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-
- International UFO Reporter (IUR) - Jan/Feb/1989 - Editorial
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- Published by the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS)
- 2457 West Peterson Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60659
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Editorial: Paranoia
- ---------
- by Jerome Clark
-
-
-
- The late Gray Barker, who trafficked in publications
- chronicling contactee adventures, men in black and sinister
- cover-ups of various sorts, was fond of saying that nothing
- sells like paranoia. Every time he had a new product to move,
- he pitched it in language that spoke to the most elemental
- fears of his customers, many of them certain that their
- knowledge of the world's deepest secrets (the hollowness of
- the earth, for example) would bring enforcers from the Silence
- Group to their doorstep any day. Barker himself wrote the all-
- time paranoid title, "They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers."
-
- Its easy to laugh. Other people's paranoia is always funny.
- But what of our own?
-
- These days, paranoia - or anyway, deep suspicion; perhaps
- there is a difference - seems in style. This time the inspiration
- is the ongoing, ever un-resolved MJ-12 dispute. The spectrum of
- paranoia ranges from the mild (and probably defensible) to the
- pathological (as in see your psychiatrist). Fortunately the latter
- has afflicted few on the sober side of ufology, but it is running
- rampant on the wild side. Since the early 1950s contactee believers
- have maintained that ETs are here to serve man - that is, to offer
- to help us. Now a new school of unhinged types claims the ETs are
- here to serve man, by which they mean offering us up as helpings,
- presumably in some cosmic McDonald's. Anyone who believes this (and
- to note the obvious - that not a shred of evidence supports this
- strange and sick reading of the UFO data - is to dignify it in a
- way it does not deserve) has, let's not mince words, cracks in his
- pot.
-
- In the sane world, where it is not generally held that the U.S.
- government is covering up knowledge of man-eating aliens, paranoia
- manifests in speculation and rumour about the "true" nature of the
- MJ-12 briefing paper. The operating assumption is that it is not
- what it purports to be, a summary prepared for President-elect
- Eisenhower to inform him that the earth is being visited by extra-
- terrestrials, two of whose craft have crashed on North American
- soil. The questions being raised are these:
-
- Who wrote the document, if Adm. Hillenkoetter (the ostensible
- author) didn't? Was it a well-informed nastily-clever ufologist
- putting one over on his gullible colleagues? Was it intelligence-
- agency personnel disseminating disinformation, either to hide real
- UFO secrets or to confuse the Soviets? Or - at the top of the
- paranoia hit parade - was it a ufologist consciously working in
- collusion with intelligence agents? If this last is true, just
- whom can we trust?
-
- This week, as I write these words, I have heard serious charges
- leveled against two prominent figures in ufology. These charges were
- made by individuals who went to some length to list their reasons for
- entertaining suspicions that they acknowledge sound crazy. I am sure
- the ufologists at the receiving end of these accusations (which
- allege that they are collaborating with intelligence agencies
- involved in the cover-up) will be able to defend themselves and to
- explain the actions deemed suspicious. The mere fact that such
- accusations are being made by noncranks, however, illustrates how
- perilous UFO inquiry has become in the MJ-12 era.
-
- By "perilous" I do not mean, of course, that anybody need fear
- for his life because he Knows Too Much About Flying Saucers (a
- conceit that, though widespread, has always done more to massage
- ufologists' egos than to truly frighten them). I refer instead to
- the problem of thinking through rationally what we may be up against,
- given the reality of a cover-up. (And there is a cover-up; if there
- were not, the U.S. government would have told us by now what it
- recovered in New Mexico in July 1947. We know that it was not a
- weather balloon and we know the recoverers knew that, too.)
-
- One need not be a textbook-case paranoid or a conspiracy nut
- to recognize that yes, governments, even democratic ones, have
- secrets and ways of keeping them. They have intelligence agencies
- and, among their other tasks, these agencies' personnel track the
- spread of sensitive information, including rumours of same. They
- have established methods of dealing with leaks. In dictatorships
- leakers are easily dealt with: they're killed or sent off to remote
- gulags. In a democracy such as the United States, if outright treason
- is not involved, its trickier. Generally the worst that happens is
- that the leaker, if his name is known, loses his job. Beyond that,
- the official agency involved will vigorously deny the accuracy of
- the information being leaked and hope that journalists covering
- the story will be gulled into believing the denial.
