From Rationalwiki | The woo is out there UFOlogy |
| Aliens did it... |
| ...and ran away |
The Branton Files are a series of documents on various conspiracy theories published by Bruce Alan DeWalton (or Bruce Alan Walton) under the pseudonym Branton (Bruce Alan (De) Walton) in 1999 and 2000. The material covered ranges from UFOs, Hollow Earth, subterranean bases, a cosmic war in heaven with some reptilians and German time travel experiments.
"Branton" claims to be a CIA agent who was "electronically induced with an alternative personality which was "programmed" to serve the CIA Black Projects[sic] and the Bavarian-Gray collective[sic]. In this alternate or "double life" he had access to several underground bases, and has apparently encountered several alien groups as well."[1]
More likely, "Branton" was former Mormon and Utah-based writer Bruce Allan DeWalton.[2]:122 Branton claims to have had "emotional and psychological disabilities", which he attributes to malevolent aliens.[2]:122 Branton claims to have been in his thirties when he wrote the files.[2]:122
The driving force that animates most of Branton's conspiracy theories is the cosmic "war in heaven", between various alien factions. The factions are:
Branton believes that the Illuminati was created by the Jesuits. What is his evidence? Here:[4]
Illuminati founder Adam Weishaupt who ’started’ the order in Bavaria, GERMANY was a Jesuit.[sic]
In reality, the sole connection Weishaupt has to the Jesuits is... he attended a Jesuit school, and took a position previously only held by Jesuits.[5]
Freemasonry, is of course, a creation of the Jesuits:[4]
Also, the ’Scottish Rite’ of Masonry which advocates the destruction of National Sovereignties in exchange for Illuminati government has allegedly been traced back to the Jesuit college at Clermont in Paris, as have been other Jesuit-initiated Masonic rites.[sic][note 2]
And of course, the Jesuits secretly work for the Draconian Empire.[4]
Branton claims the Maya are descendants of Egyptians, who are themselves descendants of ancient India. As proof he cites a long chain of cranks including Zecharia Sitchin, and James Churchward before reaching his magnum opus, citing 2012 apocalypse crank Jose Arguelles:[6]
Arguelles claimed to have met an old Mayan 'sage' by the name of Humbarty Men who told him that his people, the Mayas, still exist as a civilization (underground? - Branton) and that they have in the last millennia succeeded in 'navigating' at least seven nearby planetary systems through advanced spacefaring technologies.[sic]
One, the Maya still exist; two, Jose Arguelles is not a reliable source for anything related to the Maya; and three, some guy's testimony is not a reliable source about ancient spacefaring.
Note: William Shatner did not create Star Trek, Gene Roddenberry did.Federation personnel apparently contacted William Shatner in the Mojave desert years before he became famous for his part in the STAR TREK series, and certain ideas from real life turned up in the "inspired" television series.
Categories: [Documents] [Conspiracy theorists] [Mormonism]