George Wilkinson: Jesus Was an Alien
After a lifetime of struggling with Dissociative Identity Disorder and 45 years of grappling with his idea despite the disorder, George Wilkinson has finally wrested his massive hypothesis, the work of his life, onto the page: the crazy truth, that Jesus was an alien. Yes, according to his master work, which is finally being published in 2018 after nearly five decades of revision and refinement, the reason Our Lord Jesus Christ was able to perform unbelievable miracles was because He was from outer space. What happened to Wilkinson 45 years ago? He read a work by Dr. Paul Brunton, nearly as brilliant as the present work, that introduced the idea that Jesus was not of this Earth—but not necessarily of Heaven either. His evidence? Hang on to your hats. But first, the marvelous prose. Wilkinson writes the book using an unusual narrative technique, as though the subject matter, the truth about Jesus Christ, were not exciting enough. He writes it as “we” instead of “I,” because of the “spirits” who live in his mind and body with him; like a chimera who has swallowed his genetic twin, Wilkinson is truly a creature of multiple spirits, which makes this book all the more fascinating. Of course, this may lead some to dismiss him as merely “crazy.” But that would be missing the point. Sometimes in this life, it is the truly “crazy” who are the truly “sane”… especially when it comes to finally finding the truth, which is not always obvious and prosaic. Like the truth, Wilkinson’s book is anything but. Where is Jesus from, then? Well, he is certainly not from the same planet as his rival, the Buddha, who is from Neptune. Of course! After reading this book it all seems so clear. Why is there so much religious strife in the world? Well, because the leaders of all of the world’s great religions are criminals from other planets, and they did not necessarily come in peace! Paul Brunton’s insight initially came from an Indian sage’s meditation method, which in 1971 yielded the seeds of this world-shattering idea. Jesus is a criminal, and he comes from Uranus. The news that Jesus is an ET, and a fugitive at that, never left Wilkinson’s mind. It explains so much, I have to thank Brunton, rest his soul, for doing the work to come upon this magnificent truth—and I have Wilkinson even more to thank, for doing the thankless work of holding, nursing, and developing this amazing secret for all these years. As he struggles with the very disease that makes his mind so gloriously open to truth, he has still carried on the work of writing this important book. Unless God is also a criminal, possibly from Alpha Centauri, God bless him. But God may have left us all alone, I fear. The only thing we have to cling to is the evidence. What we know is all we can know, and Wilkinson has done his best to provide us with scraps of this spiritual sustenance. Other weighty topics that Wilkinson enters into involve the horrible butchery of sex, inhumane atrocities the world over, committed by man and woman unto our fellow creatures and unto ourselves; at times, Wilkinson’s alter egos take over in a different voice, using bold type to show the various strains of thought that take place in his mind. It is truly a struggle at times for the reader to comprehend the complexity of the narrative, but as time and the words flow by, things become clearer: some of the spirits with whom George communes are more in tune with the universe and its multivariate possibilities than others. A man who is many men is truly a struggle to comprehend, but imagine the struggle it take for him to live it! The various personalities at interplay in the book are nearly as fascinating as the idea that Jesus is an alien from Uranus… did I mention, that alone is worth the price of admission? But the really important thing about this book is the warning: Jesus was not the only “one” who comes from “out there.” The universe is full of spirits, as I have felt deep down before; further, as Wilkinson has also had the acuity to perceive, the Earth itself, even when it is not under assault by Jesus or other “deities,” is full of, and I quote, “negative filthy powers” that have done all they can to diminish Wilkinson’s powers or remove him from the planet. They have always been aggressive, arrogant, and certain that they can defeat what they perceive as the tininess of George Wilkinson’s positive powers. That, I believe, is the importance of this book. Wilkinson is here to bring a positive message about the true nature of Jesus, aliens, the cosmos, human consciousness, and a rash of other important subjects, which is probably why he has been subjected to spiritual attack throughout his life. I personally believe that there are many alien entities who mean us well and are a positive force in the universe. However, as Wilkinson has learned through much tribulation, far more of the alien and domestic powers in the universe are as evil as they are arrogant and determined. Arrogant is truly the operative word here. We cannot afford to ignore these truths. However, due to the complexity of this brilliant text, I believe it will take me at least one extra pass through the text to complete my digestion of what appears to be the truth. I do not agree with Wilkinson in every particular; although the book is excellent, I sometimes think he does not pay enough attention to positive entities. However, he does shine a light of hope. Wilkinson’s solution? To use what he calls an IACET missile: Image, Alive, Creative, Motion, Thought, to fight the negative forces: these are the only weapons we have against the darkness. As this brilliant book attests, there is positivity, but we must learn to use it before it is too late. |
So where are they? Are we alone? Looking for the news on whoever is out there. |
More on george wilkinson: Psychological advice from a "Conspiracy theorist"? |
Why aren’t they here yet?
