Many
years ago, my pal, Rich Reynolds, thought that we geezers in the UFO field
should step aside and allow the youngsters to take over. I don’t think he
phrased it quite that way but the implication was clear. We had failed to solve
the riddle of the flying saucers, so let someone else, with newer ideas, come
forward. Maybe they would do better than we had.
Now
we have Lue Elizondo, a late comer to the party, saying that he wanted to kill
Ufology so that whatever replaced it might by more holistic and harmonized. He
wanted a community that was far more academically serious and representative of
the topic. You know, like the To The Stars Academy of Arts and Sciences. Yes, I
know that he is no longer associated with it, but then, it certainly wasn’t,
exactly, serious and representative of the topic.
What
he seems to have missed was that Ufology has always been relegated to the
civilian world for any serious investigation. The Air Force spent its time
ridiculing the topic, often suggesting that those who see UFOs are not the most
reliable of observers and providing useless answers to high quality cases.
Oh,
you want an example?
In
a word, “Levelland.”
Here
was a case in which witnesses, who had observed a UFO close to the ground, that
stalled their car engines, dimmed their headlights, and filled their radios
with static, provided multiple chains of evidence. Sightings lasted for
minutes, giving the witness enough time to get a good look at the UFO before it
took off in a bright red glow. The craft interacted with the environment and
there are even hints of landing traces having been found. The local sheriff saw
the UFO but if you read the Air Force report, it said that he’d only seen a
streak red light in the distance rather than an object. Before the Air Force
investigator arrived, he told reporters that he had seen a glowing red object
that was oval or football shaped. After he talked with the Air Force
investigator, and according to the Project Blue Book file, he said he had only
seen a streak of red light in the distance. Later still, he told Don Berliner
that he had seen an object.
Witnesses
around the Levelland, Texas, area independently reported the craft, reported
the electromagnetic effects, and there were reliable reports of landing traces.
The Air Force said that only three people saw the object and ignored most of
the reports of stalled engines. The Air Force concluded that the sightings were
the result of ball lightning even though, at the time, scientists argued about
the reality of ball lightning. Doesn’t really matter because ball lightning has
been described as never being larger than a foot to two feet in diameter and
existing for mere seconds. Witnesses talked of large craft that remained close
to them for five or more minutes. The sightings by multiple witnesses lasted
for two and a half to three hours in and around the Levelland, Texas, area.
The
Air Force didn’t issue an immediate explanation for the Levelland sightings because
they were waiting for NICAP to issue theirs first. The Air Force believed that
it was easier to respond to NICAP than it was for them to issue the first
report. By waiting, the Air Force was able to change the tone of the discussion
from the sightings to the number of the witnesses to those sightings, and then
to lie about those numbers. They claimed that only three witnesses had seen an
object but their own files provide five names and newspapers, some of the
clippings in the Air Force file, reported on many other names.
This
wasn’t the only deception by the Air Force related to the sightings in
November, 1957. James Stokes, an engineer working at Holloman Air Force Base,
reported that just days after the Levelland sightings, his car had been stalled
by a low flying UFO James Stokes
near Orogrande, New Mexico, just south of the Air Force
base and near the White Sands Missile Range. Stokes also spoke of a slight,
sunburn effect, that reddened his skin. Although the sunburn was seen by
others, including the news director at an Alamogordo, New Mexico, radio
station, the Air Force investigator, who arrived two days later, didn’t see the
burn. The Air Force officers also made a big deal out of the claim that Stokes
was an engineer, saying that there was no record of his graduating with any
sort of engineering degree and that he was just a technician assigned to the
base. It was a smear designed to reduce Stokes’ credibility by suggesting that
he was misrepresenting his job status.
The
problem was that the Air Force officers assigned to Holloman AFB and who knew
Stokes, refuted the other Air Force claim. They said that Stokes was an
engineer, had been doing the work of a trained engineer for some eighteen
months, and was a twenty-year veteran of the Navy. It was an example of the
attitude suggesting that if you can’t explain it, then ridicule it. We had two
Air Force organizations dueling over Stokes’ qualifications which, of course,
changed the discussion from the reality of the sighting to the credibility of
the witness which was what some in the Air Force wanted anyway.
The
point here is that the problem wasn’t the quality of the civilian
investigations into UFO sightings, but the government and the Air Force
attitude and interference in them. Rather than conduct a real investigation,
the Air Force just labeled the cases, smeared the witnesses, and went on about
their business as if they had supplied accurate analysis.
