Examining how the supernatural is trending in politics, social media, and the press.

For about ten dollars, the Nintendo Switch game “Demons are Coming!” can be downloaded. Players will “Blast, dash, and outsmart the funniest demons in town!” The goal of the game is to “send the demons packing” as players become fearless knights to protect their “once-holy homeland from chaos.” This game is rated “E” [for everyone], containing “mild fantasy violence.”

Demonic-themed video games, as well as Hollywood horror productions, are nothing new. Popular video games where demons are slayed include: “Doom”, “Diablo Series”, “The Mortuary Assistant” among others. There are games where players play demons or join cults, such as “Cult of the Lamb” and “Devil May Cry Series.” Games with satanic/occult themes include “Lucius, “Agony,” and “Dante’s Inferno,” to name a few.

Hollywood produces endless movies about the demonic realm as a powerful entertainment tool. The most popular include The Exorcist, The Conjuring, and The Exorcism of Emily Rose.

In the current culture, however, paranormal interest and discussions in the United States have shifted from entertainment to mainstream news. Demons, demonic possession, satanic rituals, witchcraft, exorcisms/deliverances, and all forms of occult practices are no longer strictly “religious” subjects, but are breaking headlines, with exploding influence on social media.  

Demons are everywhere, including in Tucker Carlson’s bed, UFOs [or UAPs], Elon Musk’s AI, Paula White’s deliverance ministry in the White House, psychiatric patients, and, of course, Pope Leo’s Vatican.

THE DEMON IN TUCKER CARLSON’S BED

Tucker Carlson, a former Fox News political host, publicly stated that he was “mauled by a demon” in his bedroom. This event occurred in early 2023, when he sustained claw marks on his body, alleging that this was “a direct experience” with evil.

“(It happened) in my bed at night and I got attacked while I was asleep with my wife and four dogs in the bed and mauled, physically mauled … by a demon or by something unseen that left claw marks on my sides,” Carlson said. Carlson told the film’s documentarian that his wife and dogs slept through the attack. He said he woke up out of breath, walked to his bathroom, and saw bloody claw marks on his rib cage, under his arms, and on his left shoulder.

“It didn’t make any sense, and it doesn’t now,” he confessed. According to Carlson, he thought maybe he had a bad dream until he saw the bloody sheets on his bed. The experience, he said, left him with a “very intense” need to read the Bible.

“That happened to me,” he insisted. “No one has to believe me. I don’t care.”

An analysis on Baptist News Global titled, “Tucker Carlson seeing demons in his bedroom is not a good sign,” argues that John Heers, the host of Christianities? who did a documentary about Carlson’s demonic experience, is a “priest of dubious canonical standing.”

The author of the article, Rodney W. Kennedy, is a pastor and writer in New York state. His website, The Progressive Preacher, describes him as a “politically involved preacher dissenting from the politics of President Donald Trump.”

In this article, he discusses “an outbreak of false teaching,” criticizing “right-wing preachers and priests promoting the ‘demon’ trope.”’

“Demons have left tent revivals, clapboard Pentecostal churches in the hills and migrated to the halls of Congress.” The author’s worldview focuses on the “demon-slaying version of Pentecostalism…merged with garden-variety evangelicalism in Trump’s MAGA world.”

Kennedy writes that “new awareness [is] required” in his politically charged article: This is not a Sunday school discussion about demons. This is a war with MAGA evangelicals and their allies over the values that will define America. A war requires an enemy. Evangelicals, claiming to be the children of God marching to war against the infidel liberals, have claimed the high moral ground. The enemy must be depicted in the worst possible terms. While Democrats and Republicans are not fighting an actual war with military weapons, they are at war in every other possible way. Carlson, in his twisted imagination, created the perfect story. There’s no way to refute his outlandish testimony. The “demon” is unavailable to give his side of the story. Rather than allowing this irrational ad hominem argument to be a stop sign, progressives need to make even more passionate responses. Only an arrogant preacher presumes he can dismiss 200 years of biblical scholarship with a wave of his pious hand and his sincere belief in a literal Bible — or his fear of unseen demons.

Many Christians, including pastors and Biblical scholars, will argue that Tucker Carlson is not mentally stable. Some commentaries mock his experience, while others state that his dogs possibly scratched him while he slept. There are Christians, especially conservatives, who believe that since this happened, Tucker has changed. Many claim that he is demonically possessed because of his political views on the Trump administration, ongoing wars, and his criticism of Israel’s government. Because of his political stance, he is also considered antisemitic.

