Ta-Da!! The New York Times' latest in its series of government UFO stories, with the obligatory videos of "unidentifieds" taken by Navy Jets |
(Hat tip to Danny Miller) |
the reality is that virtually none of this information is new. If you follow the online work of researchers like Danny Silva and Andreas Freeman Stahl (and too many others to list here) or keep up with the more mainstream reporting of investigative journalists like Tim McMillan or M.J. Banias (again, along with many others) at outlets such as Popular Mechanics, Vice, and the War Zone, you would have already been aware of nearly everything covered in this article. Aside from a couple of fresh quotes from some of the key players, this is all information that’s been reported on before.(Here Shaw has given us almost a Who's Who of UFOlogy's "Young Guns.") And the reaction among longtime observers was equally unenthusiastic. Veteran Canadian UFO researcher Chris Rutkowski posted to Facebook that the article contained "Nothing of substance at all."
As I predicted, promises of "Disclosure" have once again proven misleading. |
As with several earlier widely-read New York Times UFO articles, the authors of the current piece are Ralph Blumenthal and Leslie Kean. Kean is well-known in UFOology as the author of the 2010 book UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record. The book has credibility problems, like her embrace of a Belgian photo hoax (my critical review gives the details). Not long afterward, Kean went all-out promoting a supposed UFO video from Chile that in reality only showed a fly buzzing around. Kean is now turning most of her efforts toward investigating spirits and ghosties and things that go bump in the night. Her most recent book is titled Surviving Death: A Journalist Investigates Evidence for an Afterlife (2017). Blumenthal also is the author of various other UFO articles, some promoting claims of alleged UFO abductions.
Leslie Kean took time off from her pursuit of "Spirit Materialization" to write another UFO article for the New York Times. |
The new Times article has the obligatory interview with Luis Elizondo of "To The Stars." It describes him as "the director of the Pentagon’s previous program on unidentified aerial vehicles," even though a Pentagon spokesperson has specifically denied that claim:
The Pentagon said Monday he was a supervisory intelligence specialist in the office of the undersecretary of defense for intelligence from 2008 to 2017, when he resigned. But Elizondo had no assigned responsibilities in the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program and was not assigned or detailed to the Defense intelligence Agency, Pentagon spokeswoman Sue Gough wrote in an email statement.
But Blumenthal and Kean don't question Elizondo's claim at all, or even seem to be aware of the controversy.
Mr. Elizondo is among a small group of former government officials and scientists with security clearances who, without presenting physical proof, say they are convinced that objects of undetermined origin have crashed on earth with materials retrieved for study.That's Elizondo's opinion, and he is welcome to it.
The Times authors also interviewed Dr. Eric Davis, an astrophysicist who has a long association with Harold Puthoff of "To The Stars" and Robert Bigelow of Bigelow Aerospace.
Eric W. Davis, an astrophysicist who worked as a subcontractor and then a consultant for the Pentagon U.F.O. program since 2007, said that, in some cases, examination of the materials had so far failed to determine their source and led him to conclude, “We couldn’t make it ourselves.”Davis might as well have briefed them about the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy, for which he has an equal amount of proof - none. Some excitable folks have seized upon Davis' claims as "Disclosure," or at least as proof of something. But Davis has been making these same unfounded claims for some time now. Davis was interviewed by George Knapp, long-time reporter on UFO subjects and longtime Bigelow associate (as well as co-author of Hunt for the Skinwalker with NIDS scientist Colm A. Kelleher), on the all-night high-weirdness radio show Coast to Coast AM on June 24, 2018. Davis claimed there that the government had a crashed UFO recovery program until 1989, when its funding was cut, in spite of its success in recovering UFO crash debris. AATIP was supposed to re-initiate the Crash Retrieval Program, but did not get funding for that.
The constraints on discussing classified programs — and the ambiguity of information cited in unclassified slides from the briefings — have put officials who have studied U.F.O.s in the position of stating their views without presenting any hard evidence.
Mr. Davis, who now works for Aerospace Corporation, a defense contractor, said he gave a classified briefing to a Defense Department agency as recently as March about retrievals from “off-world vehicles not made on this earth.”
Mr. Davis said he also gave classified briefings on retrievals of unexplained objects to staff members of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Oct. 21, 2019, and to staff members of the Senate Intelligence Committee two days later.
Dr. Eric Davis
One of the more interesting things Davis said in that same interview was that a poltergeist apparently followed him home from Skinwalker ranch. The poltergeist phenomenon is "real," he said, and is closely related to the UFO phenomenon. Some people are more "receptive" to this than others, he explained.
