“It didn’t take long for the Collective to learn of this pestering so far from them. They got tired of the Reptilians on Earth and sent the Atlanteans here. They colonized the continent of Atlantis. This was a fierce race, one that’d been from Lyra and had fought hard against the Reptilians. After Lyra was destroyed they moved to the Pleiades, but their fighting spirit caused too much trouble. That’s when they were sent to Earth, to both get rid of them and to pit them against the Reptilians. They were able to sink the continent of Lemuria — which was the 6,000-mile wide continent where the Reptilians had settled, and sometimes called simply ‘Mu’ — thus forcing the aliens underground. That was 300,000 years ago and they’ve been there ever since. They didn’t go without a fight, though, and they haven’t stopped fighting since they’ve been down there. It took them awhile, but they tinkered enough with the large belt of natural gas under Atlantis so that it became over-compressed, sinking the continent. That threw Earth into a deep and prolonged dark age, one that lasted for millennia. The fighting never really stopped, however, though by 50,000 years ago it’d heated up again. This led to the nuclear war over what’s now India, culminating in the war’s end around the year 2600 BC. Since then it’s been quiet, with the 2,000 or so Reptilians that are left mostly focused under the Indian subcontinent and in Antarctica.”
“Just 2,000 of ‘em?” Turn says. “You’ve got to be kidding me!”
“I’m not,” Mark says, “those are their numbers.”
Bennewitz chuckles. “Not many, eh? Well trust me — they’re damn hard to get rid of when they dig themselves in, like they’ve done here.”
“They’ve never been good at reproducing, hence their reliance on the Grays as workers and underlings,” Mark says. “It’s one of the drawbacks of not having a soul — you can’t make new souls. They hate that, and despise anyone that has that ability over them.”
“It’s one of the reasons they go out into the universe and conquer and enslave,” Walter says.
“They’ve conquered and enslaved 21 other star systems, taking over the levers of power from within,” Mark says. “They use spies and then hybridize the surface population. This is their fifth column and we hardly stand a chance against it. In many ways — like with the Illuminati — we’ve already been defeated.”
Bennewitz nods to that. “The threat they pose from without — and the threat the humans working with them pose from within — makes them nearly impossible to defeat.”
“But we can do it… right?” Turn says.
“Humanity’s depending on us,” Mark says.
“Depending on us to root out the traitors,” Walter says.
“It all comes back to the military cabal that’s associating with the Reptilians,” Bennewitz says. “We know that 13,000 children have been taken by the Reptilians over the past 25 years.”
“Why?” Turn asks.
“They drink the blood, and they prefer the blood of humans that’s unpolluted. When adults, the blood is usually polluted with all
“Wasn’t always like that,” Bennewitz continues. “When the dinosaurs were destroyed they began to use the humans as their main food source. So this has been going on for as long as human history.”
“I just can’t believe it,” Turn says.
“Better start,” Mark replies. “Thousands of humans disappear each year all over the world, and most of them can be chalked-up to the Grays doing the abducting, the Reptilians doing the eating. They have to. You see, the blood contains the life force, which is what they live on. They live in the fourth dimension, a lower astral realm, and to manifest in the third dimension they need the energy of human blood and human flesh.”
“God… can we even stop ‘em?”
Mark nods. “The path to victory is through expanding our consciousness, for at that point they can no longer affect us
“And that’s why they’re fighting all the harder now,” Bennewitz says, “that’s why they’ve infiltrated our society, pitting the haves against the have-nots. And they
“Like Hitler,” Mark says, looking to Turn. “It’s not taught in school, but the Nazis created the current underground Antarctic colony way back in 1938, and they did so at the invitation of the Reptilians.”
“Ha!” Bennewitz laughs. “
“No, Hitler probably wasn’t the best choice,” Mark admits. “Reptilians have problems controlling the human race, and Hitler is a prime example why. They can’t control the kind of madness that often takes hold in leaders, like it took hold in that nutcase. At that point the Reptilians have no use for them.”
“But… why work with them at all?” Turn asks.