It has recently been proved that the famous “Starchild” skull that Lloyd Pye has been researching for 11 years is not the skull of a child, and that, while it contains human mitochondrial DNA from its mother, it ALSO contains other DNA from its father that has not been identified.

Listen as Lloyd Pye takes us through the continuing saga of this artifact, explaining all the latest research and also retuning with us to the moment 900 years ago when an unknown woman partially buried the body of the Starchild, laid its arm across her breast, and committed suicide.

What happened? Why, in the depths of what was then–and is now–a great wilderness, did this drama take place?
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In 2004, Winchester City Councillor Adrian Hicks spent ten minutes watching an alien walking down the High Street on a Saturday afternoon in his home town of Winchester in the UK. This courageous man tells an amazing story–and one that might well become more common in the future.

Listen as Councillor Hicks tells Whitley Strieber his story, and they go on to discuss his experience and the future of contact as only two people who have had direct experience can. If you listen closely, you will catch some real bombshells, dropped in very casually in this very provocative and engaging discussion.
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In this week’s Dreamland interview, Lloyd Pye talks about hidden cities. A long lost city in what is now South Africa has recently been discovered. The remains aren’t noticeable from the ground, but just like crop circles, they can be seen clearly from the air.

The remains of a huge metropolis that measure about 1,500 square miles, and are part of an even larger community of about 10,000 square miles. These cities appear to have been constructed between 160,000 and 200,000 BCE.

Researcher Michael Tellinger worked with pilot Johan Heine. Heine had long suspected the ruins were there and had been searching for them from the air for many years.
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This is a truth that’s hidden in plain sight: It’s not poverty, drugs, lack of gun control or even downright meanness. The reason there is so much homicide in America has to do with politics!

When Americans begin routinely complaining about how they hate their government and don’t trust their leaders, it may be time to look warily at the homicide rate. Historian Randolph Roth tried to make sense of changing homicide rates by sifting through records of tens of thousands of homicides in the United States and western Europe over the past four centuries.
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