If the universe is infinite, WHY HAS NO ONE FOUND US YET? We can’t possibly be the only intelligent life form. I have found several horribly pretentious academic papers on the topic, and they use a lot of rambling to go absolutely nowhere except in the direction of a very badly written sci-fi novel (Heinlein is about as autistic as you can actually get away with). Please don’t waste an hour of my time on having to decipher the message “I don’t know but fear not, I’m still more clever than thou.” If you don’t have the answer, you don’t have the answer. Most of these garbage essays give themselves credibility (or rather try to) by citing the lofty-sounding moniker of “THE FERMI PARADOX,” which sounds fancy, but it’s just asking MY question: We’re orbiting a relatively young star, so even if OUR dumb asses haven’t figured it out yet, there has to be SOME way to do interstellar travel, right? If we can’t possibly be the most advanced race in the universe, the ever present human capacity for hope naturally gets us thinking: well someone must have figured it out yet. So where the [expletive deleted] is everybody? Why are we alone? Why hasn’t sky daddy shown us the way? Are aliens a fantasy, just like God? The brilliant George Wilkinson (in his book, reviewed here above) has one answer: they were already here. Maybe sky daddy IS god and IS an alien and IS real and is all three of those things at once. Wilkinson’s work holds thusly: Most of the leaders and founders of major Terran religions were criminals from Uranus or elsewhere in space. An interesting idea. They have already been here, and they are actually the creatures that founded the religions that have us all endlessly gnashing our teeth at one another’s throats. If he is correct, it is almost amusing to think of their dark amusement at the Crusades and Jihad and all the other senseless conflicts they have created. Little do we know, we are fighting it out over something real… but something which is utterly “alien,” if you’ll pardon my pun, to what we THINK we are fighting over. Jesus wasn’t just real, he was a TANGIBLE GOD…. That is a highly interesting theory, which is why I recommend George Wilkinson’s work—but is it possible for ALL aliens to be malicious? No; either they are not uniformly malicious, or they are INCOMPETENT, as we still have things here that we think are good. Wilkinson belives that working for good can combat these false gods and their poisonous cosmic emanations of dogma. or else… I could be wrong… and things are really worse than they seem, simply because I am so overly accustomed to how bad they are. In other words, if the gods/aliens are all evil, then that means that we are living on a slave planet and do not realize it, like the people of North Korea. This is an interesting thought and I will continue to explore it. I was watching this interview with a North Korean defector, who had the surreal experience of finding out that she had been living in a bizarre mental experiment, in which the populace was convinced that the world outside their prison bubble was a nightmare. Well, it is a nightmare out here, unless you’re Jesus, but it is a less bad nightmare than the one in the North Korea bubble, actually. In my thought experiment, then, North Korea is a bubble of horror within a bubble of horror. The aliens created this prison for us, just like Kim-Jong-Un, within his prison, created an inner prison for his people. The opening up of that society provides a fascinating opportunity for the rest of us to study their minds. Is our own acceptance of our current predicament the result of propaganda? Perhaps propagated by our own DNA? Or even propagated virus-like by the giant cosmic joke of our religions? In other words…. Are we living in a reality manufactured by our alien overlords? Are we slaves? OR are there good aliens and bad, fighting for our very souls on this Earth? Or do they not care about us? Are we just another stop on the cosmic highway, barely worth a gas refill? Will our planet be backfilled next Tuesday? Will Judgment Day consist of Jesus harvesting our organs to give eternal life to a foreign species? This may all seem to be getting a bit far-fetched, but the “Fermi Paradox” crew seems to have little to say on the subject that is any more plausible. The leading theory in some circles at the moment is that we are in fact all there is… that by some giant mathematical probability improbability, a failure to carry the 2 on the part of the universe—that against all odds, an idiot species on a fairly young planet far out on the arm of the Milky Way is just as far along as anyone in the intergalactic space race, and that if anyone is likely to conquer and oppress (or conquer and improve) the universe, it is just as likely to be us as anyone. What poppycock! For our sake, I would hope it is true poppycock, but that isn’t very likely. There are rocks in orbit around a black hole that are more venerable than most of our civilizations. If there are aliens out there, a popular knee-jerk reaction is to presume they are too disgusted by us to bother with oppressing us, talking to us, singing campfire songs with us, or even acknowledging our gnat-like existence. Normally, what the masses think appalls me. But in this case, at least the masses are self-deprecating, so they must for once be correct. We are too disgusting for anyone “out there” to have anything to do with us. Or else Jesus was a criminal alien from Uranus. It has to be one of those two things. Otherwise, I throw up my hands. |
