Collins Elite
The Collins Elite is a faction that some whistleblowers say exists within the US government investigations into UFOs. The Collins Elite supposedly believe that the NHIBs behind the events being investigated are in fact demons in the Biblical sense, and, according to some accounts, are obstructing the investigation for this reason.
Nick Redfern[edit | edit source]
British journalist Nick Redfern interviewed several alleged insiders including Ray Boeche for his book Final Events and the Secret Government Group on Demonic UFOs and the Afterlife. According to Final Events the nickname started as an in-joke - the group were quite low-ranking in the US military at the time, and several of them had connections to a small town named Collins. (Others have speculated that this explanation is a cover and the nickname in fact refers to Fort Collins or Gen. J. Lawton Collins).[1][2]
The Collins Elite came to believe that the activities of Aleister Crowley and his circle - for instance, the attempted magical ritual called the 'Babalon Working' carried out by Jack Parsons and L. Ron Hubbard in 1946 - actually succeeded in opening a 'portal' though which demons could enter the world, and that the 1947 flying disc craze and the increase in 'alien encounters' and 'UFO' activity after that point was in fact the work of the demons. They theorised that the demons, working with unscrupulous human allies, were deliberately passing themselves off as aliens to frighten humanity into accepting a world government to meet the supposed threat of the aliens, and that the demons and their human allies would run the new government, with the goal being to enslave humanity and harvest human souls.[1]
Theologian Michael S. Heiser has remarked that if the Collins Elite exist, their ideas about theology and demons are rather peculiar and seem to him to owe more to horror films than the Bible - one of the examples he singled out was the idea of demons being unable to enter the world unless a human performed specific magical rituals for them, which he said had no Biblical support and seemed to him to imply comically feeble demons.[1]
Luis Elizondo[edit | edit source]
In a 2024 interview with NewsNation, former Pentagon insider Luis Elizondo said he believed that the Collins Elite was entirely real, saying that he had encountered 'religious fundamentalists' within the intelligence community that had 'a very strict interpretation of their philosophical belief system' and described a specific conversation.
“Someone stopped me in the halls of the Pentagon and said, ‘Have you read your Bible lately?’ And I was kind of surprised by the question. ‘I know what the Bible says. What, may I ask specifically, do you mean?’ He says, ‘You know, what we’re dealing with are our demons. These are demonic beings. And we shouldn’t be looking at them’”.[3]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Heiser, Michael S. "Review of Nick Redfern's Final Events".
- ↑ "Collin's Elite: a covert intelligence group believes UAPs are demonic".
- ↑ Coulthart, Ross; Durgan, Holly; Gipson, Andy; Sancho, Miguel (Aug 26, 2024). "Full special: Confessions of a UFO Hunter". NewsNation.