I received an email note from a guy in Australia yesterday concerning an incident that happened to me on my first radio show, UFOs Tonite. It involved the very last interview I ever conducted with Phil Klass when he ended up shouting Bullshit on my radio show and hung up. The reason he did this was because during the interview we began discussing the Washington DC overflights by UFOs in 1952 and that the Air Force took approx. one hour to get jet interceptors there instead of right away. I had always been curious about that fact and finally I spoke to Al Chop prior to his death and this was what he told me ... that at the time the military air bases there were having their runways repaired and re-surfaced. Subsequently the jets had to be flown in to DC from Delaware. At anyrate that reminded me of short article I had written a number of years ago for a website that dealt with items involving space and of course UFOs. I thought some here might find my article of interest. Here it is.
Don
UFO Enigma
Editorial: Skeptics or Debunkers?
By Don Ecker, Director of Research
From The Desk of UFO MAGAZINE
As I started to think about this month's topic for Destination
Space, I had several things going on at once. I have been
working on a book of Lunar Anomalies and of course my job with
UFO Magazine takes most of my time. Just about a week had passed
since I had started reading a new book we received at the
magazine, a book that I just reviewed and that will end up being
the next "must have, must read" for this generation. This book
is titled "UFOs and the National Security State" written by one
Richard M. Dolan. (I will be talking more about this book in the
future.)
While all this was going on I also received, addressed to me,
something I immediately put a jaundiced eye on, a letter trying
to get me to subscribe to the Skeptical Inquirer. Now why would
I feel so strongly about the Skeptical Inquirer? And what is the
Skeptical Inquirer? Well, in the letter it was described as the
"magazine for science and reason" and that can't be too bad, can
it? Let me give you a paragraph or two from the letter:
"This magazine is created by editors, scientists, and writers
who are as fascinated by the extraordinary and the mysterious as
you are. But unlike most of the 'wide-eyed' amateurs who call
themselves experts, they're not afraid to look a little
closer... to ask some pointed questions... to bring science to
bear on the issue-because they want to truly solve the mystery,
not wallow in it. (Oh goody! My comment) That's where the fun
is. And, believe me, it's a wild ride!"
Oh yeah, it is a wild ride for sure. But wait, just like the
Ginzu Knives commercial, there is more! I also received a
"personal note" from Nobel Laureate Leon M. Lederman addressed
to 'me.' It started with: Don Ecker
"Dear Friend, I have found great articles in the Skeptical
Inquirer that *debunk such examples of 'junk science' as UFOs in
Roswell, cold fusion, ghosts and haunted houses, astrology,
fortune tellers, crying statues, etc., etc. The exercise of
rational (scientific) thinking is essential to preserving our
long-term commitment to rationality. Skepticism is an essential
attribute of good thinking. Sincerely, Leon M. Lederman Nobel
Laureate-Physics 1988."
Ooo, I felt better already. I decided to compile a list of
writers, former and current for the Skeptical Inquirer and see
what kind of rationality we came up with. And one or two names
have expired or gone on to that great rational hall in the sky,
so if still alive, I am sure they would write for the Skeptical
Inquirer. Here goes.....
What skeptical observation can begin without mentioning Dr.
Donald Menzel, the grandpa of all UFO skeptics? Menzel was the
man who put the "ad" in "ad hominem." Of course next would be
Philip J. Klass, who bills himself as the Sherlock Holmes of UFO
investigations. (Oh, really?) Jim Oberg, former NASA contractor
and "up and coming" debunker. Carl Sagan, pop astronomer, former
SETI proponent and debunker extraordinaire would fit right in
there, and I cannot forget another "up and comer" Michael
Shermer. Now some meaner guys, (not to suggest some of the above
were not nasty now and then) Martin Gardner, Joe Nickell, Curtis
Peebles, and Robert Sheaffer. This list is kind of a "Who's
Who."