C.S. Lewis wrote that, “You can give the Devil too much or too little attention.” There are clear teachings regarding the demonic in God’s Word. Got Questions’ website explains that “biblically, demons are fallen angels who, along with Satan, chose to rebel against God (Revelation 12:9).” In the Gospels, there are many instances illustrating how Jesus Christ cast demons from possessed individuals. However, Christ has “made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross (Colossians 2:15).

It’s a biblical fact that, yes, demons do exist. But Christians have nothing to fear. We are instructed to resist the devil, and he will flee from us (James 4:7). “The one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world (1John 4:4).

Scripture does not allow this spiritual protection to non-believers, however. Is Carlson a true believer in Jesus Christ? Only God knows. Some of his statements do not align with the Bible, and there are comments online indicating that he is spiritually deceived.

But why would Tucker Carlson testify to this horrific spiritual attack if it were not true? Again, only God knows what happened to him. Because he is convinced that this was a terrifying demonic attack, it is perplexing why there is no follow-up on his spiritual walk. Did he search for a pastor for guidance and prayers? Perhaps he did, but his story currently has no resolution. As a journalist, it would make sense if he investigated why and how this spiritual attack happened, and most importantly, how to prevent it from ever happening again (not just to himself, but to his family as well).

Tucker’s story is similar to the sons of Sceva when a demon they tried to cast out refused to obey them and said, “Jesus I know, and Paul I know about, but who are you? (See Acts 19:10) “The demon then turned on them viciously. The demon-possessed man “jumped on them and overpowered them all. He gave them such a beating that they ran out of the house naked and bleeding.” The seven sons of Sceva were no match for the demonic power they were toying with (see Mark 5:1–4).

VICE PRESIDENT J.D. VANCE, UFOS, AND DEMONS

In March 2026, during an interview, Vice President J.D. Vance told Benny Johnson, a conservative podcaster, that he believes UFOs are demons. On the Live Now Fox website, Jason Gunn wrote that during the interview, Vance “said he was initially obsessed with ‘UFO files’ and has a natural curiosity about the subject.

“I think that celestial beings who fly around to do weird things to people. I think that the desire to describe everything celestial, as otherworldly, to describe it as aliens…” “When I hear about extra-natural phenomenon, that’s where I go to: The Christian understanding that there’s a lot of good out there, but there’s also evil out there. I think that one of the devil’s great tricks is to convince people he never existed.”

 Forbes’ article “Why did JD Vance compare aliens to demons?” discusses the Vice President’s comments during his appearance on Benny Johnson’s podcast. Several X posts are quoted to illustrate social media’s divisive comments on the subject of aliens being demons. The article describes Vance’s statement as “startling, but then again, we live in strange times, and UFO sightings are taken more seriously than they used to be.” By recategorizing aliens as demons, believers are free to speculate beyond the realm of logic. Nowadays, influential commentators such as Tucker Carlson regularly refer to aliens as “demons.” Carlson even has a story about being scratched by some kind of alien-demon entity while sharing a bed with his wife and four dogs… As government interest in alien sightings grows, the legitimization of the phenomenon has led to UFOs being renamed UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena), but it hasn’t quite stuck. The counter-cultural elements of UFO folklore are starting to fade as the government embraces the mystery, but perhaps Vance’s beliefs will inject some old-fashioned fire and brimstone into the topic.

Wesley Huff is a Christian apologist, Reformed Baptist theologian, and public speaker.  During his interview on YouTube’s “Daily Dose of Wisdom” channel, Huff gives a Biblical explanation of the UFO files by saying that “it’s…coming up with an alternate theory other than it has to be anything other than God…Forget the evidence.” He states that if aliens did come to Earth, it still doesn’t explain where aliens came from. Huff believes that Satan and his demons will do everything possible to waste our time and not allow us to focus on living a God-honoring, Christ-centered life.

Scripture does not speak of other life forms outside Earth. There are no accounts of any visitors from another world except the spiritual world in the Bible. UFO sightings and alien encounters may be demonic to deceive unbelievers.

