 5erhaps it even refers to the failures of the
upper hierarch' of the Church. 7or that matter, none of this is forei#n to other
communications Sister (uc' has had on this suOect.>6i?
Q2
5erhaps most unvar'in# amon# those who actuall' had access to and read the
7Ztima messa#e was 3esuit Malachi Martin, a close personal friend of 5ope 5aul &$
who wor!ed within the Hol' See doin# research on the +ead Sea Scrolls, pulishin#
articles in Oournals on Semitic paleo#raph', and teachin# )ramaic, Herew, and Sacred
Scripture. )s a memer of the &atican )dvisor' Council and personal secretar' to
renowned 3esuit Cardinal )u#ustin *ea, Martin had privile#ed information pertainin# to
secretive church and world issues, includin# the Third Secret of 7Ztima, which
Martin hinted spelled out parts of the plan to formerl' install the dreaded 7alse
5rophet H5etrus RomanusVI durin# a =7inal Conclave.@ Comparin# the conflictin#
statements etween Cardinal Rat"in#er and Malachi

Martin, 7ather Charles 7iore, a #ood friend of the murdered priest )lfred 3. [un"
Hdiscussed elsewhere in this oo!I and the late eminent theolo#ian 7r. 3ohn Hardon, said in
a taped interview8 =%e have two different Cardinal Rat"in#ersG we have two different
messa#es. *ut Malachi Martin was consistent all the wa' throu#h.@>6ii?
%i!ipediaDs entr' on the Three Secrets of 7Ztima adds8
On a s'ndicated radio roadcast, 7ather Malachi Martin was as!ed the followin#
Muestion ' a caller8 =$ had a 3esuit priest tell me more of the Third Secret of 7Ztima
'ears a#o, in 5erth. He said, amon# other thin#s, the last pope would e under control of
SatanA )n' comment on thatV@ 7r. Martin responded, =<es, it sounds as if the' were
readin#, or ein# told, the te6t of the Third Secret.@ $n a taped interview with *ernard
3an"en, 7r. Martin was as!ed the followin# Muestion8 =%ho are the people who are
wor!in# so hard to suppress 7ZtimaV@ 7r. Martin responded, =) unch, a whole unch, of
Catholic prelates in Rome, who elon# to Satan. The'Dre servants of Satan. )nd the
servants of Satan outside the Church, in various or#ani"ationsG the' want to destro' the
Catholicism of the Church, and !eep it as a staili"in# factor in human affairs. $tDs an
alliance. ) dirt' alliance, a filth' alliance...@ $n the same interview, 7r. Martin also said
with respect to (ucia >(uc' of 7Ztima? that, =The'Dve HThe &aticanI pulished for#ed letters
in her nameG the'Dve made her sa' thin#s she didnDt want to sa'. The' put statements on
her lips she never made.@>6iii?
One thin# is certainG somethin# unnervin# did seem to e happenin# around and with Sister
(uc' in the lead/up to the release of the so/called 7inal Secret. )fter all, the first two parts
of the Messa#e of 7Ztima had een pulicall' issued ' her *ishop in 4FN4, and the
Third Secret sent to the Hol' See with instructions that it e made pulic in
4FR1. That 'ear was chosen accordin# to (uc' ecause the =Hol' Mother@ had
revealed to her that it would then e when =the Messa#e will appear more clear.@ )nd lo
and ehold it was immediatel' followin# 4FR1 that &atican $$ set in motion what man'
conservative Catholics toda' elieve is a crisis of faith in the form of Roman heresies.
QQ
)nd thou#h there could have een much more to the revelation than Oust a &atican $$
warnin#, and the Secret was not released in 4FR1 as it was supposed to e
an'wa' Hso we ma' never !nowI, when 5ope 3ohn ::$$$ read the contents of the
secret, he refused to pulish it, and it remained under loc! and !e' until it was
supposedl' disclosed in the 'ear ;111. $f the first two Secrets were an' indication of the
scope and accurac' of the Third one, the' had een ama"in#l' insi#htful includin# the
=miracle of the sun@ that was witnessed =' over 21,111 persons Hincludin# non/ elievers
hopin# to dispel the apparitionsI, where' the sun itself >seemed to e? dislod#ed from
its settin# and performed miraculous maneuvers while emittin# astonishin# li#ht displa'sG the
end of %orld %ar $G the name of the pope who would e rei#nin# at the e#innin# of
%orld %ar $$G the e6traordinar' heavenl' phenomenon that would e witnessed
worldwide foretellin# of the e#innin# of %orld %ar $$G the ascendance of Russia Ha wea!
and insi#nificant nation in 4F42I to
an evil monolithic power that would afflict the world with sufferin# and death.@>6iv?

*ut somethin# aout the Third and 7inal Secret was different, a phenomenon
evidentl' to e avoided and ofuscated at all costs ' the hierarch' of Rome. )t a
minimum, it spo!e of the apostati"in# of the cler#' and do#ma that followed &atican $$.
)nd 'et perhaps these were simpl' devices to lead to somethin# more sinister,
elements so dar! that it was !eepin# (uc' awa!e at ni#ht. %hen she finall' had
written down the Secret in 4FNN under oedience to Rome, she had a hard time doin# so
ecause of its terrif'in# contents. $t had ta!en a fresh visit from the =Hol' Mother@ herself to
convince (uc' it was o!a'. Then in the 'ears followin#, she had een ordered ' the
&atican to remain silent concernin# its disclosure. &isits to her for hours at a time were
made ' Cardinal *ertone under orders from the pope durin# which the two of them
would #o over the diminutive aspects of the vision in private. This happened in ;111, a#ain
in ;114, and a#ain in ;110. %hen at a#e ninet'/seven the Carmelite nun finall' passed
awa' H;11PI, ta!in# whatever secrets remained with her to the #rave, her ehavior at the
last seemed odd to Catholics who understood Roman doctrinal =salvation@ implications.
)ntonio Socci comments on this, pointin# out how the lon# visits with the a#ed seer
were not videotaped or recorded for posterit' ecause viewers would have seen for
themselves the ps'cholo#ical pressure that was ein# e6erted on the cloistered Sister.
=These thou#hts came ac! to m' mind while $ was readin# a passa#e of *ertoneDs
oo!, in which the Cardinal rememers that at one point the seer was XirritatedD, and
she told him X$Dm not #oin# to confessionTD@ )out this, Socci wonders, =%hat !ind of
Muestion could Sister (uc' answer to so stron#l'V Ma'e someone was remindin#
the old Sister of the ecclesiastical power, and hintin# that she would Xnot #et
asolutionDV %e donDt !now, ecause the prelate >*ertone?Ewho !nows and rememers
the SisterDs HMuite tou#hI answer ver' wellEsa's he literall' Xfor#otD what his Muestion
was.@>6v?
$t appears in truth that poor (uc' was trapped inside a sinister rin# of Romanita OmertC
Siciliani or =Mafia Code of Silence@ imposed ' Rome. <et Socci elieves the full truth of
QF
7Ztima ma' have #otten out an'wa', and ased on his investi#ation he offers a rave
theor' in his oo! The 7ourth Secret of 7Ztima aout what actuall' transpired in ;111
ehind the &aticanDs walls. 3ohn &ennari summari"es SocciDs shoc!in# h'pothesis this
wa'8
Socci elieves that when 3ohn 5aul $$ decided to release the Secret, a power/stru##le of
sorts erupted in the &atican. He postulates that 3ohn 5aul $$ and Cardinal
Rat"in#er wanted to release the Secret in its entiret', ut Cardinal Sodano, then
&atican Secretar' of State, opposed the idea. )nd opposition from a &atican Secretar' of
State is formidale.
) compromise was reached that sadl' reveals heroic virtue from none of the main
pla'ers.
The =*ishop dressed in white@ vision, which is the four pa#es written ' Sister (uc'
would e initiall' revealed ' Cardinal Sodano, alon# with his ludicrous

interpretation that the Secret is nothin# more than the predicted 4FQ4 assassination
attempt on 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$.
)t the same time, at the Ma' 40 ;111 eatification ceremon' of 3acinta and
7rancisco, 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$ would =reveal@ the other partEthe most =terrif'in#
part@Eof the Secret oliMuel' in his sermon. $t was here that 3ohn 5aul $$ spo!e on the
)pocapl'se8 =)nother portent appeared in HeavenG ehold, a #reat red dra#on@ H)poc. 4;8
0I. These words from the first readin# of the Mass ma!e us thin! of the #reat stru##le
etween #ood and evil, showin# how, when man puts .od aside, he cannot achieve
happiness, ut ends up destro'in# himselfA The Messa#e of 7Ztima is a call to conversion,
alertin# humanit' to have nothin# to do with the =dra#on@ whose =tail swept down a third of
the stars of Heaven, and dra##ed them to the earth@ H)poc.
4;8NI.
The 7athers of the Church have alwa's interpreted the stars as the cler#', and the
stars swept up in the dra#onDs tail indicates a #reat numer of churchmen who would e
under the influence of the devil. This was 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$Ds wa' of e6plainin# that the
Third Secret also predicts a #reat apostas'.>6vi?
F1
$f Socci is correct in this anal'sis, *ishop Richard Nelson %illiamson, an En#lish
traditionalist Catholic and memer of the Societ' of St. 5ius : who opposes chan#es in the
Catholic Church rou#ht on ' &atican $$, ma' have verified his h'pothesis in
;11P when he related how a priest acMuaintance of his from )ustria shared privatel' that
Cardinal Rat"in#er had confessed8 =$ have two prolems on m' conscience8 )rchishop
(efevre and 7Ztima. )s to the latter, m' hand was forced.@ %ho could have =forced@
Rat"in#erDs hand to #o alon# with a false or partial statement on the final 7Ztima
SecretV %as it pressure from the papal office, or, as %illiamson Muestions, =Some
hidden power ehind oth 5ope and CardinalV@>6vii? $f 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$Ds sermon at
7Ztima did in fact spea! to the =terrif'in# part@ of the 7inal SecretEas in the +ra#onDs
tail sweepin# down a third of the cler#' to do his iddin#E we are left with the unsettlin#
impression that at least 00 percent HMasonic mar!erI of the &aticanDs hierarch' are
committed to a Satanic 5lan.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 4N
*' Thomas R. Horn
March 42, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
Most people are proal' unaware that in addition to the Secrets of 7Ztima, a second,
most renowned Marian apparition from (a Salette, 7rance,
which was approved ' 5opes 5ius $: and (eo :$$$, revealed
analo#ous informationaout a crisis of faith that would transpire within Roman
Catholicism in the last da's, durin#
which Rome would ecome the seat of the )ntichrist.
F4
+elivered to MJlanie Calvat and Ma6imin .iraud on Septemer 4F, 4QNR,
while the' tended cattle in the mountains, the Secret of (a Salette reads in part8
The earth will e struc! ' calamities of all !inds Hin addition to pla#ue and famine which
will e wide/spreadI. There will e a series of wars until the last war, which will then
e fou#ht ' the ten [in#s of the )ntichrist, all of whom will
have one and the same plan and will e the onl' rulers of the world. *efore this comes to
pass, there will e a !ind of false peace in the world. 5eople will thin! of nothin# ut
amusement. The wic!ed will #ive themselves over to all !inds of sinAthis will e the hour
of dar!ness. The Church will suffer a terrile crisisA Rome will lose the 7aith and
ecome the seat of the )ntichristA The Church will e in eclipse, the world
will e in disma'.>i?
$n The 5lot )#ainst The 5opeG Coup dJDtat in the ConclaveB4FPQ, .ar' .iuffrJ
discusses how 7rench Masonic influences who had infiltrated the Catholic cler#' in the
4Q11s were wor!in# overtime to suppress and discredit the Secret of (a Salette, even
thou#h its messa#e had een officiall' favored ' two popes. This was ecause at that
time, prophetic references to Rome =ecomin# the seat of )ntichrist@ was formin# a
common eschatolo#' amon# Catholic scholars li!e Cardinal Henr' Mannin#
Hdiscussed elsewhere in this oo!I, *ishop Salvator .rafen cola, and 7rederic!
%illiam Helle, who saw in these predictions the wor! of Masonicall' infested cler#'
who plotted the overthrow of the papac' and the use of the Church as a political vehicle
for an occult %orld Order. =These !inds of details, found in the #enuine, modern/da',
Marian prophecies, would alwa's #enerate the #reatest opposition from the ChurchDs
enemies who had infiltrated her structures,@ wrote

