The fact that the data was all coming to him from verifiable insider sources impressed Bennewitz and led him to believe their every word.…
Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies
One such account came from one Jason Bishop III, which is an alias for another alias belonging to Tal Lavesque. No wonder the Dulce saga is so confusing. Lavesque/Bishop published what he claimed were the words of a former employee at the base, Thomas E. Castello. According to Castello: “Level 7 is worse, row after row of thousands of humans and human mixtures in cold storage. Here too are embryo storage vats of humanoids in various stages of development.
I frequently encountered humans in cages, usually dazed or drugged, but sometimes they cried and begged for help. We were told they were hopelessly insane and involved in high risk drug tests to cure insanity. We were told to never try to speak to them at all. At the beginning we believed that story.
Finally in 1978 a small group of workers discovered the truth.” Then, Alan B. de Walton also wrote about the claimed firefight that led to the hasty retreat of the U.S. military. In his controversial work, The Dulce Book, he stated that the human body is “surrounded by the etheric ‘body,’ surrounded by the astral ‘body,’ surrounded by the mental ‘body.’”
On this same issue, an insider told de Walton: “We also actually have an extra ‘body,’ the emotional ‘body,’ that the aliens don’t have. This part of us constantly puts out a kind of energy they cannot generate or simulate. This emotional energy … is to them, like a potent, much sought-after drug. They can take it out of us and bottle it, so to speak.… Also during this ‘harvesting,’ Greys will look directly into our eyes, as if they are drinking something or basking in light.”
In 1991, Valdemar Valerian’s book Matrix II hit the bookshelves. It referred to a female abductee who had seen in the Dulce base “a vat full of red liquid and body parts of humans and animals … she could see Greys bobbing up and down, almost swimming.” In 2015, Joshua Cutchin penned A Trojan Feast: The Food and Drink Offerings of Aliens, Faeries, and Sasquatch. Cutchin’s words are chilling, to say the very least: “While abduction research does not overtly suggest that aliens are harvesting people for consumption, there may be a grain of truth to the report [contained in the pages of Valerian’s Matrix II]. ‘Nourishment is ingested by smearing a soupy mixture of biologicals on the epidermis. Food sources include Bovine cattle and human parts … distilled into a high protein broth.…’” What are we to make of all this? Undoubtedly, certain portions of the story given to Bennewitz from the late 1970s to the early to mid-1980s sound unbelievable.
They may well have been. Certainly, the plan seems to have been designed to mentally destabilize Bennewitz, which is exactly what happened. He became a definitive shell of his former self. The fact that a very similar tale of a violent firefight between security personnel and the aliens was given to Bob Lazar—but with the location changed from the underground realms of Dulce to the highly classified S-4 facility in the Nevada desert—strongly suggests that we should proceed with deep caution when it comes to evaluating Lazar’s recollections of this particular story not because Lazar was a liar but because he may have been fed lies—which is a very different thing altogether.
All of this inevitably reflects on the testimony of all the other whistle- blowers whose stories we have dissected and studied (and others whose testimony is still to come in further chapters of this book). Was “Fritz Werner” speaking truthfully about the 1953 crash of a UFO in May 1853, an incident with deep links to the Nevada Test and Training Range? How about the story of “John,” who spent a year or so working out at Area 51? Over time, he came to suspect that what he read was deliberate disinformation, for what reason he couldn’t fully fathom, but probably, somehow, it was connected to a program designed to deceive the Russians of what was going on at the base.
Perhaps the goal of the staff at Area 51 was not to fully confirm or to deny the claims of alien activity at Area 51 but to confuse the matter. After all, having researchers such as myself chasing leads, threads, and tales that ultimately prove nothing might be the aim—because such leads and tales are actually a mixture of fact and well-placed and well-thought-out disinformation.
Therefore, when a leak occurs—as it most assuredly did with Bob Lazar in 1989—those at Area 51 might certainly be concerned, but they can also be fairly safe in the knowledge that the same whistle-blower will be sharing data that is false—and that may be shown to be false. In that sense, Bob Lazar may very well have told 100 percent truths, but they were truths as he saw them. When Lazar said that he read classified files on a 1979 shoot-out at Area 51, he was almost speaking honestly, but that doesn’t mean that the data provided to him by his colleagues was real. That goes for Paul Bennewitz, too, whose tales eerily mirrored those of Lazar.
What all of this demonstrates is that despite the “I want to believe” factor that hovers around so many of the alien-driven stories coming out of Area 51, we need to proceed with a great deal of caution and skepticism but, in the process, certainly not dismissing the possibility that aliens really might be housed and working in below-surface facilities at Area 51 and Dulce, New Mexico. Our minds should be open but not open to the point of uncritical gullibility.