Hybrid breeding programs: top image is missing persons. bottom image is a cave system map.

by SystematicApproach

18 Comments

  1. SystematicApproach on

    Many ancient traditions described gods or sky beings mating with humans, producing demigods, giants, or altered bloodlines. Stories of divine-human offspring appear in Mesopotamian texts, Greek mythology, and biblical traditions such as the Nephilim. In European folklore, fairy changelings echoed similar themes of non-human interference in human reproduction. The modern hybrid narrative inherited this structure but replaced divine beings with extraterrestrials.

    In the 1950s, early UFO “contactee” accounts focused largely on benevolent space visitors who warned humanity about nuclear war and spiritual evolution. Reproductive themes were not central, though some narratives hinted that humanity played a larger cosmic role. The shift began in the 1960s with abduction reports that included medical examinations and reproductive procedures.

    By the late 1970s and 1980s, the reproductive element became more structured within abduction literature. Researchers such as Budd Hopkins documented recurring claims of sperm and egg extraction, pregnancies that ended mysteriously, and lifelong patterns of contact. These accounts increasingly suggested that encounters were not isolated but part of an ongoing program.

    In the late 1980s and 1990s, the hybrid breeding concept developed into a more elaborate framework. David Jacobs described a coordinated, multigenerational effort in which hybrids were created, raised, and gradually integrated. Abductees reported being shown children they were told were partially human and partially alien. The narrative expanded to include training programs, emotional bonding exercises, and the idea that hybrids would eventually blend into human society.

    In more recent decades, some versions of the story have emphasized integration and coexistence rather than clinical extraction, suggesting that hybridization represents a transitional phase in human development.

    Across its evolution, the hybrid breeding narrative has maintained a consistent thread: humanity is biologically significant, non-human intelligences are intervening through reproduction, and the process unfolds quietly over generations.

  2. Cultural_Ad_9241 on

    The only programs going on are the child trafficking programs the president is managing, but you’re too distracted with all this alien stuff to even care. Or do you need to be distracted not to care, really?

  3. MinionSympathizer on

    This was a stupid inference to make in Us (2019), similarly stupid and unfounded in this context.

  4. I can show you a graph that correlates pool drownings with the number of movies nicholas cage is in. Does that mean they are related?

  5. TheColorRedish on

    So… You’re telling me… People disappear near cave systems? Man I’m not a rocket surgeon, but I can figure this one out without aliens.

  6. Do yall understand the difference between causation and correlation? I’m all for evidence for aliens but at least make it concrete

  7. I bet if you put up a population heat map up it would also match up fairly well. We do like to live near mountains, mountains tend to caves.

    Additionally, on top of what others have said about people getting lost in caves, people also fall off mountains or die in the wilderness a lot near mountains.

  8. People post this a lot but it’s the first time I’ve seen one of these mention hybrid breeding programs

  9. I’m gonna be honest with you….there is definitely breeding happening in those caves, but it ain’t aliens. In high school we called it spelunking spunking.

  10. Positive-Feedback-lu on

    Out in some parts of new mexico the roofs of some caves are thin enough to break and fall into when walking over them.