.iuffrJ. =7or the' threatened to e6pose the satanic plot and lon#/time #oal of the
Masonic (od#eDs a#ents in the &atican, to usurp and control the papal chair.@>ii?
)nd it has to e rememered that the specter of infiltration of the Roman Catholic
hierarch' ' memers of 7reemasonr'Ds luciferian =li#ht earers@ was a fairl' well/
estalished a#enda historicall', one which 5ope 5ius $: called the =S'na#o#ue of
Satan.@ 5ope (eo :$$$ went so far as to issue a damnin# enc'clical HHumanum .enusI on
)pril ;1, 4QQN a#ainst the efforts to invade and corrupt Roman Catholicism '
7reemasons, and 'et (eoDs own Secretar' of State, Cardinal Mariano Rampolla del
Tindaro was later identified as a secret 7reemason of the diaolical Ordo Templi Orientis
HO.T.O.I sect of whom Satanist )leister Crowle' elon#ed and later ecame leader.
%hen 5ope (eo passed awa' in 4F10, it was widel' anticipated that Rampolla would
replace him as pope, and Rampolla did receive the earl' votes durin# conclave. Then
somethin# e6traordinar' happened, and the allotin# was interrupted when 5rince 3an
F;
Maur'c' 5awel 5u"'na de [osiels!o, a 5olish Roman Catholic Cardinal from [ra!ew,
rose on ehalf of his Soverei#n, Emperor 7ran" 3oseph of )ustria, and shoc!ed the
asseml' ' declarin# in (atin, =Aofficiall' and in the name and ' the authorit' of 7ran"/
3osef, Emperor of )ustria and [in# of Hun#ar', that His MaOest', in virtue of an ancient
ri#ht and privile#e, pronounces the veto of e6clusion a#ainst m' Most Eminent (ord,
Cardinal Mariano Rampolla del Tindaro.@>iii?
This 3us E6clusivf H=ri#ht of e6clusion@ or papal vetoI was an ancient rule of order
claimed ' Catholic monarchs to veto a candidate for the papac'. =)t times the ri#ht was
claimed ' the 7rench monarch, the Spanish monarch, the Hol' Roman Emperor,
and the Emperor of )ustria. These powers would ma!e !nown to a papal conclave,
throu#h a crown/cardinal, that a certain candidate for election was considered
oOectionale as a prospective 5ope.@>iv? $t has since een su##ested ' some historians
that the alert Emperor 7ran" 3oseph !new somethin# of RampollaDs masonic connection
and saved Rome from usurpation. $t is also noteworth' that the official (ier ($$ Manifesto
of the O.T.O. *)5HOMET :$g does indeed list Cardinal Rampolla amon# its memers.>v?
*ut was Rampolla Oust one of man' covert MasonsV The answer to that Muestion appears
to e 'es accordin# to e6perts li!e the late Canadian naval officer, author, and popular
lecturer %illiam 3ames .u' Carr. $n addition to his accounts of wartime activit' as a
Navi#atin# Sumarine Officer durin# %orld %ar One, CarrEthou#h a conspirac' theoristE
was a noted authorit' on the histor' of the $lluminati and its connection to
7reemasonr'. He chronicled the movement from its foundin# in 422R ' )dam %eishaupt
to its purported penetration of the &atican. $n 4FPF, Carr pulished The Red 7o# Over
)merica, in which he said8
%eishaupt oasted that the $lluminati would infiltrate into the &atican and ore from within,
until the' left it nothin# ut an empt' shellA Since $ e6posed certain events which
indicate that a#entur of the $lluminati have infiltrated into the &atican, $ have received a
numer of letters from priests who have studied in the &aticanA Those who wrote
assured me that the fears $ e6press are more than well founded. One priest

informed me that the 5ope was surrounded ' pic!ed =Specialists@, =E6perts@ and
=)dvisors@ to such an e6tent that he was little etter than a prisoner in his own
palace. )nother priest informed me of the eternal surveillance e6ercised over the 5opeA
those who maintain the surveillanceA#ive him no freedom of action even in the privac'
of his own chamers. The priest said XThose who e6ercise this surveillance are all hand/
pic!ed memers of a certain order and the' all come from the same institutionAwhere
%eishauptAconspired.D@>vi?
CarrDs description matches so closel' to what Malachi Martin and similar priests have
alle#ed on different occasions concernin# a formidale $lluminati/Masonic #roup inside
the &atican that it is temptin# to elieve Malachi himself ma' have een one of CarrDs
F0
informants. *ut was this $lluminated council the unseen hand in Rome that =forced@
Cardinal Rat"in#er H5ope *enedictI and Cardinal *ertone to issue what )ntonio Socci
thou#ht was astu"ia in#anno Hcunnin# deceptionI at 7ZtimaV )nd would this indicate oth
the current pope and his Secretar' of State are clandestinel' committed to, or ein# forced
to #o alon# with, the overarchin# scheme of a secret order inside the Hol' SeeV
The solidarit' etween 5ope *enedict and Cardinal *ertone #oes ac! a lon# wa' and it
certainl' appears to have continuedEat least for the first few 'ears of *enedictDs papac'E
in the time followin# the =Messa#e of 7Ztima@controvers'. )fter ein# elected pope
in )pril, ;11P and ta!in# his place as successor of 3ohn 5aul $$ as Soverei#n of the
&atican Cit' State and leader of the Roman Catholic Church, Rat"in#er as =5ope
*enedict :&$@ Muic!l' appointed Cardinal *ertone to replace 7Ztima co/conspirator
)n#elo Sodano as the Cardinal Secretar' of State. On )pril N, ;112, *enedict also
appointed *ertone as his Camerlen#o
to administrate the dut' of the 5ope in the case of a vacanc' of the papac'. *enedict has
since made decisions that indicate *ertone could e Hor once wasI his choice for
successor, and oth men have at times appeared to e stac!in# and massa#in# the
Red Hats in *ertoneDs favor for the ne6t HfinalVI conclave. This was noted in the Ma'
40, ;144 National Catholic Reporter article, =) Tript'ch on *enedictDs 5apac', and Hints
of %hat (ies *e'ond,@ when NCR Senior Correspondent 3ohn (. )llen 3r. spo!e of
the sha!e/up inside the Roman Curia Hthe Curia is the administrative apparatus of the
&atican and, to#ether with the pope, the central #overnin# od' of the Catholic
ChurchI in which $talian )rchishop .iovanni )n#elo *ecciu was
appointed the Sustitute for .eneral )ffairs ' 5ope *enedict :&$. *ecciu, who
replaced )rchishop 7ernando 7iloni for the Oo, seemed at first an odd selection to &atican
insiders. =.iven how difficult it is to master the role >of Sustitute?, man' oservers found
it curious that 7iloni would e shipped out after less than four 'ears, to e replaced '
someone in *ecciu who has no previous e6perience at all wor!in#

inside the &atican,@ oserved the NCR.>vii? *ut then the nail was hit on the head
when the news service added, =%hen the dust settles, the most ovious eneficiar' of
these moves would seem to e $talian Cardinal Tarcisio *ertone, the Secretar' of State,
who will not have to e concerned aout the new sustitute formin# a rival center of
power.@>viii?
The Oo of the Sustitute for .eneral )ffairs has een descried as the most
complicated and demandin# responsiilit' in the Roman Curia due to the sta##erin#
amount of concerns the Sustitute must carr' on a dail' asis. Rou#hl' compared to a
%hite House Chief of Staff, the Sustitute meets with the 5ontiff usuall' once per da' to
administer &atican affairs and also re#ularl' reports to the Cardinal Secretar' of State
Hcurrentl' Cardinal *ertoneI. The or#ani"ational =success or failure of a papac' often rests
FN
on his shoulders,@ adds the NCR. )nd those who have handled the office well over the
'ears =have een the stuff of le#end8 .iovanni *attista Montini, for instance, was the
sustitute under 5ius :$$ from 4F02 to 4FP0, and went on to ecome 5ope 5aul &$G .iovanni
*enelli, who was 5aulDs own sustitute from 4FR2 to 4F22, was widel' understood to e the
power ehind the throne@ Hemphasis addedI.>i6?
Of course, Oust when we thou#ht it couldnDt #et an' more ovious, anotherEand this time
unprecedentedEmove to consolidate his power Hand which also raises the Muestion
of a third contender for the throne of St. 5eterI was made ' *ertone himself. $t
followed the Octoer ;N, ;144, document, =Toward Reformin# the $nternational
7inancial and Monetar' S'stems in the Conte6t of a .loal 5ulic )uthorit',@ which
amounted to a call ' the &atican for a %orld 5olitical and 7inancial )uthorit'.
5ulished ' the 5ontifical Council for 3ustice and 5eace, which is headed ' Cardinal
5eter Tur!son, the media was Muic!Einside and outside Christianit'Eto see the dar!
side of socialism raisin# its head, not to mention prophetic implications of the paperDs
call for a .loal )uthorit' seated inside the United Nations. $n a different chapter we
e6plain how this new unsettlin# directive attempts to devise a =moral@ mandate for
estalishin# =a #loal pulic authorit'@ and =a central world an!@ that would oversee
individual and world pecuniar' institutions throu#h suOu#ation to a new #loal power made
=at the cost of a #radual, alanced transfer of a part of each nationDs powers to a
world authorit' and to re#ional authorities@ Hemphasis addedI.>6ii? The document was
addressed at the ;144 .;1
Summit in Cannes in comments ' 5resident *arac! Oama and 7rench 5resident
Nicholas Sar!o"', ut nothin# came of it there due to what Cardinal *ertone did Oust ten
da's later. )nd this is where thin#s start #ettin# interestin#, as some soothsa'ers were
alread' predictin# that the author of the document, 5eter Tur!son of .hana H5eter the
RomanVI could e the ne6t pope, as he is considered papaile ' the Colle#e of
Cardinals.
7ollowin# the election of )mericaDs first lac! president in Oama, anal'sts around the
world e#an speculatin# that perhaps Rome would follow suit and roll out the red carpet for
a lac! pope, the first in fifteen hundred 'ears, in someod' li!e Tur!son.

Cardinal 7rancis )rin"e, whom Ronald (. Conte 3r. elieves will e the ne6t pope and fulfill
=The 5rophec' of the 5opes@ ' ta!in# the name 5ius :$$$, is also a lac! man, an $#o
Ni#erian considered papaile since efore the ;11P conclave that elected Cardinal
Rat"in#er H5ope *enedict :&$I. =The election of *arac! Oama as the first )frican/
)merican US 5resident could pave the wa' for the election of >a? lac! 5ope, accordin# to a
leadin# lac! )merican Catholic,@ wrote the Times Online in ;11Q. =%ilton +aniel
.re#or', R1, the )rchishop of )tlanta, said that in the past 5ope *enedict :&$ had
himself su##ested that the election of a lac! pontiff would Xsend a splendid si#nal to the
worldD aout the universal Church.@>6iii? The )ssociated 5ress a#reed. =The pope has
appointed Cardinal 5eter Tur!son of .hana to head the &aticanDs Oustice and peace
FP
office, a hi#h/profile post that cements his reputation as a possile future papal
candidateA Tur!son told reporters there was no reason there couldnDt e a lac!
pope, particularl' after *arac! Oama was elected U.S. president.@>6iv? .iven that
Tur!son is popular in some circles, here is how the National Catholic Reporter
heralded the release of his document on Reformin# the $nternational 7inancial and
Monetar' S'stems in their Octoer ;Q, ;144, headline8 ) 5apal Contender .ras the
Spotli#ht8
Rome saw a stri!in# coincidence this wee!, which could e either simple luc! or a si#n
of thin#s to come. There were two i#/tic!et &atican news flashes, Monda'Ds note on reform
of the international econom' and Thursda'Ds summit of reli#ious leaders in )ssisi. $n oth
cases, the same &atican official was a prime mover8 Cardinal 5eter Tur!son of .hana,
president of the 5ontifical Council for 3ustice and 5eace.
Tur!son, still 'oun# in church terms at R0, was the chief or#ani"er of the )ssisi
#atherin#, Oust as he was the top si#nator' on the document lastin# =neo/lieral@
ideolo#ies and callin# for a =true world political authorit'@ to re#ulate the econom'.
+urin# &atican press conferences to present oth, Tur!son was the star attraction each
time.
Can an'one sa', papaileV>6v?
Onl' a wee! followin# the National Catholic Reporter celeration, however, and
onl' ten da's after Tur!son released his document callin# for a #loal financial
authorit', an emer#enc' summit at the &atican was called 'A'ou #uessed itAthe
Secretariat of StateECardinal Tarcisio *ertone. )nd this time he wasnDt ta!in#
an' prisoners. *ertone lasted the document ' Tur!son and laid down a new set of
laws. 7rom that da' forward, he ordered, an' new &atican te6t would have to e
authori"ed in advance ' himself. The popular Chiesa News in Rome said of the power
pla'8