So, what is it that I think that suggests I am not ready to buy
the "honest effort" that these guys put out to bring rationality
to UFOs? And... why is it that the UFO subject is always thrown
in with the ghosts, astrologers, haunted houses, fairies and so
on? After all, when the United States Air Force was publicly
chasing saucers they did not have a "fairies officer" or a
"ghost" officer or a "haunted house" officer, but they did have
a UFO officer on *each Air Force base. That should say
something. But my experience by and large is that the skeptical
community "explains that which is un-investigated, and does not
investigate that which is unexplained." Let me explain.....
Philip J. Klass is today considered to be the premier UFO
skeptic alive. Klass, now fast approaching 80 years of age, has
slashed and burned his way across the landscape for about 35
years. Over the now almost 15 years I have been chasing the
phenomenon, I have had a number of encounters with "kindly old
Phil." Now please, do not get the idea that I am billing myself
as the "know all and seen it all" guy, but I have been around
the block with a bunch of skeptics in all those years. In my
encounters with Klass, Oberg, Sheaffer, Shermer and others I
have found that *without exception they *all have taken a page
from Robert Low, Project Coordinator of the Condon Committee,
and instead of attacking the cases -- they will attack the
witnesses. Slashing and burning the word, reputations and
character of people reporting on the UFO phenomenon. (In a
humorous moment when I was on Larry King Live debating Jim Oberg
on the STS-48 shuttle UFO, Oberg accused me of coming on the
program to sell magazines when I asked him if he was operating
under any security restrictions. The "ad hominem attack!)
I do not have either the time or space to give you a litany of
each skeptic I have named, so this month I will simply zero in
on one, Phil Klass.
Klass entered the UFO scene around 1966. A former editor with
Aviation Week & Space Technology, he would seem to be an
excellent choice to examine the UFO subject and present an
honest and critical eye on some of the more difficult UFO cases.
Alas, that was not to be. After Klass wrote his first UFO book
"UFOs-Identified" where he claimed UFOs were anomalous, but not
alien, Klass theorized that UFOs were caused by ball lighting
and free floating plasmas. Even the University of Colorado study
(Condon) found this theory to be scientifically unsustainable.
Dr. James McDonald, an atmospheric physicist and proponent of
legitimate UFO study, tore Klass's arguments apart using
scientific reasoning and facts. Klass then decided McDonald must
be dangerous and dealt with, after all he was "pro-UFO."
McDonald was working for the Office of Naval Research who funded
his trip to Australia to conduct cloud-physics studies, and
Klass went on a rampage at ONR writing letters demanding to know
who funded McDonald to conduct UFO research in Australia, and
later trips McDonald was to take to Europe and the USSR. Klass
also enlisted other sympathetic journalists to assist him in a
campaign that lasted 1 and one half years. The ONR conducted an
audit of McDonald that cleared him, but then cut McDonald off
from any further grants. They were afraid of further bad press.
At this point I would ask the Skeptical Inquirer about rational
and scientific open mindedness.
Klass's position is such that if anyone is willing to propose
that some cases might possibly be explained as off world
technology, then they are only seeking celebrity status or
attempting to make money. At this point, Klass then zeroes in on
the character of the researcher. In 1983, Klass began an attack
directed against the University of Nebraska because they were
sponsoring a UFO conference. In a conversation with the
university's administrator Klass charged that "ufologists 'seek
what the Soviet Union does, to convey to the public that our
government can not be trusted, and I resent it as an American
citizen." He equated UFO research with communism, as un-
patriotic and anti-American. Klass went on to phone faculty and
further claimed that for the university to sponsor such a
conference (UFOs) was comparable to the dilemma they would face
if the American Nazi Party wanted to hold a conference there.
Later CSICOP spokesman Mark Plummer wrote that he found nothing
excessive in Klass's claims.
I had personal experience with Klass on two different occasions
when he displayed his fanatic anti-UFO sentiments. In 1992, I
was invited to debate Klass in Denver, sponsored by ParaNet and
MICAP. During the debate we began to discuss the Frederick
Valentich case. This was a case of a young Australian pilot who
disappeared in 1978 after radioing that he was being approached
by a huge UFO. (The RAAF became involved in this case, but no
aircraft or body was ever located.) Klass began by calling
Valentich a "drug smuggler." I was not about to allow him to get
away with that and demanded he prove his assertion. His proof?
