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- Info-ParaNet Newsletters Volume I Number 438
-
- Friday, July 12th 1991
-
- Today's Topics:
-
- Re: UFONS
- Re: Asteriods?
- Re: Roswell on Phx Radio
- Re: Bilderbergers & UN?
- Re: Wernikoff On Maccabee
- Re: RE: Paranet Newsletter 435
- Roswell Discussion
- Re: Cfr, Russia And Other Off-topic "gee-whiz" Excuses....
- (none)
- Your posting to sci.skeptic (as seen on Paranet.)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: Peggy.Noonan@p0.f150.n30163.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Peggy Noonan)
- Subject: Re: UFONS
- Date: 10 Jul 91 20:32:00 GMT
-
- Hi Bob,
- I've been off the BBS for a week or so getting some heavy
- deadline work done but was delighted to see your message here today!
- I'll check CIS (hope it'll be today) later on.
- ==Peggy==
- --
- Peggy Noonan - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Peggy.Noonan@p0.f150.n30163.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: ncar!neptune.convex.com!swarren
- Subject: Re: Asteriods?
- Date: 11 Jul 91 17:37:41 GMT
-
- From: swarren@neptune.convex.com (Steve Warren)
-
- +From: Kurt.Lochner@f22.n14766.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Kurt Lochner)
- +Subject: Asteriods?
- +Date: 7 Jul 91 21:32:11 GMT
- +
- +Nope! There's been some deep-space tracking experiments
- +going on over the years with the asteriod belt. The
- +contigencies for dealing with an errant asteriod do
- +include 'blowing it up' which IMHO is an oxymoron.
- +
- +Remember 'up' in freefall is not a valid reference, as
- +all directions in space (free of gravity wells) are 'up.'
- +So blowing it up is not a term that I would want to see
- +in usage to describe what might be done to prevent such
- +a cataclysm. Nope, more likely and feasible would be to
- +use various instrument probes (and atomic devices) to
- +try and deflect the trajectory of an asteroid.
-
- No, actually the most sensible solution would indeed be 'blowing
- it up' (which I hope we can agree means 'apart" - not in any
- particular direction).
-
- The problem is that deflecting a large object requires reaction mass,
- and it is silly to carry reaction mass out to an asteroid, when the
- asteroid itself is a wonderful source reaction mass in and of itself.
-
- Why would blowing an asteroid apart solve the problem?
-
- Because, even if the average velocity added to a chunk of the asteroid
- by the explosion is only 100 m/s (which is rather small for a nuclear
- explosion), then exploding a 1 km diameter asteroid 1 week before impact
- will expand its diameter from 1 km to 60,000 km.
-
- The Earth's diameter is approximately 12,000 km. The ratio of surface
- area - to - surface area of Earth to asteroid would be approximately
- 0.04 (ie the Earth would intersect 4% of the cross-sectional area of
- space occupied by the asteroid). We would see a spectacular meteorite
- shower, but it would not threaten civilization.
-
- A more energetic explosion would scatter the remains much more widely,
- resulting in a much smaller percentage of the asteroid intersecting
- the Earth. The cloud of asteroid particles would continue to expand and
- become less dense over time, with the result that if it ever crosses the
- Earth's orbit again it will be a minimal threat.
-
- The explosive device would be similar to our bunker-busting bombs, as
- it would need to tunnel deep into the asteroid before exploding.
-
- I like the destruction approach because it also means that there is one
- less large mass in an orbit that intersects ours. In other words, not
- only will it not destroy our civilization now, but it will not come back
- and get us later either. The orbit modification approach is bad because
- it allows a serious threat to our existence to continue hanging over our
- heads (call me paranoid).
- _.
- --Steve ._||__
- Warren v\ *|
- V
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Don.Allen@f29.n363.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Don Allen)
- Subject: Re: Roswell on Phx Radio
- Date: 11 Jul 91 00:36:01 GMT
-
-
- JS> So was I! Klass I can handle. Stackpole's too sensible to
- JS> argue with. We wound up agreeing most of the time.
-
- Methinks Klass is getting OLD (and slow :-)
-
- He sure looks like he's added a few miles..and I noticed that
- despite his usual ramblings..he's gotten _soft_.
-
- Ah..Klass..He's one of our favorites :-)
-
- JS> ->BTW..Did you notice how well Randle handled Klass on "Larry
- JS> ->King Live"?
