Just got through watching Psychic Detectives on Court TV and I suggest the person with an open mind watch the repeat tonight.
I will give you a quick overview:
Just got through watching a documentary on TV, and I suggest the person with an open mind watch it on DVD tonight.
I will give you a quick overview:
A large alien spaceship split up into lots of smaller spaceships which fly down to the Earth. Everyone thinks they are friendly except for one computer geek who says they suspect wrong.
The computer geek went to the invasion scene, and the military took notice because he began to describe things that they didn't know. He told the military that the aliens had been to the scene before and left a spaceship. The geek said when you find the spaceship you will kill the aliens.
The geek then followed the alien's energy, like I should have talked about earlier. He took the military to the place the aliens had been earlier. The military began looking for the alien's weakness based on the geek's description.
The military then bring the geek back to their base and he tells them he keeps seeing two names, "Area" and "51". The special forces are about to investigate a lead that matches the description given by the geek.
When they get to the base what do they find under the ground? The alien spaceship from a crash scene. When they open it it's 50 years old and looks rather unkempt.
It's like the geek says, he gives the military the pieces of the puzzle and the military has to put the nuclear bomb together. The only thing supernatural about this geek's ability is that we don't fully understand how one nuclear bomb can blow up something a quarter the size of the Moon. If you were to go back in time 200 years and show people aliens, they would communicate about it using Morse code.
There was only one show and you should watch all of it. That's if you're a freethinker. It just goes to show how real the abilities of geeks are, since aliens destroyed half the world and I completely missed it. I guess I must have been in the bathroom. But it was on TV, so it must have been true.