Remember the men in black (MIB) conspiracy theory of the 1990s? It’s now a conspiracy fact!

Whistleblower claims CIA used DNA data from Ancestry and 23andMe customers in search for aliens

“Does the CIA have its own “Men in Black”?

Apparently, the government isn’t disclosing everything it knows about UFOs. A whistleblower has accused the CIA of attempting to use sites like 23andMe and Ancestry.com to uncover people with extraterrestrial DNA in their makeup.

“The CIA wants to hunt them down,” said philosopher and novelist Jason Reza Jorjani, Ph.D., while discussing the so-called top secret government program in an episode of the podcast “American Alchemy.”

Jorjani claimed that he was alerted to this bug-hunting initiative by army veteran Lyn Buchanan, who claims he was a “psychic spy” with the CIA’s remote viewing program — which investigated whether individuals could use extrasensory perception to conduct recon on distant objects, events or people.

Jorjani said Buchanan had informed him that former CIA analyst and UAP specialist Christopher “Kit” Green had devised a backdoor way of accessing 23andMe and Ancestry — uber-popular sites that break down users’ family trees — to screen users for a specific “genetic variance” linked to nonhuman beings.

Green was notably part of the Remote Viewing Program in the 1970s, but left the intelligence agency long before the founding of the DNA detective sites.

Buchanan reportedly learned of this so-called campaign after being approached at a diner by three individuals claiming to be Nordics — tall, blue-eyed, blond visitors from beyond that are said to be living covertly among us.

“They live in like small towns in the [Colorado] Rockies, and they pass because they look like tall Scandinavian people,” Jorjani remarked of Buchanan’s theory.

 

 

h/t Sir P. Ent