For lack of a better word, most normies would probably call George Wilkinson a "conspiracy theorist." For the uninitiated, Wilkinson is the author of Jesus, [sic] Is the Criminal from the Planet Uranus, a brilliant compendium of Wilkinson's thoughts from the past 45 years on the topic that has absorbed him:
The notion that, as the title implies, most of the world's major religions are the work of criminal renegades from elsewhere in the solar system or universe, and that unfortunate psychic vibrations from these beings are at war with those who like Wilkinson would rather attempt to inject some sort of decency into the universe as we live it. Life is a battle between bad forces and good; but like Jesus, many bad forces are extremely clever when it comes to disguising themselves in a veneer of positivity. However, aside from cosmic politics, there are very many positive contributions in this thought to the field of self-help, believe it or not. Whether or not the universe is actually set up as Wilkinson sees it—I cannot tell yet for sure, although the ideas are fascinating—in his battles with "filthy negative forces" emanating from criminal elements such as Jesus Christ, Wilkinson has learned a great deal about keeping one's chin up and dealing with the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune (and the even more outrageous actions of people who consider themselves "the norm"). Wilkinson has created an acronym he uses in the book. He describes all forms of communication as a kind of ballistic missile that is launched at another being, a missile made of a fairly consistent potpourri of ingredients: Image, alive, creative, emotion, thought: IACET. He uses the IACET ideas as a metaphor, both for ideas which serve to advance the interests of criminals like Jesus, but also for ideas that are POSITIVE and which serve as a counter-example to the filthy machinations of "our lord and savior" and similar galactic criminals. IACET, implies that thoughts and images are an object that can be launched and traded—with the difference, Wilkinson specifies, that they are ALIVE with a LIFE OF THEIR OWN. This reminds me of the scientific idea that life may be spread from planet to planet via asteroids impregnated with the spore of plants and animals, dormant in outer space, but which may thrive as micro-organisms should the projectile/asteroid reach the surface of the "heavenly" body that has thee proper conditions to support the form of life it carries. This is an apt metaphor, as rare is the mind that is hospitable to the microbes of thought that accompany the tenderest, most sensitive grade of IACET! Those thoughts are like delicate flowers that may only bloom in one clime. By contrast, the lunk-headed manipulations of Jesus are like an asteroid whose living charge could grow anywhere, from Mars to Jupiter. These are the commonest of IACETS, the Falstaffs of physics, psychologically speaking. Wilkinson's advice in this department, however, is so useful it nearly made me cry. And I am not an easy man to move to tears! He explains them as "brickbats or bouquet," our IACETS. They have the power to immensely help, or to just as greatly harm. How to defend against negative or ill-meaning IACETS? The metaphor lends itself more to counterballistic missiles of spirit than to firing IACETS back in the opposite direction; Wilkinson warns that the way out is not a "tit for tat" mindset against the negative forces, as such battles are a rape against the female reproductive organs, metaphorically, and also they envelop us in vicious and time-wasting battles that lead to endless humiliations. The humiliations of fighting like with like, especially with more powerful space beings such as Jesus, should be obvious. There is an element of martial arts involved in the self defense here: we cannot fight Jesus and his allies head on. We have to sidestep them. Be clever, as we are not powerful. Be smart, as we are not intelligent. Be timely, as we are not timeless. And have dignity where the universe would conspire to strip us of every ounce of that precious commodity. Using a mantra, Wilkinson teaches, is a particularly useful apparatus for fighting Jesus and other purveyors of corrosive IACETS, otherwise known as the painful and radioactive variety of outer space derived thoughts and feelings. I don't suppose you ever thought you would get supremely useful psychological advice from a "UFO looney," but then again most of what we think is wrong. The human mind is born into a universe that sometimes seems to be designed to be misunderstood, especially with n'er-do-wells like Jesus coming along to muddy the waters. Jesus is a font of IACETS that are up to no good; even those that are well meaning are confusing. If Wilkinson is correct, Jesus is the kind of criminal who almost has a change of heart from time to time; but this only makes him that much more damaging. They say the most effective lie contains a grain of truth; well, if the liar believes his entire lie including the truth, the entire package or flight of IACETS only becomes that much more horribly effective. However, as I have stated elsewhere, my one major disagreement with Wilkinson is that he does not seem to think there is much room in the universe for positive aliens; the only positive IACETS come from positive thinkers here on earth. However, if powerful beings such as Jesus were uniformly terrible, how could the universe still be in place? Life forms desire to live, and so far the structure has let us. If there were no powerful positivity in the universe, we would have all been dust in whomever is the true God's mouth a millennium ago. Who is the spiritual leader we can look to for positivity? For that we must clearly go on looking. Read it here! |