Search For Truth Is An Elusive Task

Are stories of UFOs, human contact with aliens and a secret military base in Nevada where alien technology is being hidden true?  Or is the truth so boring we have to invent conspiracies?

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A sign points the way to the
Roswell NM UFO crash site

As theater-goers line up, popcorn in hand to see the new X-Files flick, it’s highly likely many of them won’t see the film as fiction. A new poll shows that 48 per cent of us believe in America’s famed conspiracy theory Area 51 - which alleges that at a secret base in Nevada, the US government conducts tests on aliens and UFOs. It’s a big surprise that so many of us would sign up to this theory, on the basis of very little proof. Why is that?

Dave Cosnette from the The Cosmic Conspiracies team, who runs the popular website http://www.ufos-aliens.co.uk receives an average of 300 emails a day from worldwide UFO spotters.

He reckons they’re definitely out there. Talking about the Area 51 conspiracy, he says: “The belief that UFOs were present at the base probably started when alleged former employee, Bob Lazar, came forward in 1989, claiming he’d seen a UFO at an area within the base called S-4. Lazar claimed that S-4 was used to back engineer alien technology. According to Lazar, there were nine UFOs in the hanger. It was his job to investigate the propulsion system of the craft.”

However, after in-depth research, no official records of Lazar could be found, other than his name appearing in a phonebook from the base. “Was this a case of Lazar lying or the US military removing all traces of him being on the base, once he went public with his story?”

But there’s further evidence too, according to Cosnette. “Dreamland, a documentary from the mid 90s, included an interview with a 71-year-old mechanical engineer who claimed to be a former employee at Area 51 during the 1950s,” says Cosnette. “He claims he worked on a flying disc simulator built to train US pilots, based on a disc originating from a crashed extraterrestrial craft. During his career at Area 51 he claimed to have worked with an extraterrestrial being whose name was J-Rod, described as a telepathic translator.”

As outrageous as this may sound, other informers have come forward claiming to have worked on cloning alien viruses at Area 51, also with the alien J-Rod.

And as for the reason so many people now subscribe to this theory? Cosnette thinks it’s down to the media, whether that’s Hollywood blockbusters such as Independence Day, TV programmes such as The X Files, or the accessibility of internet sites like YouTube where people can upload and view other people’s suspected UFO footage.

Dave Sadler, co-ordinator of the UK-based Unknown Phenomena Investigation Association, is less sure about the existence of little green men in the Nevada desert. “I just think it’s down to testing secretive aircraft which the American government don’t want the rest of the world to see. The American government have probably let the alien conspiracy theories go a little further so the public can be a bit more imaginative, which allows them to get along with their work without hassle.”

Robin Ramsay, author of Harpenden’s Pocket Essentials book Conspiracy Theories, says it’s important to differentiate between UFOs and aliens. “There are undoubtedly UFOs, there’s no question about that, there’s too many bits of video tape, film, too many reliable witnesses, too many pilots who have seen them for them to be denied and say they are irrational.”

He also believes there are three main reasons why people have embraced the conspiracy theory: The rise of the internet, where anyone can make a claim about any theory; the worldwide impact of the TV series The X Files; and America’s political culture which leans towards conspiracy theories because of events such as Watergate and the JFK and Martin Luther King assassinations.

Then there’s the other view. Professor Christopher French edits The Skeptic Magazine, and is scathing of the Area 51 conspiracy theory. “The idea that the governments of the world are all involved in a huge cover-up regarding extraterrestrial visitation hardly stands up to a nanosecond’s critical scrutiny. Presumably the aliens wouldn’t choose to only crash their saucers (having travelled successfully across the galaxy) conveniently near to Area 51? So a cover-up would require the co-operation of all the governments and military forces of the world, without any one of the thousands of people involved speaking out. Any anti-American national leader in the word would be in a position to blow the whistle at any time. The conspiracy theory is complete nonsense.”

Psychologist Ciaran O’Keeffe, a presenter of hit TV show Most Haunted, understands why people are drawn to such stories. “For some the truth is very mundane and quite boring. It makes no promises about there being an exciting afterlife or other life in the universe. For that reason people often dismiss the truth and say, ‘There must be something else.”‘

For now, with so many different opinions and no concrete evidence supporting or dismissing the theory, it remains a mystery.

The truth is still out there - somewhere.

http://www.shropshirestar.com/


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You guys need to do more research before writing your articles. Bob Lazaar was not the source of the Area 51 rumors.  The original source was the U.S. Government, they put out the original press release that the base was in possession of a recovered disc on the day after the event happened.  The official press release was picked up by local newspapaers and published.  It wasnt until the next day when high ranking brass showed up at the base that a second press release was issued by the govt, saying it was a weather balloon.  Lazar, local ranchers, people that worked at the base, and a host of others only backed the original press release stated a disc was recovered.  So the govt either lied then, or is lying now about these events.  Too many honest people have testified with the truth that they did recover alien bodies and a disc, its the us govt that is being dishonest here.

J on Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Bob Lazar, for all intents and purposes, is the person most credited with bringing information from Area 51 to the public.
Besides, the article says, “The belief that UFOs were present at the base probably started when alleged former employee, Bob Lazar, came forward… “
It doesn’t say Bob Lazar was the source of Area 51 rumours, it says he “probably started” the belief that UFOs were at Area 51.

Dean Terry on Wednesday, August 06, 2008

I have to say that as far as UFO’s go it has to be true.Way to many people have seen these things and you know the saying that everybody cannot be wrog?Well that definitely apply’s here.The government naturaly would not want anyone to know if they had anything pertaing to a craft or bodies.It would not be in their best interest to let it leak out.They would be keeping it under wraps to learn how they work and try to copy the technology involved.Of course this would be used more for defence department activity’s than anything else

charles0390 on Sunday, September 07, 2008