Do aliens really exist? The question as to whether there are extra-terrestrials living in the universe is still a mystery. Their supposed existence have been featured in movies, news, and documentaries.
Just recently, the topic about aliens has dominated some news sites once more, after a video of an aerospace scientist claiming that aliens exist, surfaced.
The video was reportedly taken shortly before his death in August. According to the Inquisitr, scientist Boyd Bushman not only tried to prove the existence of aliens through the numerous pictures he showed but he also revealed that some of these aliens are now working for the U.S. government.
Bushman also attested that the Area 51 military base in Nevada has served as a place for research and development on UFO and alien technology. Area 51, which later became the National Classified Test Facility, was made in 1995 as a "testing ground" for the "most closely guarded secret project" called the U2 spy plane, Inquisitr reported.
Bushman also said in the video that aliens have come from a planet called "Quintumnia" and have visited the Earth. Allegedly, at least 18 of them aged 250 years old have been working for the U.S. government, The Inquisitr added.
Bushman also claimed that these aliens stand at least five feet or a meter and a half tall and have fingers and toes that resemble those of what humans have, as reported by the Daily Mail. He also revealed that scientists are trying to develop "anti-gravity technology."
More questions than answers
Several reactions have been said about Bushman's video. Some have considered it a new discovery and some have raised their eye brows, calling the scientist who has dedicated most of his career in aerospace "delusional."
But Death and Taxes have revealed that people have really tried to communicate with aliens through a document called "The Golden Record," "an auditory account of life on earth, including greetings in different languages as well as music." It claimed that "The Golden Record" was sent to space in 1977 through NASA's Voyager 1.
"There is an argument-perhaps it is only a hope-that we might be able to communicate with representatives of such exotic civilizations because they, like we, must come to grips with the same laws of physics and chemistry and astronomy," Carl Sagan, author of "Murmurs of Earth" was quoted as saying in the report.
So what does "The Golden Record" contain?
Death and taxes have posted the compiled audio files uploaded on YouTube by a user named "73Notelrac."
1. The first audio file was a greeting from then United Nations Secretary General Kurt Waldheim.
2. The second one was a compilation of greetings spoken in 55 languages.
3. Aside from animal sounds, most of the audio files included in "The Golden Record" were "classical European" music. Only three came from the "Western song writing tradition" -- "Johnny B. Goode" by Chuck Berry, "Melancholy Blues" by Louis Armstrong, and "Dark Was the Night" by Blind Willie Johnson.
To listen to "The Golden Record Files," you can also listen to it directly on Youtube.
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