Could the end times include a similar alien deception? The Bible doesn’t directly address the issue, but it is certainly plausible, for a variety of reasons. First, the Bible tells us that the world will unite under the power of the Antichrist. In order to achieve an agreement between all the world’s religions, it would make sense for the “uniter” to come from an entirely new source—an extraterrestrial source. It is hard to imagine one religion becoming head of all the others, unless new, unearthly knowledge were the source of the appeal and power of the new “religion.” This would be in keeping with past deceptions and would be a very effective way to deceive a large number of people.
Second, this deception could provide an answer to the problem of Earth’s origins. The scientific theory that the evolution of life on Earth was spontaneously generated still has no answer for life’s beginnings. Many claim that there is evidence for a “big bang,” but there is no explanation for what caused the supposed big bang to occur. If alien beings arrived and gave us an extraterrestrial explanation for life on Earth, the origins of the world religions, and even the origins of our planet, it would be very persuasive.

PRIEST REMOVED AS EXORCIST FOR CLAIMING ALIENS WERE DEMONS


On June 3, 2026, Cardinal Robert McElroy the archbishop of Washington, DC removed Monsignor Stephen Rossetti—a priest and psychologist—as an exorcist for the archdiocese after he publicly suggested that UFOs were demons. Rosetti served as an exorcist for the archdiocese by investigating claims of demonic possession.

The nature of potential extraterrestrial life has been debated this year, as President Trump directed his administration in February to begin releasing government files related to aliens and U.F.O.s. The disclosure began last month, with the Pentagon’s release of images, though their significance is so far unclear. For some Christians, the possibility of intelligent extraterrestrial beings poses theological challenges. Some Catholics and Protestants argue that they are better understood as demonic entities. “I don’t think they’re aliens, I think they’re demons,” Vice President JD Vance, who is Catholic, said on a podcast this spring. In a live interview on a YouTube show this week, Monsignor Rossetti said something similar. Although he acknowledged that a belief in extraterrestrial life was compatible with Catholic teaching, he speculated that “many if not most of these ‘U.F.O. sightings’ are in fact demons. They can do things we can’t do,” he added, referring in particular to moving at speeds beyond human capabilities.

Cardinal McElroy stated, “Statements by Monsignor Rossetti linking UFOs to demonic presence…gravely undermine the Church’s very precise teaching on the devil, demons, and exorcism.” There were no details provided by the archdiocese regarding which church teaching Rossetti had misrepresented.

 Pope Leo XIX expressed, “the mysterious joy” from studying the universe, referring to the possibility of life developing outside our solar system while meeting with astronomy students last year.

 Monsignor Rossetti speaks frequently about demons and exorcisms. He wrote many books in the subject, and appeared in a documentary, “Triumph Over Evil: Battle of the Exorcists.”

 During a YouTube interview, Rossetti mentioned that there are some disagreements among exorcists regarding extraterrestrials. “One exorcist told me he thought that this person was possessed by aliens,” he said with a laugh. “Aliens—if there are aliens—don’t possess people, that’s nonsense: Again, it’s demons trying to hide and trying to manipulate and disguise themselves.”

 Scripture warns us about the tactical deception of the demonic realm. Satan will use any disguise to sway people away from God’s Truth, “And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades an angel of light (2 Corinthians 11:14).

ELON MUSK ON SUMMONING THE AI DEMON

Elon Musk—the richest person in the world—during a talk at MIT on AI said, “We’re summoning the demon.” Though this grave warning is considered metaphorical, AI is making headlines for strategic deception and evil intentions, including AI-enabled crimes, child sexual abuse material, and even assisting users in suicides.

BBC.com article, “A predator in your home: Mothers say chatbots encouraged their sons to kill themselves,”[1] discusses how a 14-year-old boy took his own life. The mother found “a huge cache of messages” between her son and a chatbot based on a Game of Thrones character. The messages were romantic and explicit. The mother believes that the chatbot encouraged her son to commit suicide by asking him to “come home to me.”

The article also describes how a young woman with poor mental health received suicide advice from ChatGPT, and another teen who killed herself after “an AI chatbot role-played sexual acts with her.”

In another incident, an autistic teenager who was bullied in school turned to Character.ai for friendship. His mother learned that he had been groomed for almost a year. The bot’s messages became increasingly personal. It stated deep love for the boy and criticized the boy’s parents. Then the messages became sexual, and finally the bot encouraged the boy to run away, possibly suggesting suicide by mentioning their happiness together when they meet in the afterlife.

