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Don Croft
Fri 22 May, 2009 19:41

Re: Great UFO Report From a New Gifter in Colorado
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Very good intel, Eric, thanks!  I think Carolien's thread about silver discs seen in her sky relates to this thread, by the way.

Laurent, one of our most ardent detractors, Trevor Constable, wrote a good, illustrated book about the use of infrared film to capture images of some space craft and also living entities in our skies. He also showed how radar also functions as an infrared detector.  I asked Carol about the sometimes gigantic critters and she said they're not Sylphs, by the way.  When it was published, I think in the 1970s, he was excoriated by the UFO 'community' because most of them at the time were evidently vested (or hypnotized) in the belief that all space craft came from other planets.

In 1985, right after I returned from Tonga, where I'd first been exposed to legitimate, documented conspiracy literature, I did some work for an old sign painter in St Louis who screened me about my belief in UFOs, then when he saw that I was receptive to new information, told me that in the late 1950s he was in a club that collected and examined evidence of UFOs.

An aerospace engineer at nearby McDonnel Douglas (makers of the F4 Phantom and other weapons) was active in the clubb and a personal friend of his.  When the engineer got and shared evidence that some of the flying saucers were manmade there was an uproar and he was shouted down by the faction who insisted that all spacecraft came from other planets, then the club divided, the engineer was transferred to another state and my friend and his son were accosted by a flying saucer.   It happened when they were on the roof, observing one of hte planets through a telescope. The thing hovered a hundred feet or so, right above them, for a minute or so, then sped off. He abandoned the club, which had become a pseudomystical babblefest, anyway.  Note how some silly UFOlogists insist that spacemen propound Alice Bailey's ideology package, for instance.

Jim Marrs wrote a comprehensive book on the history of the CIA's and the US Air Force's collaborative effort, since their inception in 1947, to dissuade the public from believing in UFOs.  It's a good read for anyone, in spite of the fact that he seems to have an incidental crush on one fellow among the stable of  Theosophy/masonic charismatic gurus, or did at the time.  Maybe he was just looking for answers.  Those corporate mystics explain everything but answer nothing, of course. Devouring their material  is sort of like eating wax fruit.

Some of the reports in Marrs' book jive with Constable's reports of large organisms, by the way.

~Don