- JS>
- JS> Well, I thought Kevin did a decent job, but I wish he
- JS> hadn't fudged on the first question, about "was this the
- JS> first book on the subjectt?"
-
- I think that was the big boo-boo of the evening. There certainly
- would have been no problem to admit his wasn't the first..and it
- I noticed that Klass lost no time at all in taking advantage of Randle's
- faux pas :-/
-
- I'm upto page 85 of the book. So far, it looks pretty solid.
-
- Don
-
-
-
- --
- Don Allen - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Don.Allen@f29.n363.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: John.Feilke@f14.n1010.z9.FIDONET.ORG (John Feilke)
- Subject: Re: Bilderbergers & UN?
- Date: 10 Jul 91 22:54:00 GMT
-
- In a message to John Feilke <07-09-91 23:03> John Hrusovszky wrote:
-
- JH=>JF> Pack the suckers up and give me a magic word and i'll
- JH=>get them, I have
- JH=>JF> GEMSTONE FILES......
- JH=>
- JH=>Can you let me in on what these "Gemstone Files" are
- JH=>basically about?
- JH=>And can I FREQ them at high speed from you? If so, what
- JH=>magicname?
- JH=>
-
- the Gemstone files are the goods on everyone! I think the file name is
- GEMSTONE.ZIP d'l my allfiles list and have a looksee. magic word is FILE or
- FILES.
-
- --
- John Feilke - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: John.Feilke@f14.n1010.z9.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Jim.Greenen@f29.n363.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Jim Greenen)
- Subject: Re: Wernikoff On Maccabee
- Date: 12 Jul 91 00:15:00 GMT
-
-
- JS> In a message to Michael Corbin <06-29-91 09:08> Jim Greenen
- JS> wrote:
- JS> -> Ed did the right thing by letting MUFON handle the photo
- JS> ->analyzes. MUFON has also sent the photo's to another expert
- JS> ->and they are being looked at now. The results should be
- JS>
- JS> What makes you so sure that MUFON hasn't been "compromised"
- JS> by the control group at the highest levels?
- JS>
- JS> Jim
- JS>
- JS> --- QuickBBS 2.66 (Eval)
- JS> * Origin: ParaNet(sm) Zeta-Reticuli Scottsdale, AZ
- JS> 9:1010/100 (0:0/0)
- I don't, Jim. But from all the other facts in the GB case makes Ed's
- photos look awful good. ---Jim---
- --
- Jim Greenen - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Jim.Greenen@f29.n363.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Linda.Bird@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (Linda Bird)
- Subject: Re: RE: Paranet Newsletter 435
- Date: 12 Jul 91 06:47:00 GMT
-
- Hello,
- Thanks for posting the info on migraine headaches. I used to get
- them severely as a Senior in H.S. When I noted this on my medical
- form as a college Freshman, I was called to the medical center (Cal
- State Long Beach) and asked to take a "self-hypnosis" class that
- dealt with students with migraines.
-
- I did take the class and found the self-hypnosis techniques worked
- extremely well. I seldom ever get headaches now, and I'm
- "fortysomething." :-)
-
- Regards,
- Linda Bird
- --
- Linda Bird - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Linda.Bird@paranet.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Michael Corbin)
- Subject: Roswell Discussion
- Date: 12 Jul 91 18:15:00 GMT
-
-
- > 1) The entire second crash site scenario is a house of cards. Barney
- > Barnett, by all previous accounts, had been placed at Magdalena at the
- > time of the crash. Ruth Barnett's diary is quoted as authoritative at
- > one point, in order to put Barney in his office, yet later the authors
- > speculate that her diary entry placing Barney "300 miles[*]" from -
- > their- second crash site may have been due to Barney lying to his wife
- > under pressure from the military. This is an inconsistent use of
- > documentary evidence. The authors were stretching in their speculation,
- > yet they use this speculation later as part of the foundation of their
- > conclusion that a second crash site, complete with bodies, existed. It
- > doesn't wash that Barney would lie to his wife, yet tell the truth to
- > his niece.
-
- I feel that these inconsistencies serve to support the case even more. Barney
- Barnett may have been under so much duress at that time that he did exactly
- what the military told him to do under threat of criminal prosecution.
- However, the authors do claim that the Barnett connection is very ambiguous.
- I feel that they have not stretched their speculation regarding this point.
