A tour through the new science of the Omniverse, its spiritual and physical dimensions, and its incalculable intelligent civilizations • Reveals the key travel and communication technologies of the time travel, teleportation, and telepathy • Unveils newly disclosed state secrets about these technologies, about the findings of the NASA Mars rover missions, and about a secret colony and life on Mars • Explains through science how souls are holographic fragments of God and how they help create planets, solar systems, galaxies, and universes in the multiverse We are all citizens of the Omniverse, the overarching matrix of energy, spirit, and intelligence that encompasses all that all universes within the multiverse as well as the spiritual dimensions centered on the divine Source that many call God. In this scientific guide to the Omniverse, Alfred Lambremont Webre reveals startling replicable evidence about extraterrestrial and extra-universal life, the intelligent civilizations created by souls in the afterlife, top-secret alien technology, and the existence of a secret base as well as life on Mars. The author explains how our souls are holographic fragments of God/Source and how souls and Source are co-creating planets and galaxies as virtual realities for soul development. He addresses Grey alien control over soul reincarnation and also sheds light on the presence of invisible hyperdimensional controllers known as the Archons, who feed off negative energy. Revealing the key technologies of the Omniverse, the author explains how hyperdimensional civilizations communicate telepathically, teleport interdimensionally, and travel through time. He unveils newly disclosed state secrets about government possession of these technologies, the findings of the NASA Mars rover missions, and the secret Mars colony whose permanent security personnel is age-reversed and shot back through time to their specific space-time origin points--with their memories blocked. Integrating science and spirituality, this map of the dimensions of the Omniverse sounds the call for scientific inquiry into the holographic origins of the soul, the potential of time travel, and our role as divine co-creators with Source.
American author, lawyer, futurist, peace activist, environmental activist, and a space activist who promotes the ban of space weapons.
He was a co-architect of the Space Preservation Treaty and the Space Preservation Act that was introduced to the U.S. Congress by Congressman Dennis Kucinich.
He helped draft the Citizen Hearing in 2000 with Stephen Bassett and serves as a member of the Board of Advisors. Webre is also the congressional coordinator for The Disclosure Project, and is a judge on the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission.
Interesting: Telepathy and telekinesis ideas. 'Prima facie' evidence of interlife dimentions. Intelligent civilization of souls Civilizations typology Density dimention
Bizarre: Exophenotipes. (Praying mantis–like, depanoid ones...) MYLAB and psyops. UFOs (of course...) Exopolitical dimentions of the omniverse (whatever it might be) Universe governments' authorities jurisdictional issues Chronovision
Naïve: Q: How does the chlorophyll provide nutrients if it does not have sunlight? Small Greys: We have special illumination. (c)
There's some really interesting concepts presented here but the author tends to slip into a pseudo-academic writing style to try and justify some of them. It's a little like the History Channel and their stock phrase "Could this really be true? Ancient Astronaut Theorists believe..."
The boundaries of my mind do not stretch far enough for some of the huge numbers presented, 19-year-old Obama traveling to Mars thru a CIA jumproom, and Bigfoot actually being a type of Martian, but the discussion of the spiritual dimensions seemed much more plausible.
I really hope the Galactic Counsel really did vote in 2011 to clean up Earth's environmental crisis... but I think they better get started SOON!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I was really looking forward to an interesting book and some way-out theories. Unfortunately this book reads like the bibliography of a doctoral candidate's thesis. Lots of stats, quotes, footnotes, repetition, but it never gets to a point. I gave up after 30 pages and clicked the "return for refund" button.
Ramblings of a schizophrenic obsessively delusional man. Nothing new here, aliens, reptiles, Obama time traveling, History Channel bunk about ancient aliens, etc.
It has sources for websites and other crackpots cited.
I don’t think this publisher bothered to edit or proofread this, it has no coherent end or point. Shame on these publishers for shilling this dreck out.
The book “ends” with a section about science not being enough to study the “soul”. Only a few steps removed from religious dogma.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Wow, this book was a very weird one. It argues that it has been scientifically proven that alien abductions are real, grey extraterrestrials sometimes help humans to go through the process of reincarnation, and Obama was secretly a "crononaut" who visited Mars. The author takes this stuff so seriously that it often ended up being unintentionally hilarious. It has many good examples of what pseudoscientific gibberish looks like. Unfortunately there isn't much more value than that.
Definitely written to attempt to appeal to the academic. Be prepared for a slew of 50¢ words, overly verbose and complex sentence structure, parenthetical interjections galore, etc. The subject matter is controversial and highly unconventional, but the writing simply smacks of desperation for acceptance. I think I would have enjoyed the book far more without the pretense.
What did I just read? could not understand this at all with the words he used seeming to be made up as well as the information that was confusing as well as unsupported.
Believing something is okay, believing everything is not. To accept everything as true, means nothing is false. Both previous statements define the thinking of a fool.
This book was a WILD ride, whew! Right from the get-go, I knew I'd have a problem with the 'secret colony on Mars' stuff...and, I did. That part was a lot to digest, but it's also right at the beginning, so to get to the other stuff I did the only thing I could think of: I treated it like a NoSleep story (go into it with the mindset that everything you're about to read is true--which makes it all way more fun) and then just sort out my personal opinions when I finished. I'm still not sold on the Mars stuff, but the other parts were worth the effort!
It amazes me how many official and highly educated people were involved with this book because the whole thing reads like a really long 'X-Files' episode... It does make you wonder.
It's obviously a bit ~out there~, but it kept my interest, and I did learn some legitimate facts (historical, science), so it was a worthy read.