Thanks to huffpost, “weird news.” Would that the tone of derision that the MSM uses for the ET presence would be as quickly transformed into the kind of respect, and even awe, that is now greeting the mushrooming, global #occupyeverywhere movement of the 99%. Lee Spiegel works hard to change the tone despite the derision of skeptics that he includes for “balance,” but the fact that his columns are filed in the”weird” section by his employer speaks volumes. On the other hand, check out the original meaning of the word “weird,” from an online etymological entry:
O.E. wyrd “fate, destiny” (n.), lit. “that which comes,” from P.Gmc. *wurthis (cf. O.S. wurd, O.H.G. wurt “fate,” O.N. urðr “fate, one of the three Norns”), from PIE*wert- “to turn, wind,” (cf. Ger. werden, O.E. weorðan “to become”), from base *wer- “to turn, bend” (see versus). For sense development from “turning” to “becoming,” cf. phrase turn into “become.” The modern sense of weird developed from M.E. use of weird sisters for the three fates or Norns (in Germanic mythology), the goddesses who controlled human destiny. They were usually portrayed as odd or frightening in appearance, as in “Macbeth,” which led to the adj. meaning “odd-looking, uncanny,” first recorded 1815.
Yes, it may be our destiny to actually meet up with the “gods,” our brothers and sisters in the cosmos. It may be our fate to acknowledge that we are everywhere.
‘We The People’ Petition Seeks Truth Of Alien Visits From Obama Administration
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Under the White House’s “We the People” program, citizens can appeal to officials “to take action on a range of important issues facing our country.”
“If a petition gets enough support,” the government website promises, “White House staff will review it, ensure it’s sent to the appropriate policy experts and issue an official response.”
Gentlemen, start your intergalactic engines . . .
WATCH THIS OFFICIAL WHITE HOUSE PETITION PROMO:
By “enough support,” the administration means a petition has to receive just 5,000 signatures within 30 days to warrant an official White House response. That’s a low enough threshold to get a lot of conspiracy theorists licking their suspicious chops.
As soon as the White House announced its We the People program, UFO/ET proponent Stephen Bassett wasted no time penning the first alien disclosure petition which reads:
We, the undersigned, strongly urge the president of the United States to formally acknowledge an extraterrestrial presence engaging the human race and immediately release into the public domain all files from all agencies and military services relevant to this phenomenon.
Bassett is executive director of Paradigm Research Group which advocates for the truth about UFOs.
“In 1996, when I launched the Paradigm Research Group, I registered as a lobbyist on behalf of a number of organizations on this particular subject — the idea of total disclosure of an ET presence on Earth by the world governments,” Bassett told The Huffington Post.
“Everything PRG does, including World Disclosure Day — all of it contributes to this process.”
And now the die is cast, because within just four days of Bassett’s petition being registered, it amassed more than the necessary 5,000 signatures to warrant an official White House response.
And that just delighted arch UFO skeptic Robert Sheaffer. “Well, now we’ve got something to look forward to!” he said sarcastically.
“It would be one thing if what it were asking is, ‘Please reveal all that you know about extraterrestrials.’ But this wording pre-supposes that the contact is already going on,” Sheaffer told HuffPost. “It doesn’t allow the possibility that there isn’t an extraterrestrial presence already engaging the human race.”
Sheaffer, author of the new book, “Psychic Vibrations,” suggests President Obama made a mistake by offering to respond to any petition with a relatively modest number of signatures, “because there’s no shortage of bizarre and marginal groups and beliefs that can raise 5,000 signatures.”
As Alejandro Rojas pointed out in his recent HuffPost blog, there are examples of prior American presidents — such as Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter — who tried to obtain information about UFOs. EvenJohn F. Kennedy asked his staff to provide him with UFO materials.
So now, both alien believers and skeptics are playing a mutual waiting game as they anticipate someone at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. in Washington to tell us who’s right.
“The response from the White House could be utterly trivial,” said Bassett. “They could just blow it off by saying something like, ‘Our policy is that we don’t investigate this phenomenon anymore’ — which is a lie — ‘and whatever this phenomenon is, it doesn’t pose a threat’ — which they don’t know for sure.”
And a White House spokesman told HuffPost, “It’s not going to be practical for us to start commenting on each individual petition ahead of their getting officlal responses.”
But when that official response about extraterrestrials on Earth comes — as it must — will you believe it?
CHECK OUT THE FOLLOWING UFO ITEMS: