Ok, but he also supported, unapologetically, some pretty goofy stuff, and I'm not just talking about MJ12 docs. He was never going to back down from a position once taken even if it was so obviously not credible.
You sound a little like Jerome...
Obviously some MJ-12 stuff is highly suspect, but the idea of some high-level working group is reasonable, and the level of the psyop pulled on Friedman is evidence in and of itself that he was onto something.
More than we've been told I...
The differences between opinions might not be as wide as is assumed. Try to look at it this way:
Few ( if any ) astrophysicists hypothesized beforehand that black holes are portals to Hell, and that therefore they should look for demons in the...
I think that actually happened in one case I read someplace — unless it was on a Twilight Zone episode :p .
My way of grounding myself in the subject is to recall the words of the inimitable Stanton Friedman, who said — "I don't care about UFOs...
@SRL+ what's your unvarnished opinion of this weirdness?
I am firmly in the non human camp, but like @Randall I vacillate between terrestrial and extraterrestrial.
There's certainly a lot of effort put on to demonstrate an extraterrestrial...
This was the first ever UFO book I bought at the grocery store with my mom when grocery stores used to sell cool books and albums at the checkout. I was in grade 5 and riveted by this book!
That's exactly what he said. It seems there is a trend...
What I mean is that Vallée starts off collaborating with Hynek on classification systems for UFO reports, a relatively grounded systematic way of studying the subject, and with the success of Hynek's 1972 book, The UFO Experience, he reissues his...
As these are taken from his diary entries from the first decade of this century I would say that they are the facts as he recorded them in the moment. What's exotic about it all?
As a correction to an above post in the interviews with him I...
And yet again, ufology descends deeper into the world of weird. IMO as Vallée ran out of relatively grounded themes for his his UFO books, he started coming-up with increasingly exotic theories, to keep the presses running.
I would just like to take a moment in acknowledging that at some point in time AI will replace my thoughts and there will be no need for grammar, syntax, parsing, bla…bla…bla. Similar to automotive manual transmissions (and drivers) that have or...
Yeah, but there’s more while wondering if Jacques is jumping the shark, as claiming to have discussed with a reliable source indicating a sophisticated protocol in communicating with other worldly critters. But then he said it could have been a...
Great response. I very much appreciate the many good laughs I got from your insights. It prompted me to look for some of those recent Interviews and have to admit I was a little shocked with Vallee's very specific claims regarding the data...
Very well stated, Mr. State.
And even at that they were somewhat harried.
As a proper memorial may include a cadre of David Perkins, Ray Stanford, Clifford Mahooty, Paul Kimball, Nick Redfurn, Greg Bishop and so many more that held different...
Your first impression is probably correct, and the more you look, the weirder it gets.
According to Google's AI:
Yes, Dr. Garry Nolan, a professor of pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine, has stated that he was contacted by...
I agree—everything about this seems far more aligned with what later became known as Havana Syndrome, which, as far as I can recall, had nothing to do with UFOs.
I do know that John Burroughs ran into serious issues with his medical records...
I don't think it was that clear. I believe that he was first asked to explore the medical conditions of people with Havana Syndrome and he did the blood work if I remember correctly, as that's his specific area. I posted a video interview with...
Oh, my first thought it was a disinfo campaign to cover up some shady stuff. I don't know if all those individuals were targeted or not, but I'm inclined that Nolan's conversation arose from incidental or targeted exposure to some classified tech.
So...Nolan claims the CIA came to him with the MRIs of people whose brains were damaged by UFOs. And no, I'm not making this up. Nor do I believe for a second that it was UFOs. Here we go again. Want a start a pool on what kind of shape the...
I dig both universes.
I thought the clip was a good satire on the reliability of the MSM to tell anyone within the Empire's domain what's really going on.
Interesting discussion. I posed an idea to Chalmers in an email, that based on an experiments where simply thinking about the results changed the outcome, that if true, then it seems that the setup might qualify as a consciousness detector. I...
Sure, I will reach out to Don today and have him PM you.
Believe it or not, there used to be a part of this site that was merely a list of OTHER podcasts; it wasn't a thread, it was a little dedicated spot on the site. It wasn't well organized...
In this episode, Erica Lukes calls Clueless Wonder* her "Partner in crime", which I suspect at least one prominent paracaster would think is literally apt. Together they interview James Carrion. Because those two were mentioned in @Constance's post...
I received a phone call from Gene and he is still among the living. He had to fight a bout of pneumonia last month as well as having side effects from antibiotics that caused his kidney's to stop functioning. However, he is doing better and his...
Thanks. The reason I asked if there are ads, is because Gene says that if they have ads, I can just post the links. Personally, I don't know why it should matter, but because the original list seems to be no longer around, there must have been...