A quick look at Google News yields four news stories with Reptilians featured.
Everything from an article about how "Secret services 'must be made more transparent'" to "What will the 2011 Model of UFO Look Like?" contain either references to Reptilians in the article itself or comments about the articles.
Searching for Reptilians on Google yields hits for David Icke, shapeshifting reptilians, greys, reptiles, Illuminati, reptoids, aliens and reptilian agenda, which leads me to believe that these searches aren't being run by children looking for info for school projects.
I know here, just about every article I do on Reptilians goes to the top, or close to the top of the most read pages here.
So people still hold the Reptilians in high regard in the Conspiracy circles.
What is the fascination?
Well I pointed out in an article I wrote elsewhere that Reptilians have figured into science fiction and fantasy lore for a long time.
And that's not even counting early mythology.
The earliest fictional account I could find about Reptilians (on TV) was in 1967, when the British TV show Dr Who introduced the Ice Warriors.
The Ice warriors were reptilian humanoids, but their features were usually hidden under heavy armor.
Then in 1973, Dr. Who introduced the Draconians, a space-faring feudal civilization of reptilian humanoids.
The Draconians in Dr. Who were articulate and had an advanced culture, very much like feudal Japan and they came from the planet Draconia.
Now Draconians are actually listed as a race of reptoids on many websites devoted to Reptilians.
They are even mentioned in the Dulce Wars of 1979-1985.
The "real" Draconians are said to have come from colonies in Alpha Draconis.
But, they originated here on Earth.
By the way, Dr.Who also had another reptilian race of beings known as The Silurians.
They were actually scientifically advanced sentient humanoids who predated the dawn of man.
So they originated on Earth, like the "real" Draconians.
And also the Silurians live underground.
The Silurians debuted in 1970, a full 29 years before David Icke's The Biggest Secret came out.
Icke was born in 1952, so that would have made him about 15 when the Ice Warriors showed up on Dr. Who.
Of course if you really wanna tie Icke's Reptilian Conspiracy to the media, look at the original "V" that debuted in 1983, 16 years before The Biggest Secret came out.
To quote, AC/DC, Who Made Who?
For more Reptilian History check out http://hubpages.com/hub/The-Reptilian-Take-Over
Friday, September 3, 2010
Reptilians Are Still Popular
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Illuminati Symbolism
Over at The Vigilant Citizen, they have a VERY in depth article on Lady Gaga being an Illuminati Puppet.
It is very well worth the read.
http://vigilantcitizen.com/?p=1676
I have read about Illuminati symbolism for awhile.
Actually, I think the first place I saw anything was on David Icke's site.
They had a huge section there of everyday symbols and things we take for granted that he says are actually Illuminati "clues".
That made me start looking at things, but if you read too much into the symbolism, just about everything is an Illuminati marker.
Reading Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum didnt help any.
(Which Foucault's Pendulum is an interesting story by itself. I never buy hardcover books. I always wait for them to come out in paperback, but I bought Pendulum off the shelf back in the late 80s. Something about it caught my eye.)
I have to admit, a lot of the Illuminati symbol theory is very interesting, but taken too far, it can make you very paranoid.
I wonder what your home would look like if you removed everything that might be considered an occult symbol?
I mean EVERYTHING.
Of course you can look at this as if they are right, and the Illuminati have invaded almost everything.
Or you can look at it as they are paranoid and they see the Illuminati in everything.
Either way I like to explore all the theories and look for common threads.
Friday, October 24, 2008
The Illuminati, Out of the Shadows?
Did he just say "there have been some wrong footed moves from Hank Paulson and the Illuminati, if you will"?
http://www.disclose.tv/action/viewvideo/10658/CNBC__Illuminati_blamed_for_market_meltdowns/
I think he did.
Did he just say "Illuminate the Illuminati."?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dssDJxEx_gA
I think he did.
Friday, January 4, 2008
David Icke ,part 6

In 1999, David Icke's books were removed from Indigo stores across Ontario, and several venues on his speaking tour were cancelled, after protests from the Canadian Jewish Congress. The University of Toronto allowed his planned speech there to go ahead, despite the presence of 70 protesters, including the Green Party of Ontario, outside the Hart House Theatre. Icke received a standing ovation from the audience after speaking for five hours.
