Art Bell speaks with Temple University Associate Professor of History David M. Jacobs, a 35-year veteran of UFO research who has conducted over 800 hypnotic regressions with more than 130 abductees. Jacobs discusses his latest edited volume from the University of Kansas Press, featuring contributions from ten researchers including Bud Hopkins and John Mack. He describes the academic hostility that has kept serious UFO scholarship nearly absent from university presses for half a century.
Jacobs lays out his controversial thesis that the abduction phenomenon centers on a systematic hybridization program. He explains how women report being used as hosts for hybrid fetuses, and describes a hierarchy of beings observed aboard craft, from insectoid commanders to various stages of increasingly human-looking hybrids. He characterizes the alien social structure as resembling a hive, with telepathic communication, restricted emotional range, and no apparent interest in human political or cultural institutions.
Art presses Jacobs on whether resistance is possible. Jacobs admits he sees few options, noting that the beings possess neurological control capabilities humans cannot counter. He estimates the phenomenon began around the 1890s and has spread intergenerationally, with perhaps five percent of the population affected. Despite calling his own conclusions embarrassing, Jacobs maintains the evidence from independent witnesses consistently points in the same troubling direction.