Unfortunately, both are true. The original story was a divine inspiration specifically to address the likelihood things would end with annihilation of humanity at the behest of the Extraterrestrial Alliance that has been controlling things for many thousands of years. The seizing on this for a provocative radio broadcast was a self-serving exploitation of innocent people to cause a stir and to make a splash to further the career of the producer. It was in divine alignment in the sense of conveying a divine message and served to educate a further generation of humans in the possibility of alien invasion and to take it seriously, but the way it was handled caused a backlash and this became the poster child for disinformation and a reckless disregard for truth which continues to plague all accounts of paranormal phenomena, especially things related to extraterrestrial activities.
So all such stories that stem from accurate inner perceptions or even real-world events witnessed directly, are carefully excluded from being spread via the media so they go nowhere. When people hear of them, they often end up as subject matter for screenplays and will appear in the media, but this serves the darkness by creating what is perceived as a fiction and it will be all the more immediately dismissed when a similar story appears by a purported eye witness or someone believing they are privy to higher truth. It will just be assumed they got the idea from seeing the movie and people will give it no serious attention. The best way to keep secrets is to get them out in the open, so they cannot be labeled as untruths through a subterfuge. What people hear first will typically stick and it will be monumentally hard to change their opinions—this strategy works over and over to serve the extraterrestrial agenda.
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