There
are other examples of this, including the case of the photographs taken by
William Rhodes in 1947. I have detailed this on the blog and you can access
some of that information here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2010/10/still-more-on-rhodes.html
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2010/10/rhodes-wrap-up.html
I
certainly could supply additional examples of these tactics but after a point
it becomes tedious. For those who wish to read more information about Air Force
attempts to smear witnesses, including members of the Air Force, I point you
to:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2014/07/air-force-character-assassination-and.html
Elizondo
complains that some self-professed Ufologists (is there really another kind) on
social media have been less than productive. He reminds us that the
Intelligence Community and the Defense apparatus watch social media. I’d
suggest their time might be better spent engaging those of us who stay away
from social media and the nonsense produced there. While Elizondo mentions a
“few naughty children… that have decided that no other children are allowed to
play in their sandbox…,” I would suggest that these spats, once called flame
wars, have little to do with the scientific work being done by those of us associated
with the Center for UFO Studies and the recently formed Scientific Coalition
for UAP Studies (SCU), which embrace the scientific method and rejects these
other spats as counterproductive.
Many
of these “spats” are not between members of the UFO community on the side of
alien visitation, but are the result of half-truths and lies created by the
so-called skeptical community. Philip Klass had a habit of attacking those with
whom he disagreed. In the past, I have enumerated some of these allegations. Rather
than go into them, at length now, you can read find the information here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2011/09/philip-klass-and-his-letter-writing.html
I
would also point out that there are scientific journals that routinely report
on UFOs. The Journal of Scientific Exploration, a peer reviewed
scientific journal, publishes research into the UFO phenomenon. This is the
sort of thing that Elizondo advocates but seemed to know nothing about.
And
there is the MADAR system created by Fran Ridge and others. These are stations
around the world with sensor arrays that detect and record a wide range of
anomalies in the environment. Then, tracking with MUFON and the National UFO
Reporting Center, they search for visual observations of UFOs, looking for
correlation. Although the results have been slim, there have been some
interesting correlations between alerts from the MADAR array and UFO sightings.
This brings another level of science to the investigations that provides
corroboration for the visual sightings and adds another link in a chain of
evidence.
Elizondo
wrote that the first place the newcomers go for information about UFOs is
social media and that suggests a rather superficial look at UFOs. There are
some very good websites and blogs that provide solid and well thought out
examinations of the evidence but, of course, there are those that are filled
with conjecture, conspiracy, and conflicting data. Shouldn’t anyone interested
in the topic seek out multiple sources of information rather than just
searching social media? Shouldn’t they be given the opportunity to draw their
own conclusions rather than have some suspected and self-appointed authority
tell them what the truth is and where to find it?
Elizondo
wrote, “Sadly, the UFO Community as of late has
become somewhat of an irrational morass of mob rule and popularity
seekers. Gone is the respect and decorum, in favor of mosh pit elbow
shoves and boot kicks. Voices of those who would otherwise apply a
scholarly focus are being drowned out by those social media personalities
sensationalizing their efforts as ‘disclosure activists’ in order to generate
revenue through viewers and subscribers. Those who seek ‘credit’ instead
of cooperation are hijacking the topic for their own enrichment at the expense
of genuine truth advocates.”
While I might point out that science is often
driven by the same sad motivations, and would point to the Dinosaur Wars of the
late 19th and early 20th centuries as but a single
example, it would seem that some of these newcomers are driven by the same
motivations. Some of these newcomers have engaged the services of agents and
public relations specialists for the very purpose of enriching themselves and
propelling themselves into the spotlight. Others have used their connections,
however indirect those connections might be, to suggest inside information and
knowledge as a way of improving their access to media and those important monetary
rewards.
I
have often wondered, however, why researching and writing about UFOs is about
the only field in which it is a sin to profit from hard work. I can name several
older UFO researchers who have written books and given presentations about their
research to share the information for the purpose of sharing that information.
For those who visit my blog, there is no pay wall or donation button. The
information is offered freely. But I still wonder why I am criticized for
publishing books on the topic when the compensation rarely covers the expenses
for gathering the information. I don’t know how many times I have been accused
of only being in it for the money, when there are easier and better ways for me
to make money such as historical fiction. The accusation is hurled as a way of
dismissing my work, and that of many others, without having to do much research
into how we gathered the data or what credentials we might hold.
And
while Elizondo condemns us for many of the problems in Ufology, I would suggest
they grow from the attempts to cover up what is happening. I can point to the
CIA-sponsored Robertson Panel from early 1953 as a good example. Their
recommendations after their alleged investigation were to debunk the
phenomenon, have teachers deny students permission to use UFOs as research
projects and reject reports on UFO books. They suggested an “education” program
to demystified UFOs so that the public would lose interest all the while
knowing that the truth was much more interesting.