5recisel' when the .;1 summit in Cannes was comin# to its wea! and uncertain
conclusion, on that same 7rida', Novemer N at the &atican, asmaller summit
convened in the secretariat of stateA $n the hot seat was the >Tur!son? document on the
#loal financial crisis released ten da's earlier ' the pontifical council for Oustice and
peaceA The secretar' of state, Cardinal Tarcisio *ertone, complained that he had not
!nown aout it until the last moment. )nd precisel' for this reason he had called that
meetin# in the secretariat of state. The conclusion of the summit was that this indin#
order would e transmitted to all of the offices of the curia8 from that point on, nothin# in
writin# would e released unless it had een inspected and authori"ed ' the secretariat of
state.>6vi?
FR
%hile *ertone convinced some &atican watchers that his overreachin# motives had to do
with protectin# the Hol' See from confusion ' claimin# that he had een in the dar! and
thus side/swiped ' the release of the document Ha case Chiesa News thorou#hl'
deun!edI, others saw in it another #iant step in *ertone carefull' solidif'in# his
powerase in Rome. The' also ima#ined that old enem' the 7reemasons havin#
somethin# to do with it. =$t would seem that the dar! forces in the &atican are ma!in#
their moves to sei"e control of the Catholic Church,@ wrote Catholic 3ew )ron *en
.ilad. =The' are usin# the recent document of the 5ontifical Council of 3ustice and
5eace on the #loal financial crisis as the e6cuse to sei"e autocratic control of all the
con#re#ations of the curia and puttin# them under the control of Cardinal *ertone and the
&aticanDs Secretariat of State.
%hatever the merits or demerits of this document is not the important Muestion, ut its use
as an instrument for ecclesiastical masonr' to ta!e control of the Roman Curia@
Hemphasis addedI.>6vii? Top &atican watcher and Oournalist )ndrea Tornielli had stated as
much earlier, documentin# how *ertone had een consolidatin# his influence in the
&atican8
Athrou#h a numer of actions8 he appointed ishops who are well !nown to him and friends
in !e' roles, especiall' in positions involvin# the mana#ement and control of the Hol'
SeeDs finances. The last individual appointed, was the *ishop of )le6andria .iuseppe
&ersaldinew, to the position of 5resident of the 5refecture for Economic )ffairs of the Hol'
SeeA On the other hand, *ertone has done awa' with prelates who had moved a#ainst
him in some wa' or another, such as )rchishop Carlo Maria &i#anh, who had left the
.overnment office to ecome Nuncio HamassadorI to the United States, or *ishop
&incen"o di Mauro, who left the Office of Economic )ffairs to ecome )rchishop of
&i#evano.>6viii?
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 4P
*' Thomas R. Horn
F2
March ;1, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
) few 'ears a#o one could have thou#ht with some certaint' that Cardinal -5eter the
Roman- *ertone would e a shoo/in for 5etrus Romanus. However, as we move into
;140, crac!s have appeared in the foundation of his sand castle, and not ever'od'
in the CuriaEincludin# former 5ope *enedict :&$, himselfEma' e as ea#er to support
him as the' once were.
)s 5ope *enedict stepped down li!e these authors predicted he would, claims of
mismana#ement ' *ertone have surfaced in Rome, lea!ed from competin# factions
in the Church that are more than happ' to sei"e opportunit' to cast aspersion on his
leadership in order to elevate their own standin# amon# the Colle#e of Cardinals. This
ma' include )rchishop &i#ano, whose personal letters to 5ope *enedict and Cardinal
*ertone concernin# his reassi#nment as Nuncio
were partiall' roadcast ' an $talian television news pro#ram in 3anuar' ;14;. The letters,
confirmed ' the &atican as authentic, e6posed a listerin# relationship etween
himself and *ertone involvin# political Ooc!e'in# and financial deal ma!in# includin#
char#es of =corruption, nepotism and cron'ism lin!ed to the awardin# of
contracts to contractors at inflated prices.@>i? Most &atican sources a#ree that an
internal campai#n involvin# Machiavellian manipulation and maneuverin#sEwhat 5hillip
5ullella for Reuters called =a sort of Xmutin' of the monsi#norsD@>iii?Ehas een pla'in# out
ehind the scenes a#ainst *ertone. The same sources sa' =the reels have the tacit
ac!in# of a former secretar' of state, Cardinal )n#elo Sodano, an influential power/
ro!er in his own ri#ht and a veteran diplomat who served under the late 5ope
3ohn 5aul $$ for 4P 'ears.@>iv?
$f Sodano trul' is ehind a campai#n to undermine papal possiilities for *ertone,
suspicions deepen that somethin# ma' e lin#erin# etween 7Ztima cover/up conspirators
Rat"in#er, *ertone, and Sodano, as the reader mi#ht recall )ntonio SocciDs elief that
when 3ohn 5aul $$ decided to release the Third Secret of 7Ztima, a power/stru##le of
sorts erupted in the &atican when future 5ope *enedict :&$ HCardinal Rat"in#erI
wanted to release the Secret in its entiret', ut Cardinal Sodano, then &atican Secretar' of
State, opposed the idea. %hatever the case ma' e, the 3anuar' ;R, ;14; headline at
The New <or! Times said it all8 =Transfer of &atican

Official %ho E6posed Corruption Hints at 5ower Stru##le,@>v? and echoed the fact that,
Oust li!e in )merican presidential politics, toda'Ds risin# star at the &atican can all/to/soon
FQ
ecome crushed under the Ou##ernaut of amitious and motivated men if one does not
vi#ilantl' maintain ever' it as much cunnin# as their challen#ers.
Other duious movements in Rome also verified a #ame was afoot. This includes a hast'
appointment on 3anuar' 44, ;14;, ' 5ope *enedict :&$ of another $talian, )rchishop
(oren"o *aldisseri, as the new secretar' of the Con#re#ation for *ishops Hthe ranch of
the Roman Curia that oversees the selection of new ishopsI. *aldisseri is
intri#uin# ecause his 5rincipal Consecrator durin# his 4FR0 ordination was *ertone
predecessor and 7Ztima deception accomplice, Cardinal )n#elo Sodano. )nd *aldisseriDs
ordination to priesthood occurred 3une ;F, 4FR0, ei#ht HQI da's after .iovanni Montini H5ope
5aul &$I was elected. This is interestin# on two levels. 7irst, the numer ei#ht HQI is
associated with destin', divinit', occult fertilit' rites, resurrection, and the incarnation
of 3esus HQQQI, as an' *ishop of Rome !nows. *ut more importantl', the e6act date of
*aldisseriDs ordinationE3une ;F, 4FR0Eis the ver' da' on which Malachi Martin swore
the =enthronement of the fallen )rchan#el (ucifer@ too! place in the Roman Catholic
Citadel. This rituale, as Martin had called it, had two primar' oOectives8 4I to enthrone
(ucifer as the true 5rince over RomeG and ;I to assure the sorcerous inception and
emodiment in flesh of that immaterial spirit into a priest was made, one who would later
ecome 5etrus Romanus.
$n his oo!, %indswept House, Martin wrote8
The Enthronement of the 7allen )rchan#el (ucifer was effected within the Roman
Catholic Citadel on 3une ;F, 4FR0G a fittin# date for the historic promise aout to e
fulfilled. )s the principal a#ents of this Ceremonial well !new, Satanist tradition had lon#
predicted that the Time of the 5rince would e ushered in at the moment when a 5ope
would ta!e the name of the )postle 5aul >5ope 5aul &$?. That reMuirementEthe si#nal that
the )vailin# Time had e#unEhad een accomplished Oust ei#ht da's efore with the
election of the latest 5eter/in/the/(ine.>vi?
The i# prolem with *aldisseri is that he does not 'et appear papaile, so his role ma'
e coincidental or that of a carrier collaorator, for the m'ster' of the 4FR0 conclave,
which e#an 3une 4F and ended 3une ;4 with the election of 5ope 5aul &$, carries a
secret most in the pulic are completel' unaware of ut that Malachi Martin most
coura#eousl' too! on. $t is called in investi#ative circles, =The Siri Thesis,@ and involves
whispered evidence that Cardinal .iuseppe Siri of .enoa actuall' received the maOorit'
vote in oth the 4FPQ and 4FR0 conclaves ut under m'sterious pressure Hpresumal' from
Masonic influencesI refused the papal office. %hen as!ed twent' 'ears later if in oth
conclaves he had initiall' een elected as pontiff, Siri responded, =$ am ound ' the
secret. This secret is horrile. $ would have oo!s to write aout the different conclaves.
&er' serious thin#s have ta!en place. *ut $ can sa' nothin#.@>vii? Malachi Martin
wasnDt so silent. He claimed to e an e'e/witness of the
FF

4FR0 Conclave and in his oo!, The [e's of This *lood, said that Siri was in fact
elected pope in oth 4FPQ and 4FR0, ut that his election was =set aside@ ecause of
=interference@ ' an =emissar' of an internationall' ased or#ani"ation@ Hthe 7reemasonsI.
>viii? .iven that our estsellin# oo!, 5etrus Romanus8 The 7inal 5ope is Here, is ased
in part on the prophec' attriuted to St. Malach' called =The 5rophec' of the 5opes,@
we would e remiss not to also point out how, in 4FPQ, the inevitailit' of SiriDs election
was elieved so stron#l' that in $tal', =the prophes' of Saint Malach', descriin# 5iusD
successor as XShepherd and SailorD >L412 in the 5rophec' of the 5opes? H5astor et
NautaI, was commonl' attriuted to the illustrious )rchishop of .enoa >Siri?. The maritime
cit' had een his life/lon# home, where he was orn the son of a doc!wor!er. $t was the
most important seaport in the countr', and irthplace of Christopher Columus. ) .enoan
newspaper would write8 XNo one etter than Siri could s'moli"e this motto8 he is a pastor
of hi#hest virtues, a captain of the ship, orn and raised on the sea.D@>i6?
So how and for what purpose could the election of Siri have een set aside and
covered up so completel'V %illiam .. von 5eters, 5h.+., e6plains in The Siri Thesis8
Most Catholics toda', simpl' cannot comprehend wh' or how such a crime could have
een so successfull' carried out almost undetected ' the outside world, with the active
participation of hi#h princes of the Church, over the span of a #eneration, as alle#ed '
the =Siri thesis@. Surel' such a lon#, drawn/out conspirac' would e e'ond the ailit'
of even the most evil of men. *ut 401 'ears a#o, 5ope 5ius $: e6plained that8 =$f one
ta!es into consideration the immense development which >the?Asecret societies have
attainedG the len#th of time the' are perseverin# in their vi#orG their furious
a##ressivenessG the tenacit' with which their memers clin# to the association and to
the false principles it professesG the perseverin# mutual
cooperation of so man' different t'pes of men in the promotion of evilG one can hardl'
den' that the SU5REME )RCH$TECT >the #od of 7reemasonr'? of these associations
Hseein# that the cause must e proportional to the effectI can e none other than he
who in the sacred writin#s is st'led the 5R$NCE O7 THE %OR(+G and that Satan himself
even ' his ph'sical cooperation, directs
and inspires at least the leaders of these odies ph'sicall' cooperatin# with them.@>6?
7urther speculation aout the Masonic plot ori#inall' spelled out in the )lta &endita does
seem related to what went on in the 4FPQ and 4FR0 conclaves ecause it was under
these secret meetin#s when the popes were =elected@ that would implement the Second
&atican Council and its &endita/ li!eheretical decrees. Of course we could cite once a#ain
a plethora of Church 7athers, Marian apparitions, and Catholic seers down throu#h time
that had forecast these events as a pre/#ame for the arrival of 5etrus Romanus. Even
Saint

411
7rancis of )ssisiEone of the most venerated reli#ious fi#ures in histor'E#athered his
devotees shortl' efore his death and prophesied that8 =)t the time of this triulation a man,
not canonicall' elected, will e raised to the 5ontificate, who, ' his cunnin#, will endeavor
to draw man' into error and deathA Some preachers will !eep silence aout the truth,
and others will trample it under foot and den' itAfor in those da's 3esus Christ will send
them not a true 5astor, ut a destro'er.@>6i? )s we were writin# our oo!, the &atican
entered the .olden )nniversar' of &atican $$, a perfect time, $lluminati would sa', to install
5etrus Romanus and to e6act their reven#e. *ut we are left, at least for the moment, with
a Muandar' as to which of the candidates we have discussed in this chapter Hor perhaps an
as 'et unidentified contenderI will fulfill the dar! au#ur' of the 5rophec' of the 5opes
amidst a showdown that is set to occur amon# the Colle#e of Cardinals inside the Sistine
Chapel in the 5alace of the &atican durin# the ne6t few wee!s. The unpleasant realit' is
that a conflict over who will ecome 5etrus Romanus is oilin# eneath the surface,
lar#el' un!nown to the pulic ut nevertheless foresaw ' Catholic m'stics such as 7ather
Herman *ernard [ramer in his wor!, =The *oo! of +estin'.@ Note his fri#htenin# and stran#e
interpretation of the twelfth chapter of the *oo! of Revelation concernin# =the #reat
wonder@ mentioned in verse one. 7ather [ramer prophesied8
The =si#n@ in heaven is that of a woman with child cr'in# out in her travail and
an#uish of deliver'. $n that travail, she #ives irth to some definite =person@ who is to
RU(E the Church with a rod of iron Hverse PI. $t then points to a conflict wa#ed within the
Church to elect one who was to =rule all nations@ in the manner clearl' stated. $n accord with
the te6t this is unmista!al' a 5)5)( E(ECT$ON, for onl' Christ and his &icar have the
divine ri#ht to rule )(( N)T$ONSA *ut at this time the #reat powers ma' ta!e a
menacin# attitude to hinder the election of the lo#ical and e6pected candidate '
threats of a #eneral apostas', assassination or imprisonment of this candidate if
elected.@>6ii?
%hile we disa#ree with [ramerDs interpretation of the oo! of Revelation, the idea that a
specific =person@ was orn and is now of the appropriate a#e to fulfill the incarnation of
St. Malach'Ds 5rophec' of the 5opes and to produce the Man of Sin, is without Muestion.
[ramerDs fear that =#reat powers ma' ta!e a menacin# attitude to hinder the election of
the lo#ical and e6pected candidate@ also revererates the sentiment of other priests,
past and present, includin# Cardinal )rchishop 5aolo Romeo, the leader of Sicil'Ds
Catholics, who made headlines 7eruar' 41, ;14; when the $talian newspaper $l 7atto
Kuotidiano Hwhich is famous for rea!in# e6clusivesI pulished parts of a secret
communiMue involvin# the Cardinal and a criminal conspirac' to assassinate 5ope
*enedict :&$ efore the end of ;14;.>6iii? Evidentl' at the center of the Mord!omplott
Hor contract to !ill the popeI was political machinations in Rome involvin# &atican
Secretar' of State Cardinal Tarcisio *ertone, whose #rowin# thirst for power *enedict had
come to hate accordin# to the lea!ed document, and another $talian now favored as
successor ' *enedict, Cardinal )n#elo Scola, currentl' the )rchishop of Milan.

