The Earth Is Hollow & Filled With Aliens
If you thought the “flat Earth” theory was the craziest
conspiracy you’d hear about all year, think again. Because there’s a growing
community of people convinced the Earth is hollow, with a race of superior
“alien” humans, Vikings and Nazis living in paradise at the center. They even
believe that flying saucers and UFOs come from within the interior Earth — sent
from the highly evolved tribes to spy on us and prevent nuclear war.
Spearheading the bizarre movement is Rodney Cluff, author of
“World Top Secret: Our Earth IS Hollow.” He was so confident in the theory that
he organized a 2007 voyage to the hollow Earth — with a plan to set off from
Russia on an icebreaker ship to find an “opening” at the North Pole. The
$20,000-per-head expedition was canceled, but this in no way dampened his
enthusiasm for the theory that flies in the face of modern scientific thinking.
He told SunOnline that the movement has exploded in popularity — with thousands
subscribing to the idea of an inner sun and Earth.
“More and more people are coming to terms with the fact that
the Earth is hollow. I get emails from people learning about it every day,”
Cluff said. “It’s definitely growing in popularity — certainly not in the
millions but maybe in the thousands.”
So, what does Cluff think of the loony rival theory that the
Earth is flat?
“I don’t know how the flat-Earthers can be so confused,” he
told SunOnline. “They are obviously wrong. The world is not flat — it’s hollow.
They reject all the evidence.”
Contrary to flat-Earthers, the hollow Earth movement
believes the planet is a sphere — or more specifically, a “doughnut” shape. And
the theory does not just stop at our Earth — the group believes the moon, sun,
stars and other planets are all hollow bodies.
There are thought to be three “substantial” openings into
the inner Earth — two near the poles and one in the Himalayas. Cluff believes
the shell of the Earth is about 800 miles thick, from the outside to the inner
surface. “Suspended in the center of that hollow is an interior sun that is
divided by day and night sides,” he says.
Those who claim to have traveled to the inner Earth have
described the land as like the Garden of Eden. Norwegian sailor Olaf Jansen
claimed he sailed with his dad through an entrance to the Earth’s interior at
the North Pole in 1811. He told author Willis George Emerson how they lived in
the beautiful paradise for two years.
“The city of ‘Eden’ is located in what seems to be a
beautiful valley, yet, in fact, it is on the loftiest mountain plateau of the
Inner Continent,” Jansen said. He claimed the “superhumans” living there were
at least 12 feet tall and never got ill.
As the hollow Earth theory has grown in popularity, so has
speculation about the people apparently living in the center. It’s now thought
to be home to Nazis who escaped from World War II, the lost Viking colonies of
Greenland and the lost tribes of Israel. Cluff, who lives in Utah, says the
“superior” human race living at the center of the Earth consider themselves
“guardians of the planet.”
“They regularly spy on us using spacecrafts and flying
saucers,” he said. “They want to keep an eye on us and stop us from starting a
nuclear war. The majority of UFOs actually come from inside our planet.”
Dianne Robbins, another hollow Earth theorist, says those
living at the center have evolved to be immortal. “They are physical humans
like we are, but they live in peace, isolation and seclusion and through this,
they have gained their immortality,” she says. The telepathic communicator
believes there are 100 subterranean cities, known as the Agartha network, at
the center of the hollow Earth.
The hollow Earth theory has its origins in the belief
systems of the ancient Greeks, Tibetan Buddhists and Christians. In ancient
times, the idea of underground realms often became associated with the
afterlife. The idea gained traction after 18th-century astronomer Edmond Halley
argued that unusual compass readings could be explained by the fact that the
planet was composed of a hollow shell. He said they were two inner concentric
shells and an innermost core.
The idea has been rejected by scientific research ever
since.
Interest in the theory reignited in the 1940's when polar
explorer Adm. Richard E. Byrd claimed he entered the inner Earth. He also
apparently found thriving civilizations on his 1920's trips and was once
“attacked by flying saucers that burst out of the ocean and wiped out half of
his fleet.” The insane idea was once again thrust into the spotlight last year
when conspiracy theorists claimed pictures proved NASA is hiding a huge hole
leading directly to the center of the Earth.
Video footage revealed never-before-seen pictures of the
alleged hole — which the US government apparently has covered up. YouTube
conspiracy theorists secureteam10 said: “Every single satellite image that we
have of the North Pole shows a massive hole or a blackout hole put there to
hide whatever’s underneath.”
Psychologist Jonathan Young said: “If we were to discover
the other Earth, the place we have sought, the missing world — it would be
profoundly humbling. So this would be quite a paradigm shift. History would
change in a very major way.”
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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