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miércoles, 26 de marzo de 2014

ALLIGATORS, REPTILIANS AND OTHER CREATURES UNDER NEW YORK





By Gundhramns Hammer
March 26, 2014


The team of researchers did not find a single one but that does not mean that they ain´t down there. The investigators did find a lot of potential food for a big predator under the city.

If there are hundreds of rats, worms, cockroaches and other prey, and with high humidity and temperature deep down there, predators could perfectly survive under the city.

Moreover, these suspected predators can go on living with no sunlight. As a matter of fact, they can grow much faster in total darkness.

On top of that, they possess a first class immune system to keep them healthy in the waters filled with dangerous bugs.

These predators rely on a unique antimicrobial defense mechanism capable of fighting off bacteria, fungi and viruses.

So, they are well equipped to survive in pools full of shit. 

They could very well be down there without people knowing it but perhaps some city officials who want to keep things calm and quiet, not alarm any citizens.

We are talking about the possibility of alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) living in New York City´s complex and giant sewer system.

Let us take a look at what the cryptozoologists found living under New York City (Video 1).


                          Video 1. Giant alligators living under New York.


One this is clear, the search for giant alligators under New York is still on.


Reptilians, ETs, extradimensional entities, mole people...

Hmmmm.... But how about the famous reptilian aliens living under New York? 

Do these ETs have an underground base under the Big Apple?

Some experts think so

Others point out that these creatures are not aliens but extradimensional entities (EDEs) or interdimensional beings (IDEs), also known as djinns, who see New York as their playground and experimental lab. 

At any time, round the clock, year round, there is plenty of negative energy given off by mad people who inhabit this megapolis. 

Enough to satisfy the taste of the fuzziest of EDEs or IDEs.

"Mole people", comprised by beggars, homeless, vagabonds, thieves and a whole zoo of folks who do not want to belong to the main society, will tell you hundreds of legends and horror stories that would fill up an encyclopedia of what they have witnessed whilst sleeping underground in the maze of New York´s subway system (Fig. 1).



Figure 1. Subway station in New York City. Source: Listosaur.com.



Some mole people will tell you that, apart from the human crooks, there are "demons living underground" and that some of their comrades have been abducted or eaten by some of these creatures from hell. 

Other insist that at "least half of the people living in New York are aliens" who, according to them, have taken the human form to go unnoticed by the human population. 

The shapeshifting process has been witnessed by a few mole folks. Because of this, there is a lot of fear in the mole community, especially amongst men.

What mole people report may be the product of their imagination or their twisted brains under the effects of narcotics or alcohol. 

But you never know.

There is a famous case of a woman who was abducted from her own apartment in New York in 1989. 
 
It is known as the "Brooklyn Bridge Abduction". It is part of the UFO abduction phenomenon. Or was it an elaborate hoax?

Reptilians, aliens, alligators, mole people.... Only in New York. 

We have plenty of strange creatures right here on Earth to keep us busy instead of searching for them in Mars or anywhere else.

So, whatever strange predators might be living and lurking under New York, we can be sure of one thing: 

That their reality will go along with our own set of beliefs and if there is such a thing as "reality" is not what we see.



References

Dennet P. (2008). UFOs Over New York: A True History of Extraterrestrial Encounters in the Empire State. Schiffer Publishing, Atglen, PA, USA. 256 p.

Merchant M. E., Roche E., Elsey R. M. & Prudhomme J. (2003). Antibacterial properties of serum from the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis). Comp. Biochem. Physiol., B, 136: 5005-513.

Merchant M. E., Pallansch M., Paulman R. L., Wells J. B., Nalca A. & Ptak R. (2006). Antiviral activity of serum from the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis). Antiviral Res., 66: 35-38.

1 comentario:

  1. Whoever writtes all of this has a curious mind indeed!! And... I don't know if I imagine things, but It sounds like a he, and I have a feeling he knows much more than he shows here. Sure you have a bunch of intrigued readers, you might consider giving us further information on topics like this? :)

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