May 25

Genoskwa: The killer Bigfoot!

We are IF writes “Its collab time once again and we have another great subject covered in depth by Ryan Tremblay, Ryan wrote the Wendigo story I looked at a few videos ago, and is back with a cryptid related to the Bigfoot.

This Sasquatch cousin is a little different to its kin, a lot more violent and feared by those that know of its existence. This creature is known as Ge’nos’kwa.”

 

11 Responses to “Genoskwa: The killer Bigfoot!”

  1. Justin J

    I wonder if the Genoska are just aggressive Sasquatchs just like some people are crazy and hostile I could definitely see that being a possibility Its hard for me to believe there is so many subspecies of Sasquatch without ome single body found I do believe that its possible for the Sasquatch to exist but all the other types im not so sure in this crazy world tho anything is possible just think about all the other primates and Sasquatch being so close I doubt if they seen us and told others they would believe it things with no hair and smooth skin driving in crazy machines sounds all to make believe also kinda cool to look at us from their perspective and see just how crazy it would sound for us to exist but we do and possibly they do to I’ve never seen this the I think that’s what its gonna take for me to believe

  2. Thomas D

    I’m on board with the Natives. If this were a sasquatch, they would have described it as such. Yet they have a different name for it. Different beast.
    Don’t wait around on science to help you out. My own personal experiences with actual PhD scientists has been very eye opening for me. We faked results on videos that were submitted to receive continued funding for a basically useless research. Much like wind energy, which has just been resubsidized for another 20 years. My bill has not gone down, and no progress has been made in that field.
    Yet fortunes are being made on it. Ya feeling me?
    Don’t wait around on science to validate anything for you. They will always need more time and money, and will ALWAYS be dead-ended by dogma.
    If you see a booger, do you really need the Big Bang people to validate that for you, or is your given set of senses enough to tell you that you saw something?

  3. Richard P

    There are two classifications of life forms on this planet that I use, conventional, where their existence is accepted by science, government and the general public, and non conventional, where there is evidence that they exist. But they’re not recognized by science, government and the general public as being a classifiable native species to our planet. Such as aliens and criptids.

    However there may be sequestered recognized species of lifeforms by the government, or branches of it, of some aliens and criptids. Because they’ve recovered the remains of dead ones, and or have captured live ones. This would help explain the various cover ups where people with evidence are in some cases subjected to various forms of suppression. Including murders and disappearances.

    Most people accept that there are cover ups for various reasons. What a lot of them don’t recognize is that the government may not always be responsible for the cover ups. And that the ETs or criptids themselves may be responsible for the cover ups. In his book Alien Mind, George LaBuono talks about non intervention laws in ET societies. This is a link for the book for anyone interested in reading it. It’s free on the internet:

    http://exopoliticshongkong.com/uploads/Alien_Mind_a_Primer_book.pdf

    If interfering in a non ET civilization is illegal. Then ETs breaking the law may have a motivation for covering up their crimes.

    Part of the Billy Meier UFO case deals with criminal elements of ETs present on our planet that are hunted down and captured or killed by ET law enforcement and special ops.

    With ETs the government’s motivation for classifying what they know is partially based in technology recovery for military and other applications. With criptids, bigfoots in particular, the motivation may also be based in technology recovery. Bigfoots and all other criptids exhibit an ability to evade capture based in their non conventional ability to disappear. This is what separates them from conventional wildlife which doesn’t have this ability.

    Why they would want to disappear is obvious, how they are doing it is publicly unknown. But there are so many reports and there is so much evidence of them disappearing that it can’t be ignored. This doesn’t mean that bigfoots aren’t flesh and blood mammals like us. It just means that they have an ability that conventional mammals don’t have. So this ability is of great interest to governments. Bigfoot’s size and strength is also of use in super soldier programs.

    With thermal and drone technology it’s almost impossible for bigfoots to evade detection, attack and capture based simply on their physical prowess and camouflage ability. And in some cases governments may have used these and other technologies to kill and capture bigfoots for research and study. They may have also gotten information about how the bigfoots use non conventional abilities for evasion and escape. That has been used to develop counter measures to the bigfoot’s disappearance abilities. Both for replicating these capabilities for government use. And to neutralize the bigfoot’s use of these abilities so that they can be captured or killed.

    The bigfoot’s disappearance abilities may not be their own in all cases. They may be part of an ET genetic project here. And may be tracked full time. And when a certain threshold is reached. They’re removed from their environment and temporally transferred to someplace else using advanced technology. Much in the way that problem predatory wildlife is trapped and relocated when they get in trouble.

  4. Richard P

    In a real life encounter with a hostile like the one described in the video. Deep penetration large caliber projectiles are necessary. Moose and African buffalo kill people every year. Some after being repeatedly shot. Staying on target with high powered ammunition using as many follow up shots as necessary until the threat is neutralized would be my go to option. At close range with a moving target my preference would be a target laser that holds it zero.

    I can hit a human head size target with 10 round mag dumps from a standing shoulder fired position with my Sub 2000 in .40 S&W using a target laser with the target against the back wall at the indoor shooting range at a distance of about 20 yards 95% to 100% of the time. Hard cast lead woods rounds in this caliber should penetrate most bone and penetrate up to 3 feet to hit vital organs. I’ll be carrying 30 round mags when needed.

    This is an 800 pound Alaskan grizzly bear killed by a fishing guide using a mag dump from a compact 9mm loaded with woods rounds at close range that was menacing his fishing party:

    http://preparedgunowners.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/grizzly-9mm-2.jpg

    I carry a similar gun and ammunition in the woods. And after my close encounter with 3 bigfoots 2 summers ago. I also started carrying a folding carbine in .40 S&W in my pack as back up. Which is a lot easier than carrying a full sized long gun over rough terrain for long hikes.

    • Paul M

      Well carry what ya like , its each to his own… BUT l will stay with 45 and 44 mag for my hand gun protection when on the move in the woods…. and when in camp its = shotgun with OO BUCK , and SLUG every other round … also carry 308 short rifle… l do understand the need for speed and accuracy is of utmost importance , And can get this done by having 2 or more shooters all THE time… And l dont go alone… We are never 100 % safe in most things we do… we just try to get the odds in our favor…

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