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Your Paracast Newsletter — January 11, 2015

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Gene Steinberg

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Staff member
THE PARACAST NEWSLETTER
January 11, 2015
www.theparacast.com


The UFO Debates Continue on The Paracast

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About The Paracast: The Paracast covers a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions across the planet.

Set Up: The Paracast is a paranormal radio show that takes you on a journey to a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions. The Paracast seeks to shed light on the mysteries and complexities of our Universe and the secrets that surround us in our everyday lives.

Join long-time paranormal researcher Gene Steinberg, co-host and acclaimed field investigator Christopher O'Brien, and a panel of special guest experts and experiencers, as they explore the realms of the known and unknown. Listen each week to the great stories of the history of the paranormal field in the 20th and 21st centuries.

This Week's Episode: Gene and Chris present David Stinnett. David is a biomedical engineer and a 30-year veteran of UFO field work and archival research. He is director of the longest running UFO conference on the east coast, the New Jersey UFO Conference, continuously running for 28 years. Stinnett has been a guest on numerous radio shows and was co-host for the Researchers Live Radio program. He is very active in worldwide UFO research and anomoly research. His research interests include ancient texts, biblical and extra canonical texts, ancient civilizations, astronomy, physics, archaeology and a host of other topics that coincide with the UFO phenomenon.

Chris O’Brien’s Site: Our Strange Planet

New Jersey UFO Conference: New Jersey UFO Paranormal Conciousness Conference

Reminder: Please don't forget to visit our famous Paracast Community Forums for the latest news/views/debates on all things paranormal: The Paracast Community Forums.

I Said This Once Before
By Gene Steinberg

Editor’s Note: Since The Paracast debuted, and I started publishing this newsletter, I have written hundreds of editorials. Add to that dozens and dozens of articles that I wrote for a number of magazines and newspapers, paranormal and mainstream, over the years.

Reviewing that material gives me the chance to see where my opinions about things paranormal have evolved, and where they are remained substantially the same. I invite you to consider the following, adapted and updated from an editorial I wrote when the world was much younger — and so was I. GS


As many of you know, I am not a newcomer to offbeat studies. In addition to hosting The Paracast for eight years, I have been connected with several magazines publishing this type of material over the years. But despite this past experience, I am first to admit that there is a tremendous amount I do not know about these subjects. One of the purposes of this show is to present information, not only for the listeners, but the hosts as well.

This admission notwithstanding, allow me to present a few ideas for you to consider.

Although UFOs are still being seen, the Air Force gave up its UFO investigating project way back in 1969, and relegated its saucer data to the Air Force archives in Alabama. Forty-five years later, the flying saucers are still scooting about the skies. In fact, looking back to the year the Air Force scuttled official UFO research, I managed to turn up more sightings in the months following the announcement from the Air Force than in the months preceding.

In fact, I was a witness to one of those sightings — accompanied by my first wife, Geneva — on a chilly February evening. The details would bore you; the usual pinpoint of light in the sky, which travels at a tremendous rate of speed, and soon vanishes in the distance. No evidence save for the eyewitness testimony of two people who cannot be considered unprejudiced in such matters.

As you know, I have some strong ideas on the subject, and these same ideas cause me to distrust some of the folks who purport to be experts on UFOs. Little that the so-called experts have done has contributed one iota to the solution of the UFO enigma. And as the mystery deepens, we find that some of them have abandoned UFO investigation, because of disillusionment or frustration. Many who embarked upon research over the years have given up; their early hopes for a quick solution dashed by the increasing complexity of the problem they confronted.

If anything, the UFO problem is extremely complex, from the people who study the phenomenon to the discs themselves. The supposedly conventional explanation that we are dealing with spacecraft that will eventually land and reveal their origin no longer holds water. Flying saucers have been observed since the dawn of our recorded history in one form or another.

The presence of a persistent phenomenon for centuries suggests at least the possibility that they are closely related to our own world. Some suggest the presence of UFOs and their occupants may have caused vast changes to our civilization over the course of human history.

But I caution the reader that I have not fallen for the “I’ve got the answer” syndrome, prevalent among many occult researchers over the years. As I said when I began this discussion, there is much that I do not know about UFOs, psychic phenomena, strange creatures and similar topics. The Paracast is, to me, very much an interactive learning experience, and I am often surprised at the depth of knowledge of some of our guests, and the regular posters in our forums.

So any ideas that I might suggest as the journey continues should not be accepted as gospel, but merely as “food for thought,” speculation to be carefully dissected and (if necessary) discarded in favor of more plausible theories.

The problem in the UFO field, though, is that most people have settled upon a single conclusion and gone back to their lives. So the objects must be physical craft from other planets. This opinion — and it’s very often a belief — is buttressed by the fact that we have discovered evidence of possible Earth-like planets orbiting far-away star systems.

The theory goes that if similar planets exist elsewhere in huge quantities, life may have developed on some of them. It goes without saying that such life may have evolved to a point where they are capable of amazing technological achievements, including travel to other star systems. And thus to Earth!

That being the case, the theory goes that UFOs must represent spacecraft from one or more of those planets. The governments of Earth may know the truth, may have interacted with alien intelligences, but keep it secret for reasons we can only guess at. So maybe they don’t want to frighten the populace. Maybe the military/industrial complex will not allow for even the promise of advancements in science and technology that will provide free energy, abundant supplies of food, and a near-perfect life for even the poorest members of our society.

