In Coast You Missed It 3/17/23

By Tim Binnall

Fallen angels pretending to be aliens, lunar anomalies, and mysterious beings that mimic humans were among the fascinating topics explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. And, here at the C2C website, we told you about a serial cat shaver in England, a possible ghost filmed by a trucker in Arizona, and a perplexing rhino's horn discovered in a Cornish cave. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.

Could we be sharing the planet with a race of beings who appear to be human, but are actually something else entirely? Author Tim Schwartz looked at this intriguing possibility on Tuesday night's program, presenting his research on what he calls the 'Others.' These entities, he mused, have likely existed alongside humans throughout history and, over time, have been called angels, demons, faeries, and, eventually, aliens. Eerily, Schwartz noted that many people who encounter individuals that they suspect of being an 'other' often report feeling a sense of profound dread upon realizing that they are in the presence of something non-human.

A pair of potential ghost videos popped up in the news this past week, beginning with a rather spooky piece of dashcam footage captured by a trucker in Arizona. While cruising down a desolate highway late at night, his big rig passed an eerie translucent anomaly that somewhat resembles a figure. As such, it has been theorized that perhaps the oddity was the spirit of someone who met their untimely fate in an accident on the road. Later in the week, a security guard in Singapore filmed what appears to be an apparition at a shrine devoted to an apocryphal German girl who infamously perished there during the first World War.

Lunar anomalies and mysteries were in the spotlight on Wednesday night's program as metaphysical researcher Constance Victoria Briggs discussed curious and enigmatic aspects of the moon. Noting that there appear to be domed structures on the lunar surface, she speculated that this may be some kind of power source. To that end, Briggs observed that the origins of the moon are something of a mystery and that it has long been theorized that it might actually be a spaceship that was brought to its current spot from outside our galaxy and, should that be the case, it is likely inhabited by ETs living in underground bases beneath the lunar surface.

A Cornish man was left scratching his head this past week when he stumbled upon a mysterious rhino's horn in a cave near his home. John Roundhill made the odd find while showing some friends the cavern, which was once used by infamous 18th-century smuggler Willy Wilcox and, as such, has become something of a tourist attraction in the community of Polperro. Initially uncertain as to what the curious object was, a subsequent investigation led to the revelation that it was a horn that had been sawed off of an unfortunate rhino. Both astonished and dismayed by the discovery, Randall turned the oddity over to police while wondering how exactly it wound up in the cave in the first place.

A longstanding and rather chilling theory within UFO research circles over the years posits that fallen angels could be masquerading as aliens visiting our planet as part of a grand and ultimately sinister agenda. Bible scholar Scott Mitchell explored this troubling concept on Thursday night's program and argued that just such a scenario is currently unfolding. He cautioned that these entities will soon appear before us under the guise of our 'ancient alien ancestors' and, in the process, fool people into pledging their allegiance to them. Aiding these faux ETs, Mitchell cautioned, will be hybrid humans created by these fallen angels and endowed with special powers.

By far the weirdest story of the week came by way of Britain, where cat owners in several communities are understandably unnerved by a twisted individual who has been shaving patches of fur off of their pets. The very strange situation began in late December in the town of Walderslade when the first unfortunate feline fell victim to the razor-wielding miscreant. In the subsequent weeks and months, the ne'er-do-well's attacks have spread to neighboring communities and now number in the dozens. Until the troublemaker can be brought to justice, animal welfare groups are advising cat owners to keep a close eye on their furry friends, lest they wind up being preyed upon by the phantom shaver.

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