New Jersey’s drone sightings — and the government’s cagey response to them — have reawakened the wild conspiracy theory dubbed “Project Blue Beam,” which claims global elites will fake an alien invasion to establish a new world order.
The outlandish theory, introduced in the 1990s by the late Canadian Serge Monast, says a cabal of the world’s most powerful people plans to covertly thrust society into chaos with fabricated supernatural events.
Those faked events include projecting alien invasions or holographic displays of religious figures into the sky — with the group then seizing control of the world amid the massive hysteria, according to USA Today.
The conspiracy theory has been invoked on social media during rampant speculation over the origin and intent of the reported hordes of enigmatic aircraft inexplicably patrolling the skies in New Jersey, New York and across the country in recent weeks.
Notorious conspiracy theorist Alex Jones posted about Project Blue Beam on X last week, sharing an old interview with ufologist Steven Greer about “how Project Blue Beam will be used.”
MAGA mouthpiece and founder of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk claimed Friday in an X post — which has been viewed more than 8.2 million times — that the drones are in fact a part of Project Blue Beam.
“LOOK FOR VIDS OF [the drones] TRANSFORMING FROM BALLS OF LIGHT TO PLANES WHEN FILMED TO SEE FOR YOURSELF,” he tweeted, while sharing an anonymous Reddit post from r/conspiracy.
“THE GOVERNMENT IS NOT INVESTIGATING. THEY ARE DOING THIS. WHATEVER YOU SEE IN THE COMING DAYS IS NOT GOD,” Kirk wrote.
Comedian Roseanne Barr also has apparently subscribed to the theory, writing Saturday in a post viewed more than 2.5 million times that the drone situation is “why I mention Project Blue Beam every week on my podcast.”
Adam Kinzinger, a former Illinois Republican congressman, shot back at Barr for spreading the wild theory.
“This is this year’s QAnon. Pay attention, don’t pretend this is just the fringe,” he wrote.
Supporters of Project Blue Beam, which Monast first wrote about in 1994, once said they expected its efforts to begin in 1995. After Monast died in 1996, they said the scheme was likely to start at the turn of the millennium.
There would be several stages in the global upheaval under the way-out-there theory, according to Newsweek.
In the first phase, earthquakes would reveal previously undiscovered objects that would prove that the world’s religions are a lie.
Holographic projections simulating the return of divine figures — customized to each region of the world — would then be broadcast in the skies, followed by the revelation of a single unifying “god” for all people.
Human thoughts were to be controlled by new-age technology that allowed people to believe they were communicating with real deities, according to Monast.
The usurpation was to be complete after a simulated alien invasion justified the elites seizing control, according to Newsweek.
The federal government has tried to downplay the uproar over the drone sightings by claiming most of the reported mysterious flying objects are just airplanes and that any increase in drone traffic stems from loosened restrictions on their operation at night.
But residents and some powerful pols — including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and scores of New Jersey mayors — have demanded the feds give more detailed answers on exactly what is flying around up there.
White House national security communications adviser John Kirby told reporters Thursday there was “no evidence at this time that the reported drone sightings pose a national security or public safety threat, or have a foreign nexus.”
But the feds also have acknowledged that the Department of Homeland Security and FBI also are deploying drone detection technology and infrared cameras to learn more about the aircraft, according to ABC News.
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