I often wonder at the feats extraterrestrials would have to have surpassed to get to us
For aliens to have come from their home planet to our own would be no simple task. Their kind must have overcome incredible feats in evolution to survive and thrive for them to make the journey.
Entry #II:
Transcribed by: Sotrokondalochendi Taltitichleson
We have yet to overcome the issue of “laziness”.
It seems that on earth, animals are lazy at every opportunity. Each organism does what is necessary to survive and thrive and nothing more. Expending more energy than necessary is, primitively, a waste of energy and resources. This is a basic instinct that almost all living things possess, and it makes sense... when intelligence is not a factor.
Now, I understand that human mentalities are as varied as they come; and also that they do not even know themselves as they like to believe. Human governors and patrons expect their citizens and servers to act like a hive mind.
There’s a disconnect between laziness, and experiencing a depression in the mentality of a human’s everyday lifestyle.  Laziness, as the term is used, isn't a real thing. I have found that there are many humans being mislabeled as such to where the term is losing its original meaning and value.
Laziness is when one have excess of resource/supply and don’t want to exert extra energy, because you have everything you need.
I often wonder at the feats extraterrestrials would have to have surpassed to get to us
For aliens to have come from their home planet to our own would be no simple task. Their kind must have overcome incredible feats in evolution to survive and thrive for them to make the journey.
Entry #: 1
Transcribed by: Sotrokondalochendi Taltitichleson
We have overcome the limits of which death once held over us.
While certainly on a path to eternal life, humans have not yet reached the submission of ageing. The path they are taking is long but not impossible. For the time I’ve been assigned to study them, humans have (almost) tentatively tripled their vitality.
Actually, I take it back; they were not, at all, wavering in their journey to their current life expectancy. It took a world war between 158 countries to motivate human scientists to create a feasible method of witnessing each other’s bone structures as well as antiseptic and primary wound care; then another world war involving 83 countries on two different sides to invent basic yet essential antibiotics, skin graphs, and blood transfusion (who knows why humans have eight different types of blood (we are no longer allowed to study them personally since a particular scientist in my team forgot to alleviate certain muscle tensions before sending one back)).
And not to mention that their first vaccine was created by pure luck and a crazed man infecting his patients with an animal disease to immunise them to a human equivalent. While this method has, however, allowed humans to advance much faster, the thought of such rash and cruel experiments causes me to shudder.
Account of the human understanding of the cosmos and their progress to becoming eligible for interstellar citizenship
Transcribed by: Sotrokondalochendi Taltitichleson
The last time we checked in on humans, their mindset was “eat, sleep, mate, survive,” and then become one with the dirt on which they were born. Although these hominids were not much further advanced than their Australopithecine brethren, it is sufficient to say that human development has improved at a higher speed than predicted, almost at the same speed as some observed herbivorous and insectivorous species. This progress has not come without a significant cost, however. Human consumption rate versus improvement has been at a directly proportional downfall. With this, their comprehensive skills have been stuck in a “my, me, mine” headspace, believing they are the centre of the universe.
One of the only philosophers in his era, Aristotle was the first in written human history (the only content available to neural download) to declare that everything has a specific place and that each object, if moved or used for something, is fixed to return from whence it came. He was not wholly astray but only in the sense that he predicted gravity, chemistry, and the density of objects in a more primitive manner. Aristotle understood that if he made a bubble underwater, the air would want to return to its “set place” in the world. He erroneously used this logic to organise society based on where each class “ought” to be.
Another mentionable figure in human history would be the human astronomer Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin. Not only was she, in my opinion, the start of the change in astronomy as an occupation from a man-centred workforce to a unisex one, but she also made a principle of how scientists “ought” to act. Her idea is that the lone scientist must understand that it is not up to them to discover the entirety of their projects. They are a piece of the puzzle, not the completed project (Aristotle would not have believed that for an instant. He was a self-centred, egotistical narcissist who thought he had figured out the laws of everything). Payne dared to ask the question, “Should humans, in the grandiosity of the universe, try to make their star system, in the corner of their little Galaxy, the best they can make it, or are they just a speck of dust in the wind, unimportant and unneeded, free to die from their own misguided, poorly sought endeavours as they see fit?” I am thankful that I am allowed to write these opinionated reports; one of my favourite topics is philosophy. Allow me to explain.
