It is suggested that this Lam is the same type of being as people call the “greys,” since there is a slight resemblance in the oversized head drawn by Whitley Strieber on the cover of Communion. I agree there is a resemblance, but I do not agree that Crowley invoked this entity. I am of the opinion the sketch was shared with him or this was a description given to him. I do not believe Crowley had the capacity to work with elementals in his condition and he could not have possible been “clear” enough to receive anything worthwhile or trustworthy. Crowley was a heavy drug user, of opiates and powders. It is precisely this type of mind which the UFO appears to enjoy playing with the most. The key personality here is Kenneth Anger who relates that Crowley had something to do with the UFO flap. Anger is an underground film maker responsible for several occult type films including Lucifer Rising (1972) which features Jimmy Page on guitar in the soundtrack. There are no words but its set in Egyptian with the theme of a high priestess, alligators, hieroglyphics and plenty of Egyptian symbolism. Rituals which start affecting nature in the beginning of the film, causing storms and tempests closes the film in ritual with a giant UFO flying over landmarks of Egypt. What I gain from this is that Anger had an interest in UFOs and may have intentionally spread a type of propaganda in relation to the Crowley “portal” or “Gateway for the Great Old Ones.” Dr. Al Lawson, a professor of English at University State California in Long Beach, was able to show that UFO abduction experiences can be mimicked by hypnosis when the subjects are placed into a deep trance. Lawson took subjects, all of who were prescreened and held to have no previous interest or study in UFO materials, and they were all hypnotized by Dr. William C. McCall. Lawson, in his book, writes: “Seven of the eight subjects went into deep trance and were asked to describe what they saw as a UFO appeared to them in their ordinary environment, then as they went on board, met the occupants, were examined by them, were given a message, returned safely to the normal world, and thought about the way in which the sighting had affected them.” The results showed that these “imaginary abductees” reported experiences that were very similar to those who felt they had actually been abducted, like the known cases of Betty Hill or Charlie Hickson: “All the imaginary subjects described many details which are identical to ones found in literature. These patterns range from the obvious (“saucer-shaped”) to rare and even obscure though well-established detains of high strangeness.” (9) Returning to L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology, the overlap among early UFO contactees and Scientology is something to be noted. John McCoy and his wife Gareth were among the first 100 original members of Scientology to attain the status of “Theta Clear” and they were both into the UFO phenomena, having worked closely with George Hunt Williamson and several other contactees. John McCoy was also one of the early progenitors of the Jewish banking |
conspiracy, linking it to a deal made by earth governments with extraterrestrials. (10) Later in this chapter we explore the role of George Hunt Williamson and interesting political theories promoted by similar groups of people. 1950’s Hippies on Mushrooms Watch UFOs in the Mohave Desert Before there ever was a 60’s hippie music generation, while far more conservative kids were trying not to get caught swaying their hips to Elvis, there was an entire generation of Bohemians and psychonauts using mushrooms, mescaline and other naturally derived entheogens. LSD was possibly sneaking into this scene as well. Hundreds of people would gather at a place called Giant Rock, in Southern California, to take psychedelics and watch for UFOs. This was actually the beginning of the psychedelic movement in America, not the sixties as everyone has been taught. A book by Adam Gorightly and Greg Bishop titled A is for Adamski: The Golden Age of the UFO Contactees, is the first to chronicle the history of UFO contactees and some of the bizarre instances involved in each one. Among them, Gorightly includes the case of Orfeo Angelucci (1912-93), who, driving home from work at Lockheed Aircraft on May 23, 1952, observed a red, glowing object in the sky. Quoting from A is for Adamski: “At some point the object slowed down until it was nearly motionless, hovering over a field; it ejected two smaller green orbs that landed near Orfeo’s car. The larger, red object then departed. “Don’t be afraid, we are friends,” the orbs telepathically transmitted, advising Orfeo to ‘drink from the crystal cup you will find on the fender of your car.’ Orfeo described this strange elixir as ‘the most delicious beverage [he] had ever tasted.’ “Orfeo was eventually treated to a voyage around the cosmos and baptized ‘in the true light of the world’s eternal.’ On subsequent starship trips he visited an unnamed planet where he met Jesus of Nazareth. ‘This is the beginning of the New Age.’ Outer space Jesus told him, apparently.” (11) The question we need to ask ourselves here is whether or not this person was actually given something at Giant Rock and had some kind of psychedelic experience and related it as though they had been aboard a UFO, or did they get slipped some acid, and while drugged, were taken aboard a real physical craft, or was this person working for some stealth intel group, aiding in the creation of a new alien mythology? (9) Messengers, p. 46; Lawson, “What We Can Learn from Hypnosis of Imaginary Abductees’? (10) A is for Adamski, p. 185 (11) ibid,p. 19 |