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-
- [Excerpted from UFO Universe, the September 1988 issue, is this article
- on Ronald Reagan's reputed UFO encounter, and how that encounter may
- serve to explain his continued interest in UFOlogy and EBEs.]
-
-
- THE SHOCKING TRUTH
-
- Ronald Reagan's Obsession With
- An Alien Invasion
-
- By A. Hovni
-
- Supermarket tabloids, that strange breed of sensationalistic
- American journalism, have been talking for most of the decade about
- Ronald Reagan's fascination with things like astrology and space aliens.
- Little attention was paid to the matter ... after all, the stuff was
- printed in the tabloids and nobody sane is supposed to believe in them.
- Yet truth is becoming stranger than fiction in the case of Ronald Wilson
- Reagan and some of his more curious remarks.
-
- For starters, he has become the first President of the United
- States to talk about he possibility of an alien invasion from outer
- space, and he has done so not once or twice but in three speeches.
- Reagan is also the only President to my knowledge, who admitted -- in a
- 1984 Presidential debate against Walter Mondale -- [to] having
- "philosophical discussions" about Armageddon in the White House with
- some rather well known fundamentalist preachers.
-
- And then there was the explosion about astrology in the White
- House, triggered by Don Regan's disclosures that Nancy had often
- consulted astrologers to arrange for appointments with the President.
- Everyone knows the details by now, yet we asked Marcello Galluppi, a
- well-known astrologer and host of a psychic radio and TV talk show in
- Detroit, to give us another view. "It is very clear to me that the
- politicians in Washington have their psychics and astrologers," said
- Marcello, "at least some of them do." Furthermore, continued Marcello,
- there is evidence that the Reagans have used astrology for a long time
- if we consider that "he was sworn in at midnight as Governor of
- California, based on astrology."
-
- The media was having a field day with horoscopes at the White House
- when Reagan talked about the possibility of Earth uniting against a
- threat by "a power from outer space." Although the idea wasn't new for
- the President, as we shall soon see, this time everybody paid attention.
- More as a joke than a serious thought, however. The AP story on the
- speech, for example, had the headline, "Reagan follows astrological flap
- with comment on space invaders."
-
- There might be a deeper reason for Reagan's apparent interest in
- the idea of an alien threat. There is an unconfirmed story that before
- he became Governor of California, Ron and Nancy had a UFO sighting on a
- highway near Hollywood. The story was broadcast last February on Steve
- Allen's radio show over WNEW-AM in New York. The comedian and host
- commented that a very well known personality in the entertainment
- industry had confided to him that many years ago, Ron and Nancy were
- expected to a casual dinner with friends in Hollywood. Except for the
- Reagans, all the guests had arrived. Ron and Nancy showed up quite
- upset half an hour later, saying that they had just seen a UFO coming
- down the coast. No further details were released by Steve Allen.
-
- The President first disclosed his recurrent thoughts about "an
- alien threat" during a December 4, 1985, speech at the Fallston High
- School in Maryland, where he spoke about his first summit with General
- Secretary Gorbachev in Geneva. According to a White House transcript,
- Reagan remarked that during his 5-hour private discussions with
- Gorbachev, he told [Gorbachev] to think, "how easy his task and mine
- might be in these meetings that we held if suddenly there was a threat
- to this world from some other species from another planet outside in the
- universe. We'd forget all the little local differences that we have
- between our countries ..."
-
- Except for one headline or two, people didn't pay much attention.
- Not then and not later, when Gorbachev himself confirmed the
- conversation in Geneva during an important speech on February 17, 1987,
- in the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow, to the Central Committee of the
- USSR's Communist Party. Not a High School in Maryland, precisely!
- There, buried on page 7A of the 'Soviet Life Supplement,' was the
- following statement:
-
- "At our meeting in Geneva, the U.S. President said that if
- the earth faced an invasion by extraterrestials, the United
- States and the Soviet Union would join forces to repel such
- an invasion. I shall not dispute the hypothesis, though I
- think it's early yet to worry about such an intrusion..."
