In a recently-released data-dump of emails hacked from Hillary Clinton’s email account, Wikileaks included approximately 1,100 emails belonging to her campaign manager, John Podesta. Among them were two recent emails from Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell, a long-time advocate of UFO research, discussing a potential meeting between the two regarding the weaponization of space, zero-point energy, and possible extraterrestrial involvement.

"Because the War in Space race is heating up, I felt you should be aware of several factors as you and I schedule our Skype talk."
read more

We got a taste of her encounters during the childhood roundtable discussion. Now, Darlene, better known as "Cosmic Librarian" at UnknownCountry.com, is here to go deeper into some of her highly strange experiences, their possible meanings, and what they point to in terms of the nature of Visitor phenomena.

To connect with Darlene and share your stories with her, please visit: CosmicLibrarian.com.
read more

Ron Felber, who thrilled Dreamlanders with his terrific interview on the Mojave Incident in September of 2015 returns with a harrowing and fantastic story to tell us about some of the world’s deepest and darkest secrets.

Did you know that half a million children were subjected to creepy personality tests in the 1960s that asked them things like what they thought of their sex organs, and other equally invasive and inappropriate questions?

Where are these children now? More than that WHAT ARE THEY and how might they be endangering us?
read more

A genetic study of the world’s oldest anatomically-modern human, the body of a boy buried 24,000 years ago near Siberia’s Lake Baikal, has revealed that this individual was of European ancestry. This finding is surprising, in that Lake Baikal, the world’s largest freshwater lake, is situated north of modern-day Mongolia, a location quite far east on the Eurasian continent. What is even more surprising is that the DNA of this individual is also found in many Native Americans, half a world away.
read more