
February 20, 1998: Alien Abductions - David Jacobs
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
January 30, 202447m 15s
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Show Notes
Art Bell welcomes Professor David Jacobs, a Temple University historian and author of The Threat, for a detailed examination of the alien abduction phenomenon based on hundreds of hypnotic regression sessions conducted over decades of careful academic research.
Jacobs presents his findings that abduction accounts from unrelated individuals across the country contain strikingly consistent details about alien beings, procedures, and spacecraft interiors. He describes a systematic program of genetic harvesting and hybrid breeding that appears to span multiple human generations, with abductees reporting procedures involving reproductive material collection and the presentation of hybrid offspring. The conversation addresses the psychological toll on experiencers who struggle to reconcile traumatic memories with everyday life, as well as the therapeutic challenges of helping them process these encounters. Art presses Jacobs on how his academic colleagues receive this research, and Jacobs explains the professional risks of investigating a subject that mainstream science dismisses outright.
Jacobs outlines what he considers the most disturbing implication of his findings: that the abduction program is not random or benevolent but represents a methodical integration project with long-term consequences for human autonomy and identity.
Jacobs presents his findings that abduction accounts from unrelated individuals across the country contain strikingly consistent details about alien beings, procedures, and spacecraft interiors. He describes a systematic program of genetic harvesting and hybrid breeding that appears to span multiple human generations, with abductees reporting procedures involving reproductive material collection and the presentation of hybrid offspring. The conversation addresses the psychological toll on experiencers who struggle to reconcile traumatic memories with everyday life, as well as the therapeutic challenges of helping them process these encounters. Art presses Jacobs on how his academic colleagues receive this research, and Jacobs explains the professional risks of investigating a subject that mainstream science dismisses outright.
Jacobs outlines what he considers the most disturbing implication of his findings: that the abduction program is not random or benevolent but represents a methodical integration project with long-term consequences for human autonomy and identity.