posted on Mar, 18 2011 @ 01:00 AM
The whole subject is indeed very interesting. I guess the whole "where from" in itself creates some intriguing questions, I mean, it's almost as if
the 'phenomenon' is there to make us think.
For instance, Vallee questions why the ET's would look so much like us, i.e., "humanoid"/bipedal. But doesn't this question open up a bigger
question; just how alike - or unlike - are things in the universe? Can intelligent beings look like squids, or snails, or everything from Lovecraft to
Avatar? Could it be liquid? Or is there some universal design, that is, as in how universal bodies like planets and suns and such are round, with
gravity pointing inward to the center (because, after all, we haven't discovered anything where, say, gravity pushes outwardly).
As for the purpose of "them being here", then yes, the ETH doesn't make sense from a human perspective. Taking us over would be easier the further
back you go (say, it would have been easier before modern computers, before nukes, before planes, rockets etc.), and just exploring seems a little
strange since so many reports have come in about "them" being here.
I was always of the mind, after reading Vallee and such, that the ETH was really stupid, but thinking about it, "we" haven't really gone one way or
another. The IDH and the ETH are both "far-out", and both plausible. I mean, is it really easier to come here from another dimension or parallel
universe than from another planet (using means we don't know about)? While the ETH may have distance as it's main problem, well, don't the IDH have
an even bigger problem - the problem of dimensional borders? Of compability?