University of Toronto law professor Edward Morgan wrote on September 30, 1999 to the university's president, Robert Pritchard: "Having been involved in a number of the more renowned cases in Canada dealing with hate literature, it is my view that this is precisely the type of vilifying material with which the Supreme Court was concerned in its decision regarding the Criminal Code ban. The publications praise classic anti-Semitic tracts, and are replete with references to a secret society carrying on a global conspiracy led by a manipulating Jewish clique. The material which I have reviewed finds no place in the Canadian marketplace of ideas."
Sumari Communications, which hosted Icke's tour, denied the allegations: "I dispute the anti-Semite issue because the Jewish community has chosen to isolate anti-Semitic quotes in David's books which he himself uses quotes from Jewish authors to prove his theories. No one is forcing these people to be here, but what is important is that they have the choice. It is called freedom and David doesn't even mention the Jews in his talks."
Icke himself addressed the concerns during his speech: "Is this a Jewish plot? No, No, No. Is it a plot? Yes, Yes, Yes. We are being manipulated, and I do not care if you are Jewish, Chinese, Catholic, etc. We are all being manipulated. And those people that are offended by what I have to say, they should choose not to be offended."
Icke lives in Ryde on the Isle of Wight, where he makes occasional public appearances.
In January 2003, he travelled to Brazil, and later talked about having used Ayahuasca: "[It] is a plant – a rain forest plant – which they turn in to what they call a turn and Shaman in South America have been using it for centuries at least to take people into other realms of reality.... I took it twice and it was an experience – particularly on the 2nd night – that completely transformed my view of life. What it did was take my intellectual understanding that the world is an illusion into the realms of knowing it’s an illusion and there’s a difference between intellectually understanding it’s an illusion and this level of knowing it because you’ve experienced it. I got to the age of 50 without taking a single magic mushroom and I never even had one smoke of pot or anything."
technorati tags: conspiracy theory, conspiracy theories, conspiracy book, conspiracy books, government conspiracy, conspiracy, ufo files, ufo abductions, ufo evidence, alien evidence, alien photographs, alien photos, davidicke, reptilian
Thursday, December 20, 2007
David Icke ,part 5

Icke believes that Combat 18 is a front for the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which in turn is an "Illuminati front." The role of the ADL, he says, is to "brand as anti-Semitic" anyone who gets close to "the truth." In ... And the Truth Shall Set You Free, he wrote: "In Britain, I am told by an extremely reliable source very close to the intelligence organisations that the "far-right" group, Combat 18, is a front for the sinister Anti-Defamation League, the United States arm of the Israeli/Rothschild secret service, Mossad. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has been operating in Britain and Europe since at least 1991 and its role is to brand as anti-Semitic anyone who is getting close to the truth of what is going on. What better way to discredit an investigator than to have a "far-Right" group like Combat 18 to praise them?"
Icke has strongly denied that his reptiles represent Jews, calling it "friggin' nonsense." "I am not an anti-Semite!", he told The Guardian, "I have a great respect for the Jewish people." He maintains that the reptilians are not human, and therefore not Jewish, but are "extra-dimensional entities" that enter and control human minds. "This is not a Jewish plot. This is not a plot on the world by Jewish people," he told Jon Ronson.
During a question-and-answer session after one of his lectures, Icke told Jones: "I believe that people have a right to believe, to read, and have access to all information, so that they can then make up their own minds what to think. If something is a nonsense, and if something doesn't stand up, it will be shown to be a nonsense in the spotlight of the public arena."
British journalist Louis Theroux, reviewing Jon Ronson's Them: Adventures with Extremists, cautioned against accusing Icke of anti-Semitism: "Icke's 'theory' is basically The Protocols of the Elders of Zion with a new cast and a few script changes. Not surprisingly, Icke has come under suspicion of anti-Semitism.... Not only might it be unfair to Icke, but by implying that he is so dangerous that he has to be censored, the watchdogs are giving a patina of seriousness to ideas that are — let's face it — very, very silly."
technorati tags: conspiracy theory,conspiracy book,davidicke,reptilian,illuminati,conspiracies,david icke,ufo abductions,alien sightings,conspiracy books,alien, aliens
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
David Icke ,part 4
Barkun writes that Icke has "clearly sought to cultivate the extreme right," but that the relationship is tense because of the New Age "baggage" that Icke brings with him. Barkun cites the London Evening Standard, which wrote in 1995 that: "uncanny parallels are emerging between Icke's thoughts ... and the writings of senior figures in the armed militia movement in America." Barkun writes that Icke's relationship with militias and Christian Patriots is complex. On the one hand, Icke believes the Christian patriots to be the only Americans who understand the truth about the New World Order, but on the other, he allegedly told a Christian Patriot group: "I don't know which I dislike more, the world controlled by the Brotherhood, or the one you want to replace it with."
Some of Icke's theories have been controversially attacked by some as anti-Semitic because of his references to a secret elite that rules the world, which includes prominent Jewish banking families, who he says planned the Holocaust and financed Adolf Hitler, and his use of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. In ... And the Truth Shall Set You Free he wrote:
I strongly believe that a small Jewish clique which has contempt for the mass of Jewish people worked with non-Jews to create the First World War, the Russian Revolution, and the Second World War. This Jewish/non-Jewish Elite used the First World War to secure the Balfour Declaration and the principle of the Jewish State of Israel. They then dominated the Versailles Peace Conference and created the circumstances which made the Second World War inevitable. They financed Hitler to power in 1933 and made the funds available for his rearmament."
In 1995, Alick Bartholomew of Gateway, at that time Icke's publisher, told the London Evening Standard that an early draft of ... And the Truth Shall Set You Free contained "revisionist Holocaust material."
Icke has cited white supremacist, neo-Nazi and other far-right publications in his books. British journalist Simon Jones notes that the bibliography of ... And the Truth Shall Set You Free lists The Spotlight, formerly published by the now-defunct Liberty Lobby, and which Icke calls "excellent," and On Target, published by the Australian League of Rights, which has organized speaking tours for Holocaust denier David Irving. Jones writes: "It's tempting to dismiss David Icke as a confused and ignorant man, manipulated by extremists in order to present their philosophy in a socially acceptable format. But Icke clearly understands the implications of his words."
Mark Honigsbaum has written about the apparent link between the more extreme New Age proponents and the far-right armed militia movement in the U.S. Icke's books contain multiple references to the "Illuminati," which Icke and the militia movement believe constitutes the secret government they call the "New World Order". In 1995, Honigsbaum wrote in the London Evening Standard that Combat 18, the British neo-Nazi group, was publicizing Icke's speaking tour of the UK in its internal magazine, Putsch. The magazine wrote that Icke spoke about "'the sheep' and how the 'illuminati', uses them for its own ends". The story continued: "Icke began to talk about the big conspiracy by a group of bankers, media moguls etc. — always being clever enough not to mention what all these had in common."
technorati tags: david icke, draco conspiracy ,reptilian conspiracy ,conspiracy.com ,reptoids.com ,draco reptilians ,draco conspiracies ,reptilians ,reptilian theory ,reptoids ,draco ,reptilian draco hybrids
Saturday, December 8, 2007
David Icke, Part1
When I first started reading about conspiracy theories, I really liked David Icke's because his came the closest I had found to a "Unified Conspiracy Theory".
He took almost everything into account, and tied everything in together.
David Vaughan Icke (pronounced to rhyme with "like") was born April 29, 1952 and is a British writer and public speaker who has devoted himself since 1990 to researching "who and what is really controlling the world." A former professional football player, reporter, television sports presenter, and former spokesman for the Green Party, he is the author of 20 books explaining his views.
Icke argues that he has developed a moral and political worldview that combines New Age spiritualism with a passionate denunciation of what he sees as totalitarian trends in the modern world, a position that has been described as "New Age conspiracism."
At the heart of Icke's theories is the view that the world is ruled by a secret group called the "Global Elite" or "Illuminati". In 1999, he published The Biggest Secret, in which he wrote that the Illuminati are a race of reptilian humanoids known as the Babylonian Brotherhood, and that many prominent figures are reptilian, including George W. Bush, Queen Elizabeth II, Kris Kristofferson, and Boxcar Willie.
His son, Gareth Icke, is a musician and beach soccer player who has represented England in international beach soccer.
According to Political Research Associates, Icke's speaking engagements can draw a substantial audience in Canada, with his organizers claiming as many as 1000 people attending one in Vancouver. During an October 1999 speaking tour there, he received a standing ovation from students after a four-hour speech at the University of Toronto, while his books were removed from the shelves of Indigo Books across Ontario after protests from the Canadian Jewish Congress.