Valentich had four life preservers in his aircraft. Klass has
operated on the assumption that if the case cannot be discarded
because the claims can't be disproved, then it *must be a hoax
because UFOs simply cannot be real!
The next run in with Klass happened near the end of January
1995. I had invited Klass on my two hour, weekly radio program
UFOs Tonite!. During the program Klass had threatened to hang up
when I challenged him about his assertion that Major Jesse
Marcel, when picking up debris from the Roswell Incident, was
trying to claim a $3,000 reward offered by a newspaper for proof
of a flying saucer. Klass got very testy when I challenged him
on the statement that Marcel, the intelligence officer of the
most elite military group in the world, would attempt collect a
reward. (By the way, there is no proof of such a reward being
offered that I was ever able to locate.) He threatened to hang
up at that point. Later during the program we were discussing
the 1952 overflights of Washington DC, when Klass tried to
suggest the Air Force was not worried because they took over an
hour to send up jet interceptors. I informed Klass the reason
was that the local Air Force bases were repairing runways and
the jets had to be flown in from Delaware. (I had the proof
including a statement by Al Chop who was then the Air Force
liaison with its Blue Book operation) Klass became enraged and
began screaming "Bullshit!" over the air. When I expressed my
indignation to him, he became embarrassed and hung up his
telephone mid-show! (Another time Klass "lost it" and began
screaming profanities to a national audience occurred about 1993
on the Larry King show. Klass appeared with Travis Walton and
Mike Rogers, and Rogers accused Klass of being a government
agent. Klass in a 'klassic-display' of temper screamed, 'MIKE
ROGERS!, YOU'RE A GODDAMNED LIAR!") This is the rational thought
demonstrated by the likes of the Skeptical Inquirer and CSICOP
that I have encountered.
The bottom line is the fact that UFOs are real (but I am not
saying necessarily ET, but some cases _do_ suggest that) and the
United States Government is hiding the information. Perhaps they
still feel that they are 'protecting us', but I don't buy it.
When my tax dollars help defray the costs of all these damned
secret programs, and then I am lied to, to boot... well, damn
it, I feel used. _And_ - if the skeptics are honest, and not
much proof of that yet - either... in their heart of hearts they
know it to be true. More on this later and remember to keep your
eyes to the skies.
Don
UFO Enigma
Editorial: Skeptics or Debunkers?
By Don Ecker, Director of Research
From The Desk of UFO MAGAZINE
As I started to think about this month's topic for Destination
Space, I had several things going on at once. I have been
working on a book of Lunar Anomalies and of course my job with
UFO Magazine takes most of my time. Just about a week had passed
since I had started reading a new book we received at the
magazine, a book that I just reviewed and that will end up being
the next "must have, must read" for this generation. This book
is titled "UFOs and the National Security State" written by one
Richard M. Dolan. (I will be talking more about this book in the
future.)
While all this was going on I also received, addressed to me,
something I immediately put a jaundiced eye on, a letter trying
to get me to subscribe to the Skeptical Inquirer. Now why would
I feel so strongly about the Skeptical Inquirer? And what is the
Skeptical Inquirer? Well, in the letter it was described as the
"magazine for science and reason" and that can't be too bad, can
it? Let me give you a paragraph or two from the letter:
"This magazine is created by editors, scientists, and writers
who are as fascinated by the extraordinary and the mysterious as
you are. But unlike most of the 'wide-eyed' amateurs who call
themselves experts, they're not afraid to look a little
closer... to ask some pointed questions... to bring science to
bear on the issue-because they want to truly solve the mystery,
not wallow in it. (Oh goody! My comment) That's where the fun
is. And, believe me, it's a wild ride!"
