Awesome or Off-Putting is a weekly delve into cryptozoology, ufology, aliens, medical marvels, scientific wonders, secret societies, government conspiracies, cults, ghosts, EVPs, ancient artifacts, strange facts, odd sightings or just the plain unexplainable.
The general UFO conspiracy theory is that aliens are here, they probably golf with Barack Obama at least twice a month – and the government’s not saying a thing. The only concrete proof ever found for this is that golf clubs with just three finger-grooves were found stashed in the cargo bay of Air Force One.
Despite little hard evidence – true believers know the feds are covering the whole thing up. State officials, however, seem more than willing to spill everything they know all over Youtube.
Like this retiring politician from New Hampshire, for example…
Due largely to politicians’ seemingly uncooperative nature, UFO enthusiasts need to rely on testimonies from off-duty police officers, sexy cougar teenagers and/or Mexican amateur videographers for the meat of their weird symposium discussion panels. Politicians, you see, need votes to retain their jobs. If you come out all weird and UFO-ish, the next thing you know you’ll completely lose your presidential bid.
Politicians, it would seem, have far too much to lose to volunteer any information that may turn off the masses. A retiring politician, however, well one of those might gab spaceships all day. Like Henry McElroy, for instance. According to something called Ray Alex Website, this is what McElroy’s got for us:
“Henry W. McElroy, Jr, retiring State Representative to New Hampshire, declared this week that former U.S. President Eisenhower was briefed about the presence of extraterrestrial intelligent beings on Earth. McElroy also said that the document he viewed while at the State Legislature made reference to the opportunity for Eisenhower to meet the alien visitors.”
We know what you’re thinking – the now senile McElroy got caught off guard, issued a rambling semi-coherent statement about UFOs burrowing up his butt or something, and the whole thing’s been blown out of proportion.
Not so, says we.
You see his video statement is about eight minutes long. He’s sitting at a desk reading a prepared statement. This implies to us that actual thought went into his message. He provides no proof other than testimony – but that testimony did include a team of people who helped him film it. Again – prior thought is implied.
Is he legitimate? Who knows? But he is very interesting:
And for the record – that goes around about perfectly with this other clip. It’s a second-hand account of President Eisenhower climbing on board an alien spaceship:
Karla says
Awesome!
john smith says
great job have a nice day