
ONE night in October 1957, working after dark to avoid the heat of the sun, a 23-year-old Brazilian called Antonio Villas Boas was ploughing a field on the banks of the Rio Grande. Suddenly an egg-shaped object surrounded by purple lights landed in front of him.
He tried to run but a short, strong creature dressed in strange clothing grabbed him. Three taller beings then emerged and carried him back to the craft, pushing him up a ladder and through a hatch. They wore striped overalls and cloth helmets which extended twice the height of a human head. Silver tubes ran from their helmets to their overalls.
The farmer was stripped by his captors, wiped with some kind of fluid and put in a small chamber. He was then joined by a beautiful, naked woman – humanoid but with unusually pointed features – who proceeded to seduce him. When it was over, she smiled and pointed at her stomach and then to the sky, leading the Brazilian to conclude she was going to have their child. He was allowed to dress and was escorted out of the craft, which shot away into the air. He staggered home and vomited.
Being kidnapped by sex-starved aliens in an unidentified flying object may sound like a fantasy but author Mark Pilkington believes it. Not that he thinks Villas Boas was really abducted to populate a distant galaxy; but he does think it’s a sincere description of what the farmer saw.
“Certain UFO sightings throughout the history of the subject were demonstrations or tests to see how people would respond to them,” he says. “I don’t have solid evidence that’s what happened in the Villas Boas story but it can be read as some kind of experiment or operation disguised as a UFO kidnapping. What he describes sounds very like a helicopter and humans in funny costumes. The CIA was certainly involved in Brazil at the time and my guess would be they were testing out some new incapacitant as a potential battlefield drug.”
In his new book Mirage Men – subtitled A Journey In Disinformation, Paranoia And UFOs – Pilkington outlines a remarkable theory. Conspiracy theorists are right, he says, to suspect an elaborate deception by the US government relating to UFOs. But the conspiracy is not to hide the fact that extra-terrestrials have landed, as most “ufologists” believe. Rather, he says the CIA and another US agency called the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) are responsible for spreading those very conspiracy theories.
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