“The Science of Alien Abduction and Interference”: A Review of A Scientist’s Own Alien Abduction Encounters: Dominion Lost, UNABRIDGED by Bruce Rapuano

 

 (Self-published, 2023). ISBN: 9798861535755

Dominion Lost is one of the most compelling, convincing narratives of ET abduction that I have ever read. This is no small compliment: over the past 15 years, after my own experience with missing time and probable ET abduction, I have studied this field intensively, reading many books, interviewing dozens of abductees and contactees, and carefully considering the evidence.

Although UFOlogists lament the lack of attention paid to your “everyday person,” and I have long been skeptical of the assumption that being a police officer or airline pilot makes that individual’s report of an experience more accurate and credible, there is something encouraging about the increasing numbers of medical professionals and scientists taking a serious look at UFOlogy. Dr. John Mack, Pulitzer Prize–winning Harvard psychiatrist, nearly lost his position in the university medical school because of his study of abductees. Since that time, other psychiatrists and psychologists, as well as neuroscientists and cardiologists, have become interested in not only abduction phenomena but near death experiences, psi phenomena, and other once verboten topics that affect a large portion of the population.

Dr. Bruce Rapuano studied Neurobiology and Psychology at UPenn before earning his doctoral degree in Neuropharmacology. According to his bio, he has conducted independent biomedical research at several prestigious medical institutions, including Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. His book is part first-person abduction narrative and part techno-medical study. Although the medical portions can be a complex read, the fact that Rapuano has applied the tools of a gifted scientist to the abduction phenomenon is a major step forward in the grassroots Disclosure movement.

Rapuano begins his narrative with an encounter he had, along with several other pre-teens, on June 19, 1965, in New Haven, Connecticut. Rapuano gives us a scientist’s detailed report of size, distance, time, luminosity, and other data points… even though he was only ten years old. As the encounter continues, the classic tropes unfold. I’ll leave it to you to enjoy Rapuano’s narrative without divulging further details.

I also need to mention that Rapuano’s credentials include a Juris Doctor degree. Like any competent lawyer, he adds strength to his narrative by drawing from an array of similar cases. At the time he and seven others had their encounter in Connecticut, there were a plethora of international UFO sightings. Fourteen months prior to Rapuano’s sighting, police officer Lonnie Zamora had his famous encounter in Socorro, New Mexico. It was also the time of the Condon Committee and the work of Jacques Vallee and J. Allen Hynek (he of the infamous “swamp gas” explanation, which he later retracted, of the well-known Michigan UFO flap). Rapuano also reports on a crucial data set in making sense of the larger narrative: UFOs over military and nuclear installations. He then shares data from his extensive study of the Northeast Blackout of 1965, which illuminates the effect UFOs can have on our electrical grids. 

From here, Rapuano relates several compelling abduction experiences (some involving his nuclear family) involving sleep paralysis, sleepwalking, and missing time. His eloquence and attention to detail are more than adequate for these narratives to stand on their own as authentic, standout contributions to seventy years of case files on contactee and abduction phenomena. Then the science enters, with illustrations and highly detailed technical explanations of nasal implants and extractions. This same professional approach made the case studies and medical procedures done by Dr. Roger Leir indispensable to our understanding of alien implants. Rapuano goes much further, considering how these implants can make us suggestive, allowing these entities to manipulate our memories, study our brain function, and therefore control individuals and perhaps society as a whole.

His chapters on Free (or zero-point) Energy, portals, wormholes, and gravity drives offer some of best explanations I have ever read on the subject. Here particularly, Rapuano does a masterful job of making complex science accessible. 

In line with every abductee and contactee with whom I have spoken (and after my own experiences) there is a compulsion bordering on obsession that drives (and guides) the experiencer to search for meaning and answers to questions (including Why Me?) that I can only characterize as Profound, Cosmic, and Spiritual.

In the process of finding answers, Rapuano discovered a surgical procedure and fatality involving his grandfather that opens the door to these abductions and implants being multigenerational, which fits hand in glove with the ET abduction profile.  

The most compelling of Rapuano’s remembered experiences is one that begins on p. 384. His attention to detail and scientist’s mind make this narrative highly compelling. We are right there with him as he leaves his bed, his house, and crosses several properties in order to meet—

It’s best to read it for yourself.

A bonus to this must-read book is the detailed assessment of the Walter Reed autopsy report from Roswell, brought to light by Lt. Col. Philip J. Corso. Rapuano breaks it down element by element, building a compelling profile of what the (in)famous alien Greys actually are. Rapuano supports the popular theory that they are genetic clones—worker bees sharing a hive mind under the direction of other races (Nordics, Reticulans, Arcturians, Pleiadians, etc.). The hive-mind Greys seem to be soulless and emotionless, with abductee reports often stating that some other being intervenes when the human subject on their surgical table expresses pain and fear.

The physiological assessments that account for their ability to travel long distances in space (and/or interdimensionally) are fascinating reading and may contain the seeds of what humankind eventually becomes if it manages to survive long enough to develop (or understand) this technology.

Dominion Lost concludes with a somber, cautionary tone. Whether it be some, most, or all ETs visiting Earth, their intentions are far from virtuous. For all the talk of assistance to humans and evocations of The Day the Earth Stood Still, there is compelling evidence that many (tens of) thousands of people have been and continue to be abducted, experimented on, implanted, and used for hybridization and psychological testing (the last was my experience). Abductees do not consent. Many experience trauma or physical injury (or, in the case of Rapuano’s grandfather, die after experimentation and implantation).

Rapuano offers several sobering hypotheses about what the Greys and their fellow ETs might be planning, doing, or ultimately wanting from humanity. Pay close attention because the phenomenon shows no signs of slowing down. Given the growing evidence of enforced treaties allowing for these practices (in exchange for advanced technology) going back to Eisenhower, and the widely (skeptically) anticipated “Disclosure” process of the past several years recently thwarted by powerful congressional committees, the danger is clear and present.

There is much of which to be aware and, in the quest for knowledge and awareness, Dr. Rapuano’s book should be at the top of every researcher and experiencer’s reading list.

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