Oh yeah, it is a wild ride for sure. But wait, just like the
Ginzu Knives commercial, there is more! I also received a
"personal note" from Nobel Laureate Leon M. Lederman addressed
to 'me.' It started with: Don Ecker
"Dear Friend, I have found great articles in the Skeptical
Inquirer that *debunk such examples of 'junk science' as UFOs in
Roswell, cold fusion, ghosts and haunted houses, astrology,
fortune tellers, crying statues, etc., etc. The exercise of
rational (scientific) thinking is essential to preserving our
long-term commitment to rationality. Skepticism is an essential
attribute of good thinking. Sincerely, Leon M. Lederman Nobel
Laureate-Physics 1988."
Ooo, I felt better already. I decided to compile a list of
writers, former and current for the Skeptical Inquirer and see
what kind of rationality we came up with. And one or two names
have expired or gone on to that great rational hall in the sky,
so if still alive, I am sure they would write for the Skeptical
Inquirer. Here goes.....
What skeptical observation can begin without mentioning Dr.
Donald Menzel, the grandpa of all UFO skeptics? Menzel was the
man who put the "ad" in "ad hominem." Of course next would be
Philip J. Klass, who bills himself as the Sherlock Holmes of UFO
investigations. (Oh, really?) Jim Oberg, former NASA contractor
and "up and coming" debunker. Carl Sagan, pop astronomer, former
SETI proponent and debunker extraordinaire would fit right in
there, and I cannot forget another "up and comer" Michael
Shermer. Now some meaner guys, (not to suggest some of the above
were not nasty now and then) Martin Gardner, Joe Nickell, Curtis
Peebles, and Robert Sheaffer. This list is kind of a "Who's
Who."
So, what is it that I think that suggests I am not ready to buy
the "honest effort" that these guys put out to bring rationality
to UFOs? And... why is it that the UFO subject is always thrown
in with the ghosts, astrologers, haunted houses, fairies and so
on? After all, when the United States Air Force was publicly
chasing saucers they did not have a "fairies officer" or a
"ghost" officer or a "haunted house" officer, but they did have
a UFO officer on *each Air Force base. That should say
something. But my experience by and large is that the skeptical
community "explains that which is un-investigated, and does not
investigate that which is unexplained." Let me explain.....
Philip J. Klass is today considered to be the premier UFO
skeptic alive. Klass, now fast approaching 80 years of age, has
slashed and burned his way across the landscape for about 35
years. Over the now almost 15 years I have been chasing the
phenomenon, I have had a number of encounters with "kindly old
Phil." Now please, do not get the idea that I am billing myself
as the "know all and seen it all" guy, but I have been around
the block with a bunch of skeptics in all those years. In my
encounters with Klass, Oberg, Sheaffer, Shermer and others I
have found that *without exception they *all have taken a page
from Robert Low, Project Coordinator of the Condon Committee,
and instead of attacking the cases -- they will attack the
witnesses. Slashing and burning the word, reputations and
character of people reporting on the UFO phenomenon. (In a
humorous moment when I was on Larry King Live debating Jim Oberg
on the STS-48 shuttle UFO, Oberg accused me of coming on the
program to sell magazines when I asked him if he was operating
under any security restrictions. The "ad hominem attack!)
I do not have either the time or space to give you a litany of
each skeptic I have named, so this month I will simply zero in
on one, Phil Klass.
Klass entered the UFO scene around 1966. A former editor with
Aviation Week & Space Technology, he would seem to be an
excellent choice to examine the UFO subject and present an
honest and critical eye on some of the more difficult UFO cases.
Alas, that was not to be. After Klass wrote his first UFO book
"UFOs-Identified" where he claimed UFOs were anomalous, but not
alien, Klass theorized that UFOs were caused by ball lighting
and free floating plasmas. Even the University of Colorado study
(Condon) found this theory to be scientifically unsustainable.
Dr. James McDonald, an atmospheric physicist and proponent of
legitimate UFO study, tore Klass's arguments apart using
scientific reasoning and facts. Klass then decided McDonald must
be dangerous and dealt with, after all he was "pro-UFO."
