For generations, people have wondered whether we’re truly alone in the universe. While many in the scientific world strongly believe there’s other life out there, we’ve yet to find any solid proof.
Or at least, that’s what most of us think.
Back in the 1970s and 1980s, the CIA launched a project to test individuals who claimed to have psychic powers, asking them to describe things happening far away from where they were.
This initiative was part of a secretive operation called the Stargate program. It was focused on using psychic abilities to gather intelligence during the Cold War.
In their account, they claimed there were alien bases located in places like Alaska, parts of South America or Africa, and even on Titan — Saturn’s largest moon.
“So far have run into three types of entities associated with bases at various locations within the solar system,” they wrote.
When it came to the Titan base, the subject described seeing human scientists actively working on several different projects.
Alongside these descriptions, the document also includes several drawings made by individuals who were asked to sketch the locations as they saw them.
Inside this mountain base, the subject described one of the ‘entities’ as being engaged in some kind of work at a console.
They reported: “The entity at the console appeared to be in human form but lacked definitive features.”
Even though this specific document may not provide undeniable proof, it has added some interesting fuel to ongoing conversations around life beyond Earth.
This planet is about 2.6 times bigger than Earth. It was first spotted ten years ago by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope.
Scientists had already found water vapor in K2-18b’s atmosphere. But now, new data from the James Webb Space Telescope has revealed the presence of gases like methane, carbon dioxide, and most intriguingly, dimethyl sulfide.
“It’s a question humanity has been asking for thousands of years. It’s a shock to the system. It takes time to recover from the enormity of it,” he said.
