Verum said:
What's disturbing is that the whole field of inquiry has not only not advanced in 60+ years, it's actually digressed.
Well I would agree that ufology hasn't found
THE answer, to the satisfaction of any and all disinterested sceptical sane people. But I would disagree about there being
no progress. Think of the gold-standard blue-ribbon ufo cases - with multiple highly credible background-checked witnesses, with suggestive photos that've passed multiple attempts at falsification, with radar verification, with government documentation indicating a credible event.... today we have hundreds of these, maybe thousands. Back in '47 we didn't have have hardly any. Presumably these events would've happened anyhow, but without "ufology" there to pursue and catalogue them, they each would've been lost to the sands of time. But taken together today, they form a pretty compelling body of research to indicate that something amazing has been going on in the skies.
Verum said:
I think a real opportunity was missed when Vallee's notion (that the phenomenon may represent some manipulative inter-dimensionalism rather than what he referred to as "nuts and bolts") was not pursued more vigorously by the majority of "ufologists" who insist on and promote the extraterrestrial premise.
I disagree completely. Firstly, if it really were interdimensional woo-woo's doing all this, how the heck are we meant to profitably pursue that idea? It's hard enough pursuing capricious alleged-aliens...but at least they're from the same universe as us! Investigators of the "real" paranormal topics such as ghosts poltergoosts etc, (and as a nut&boltser I would largely differentiate ufos from that,) haven't made any more recent progress than the ufonuts have.
I also have a few fundamental problems with the "interdimensional" idea - firstly, it's multiplying entities unnecessarily, in the Occamic sense.
Secondly, it ignores the basic content of most ufo reports - If I saw an unidentified thing flying in the sky, and it was shimmery & ectoplasmic, and kinda looked like a sheet, and went "wooOooOooOOOO!" a lot, and made clanky chain noises... well fuck me! I'd think I'd just seen a ghost.
Whereas if I saw an unidentified thing in the sky that looked like a shiny metallic manufactured craft with lights and landing gear and little dudes poking their heads out the window saying "take me to your dealer," then call me naieve to our "interdimensional reality," but I would think I'd just seen a frikin alien spaceship.
Now maybe it was
really a Jinn or a leprechaun or the booger man or a deceitful daemon
pretending to be an accident-prone sex-tourist from the planet Zorg, but do you honestly think ufology could make more headway with academia and government and puublic opinion by pushing this line??????
No I didn't think so.