easy to verify through a simple google search
HAHAHA!
LOL - thanks man, that made my day!
I can't work out if it's 'ufology' you think is a joke or the whole subject of ufo's? What is your opinion on say, my own belief (dodgy term I know) that there does seem to be unknown, structured craft in our skies that ostensibly appear not to be human made?
UFOs: I have not seen "unknown, structured craft in our skies" and I have not seen a credible person provide evidence with an unbroken string of control that there are "unknown, structured craft in our skies" so I have no opinion on that, as well as I have no opinion on things like dragons, ghosts or the Headless Horseman. When I ask for solid evidence I'm given links to YouTube videos, testimony from people who also professionally promote the theory of UFOs to help market sci-fi fantasy films and video games (see: Stanton Friedman, Nick Pope), or who have demonstrably shoddy research skills that puts their competence to gather evidence on these subjects in serious question (see: Richard Dolan and his self-published book 'AD' quoting "homicide detective" Butch Witkowski) or am told "Just google it, man!" (see above)
Ufology: I am very interested in ufology from a criminological and sociological perspective, as an enduring - though low-level and low-yield - confidence game targeting the socially and educationally disenfranchised. This is an absolutely fascinating topic for me and, from this angle, I think it merits attention. If I used the word "joke" to describe it, I acknowledge it is a poor choice of words. The Spanish Prisoner con game is a similarly fascinating topic - it's been around for more than 100 years and the storyline has morphed and evolved (like ufology from Space Brothers, to Greys; from flying saucers to flying cigars, etc.) into the modern Nigerian 419 scam. Palmistry is another interesting topic for me.
When you see people address these topics with phrases like "the evidence is on Google!" it underscores the need for us to work to define literacy as - not just the ability to read and write - but as a functional skill.
Ted Roe from NARCAP was none too happy about Courant's CHD apprearance due to Courant's apparent citing of NARCAP's work. If anyone has interest in looking that close at Courant, he'd be the guy. My guess is Roe and/or Richard Haines already looked into it and if they had something, they'd blast it. Contact them though, I'm sure an answer will turn up for you going that way instead of ranting here.
For the fourth time, I can check his pilot license in 3-5 minutes via the online link to the FAA I provided on the previous page (and which, still, no one is - hilariously - willing to click for fear of their fantasy being dashed!). I don't need to track down Ted Roe and play a game of "a friend of a friend of a friend of an anonymous ex-CIA agent told me" which is what passes for research in ufology. I can instantly access primary source material myself, not rely on rumor, speculation and tertiary sources ...
as can anyone in this thread.
For the fourth time, verifying Courant's pilot license issue date can be done in 3 minutes with a web click for free. This thread has gone on for 5 pages and I have observed this fact 4 times. And still, no one is willing to take the very tiny step needed to check - they'd rather just trust the word of the Falun Gong cult newsletter "Epoch Times." Individuals in this thread have spent more than an hour pounding out angry messages to me when they could (most likely) definitively
prove me wrong with a 3-minute FAA database search. So, you can see how terrifyingly bemusing this field is to a rational person when faced with personalities of that type - who are so terrified of having their fantasy destroyed they aren't even willing to take the 9-1 odds I'm wrong and Courant is a fully qualified pilot of 30 years service.
This thread - and the absolute terror with which its participants continue to collectively refuse to simply click on a FAA database link I provided - is really a great example of how medieval beliefs in magic and sorcerers still plague a (hopefully, shrinking) sub-culture of human minds.