hotair.com article image
Above is shown an excerpt from a May 15 hotair.com article by Jazz Shaw regarding the 2019 UFO video released by Jeremy Corbell at his Extraordinary Beliefs website on May 14. This report is about a mainstream media news report of a "Navy UFO video" showing a UFO suddenly disappearing.
The way this blogger considers the subject of UFOlogy is the same as with other aspects of 'paranormal' or 'metaphysical' categorized information. Some individuals have received the gift of expanded knowledge of life and therefore are motivated to do what they can to share the evidence. The information is appreciated by those who recognize the usefulness while there are many others who are yet to have the opportunity to learn about those gifts.
A May 16 "60 Minutes" telecast report is an example of how prominent has become the topic of UFOs or 'UAP' (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) with the segment being introduced in a manner that shows the assumed imperatives and social consciousness orientation—perhaps deemed traditional—of the journalists who produced the segment, mentioning "the U.S. government's grudging acknowledgement." Correspondent Bill Whitaker's interviews included questions accompanied by such comments as "You know how this sounds. It sounds nutty, wacky"; "So what do you say to the skeptics?" and "This is a bizarre issue." One of the interview subjects was eyewitness U.S. Navy pilot David Fravor who described something that "When it gets right in front of me it just disappears."
Other recent UFOlogy news has included reports of a four-part TV docuseries to be produced with Pop singer Demi Lovato to be titled "Unidentified with Demi Lovato." I also read a Denver TV affiliate station article with a statement about the upcoming Senate UFO report: "Okay, let's be honest — even if an extraterrestrial is real, who really cares?"
An April Canadian news report is headlined "UFO sightings in Nova Scotia took off in 2020". This year when this blogger spoke to someone in Nova Scotia and mentioned UFOlogy as one of the subjects reported about at my blog, he told me that his recent familiarity with the subject involved the 'Skinwalker Ranch' topic.
This blogger guesses the UFOlogy data page link supplied
via Email to some prominent UFOlogists has been simply 'over their heads.' Here's an example of the Email messages sent:
I've long been aware that
there's an obvious impasse for UFOlogists who don't know about or
ignore the evidence of several of the best documented flying saucer/UFO
'contactee' cases. It's sad to say that every time when I’ve recently
mentioned this topic in responses to mainstream media articles about
UFOlogy topics, the comments never make it past "moderation" or are deleted by
editors soon thereafter. I've long found it surprising how the 'contactee' accounts usually go unmentioned in UFOlogy journalism. For
example - the Truman Bethurum case left him with two objects to share
with the world as physical proof of his paranormal experiences. Considering this predicament I recently published a "UFOlogy Cases for
Metaphysical Realization - Articles Links Index" making readily available
my research conducted over the years. See the recent article at https:metaphysicalarticles.org/
A news website presenting news from Poland in April offered "New documentary to investigate UFO activity in 'alien hotspot' village". The article reports about the small village of Wylatowo "where between 2000 and 2006 a host of
mysterious phenomena in the night sky began to appear along with massive
crop circles in surrounding fields . . . the film also touches on other bizarre alien events
in Poland, including the abduction of farmer Jan Wolski on May 10th,
1978 in the tiny village of Emilcin." The word 'abduction' is a misnomer as the farmer had continued his Earth life. The article presents links to the two Wylatowo village videos shown below.On May 25 the UAP acronym was found to be featured in the article "UFOs are real but that doesn't mean we've been visited by aliens" at cnet.com and the following day there were other articles found with 'UAP,' including "The aliens haven't landed: Why you should be skeptical of recent reports on UFO sightings" in USA Today and "Congress talks UAP: Unashamedly Attractive Populism," a reaction.life article requiring readers to either subscribe or register in order to read the article.
The USA Today article is by Mick West, an "Opinion contributor" whose biographical information provided in the article identifies him as "the founder of Metabunk.org, a forum about the debunking of conspiracy theories" and "the author of Escaping the Rabbit Hole: How to Debunk Conspiracy Theories Using Facts, Logic, and Respect."
On May 27 the USA Today website also featured a political cartoon by Dave Granlund that showed a military officer in uniform at a press conference podium with a word balloon stating "UFOs? Nothing to see here, move along . . ." Behind him on the ground were strange three-toed footprints leading from him to a landed flying saucer.
Another May 27 headline in The Hill preceded an article by Opinion Contributor Marik von Rennenkampff that included a typical sentiment being expressed among news media currently:
. . . the mere fact that the U.S. government,
with its nearly unlimited investigatory capabilities, is reportedly
considering "alien" technology as an explanation for these phenomena is a jaw-dropping development.
In much the same vein, the pilot with the single most credible account of an encounter with a UFO – backed up by several of his fellow naval aviators and an array of sensor data – believes that the object he chased was "not from this world."
The commentator's biographical note stated "Marik von Rennenkampff served as an analyst with the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation, as well as an Obama administration appointee at the U.S. Department of Defense. Follow him on Twitter @MvonRen."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Use Chrome or Edge browsers to comment. The Firefox browser is not functional with this Blogger system.