McDonald was working for the Office of Naval Research who funded
his trip to Australia to conduct cloud-physics studies, and
Klass went on a rampage at ONR writing letters demanding to know
who funded McDonald to conduct UFO research in Australia, and
later trips McDonald was to take to Europe and the USSR. Klass
also enlisted other sympathetic journalists to assist him in a
campaign that lasted 1 and one half years. The ONR conducted an
audit of McDonald that cleared him, but then cut McDonald off
from any further grants. They were afraid of further bad press.
At this point I would ask the Skeptical Inquirer about rational
and scientific open mindedness.
Klass's position is such that if anyone is willing to propose
that some cases might possibly be explained as off world
technology, then they are only seeking celebrity status or
attempting to make money. At this point, Klass then zeroes in on
the character of the researcher. In 1983, Klass began an attack
directed against the University of Nebraska because they were
sponsoring a UFO conference. In a conversation with the
university's administrator Klass charged that "ufologists 'seek
what the Soviet Union does, to convey to the public that our
government can not be trusted, and I resent it as an American
citizen." He equated UFO research with communism, as un-
patriotic and anti-American. Klass went on to phone faculty and
further claimed that for the university to sponsor such a
conference (UFOs) was comparable to the dilemma they would face
if the American Nazi Party wanted to hold a conference there.
Later CSICOP spokesman Mark Plummer wrote that he found nothing
excessive in Klass's claims.
I had personal experience with Klass on two different occasions
when he displayed his fanatic anti-UFO sentiments. In 1992, I
was invited to debate Klass in Denver, sponsored by ParaNet and
MICAP. During the debate we began to discuss the Frederick
Valentich case. This was a case of a young Australian pilot who
disappeared in 1978 after radioing that he was being approached
by a huge UFO. (The RAAF became involved in this case, but no
aircraft or body was ever located.) Klass began by calling
Valentich a "drug smuggler." I was not about to allow him to get
away with that and demanded he prove his assertion. His proof?
Valentich had four life preservers in his aircraft. Klass has
operated on the assumption that if the case cannot be discarded
because the claims can't be disproved, then it *must be a hoax
because UFOs simply cannot be real!
The next run in with Klass happened near the end of January
1995. I had invited Klass on my two hour, weekly radio program
UFOs Tonite!. During the program Klass had threatened to hang up
when I challenged him about his assertion that Major Jesse
Marcel, when picking up debris from the Roswell Incident, was
trying to claim a $3,000 reward offered by a newspaper for proof
of a flying saucer. Klass got very testy when I challenged him
on the statement that Marcel, the intelligence officer of the
most elite military group in the world, would attempt collect a
reward. (By the way, there is no proof of such a reward being
offered that I was ever able to locate.) He threatened to hang
up at that point. Later during the program we were discussing
the 1952 overflights of Washington DC, when Klass tried to
suggest the Air Force was not worried because they took over an
hour to send up jet interceptors. I informed Klass the reason
was that the local Air Force bases were repairing runways and
the jets had to be flown in from Delaware. (I had the proof
including a statement by Al Chop who was then the Air Force
liaison with its Blue Book operation) Klass became enraged and
began screaming "Bullshit!" over the air. When I expressed my
indignation to him, he became embarrassed and hung up his
telephone mid-show! (Another time Klass "lost it" and began
screaming profanities to a national audience occurred about 1993
on the Larry King show. Klass appeared with Travis Walton and
Mike Rogers, and Rogers accused Klass of being a government
agent. Klass in a 'klassic-display' of temper screamed, 'MIKE
ROGERS!, YOU'RE A GODDAMNED LIAR!") This is the rational thought
demonstrated by the likes of the Skeptical Inquirer and CSICOP
that I have encountered.
The bottom line is the fact that UFOs are real (but I am not
saying necessarily ET, but some cases _do_ suggest that) and the
United States Government is hiding the information. Perhaps they
still feel that they are 'protecting us', but I don't buy it.
When my tax dollars help defray the costs of all these damned
secret programs, and then I am lied to, to boot... well, damn
it, I feel used. _And_ - if the skeptics are honest, and not
much proof of that yet - either... in their heart of hearts they
know it to be true. More on this later and remember to keep your
eyes to the skies.
