Lizard People

Started by leshy, November 14, 2008, 11:02:21 AM

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My husband's boss is always talking to him about lizard people that live underneath the ground in Antarctica with Hitler. I keep telling him that it's ridiculous and he can't seem to find any kind of credible evidence to support the theory.

Now, I am a believer of possibilities, but this really is too much even for me to believe. Has anyone else heard this story?

Nooo, not that I can mention. :-(
Gabriel, "Don't kill yourself for it would crush my angelic heart. I love you for who you are and I'm glad I met you. :]"

"I'm going to break him, and there will be blood."

As a huge fan of conspiracy theories and paranormal study, the idea of Reptilians is very familiar to me.
Not only have I heard it, but I've heard every variation of "Lizard men rule the world!!" that you could possibly imagine.


Do you know the one about Interdemensional Reptilian Aliens? :?
Gabriel, "Don't kill yourself for it would crush my angelic heart. I love you for who you are and I'm glad I met you. :]"

"I'm going to break him, and there will be blood."

November 14, 2008, 03:17:53 PM #4 Last Edit: November 14, 2008, 03:29:14 PM by Mr. Kreepy
Which one?
The one where there's a portal in the center of the earth to the dimension of the Reptilians and they come out of it to rule Earth with the Nazis, or the one where the Nordic aliens from another galaxy came to earth and the Reptilians came from another dimension in order to prevent them from creating the human race?
There are hundreds upon hundreds of these whacko fringe theories. Some of them aren't even theories so much as outright paranoid delusions.
All I know is that I have immense respect for whatever paranoid nutjob comes up with this piffle. It's really rather entertaining :laugh:

Nahhh, I'm talking about the one where they come from another dimension to become stranded on Earth, then breed with humans, & they sired Geroge W. Bush, so that's why he screwed the U.S. over backwards.
Gabriel, "Don't kill yourself for it would crush my angelic heart. I love you for who you are and I'm glad I met you. :]"

"I'm going to break him, and there will be blood."

I think I've mentioned this previously, but Zulu mythology is rife with accounts of lizard men. who were credited with the creation of the black race whom they intended to use as slaves for the purpsoe of mining southern Africa's rich gold mines. In fact, a well known Zulu shaman by the name of Credo Mutwa has even gone so far as to claim that  these lizard folk are malovelant beings that originate from a different galaxy and are determined to manipulate human leaders into destroying the planet.
''Come on, I want you to do it, I want you to do it. Come on, hit me. *Hit me!''

-The Joker to Batman, The Dark Knight


Well, it took me awhile, but I'm pretty sure that this is where the theory I was talking about stems from. The book is "Vril:Power of the Coming Race" first published in 1871 and written by Edward Bulwer-Lytton.


The Vril-ya as an Aryan Race

According to the book:

    "I arrived at the conviction that this people—though originally not only of our human race, but, as seems to me clear by the roots of their language, descended from the same ancestors as the great Aryan family, from which in varied streams has flowed the dominant civilization of the world; and having, according to their myths and their history, passed through phases of society familiar to ourselves,--had yet now developed into a distinct species with which it was impossible that any community in the upper world could amalgamate: And that if they ever emerged from these nether recesses into the light of day, they would, according to their own traditional persuasions of their ultimate destiny, destroy and replace our existent varieties of man."[13]

In essence, the narrator believes the language of the Vril-ya to be of the same origin as Aryan languages. The passage does not outright affirm the narrator's belief that there is also an ethnic connection between the Vril-ya and the Aryans. In fact, subsequent passages have Zee, a female Vril-ya scientist, explain to the narrator that the Vril-ya are descended from frogs.[14]

Many readers today find the passage quoted above to be thinly veiled admiration for the Vril-ya as Aryan Supermen. However, the modern connotations of these terms are heavily influenced by Nazi and White Supremacist propaganda developed and produced decades after the writing and initial publication of this book.[citation needed]

Therefore, while it is easy to see how fanatical readers were able to, in part, derive their Nazi and Supremacist beliefs and doctrines from this book, it is also important to note that The Coming Race says no more than it does say, and says even that as a work of fiction. Unlike with Zanoni, Edward Bulwer-Lytton made no suggestions about the work being non-fiction. A fact that, of course, did not stop many readers from assuming just that all the same.

I remember seeing a show on lizard people when I was younger, but that's all I remember.