Curiosity – Curiosity may have killed the cat, but scientists think it may cure the addict. It’s a far out idea, but it happens to be true.

The brain’s innate interest in the new and different may help defeat the power of addictive drugs. Novelty could help break the vicious cycle of treatment and relapse, especially for the many addicts with novelty-craving, risk-taking personalities. This conclusion comes from controlled experiments in which novelty drew cocaine-treated rats away from the place they got cocaine.
read more

Whitley Strieber knows that implants are real because one was placed in his body that doctors have been unable to remove, but have been able to determine is not natural. But that’s a step away from what this Dreamland is about, because the much-studied implant removed from the body of scientist “John Smith” can now be shown to be something from another world.

Listen as Dr. Robert Koontz, Dr. Roger Leir and the anonymous scientist explain to Whitley Strieber why the object taken from the scientist cannot have been manufactured on earth.
read more

The last large group in the western world who can be freely laughed at and mocked are the alien abductees. Minority groups such as racial or sexual minorities, the mentally ill or the disabled are protected from discrimination and derision. But let an abductee report publicly that he or she was raped, and they will have the same experience that Whitley Strieber had: their suffering will evoke sneering laughter from the media, they will lose their social standing, and they will end up isolated outsiders.

But not to Anne Strieber, who has more knowledge of the experience than any other researcher, and the wisdom and open-mindedness to get abductees to tell us not just what they hope we will believe, but their TRUE stories as they actually remember them.
read more

The implant that was removed from “John Smith” last year was not made of materials that are available on earth. To be specific, certain of the isotopes of the metallic components of the object do not have the same ratios as isotopes found on this planet.

There has been an excellent study of the object done at the highest level of scientific professionalism. At present, we are trying to obtain a version of the study that does not contain any way of identifying the scientist who did it or the labs where it was done.

It is pitiful and an outrage that this should be necessary but, in fact, if his name was known his career would be in jeopardy, and the labs might face serious consequences for the work they did.
read more