In
the world of the UFO, we frequently talk about cognitive dissonance, which is
defined, simply as “the mental
discomfort (psychological stress) experienced by a person who simultaneously
holds two or more contradictory beliefs, ideas, or value.”
It means believing in two things that seem to
mutually exclusive. We run into this, I believe, when we begin to talk about
the Eisenhower Briefing Document (EBD) and the second crash of a UFO on the
Texas – Mexico border in December 1950.
Simply
put here, if the EBD is authentic, then the information contained in it must
also be authentic. If a portion of that information can be shown to be
fraudulent, then the credibility of the entire document collapses at that point.
Here’s
where we are on this. According to the EBD, “On 06 December, 1950 a second
object of similar origin, impacted the earth at high
speed in the El Indio –
Guerrero area of the Texas – Mexican border after following a long trajectory through
the atmosphere. By the time a search team arrived, what remained of the object
had bee almost totally incinerated. Such material as could be recovered was
transported to the A.E.C. facility at Sandia, New Mexico, for study.”
![]() |
| Robert Willingham, the man responsible for the fatal flaw. |
The
problem here is that this tale was told by Robert Willingham who had claimed to
have been a fighter pilot in the Air Force and had retired (or rather left the
service) as a colonel. I have, in the past, on this blog, explained why it is
clear that Willingham was neither a fighter pilot nor a colonel. Rather than go
into all the reasons again, just refer the articles that can be found here:
Well,
I think everyone gets the point. I have written about this on many occasions
and believed that this should have driven a stake, not only through the heart
of the Willingham tale but through the EBD as well. That one paragraph is based
on a hoax that those on the inside who were allegedly writing the EBD would
have known was a hoax. Please note that other, known hoaxes were not addressed,
including the famous Aztec hoax (which I mention solely to create more havoc).
Here’s
the point of this short piece. At the Roswell Festival (I don’t remember if it
was in 2011 or 2012) Stan Friedman came up and said, “I think you’re probably
right about Willingham but not about the Eisenhower Briefing Document.”
Cognitive
dissonance. Two mutually exclusive beliefs. One that Willingham had been lying
about the El Indio – Guerrero UFO crash but that the EBD was real.
Yes,
I know the fall back position. The EBD is disinformation, containing some real
information but also some that is faked. But given the context and everything
else, that makes no sense and does very little to establish the validity of the
EBD. All it does is call into question the whole of MJ-12 without actually
damaging the idea of an alien craft at Roswell. The EBD is seen as just a poor
attempt by UFO researchers to provide documentation of UFO crashes. It doesn’t
prove that Roswell wasn’t alien, only that this document was fraudulent.
But
what I don’t understand is how you can see that the Willingham tale is bogus
and not question the entirety of the EBD. There are other problems in the EBD,
but this seems to me, to be the fatal flaw. The information is based on a lie,
yet that isn’t enough to reject the EBD.
If
there was any other source on the El Indio – Guerrero crash, that would be one
thing, but all references to it, in various books, articles and documents are
all traceable back to Willingham as the original source. He provided a number
of dates and locations for the crash as the tide in the UFO community changed.
Without Willingham and his ever-changing story, there would be no tale of this
crash and if it hadn’t happened, then MJ-12 is equally bogus… yet there are
those who hold these mutually exclusive ideas that the document is real but
Willingham was lying… the very definition of cognitive dissonance, and that is
what I don’t understand. How can you argue for the validity of one while
confirming the other is untrue? I have yet to receive a good answer for the
question that isn’t wrapped in a lot of rhetoric without explaining anything.

