People who have had UFO experiences or who have become convinced there is something real about UFOs are confused and dismayed by the recent cloning announcement by the Raelian group. What Rael was told by aliens doesn?t make scientific sense, so does it mean that all information given to us during UFO experiences is wrong? Anne Strieber writes, “Since I’ve read literally hundreds of thousands of letters from experiencers over the years, I’m in a good position to answer this question.” Find out what she has to say about UFO Cloning.

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Rhawn Joseph thinks there’s a genetic, neurological basis for religious belief and spiritual experience?that God is all in our heads. He believes homo sapiens have evolved the ability to experience God through the amygdala, a small, almond-shaped structure buried deep in the brain. This is in the most primitive part of the brain, where emotions and sexual pleasure come from. Joseph says, “These tissues, which become highly activated when we dream, when we pray or when we take drugs such as LSD, enable us to experience those realms of reality normally filtered from consciousness, including the reality of God, the spirit, the soul, and life after death.” Despite his studies, he’s not an atheist.
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Nature hasn’t been making sense lately. One example is the mysterious hole that keeps appearing in a frozen lake. Ice fishermen and snowmobilers have always trusted Long Lake in Minnesota to stay frozen solid all winter?until the last two years, when there?s been an unexplained hole in it. Last March, one person died when he came upon the hole unexpectedly.
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Michael Guillen, the science journalist selected by Clonaid to verify the recent births of two human clones, says, “This morning, I suspended the independent review process designed to determine whether or not a cloned human baby has been born. The team of scientists has had no access to the alleged family and, therefore, cannot verify firsthand the claim that a human baby has been cloned. In other words, it’s still entirely possible Clonaid’s announcement is part of an elaborate hoax intended to bring publicity to the Raelian movement.”
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