..
Yes, it would make a very good panel discussion. Good post Jimi .
Well thanks, though obviously it betrays my general scepticism about the abduction reports, and scepticism towards relying on eyewitness accounts, even if a psychologist feels he is profesionally qualified to assess the witnessess. Different psychologists reach different conclusions, lie detector tests are typically not enough to convict anyone etc., so it isn't really an exact science.
And if we treat witnesses with scepticism in UFO cases, in comparison, the courts have a crime to solve, so
something happened. Someone was hurt, or someone's bank account just got unexpectedly lighter, or something like that. 'Abductees' can rarely point to anything happening in the first place, and therein lies the problem. They don't put up cameras in their bedroom etc. So, I don't know if something is technically evidence if we can't confirm that anything happened, if we don't have a case?
Now, if there are other more substantial reports to back it up (multiple seperate witnesses, radar, ATC or police radio etc), that somehow document strange things, then it's more interesting - like any other case with evidence and some forms of documentation. The abduction account is not terribly interesting in itself, I think, if other more tangible documentation exists.
Unless all the various reports point directly at someone's house or something, eeek
Because, I would expect some 'abductees' to piggyback on publically known events. I can't prove that, but I'd expect it, even if they do it unconsciously. A professional could perhaps answer yes or no to that.
Of course, there are the implantation stories, and pictures of physical scars, and bits of metal, but I do have a hard time believing that one single of these many implants haven't been brought to a civilian lab or at least written about in some medical journals, where a doctor innocently asks: 'what is this', and where the implant gets identified as something odd.
The 'MIB' is not good enough an explanation for me for the lack of evidence. These guys just can't know
everything and be everywhere, I don't buy it, that's paranoia imo. So, to sum up, with all the stories, the odds are that one or two genuine implants would have been located and investigated by credible civilians, completely irregardless and perhaps ignorant of UFO stories, because most doctors are relatively professionally up-to-date, and often have research interests on the side, and often also other natural scientific interests.
So yea, to specify, I would definitely find the insights of a professional in the field of sleep psychology (preferably with interests in out-of-body experiences and hallucinogenics, including prescription drugs side-effects) interesting, including a discussion of the same case as one of the proponents of actual alien abductions.
Again, my 2 cents, I realize the Paracast is in essence about giving the para-normal angle most of the attention, and what we are all mainly here for, besides the general chatter.