-
- Notice that Gorbachev doesn't say this is an incredible proposition, he
- just says that it's too early to worry about it.
-
- If Gorbachev elevated the theme from a high school to the Kremlin
- [palace], Reagan upped the stakes again by including the "alien threat"
- [again], not in a domestic speech but to a full session of the General
- Assembly of the United Nations. Towards the end of his speech to the
- Forty-second Session on September 21, 1987, the President said that, "in
- our obsession with antagonisms of the moment, we often forget how much
- unites all the members of humanity. Perhaps we need some outside,
- universal threat to make us recognize this common bond.
-
- "I occasionally think," continued Reagan, "how quickly our
- differences worldwide would vanish if we were facing an alien threat
- from outside this world. And yet, I ask" -- here comes the clincher --
- "is not an alien force ALREADY among us?" The President now tries to
- retreat from the last bold statement by posing a second question: "What
- could be more alien to the universal aspirations of our peoples than war
- and the threat of war?" Unlike the off-the-cuff remarks to the Fallston
- High School, we must assume that the President's speech to the General
- Assembly was written very carefully and likewise, it merits close
- examination.
-
- Ronald Reagan has told us that he thinks often about this issue,
- yet nobody seems to be paying attention. When the President mentioned
- last May 4 in Chicago for the third time the possibility of a threat by
- "a power from another planet," the media quickly dubbed it the "space
- invaders" speech, relegating it to a sidebar in the astrology flap. The
- ET remark was made in the Q&A period following a speech to the National
- Strategy Forum in Chicago's Palmer House Hotel, where he adopted a more
- conciliatory tone towards the Soviet Union.
-
- Significantly, Reagan's remark was made during his response to the
- question, "What do you consider to be the most important need in
- international relations?"
-
- "I've often wondered," the President told us once again, "what if
- all of us in the world discovered that we were threatened by an outer --
- a power from outer space, from another planet." And then he emphasized
- his theme that this would erase all the differences, and that the
- "citizens of the world" would "come together to fight that particular
- threat..."
-
- There is a fourth, unofficial, similar statement from Ronald Reagan
- about this particular subject. It was reported in the New Republic by
- senior editor Fred Barnes. The article described a luncheon in the
- White House between the President and Eduard Shevardnatze, during the
- Foreign Minister's visit to Washington to sign the INF Treaty on
- September 15, 1987. "Near the end of his lunch with Shevardnadze,"
- wrote Barnes, "Reagan wondered aloud what would happen if the world
- faced an 'alien threat' from outer space. 'Don't you think the United
- States and the Soviet Union would be together?' he asked. Shevardnadze
- said yes, absolutely. "And we wouldn't need our defense ministers to
- meet,' he added."
-
- The fact that there are so many references in important speeches,
- off-the-cuff remarks, and just plain conversations, means that -- for
- whatever reason or knowledge about deep UFO secrets that he may have as
- President -- Ronald Reagan does think often about the possibility of an
- alien invasion, and how this event could become a catalyst for world
- unity. Talking about these UFO secrets, there is also an unconfirmed
- story of a special story of a special screening in the White House of
- the movie "ET" at few years ago, with director Steven Spielberg and a
- few selected guests. Right after the movie, Reagan supposedly turned to
- Spielberg and whispered something to the effect, "There are only a
- handful of people who know the truth about this."
-
- Indeed, more than one ufologist has even suggested that the real
- target behind "Star Wars" -- another of Reagan's cosmic obsessions -- is
- the projected ET invasion and not the Russians. Others talk of wild
- "deals" between the U.S. Government and race of gray dwarfs, better
- known for the appetite for abducting humans ... Stop! We're entering
- the forbidden terrain of tabloid revelations, like the SUN's screaming
- headline that "Reagan will end his presidency by adding several planets
- as states." Just think about it.
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