Hey Rick, did you read all the material at Serpo.org? Bill Ryan, as he said in the interview, has just been an information proxy - he webmastered a site and put up the info. And as Biedny said, the new posts are very interesting because it names names - it has testable data.
I'll buy into serpo way before Billy Meier and his band of one-armed monks.
And as for Project Camelot, I respect them for what they want to do. As far as I'm concerned, they're doing the same kind of thing that Gene n' David are - so cheers to all!
Disclosure certainly appears to be a difficult thing to achieve. I don't think Greer's intention was to do anything but create the most massive project that could not be ignored. Unfortunately, he was ignored.
I believe that people can become convinced of things of which they're not already aware. I have seen certain evidence laid out before people who don't even realize that people think like "we" do and have henceforth become true believers. It all has to start somewhere.
I also feel that, while polls are generally not too reliable, it appears that the wavelength that the majority floats upon is changing. I see more and more polls that state a great majority of people starting to suspect the reality of UFOs or government collusion in nefarious acts.
Mainstream media is indeed the final frontier, a seemingly insurmountable wall strengthened and directed by financial interests. But here's the bright light: the internet. As broadband accessibility increases, we will soon see a major shift with online channels eventually taking over the market. No major corporation has software that a small indie can't have - the playing field is leveled. Suddenly the power is in the mind, not the wallet.
So I welcome any entrepreneurial effort by the little guy (The Paracast, Project: Camelot), and I hope that more and more come along... true, the waters may get muddy, but the shift in worldwide thinking could be well worth it.