414
The contract a#ainst the pope and the prediction ' Cardinal 5aola that was alle#edl' made
in secret to his $talian and Chinese usiness partners in *eiOin# concernin# *enedict
not livin# past the end of ;14; was apparentl' elieved serious enou#h that someod'
amon# 5aolaDs listeners =suspected that he himself was involved in a specific plot to
assassinate 5ope *enedict :&$. )t least one of those present therefore reported the
CardinalDs words to Rome, and a special report on the incidentE complied '
Cardinal +arYo Castrillen Ho'os and written in .erman in an attempt to stop it from ein#
lea!edEwas presented to the 5ope on 01 +ecemer last 'ear.@ >6iv? %as *enedict,s
decision to step down Hwhich he did secretl' and officiall' in ;14; ri#ht when we said
he would ut waited until ;140 to ma!e pulicI made as a result of pressure from those
who had threatened his lifeV
%hether or not the threat whispered ' 5aola was actuall' formulated, the report
illustrates once a#ain how efforts were ein# made ' at least some memers of the
Colle#e of Cardinals to ali#n themselves as candidates for 5etrus Romanus. *esides
7rancis )rin"e, Tarcisio *ertone, 5eter Tur!son, and )n#elo Scola, last 'ear we
rounded out our top ten candidates for the 7inal 5ope in descendin# order with
Cardinals .ianfranco Ravasi, (eonardo Sandri, Ennio )ntonelli, 3ean/(ouis Tauran,
Christoph Schinorn, and Marc Kuellet.
Time will tell if an' of these are elected or if another candidate will ecome 5etrus
Romanus, ut with these in mind, a finishin# thou#ht each of these papal contenders ma'
want to consider is how man' Catholics elieve the si6teenth/centur' seer Nostradamus
was actuall' the author of =The 5rophec' of the 5opes.@ $f that is so, the popular %est
)frican Cardinal 5eter Tur!son ein# ='oun#@ in terms of electailit' at a#e si6t'/three ma'
have a wa' of comin# ac! around. The =dar! horse@ candidate Tur!sonEand his ideas
for a one/world financial and political authorit' housed in the United NationsEcould ecome
a remar!ale and une6pected fulfillment of oth the 5rophec' of the 5opes and
NostradamusDs prediction of an end/times ='oun# lac! pope@ who sei"es control of the
Roman Hierarch' with the assistance of conspirators durin# times of dar!ness and war. $n
Kuatrain R.;P Nostradamus wrote8
Throu#h Mars adverse >a time of war? will e the monarch'
Of the #reat fisherman >the pope? in troule ruinous
) 'oun# lac! red >a 'oun# lac! Cardinal? will sei"e the hierarch'
The predators actin# on a fo##' da'
One final thou#ht for this entr'...

41;
Contemporaneous to the arrival of the 7alse 5rophet H5etrus RomanusVI is a
prophec' from what is widel' considered the most important wor! of 3ewish
[aalah, the cohar, a collection of oo!s
written in medieval )ramaic overseven hundred 'ears a#o containin# m'stical
commentar' on the 5entateuch Hfive oo!s of
Moses, the TorahI. $n addition to interpretin#
Scripture, the =&aera@ section Hvolume 0, section 0NI includes =The si#ns heraldin#
Mashiach,@ or =The comin# of the Messiah.@ The fascinatin# date for =his@ appearance is
set in the cohar in ;14;/;140T .iven the reOection of 3esus ' orthodo6 3ews as
Messiah, Christians understand this =comin#@ would
herald the unveilin# of )ntichrist.
3. R. Church of 5rophec' in the News called our office a couple 'ears ac! and led us
throu#h verses N2RBNQ0 of this part of the cohar to point out what nood' in the ;14;
research communit' had written eforeEthat the time of 3acoDs troule Hthe .reat
Triulation, which some Catholic scholars sa' e#ins with the election of 5etrus
RomanusI will commence accordin# to this ancient te6t in the 'ear ;14;/
;140 when the =!in#s of the earth@ #ather in
Rome, possil' durin# a papal conclave, and are !illed ' fier' stones or missiles
from the s!'.
The prophec' in the cohar, #iven ' 3ews hundreds of 'ears separate from the
divination of =the last pope,@ is ama"in# when compared with the Catholic prediction. The
final pope, =5eter the Roman,@ whose rei#n ends in the destruction of Rome, will assume
authorit' durin# a time of #reat triulation, and then =the Cit' of Seven Hills will e
destro'ed, and the terrile and fearsome 3ud#e will Oud#e his people.@ *ut +r. Church
pointed out how in the 3ewish cohar, this vision of the destruction of Rome is repeated,
thou#h one prophec' connects it to the comin# of the 7alse 5rophet, and the other, the
)ntichrist8
This ancient rainical dissertation claims that Rome will e destro'ed in the 3ewish
calendar 'ear P220, which, in our calendar e#ins with the new moon of Septemer
;14; and concludes a 'ear later in ;1408
=$n the 'ear sevent'/three >;14;S;140? the !in#s of the world will assemle in the #reat
cit' of Rome, and the Hol' One will shower on them fire and hail and meteoric
410

stones until the' are all destro'ed, with the e6ception of those who will not 'et have
arrived there.@
$s he hintin# at the destruction of M'ster' *a'lonV He notes that not all !in#s will e
destro'ed. Of those remainin#, he sa's8 =These will commence anew to ma!e other wars.
7rom that time the Messiah will e#in to declare himself, and round him there will e
#athered man' nations and man' hosts from the uttermost ends of the earth.@>6v?
Thus the false messiah HantichristI was predicted in a seven/hundred/'ear/old 3ewish
prophec' to appear in ;14;/;140. Similarl', the nine/hundred/'ear/old 5rophec' of the
5opes loo!s to e unfoldin# in parallel fashion to provide 5etrus Romanus//the 7inal
5ope. $t won,t e lon# now efore we !now if these 3ewish sa#es were correct.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 4R
*' Thomas R. Horn
March ;2, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
+urin# his life, Sir )rthur C. Clar!e H4F42B;11QI was a famous science/fiction author,
inventor, futurist, and television commentator who,
to#ether with Roert ). Heinlein and $saac )simov, was
considered to e one of the =*i# Three@ of science fiction.
41N
Clar!e in particular had an uncann' !nac! at foreseein# the future. )s an e6ample, modern
video #ames were unheard of in 4FPR and virtual realit' #ames had not even een
ima#ined. That is, until Clar!e wrote aout them in The Cit' and the Stars8
Of all the thousands of forms of recreation in the cit', these were the most popular. %hen
'ou entered a sa#a, 'ou were
not merel' a passive oserver.A <ou were an active participant and possessedEor
seemed to possessEfree will. The events and scenes which were the raw material of
'our adventures mi#ht have een prepared eforehand ' for#otten artists, ut there was
enou#h fle6iilit' to allow for wide variation. <ou could #o into these phantom worlds with
'our friends, see!in# the e6citement that did not e6ist in +iasparEand as lon# as the
dream lasted there was no wa' in which it could e distin#uished from
realit'.>i?
Or who could have elieved in 4FRQ that the =newspad@ technolo#' set in ;114 would e
reali"ed nine 'ears late as the i5ad in ;141V <et Clar!e in his novel, ;1148 ) Space
Od'sse', clearl' descried the technolo#'8
%hen he tired of official reports and memoranda and minutes, he would plu# his
foolscap/si"ed Newspad into the shipDs information circuit and scan the latest reports from
Earth. One ' one he would conOure up the worldDs maOor electronic papersG he !new the
codes of the more important ones ' heart, and had no need to consult the list on the
ac! of his pad. Switchin# to the displa' unitDs short/term memor', he would hold the
front pa#e while he Muic!l' searched the headlines and noted the items that interested
him.>ii?
Unfortunatel', that Clar!e showed such remar!ale prescience ma' hold important
Hand fri#htenin#I realities for our investi#ation, too. This is ecause in the sci/fi seerDs

classic, ChildhoodDs End H4FP0I, #iant silver spaceships appear in the future over ever'
maOor cit' on Earth. )fter the dust settles, the peaceful 'et m'sterious =Overlords@
inside them help form a world #overnment, which ends all war and turns the planet into a
utopia. Oddl', onl' a select few people #et to see the Overlords, and their purpose for
comin# to Earth remains shrouded as the' dod#e Muestions for 'ears, preferrin# to
remain in their spacecraft, #overnin# ' pro6'. Overlord [arellen, the =Supervisor for
Earth,@ Han alien #odI spea!s directl' onl' to the UN Secretar'/ .eneral. [arellen tells
him that the Overlords will reveal themselves in fift' 'ears, when humanit' will have
ecome used to Hand dependent onI their presence. %hen the revealin# finall' ta!es
41P
place, at [arellenDs reMuest, two children run into the ship as the crowd elow finall' #ets a
#limpse of what the aliens loo! li!e. Clar!e writes8
There was no mista!e. The leather' win#s, the little horns, the ared tailEall were there.
The most terrile of all le#ends had come to life, out of the un!nown past. <et now it
stood smilin#, in eon maOest', with the sunli#ht #leamin# upon its tremendous
od', and with a human child restin# trustfull' on either arm.>iii?
)ccordin# to the narrative, the revelation that these ein#sEhistoricall' !nown as the devil
and his an#elsEwere in fact alwa's our enefactors
andsaviors does not lead to chaos ut rather to technolo#ical and spiritual utopia, Muic!l'
resultin# in the dissolution of all previousl' e6istin# reli#ions. The world celerates as
people are descried as havin# overcome their preOudices a#ainst the devilish si#ht of
[arellen, or,
as he had een !nown in the *ile, Satan.
Here was a revelation which no/one could dout or den'8 here, seen ' some un!nown
ma#ic of Overlord science, were the true e#innin#s of all the worldDs #reat faiths. Most
of them were nole and inspirin#Eut that was not enou#h. %ithin a few da's, all
man!indDs multitudinous
messiahs had lost their divinit'. *eneath the fierce and passionless li#ht of truth, faiths
that had sustained millions for twice a thousand 'ears vanished li!e mornin#
dew.>iv?
)s the stor' continues, the children on EarthEset free from outdated )rahamic
reli#ions such as Christianit'Ee#in displa'in# powerful ps'chic ailities, foreshadowin#
their evolution into a cosmic consciousness, a transcendent form of life. $ndeed, this is the
end of the human species as it was !nown as ever'one mer#es into a cosmic intelli#ence
called the Overmind.
Those familiar with eastern reli#ions will reco#ni"e Clar!eDs narrative as a clever ET
version of pantheistic monism Hthe view that there is onl' one !ind of ultimate
sustanceI. Overmind is Muite similar to the Hindu concept of *rahman, and #iven

that )tman is, simpl' stated, the concept of self, the Hindu doctrine =)tman is
*rahman@ is rou#hl' eMuivalent to asorption into the Overmind. Similarl',
*uddhism advocates the dissolution of the self into Nirvana. $n fact, nearl' all New )#e,
41R
spiritualist, and occult traditions have comparale monistic do#ma. Some shroud this
doctrine of deceit in terms li!e =Christ Consciousness,@ #ivin# it a more appealin# veneer,
ut 3acMues &allJe recorded interestin# e6amples of such twisted ET theolo#', replacin#
ilical prophec' with the Overmind. One contactee told &allJe8
$ was told that $ was to come out at this time with this information ecause man!ind was
#oin# to #o throu#h the collective Christ e6perience of worshippin# U7Os and receivin#
information. $t would help man!ind alance its political focus. <ou see the interestin# thin#,
3acMues, is that we must emphasi"e the fact that we are receivin# a new pro#ramT %e do
not have to #o throu#h the old pro#rammin# of )rma#eddon. >v?
That such New/)#e ale as descried aove has een the doctrine of non/
Christians this centur' is one thin#, ut in recent homilies, 5ope *enedict :&$Ds end/ times
views too! on a troulin# and similar preparator' tome. This ma' not come as a surprise to
those Catholics familiar with 7ather Malachi MartinDs warnin#s in his oo!, The 3esuits,
which documented how priests li!e 5ierre Teilhard de Chardin were deepl' influencin#
the Church and its academia toward occultism this centur'. $n our chapter on
=E6otheolo#'@ in the new oo! E6o/&aticana we estalish ChardinDs elief in
e6traterrestrials and offer a rief discussion on his sorcerous +arwinian m'sticism. *ut it
was his connection with monistic occultism and what is called the =Ome#a 5oint@ that
ta!es us throu#h the alien/deit' rait hole. )ccordin# to Chardin, in his The 7uture of
Man H4FP1I, the universe is currentl' evolvin# towards hi#her levels of material comple6it'
and consciousness and ultimatel' will reach its #oal, the Ome#a 5oint. Chardin
postulated that this is the supreme aspiration of comple6it' and consciousness, an idea
also rou#hl' eMuivalent to the =Technolo#ical Sin#ularit'@ as e6pressed in the writin#s of
transhumanists li!e Ra' [ur"weil. $ndeed, one finds a remar!ale coalescence of all non/
Christian s'stems under the anner of Sin#ularit', Monism, Ome#a 5oint, and Overmind.
<et, li!e the neulous =Christ consciousness@ advocated ' occultists, ChardinDs writin#s
are easil' misunderstood ecause he not onl' created new vocaular' for his
+arwinian reli#ion, he also redefined ilical terminolo#' to mean somethin# alien to its
ori#inal intent. 7or instance, when Chardin writes aout =Christ,@ he usuall' does not
mean 3esus of Na"areth. $nstead, he is descriin# the Ultra/Man, the all/encompassin#
end of evolution at the Ome#a 5oint. )s an e6ample, consider when 3esus said, =Thin!
not that $ am come to destro' the law, or the prophets8 $ am not come to destro', ut to
fulfill@ HMatthew P842I. Chardin e6e#etes this as, =$ have not come to destro', ut to fulfill
Evolution.@>vi? To most Christians, this proal' seems overtl' heretical, ut its infiltration
into Roman Catholic thou#ht and the dan#erous alien/christ implications it rin#s with it
has infiltrated the hi#hest levels at RomeEincludin# the papac'.

