The One About Eric Davis Saying There Are Four Species of Aliens on Earth…

August 20th, 2025

Four species of aliens on earth, but no Epstein files.

Mmm hmm. Fascinating.

Is the Epstein thing causing them to run The Mighty Wurlitzer on afterburner with the aliens?

I follow this topic closely because I can’t help it, but do normies even care about this?

I think of this as going pretty much unnoticed by mainstream audiences. Background noise, in other words. The TV is on in the other room as someone pops a TV dinner in the microwave. As the weird odor of Salisbury steak starts to woft around the apartment…

In other news, Pentagon scientist says four alien species walk among us…

Via: Redacted:

5 Responses to “The One About Eric Davis Saying There Are Four Species of Aliens on Earth…”

  1. soothing hex says:

    I remember finding this classification very easily on the internet maybe decades ago. Artistic renditions make it look very unconvincing, although there’s some ground for:

    a. nazi UFOs
    b. pilots able to sustain many Gs of acceleration (possibly thanks to body characteristics akin to those of insects)
    c. genetically-engineered people with possible reptilian characteristics (eyes…)
    d. the ‘grey’ figure as a logical outcome of continuous human evolution towards evermore infant-like facial features, for some reason

  2. Snowman says:

    I always assumed that the aliens’ looks could be due to uniforms they wear, not what’s actually inside, or that they were disguised robots. The streets of earth aren’t the safest place to be these days; I’d sit in my ship and watch through the robot’s cameras. And I’d make its exterior totally non-threatening, even appealing.

    Psychological studies have shown that people instinctively react favorably to an infant’s face. They describe them as charming, beautiful, and adorable. They feel attracted to infants and protective of them. They want to please them by talking to them and touching them.

    The theory is that people are similarly attracted to all creatures with baby faces, especially eyes that are larger in comparison with the rest of the face than adult eyes usually are, as in anime and greys.

    An alien on Earth would be better off looking like an infant than like a crocodile, even a wide-eyed one.

  3. dale says:

    I appreciated the congressman’s skepticism as well as the recognition that people’s lives were destroyed for expressing these same ideas.

  4. Dennis says:

    @soothing hex

    Re. d, I’m reminded of the phenomenon of neotenisation in domesticated animals. Basically, the tamer they get, the more they look like juveniles. They also have increased propensity for ‘play’, which may be a measure of creativity — a quality Greys seem to sorely lack; Whitley Streiber saw them as drones in a hive mind.

    I lean towards a belief that Greys are synthetic biological forms, perhaps a contrived ‘species’, developed as workers, perhaps even as corporeal avatars, for non-corporeal entities.

    Perhaps they all fit this bill, a red team/blue team masquerade.

  5. soothing hex says:

    @Dennis

    Arguably abductions have a component of ‘playfulness’.

    What separates the domesticated animal from the wild is very well described by Freud. Freed from nature’s constraints, the infant experiences a very advanced form of freedom – but soon realizes the utter dependence it is based on. This is the initial traumatic shock from which arises inner repression. History is the return of the repressed. Among other features, man is able to sacrifice the present for a future gain, i.e. to exercise will – and solve any problem given enough time.

    The best book I know about this is Norman Brown’s Life Against Death. I think it has some material on the theme of play.

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