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UFOs and the Media
Atlantis
Rising
Issue
Number 10, Winter 97
UFO
Experts See Official Cover-Up Unraveling
by Marcia Jedd,
The modern-day UFO era celebrates the half-century mark this
year with the 50th anniversary of the Roswell, New Mexico
crash and pilot Ken Arnold's sightings in Washington. At the
National UFO and Unexplained Phenomena Conference in October
in Minneapolis-St. Paul, UFOlogists pondered the government
coverup and secrecy in a variety of fascinating
presentations.
Speakers cautioned the
audience not to believe everything they see and hear from
the government about UFOs as further admissions come out.
Just because Bill Clinton says it on television, don't
believe it, warned Robyn Quail, abduction researcher.
Author-researcher Kevin
Randle finds it odd that the government is now putting more
manpower into its UFO public relations efforts. Three or
four years ago the government didn't care what we, as a
bunch of UFO nuts, believed. Suddenly, they're actively
working to convince people Roswell was nothing more than a
balloon. We've actually gotten their attention and interest,
and they're working to refute what we say, he said, adding
If Roswell isn't the event that we think it is, why do they
care what we believe?
Randle suggested all the
inconsistent testimony surrounding the Roswell crash is
challenging for researchers. The government isn't the
biggest problem now. It's all these other people coming
forward and trying to cash in on the Roswell bandwagon, he
said, citing the alien autopsy film fiasco, claims of debris
and false witnesses. He said that as the public increasingly
accepts the idea of UFOs and extraterrestrial life,
eliminating the ridicule curtain that the military and
government lowered in the 1940s is the task at hand.
Nuclear physicist and
author Stan Friedman doesn't forecast any stunning
Revelation from the government anytime soon. As for Roswell
and its 50th anniversary, Friedman foresees no rejection by
governmental agencies of their original weather-balloon
statement. They're playing hardball about Roswell, about
every other aspect. If they weren't playing hardball, why
wouldn't the secretary of the Air Force give a blanket
amnesty to anybody who wants to talk about what happened in
July 1947, since it was a non-event. They haven't done that,
he said.
Friedman doesn't
necessarily adhere to the notion of a secret government, but
stated, I would say there's a group that's the equivalent of
Majestic 12 (MJ-12). It's obviously a different type of
group. His personal hope, like many UFO researchers today,
is that the floodgates to the cosmic Watergate will open
soon.
There appear signs that
bit by bit, some cracks of light are appearing.
A case in point might be
what NASA has recently stated regarding the possibility of
life of Mars and the potential for life on the Moon. In
August 1996, NASA confirmed the possibility that a primitive
form of microscopic life may have existed on Mars more than
three billion years ago. Meanwhile, the debate over
photographing the face on Mars continues to be downplayed by
NASA while other researchers make their own interpretations.
In 1974, Stan Friedman
speculated in a white paper entitled Flying Saucers and
Physics that, given the lack of atmosphere on Mars, an
underground civilization or base might be reasonable. Fast
forward twenty two years, and NASA concedes the possibility
of life on Mars and the Moon. Albeit a probe is scheduled to
land this July on the sub-zero-degree surface of Mars, a
mission to return samples to Earth isn't scheduled until
2005.
Scores of researchers
such as Timothy Good, Richard Hoagland and Stan Friedman are
convinced that NASA is engaged in UFO research behind the
scenes. Moreover, many UFOlogists believe, with intelligent
reasoning, hard, cold facts and declassified documents, that
a formal government policy for debunking UFO reports exists
as well as a secret, centralized command structure to deal
with the UFO situation.
Kevin Randle is one
researcher who says the government is reverse engineering
any saucer technology it might possess. He drew an analogy
to going back in time to Medieval England with a VCR, a
power pack and a TV. It's always possible the technology
we're confronted with is so far beyond us, we don't
understand it yet, he said adding, Last century's magic is
this century's science.
Washington's Influence on the Media
Certainly, it seems that
the government, through its own agencies and the media, is
allowing bits of information it holds about UFO and
extraterrestrial life to be disseminated. The national
mainstream media is certainly influenced, if not controlled
to some degree, by the government and those in political
power.
In an on-line conference
last summer, Scott Wolfe, author of Extraterrestrial UFOs
and World Governments, suggested the government is perhaps
entering another phase by allowing more shows which depict
the UFO phenomenon. It was not like this over the last 20
years and they (the government) are rapidly trying to design
their next scenario for unveiling the cosmic Watergate. So
hold on to your seats, urged Wolfe.
Many cyberspace attendees
asked Wolfe why the government is covering up its UFO
involvement. He said that out of many reasons, one clearly
stands out, Having to admit that they (the government) can't
control them (aliens), and the government is terrified of
having to admit that to the general public.
It's more than
coincidence scores of theatrical movie releases and T.V.
shows currently depict UFOs, abductions and unexplained
phenomena, rife with high-drama portrayals of involvement by
government agencies. On the heels of Independence Day, an
avalanche of movies depict Hollywood's version of E.T.s and
spaceship invasions. The boob tube can't stay away from UFO
and related unexplained topics with both fact-inspired and
fiction-based shows, a la Sightings, X-Files and Dark Skies.