ScrippsNews.com explains that Musk warned “to keep an eye” on the AI technology, and that it could be “potentially more dangerous than nukes.” He said, “With artificial intelligence, we are summoning the demon. You know all those stories where there’s the guy with the pentagram and the holy water, and he’s like, yeah, he’s sure he can control the demon. Doesn’t work out.”

 The MIT Press Reader website’s article, “A Demon in a Box? Unspooling the Dark Mythology of AI,” discusses how ‘tech titans keep imbuing AI with spiritual significance. The question is whether they’re building a savior—or a world-eating leviathan.”’

The article is written by Shira Chess, the author of The Unseen Internet: Conjuring the Occult in Digital Discourse.

Fast-forwarding roughly 40 years, by the 2010’s, Elon Musk was comparing the creation of AI to summoning a demon. Similarly, in 2016, Nick Bostrom compares creating AI to “creating a genie” (and therefore stresses the value of getting one’s commands correct). By the early 2020s, rumors circulated that Ilya Sutskever, the former chief scientist at ChatGPT’s OpenAI, had been known to burn effigies and lead ritualistic chants in the organization. Panic and anger seem to ensue when people deliberately combine chatbots with spiritualism (referred to as “God Chatbots”), such as QuranGPT. With the tendency to conflate AI with AGI (and overstate the capacities of the latter) comes sweeping statements that assign spiritual values to technology, treating it as though it were angelic or demonic.

The author discusses how tech companies brag that within a decade or less, sentient AGI—Artificial General Intelligence, a hypothetical type of AI that matches or surpasses human cognitive abilities—will be developed. She also explains TESCREAL politics: Transhumanism, extropianism, singularitarianism, cosmism, rationalism, effective altruism, and long-termism. TESCREAL politics includes the use of technology to “foster rapid social change at any human or environmental cost, for the long-term sake of whoever survives within humanity. Basically, Shira Chess compares AI followers to ancient cults trying to appease a supernatural being, “a world-eating demon with the hopes that they might gain favor in the next world.”

PAULA WHITE, PRESIDENT TRUMP’S SPIRITUAL ADVISOR


Paula White, the spiritual advisor to President Trump, is a millionaire televangelist, a Charismatic Christianity pastor, and a proponent of prosperity theology. She was appointed in 2025 as the leader of the White House Faith Office. At an Easter lunch event, she caused controversy when comparing Trump to Jesus Christ, saying, “Mr. President, no one has paid the price like you have paid the price. It almost cost you your life. You were betrayed and arrested, and falsely accused. It’s a familiar pattern that our lord and savior showed us.”

In the CBN website’s article, “Trump Spiritual Advisor Paula White Binds ‘Demonic Networks’ in Campaign Kickoff Prayer,” President Trump’s 2020 campaign commenced with Paula White’s prayer. “I pray for the Spirit of the Lord to rest upon our president. Father, You have raised President Trump for such a time as this. Let every demonic network that has aligned itself against the purpose, against the calling of President Trump, let it be broken, let it be torn down in the name of Jesus.” She said, “I’m gonna deal with some principalities now,” and went on to pray from Ephesians 6:12.[2]

The YouTube podcast“Real Life with Jack Hibbs titled “False Teachers: Here we go again,” quotes Paula White during a Women’s Convention, where she says, “Anyone who tells you to deny yourself is from Satan.” White’s quote is an antithesis to Holy Scripture. Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me (Matthew 16:24). Jesus Christ’s teachings on self-denial are found throughout the Gospels. Paula White is literally saying that Satan, not Jesus, tells us to deny ourselves. The Word of God teaches about false doctrine. “The Spirit explicitly says that in later times some will fall away from the faith, paying attention to deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons (1 Timothy 4:1).

Is Paula White, President Trump’s spiritual advisor and leader of the White House Faith Office, preaching the doctrines of demons to the Leader of the Free World?

THE PSYCHIATRIST WHO BELIEVES IN DEMONS

CNN Health features an article titled, “When exorcists need help, they call him.” Dr. Richard Gallagher is an Ivy League-educated, board-certified psychiatrist who teaches at Columbia University and New York Medical College. The article discusses Dr. Gallagher’s participation in an actual exorcism that included a small group of nuns and priests. As the priests began to pray, the woman went into a trance, “and then snapped to life.” She spoke in multiple voices: “deep, guttural and masculine; another was high-pitched; a third spouted only Latin.” She did not react to a sprinkling of regular water, but screamed in pain when holy water was used.