Une!nownst to most Roman Catholics, the retired 5ope *enedict :&$ is a
Chardinian m'stic of the hi#hest order. His oo!, Credo for Toda'8 %hat Christians
*elieve H;11FI, follows the lead of the 3esuit and
412
statesuneMuivocall' that a elief in Creationism Hthe idea that life, the Earth, and the
universe as we !now it toda' did not =evolve@ ut rather were created ' the .od of
the *ileI =contradicts the idea of evolution and >is?
untenale toda'.@>vii? 7ollowin# his reOection of Creationism and support of evolution,
5ope *enedict :&$ emplo'ed the doctrine of the Second Comin# of Christ to advance
ChardinDs =Ome#a 5oint,@ in which a =new !ind@ of .od, man, and mind will emer#e.
7rom
pa#e 440 we read8
7rom this perspective the elief in the second comin# of 3esus Christ and in the
consummation of the world in that event could e e6plained as the conviction that our
histor' is advancin# to an =ome#a@ point, at which it will ecome finall' and unmista!al'
clear that the element of stailit' that seems to us to e the supportin# #round
of realit', so to spea!, is not mere unconscious matterG that, on the contrar', the real, firm
#round is mind. Mind holds ein# to#ether, #ives it realit', indeed is realit'8 it is not from
elow ut from aove that ein# receives its capacit' to susist. That there is
such a thin# as this process of Xcomple6ificationD of material ein# throu#h spirit, and
from the latter its concentration into a new !ind of unit' can alread' e seen in the
remodelin# of the world throu#h technolo#'.>viii?
The term =comple6ificationD was coined ' Chardin Hand the technolo#ical allusions it
su##ests is a!in to transhumanism and Ra' [ur"weilDs Sin#ularit'I and the popeDs
complete devotion to this theolo#' is a#ain laid are in his oo!, 5rinciples of
Catholic Theolo#' H4FQ2I, which states8
The impetus #iven ' Teilhard de Chardin e6erted a wide influence. %ith darin# vision it
incorporated the historical movement of Christianit' into the #reat cosmic process of
evolution from )lpha to Ome#a8 since the noo#enesis, since the formation of consciousness
in the event ' which man ecame man, this process of evolution has continued to
unfold as the uildin# of the noosphere aove the iosphere.>i6?
This =noosphere@ is ta!en ver' seriousl' toda' in modernist Catholic theolo#',
academia, and even science. $t is e6plained in the scientific Oournal, Enc'clopedia of
5aleontolo#', this wa'8
41Q
Teilhard coined the concept of the =noosphere,@ the new =thin!in# la'er@ or
memrane on the EarthDs surface, superposed on the livin# la'er HiosphereI and the

lifeless la'er of inor#anic matter HlithosphereI. Oe'in# the =law of
comple6ificationSconscience,@ the entire universe under#oes a process of =conver#ent
inte#ration@ and tends to a final state of concentration, the =point Ome#a@ where the
noosphere will e intensel' unified and will have achieved a =h'perpersonal@
or#ani"ation. Teilhard eMuates this future h'perpersonal ps'cholo#ical or#ani"ation with an
emer#ent divinit' >a future new form of .od?.>6?
The newl' sanctioned doctrine of an approachin# =emer#ent divinit'@ in place of the literal
return of 3esus Christ isnDt even that much of a secret an' lon#er amon# Catholic
priests Hthou#h the cr'ptic Charindian lin#o mas!s it from the uninitiatedI. 7or instance,
in his 3ul' ;N, ;11F, homil' in the Cathedral of )osta while commentin# on
Romans 4;84B;, the pope said8
The role of the priesthood is to consecrate the world so that it ma' ecome a livin# host,
a litur#'8 so that the litur#' ma' not e somethin# alon#side the realit' of the world, ut
that the world itself shall ecome a livin# host, a litur#'. This is also the #reat vision of
Teilhard de Chardin8 in the end we shall achieve a true cosmic litur#', where the cosmos
ecomes a livin# host. >6i?
This is overtl' pantheistic and, of course, the te6t he was discussin# HRomans 4;I
teaches the e6act opposite8 =*e not conformed to this world@ HRomans 4;8;aI. %hile the
pope thus a##ressivel' promotes ChardinDs process of =noo#enesis@ in which the cosmos
comes alive and ever'one unifies as a =livin# host,@ one can readil' see that *rahman,
Nirvana, Overmind, and Sin#ularit' are rou#hl' eMuivalent to this monistic concept.
$nterestin#l', noo#enesis H.ree!8 vo^jkmindG kecomin#I actuall' has two uses8 one in
ChardinDs +arwinian pantheismEand
another, more tellin# renderin#Ewithin modern astroiolo#'.
$n CardinDs s'stem, noo#enesis is the fourth of five sta#es of evolution, representin# the
emer#ence and evolution of mind. This is the sta#e we are said to e in currentl', and as
noo#enesis pro#resses, so does the formation of the noosphere, which is the collective
sphere of human thou#ht. $n fact, man' Chardinians elieve that the %orld %ide %e is
an infrastructure ofnoosphere, an idea intersectin# well with transhumanist thou#ht.
Chardin wrote, =%e have as 'et no idea of the possile ma#nitude of XnoosphericD effects.
%e are confronted with human virations resoundin# ' the millionBBa whole la'er of
consciousness e6ertin# simultaneous pressure upon the future and the collected and
hoarded produce of a
41F

million 'ears of thou#ht.@>6ii?
However, this concept #ets more translucent in astroiolo#', where scientists have
adopted noo#enesis as the scientific term denotin# the ori#in of technolo#ical
civili"ations capale of communicatin# with humans and travelin# to EarthEin other words,
the asis for e6traterrestrial contact.>6iii? ConseMuentl', amon# man' if not most of
RomeDs astronomers and theolo#ians, there is the widespread elief that the arrival of
=alien deities@ will promote our lon#/sou#ht spiritual noo#enesis, and accordin# to a
leadin# social ps'cholo#ist, the worldDs masses are read' for such a visitation and will
receive them Hor himI as a messiah.>6iv? This is further reflected in a ;14; United [in#dom
poll, which indicated that more people nowada's elieve in e6traterrestrials than in .od.
>6v? ConseMuentl', whether or not it is the ultimate e6pression, the noo#enic =stron#
delusion@ is alread' here.
%hile we arenDt su##estin# a direct eMuivocation per se, the conceptual intersection
etween the two uses of noo#enesis Hthe occultic and astroiolo#icalI is thou#ht
provo!in#, especiall' in li#ht of Clar!eDs scenario in ChildhoodDs End, where
noo#enesis in the astroiolo#ical application Hthe arrival of the alien OverlordsI was the
impetus for evolution toward the Overmind and dissolution of humanit'. $t seems Rome has
connected these dots for us. $n his sanctioned treatise, [enneth 3. +elano lin!ed the
concept of ma6imum consciousness and alien contact, trul' noo#enesis in oth senses of
the word8
7or man to ta!e his proper place as a citi"en of the universe, he must transcend the
narrow/mindedness of his earthl' provincialism and e prepared to #raciousl' accept the
inhaitants of other worlds as eMuals or even superiors. )t this point in human histor',
our e6pansion into space is the necessar' means ' which we are to develop our
intellectual faculties to the utmost and, perhaps in cooperation with ET$, achieve the
ma6imum consciousness of which St. Thomas )Muinas wrote in Summa
Theolo#ica8
This is the earthl' #oal of man8 to evolve his intellectual powers to their fullest, to arrive
at the ma6imum of consciousness, to open the e'es of his understandin# upon all thin#s so
that upon the talet of his soul the order of the whole universe and all its parts ma' e
enrolled.>6vi?
&iewed throu#h this lens, the &aticanDs promotion of +arwinism and astroiolo#'
intri#ues. 7ollowin# Chardin and +elano, perhaps 5ope *enedict, the &OR.
astronomers, and theolo#ians li!e Tan"ella/Nitti, ODMera, and *alducci pursued
441
astroiolo#ical noo#enesis so that when 5etrus Romanus assumed his rei#n as the final
pope, the' mi#ht usher in the 7ifth Element of the Ome#a 5oint !nown as
=Christo#enesis.@ H)uthors note8 one cannot help recall the movie The 7ifth Element that
involved a priesthood who protects a m'sterious 7ifth Element that turns out to

e a messianic human who ultimatel' comines the power of the other four elements
>noo#enesis? to form a =divine li#ht@ that saves man!ind.I
$n ChardinDs oo!, The 5henomenon of Man, the five elements of evolution are8 4I
=#eo#enesis@ He#innin# of EarthIG ;I =io#enesis@ He#innin# of lifeIG 0I =anthropo#enesis@
He#innin# of humanit'IG NI noo#enesis Hevolutionar' consolidation to ma6imum
consciousnessIG leadin# to finall' PI =Christo#enesis,@ the creation of a =total Christ@ at the
Ome#a 5oint. %ith that in mind, e aware that astroiolo#' and transhumanist
philosoph' su##est this noo#enesis is ein# driven ' an e6ternal intelli#ence, whether it e
respectivel' artificial or e6traterrestrial, which leads these authors to conclude we are on
the cusp of a noo#enesis unli!e the one RomeDs theolo#ians ma' have anticipated. %e
would redefine the terms and instead su##est a##ressive preparation for an
)ntichristo#enesisBBan )lien
Serpent/SaviorBBthe ultimate +arwinian aermensch who ma' even are leather' win#s,
little horns, and a ared tail. *ut re#ardless how he appears, it will e fri#htenin#l'
ovious to all readers of E6o/&aticana that the &atican has cleverl' prepared for his
comin#, even now monitorin# his approach from atop Mt. .raham, usin# the (UC$7ER
device.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

E:O/&)T$C)N)
5)RT 42
*' Thomas R. Horn
)pril 40, ;140
444
News%ith&iews.com
To sa' some of our sanctified speculations have een confirmed #iven the election of
5ope 7rancis $ is an understatement.
5ope *enedict :&$Ds 7eruar' 44, ;140 announcementEas forecast in our oo! 5etrus
RomanusEwas unprecedented ecause the last pope to resi#n was .re#or' :$$ in
4N4P, nearl' si6 hundred 'ears a#o. %e did not venture this h'pothesis uninformed. $n his
oo!, (i#ht of the %orld8 The 5ope, theChurch, and
the Si#ns of the Times, when as!ed if he thou#ht it
appropriate for a pope to retire, 5ope *enedict :&$ responded, =$f a pope clearl'
reali"es that he is no lon#er ph'sicall', ps'cholo#icall' and spirituall' capale of
handlin# the duties of his office, then he has a ri#ht and, under some circumstances,
also an oli#ation to resi#n.@>i? Thus, ased on a conflation of prophec' and current
events we went out on a lim, ta!in# a ris!' position on pa#es P2B
PQ of this volume ' assertin# that *enedict :&$ would step down for reasons related to
health concerns. $ndeed, it came to pass and man' former s!eptics pic!ed up
5etrus
Romanus in earnest.
)s the reader ma' e aware, we correlated 5ope *enedictDs predisposition to retire with
the wor! of the 3esuit scholar,
RenJ Thiaut, who predicted over R1 'ears a#o that the door would e opened for the
arrival of the final pope on Malach'Ds list in ;14;. Of course, the 'ear ;14; came and
went with seemin#l' no fulfillment. ConseMuentl', we were a little disappointed when it
seemed li!e Thiaut was mista!en. )ll the same, ThiautDs code/rea!in# wor! is a
relativel' small portion of our oo!Ds content, so we never felt our wor! was made
irrelevant. )s it turns out, however, Thiaut was far more correctEastoundin#l' soE than
an'one would ever ima#ine until 7eruar' ;140T )ccordin# to the New <or!
Times8
That the resi#nation >' *enedict :&$? was lon# in the plannin# was confirmed '
.iovanni Maria &ian, the editor of the &atican newspaper, (DOsservatore Romano, who
wrote on Monda' that the popeDs decision =was ta!en man' months a#o,@ after

44;
his trip to Me6ico and Cua in March ;14;, =and !ept with a reserve that no one
could violate.@>ii?
$n other words, 5ope *enedict officiall' and secretl' resi#ned ri#ht when ThiautE and
weEspeculated he would in ;14;, and then his 7eruar' 44, ;140 pulic affirmation
was Muic!l' punctuated ' a dramatic li#htnin# olt stri!in# St. 5eterDs asilica.>iii? %hether
one a#rees with his theolo#' or not, credit must e #iven where it is due. Thiaut
accuratel' predicted this chan#in# of the #uard over si6t' 'ears prior. 5ope *enedictDs
South )merican tour was on#oin# as the first edition of our oo! went to print and it is
now evident that he decided to step down simultaneous with its release e6actl' when the
*el#ian 3esuit said he wouldEsi6t' 'ears prior. This is also evidenced ' the fact that
renovations to a propert' hostin# *enedictDs retirement home ensued in ;14; as well.>iv?
Thus, with two livin# 5ontificus Ma6imi, we have entered into terra inco#nita as far as the
modern papac' is concerned. This rin#s us to the new pope.
)ccordin# to the prophec' of St. Malach', 5eter the Roman has arrived. 5ope 7rancis,
formerl' !nown as 3or#e Mario *er#o#lio the son of $talian immi#rants to )r#entina, has
assumed the 44;th position on Malach'Ds famous list. %hile shallow s!eptics were Muic! to
point out that =his name is not 5eter,@ their complaint etra's i#norance of the wa' the
Malach' prophec' wor!s. %e have stated from the e#innin# that the title =5eter the
Roman@ was s'molic. )ll popes claim apostolic succession from 5eter and, for this
reason, it is called the 5etrine office. The' claim to sit on the chair of St. 5eter and in this
wa' all popes are 5eters. 7or instance, in an interview with %orld Net +ail' prior to the
5ope 7rancis election, Tom Horn was Muoted thus8
Re#ardless, Horn said heDs alwa's maintained that it doesnDt ta!e someone whose
Christian name is 5eter to fulfill the prophec'. =$n fact, if an' $talian is elected, that would
e a fairl' transparent fulfillment,@ he said. Moreover, he ar#ued, =in a ver' #eneral sense,
ever' pope could e re#arded as X5eter the Roman,D and in that sense, this could e the
last one.@>v?
Real scholars who studied the Malach' prophec' down throu#h time unanimousl' came
to a similar conclusionEthat the title 5etrus Romanus H=5eter the Roman@I was s'molic
and not indicative of a irth name an' more than .loria Olivae Hthe 444th line in the
prophec' of the popes, the one for 5ope *enedict :&$I was Cardinal Rat"in#erDs #iven
name efore he ecame 5ope *enedict :&$, namin# himself after the founder of the
*enedictine Order, of which the Olivetans are one ranch in order to fulfill his place in the
prophec'. Over si6t' 'ears a#o, Thiaut similarl' reOected the possiilit' of a pope literall'
named 5eter and wrote that the name s'moli"ed the totalit' of the papac'8
440
%e therefore reOect the Roman appointed 5eter as the impossile 5eter $$. There is onl'
one 5eter, the first of the Roman pontiffs, and he is seen in his man' successors.

