
© Unknown
This area of subject matter rests on the border of UFOs, Aliens and the origins of man. The idea that aliens may have been genetically playing here on Earth has endless ramifications for many firmly grounded type people. References to this type of subject matter range from ancient texts or scribes of stone from various cultures, to passing the information forward from generation to generation or from those who claim to have been given a vision or two.
Here's one to push you further down the rabbit hole. What if those nasty microchips existed in the days of the Pharaohs. Well,.... hold on to your megabits because this one is right out of the twilight zone and may flip your lid.
Now scientist believe they have found technical evidence to support the idea that key individuals could have been influenced by alien technology. What they found in the skeletal remains of the French ruler Napoleon Bonaparte was nothing less then astonishing.

© Unknown
Comment: While there is little in the way of reference for the claims made in this article, it's important to bear in mind that the
National Enquirer and such 'rags' are often used disseminate accurate information in the expectation that people will reject it
precisely because people have come to expect nonsense from them. This is from
UFOs and the National Security State, Volume II, by Richard Dolan:
"UFOs were also receiving media attention of a different sort, in this case the tabloid publication, The National Enquirer. For some time the paper had been mixing its standard tabloid fare with UFO stories that reflected genuine investigation. On October 31, the Enquirer sent a series of questions to the Air Force about the intrusion of alleged unidentified "helicopters" over Loring AFB from late 1975. WHy not the New York Times, Washington Post, CBS, or other mainstream news agencies? Why the Enquirer?
Years later, journalist Terry Hansen interviewed Bob Pratt, the Enquirer's reporter on the story. Pratt acknowledged that the tipoff appeared to have been an anonymous phone caller, "possibly with the intention of discrediting the information." After searching his notes, Pratt found a type-written statement with the name of UFO researcher Brad Sparks on the bottom, stating that on May 17 1977, an anonymous caller had contacted the Enquirer about the overflights. Pratt had no recollection of this, nor of having worked with Sparks.
What makes this more interesting is that the Enquirer publisher, Gene Pope, had been a CIA agent during the early 1950s. What he did there remains classified, except that he was involved in the Agency's Psychological Warfare Unit. Hansen's research suggested that the CIA helped to fund the Enquirer when Pope took it over, most likely to provide sensationalistic coverage to certain stories as needed - a kind of 'inoculation', just as a doctor gives a touch of disease to the patient to stimulate a reaction fom the immune system. Even soberly researched articles would be discredited within the confines of a tabloid dedicated to horoscopes and celebrity gossip."
Comment: While there is little in the way of reference for the claims made in this article, it's important to bear in mind that the National Enquirer and such 'rags' are often used disseminate accurate information in the expectation that people will reject it precisely because people have come to expect nonsense from them. This is from UFOs and the National Security State, Volume II, by Richard Dolan: