Brett Keane | GodTvRadio

Aliens Satanic Flesh-Eating Cabal


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Core Elements of the Theory


This concept typically claims that a hidden elite group (a "cabal") consists of or is controlled by malevolent aliens (frequently reptilian shapeshifters from sources like the Draco constellation). These beings allegedly engage in Satanic worship, child trafficking, blood-harvesting (e.g., for adrenochrome, a debunked psychedelic/immortality substance), and literal flesh-eating or cannibalism.


Proponents link it to global leaders, Hollywood, or "deep state" figures, portraying it as part of a larger plot for world domination or spiritual evil. Key overlapping ideas from widespread sources: Reptilian aliens as blood-drinking, shape-shifting controllers of humanity (popularized by David Icke in books like The Biggest Secret). These are often described as inherently evil or "Satanic" in nature.


Adrenochrome harvesting from terrified children, tied to Satanic elites in QAnon lore—often exaggerated into full cannibalism or flesh consumption claims.


Broader "Satanic cabal" narratives involving child sacrifice, which sometimes merge with alien/reptilian elements (e.g., underground bases, hybrid beings).


These ideas have roots in older myths like blood libel (anti-Semitic tropes of ritual murder), the 1980s-90s Satanic Panic, and sci-fi ufology. They've been amplified online, especially during events like Pizzagate or QAnon's rise, but lack verifiable evidence and are widely regarded as baseless pseudoscience or misinformation by fact-checkers, academics, and media outlets. Related Coverage Articles on QAnon's adrenochrome claims describe a "Satanic, cannibalistic" elite cabal (e.g., McGill University's debunking of the quackery, or Forbes/WIRED pieces on its virality and antisemitic undertones).

Reptilian conspiracy entries (e.g., Wikipedia) detail blood-drinking alien overlords as a core trope.

Fringe posts (e.g., on Facebook groups) explicitly call reptilians "cannibals" or "flesh eaters," sometimes tying them to ancient "Cannites" or Biblical evil.


If this refers to a specific video, post, or content from your show/channel (or something you discussed), feel free to share more details—like a link or timestamp—for deeper analysis. Otherwise, it's a niche mashup of longstanding conspiracy archetypes rather than one cohesive "article." These theories often resurface in MAGA-adjacent or anti-establishment spaces but remain unsubstantiated.



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Brett Keane | GodTvRadioBy Brett Keane