He still to serve is the final as in the first persecution. %e elieve 5etrus Romanus
represents all the Roman 5ontiffs from St. 5eter to the recipient .loria Olivae.>vi?
$n ThiautDs rec!onin#, the meanin# of -5etrus- is that all the amitions and
pretensions of the papal d'nast' are now encompassed in one man, 5ope 7rancis.
This was our position as well, ut we were more than a little astounded recentl' when the
)rchpriest of St. 5eter,s *asilica, Cardinal )n#elo Comastri ac!nowled#ed how 5etrus
Romanus is incarnate in 5ope 7rancis. $n discussin# details of the new 5opeDs )pril 4, ;140
visit to St. 5eterDs tom in the necropolis under the asilica, Comastri said8
%e then made a second stop efore the funerar' stele of a man called $statilio. He was
certainl' Christian8 on his #rave is the mono#ram >chi/rho? of Christ. On the stele is
inscried8 XHe was at peace with ever'one and never caused strife.D The 5ope, after
readin# the phrase, loo!ed at us and said, XThat is a eautiful pro#ram of life.D
Climin# ac! up the stairs and havin# reached the Clementine Chapel, 5ope 7rancis
ecame asored in pra'er and repeated with a loud voice the three professions of
5eter8 =(ord, <ou are the Christ, Son of the (ivin# .od@G =(ord, to whom do we #oV <ou
have the words of eternal life@G =(ord, <ou !now all thin#sT <ou !now that $ love 'ouT@ )t
that moment, we had the distinct impression that the life of 5eter rose out of centuries past
and ecame present and livin# in the current Successor of the )postle 5eter.

$n addition to this incredile fulfillment of the Malach' prophec', man' scholars of various
schools of thou#ht see *ile prophec' in #eneral near its clima6. $n fact, events in
$srael also fell in place Oust as the first edition of the oo! 5etrus Romanus forecast a 'ear
prior. $n chapter 4R, =The *urdensome Stone,@ we wrote aout an oscure, under/the/
tale deal concernin# the Hall of the (ast Supper on Mount cion, and it seems that deal
has een consummated. Reporter Shlomo Cesana ro!e the stor' in the $srael Ha'om
newsletter on 3anuar' 01, ;1408

) historical a#reement has een si#ned etween $srael and the &atican, endin# a ;1
'ear dispute. $srael has #ranted the pope an official seat in the room where the (ast
Supper is elieved to have ta!en place, on Mount cion in 3erusalem.>vii?
44N
Even thou#h it is ein# i#nored ' the mainstream media, this is momentous ecause end/
time prophec' pla's out in 3erusalem and now, for the first time since the reformation
of $srael in 4FNQ, the Roman 5ontiff has an official seat on Mount cion. %atch for 5ope
7rancis to visit $srael more than once and pa' attention to the details. )ccordin#l', Hal
(indse' a#rees with us that e6e#esis of Revelation 40844B4Q implies the final pope is li!el'
the false prophet8
The )postle 3ohn in the *oo! of the Revelation descries ver' plainl' how the leader of the
world reli#ious s'stem Hased in RomeI will pave the wa' for the rise of the man who
will e the )ntichrist. Unfortunatel' for that churchman, the )ntichrist and the 7alse
5rophet will later turn on him and destro' the reli#ious s'stem and the cit'.>viii?
)nother interestin# and possil' noteworth' aspect of the 7inal 5ope is the timin# of his
arrival. %hile we donDt normall' put a lot of stoc! in numerolo#', m'stics do and the #reat
ilical scholar and )n#lican theolo#ian, Ethelert %. *ullin#er, wrote an e6haustive
treatise in the nineteenth centur' which has 'ielded some interestin# connections to the
new pontiff. The numers surroundin# 5ope 7rancisD election !eep comin# up thirteen.
%hite smo!e at 281R p.m.8 2 l R k 40G he is 2R 'ears old8 2 l R k
40G he was elected on the calendar date 0S40S40, which sports two thirteens of its ownG
0S40S;140 also 'ields 0 l 4 l 0 l ; l 1 l 4 l 0 k 40G he was announced at precisel'
Q840 p.m. &atican time, or, in militar' and European time ;1840, ma!in# for an
astoundin# 0S40S;140 at ;1840. )ccordin# to *ullin#er8
)s to the si#nificance of thirteen, all are aware that it has come down to us as a
numer of ill/omen. Man' superstitions cluster around it, and various e6planations are
current concernin# them.
Unfortunatel', those who #o ac!wards to find a reason seldom #o ac! far enou#h. The
popular e6planations do not, so far as we are aware, #o further ac! than the )postles.
*ut we must #o ac! to the first occurrence of the numer thirteen in order to discover the
!e' to its si#nificance. $t occurs first in .enesis 4N8N, where we read =Twelve 'ears the'
served Chedorlaomer, and the thirteenth 'ear the' RE*E((E+.@
Hence ever' occurrence of the numer thirteen, and li!ewise of ever' multiple of it,
stamps that with which it stands in connection with reellion, apostas', defection,
corruption, disinte#ration, revolution, or some !indred idea.>i6?
44P
This ill omen su##ests the apostas' prophesied ' 5aul H; Thessalonians ;80I and the
man' Revelation Oud#ments alon# with the =man' triulations@ and destruction of

Rome predicted ' the Malach' prophec'. *ullin#er #oes on to cite these remar!al'
su##estive numerical concurrences8
HtheerionI, east k ;N2 H4064FI
=He had two horns@ k 4P;4 H40;6FI
=)nd he had two horns li!e a lam@ k ;21N H40;64RI
Revelation 40844, The whole verse k R04Q H406NQRI>6?
=)nd $ eheld another east comin# up out of the earthG and he had two horns li!e a lam,
and he spa!e as a dra#on@ HRevelation 40844I. $ndeed this second eastEthe false
prophetEis predicted to e viewed =li!e a lam@ and the accolades afforded the new pontiff
on 0S40S;140 at ;1840 support that notion. )s 5rotestants, we feel well within our ri#hts to
assert all claimants to 5ontife6 Ma6imus &icar of Christ as false prophets.>6i? 5lease do
not e fooled ' the mediaDs unwittin# accolades concernin# 5ope 7rancisD fei#ned
humilit', this man elieves he is literall' Christ on Earth, or he would not accept the title
of &icar of Christ. )ll the same, if the predictions of St. Malach' are trul' at their fruition,
then the second east, the one from the Earth called the =false prophet@ HRevelation
4R840G 4F8;1G ;1841I ma' well e 5ope 7rancis in the role of 5etrus Romanus who,
unwittin#l' or not, will lead the world to worship the dra#on. $nterestin#l', his namesa!e St.
7rancis of )ssisi would a#ree.
The )r#entine Cardinal 3or#e Mario *er#o#lio has chosen 7rancis as his papal name, a
first in triute to 7rancis of )ssisi. $t is noteworth' that St. 7rancis of )ssisiDs lon# $talian
name is 7rancesco di 5ietro di *ernardone, a title that can accuratel' e viewed as
=5eter the Roman@ from the final line in the 5rophec' of the 5opes. Since the phrase that
supplanted the irth name .iovanni is 7rancesco di 5ietro, and that ' sainthood, it is
safe to sa' that ' choosin# 7rancis of )ssisiDs name, he in effect chose 7rancesco di
5ietro, and he is unli!el' to prefer truncation of the 5ietro element since Catholicism
esteems 5eter H5etrusI as the roc! of the church and spuriousl' maintains he was the
first pope. Rome was an empire and a cit' so *er#o#lioDs $talian ancestr' ar#ual'
meets the Roman aspect in a similar wa'. )ccordin#l', man' ar#ue that *er#o#lio
has fulfilled the 5eter the Roman title with
his choice of papal name.
44R
)s the ;140 conclave concluded, *er#o#lio said he chose the ori#inal papal name 7rancis
after St. 7rancis of )ssisi when Cardinal Claudio Hummese6horted him to =rememer the
poor.@>6ii? The reader mi#ht recall that our oo! 5etrus Romanus connected the friar
)ssisi with 5etrus Romanus over a 'ear a#o now, Muotin# an apocal'ptic prediction he
made soon after St. Malach'Ds prophec' concernin# a 7inal 5ope8
)t the time of this triulation a man, not canonicall' elected,

will e raised to the 5ontificate, who, ' his cunnin#, will endeavor to draw man' into error
and deathA Some preachers will !eep silence aout the truth, and others will trample it
under foot and den' itAfor in those da's 3esus Christ will send them not a true 5astor, ut
a destro'er.>6iii?
%as there somethin# non/canonic aout the election of 5ope 7rancisV 7or starters, 5ope
*enedict :&$Ds retirement ma!es for an unprecedented situation. %hen a pope is elected,
the Church e6pects that he will remain in office until his death. *efore now, onl' five popes
unami#uousl' resi#ned with historical certaint', all etween the tenth and fifteenth
centuries. )r#ual', that ma!es *er#o#lioDs election suspect ut, apparentl', not a
violation of canon law. $n 4;FN, Celestine & issued a decree declarin# it permissile
for a pope to resi#n, and then resi#ned himself after onl' five months as pope. He lived a
few more 'ears as a hermit and then as a prisoner of his t'rannical successor, *oniface
&$$$. *ecause his decree was never repealed, canon law e6perts allow that a pope can
resi#n, aleit it is discoura#ed. Others have oOected that the fifteen/da' rule etween the
vacanc' of the office and the start of the conclave was circumvented in order to speed up
the process. This was done ' 5ope *enedictDs final decree ut the ur#enc' to seat his
successor seems suspicious. %hile 5ope 7rancis represents man' firsts, overall, the
most interestin# aspect is his status as the first ever 3esuit pope.
The sittin# pontiffDs ac!#round has #reat prophetic si#nificance as the 3esuit order was
formed to specificall' comat the 5rotestant reformation and assert papal supremac'
over the entire world. )ccordin# to a historian, =The 3esuits were the soldiers of the
pope8 the' !new no law ut the will of their #eneral, no mode of worship ut the
popeDs dictate no church ut themselves.@>6iv? *ecause of this, the 3esuit order was
suppressed and disanded for its pernicious s!ulldu##er' ' 5ope Clement :$& in 4220,
and ' the mid/ei#hteenth centur', the 3esuits had earned a ad reputation in Europe for
political maneuverin# and economic e6ploitation ar/ none.
The order was reinstated in the earl' nineteenth centur' with the mission to conMuer '
scholarship and infiltration of the education s'stem. $nterestin#l', 5ope *enedict :&$
addressed the 3esuit order in ;11Q, encoura#in# them to reinvi#orate the fourth vow. He
said, =7or this ver' reason $ have invited 'ou and also invite 'ou toda' to reflect in order
442
to rediscover the fullest meanin# of 'our characteristic Xfourth vowD of oedience to the
Successor of 5eter.@>6v?
Church historians record that the fourth vow of oedience is one of =asolute
suservience to the popeG to do whatever he enOoined, and #o on an' service he
wished, and into an' Muarter of the #loe.@>6vi? ) few e6/3esuit whistle/lowers have called
this a lood oath involvin# pa#an rites which were laid are in the suppressed document,
=3esuit E6treme Oath of $nduction,@ which was once recorded in records of the US
Con#ress, ut was suspiciousl' e6pun#ed. )ccordin# to this document, the'

are indoctrinated into the principle of $ustum, Necar, Re#es, $mpious, meanin#, =$t is Oust to
e6terminate or annihilate impious or heretical [in#s, .overnments, or Rulers.@>6vii? The
3esuit modernists of toda' prefer more sutle methods li!e infiltratin# the education
s'stem and promotin# ilical hi#her criticism that undermines ilical authorit'.
5rotestants and Catholics have written aout a clandestine war that has een pla'in# out
for some time ehind the scenes etween the papac' and the 3esuit order. %e will speculate
in the ne6t entr' what this could mean etween 5ope 7rancis Romanus . . . and the comin#
of an alien savior.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

cEN$TH ;14R8 +$+ SOMETH$N. *E.$N $N ;14;V
5)RT 4
*' Thomas R. Horn
3une 4, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
That %ill cenith $n ;14RV
44Q
$ learned recentl' that our #ood friend Sue *radle' has #one home to e with 3esus. She
went into the (ord,s arms earl' in the mornin# on )pril ;R, ;140.
$n ;11Q and a#ain in ;14; with input from Steve Kua'le and $, Sue e#an wor!in# on one
of her last articles titled The 7ourth Turnin#8 The 5rotocols and The .ra' Champion.
) couple months ac!, she had emailed me from her hospital room and said she was
aout to e6pand this 7ourth
Turnin# wor! ased on some =cenith
;14R@ material $ had Oust shared with her. Unfortunatel', li!e with the passin# of +avid
7l'nn, the world will proal' never !now what Sue was aout to reveal. %hat we do
!now is her wor! was partiall' ased on a oo! pulished in
4FF2, The 7ourth Turnin#, which descries itself as =a oo! that turns histor' into
prophec'.@ $t e6plains c'cles
of life and #enerational archet'pes
throu#h the e6amination of %estern historical paradi#ms over the past five centuries. *'
surve'in# the past and identif'in# contemporar' mar!ers, %illiam Strauss and Neil Howe,
the authors of the wor! determined an astoundin#l' prescient forecast in which the' saw a
cascade of incidents that would ultimatel' lead to chaos and the =7ourth Turnin#.@ [eep
in mind the' made these predictions over si6teen 'ears a#o, lon# efore the Septemer
44, ;114 attac!s on )merica or the financial issues of
toda'. )mon# the scenarios the' foresaw were8
The first could e economic distress with a #overnment eset ' fiscal crisis, the state la'in#
claim to federal ta6 monies, federal marshals enforcin# orders, ta6 reellions, special
forces and an ensuin# constitutional crisis8