Icke was born in Leicester to Beric Vaughan Icke (born 1907, Leicester) and Barbara J. Icke (née Cooke) (married 1951, Leicester), and was raised on a council estate, or public housing, according to the biography on his website. He left school to play football for Coventry City ( The Sky Blues) and Hereford United ( The Whites) in the English league, playing as a goalkeeper until forced to retire at the age of 21 because of a swollen knee.
He found a job with a local newspaper in Leicester and became a reporter, moving on to local sports presenter for BBC South's Program South Today. He appeared on the first episode of British television's first national breakfast show BBC Breakfast Time presenting the sports news and featured on the show until 1985. He would also become strong part of BBC Sport's presentation team, often as a stand-in host on Grandstand and snooker programs. He was part of the BBC team at the 1988 Olympic Games, but he left the BBC later that year to become an activist for the Green Party. He rose swiftly to the position of national media spokesperson. In 1990, he wrote It Doesn't Have To Be Like This, an outline of his views on the environment and his political philosophy.
David Icke, Part1, posted to http://conspiracycom.blogspot.com/ on 12-8-2007
Thursday, July 26, 2007
The Montauk Project: Stewart Swerdlow
To do any research online about Stewart Swerdlow is a daunting task.
There are TONS of links out there ( Google lists 111,000 ).
There's Stewart's own site:
http://www.expansions.com/
There's a brief write up about him:
http://www.bielek.com/stewart.htm
There's Stewart Swerdlow on the Illuminati and the structure of this reality.
http://www.2012.com.au/Swerdlow.html
There's the same write up about him thats on Al Bieleks site:
http://www.philadelphia-experiment.com/Stewart_Swerdlow.htm
And there's Stewart Swerdlow - History of Mind Control (History and Deprogramming)
http://www.whale.to/b/swerdlow.html
...just to name a very few.
Stewart says that he witnessed human sacrifice and blood drinking rituals at the Montauk mind control centre on Long Island, New York, in which Sir Laurence Gardner played a major role. ( See? I told you it all ties in!) And William F. Buckley Jr. as well.
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/laurencegardnershapeshifter.shtml
Happy Hunting!
Sunday, May 6, 2007
The Top Ten Conspiracy Theories,Number 10,Part 2
According to Icke, the reptilian group includes many prominent people and practically every world leader from Britain's late Queen Mother to George H.W. Bush, Hillary Clinton, Harold Wilson, and Tony Blair. These people are either themselves reptilian, or work for the reptiles as what Icke calls slave-like victims of multiple personality disorder: "The Rothschilds, Rockefellers, the British royal family, and the ruling political and economic families of the U.S. and the rest of the world come from these SAME bloodlines. It is not because of snobbery, it is to hold as best they can a genetic structure — the reptilian-mammalian DNA combination which allows them to 'shape-shift'."
Icke has since published a number of additional books on the same theme. His latest work sees George W. Bush, also a reptilian, playing a key role in what Icke alleges is a 9/11 conspiracy. In Tales From The Time Loop and other works, Icke states that most organized religions, especially Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, are Illuminati creations designed to divide and conquer the human race through endless conflicts. In a similar vein, Icke believes racial and ethnic divisions are an illusion promoted by the reptilians, and that racism fuels the Illuminati agenda.
Popular Posts
-
One of the best set of UFO pictures (or one of the best set of fake UFO pictures) were those taken by UFO Contactee Elizabeth Klarer. O...
-
I have been seeing quite a bit of the "US Navy Map of the Future" since the Japan earthquake and tsunami. Does anyone actu...
-
Project Superman: Andy Pero This, to me, is one of the more facinating stories to come out of Montauk. Mainly because a lot of what he said ...
-
Dulce Base is the name for a supposed secret underground facility in or near Dulce, New Mexico, United States. To date, very little eviden...
-
In my usual running around looking for weird stuff (which you know I love) I ran across this article at the Telegraph.co.uk that if it were ...
-
It looks like the most popular subject here on this blog in the last little bit is chemtrails. In case you don’t know what chemtrails are......
-
"You and me hit by a test of white evil rain...Watching the jet planes go by" Chemtrails-Beck The seemingly harmless streaks acros...
-
Today's THV - KTHV Little Rock News Article : "PARIS - The saucer-shaped object is said to have touched down in the south of France...
-
Natural News has reported this..... Homeschooling Banned in California as State Turns Parents Into Criminals for Teaching Their Own Children...
-
If you think that UFO sightings, crashes and cover ups are a recent thing, think again. If it is a conspiracy, it's a far reaching one. ...

