Alien Base: The Evidence for Extraterrestrial Colonization of Earth: RETURN TO EARTH
Finally, Orlando and Elena were informed that they would be returned to the place from where they had been taken, and that for a time they would remember nothing. Later, memories of these events came back. For example, Ferraudi recalls that on arrival the beings asked him to bend down, then they pointed a very bright light at him, causing him to fall asleep. He woke up with the sun almost up and his body feeling very numb, without remembering whether he had caught any fish. He gathered up his fishing-tackle and went home.
Fifteen days later, when he was again getting his fishing-tackle ready for another Saturday night of fishing at the same spot, Ferraudi reasoned to himself: ‘I don’t know why I should go fishing, if I end up falling asleep.’ Suddenly, it ‘clicked’. ‘No! I didn’t fall asleep! I travelled in a flying saucer!’ ‘I am sure I did not dream all this,’ Ferraudi told Hector Antonio Picco, the principal investigator. After questioning the witness repeatedly over an eight- year period, all the while carefully studying his body language, Picco has concluded that Ferraudi is totally truthful. Furthermore, Picco is impressed by the fact that the beings evidently imparted to Ferraudi scientific and medical information well beyond his own knowledge.
For instance, Ferraudi wanted to create a ‘machine’ to cure cancer. In the beginning of his manuscript, ‘Cancer: its origin and development’, he writes: The origin of this disease lies in the altered functions of the ductless glands, which due to their bioelectrical balance having been upset, drain into the blood incomplete humors that lead to the irrational forming of the cells. This phenomenon leads to the immediate consequence of these humours circulating throughout the whole body, since blood is a vehicle; thus incomplete humors look for the weakest organs where they can exert their influence within a favorable field.
In July 1975, years after Orlando Ferraudi outlined this theory, Nobel Prize- winner (1937) Dr Albert Szent-Györgyi came out with his ‘electromagnetic theory’ of cancer, which was expressed in a very similar way to that of Ferraudi — despite the fact that the abductee had only the most rudimentary knowledge of medicine.