Friedman noted the pick
up in the UFO craze. What drives Hollywood is greed. Nothing
more, nothing less, he said. As far as the validity of film
treatments, Friedman, like other UFOlogists, implies there's
more here than fun and games. Who needs to do research?
Friedman flippantly said of the movie business.
Outside of the movies, no
saucer has yet landed on the White House lawn but researcher
Karl Pflock told conferees of famous radar sightings around
Washington, D.C. during the Eisenhower administration in
1952. It was a wild night. A week later, it happened again,
said Pflock. The event precipitated one of the largest press
conferences held by the military since World War II, Pflock
said. Typical, however, following the government's initial
public explanations of a sighting such as to weather
balloons, little or no follow-up or explanation of its
subsequent investigations is offered.
However, on the bright
side, the U.S. government is allowing the selective release
of old information, namely documents which were previously
classified. Friedman suggested the re-election of Clinton
goes a long way toward making people aware of what's going
on. He cites Clinton's push for a new executive order in his
first term which made it tougher to keep documents
classified, reversing the trend of the Bush and Reagan
years. The new executive order says: if in doubt, declassify
after 25 years. The old one said: if in doubt classify, said
Friedman.
Friedman lauds the fact
that Clinton is the first post-war President. He has already
set a precedent by releasing loads of nuclear information,
all these illegal experiments on people. It wasn't on his
watch. He wasn't taking a risk. People think our rulers
should be open and certainly he's from a generation that
thinks that very strongly, said Friedman.
Still, the problem of
validating old documents and testimony remains. Author,
researcher and editor Jerome Clark gave illustrations of the
rumors and official-looking, but false documents related to
MJ-12 which have freely circulated. Besides wasting
everyone's time and throwing UFOlogists into confusion, such
disinformation serves to take investigators off the scent of
potentially genuine UFO secrets, such as those surrounding
the Roswell incident. It also encourages the freelance
disinformers, those who spread observed tales of trees with
aliens, concentrations camps on Mars and other rubbish, he
said.
Researcher Pflock is
among many diligent UFO researchers today who are examining
decades-old cases. I think there's gold in these old cases.
That's been my focus these days, he said.
Nevertheless, UFO
researchers hot on the trail of decades-old and current
cases find their information quests leading to closed doors
within the government. Why? Because it presents the
proverbial lose-lose situation. For example, it's no secret
that the federal government would have much to lose by
coming out now with more Roswell information, as opposed to
disinformation, given its celebrity status. The notion of
paying for protection, read taxes, is lost when the U.S. Air
Force is forced to admit it is ultimately incapable of
protecting our skies from a UFO. If a key function of the
government is to maintain civil order, then it's easy to
understand why the government won't disclose the reality of
UFOs as highly advanced technology, wrote a UFO researcher
connected with NASA.
Friedman too adheres to
the lose-lose theory. A Pandora's box of woes have the
potential to unfold: disrupted social institutions, economic
uncertainty, national security issues (i.e., giving other
countries and governments information), and so on.
Meanwhile, Clark takes a
stance that the government or military involvement in UFOs
is an extreme, fringe view. Clark raised some interesting
questions at the conference in separating UFO fact from
fiction, and discussed darkside theories.
In mentioning one source
connected to Roswell, he said, If events happened as
alleged, no one will be brought to account for it. That's
not because there's a lawless secret government, but because
counter-intelligence operatives know that they can operate
with relative impunity when they are dealing with
individuals on society's fringes.
Clark drew analogies
between the contactees of the 1960s and 1970s and those that
today hang their hats on government conspiracy theories.
There's no reason to believe that the major darksiders are
government agents, but it is reasonable to deduce that if
they didn't exist, the agencies responsible for the cover-up
would probably have to invent them. Whatever their
differences, the early contactees and today's darksiders do
have one major common element: an audience to which it does
not occur to ask the harder obvious questions. For example:
where's your evidence? he stated. Clark then wryly hinted
that when one does ask a lot of questions and express
disbelief, that one could be deemed immediately suspect and
thus an agent of conspiracy.
In concurrence was Kevin
Randle, who said in an interview that indeed the lunatic
fringe presents a problem as some of the wild contactee
stories harm legitimate UFO research and strain the public's
credulity.
Interestingly, at the
time of freewheeling contactee and early abduction stories,
the government was becoming increasingly unified and
tight-lipped in its UFO policy. The (Robertson) panel went
on to urge a policy of official debunking of UFO reports,
said Clark. That recommendation was followed from then on
until the closing the Air Force's public UFO project in
1969. With the contact stories, we see the opposite of
traditional Air Force policy, not the debunking, but the act
of encouraging of the most outlandish UFO rumors of all, he
said.
It's also probably no
mere coincidence that following the formation of the
Robertson panel and its edict to debunk UFO reports in the
media that the Brookings Institution was enlisted by NASA.
By the late 1950s, one conclusion of the Brookings Report
was that any discovery of alien artifacts on other planets
may have a disastrous impact on society. Again, it's a
lose-lose situation.
As Clark and other
UFOlogists suggest, we owe it to ourselves to keep asking
hard questions about evidence to debunkers, charlatans and
respected researchers alike.
Marcia Jedd is a
journalist and marketing researcher. As a journalist her
specialties are earth-bound transportation and travel. She
watches the skies from Minneapolis, Minnesota.

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