We
also have had the Air Force sponsored, University of Colorado “Scientific
Study” of UFOs, commonly called the Condon Committee. We have the documentation
showing that the conclusions were written before the investigation began. Air
Force Lieutenant Colonel Robert Hippler wrote to Dr. Robert Low of the
committee telling him what the Air Force wanted, that is, there was no national
security threat, there was no scientific benefit in continued in the
investigation of UFOs, and that the Air Force had done a good job with their
investigation. For the next fifty years, science beat us all over the head with
the results of this “scientific endeavor” only to learn that it was more
anti-UFO propaganda paid for by the US Government and the Air Force. You can
learn more about this here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2007/03/hippler-letter.html
Now
we learn that “the social media circus of today has challenged the government’s
confidence in UFOlogy as a worthy area of study.” I submit that this social
media circus might be driven by the government that has worked for 75 years to
prove that UFOs do not exist and are not worth the expenditure of government
resources. I suggest that the podcasts, YouTube channels, Twitter fees, and
Instagram pages are not the problem here, but the decades of ridicule,
misinformation and outright lies spread by official government and Air Force
sources are the reason that there is the confusion and division that Elizondo
condemns as he attempts to propel himself into a leadership role in the UFO
community. That ridicule and division was exactly what the Air Force and the
government wanted to keep the answers hidden and it has worked for 75 years.
And
now we have a bunch of ex-government officials, some with questioned
credentials, lecturing us on what is wrong in the world of UFOs. While many of
us have been toiling for decades to bring science to UFOs, have written about it,
made suggestions about it, and have attempted to apply science, we have the
newcomers telling us that we should now embrace science as if we hadn’t thought
of that all by ourselves long ago. Well, thanks for the enlightened view of the
situation and I’m sure everything will now change… except, of course, the
government is again wrapping its investigation in the cloak of national
security so that they can bury the information. John Greenewald just reported
that the Navy has determined that the majority of the information and video
evidence they have gathered is a national security issue and will not be
released to the general public anytime soon. This is the same dodge they used
for the last 75 years.
But
that’s okay because we have these newcomers who have the answers as they find
themselves on the lecture circuit and writing the books, for which they are
paid, sometimes quite handsomely, all the while condemning us for writing books
and appearing on the lecture circuit. But that’s okay because their motives are
pure. We know this because they have told us so.
So,
obviously, I find it difficult to read the suggestions made by someone who
doesn’t seem to know the history of UFO research. I find it difficult to listen
to the suggestion that we embrace science when many of us have done that for
years. I wonder just how useful Elizondo’s suggestions are because they seem to
address a symptom of the problem but not the problem itself. The problem isn’t
the current state of UFO research, but to interference by government, DoD, and
Air Force officials. Had they not attempted to hide the information, we would
be having a completely different discussion and we would have “solved” the
problem decades ago without the help of the enlightened newcomers.
PS: I do wonder if putting in links to other articles that have relevance here is worth the effort. Those links lead to other links so that a comprehensive picture can be drawn. The problem is that it can take a long time to wade through the material. Does putting in the links help or hinder the discussion. I would like to know. Please provide a comment with your thoughts.
5 comments:
Links do help and it takes time to jump to a new story but it is worth it. Thanks for all you do.
Kevin: Thank you for a fine blogpost and defense of UFOlogy. Your writing this matters! P.S. I for one find the links in your blogposts helpful at times (though I confess I don't always avail myself of all of them), and I would miss them in their absence. So thank you for these links as well.
Thanks for the comments Kevin. I agree with your assessment of the situation, and of the comments being made by Mr. Elizondo. As far as the inclusion of additional links, I feel that extra information is essential to wrapping one's head around the situation as it now stands. Unfortunately, many people, in the UFO community and otherwise, tend to not do their homework, and most likely will not take the time to read through all the additional information. I for one greatly appreciate your efforts. Hope all is well with you and yours. William.
Have to love it when DoD speaks out of both sides of its mouth. Air Force says there's no national security issue and its a waste of time because its crap, but at the same time the Navy says that it is and they're classifying everything about it in some arcane Special Access Program that have a whole 4 people read into it, with noone ranked above O-3 or E-4 assigned to it shoved into a broom closet at Fort Belvior or the bunker at Olney that next to no one knows or cares about. I do wonder what the Army has to say about it, given that ground based Air Defense Artillery and ballistic missile defense is primarily an Army competency.
KRandle..."PS: I do wonder if putting in links to other articles that have relevance here is worth the effort."
Kevin...I think the links you provide to your previous articles are extremely helpful.
Thank you for the effort you have put into this subject for so many years.
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