Supernatural Dangers (Part 1)

Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies

We now come to what is undeniably the weirdest story in the saga of the Strategic Defense Initiative, nonhuman entities, and Area 51. It’s a tale that came from a man named Gordon Creighton—a man who moved effortlessly in the fields of UFOs and U.K. government secrecy. Indeed, when he retired from the government, his interests in UFOs expanded massively, to the point that he became the editor of the long-running publication Flying Saucer Review.

When Creighton died in 2003, the United Kingdom’s prestigious newspaper The Times published a notable obituary, which, in part, read as follows: “Government service occupied most of the working life of Gordon Creighton, but he perhaps made his greatest mark as an authority on unidentified flying objects. His conviction that extraterrestrials were visiting Earth seemed oddly at variance with the more orthodox worlds of diplomacy and Whitehall.…

His expertise took him into government research on maps in oriental and other languages with the Permanent Committee on Geographical Names, and he spent eight years as an intelligence officer on Russian and Chinese affairs at the Ministry of Defense.

It is said that in the intelligence post he worked directly below the secret Whitehall department where the Air Ministry and the RAF were studying information on UFOs.” When Creighton first immersed himself in the subject of UFOs—which was back in the 1940s—he was of the opinion that the phenomenon was extraterrestrial in nature. Over time, however, his views on the subject began to change—and to change to a radical and incredible degree. Certainly, by the late 1970s, Creighton was convinced that the phenomenon had definitive supernatural origins. Specifically, he came to believe that the mystery had its origins in the world of the Middle Eastern Djinn—from which the term “genie” is taken.

Rosemary Ellen Guiley is an expert in the field of the Djinn and its history. She says: “In Arabian lore, djinn (also spelled jinn) are a race of supernaturally empowered beings who have the ability to intervene in the affairs of people.

Like the Greek daimones, djinn are self-propagating and can be either good or evil. They can be conjured in magical rites to perform various tasks and services. A djinni (singular) appears as a wish-granting ‘genie’ in folk tales such as in The Book of 1001 Nights collection of folk tales.” She adds: “In Western lore djinn are sometimes equated with demons, but they are not the same. They are often portrayed as having a demonic-like appearance, but they can also appear in beautiful, seductive forms. The djinn are masterful shape-shifters, and their favored forms are snakes and black dogs.

They also can masquerade as anything: humans, animals, ghosts, cryptids, and other entities such as extraterrestrials [italics mine], demons, shadow people, fairies, angels and more.” Guiley also says this: “[They] are born of smokeless fire (which in modern terms could be plasma). They live very long lives but they are not immortal. According to some accounts, they live with other supernatural beings in the Kaf, a mythical range of emerald mountains that encircles the Earth. In modern terms, they live in a parallel dimension.” All of this brings us directly back to Gordon Creighton.

When the controversy surrounding the Marconi deaths was at its peak—and the subject of considerable media attention in the United Kingdom—Creighton made tantalizing allusions to the matter of the deaths and his suspicions that they were the work of deadly Djinn. Their purpose: to derail Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative, Star Wars. When Creighton came out with his controversial theories, I contacted him, as I had been following the Marconi saga, too. He had quite a tale to tell, which is putting matters mildly. Creighton was of the belief that many of the deaths of Marconi personnel in the 1980s were the results of suicides, but as Creighton also saw things, they were not what one could call normal suicides. By that, he meant that deadly

Djinn were mind-controlling the victims and forcing them to commit suicide as a means to slow down the progress on the Star Wars program. We’re talking about a Djinn-based version of the CIA’s MKUltra: a plan to enslave the minds of their targets and force them to take their own lives. Compounding things more, Creighton had his suspicions that it wasn’t just the Djinn who were hunting down the Marconi people but Russian assassination squads. In light of that, and if true, it’s no wonder that so many Marconi employees died in such a short time —and under bizarre circumstances.

https://scienceandspace.com/ufos/supernatural-dangers-part-2/