-
- Few ufologists are aware that in the United States it is
- illegal for official agencies or individuals to circulate dis-
- information for domestic consumption. We all know, of course,
- that officials, including Presidents, break the law. They usually
- don't bet by with it, as witness such episodes as Watergate and
- the Iran-contra fiasco. The reason they don't get by with it is
- that Congress, prosecutors and the press are watching them. That's
- why there was an uproar, a year or two ago, when the Wall Street
- Journal fell victim to a disinformation scam that reported, falsely,
- that the U.S. government was about to bomb Libya again. The story
- was circulated for psychological purposes; the idea was to scare
- the Libyan government. A 'Journal' foreign correspondent picked up
- the story and made the mistake of taking it seriously. When the
- truth came out, the Reagan administration was severely criticized
- and forced to give assurances that nothing like this would happen
- again.
-
- In the context of the UFO controversy, however, it is
- undeniably true that a different set of rules apply. It is an
- article of faith among this country's opinion-making elite (New
- York Times, CBS News, Time, Science, et al) that people who
- believe in UFOs are all screwballs, since UFOs do not exist.
- Nothing that happens among UFO believers could conceivably be of
- any significance except to readers fo the "National Enquirer".
- That being the case, UFO "evidence" is of no interest whatever,
- regardless of the amount of documentation or quality of witnesses.
- Because there are no UFOs, there cannot be a cover-up of important
- information about them. Therefore any testimony that claims the
- contrary need not be heeded.
-
- In other words, the field is open to any government agency to
- play any game it feels it need to play. The watchdogs aren't just
- sleeping on the job; they're not even on the job. "The New York
- Times" and the "Washington Post" have never heard of the Roswell
- incident, much less dispatched investigative reporters to look
- into it. Supremely smug and blind, they will not know if laws are
- being broken by official persons keeping UFO secrets; anybody who
- says they are need only be referred to "Skeptical Inquirer", or a
- psychiatrist, to get his head straightened.
-
- It is not true as a general principle, the cliche notwith-
- standing, that secrets can't be kept. But it has to be especially
- easy to keep UFO secrets, since nobody except ufologists, who have
- no influence and only limited resources, is looking for them. (In
- the 1970s famous investigative journalist Seymour Hersh made a point
- of telling "Rolling Stone" that he doesn't do "flying saucer stories
- .") Nor, consequently, is anybody looking to see if federal laws are
- being violated by keepers of UFO secrets. Any ufologist who says his
- phone is being tapped or that intelligence personnel are circulating
- domestic UFO disinformation is, well, just another paranoid, a harm-
- less version of the guy who tells police that space aliens ordered
- him to shoot his mother.
-
- What is truth? a famous man asked. Two thousand years later we
- ask, what is paranoia? Well, it's certainly no delusion, no purely
- subjective phenomenon. A fear or suspicion that has no demonstrably
- objective basis is paranoia. That makes the fear that the CIA
- assassinates ufologists paranoia, but it does not do the same for
- the suspicion that intelligence agencies are doing other things to
- ufologists. We know that both active-duty and retired spook types
- have told ufologists hair-raising tales about EBEs in government
- custody. There is no independent reason to believe these stories
- are true, but what's important for the moment is that they're being
- told by the individuals who are telling them. We also know that
- some ufologists have interacted, sometimes in curious ways, with
- these individuals.
-
- What is going on far away from the scrutiny of the usual
- establishment watchdogs? And what is the reason for it? It must
- surely mean that ufologists are on to something, otherwise why
- the attention? But where do reasonable questions end and crazy
- fantasies begin? Beyond the richly-documented Roswell incident,
- we have no real evidence of what the government may or may not
- know, what it may or may not be concealing. That leaves us open
- to any credentialed liar who comes along - if we are foolish
- enough to take him at his word, that is.
-
- Under the circumstances, given the bewildering and bizarre
- nature of events in recent years, a certain degree of paranoia
- (provided that it be mild and containable) is inevitable. Any
- more that a mild degree, however, need an antidote. I suggest
- laughter. What's ahead of us, as we work our way through Roswell
- and beyond, is not going to be easy to get to, but lunatic fears,
- we can be sure, will take us only to never-neverland.
-