- On another similarly related point, Magdalena was noted by the authors to not
- be the point of the second debris field. However, LaPaz was sent out a little
- over a year later to discover yet another related debris field.
-
- > 2) Mac Brazel, who saw only a debris field, was imprisoned for days and
- > supposedly debriefed by the military. Barney Barnett, who saw a saucer,
- > bodies, the whole shootin' match, was merely "shooed away" by the
- > military.
-
- This is unfounded and is not even a legit point. First, we don't know exactly
- what Mac Brazel saw. We don't know what his attitude was with the military
- which prompted them to cloister him for those days. He was also the caretaker
- of the land that the debris crashed on. He could have made it very difficult
- for the military to carry out their operation by being present while they did
- their work. As with the witnesses at the other crash site, they were alleged
- to have been sworn to secrecy and sent on their way. Since Brazel was
- considerably more intimate with the affair, more so than Barnett, it makes
- perfect sense that they would try to persuade him to be cooperative.
-
- > 3) A glaring inconsistency in the much-vaunted time-line: The "first
- > flight from Washington" arrived at Roswell at 12 Noon. Allowing for a
- > two-hour drive to Corona, that places them at the crash site around 2PM.
- > Yet the CIC man stated that a "photography crew from Washington" had
- > been on the scene by 11AM. How did they get there?
-
- A trivial point. The Air Force uses planes. If they flew in from Washington,
- it would make perfect sense that they flew to the site and may have landed on
- the roadway, or someplace else in close proximity to the debris field.
-
- > 4) The gases that cause the stench associated with decomposition also
- > cause profound bloating, which would result in "fat corpses." Yet the
- > corpses were invariably described as "skinny."
-
- Again, trivial. If we are dealing with non-human entities, then we do not
- know that their method of decomposition would be consistent with humans.
-
- > 5) On the flight from Roswell to Ft. Worth, armed guards were placed
- > around the crates containing the wreckage (and possibly the bodies). No
- > one on that flight was allowed near it. Yet on the flight from Ft. Worth
- > to Dayton, as attested to by Pappy Henderson, the crew were allowed to
- > handle the debris (now supposedly ESTABLISHED to be a flying saucer) to
- > their heart's content.
-
- Without looking back at the book, wasn't that material contained in a shoe
- box? This is not the same material that was on the flight deck to be flown to
- Dayton. I will have to check this point out further.
-
- > 6) The crate used to ship the alleged bodies measured 14' by 5' by 5'
- > (or thereabouts). This works out to about 300 cubic feet. This much ice
- > would weigh 18,000 lbs. Allowing for a hollowed-out area to contain the
- > bodies, let's say anywhere from 10,000-12,000 pounds. Yet one of the
- > crewmen was quoted as saying that the weight-and-balance man cleared the
- > plane for flight without doing his calculations, since the load would be
- > so light.
-
- Without knowing my aviation stuff, as I suspect Mike doesn't, I would say that
- 18,000 pounds is nothing compared to other cargo that the military would fly
- in a cargo hold of one of their planes. Also, due to the nature of the
- material that was contained in the cargo, all of the necessary arrangements
- would have been pre-arranged to alleviate another person in the chain of
- having intimate knowledge of his cargo.
-
- > I have to say that I acknowledge and agree with the above objections,
- > and others that Mike raises. These are points that sorely need to be
- > addressed, if the authors wish to maintain the integrity of their
- > investigation. However, I part company with Mike on the ultimate
- > conclusion to be drawn from these discrepancies. I view these as a point
- > of departure for further research, rather than as a basis for dismissal
- > of the case as a whole. Mike said that the authors were inconsistent; I
- > replied that it was the evidence that was inconsistent, and the authors
- > were to be commended for including contradictory testimony, and labeling
- > it as such.
-
- I have to disagree completely. What amazes me is that this argument is
- another of the typical "maintain the party line" in direct opposition of solid
- eyewitness data to a very extraordinary incident. Granted, it is not the
- flying-saucer-lands-on-the-White-House-Lawn that would settle this business
- once and for all, but it does prove that many people were involved in a highly
- organized effort to clean up a crash site where something very strange
- crashed. The main points to consider, and for the debunkers to address are:
-
- 1) If it was a weather balloon, why the need for secrecy for over 40 years
- since the original event? Even the most highly classified aerial project that
- they would have had going at that time would surely have become obsolete with
- the technological advances that have been made since that time. After all,
- the Manhattan Project, known to be one of this nation's most classified
- projects, is now available in your local library.