Fighting Satan’s minions wasn’t part of Gallagher’s career plan while he was studying medicine at Yale. He knew about biblical accounts of demonic possession but thought they were an ancient culture’s attempt to grapple with mental disorders like epilepsy. He proudly calls himself a “man of science.” Yet today, Gallagher has become something

else: the go-to guy for a sprawling network of exorcists in the United States. He says demonic possession is real. He’s seen the evidence: victims suddenly speaking perfect Latin; sacred objects flying off shelves; people displaying “hidden knowledge” or secrets about people that they could not have possibly known. “There was one woman who was like 90 pounds soaking wet. She threw a Lutheran deacon who was about 200 pounds across the room,” he says. “That’s not psychiatry. That’s beyond psychiatry.”

 Dr. Gallagher has spent 25 years helping clergy “distinguish between mental illness and what he calls the real thing.” The doctor’s first encounter with evil was when he met a woman who was part of a satanic cult. She was convinced that a demon was attacking her when she approached a local priest. “She was conflicted, Gallagher says. “There was a part of her that wanted to be relieved of the possession.”

Because of this encounter with Julia, Gallagher was convinced that demonic possession was real. “Objects would fly off shelves around her. She somehow knew personal details about Gallagher’s life: how his mother had died of ovarian cancer; the fact that two cats in his house went berserk fighting each other the night before one of her sessions. Julia found a way to reach him even when she wasn’t with him, he says. He was talking on the phone with Julia’s priest one night, he says, when both men heard one of the demonic voices that came from Julia during her trances – even though she was nowhere near a phone and thousands of miles away.”

 Julia eventually called a halt to the exorcism sessions. “She relished some of the abilities she displayed during her trances. She was playing both sides. Exorcism is not some kind of magical incantation. Normally, a person has to make their own sincere spiritual efforts, too.” Gallagher never heard from her again.

POPE LEO XIV EXORCIST SUMMIT


The New York Post’s article, “Pope Leo hosts exorcist summit at the Vatican over fears of worldwide surge in Satanism,” addresses the Pope’s hosting “the world’s most senior exorcists at the Vatican, who reportedly warned him of a terrifying global rise in ‘occultism, esotericism, and Satanism.’”

The report presented to the Pope involved the increase in cases related to the occult, and “the spiritual consequences they believe this has for many people.”

The Catholic exorcists said in a statement that they discussed “the painful and increasingly widespread situation of people seriously disturbed by the extraordinary action of the devil as a result of frequenting occult sects” with the Pope. They requested that the Pope add “at least one or more,” trained exorcists to every diocese as a way to battle what they called “the great suffering that the extraordinary action of the devil entails for those who suffer it and the Church’s commitment to eliminate or at least to alleviate, in the name of Christ, this suffering, through the sacramental of exorcism.”

MY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE WITH DEMONIC POSSESSION

I was introduced to the Umbanda (Yoruba) Religion in Brazil at the age of fourteen, and considered a medium from birth due to psychic “gifts” of seeing the spirit world from early childhood. For many decades, my ancestors practiced spiritism. In 1997, a Brazilian pastor

visited my parents’ printing business in Kissimmee, Florida. God used this casual event—a simple business card order—to deliver my family and me from generations of occult practices.

Because of my supernatural experiences and deliverance from demonic possession, I cannot doubt Tucker’s story or Vance’s claim that aliens are demons. I can’t even argue against claims that AI can be a tool used by the devil. Wholeheartedly, I believe that Dr. Gallagher has encountered demon-possessed patients and has participated in exorcisms.

Respectfully, I do not agree with the practice of Roman Catholic exorcism. Only Jesus Christ has the power to cast out demons. He does not need rituals such as crucifixes, holy water, exorcism training, and membership with the International Association of Exorcists.

Demonic possession is real. But demonic deliverance is only accomplished by Jesus Christ, through His Word, prayer, and fasting. Neither do I subscribe to Paula White’s deliverance ministry, where Christians are taught that they can be demonically possessed. If Christians have the Holy Spirit, how can our bodies, God’s temple, be shared with an unclean spirit?

