Sea Turtle
Slow and steady wins the race
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Sorry if this has been posted but what do you guys think of the Skinwalker Ranch case?
Have you been watching the History channel or whatever channel the show it on? Seems like a lot of nothingSorry if this has been posted but what do you guys think of the Skinwalker Ranch case?
Yes, which I why I post this now. I saw a couple of episodes last night. So far it hasn't been as interesting as the online stories you see.Have you been watching the History channel or whatever channel the show it on? Seems like a lot of nothing
Sounds like the curse of oak island.There was a discussion about it several months ago here or in the What Are You Watching thread. I thought the show was one long empty tease without a shred of substance.
Curse of Oak Island at least they find some stuff here and there and some of the man made stuff found while digging is interesting. I don't think they will ever find the "treasure" they think is there but the show is fun if you watching for the history side of things.Sounds like the curse of oak island.
Mike loved your book UFOs and Government.Well .... very long story and far more complicated than you'll ever get on mass-view TV.
Not sure that I want to go into it. (also Bishop and others tend to just disregard my inside info, and that's a bit irritating.)
I'll just give a few bullet points:
1. There were claims about odd things there from the late 1980s at a minimum (Native American much longer.)
2. Bob Bigelow bought the place to do what he hoped would be hi-tech UFO research there.
3. I knew Bob and his research director, Colm Kelleher, personally, and got over-the-lunch table inside talk on it.
4. Bigelow decided that it wasn't producing enough data and sold it. New owners are exploiters.
5. Kelleher told me that there were some genuinely peculiar incidents (to say the least) but resisting explanation.
6. Injury to workers cases were MRId by top NSA/CIA bioscientist (Known very well by several of my friends.)
7. This spooky guy (Christopher Green if you must know a name) believes that the injuries are NOT due to UFOs.
8. Injury types are felt to be caused by specific RF frequency broadcasts probably delivered by drones.
9. These injuries are felt to be a different problem than some of the more paranormal events out there.
That's enough. I'll hand the "conclusions" over to those with deeper information. (italics)
The book by Kelleher isn't bad for the parts he oversaw. The news writer is less trustworthy. Eric Davis not at all.
I've not been dismissive of anything you've posted, Mike. I'm just in the camp that thinks Sagan was right when he said that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. "It's amazing and unusual and we can't explain it" is not proof that it's from an extraterrestrial intelligence.Well .... very long story and far more complicated than you'll ever get on mass-view TV.
Not sure that I want to go into it. (also Bishop and others tend to just disregard my inside info, and that's a bit irritating.)
We don't have the technology now to do what these things are capable of and we certainly didn't have the technology 70-75 years ago.I've not been dismissive of anything you've posted, Mike. I'm just in the camp that thinks Sagan was right when he said that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. "It's amazing and unusual and we can't explain it" is not proof that it's from an extraterrestrial intelligence.
I strongly believe there is intelligent life out there. I'd set the odds at better than 90%. I'm much less convinced that they've ever visited us. If they have, that would require a civilization whose technology is far, far beyond ours at this moment, and I can't imagine in my wildest dreams that such an advanced civilization would find it difficult to observe us without detection. If they want to make contact, then the current type of questionable sightings sure is an odd, ineffective, difficult to explain way to do so, and if they don't want us to know they're here, I can't imagine they'd have any trouble hiding themselves from us completely.
I believe all the sightings are simply military testing, intentional deceit on the part of the military to cover up such testing, or over-active imaginations. I'd love to be convinced otherwise and see some genuinely compelling evidence and proof of ETI, but until I do, I'll remain skeptical of all claims. I enjoy your posts on the subject and respect the work you've done. I just haven't seen any evidence that crosses from interesting and thought-provoking to convincing and proof.
Invoking Sagan’s evidentiary quotes to diminish this thread’s legitimacy is peak gaslighting. Makes me think you don’t understand what Carl was all about in the least. That quote was a pot shot a religion because at least with science there are ways to obtain knowledge that doesn’t involve handwaving and acceptance without evidence.I'm sorry you're bothered by my skepticism, Mike. I didn't say I couldn't imagine "any of this." I very clearly and specifically said I couldn't imagine that such an advanced civilization would find it difficult to observe us without detection. Please don't misrepresent my statements nor my thoughts.
OMM, this has to be the coolest thing I've seen on IE in the 15 or so years I've been on this site. Your insights on Carl are absolutely fascinating as well. I am no expert on these matters, so I keep my mouth shut--but I just wanted to give you a shout-out for all of your contributions to this site, and science in general. You've enriched my life greatly over the years.View attachment 3050712
For doubters, I just found this old image from the Face on Mars conversation time.

Strange observation but I have to ask - why so many duplicate copies of different books on the book shelf? Signed copies? Don't trust they will return when lent out? People know your interests so you end up with multiple gifted copies?Very flattered. I was a good science teacher and the "trick" was to be adventurously open to all possibilities while insisting that we do the necessary work ourselves in the studies, maintain active flexibility to alternative hypotheses, and not be dismissive of others simply because what they say doesn't resonate with our view of the world. I called that "policy" Earning An Opinion That Was Worth Speaking In Public. The kids loved that attitude, which coincidentally SHOULD be the Objective Scientific Method in part. I'm sure that we are all aware here on IE that very few of us actually live our internet lives by that policy.
But soapbox over. I've spent a VERY long exploratory life looking into almost all the substantive topics relevant to this thread, and if I have useful information on any question, and if it is phrased respectfully, and if it CAN be answered in less than a weekend Chataqua Workshop worth of intensity, I'll do my best to share. Now that I'm in this retirement community, I've left a lot of my files behind and so won't be able
to give factually solid responses (so on such things I won't.) Photo of me making fun of myself (a good general policy also.) View attachment 3050753
We may be wearing you out, OMM, so don't feel obligated to respond, but, regarding the second paragraph of your post, what are your views on someone like Sam Harris, particularly on his book Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality without Religion? He doesn't like the word "atheist" but he certainly is one of the so-called "New Atheists." He's also a materialist, and by his own account a very spiritual man--having had some of the same experiences as him (minus the LSD, haha), I believe him to be so. Further, he refers to himself as agnostic regarding Psi Phenomena and similar things.I'm sitting in the library of the Center for UFO Studies prior to a board meeting in that picture. The CUFOS librarian cannot help acting like a professional librarian (Masters in Library Science from Kansas) so he collects both every edition of some books plus multicopies of ones he considers worthy of same. There was only one copy of Round Trip, by the way. ... appropriate for its "high" quality.
otherwise: both my faith in faith and my not-very-popular theory of Bigfoot are in their wildly different ways VERY long stories to tell. Don't know if I could ever condense them into a reasonable set of paragraphs here. One thing: the savvy atheists oppose all things in the psychic areas just as violently as in the GOD area. They know that opening the door to exploring the possible paranormal claims leads to direct violation of their "There is nothing but Matter moving in its lawful ways" gospel (i.e. materialist reductionism.) To give even a little on that opens the doors to the Spiritual and that is the death knell of Materialist Reductionism. That would force them to expand their consciousnesses beyond mere matter to, at a minimum, well, "consciousness." That terrifies them. Anything smacking of the Soul and Free Will kills not GOD but their Universe of Minimalism.