It would virtually render our existing society obsolete overnight.

Or maybe it’s more than that, maybe the aliens do not want to reveal the secrets behind their presence on Earth, or maybe there’s a sinister motive behind it all that we aren’t meant to know. Well, until it’s too late to do anything about it.

But I wouldn’t want to engender feelings of panic, except to say that the belief in benevolent Space Brothers who are here to save us defies logic. Most any citizen of Paris, after witnessing the tragic events of this past week, would tell you that they do not feel safe, that they do not expect visitors from outer space to land and rescue them. It’s clear that our Brothers from “out there,” if they exist, have been strictly AWOL for a long, long time.

But skepticism does not mean disbelief. I will let the weight of evidence convince me. What frustrates me, however, is that progress in paranormal research appears almost non-existent. I feel sad that a large part of this column was merely adapted and updated from an editorial I wrote back in 1971.

How little has changed!

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So true. But I have to remind myself once in a while although we're used to the situation, there are still newbies to the field who are struck with the same sense of wonder as we were. Notwithstanding the discovery of the origin of UFOs, I hope that sense of wonder is something that never changes too :cool: .
 
Nice summation Gene, and Randall brings up an important point: The "sense of wonder" that we all (at some point) have experienced is a result of what could be called the "honey-pot" aspect of this phenomenon. Anyone and everyone that has and/or will be attracted to this mystery shares in this aspect of strange attraction. We all have our own personal saga of wondrous attraction that explains why this is so—none more relevant than the next. And (IMO) this is one of the most important (and overlooked) aspects of our collective perception of the phenomena. Motivation. Why is one person motivated to pursue answer(s) to the mystery and someone else could care less? This question of motivation and non-motivation to seek answer(s) is rarely addressed by the field of "ufology" or any phenomenological subject. In otherwords: why are we "ufologists" and everyone else are not? Why do some people become theoretical physicists and most others could care less about the subject. i.e., where do our motivations toward answers begin and why?

Whatevaaah.... :confused:
 
Nice summation Gene, and Randall brings up an important point: The "sense of wonder" that we all (at some point) have experienced is a result of what could be called the "honey-pot" aspect of this phenomenon. Anyone and everyone that has and/or will be attracted to this mystery shares in this aspect of strange attraction. We all have our own personal saga of wondrous attraction that explains why this is so—none more relevant than the next. And (IMO) this is one of the most important (and overlooked) aspects of our collective perception of the phenomena. Motivation. Why is one person motivated to pursue answer(s) to the mystery and someone else could care less? This question of motivation and non-motivation to seek answer(s) is rarely addressed by the field of "ufology" or any phenomenological subject. In otherwords: why are we "ufologists" and everyone else are not? Why do some people become theoretical physicists and most others could care less about the subject. i.e., where do our motivations toward answers begin and why?

Whatevaaah.... :confused:

Like the old adage goes, "Seeing is believing". I think almost anyone who sees a UFO well enough to be personally certain that what they saw was alien, will come away from the experience with a worldview that is profoundly different than the one they had before that experience. Those who have become interested in UFOs out of personal curiosity will have an intellectualized view of that experience. Still others might become interested because they recognize the potential that acquiring or discovering UFO technology has.

There are lots of reasons. It's a genuine mystery that affects our collective identity on a cosmic scale, and it's not just fiction, or myth, or wishful thinking. It's something real. Not everyone believes it, but those doubts don't change the facts. It's incredible really. Yet we've grown so accustomed to it that we're almost to the point of thinking it's nothing special or out of the ordinary. That's how far the perspective of those who know is from those who have never had a UFO experience, or who deny it. It's a gulf that is almost as unimaginable as the distance is from wherever the aliens are from.


The whole point of this is that this state of awareness is something that is now shared by many people, and it's not a small thing. So what is it that Gene is talking about really? Is it just convincing the skeptics? They won't be satisfied until they can book their own mothership cruise, so who cares. At some point we need to put them in the same category as those who still think the Earth is flat and just move on, and IMO those who have done that have taken a huge step forward. That is progress.
 
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You're aware that there was once congressional hearings on UFOs, and they gave us the Condon Report in the 1960s, right?

I think we've taken a position on this petition, which is that it will go exactly where previous attempts of gone. But you have put the link up here, so anyone who is interested is free to check it out.
 
You're aware that there was once congressional hearings on UFOs, and they gave us the Condon Report in the 1960s, right?

Yes, and the transcript of those hearings in 60s is excellent and informative reading. And we all know what the Condon Report was set up to do and did.

I think we've taken a position on this petition, which is that it will go exactly where previous attempts of gone. But you have put the link up here, so anyone who is interested is free to check it out.

It never hurts to keep up the pressure for even partial disclosure when possible. Takes a second to sign the petition. The more signatures accumulated, the better.
 

I certainly think it deserves a mention. I should really create a whole article on disclosure. But I share Gene and Chris' reservations on just how much good it would do to try to open up the secret vault on the really good stuff, the stuff we know they must have but can't share for reasons of "national security". I suspect the release of that stuff is decades into the future, if we ever get to see it at all. That's why I advocate a whole other approach rather than spending more money chasing that wild goose and watching yet another attempt at disclosure turn into a media circus. We don't need the government to tell us what we already know. The aliens are here, or have at least been here in the not too distant past, and I think that knowledge represents a shift in awareness that is underestimated, and if harnessed could be more fruitful than another round of disclosure hearings.
 
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