But wait - it gets worse.
The Times article interviews Harry Reid, former Democratic leader in the U.S. Senate, who was primarily responsible for funneling approximately $22 million in government money from AAWSAP to the business of his campaign contributor Robert Bigelow. It said - by paraphrase and not by direct quote - that Reid "believed that crashes of vehicles from other worlds had occurred and that retrieved materials had been studied secretly for decades, often by aerospace companies under government contracts." Very significant, if true. But the very next day, the indefatigable John Greenewald of The Black Vault posted this to Facebook:
Yesterday, I posted on Twitter about the potential irresponsibility by the NY Times to attribute beliefs to someone like Senator Harry Reid, without offering ANY direct quotes justifying their claim.
Today, the NY Times issued a retraction about part of what they attributed to Harry Reid.
The "correction" that Greenewald apparently shamed the New York Times into imaking. |
So Harry Reid's beliefs about saucer crashes are shown to be based on hearsay, and not on any first-hand knowledge. Reid took to Twitter to announce the following:
The days when the New York Times could be considered "serious journalism" have long passed.
Several years ago, I described the ‘questionable foundation’ of Leslie Kean’s book as the naïve and unverified faith in pilot reports. She has insisted the UFOs show intelligent purpose based on their perception of the nature of their witnesses, since they behave differently when seen by military pilots than when seen by civilian pilots [when the more common-sense explanation is that different pilots report observations in terms of what they expect from their own different experience bases]. The data archives she touts as ‘unexplainable’ pilot sightings [such as the French ‘Weinstein Report’] can easily be shown to contain numerous pilot misinterpretations of unrecognized space and missile activity around the world, so who knows how many other prosaic explanations were never found by the ‘investigators’? See here:
ReplyDeletehttps://web.archive.org/web/20190101223008/http:/www.nbcnews.com/id/38852385
Interesting. Well, in law enforcement its understood that eye witness accounts are notoriously inaccurate and should be taken with a grain of salt. I'm not saying a person is misleading on purpose, its a matter of visual interpretation. Furthermore, each new season of "Unidentified" brings a flurry of press releases and articles about "disclosure" but its always just marketing hype. Nobody has presented empirical/forensic evidence of anything that has been scrutinized independently under scientific/lab conditions. Steven Greer's "Ata mummy" that was allegedly alien turned out to be nothing more than a deformed skeleton when analyzed by Garry Nolan using DNA. Of course Greer, as usual, became bitterly angry and bad-mouthed Nolan because the findings didn't fit Greer's whacked out hypotheses.
ReplyDeleteBut Joe Rogan said this latest non report "vindicates" Bob Lazar...so it must be true.sarcasm/
ReplyDeleteDisclosure is a myth perpetrated by the military industrial complex. Always just moments away, always to come in a press release, only to not happen. This is how they change the rabbit hole they want serious researches to go down next. In reality, disclose is a decades old lie that will not happen, but it makes for good press stories and sells.
ReplyDeleteMaybe Harry Reid can spare some time to apologize to the taxpayer for wasting millions on behalf of his wealthy Nevada crony.
ReplyDeleteOther creative rewriting of documents by Kean:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread1268654/pg10#pid25329560
Do your own disclosure as nasa, seti, military and Govt will not. open theyfly.com
ReplyDeleteThe only thing to disclose is that there is nothing to disclose! UFO's are a money-making cottage industry for those trying to sell books, lectures, souvenirs and podcasts. Its like crop-circles, bigfoot tours and paranormal nonsense peddled by The (Fake) History Channel. Science fiction is not science fact although Linda Moulton Howe, Corey Goode and the creators of Unidentified et al would like you to think so.
Deletehttps://www.rt.com/usa/500504-declassified-ufo-act-of-war-radar/
ReplyDeleteSo what did this pilot see? An alien craft, a military craft, or something much more mundane? I'd appreciate a reasonable answer.
Like the country, the so-called UFO field is in upheaval! The UFO world is filled up with so-called Ufologists (what university did they go to, to receive their UFO degrees? Heck,I want one too!)who just waggle their tonques about this and that, and NEVER offer any evidence or proofs for what they claim. And the most glaring of these are Kean,Elizondo, etc., etc., who at first, seem sensible on the subject...but not anymore. What should rile everyone up about these "ufo experts" is that they expect us to believe them, without questioning their tales! We are now, as a nation, going through a sea of craziness, and the UFO field is part of this sickness.
ReplyDeleteI find the flippant, glib and nonchalant tone of this blog...disturbing.
ReplyDelete