Too weird for Geraldo but perfect for the Internet, Pamela Stonebrook is a pioneer of the Internet. She is the quintessential example of the kind of person to whom this medium has given a forum, where none previously existed.Though network executives considered her schtick too "out there" for the 1990s daytime television talk show format, her story has had a home on the World Wide Web for several years.
Long before David Icke began mercilessly bashing the species, Pamela exultantly extolled on the "Joys of Reptoid Sex." I recall first encountering her postings in 1997, linked to the fabulous (and sadly, long defunct) Brother Blue site. As I disjointedly surfed around Blue's reptoid postings I perceived at the time that Pamela was trolling for dates by the unconventional means of relating her reptilian sexual experiences. The Internet as a pickup scene never appealed to me and although I may have been mistaken, I lost interest in her because of this initial perception.
Recently, however I was very impressed to see that what had grown out of her early discourse about hot sex with buff alien lizards was now an immense degree of existential wisdom. Pamela's "Open Letter the UFO Community," now posted on her site, is a poignant articulation of Self-Sovereignty that is a must-read for anyone on any side of the reptilian debate.
As I have written extensively elsewhere, the reptilian experience has spanned world cultures for millennia and it is clearly widespread in our present, given the amount of coverage it currently gets on the Internet. This is still the only medium that so actively engages the subject.
It is interesting to see how the Internet's development has been hand-in-hand with the mass proliferation of inter-dimensional information. The reptilian phenomenon is of the astral or imaginal realm. The process of our coming to grips with the possible existence of reptilians, and fully comprehending the dimension of the mind, has the potential to trigger a larger awareness of our own multidimensionality, our spirituality and our relationship with Creation.
Pamela's process of integrating her unusual experiences with her "normal" life has been played out very publicly, with interviews on the Art Bell Show and other venues. She has been visited with the hellish tribulation that tends to befall the experiencer who comes forward. She has been misquoted, ridiculed and plain misunderstood by people who don't get it because they are blinkered by the prevailing Western materialistic worldview. The sexual nature of her stories, in addition, has set off a lot of alarms, triggering instant Puritanical judgement of her.
Even the particular race of ETs that Pamela loves have been mercilessly attacked and made unpopular on the 'Net! But it appears that she has emerged all the wiser for it. Her urge to share her high strangeness worldwide has been pathologically honest, verging on the suicidal. I must acknowledge her bravery!