We often hear about conspiracy theories and the
claim that those who believe in them are part of the tin foil hat wearing
brigade. One of those theories is about something called Operation Mockingbird,
which turns out not to be a theory. This was a real program created by the CIA
and involved some of the major journalists in the country. It was used to
influence the way people think by leaking carefully crafted stories into the
mainstream media. Don’t get me wrong, the journalists involved knew what they
were doing and participated in this willingly.
You might think, “So what? How does this affect
UFOs?”
In 1953, the Robertson Panel, spent five days
reviewing the best of the UFO cases. While it was reported to be an unbiased
and scientific investigation, it is clear from the membership of the panel that
not one of the scientists believed or even considered the possibility that some
UFOs represented alien spacecraft.
Dr. H. P. Robertson |
One of the conclusions was that the Air Force should
deemphasize the subject of UFOs and embark on a debunking campaign which would
result in a reduction of public interest… this education could be accomplished
by mass media such as television, motion pictures, and popular articles to show
that even puzzling sightings were potentially explainable.
Here’s what we know today and this is the
connection. According to a former CIA agent, “CIA officials wanted knowledge of
any CIA interest in the subject of flying saucer restricted… any mention of CIA
sponsorship of the Robertson panel was forbidden…”
You can read more about the Robertson Panel and their
efforts to restrict interest in UFOs here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2021/06/the-uap-report-and-historical.html
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2011/06/ufo-cover-up-early-days.html
And taking this a step farther, you can read about
the US government’s attempts to hinder the UFO investigations in other
countries here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2018/05/how-us-influences-other-countries.html
This means, of course, that the media was being used
to push an explanation of UFOs on the public because that was what the CIA
wanted. Those of us who have been around for a long time remember the attitudes
of journalists regarding UFOs. They were just too sophisticated to believe that
UFOs were anything alien.
Here we are today. We have been given the
unclassified version of the UAP report. It tells us nothing that we didn’t
already know, other than the topic deserves a serious investigation. John
Greenewald tells me that the classified version is only 17 pages long, and
while you can cram a lot into 17 pages, this doesn’t bode well.
Lue Elizondo suggests that the classified version is
70 pages, but you can fill it with a lot of technical jargon and irrelevant
information. That is what the Condon Committee did in 1969. I don’t know how
many journalists took time to examine Condon’s final report, but about 30
percent of the cases were not explained, so their conclusions are irrelevant.
That is especially true today given the latest information.
This latest exercise seems to be little more than a
repeat of what has gone on before. It seems that this is an appeal to authority,
designed to end public interest in UFOs.
Here’s the sort of thing I think they might want to
look at, but would rather we didn’t. On January 17, this year, in Lee’s Summit,
Missouri, a witness said that he saw an object that was as long as a football
field that looked as if it was radar resistant, meaning it was angular like our
stealth aircraft. As he watched, it dropped to about 100 feet. The witness
attempted to record the object using his cell phone, but his phone had
malfunctioned. He said that he was frustrated by the lack of video, but then,
so am I. Had he recorded the sighting, maybe the government would have
interested.
Even without the video, it’s a case that deserves
some attention.
I don't know how much I'd call Mockingbird a "conspiracy theory".....as I don't know if it was a ever really a theory in the first place.
ReplyDeleteIn any case, the fact that some journalists have had sources in Intel and higher up has been fairly well known for quite some time. (Well before this revelation.)
And if you read why the government wanted to get the public's mind off this stuff, it actually has nothing to do with aliens. They were worried about communication channels being clogged and so on.
09rja -
ReplyDeleteCalled it a conspiracy theory because these sorts of things are always labeled as a conspiracy theory as a way of discrediting them without having to offer evidence... and also said that it was real as opposed to a theory.
And yes, I read that nonsense about overwhelming the communications networks, and dismissed it as an excuse for forcing an opinion on the public. The real point is that the CIA was attempting to protect their name by keeping their name out of this arena. They were behind the Robertson Panel and it is clear that the conclusions were written before any one sat down to listen to and look at the evidence.
Of it it was known for a long time, just as journalists have denied it for a long time. The point here was the connection to the Robertson Panel, UFOs and the debunking operation.
The unclassified version of the UAP Report:
ReplyDelete"Its not American technology and in all probability not of Russia or Chinese origin..But its not alien" ..Duh??.No mention of ETH IDH or some unknown civilization residing in our oceans or under our very noses that are not visible except when it chooses to be..Its downright condescending that the few writers who authored this report take the American public at large as naive dupes..And so far have pulled a fast one and got away with it.Fully understanding the pandering and grandstanding displayed by a significant % of today's Congress, including their obsession with playing identity politics, I have zero expectations of a serious or deeper investigation
And yes, I read that nonsense about overwhelming the communications networks, and dismissed it as an excuse for forcing an opinion on the public.~KR
ReplyDeleteI don't know that I buy that. That is unless they were lying to themselves (via internal documents).