We conscious entities need to be free from the external pressures which we react to in order to become awakened. Since this is the case, why don’t the human gods give them the knowledge they desire? Why must they work for it? Are their gods just that neglectful, or is it in his likeness that, in order to advance as a species, humans must be able to figure things out? Those like Aristotle likely believed the latter since his idea of their god(s) is that they were the first of motion as well as change and were an example of pure form with no relation to matter at all.
Some humans might believe that the laws of nature are too great in concept for their squishy tellurian minds. Copernicus, another human astronomer, states that the Earth was “created for our sake by the best and most systematic Artisan of all…” (referring to his society’s god). He was fixed on the idea that his “destiny” was to uncover as much knowledge as his god had left buried. But what is their God, if not just a symbol of life itself? Many species begin their explanation of the universe around them with gods or other personifications of stagnant statues or stories they use. Later, they find the reason behind their magic. Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin was the first to discover the main components of her star, as well as (what the humans call) A-type and B-type stars. Beforehand, nearly all human scientists believed that their star and the others they observed were comprised of the ingredients needed for the solar systems they fostered.
As annoyed as archaic human philosophers were at their gods for not giving them the answers they desired, they did not, for a second, think to cease their explorations. It is hardwired into human programming that they are to ”learn the hard way.” It is human nature to seek the truth, yet they are likewise programmed to deny their instincts to fight for the ability to be correct above others. Getting rid of this contradiction is usually essential in becoming eligible for galactic citizenship. However, this is not the case for humanity since, as most who have researched Earth and its purpose know, Deepthought specifically requested that this instinct be unconsciously nurtured and utilised to find the Ultimate Question of life. Finding the Ultimate Question to life and surpassing what humans now call “the great filter” is to remain their current criteria to meet before (minus ambassadors- currently Steven Hawking, for example, and what a clever departure he executed) humanity is allowed contact without detailed mind-wiping. Now that I think about it, there have been instances where mind-wiping will leave residual engrams in the subjects’ subconscious. I do not want to delve into the possibility of Aristotle’s jealousness at witnessing Plato’s human ambassador status being the source of his genius. Nor do I wish to discuss the ability of intense emotions to survive post-wipe.
As of the current date, humans have not created a way to communicate either posthumously or through mental inter-psionic means. Sadly, this includes their beautiful art, which can still be left to interpretation. While a beautiful concept in all I have studied so far, it does not effectively nor efficiently get ideas across from artist to viewer. I have listened to every “genre” of music, and I can say with certainty that there is little to no mention of exploring things other than themselves. Their speech still limits their worldviews, and their anthropocentric view of the universe defines their existence as a “me versus the world” mentality.
To sum up this report, humanity is fleeting among humans. I often worry that Deepthought gave false information about the planet Terra and that its inhabitants are the actual subjects of its controlled experiment. There have been far too many exciting cases over the small amount of time that humans have been present. Their instinctual want to finish every started project, along with the instinct to “go faster”, has caused their growth to accelerate at unprecedented speeds. Even though this growth is rapidly changing the chemistry of Terra’s atmosphere, I have faith that most of them will survive long enough to give us an answer one way or another.
ALIEN REPORT Trailer (2020) Found Footage Horror
PLOT: An alien abductee figures out a clever way to secretly record his own alien encounters revealing telepathic aliens, human hybrids and the elusive “men-in-black”.
Filmed from the perspective of a tiny micro-camera, hidden in a hearing implant, you will see everything this alien abductee sees. More than a movie or a story, The Alien Report is a…
Back in March we got our first trailer and now we have another! In Alien Report, an alien abductee figures out a clever way to secretly record his own alien encounters revealing telepathic aliens, human hybrids and the elusive “men-in-black”.
Filmed from the perspective of a tiny micro-camera, hidden in a hearing implant, you will see everything this alien abductee sees. More than a movie or a…
In Alien Report, an alien abductee figures out a clever way to secretly record his own alien encounters revealing telepathic aliens, human hybrids and the elusive “men-in-black”.
Filmed from the perspective of a tiny micro-camera, hidden in a hearing implant, you will see everything this alien abductee sees. More than a movie or a story, The Alien Report is a guide intended to show, rather than…