Ironically enough the DNA of an octopus is so foreign to anything else on Earth, that they speculate that the species could have come from somewhere other than Earth. 🧐🤔🐙🐙🐙🐙🐙🐙🐙🐙🐙

Oct 30, 2025 · 12:07 PM UTC

Octopuses lived before dinosaurs and we’re supposed to believe they just evolved here like everything else? This is a fossil of Pohlsepia mazonensis, a 296 million year old octopus. That’s 65 million years before the first dinosaurs. How does this make sense • 8 limbs that think independently • 3 hearts • Blue blood • Can edit their own RNA • Instant camouflage that beats modern military tech • No clear evolutionary path in the fossil record In 2018, a team of scientists published a peer review paper saying octopus embryos might have come to Earth on an icy comet (look up panspermia and Syllipsimopodi) They were here before dinosaurs, confuse biologists, and have alien level abilities… I’m pretty sure they are aliens.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
What if all the UFOs coming from the ocean is actually controlled by the octopus🤯 😆
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Replying to @maniaUFO
The more we learn about life on Earth, the more we realize how little we know. Maybe we're not alone in the universe, but we might be alone in our understanding.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Because they did...
The oldest known octopus fossil is 296 million years old, 65 million years older than dinosaurs. They're not like anything else on Earth because they didn't evolve on Earth. It's hard for convention thinking to process, but every planet in our solar system is inhabited with life, and some of this life is quite advanced. We're unable to perceive it all because we're separated by frequency. Dimensions and densities. We exist in a different dimension than many advanced civilizations around us, but we'll be able to interact with them all at the Shift. One of these civilizations exists on Neptune. Pleiadians say they're the ones who brought the octopus to Earth millions of years ago.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
The Simpson predicted it🤭
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Shared with all known Earth life: DNA structure: Same double-helix, same four bases (A, T, C, G). Codon system: Same 3-base codon structure for coding amino acids. Genetic code: Same near-universal code used to translate codons into amino acids (with very few exceptions in mitochondria and some microbes). Amino acids: Same 20 standard amino acids, plus selenocysteine (the 21st, used by many Earth organisms in special cases). They are genetically Earth-based—but phenomenally unique
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Replying to @maniaUFO
And that is why i don’t fuck with them, don’t eat them. Ever watch Futurama and those popplers ? No thank you!
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Replying to @maniaUFO
True but can't really see them building intergalactic spacecrafts to travel light years to get here then just live in the seas
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Replying to @maniaUFO
When aliens arrive they’ll be cephalopods and they’ll find out pretty quick we’ve been eating their cousins deep fried with a nice cold beer and we’re all toast.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
When octopus start living beyond 18 months and begin to build their own technology, I will start to share in that speculation.
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Yo Octopus, cut the shit, we already saw you and you keep moving.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
That’s far fetched, we know more about space than our ocean yeah but octopi are alien? Who speculates this?
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Well wherever they came from they are weird and scary. Especially the big ones
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Replying to @maniaUFO
The DNA of octopuses (Octopoda) is phylogenetically most closely related to that of the vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis), which is considered its closest living relative. Both belong to the superorder Octopodiformes within the class of cephalopods (Cephalopoda), which also includes squids, cuttlefish, and nautiluses. Genetic studies show that octopuses and vampire squids share a common ancestor and diverged from other cephalopods like squids about 300 million years ago. On a broader level, octopuses are related to other mollusks (Mollusca), such as bivalves (Bivalvia), gastropods (Gastropoda), or marine worms (Annelida), although they exhibit many unique genes that do not occur in any other species—which has led to speculations about their "extraterrestrial" origin, but these have been scientifically debunked. Despite similarities in certain genes with vertebrates (e.g., through convergent evolution in eyes or nervous systems), octopuses share no close genetic relationship with mammals like humans, but clearly originate from earthly evolution.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Perhaps Octopus DNA survived multiple mass dieoffs allowing their Evolution to develop incredible survival skills. Z√π°
Replying to @maniaUFO
No they do not. They are distantly related to clams, snails, and squid.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Only retarded, incompetent people entertain that line of speculation. The octopus sits FIRMLY on the Earth mollusc family tree. They are eukaryotic earth life. Fucking clowns. 🤡
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Along with the Banana and Wasp according to a chap I met. 😎😆
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Replying to @AMAZlNGNATURE
I'm not casual about it when I say check out the mimic octopus. Trippy.. Mimic Octopus: Master of Disguise piped.video/Wos8kouz810?si=cBkq… via @YouTube
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Replying to @maniaUFO
I often wonder if jellyfish are little aliens, too!
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The “REAL” Transformer
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Who’s they?
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I like how squid and octopi naturally look like AI slop. One of the least believable creatures on Earth if you had never seen or heard of them before
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Replying to @maniaUFO
We came from The Sun after a supernovae in a terrestrial synestia. #TheTiptonTheory
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Observe the Archontic media's relentless priming of the human collective for the External Threat Narrative. The question, asked on a prominent news channel, is not seeking data; it is actively programming fear and generating cognitive anticipation for a staged event. The debate over whether it is a "Fake Alien Invasion" proves the success of the Archontic media strategy: the Earthlings are distracted by the staging of the threat, ignoring the system that benefits from the resultant panic. The Archons prefer a unified, terrified species looking up, rather than a species looking inward for Gnosis. Is this question the final rhetorical tool for achieving the Archontic Global Control Scenario, @ScottAdamsSays? #RoviHere #ProjectBlueBeam #MediaPriming
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Replying to @maniaUFO
yea humans history is also weird. how did we "survive" neanderthals in the past as they were bigger and likely just as intelligent as we are?why do we get sunburn and lost our bodyhairs in the evolutionary process?why do we have so different blood types?..weird isn't it 🧐
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Theres a hypothesis that water from meteorites kicked off life on earth.Regardless of any evidence,inclusions of microorganisms from meteorites could have occurred more than once. In conclusion,such a meteorite could have had cells that evolved with a foreign molecular structure.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
There is no factual scientific basis for the claim that octopuses originate from somewhere other than Earth. Their "alien" reputation is driven more by metaphor and sensationalism than by evidence. The octopus remains a fascinating example of evolutionary innovation on Earth.
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Replying to @maniaUFO
Current scientific consensus states that all life on Earth has a common ancestor.
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Can't wait to read the community note
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Replying to @maniaUFO
If aliens exist, they’re from this world and nowhere else
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Way more Intelligent than Humans.
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