-
- 2) Why would trained observers like Marcel make such a stupid mistake in
- identification of a simple weather balloon? Even if it was classified, the
- weather balloon was as common as the automobile. Would Marcel have made such
- a misidentification? Surely not.
-
- 3) The amount of witnesses testifying to an extraordinary event is
- staggering. I admit that the AFOSI might go to nominal extremes to disinform
- the public, but to influence over 300 people to directly lie about an incident
- just for the sake of trickery on the public is ludicrous, not to mention the
- amount of time that has passed. Even with faded memories, the same bottom
- line consensus is arrived at: It was something foreign to our technology.
-
- Let's get real! Something happened at Roswell in 1947. Whether it represents
- extraterrestrial technology or something prosaic that is highly advanced is
- not necessarily the issue. We need to find out what it represents, and why it
- has represented such a big cloud of secrecy that has stretched to 1991, 44
- years later.
-
- This example above is not skepticism, it is debunkery. I am skeptical, and I
- will admit that something happened there.
-
- Mike
-
- --
- Michael Corbin - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Michael Corbin)
- Subject: Re: Cfr, Russia And Other Off-topic "gee-whiz" Excuses....
- Date: 12 Jul 91 18:18:00 GMT
-
-
- > > From: lush@ecn.purdue.edu (Gregory B Lush)
- >
- > Can someone please inform me as to what the gibberish in line number
- > one above is? I mean, on my computer, it says:
- > From: lush@ecn.purdue.edu
- > Now, I can understand what the word lush is (although I believe it is
- > misspelled) and Purdue is obviously familiar, but what is the @ecn.?
- > Is this an interpretation of some high-bit ascii characters, or what?
-
- This is best left for the sysop conference or netmail, but it is the
- addressing path for Internet traffic. the "ecn" represents the name of the
- organization where Mr. Lush is posting from. As in the words of Outer Limits
- program, "Do not adjust your set. We are in complete control of the video and
- the audio." <grin>
-
- Mike
-
- --
- Michael Corbin - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Michael Corbin)
- Subject: (none)
- Date: 12 Jul 91 19:01:00 GMT
-
-
- > From: lush@ecn.purdue.edu (Gregory B Lush)
-
- Greg,
-
- After reading your message, I have come to the conclusion that there is just
- no common ground between our viewpoints. I suggest that we agree to
- disagree. However, just to clarify my position on things about this whole
- mess...
-
- I do believe that there is something going on. There are just too many
- people reporting things to dismiss it out-of-hand. But, at the same time, I
- object to those who have no idea of what it is trying to convince others that
- they have the truth without proof of it. When I use the word "proof" I speak
- of not what it would take to convince you or me of the validity of something,
- but what it takes to convince the masses. It is clear that we are battling
- the same thing: Big media, mega-bucks and everything else that fits into that
- camp. This also does not validate their position, but they have a corner on
- the market when it comes to knowing which buttons to push. They did not come
- to these strategies by just guessing. They employed known and tested
- psychological methods to know what it is that we want to hear. Obviously it
- works, so something can be said for scientific study.
-
- The problem with this whole UFO field is that no one is willing to make the
- commitment to see it through. Since most people already have the answers,
- they have no interest in pursuing it further. But, all the while that they
- are convinced that they have the answers, the real thing might be going on
- somewhere else.
-
- Do you really know the agenda of these aliens or whatever they are? If you
- do, then why don't they come out and show themselves?
-
- On another note, do psychics really have the answers? If so, then why didn't
- they channel the dead president that they thought was poisoned so we could
- get the real scoop? If they really are in contact with those out there, then
- why do we still have social problems? Why can't we cure cancer and AIDS?
- The answers are simple. If the "space brothers" are real, and their
- intentions were good, we would see drastic social changes, but we don't. We
- would see a movement to be indoctrinated into the galactic society, but we
- aren't. There is no progress being made at all.
-
- I say that I am grateful for what science has done thus far. Thank goodness
- we don't have pseudo-scientists building bridges and airplanes. If we did,
- we would really be in trouble.
-
- On a closing note, there is this word "ESPIONAGE" that keeps troubling me.
- Until we know what the agenda is, we have to approach this thing with the
- utmost care. I do recall that several noted scientists involved with early
- SETI were also concerned with this aspect of making contact with aliens should
- that ever happen, much less what could happen if they intercept a signal sent
- out by us.