The second is a terrorist attac!, involvin# an airliner, a militar' response,
authori"ation for house to house searches and false fla# accusations a#ainst the
administrationG
) third scenario is an economic disaster involvin# %all Street and a federal ud#et
impasse which results in a stalemateG
44F
The fourth consideration is Eco/environmental malaise with the Centers for +isease
Control announcin# the spread of a new communicale virus with Muarantines and
relocationsG
The fifth proOection is #eopolitical in nature with #rowin# anarch' throu#hout the former
Soviet repulics promptin# Russia to conduct trainin# e6ercises around its orders, a
Russian alliance with $ran, soarin# #old and silver prices and #loal militar'
responses.
$n descriin# these insi#htful scenarios, Strauss and Howe felt a catal'st would unfold as a
result of a specific d'namic and, =)n initial spar! will tri##er a chain reaction of un'ieldin#
responses and further emer#encies@ Hthe war on terrorVI.
)ccordin# to Strauss and Howe in 4FF2, this chain reaction was alread' prepped to
unfold as the result of natural c'cles or =Turnin#s@ in which #enerations are doomed to
for#etEand thus to repeatEthe mista!es of the past. The authors descrie a Turnin#
as =an era with a characteristic social mood, a new twist on how people feel aout
themselves and their nation. $t results from the a#in# of the #eneration >efore it?.@ )
societ' enters a Turnin# once ever' twent' 'ears or so, when all livin# #enerations
e#in to enter their ne6t phases of life. The livin# #enerations or =saeculae@
comprise four c'clical =Turnin#s@, characteri"ed as8
The 7irst Turnin# HTHE H$.HI, an era of enthusiastic collective stren#thenin# and civic
development, havin# urned the rush and swept the ashes of precedin# structure.
The Second Turnin# HTHE )%)[EN$N.I, is uilt on the ener#ies and
accomplishments of the Hi#h ut finds increasin# 'earnin# for introspection with a hi#h
tolerance for spiritual e6pression outside the parameters of predetermined standards.
The Third Turnin# HTHE UNR)&E($N.I, e#ins as the =societ'/wide emrace of the
lieratin# cultural forces@ loosed ' the )wa!enin# shows si#ns of civic disorder and
deca', a hei#htened sense of self/reliance and an increasin# withdrawal of pulic trust. This
uilds to a near crisis of downcast pessimism and a palpale pall that can onl' e
remedied ' 'ieldin# to the ne6t.

The 7ourth Turnin# HTHE CR$SES and the era we have now enteredI, is ' far, the most
perilous as societies pass throu#h the #reatest and most dan#erous #ates of histor'. )s
desperate solutions are sou#ht for =sudden threats@ on multiple cultural fronts, confrontation
4;1
is passionate and decisions are often reactive, a##ressive. =.overnment #overns,
communit' ostacles are removed, and laws and customs that resisted chan#e for decades
are swiftl' shunted aside. .. ) #rim preoccupation with civic peril causes spiritual curiosit'
to declineA 5ulic order ti#htens, private ris!/ ta!in# aates, and... child/rearin# reaches
a smotherin# de#ree of protection and structure. The 'oun# focus their ener#' on
worldl' achievements, leavin# values in the hands of the old. %ars are fou#ht with fur' and
for ma6imum result. >4?
Throu#h the e6amination of an enormous amount of political and cultural histor', Strauss
and Howe processed over five hundred 'ears of )n#lo/)merican cultural nuance into
remar!ale, well/or#ani"ed and predictale c'cles and it is from this reservoir the' finall'
sta!e an uncann' claim8
3ust after the millennium, )merica will enter a new era that will culminate with a crisis
comparale to the )merican Revolution, the Civil %ar, the .reat +epression, and %orld
%ar $$. The ver' survival of the nation will almost certainl' e at sta!e. >;?
Strauss and Howe saw the United States of that time H4FF2I in the Third Turnin#,
=midwa' throu#h an Unravelin#,@ rou#hl' a decade awa' from the ne6t Crisis or
7ourth Turnin#8
)merica feels li!e itDs unravelin#. )lthou#h we live in an era of relative peace and
comfort, we have settled into a mood of pessimism aout the lon#/term future, fearful that
our superpower nation is somehow rottin# from within.
The ne6t 7ourth Turnin# is due to e#in shortl' after the new millenniumA Real
hardship will eset the land, with severe distress that could involve Muestions of class, race,
nation, and empireA
The ver' survival of the nation will feel at sta!e.
Sometime efore the 'ear ;1;P, )merica will pass throu#h a #reat #ate in histor',
commensurate with the )merican Revolution, Civil %ar, and twin emer#encies of the .reat
+epression and %orld %ar $$.
4;4
The ris! of catastrophe will e ver' hi#h. The nation could erupt into insurrection or civil
violence, crac! up #eo#raphicall', or succum to authoritarian rule. $f there is a war, it is
li!el' to e one of ma6imum ris! and efforts E in other words, a TOT)( %)R. >0?

The stri!in# details contained within The 7ourth Turnin# illustrate the precision that was
distilled with a close e6amination of historical patterns and contemporar' application.
)lthou#h the authors note that the events descried are not asolute, the' also insist that
the c'cles, these Turnin#s, cannot e interrupted. )s summer follows sprin#, an Unravelin#
precedes a Crisis of 7austian proportions8
$t will reMuire us to lend a new seasonal interpretation to our revered )merican +ream.
)nd it will reMuire us to admit that our faith in linear pro#ress has often amounted to a
7austian ar#ain with our children.
7aust alwa's ups the ante, and ever' et is doule/or/nothin#. Throu#h much of the Third
Turnin#, we have mana#ed to postpone the rec!onin#. *ut histor' warns that we canDt
defer it e'ond the ne6t end in time.>N?
%hile a =7austian ar#ain@ sounds ominous, Sue wrote, there is little evidence that the
)n#lo/)merican =+ream@ has under#one the introspection and discipline necessar'
to uffer the arro#ant rec!lessness of this #eneration and its administration.
N*CDs Chuc! Todd noted on the evenin# of Novemer N, ;11Q that *arac! Oama was
a chan#in# of the #uard in the United States from the *a' *oomer presidencies of
%illiam Clinton and .eor#e %. *ush. The Toronto .loe and Mail referred to
5resident/elect Oama as ein# a memer of .eneration :, ein# orn in 4FR4. )nd
Strauss and Howe assi#ned .eneration :Ethe Thirteenth .enerationEto those who would
rin# us to chaos and the start of the 7ourth Turnin# . . . culminatin# in a cenith of
events scheduled for the 'ear ;14R.
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved

cEN$TH ;14R8 +$+ SOMETH$N. *E.$N $N ;14;V
5)RT ;
4;;
*' Thomas R. Horn
3une N, ;140
News%ith&iews.com
$tDs een assumed for centuries that a prereMuisite for the comin# of )ntichrist would e a
=revived@ world orderEan umrella under which national oundaries dissolve and ethnic
#roups, ideolo#ies, reli#ions, and economics from around the world orchestrate a
sin#le and dominant soverei#nt'.
)t the head of the utopian administration, a sin#le personalit' will surface. He will appear
to e a man of distin#uished character, ut will ultimatel' ecome =a !in# of fierce
countenance@ H+aniel Q8;0I. %ith imperious decree, he will facilitate a One/ %orld
.overnment, universal reli#ion, and #loal socialism. Those who refuse his New %orld
Order will inevital' e imprisoned or destro'ed until at last he e6alts himself =aove all
that is called .od, or that is worshiped, so that he, as .od, sitteth in the temple of .od,
showin# himself that he is .od@ H; Thessalonians ;8NI.
7or man' 'ears, the notion of an Orwellian societ' where One %orld .overnment
oversees the smallest details of our lives and in which human lierties are aandoned was
considered anathema. The idea that ru##ed individualism would somehow e sacrificed
for an anestheti"ed universal harmon' was repudiated ' )mericaDs #reatest minds.
Then, in the 4F21s, thin#s e#an to chan#e. 7ollowin# a call ' Nelson Roc!efeller for the
creation of a =New %orld Order,@ presidential candidate 3imm' Carter campai#ned, sa'in#,
=%e must replace alance of power politics with world order politics.@ This struc! a
chord with international leaders, includin# 5resident .eor#e Herert %al!er *ush, who
in the 4FQ1s e#an championin# the one/world dir#e, announcin# over national television
that the time for a =New %orld Order@ had arrived. The invasion into [uwait ' $raMS*a'lon
provided perfect cover for allied forces to en#a#e the *a'lonian =prince@ ' launchin#
+esert Storm a#ainst Saddam HusseinDs forces, an effort *ush made clear was =to for#e
for ourselves and for future #enerations a New %orld OrderAin which a credile United
Nations can use itsArole to fulfill the promise and vision of the U.N.Ds founders.@
7ollowin# this initial statement, *ush addressed the Con#ress, addin#8
%hat is at sta!e is more than one small countr' >[uwait?, it is a i# ideaEa New
%orld Order, where diverse nations are drawn to#ether in common cause to achieve
4;0

the universal aspirations of man!ind.A Such is a world worth' of our stru##le, and worth'
of our childrenDs futureAthe lon#/held promise of a New %orld Order.>i?
Ever since the 5residentDs astonishin# newscast, the parade of political and reli#ious
leaders in the United States and aroad pushin# for a New %orldOrder has multiplied.
*ritainDs 5rime Minister Ton' *lair, in a speech delivered in Chica#o, said fran!l', =%e
are all internationalists now, whether we li!e it or not.@ *lair could arel' have ima#ined
how Muic!l' his doctrine would catch on. *' +ecemer F, ;11Q, respected chief forei#n
affairs columnist for The 7inancial Times, .ideon Rachman Hwho attended the ;110
and ;11N
*ilderer# meetin#s at &ersailles, 7rance, and Stresa, $tal'I, admitted, =$ have never
elieved that there is a secret United Nations plot to ta!e over the U.S. $ have never seen
lac! helicopters hoverin# in the s!' aove Montana. *ut, for the first time in m' life, $ thin!
the formation of some sort of world #overnment is plausile.@ The United [in#domDs
.ordon *rown not onl' a#reed, ut in an article for The Sunda' Times,
March 4, ;11F, said it was time =for all countries of the world@ to renounce
=protectionism@ and to participate in a new =international@ s'stem of an!in# and
re#ulations =to shape the twent'/first centur' as the first centur' of a trul' #loal societ'.@
On 3anuar' 4, ;11F, Mi!hail .orachev, the former head of state of the USSR, said the
#loal clamor for chan#e and the election of *arac! Oama was the catal'st that mi#ht
finall' convince the world of the need for #loal #overnment. $n an
article for the $nternational Herald Triune, he said8
Throu#hout the world, there is a clamor for chan#e. That desire was evident in
Novemer, in an event that could ecome oth a s'mol of this need for chan#e and a real
catal'st for that chan#e. .iven the special role the United States continues to pla' in the
world, the election of *arac! Oama could have conseMuences that #o far e'ond
that countr'.A
$f current ideas for reformin# the worldDs financial and economic institutions are
consistentl' implemented, that would su##est we are finall' e#innin# to understand the
important of #loal #overnance.@
7our da's later, on 3anuar' P, ;11F, the chorus call for a New %orld Order was
ramped up a#ain ' former Secretar' of State Henr' [issin#er while on the floor of the
New <or! Stoc! E6chan#e. ) reporter for CN*C as!ed [issin#er what he thou#ht *arac!
OamaDs first actions as president should e in li#ht of the #loal financial crises. He
answered, =$ thin! that his tas! will e to develop an overall strate#' for
4;N

)merica in this period, when reall' a New %orld Order can e created.@ [issin#er
followed on 3anuar' 40 with an opinion piece distriuted ' Triune Media Services titled
=The Chance for a New %orld Order.@ )ddressin# the international financial crises
inherited ' *arac! Oama, [issin#er discussed the need for an international political
order Hworld #overnmentI to arise and #overn a new international monetar' and trade
s'stem. =The nadir of the e6istin# international financial s'stem coincides with
simultaneous political crises around the #loe,@ he wrote. =The alternative to a new
international order is chaos.@ [issin#er went on to hi#hli#ht OamaDs
e6traordinar' impact on the =ima#ination of humanit',@ callin# it =an important element in
shapin# a New %orld Order.@>ii? [issin#erEa Roc!efeller functionar' and memer of the
*ilderer# #roup and Trilateral Commission who routinel' turns up in lists amon# senior
memers of the $lluminatiEpeppered his article with !e' phrases from Masonic do#ma,
includin# the comment aout the =alternative to a new international order is chaos,@ a
clear reference to =ordo a chao@ from ancient Craft Masonr', a reference to the doctrine
of =order out of chaos.@ (i!e the m'thical phoeni6 fireird, [issin#er visuali"ed the
opportunit' for a New %orld Order to e en#ineered from the ashes of current #loal
chaos, e6actl' the point he had made 'ears earlier at the *ilderer#er meetin# in
Evian, 7rance, on Ma' ;4, 4FF4, when descriin# how the world could e manipulated into
willin#l' emracin# #loal #overnment. He said8
Toda' )mericans would e outra#ed if UN troops entered (os )n#eles to restore orderG
tomorrow the' will e #ratefulT This is especiall' true if the' were told there was an
outside threat from e'ond, whether real or promul#ated, that threatened our ver'
e6istence. $t is then that all peoples of the world will plead with world leaders to deliver
them from this evil. The one thin# ever' man fears is the un!nown. %hen presented
with this scenario, individual ri#hts will e willin#l' relinMuished for the #uarantee of their
well ein# #ranted to them ' their world #overnment.>iii?
+urin# his second inau#ural address, U.S. 5resident .eor#e %. *ush li!ewise
envisioned the specter of a *a'lonian/li!e,
one/world #overnment. %ith an almost reli#ious tone, he cited Masonic script, sa'in#,
=%hen our 7ounders declared a new order of the a#esAthe' were actin# on an
ancient hope that is meant to e fulfilled.@>iv? New )#e #uru *enOamin Creme was clearer
still on how the marria#e of politics and reli#ion would epitomi"e the New %orld
Order when he said
some 'ears a#o, =%hat is the planV $t includes
the installation of a new world #overnment and a new world reli#ion under Maitreia@
HMaitreia is a New )#e =messiah@I.>v? 7ive/time United States senator from )ri"ona and
Repulican

