Dr. Michael Masters, a biological anthropology professor at Montana Technological University, is best known in UFO circles for his theory that ‘grey aliens’ could be humans from the future traveling back in time.
The reception of his theory since the release of his ground-breaking 2019 book, Identified Flying Objects: A Multidisciplinary Scientific Approach to the UFO Phenomenon, has been overwhelmingly positive, Masters reports. Earlier fears of widespread ridicule, even career suicide, turned out to be unfounded.
But recently, there have been other phenomenal revelations Masters has revealed that are adding a new twist to his fascinating journey of recent years.
In a NewsNation interview hosted by Ross Coulthart, Masters describes his own personal experiences with ‘high strangeness,’ including a sighting of five UFOs over his home in 2022.
But what’s even more astonishing is that Masters says he has had a number of surreal telepathic experiences in the past couple of years, including a conversation in his mind with a security light in his backyard.
“This is where I start to sound like a crazy person, ” Masters says with conviction.
Masters describes how he learned that a later incident, involving a face-to-face telepathetic communication with another person, was actually the same source entity that contacted him previously via the security light.
According to Masters, in the springtime of 2023, he was considering the idea of quitting his work related to anomolous phenomenon and aliens. He said he was burnt out from conferences, travel, interviews, stress and online trolls.
Not long after, while at a conference in Mesa, Arizona, he had an encounter with a man that he did not know.
The stranger, who was with someone Masters did know, calmly walked onto a hotel balcony where Masters was sitting and pulled up a chair right to him so that the two men were face-to-face.
Staring into his Masters’ eyes, the man then, Masters says, communicated with him telephatically: “I can tell this is upsetting you, but we need to be this close for this to work…we know that you’ve been thinking about quitting lately, but we prefer that you not do that.”
Of course Masters was stunned. How did this man – who he later learns is Eric Mitchell – know he was thinking of quitting?
As the weeks went by, Masters says, he thought a lot about the encounter and came to the determination that whatever the entity was that communicated with him the first time via the security light was the same entity that used Mitchell to send him a message he could not ignore.
Regardless of the origin of the telepathic messages he received, Masters asserts that what he does know for sure is that they happened.
The confusion and unease Masters demonstrates about these recent strange personal encounters is clear in his voice, words and body language.
Making such personal encounters public – more so than releasing his first book about UFOs/UAPs – Masters feared even more this time around that he could be committing ‘career suicide’ talking about them.
Yet his fears were once again unfounded. In fact, he maintains the overall response to his experiences has been “just the opposite.”
In addition to the credibility his paranormal experiences add to the overall debate over the existence of ‘high-strangeness’, it also makes it safe for more researchers and scientists to study phenomenon and the paranormal.
For decades, within the field of ufology, and related disciplines, phenomenon sometimes are believed to attach to the researcher personally, resulting in strange experiences and encounters. This phenomenon is called “The Hitchiker Effect.”
Recently, UFO personality and disclosure advocate, Lue Elizondo, revealed he and his family have experienced orbs flying around inside their home.
A number of researchers who participated in studying phenomenon at SkinWalker Ranch have reported experiencing paranormal activity only after they visted the ranch.
Dr. Masters’ reluctant revelations of very strange encounters with an otherworldly unseen being, or entity, who he asserts knew his thoughts, lends credibility to the mountain of such stories by respected people over the past decade.
How Masters was thrust into the UFO/ET debate
In 2019, when Masters was preparing the release of his first book, Identified Flying Objects: A Multidisciplinary Scientific Approach to the UFO Phenomenon, he did not know what the reception would be like.
Masters had every reason in the world to be concerned.
For decades, scientists have avoided even mentioning the UFO phenomenon for fear that it would damage, even end, their careers and reputation. That’s how successful the largest and longest counter-intelligence, mind-control operation against the American public in U.S. history has been. But the dam is cracking.
And yet, while the stigma around the subject has abated in recent years, scientists like Masters are well aware that it still persists mightily in many aspects of society, including institutional sciences.
But Masters says he has been pleasantly surprised by the positive reaction across the board to his book – from his superiors at work, to his colleagues, the media and everday people.
His book theorizes, from a biological anthropologic position, that the commonly described ‘grey aliens’ are anatomically approximate to what he would expect humans to look like in the far future.
Master’s cites common characteristics of greys that are linked to humans – large hairless heads (presumably to enclose larger brains), upright bifocal and bipedal entities “who communicate with us in our own languages, and who possess technology advanced beyond, but clearly built upon, our own.”
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