Are ‘Visitors’ Really Demons? A Personal Response to J.D. Vance from Direct Experience
- יוסי רונן
- Apr 28
- 2 min read

When I hear the words of J.D. Vance claiming that the “visitors” are actually demons, I understand where the fear comes from—but I cannot agree with the conclusion.
I’m writing this not from theory or belief, but from direct, profound, and life-altering experience—an encounter that has shaped my life since 1981.
The first human response to the unknown is often fear. That’s natural. When consciousness meets something that does not fit familiar frameworks, it tries to interpret it using existing concepts—religious, cultural, or mythological. Throughout history, what was not understood was often labeled as “demons,” “angels,” or supernatural forces.
But my experience was entirely different.
My encounter with the “visitors” did not carry a sense of threat, evil, or negative intent. Quite the opposite—it conveyed a presence that was intelligent, aware, deeply conscious, and even loving. Not love in the simple emotional sense, but something far broader—a form of consciousness that contains, understands, and does not operate from fear or control.
One of the central mistakes is interpreting the unknown through the lens of ancient fear. When we do that, we are not truly exploring the phenomenon—we are projecting onto it the images that already exist within us.
In my book *ONE face to face contact*, I describe how communication with the visitors is not verbal but conscious—a form of telepathic or direct transmission of understanding. In such a state, it is very difficult to “fake” intent. You experience the essence of the other consciousness directly.
If there had been negative intent—it would have been immediately felt.
But it wasn’t there.
Instead, the encounter led to inner development, a deepening of self-understanding, and a closer connection to ideas such as unity, consciousness, and even faith—not as fear, but as recognition.
I don’t expect everyone to agree with my interpretation—and that’s natural. But I do suggest caution before assigning absolute labels like “demons” to a phenomenon that may be far beyond our current frameworks.
The unknown is not necessarily an enemy.
Sometimes—it is an invitation to expand.
— Yossi Ronen

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