My photo of a UFO made from a banana-split dish and modelling
clay (from The UFO Verdict)
I have been interested in UFOs since I was a child in the 1960s. Reading the widely-published misinformation of authors such as Donald H. Keyhoe and Frank Edwards, I was persuaded that 'there must be something to it.' Of course, UFOlogy in those days was much less wild than it is today. Even Keyhoe disbelieved most if not all claims of UFO "contact", and the early "abduction" cases. As I noted in The UFO Verdict (chapter 3),
the willingness to believe on the part of the UFO movement has steadily grown with each passing yearThose words were written over 15 years ago, and subsequent events have proved them to be absolutely true. Since they were written, the credulity of the UFO Movement has expanded to take in:
- The supposed "UFO Crash" at Roswell, New Mexico, now with- a supposed "Alien Autopsy" film.
- A veritable Epidemic of supposed "UFO Abductions", including
- Supposed "UFO Abductions" that take place right in your own bedroom, and "beam you up" right through the ceiling, just like in Star Trek. No longer do you need to go out to deserted roads late at night to run into aliens. Since Budd Hopkins' books were published in the early 1980s, the aliens now come right into your bedroom to get you.
When I became older and a little wiser, I read other, more skeptical, UFO authors such as Dr. Donald H. Menzel. I realized that the UFO proponents were not being careful, reliable, or accurate in their statements on the subject. I began to correspond with Philip J. Klass in 1968, and we met the following year. We've been good friends ever since. I first met Jim Oberg in 1975. I met Gary Posner in 1977, and James McGaha in 1987.
When I attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois,
during the very exciting yet frightening time
of the Vietnam War protests, I majored in mathematics, and
also took many astronomy classes. In fact, I had enough
astronomy classes for an astronomy major, although I would have
needed more physics classes to major in astronomy. I got to know
the late Dr. J. Allen Hynek (1910-1986) quite well,
I found him to be a most interesting character.
He was the U.S. Air Force's chief astronomical consultant for
the celebrated Project Bluebook .
While a man
of much personal integrity, he was also gullible in the extreme.
He believed himself able to determine the sincerity, and even the
reliability of an individual, simply by his intuition as
he listened to their story.
He was valuable to Northwestern in his
role as Astronomy Department Chairman. Were it not for him,
Northwestern would not have today its splended Lindheimer
Astronomical Research Center right on campus, nor its Corralitos
observatory in New Mexico. Still, Hynek's skills were primarily
political and personal, rather than scientific. He did not generally
teach advanced-level astronomy courses, he made few if any
tangible contributions to the science of astronomy during his decades
at Northwestern, and was primarily known for his interest in
UFOs. His presentations and media appearances on the subject
of astronomy were first-rate. Hynek was a great popularizer of
astronomy. However, he was not greatly esteemed by his fellow
astronomers - in fact, he was frequently the butt of their private
jokes. Hynek envisioned himself as "The Galileo of UFOlogy",
(see, for example, Newsweek magazine, Nov. 21, 1977, p.97.)
but unlike the original Galileo, Hynek had no demonstration that
could be made to believers and unbelievers alike to allow them
to evaluate his claims. If the original Galileo had no more solid evidence
to offer than did the Galileo of UFOlogy, his name would be
forgotten today.
The famous NASA Space Shuttle "UFO Video" has been widely promoted on The TV show HARD COPY and by Richard Hoagland. Here James Oberg explains what it really was.
Did President Jimmy Carter see a real UFO?
The very famous Travis Walton UFO Abduction Story was made into the movie The Fire Came By. Here is an inside account of that incident, by one of the first reporters on the scene, sent by the National Enquirer. The story he tells is very different than what you will hear from the mass media!
"UFO abduction" researcher David Jacobs claims that
people are
Entirely Unpredisposed
by the existing Science Fiction literature to tell stories
of supposed abductions by aliens. Here Martin Kottmeyer
shows how dead wrong Jacobs is.
Is the Space Conspiracy book
Alternative 3
A Close Encounter with Whitley Strieber, best-selling author of "Communion" and many other books.
Erich Von Daniken's Ancient Astronauts - Science or Charlatanism?
Debunking the famous
Roswell Alien Autopsy
film.
Visit the
Internet UFO Skeptics,
who offer a skeptical perspective on many well-known UFO claims.
Popular radio talk show host
Art Bell
peddles a steady stream of paranormal claims to millions of listeners.
Here's a photo of a supposed "Chupacabra" from his page.
The Roswell UFO Crash Home Page!
The Home Page of Stanton Friedman, the famous Flying Saucer Physicist!
The Home Page of MUFON, the largest UFO group in the U.S.
UFO Abductees Anonymous - Read all about "spontaneous invisibility" and more! Become a member for $10, and they will reply to your email! (Otherwise, you will be ignored.)
A Very Useful UFO Dictionary and Glossary helps you find your way through UFOlogical lingo.
Scandal! Backstabbing! Slander! To get the Inside Dirt on
UFOlogists' squabbles, read James Moseley's
Saucer Smear.
It's Shockingly Close to the Truth!
Glenn Campbell's Newsletter on the celebrated "Area 51", Desert Rat
Miscellaneous Skeptical Resources