Alien Base: The Evidence for Extraterrestrial Colonization of Earth – A PARADOX
It was implied that ‘ordinary’ human beings were as yet not conditioned to accept or mix freely with the Itibi Rayans. Yet, paradoxically, the local Indian peasants not only mixed freely with, but were employed by the extraterrestrials to work on their plantations. As Pallmann explained: These Indians were employed on very humdrum tasks, keeping the area free of insects, because, despite the protective covers, insects did manage to find their way into the seedlings and saplings. The Indians looked upon their employers as light-skinned foreigners from another part of the world.
I doubt if they gave a second thought to the rather unusual chin formation of the Itibi Rayans. In any case, the simple Amazon Indians would not have believed that people could come from other planets. They would have rejected the story in exactly the same way as most of us would reject the idea of several men having been landed on the Moon, if we had not seen it on TV. ‘At first,’ Satu Ra told Pallmann, ‘the local Indians looked upon us with some caution. But then Xiti and I began to heal their wounds, and cure their sick.
They soon came to accept us.’
On one occasion, Pallmann claims to have witnessed a group of Indians alighting from a spacecraft. Out stepped the most audacious group of wild-looking but smiling savages followed by a bunch of serious Itibi Rayan explorers. There was plenty of excitement, but what really made me shake my head was this: these, perhaps the most feared man-eaters of the endless forests . . . were laughing and giggling like little girls. What an excursion it must have been . . .
The Itibi Rayans had known these men already since their first landing near Pucallpa. The amazing thing I discovered was the age of these Indians: all over 50 years, looking as healthy and young as those Indians being only 20 or 25. Another controversy! Had they been used as guinea-pigs by the Itibi Rayans?