4;P
presidential nominee in 4FRN, *arr' .oldwater, li!ewise foresaw the union of politics and
reli#ion as a catal'st for #loal #overnment. $n writin# of the efforts of ehind/ the/scenes
#roups, includin# international an!ers, to rin# aout a New %orld Order, he said it
would occur throu#h consolidatin# =the four centers of powerE political, monetar',
intellectual, and ecclesiastical.@ )s the mana#ers and creators of the new HpropheticI
s'stem, this power elite would =rule the future@ of man!ind, he elieved.>vi? So
concerned was .oldwater with the consolidation of #overnment polic' and reli#ious
creed that on Septemer 4R, 4FQ4, he too! the uniMue position of warnin# political
preachers from the floor of the U.S. Senate that he would =fi#ht them ever' step of
the wa' if the' >tried? to dictate their >reli#ious ideas? to all )mericans in the name of
conservatism.@ The increasin# influence of the Reli#ious Ri#ht on the Repulican 5art' was
othersome to .oldwater in particular ecause of his liertarian views. $t should have
concerned theolo#ians as well, and $ sa' this as a man often associated with the Reli#ious
Ri#ht. Cominin# reli#ious faith with politics as a le#islative s'stem of #overnance
hear!ens the formula upon which )ntichrist will come to power. HNote how in the oo! of
Revelation, chapter 40, the political fi#ure of )ntichrist derives ultra/national dominance
from the worldDs reli#ious faithful throu#h the influence of an ecclesiastical leader !nown
as the 7alse 5rophet.I Neither 3esus nor His disciples Hwho turned the world upside
down throu#h preachin# the #ospel of Christ, the true =power of .od,@ accordin# to 5aulI
ever ima#ined the #oal of chan#in# the world throu#h supplantin# secular #overnment with
an authoritarian theocrac'. $n fact, 3esus made it clear that His followers would not
fi#ht earthl' authorities purel' ecause His !in#dom was =not of this world@ H3ohn 4Q80RI.
%hile ever' modern citi"enEreli#ious and non/reli#iousEhas responsiilit' to lo' for
moral #ood, cominin# the mission of the church with political aspirations is not onl'
unprecedented in New Testament theolo#'Eincludin# the life of Christ and the
pattern of the New Testament churchEut, as .oldwater ma' have feared, a tra#ic
scheme concocted ' sinister forces to defer the church from its true power while
enrichin# insincere ureaucrats, a disastrous fact that onl' now some are e#innin# to
understand.
*ehind these scenes and e'ond view of the worldDs uninitiated memers, the
alchem' and rituals of the occult mastersE$lluminatists, Masons, *onesmen, *ilderer#ers,
and *ohemiansEhave comined to harmoni"e so completel' within recent U.S. forei#n
and domestic policies as to clearl' point to a terrif'in# Si'lDs conOure, a near/future
hori"on upon which a leader of indescriale rutalit' will appear. )lthou#h this false
prince of peace will seem at first to hold uniMue answers to lifeDs most challen#in# Muestions,
ultimatel' he will ma!e the comined depravities of )ntiochus Epiphanes, Hitler, Stalin, and
.en#his [han, all of whom were t'pes of the )ntichrist, loo! li!e childDs pla'. He will raise
his fist, =spea!in# #reat thin#sAin lasphem' a#ainst .od, to laspheme his name, and
his taernacle, and them that dwell in heaven@ HRevelation 408PBRI. He will champion
worship of the =old #ods@ and =cause that as man' as would not worship the ima#e of the
east should e !illed@ HRevelation 4084PI, and he will revive an ancient m'ster'
reli#ion that is =the

4;R
haitation of devils, and the hold of ever' foul spirit, and a ca#e of ever' unclean and hateful
ird@ HRevelation 4Q8;I.
Nevertheless, the world is readiedEindeed, hun#r' forEa political savior to arise now with
a plan to deliver man!ind from upheaval.
Enter the Era of Oama
Should the world continue, historians will undoutedl' record how the messianic fervor
surroundin# the election of the fort'/fourth president of the United States reflected not
onl' widespread disapproval for *ush administration policies, ut how, in the aftermath of
Septemer 44, ;114, the )merican ps'che was primed to accept e6pansive alterations in
political and financial polic' with an overarchin# scheme for salvation from chaos. )mon#
these historians, a few will undoutedl' also ar#ue that, as National .erman Socialists did
in the 'ears followin# %orld %ar $, *arac! Hussein Oama appealed to the increasin#l'
disenfranchised voters amon# )merican societ' ' pla'in# on their understandale fears
in order to posture himself as the essential a#ent of chan#e. %hat most of these
historians are not li!el' to record, however, is the involvement efore and after the
;11Q U.S. presidential election ' unseen shapers of the New %orld Order. $f the' did,
the vast numers of people would not elieve it an'wa', the idea that ehind the
#loal chaos that #ave rise to OamaDs popularit' was a secret networ!, a
transnational hand directin# the course of civili"ation. <et no account of histor'
includin# recent times is complete or even sincere without at least ac!nowled#in#
the ehind/the/scenes masters who manipulate international polic', an!in# and finance,
securities and e6chan#e, trade, commodities, and ener#' resources. Numerous wor!s,
includin# scholarl' ones, have connected the dots etween this rulin# =superclass@ and
the inte#ration of polic' handed down to #overnin# odies of nation/states and supra/
national or#ani"ations.
The Economist newspaper in the 'ear of OamaDs first election as 5resident of
the United States pointed to research ' academic +avid Roth!opf, whose oo!,
Superclass8 The .loal 5ower Elite and the %orld The' )re Ma!in#,documented how onl'
a few thousand people worldwide actuall' dictate the maOorit' of policies operatin# at a
#loal scale. The Economist descried this comparativel' small numer of elites as ein#
=#roomed@ in =world/spannin# institutionsA>who? meet at #loal events such as the
%orld Economic 7orum at +avos and the Trilateral Commission orAthe *ilderer#
meetin#s or the *ohemian .rove seminars that ta!e place ever' 3ul' in California.@>vii? $n
;144, a Swiss 7ederal $nstitute HS7$I stud' showed less than one/hundred and fift'
technocratic =Super Entities@Emainl' an!s and the families that own

4;2
themEcontrol N1m of the worldDs wealth. (on#/time radio host and author of
*rotherhood of +ar!ness, Stanle' Monteith, sa's such persons are part of an =occult
hierarch'@ that rules the world and directs the course of human events. =The movement
is led ' powerful men who reOect Christianit', emrace the Xdar! side,D and are
dedicated to the formation of a world #overnment and a world reli#ion,@ he writes. =The'
control the #overnment, the mediaAman' corporations, and oth >U.S.? political parties.@>viii?
$nterestin#l', Emeritus 5ope *enedict :&$ ma' have referred to the same #roup when,
in ;11Q, he warned United Nations diplomats that multilateral consensus needed to
solve #loal difficulties was =in crisis@ ecause answers to the prolems were ein#
=suordinated to the decisions of the few.@ His predecessor, 5ope 3ohn 5aul $$, ma'
have ac!nowled#ed the same, elievin# a One/%orld .overnment eneath the
#uidance of a rulin# superclass was inevitale. *efore his death, it was prominent )merican
political scientist Samuel 5. Huntin#ton who rou#ht the uer/ echelon ehind the push
for #loal #overnment up from =conspirac' theor'@ to academic acceptailit' when he
estalished that the' =have little need for national lo'alt', view national oundaries as
ostacles that than!full' are vanishin#, and see national #overnments as residues from
the past whose onl' useful function is to facilitate the eliteDs #loal operations.@>i6? $n
other words, accordin# to e6perts, international affairs, forei#n and domestic politics, and
ta6pa'er/funded investment economics are ein# lar#el' decided ' a privile#ed
cadre of families who are dedicated to a New %orld Order and One/%orld .overnment.
$ have to admit that, when writin# the first edition of )poll'on Risin# ;14; in ;11F
H#reatl' e6panded to a new oo!, soon to e released titled cEN$TH ;14R8 +id
Somethin# *e#in $n ;14; That %ill )pe6 $n ;14RVI, it was difficult to resist the
temptation to compile at len#th the names, dates, and or#ani"ations that form the #oals
of the rulin# elite. Havin# accumulated thousands of pa#es of research material concernin#
the C7R, the Trilateral Commission, the *ohemians, the Masons, the *ilderer#ers,
and other $lluminatus su#roups, m' ori#inal intention included several chapters on
the memerships past and present of the lar#el' un!nown powers wor!in# ehind pulic
affairs. $n the end, $ determined that enou#h of this t'pe material is alread' availale to
the pulic, and that this oo! would e etter served in raisin# awarenessEe'ond the
machinations of financiers and occult ideolo#ues who direct #loal institutionsE' showin#
that ehind their matri6 of illusionEwhich most citi"ens perceive as realit'Eis an arena
of evil supernaturalism under which these human =conduits@ are willin#l' or#ani"ed. $n
more than thirt' important ilical te6ts, the .ree! New Testament emplo's the term
!osmos, which descries an invisile order or =#overnment ehind #overnment.@ $t is
here that human e#o, separated from .od, ecomes hostile to the service of man!ind
while viewin# people as commodities to e manipulated in the ministration of fiendish
amition. To some, the ori#ins of this phenomenon e#an in the distant past, when a =fire
in the minds@ of an#els caused (ucifer to e6alt himself aove the #ood of .odDs creation.
The once/

4;Q
#lorified spirit was driven mad ' an uneMuivocal thirst to rule, conMuer, and
dominate. His fall spawned similar lust etween his followers, which continues toda' amon#
human a#ents of dar! power who #uard a privile#ed =cause/and/effect@ relationship
etween diaolical forces and the opportunit' for lordship over societies.
The oOectives of the secret orders and the ver' real forces the' serve are seldom
perceived ' citi"ens of democratic societies who choose to elieve national officials
actuall' rule their countries and represent their interests. <et accordin# to sacred te6ts,
not onl' does an active collaoration e6ist etween unre#enerate social architects
and fallen an#els, ut politicians in particular are vulnerale to =principalities and
powers.@ )ccordin# to well/!nown e6orcist .ariele )morth, who has performed more
than sevent' thousand official e6orcisms, =Evil e6ists in politics, Muite often in fact. The
devil loves to ta!e overAthose who hold political office.@>6? )s a result, it is not difficult to
see how =flesh' #loves@ such as U.S. presidents ma' e unaware of their role as chess
pieces on a terrestrial #ame oard slidin# in and out of position as the' are moved ' =the
#od of this world@ toward the phantasmo#oric end #ame Hsee ; Corinthians N8NI. $f
researchers li!e +r. Monteith are correct, and world #overnments are to this da'
influenced ' such dar! an#elic powers, the elite who head the current push to estalish
a New %orld Order are directl' connected with an antichrist s'stem whether the' !now it
or not. %ith vivid testimon' to this, Satan offered to 3esus all the power and #lor' of the
!in#doms of this world. He said, =)ll this power >control? will $ #ive thee, and the #lor' of
them >earthl' cities?8 for that is delivered unto me8 and to whomsoever $ will $ #ive it. $f thou
therefore wilt worship me, all shall e thine@ H(u!e N8RB2I.
Si#ns and evidence of such supernatural involvement in the current move towards
worldwide totalitarian #overnment have een increasin# in political commentar', occult
s'molism, and numerolo#ical =coincidences@ over the past decade. )s pulic opinion is
en#ineered toward final acceptance of the international suordination, we would e6pect to
see these =mirrors of occult involvement@ continue. Recentl', there have een so man'
semiotic messa#es Hvisile si#ns and audile references that communicate suliminal
ideasI in the open that it is startin# to feel as if the =#ods@ are moc!in# us, challen#in#
whether or not we will willin#l' admit their involvement.
This has een e6ponentiall' true since the election of U.S. 5resident *arac! Hussein
Oama, the =5resident of the %orld,@ accordin# to news services around the planet in
;11Q. %hile the #randiose title =5resident of the %orld@E#ranted Oama '
euphoric crowds on that election ni#htEremains to e prophetic, the #lorified ideal ehind
it reflects the #loal hun#er for and movement toward the arrival of =the one@ who
represents the invisile a#encies mentioned aove and who, for a while, will
appear to e the worldDs answer man.

4;F
Still... what most are lind to... is what e#an in ;14; that will reach its cenith in
;14R. $s it no coincidence that the &ice 5resident of the United States recentl' called
for the creation of =the New %orld Order.@
U ;140 Thomas Horn / )ll Ri#hts Reserved
401

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