-
- Mike
-
- --
- Michael Corbin - via FidoNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- From: ncar!gatech!ucsd!cs.UCSD.EDU!pluto
- Subject: Your posting to sci.skeptic (as seen on Paranet.)
- Date: 12 Jul 91 21:14:52 GMT
-
-
- ----- Begin Included Message -----
-
- * Forwarded from 'Sci.Skeptic'
- * Originally from John Stach X6191
- * Originally dated 07-03-91 12:16
-
- From: stach@fritz.sri.com (John Stach x6191)
- Date: 2 Jul 91 15:34:56 GMT
- Organization: SRI International
- Message-ID: <25986@unix.SRI.COM>
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
-
- There was a debate on the alleged UFO crash in New Mexico on Larry
- King last night. One of the authors of a new book on the incident was
- there to promote it. The facts and figures were the same as we've
- seen here over and over so I won't comment on them.
-
- However, the debate itself was interesting. On the pro-UFO side there
- was the author, the public affairs oficer at a nearby Army-Air Force
- base at the time, and a woman who had witnessed pieces when she was
- young. On the skeptical side, there was an older man who has studied
- UFO sightings and concluded that none had a shred of hard evidence.
-
- Although reason and the obvious may have sided with the skeptic, IMHO
- the debate was won by the author and company in the public's view. It
- seemed that the skeptic had a general knowledge of the incident but
- not nearly enough first-hand knowledge of testimony to argue
- convincingly against the evidence presented by the author.
-
- I remain unconvinced, but I believe this tends to be typical of
- debates of this sort. Since the believers have a mission, their
- knowledge of the subject matter and their careful construction of
- facts reflects the years of effort (delusion?) put into it. The
- skeptics, realizing the obvious, do not consider a similar effort
- worthwhile. I'm not blaming, just observing.
-
- I think this contributes to the public's acceptance of the weird.
-
-
- John
-
- ----- End Included Message -----
-
- Actually, I didn't think that the author defended his point of view as well
- as he could have against the flimsy but popular retorts of Klass. You should
- also know that Klass has put quite a lot of effort into his 'Mission' -- and
- a mission it is -- he believes in his point of view enough to call anyone
- who disagrees with him a 'kook' and question their credibility by calling
- attention to their age or personal characteristics. Another favorite strategy
- of his is not to judge the evidence on its own merits, but to try to reduce
- it to an absurdity, by saying, 'If this were true, then, why is it not true
- that ...[fill in the blank with an appropriately absurd situation.]'
- I think that these arguments are persuasive enough to a large segment of
- the population to have allowed Klass to come out about even in this debate,
- even though he was up against two people with access to (apparently) much
- better information than he had.
-
- It should be noted that the author did point out that he used to be on the
- other side of the fence in this debate, and that he claims to have changed
- his opinion due to the evidence. We can only take this for what it's worth,
- i.e., take his word for it. However, it did make him seem more objective than
- Klass. I have never heard Klass adopt even a moderately objective stance.
- When confronted with evidence that is currently unexplainable
- he typically changes the subject, or else pulls another ad absurdum argument
- out of his hat. I think the skeptics have a valuable role to play in this
- field, that of eliminating the kooks who are really messing up the picture --
- but I also think that they need a new spokesman, because Klass' arguments are
- wearing thin in his old age.
-
- (That last barb is understandable by any who saw the show and heard him
- challenge the witnesses by pointing out either their current elderly age,
- or the youthful age they were at the time they were first hand witnesses.)
-
- To be fair, other than the presence of the public relations officer, who
- seemed to be in the know, and lended a fair amount of credibility to the
- author's side of the debate, I didn't see any new evidence -- for example,
- when it was maintained that the physical evidence was not from a balloon
- or radar target, they didn't explain why they believed this to be true.
- Then, they show a video clip of a woman handling some metallic material
- that could easily have been taken from a weather balloon or radar target.
- So, while Klass lost a great deal of respect in my eyes due to the way he
- handled himself (as he usually does) the author did not do a great job
- of increasing my faith in his evidence - and the public relations officer
- was sufficiently enigmatic to make me hesitant to embrace his evidence as
- anything other than hearsay.
-
-
- = Mark Plutowski
-
-
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- ******************The**End**of**Info-ParaNet**Newsletter************************
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