Nadene Goldfoot
I'm watching a video on Area 51. They are holding Insectman, who is not an alien from Mars or anywhere else but Earth. The surprise is that he was from humans of the future.
There was supposed to be a terrible even that happened in the future, wiping out most of the people. They went underground to live, and divide into two groups, one being from our Insectman.
Heaven help us! I hate to think of my descendants looking like that!
Area 51 is a highly classified U.S. Air Force facility in Nevada used for experimental aircraft testing and weapons development, not extraterrestrial activity. Its strict security, including no-fly zones and surveillance, fuels conspiracy theories, but the base's confirmed purpose is a flight testing site for Special Access Programs. According to some, the extraterrestrial worked at Area 51 for some years. Alien Autopsy room, UFO Museum in Roswell. Credit: John Manard, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0/Wikipedia
Area 51 is a U.S. military base associated with UFO and alien conspiracies, such as claims about reverse-engineering alien technology or contact with an alien named J-Rod. The "insect man from the future" concept is not directly linked to Area 51, but appears in separate, speculative narratives about time travel and the possibility of humans evolving into insect-like forms in the future, sometimes seen in fiction or internet content.
Frankly, I liked the story better about the little green alien who lands his
UAP and gets a flat tire. He starts wandering around the city looking for something he can use as a replacement, and comes to a Jewish delicatessen. He sees some bagels in the window and goes inside to ask for one.
"Hello," he says. "Can I have one of those flying saucer tires?"
The guy behind the counter has to lean way over the counter to even see the little green man. He looks at where the alien is pointing and says, "That's not a flying saucer tire. That's a bagel!"
"A bagel? What's a bagel?"
"It's food. You eat it," the guy says and holds one out to the little green man. "Here, try one."
The little green man takes it, takes a bite, chews for a while and then says, "Huh! You know, this would be really good with some cream cheese and lox!"
Such ideas as Insectman could have come from Native American lore.
The Hopi, Lakota, and other Native American tribes have legends of people living underground, often protected by "Ant People" during periods of cataclysm like those caused by fire or ice. These stories describe humans taking refuge in subterranean dwellings, either guided by benevolent spirits or seeking shelter in the earth until the surface world was safe again. These tales are sometimes linked to the actual archaeological evidence of ancient peoples dwelling in caves and cliffside homes, like those of the Anasazi, according to vocal.media.
One of the most intriguing Hopi legends involves the Ant People, who were crucial to the survival of the Hopi—not just once but twice. The so-called “First World” (or world-age) was apparently destroyed by fire—possibly some sort of volcanism, asteroid strike, or coronal mass ejection from the sun. The Second World was destroyed by ice—Ice Age glaciers or a pole shift. During these two global cataclysms, the virtuous members of the Hopi tribe were guided by an odd-shaped cloud during the day and a moving star at night that led them to the sky god named Sotuknang, who finally took them to the Ant People—in Hopi, Anu Sinom. The Ant People then escorted the Hopi into subterranean caves where they found refuge and sustenance.
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