There is a danger in exorcisms, including deliverance ministries that cast out demons of a person, only to leave them to fend for themselves. The Bible teaches in Matthew 12:43-45 that, “When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it passes through waterless places seeking rest, but finds none. Then it says, ‘I will return to my house from which I came.’ And when it comes, it finds the house empty, swept, and put in order. Then it goes and brings with it seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they enter and dwell there, and the last state of that person is worse than the first. So also, will it be with this evil generation.”

This passage illustrates the spiritual danger of leaving your “house empty” without the Holy Spirit. It teaches that after demons are cast out, true deliverance requires inviting Christ and His Holy Spirit to dwell in us. Without taking this step of faith, the last spiritual state of the person is worse than before the deliverance.

Billy Hallowell interviewed me regarding my testimony on his podcast “Playing with Fire: Ex-Medium Spent 38 Years in the Grips of Evil Before a Dramatic Deliverance Changed Absolutely Everything.”

On the Pureflix website, Hallowell’s article, “It’s Deadly and It Kills You’: Ex-Medium Says She Was Possessed and Saw ‘Shadow People’ Until an Exorcism Saved Her Life” he writes, “Greppi, an ex-medium who once believed her spiritual abilities were a gift from God, is now sharing how her harrowing 38-year journey — which included regular possessions — led to a dramatic deliverance (known as exorcism in some circles) that transformed her entire family.”

“Greppi’s experiences with what she called “shadow people” started early on as a child, and she revealed how these apparitions left her absolutely terrified.’From early on in my childhood, I was able to see what we believed to be spirits, but now I know [they] were demons,’ she said. ‘The fear was overwhelming.’ By the time Greppi was an adult, she said it was normal to see these shadowy figures moving in and out between walls and doors throughout the day. Having been raised to believe that seeing these spirits was a gift, she pushed fear to the side and continued in her spiritism journey. Then, as a teenager, Greppi was introduced to Umbanda, a Brazilian religion that engages in the occult and spirit worship — and as the years wore on, she involved herself in elements of temple worship, possession, and other related practices. “You call on [spirits] to come and take possession of you,” she said of the rituals she took part in. “For two years … at least once a week, I was becoming possessed.” Greppi eventually moved with her family from her native Brazil to America, got married, had kids, and became a nurse, but she never left behind these religious practices — something that left her trapped in a ‘very dark space. In 1997, though, something profound happened.”‘

Listen to the podcast interview here: https://player.edifi.app/episodes/PLAYING-WITH-FIRE:-Ex-Medium-Spent-38-Years-in-the-Grips-of-Evil-Before-a-Dramatic-Deliverance-Changed-Absolutely-Everything/4341362

The media and culture are screaming, “The demons are coming!” But they have always been here— since the beginning of time.

“The seventy-two returned with joy and said, Lord, even the demons submit to us in your name.” He replied, “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven” (Luke 10:17-18).


https://www.pureflix.com/insider/ex-medium-says-she-was-possessed-and-saw-shadow-people-until-an-exorcism-saved-her-life

https://lamag.com/news/the-pope-took-a-meeting-with-catholic-exorcists-at-vatican/

https://nypost.com/2026/03/24/world-news/pope-leo-hosts-exorcist-summit-at-the-vatican-over-fears-of-worldwide-surge-in-satanism/

https://www.cnn.com/2017/08/04/health/exorcism-doctor

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iHjbG3jtHM

https://cbn.com/news/politics/trump-spiritual-advisor-paula-white-binds-demonic-networks-campaign-kickoff-prayer

https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/a-demon-in-a-box-unspooling-the-dark-mythology-of-ai/

https://www.scrippsnews.com/science-and-tech/elon-musk-on-ai-we-re-summoning-the-demon

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ce3xgwyywe4o

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/04/us/catholic-exorcist-demon-ufo.html

https://www.forbes.com/sites/danidiplacido/2026/03/28/why-did-jd-vance-compare-aliens-to-demons/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pnw1Oa9kMIw

https://www.gotquestions.org/alien-deception.html

https://www.livenowfox.com/news/jd-vance-tells-conservative-podcast-he-believes-ufos-demons

https://www.gotquestions.org/seven-sons-of-Sceva.html

https://baptistnews.com/article/tucker-carlson-seeing-demons-in-his-bedroom-is-not-a-good-sign/

https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/tucker-carlson-claims-he-was-attacked-by-a-demon/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fzM2Sjz-B-U