Are UFOs technically feasible
using current technology? Mr. Hill seems to think so, and says so in this book. But if
they could be terrestrial in origin, who's flying them?
Jim Moseley is one of the most
entertaining and well-connected UFO researchers out there. Editor of Saucer Smear,
he gets all the inside news and gossip before almost anyone else, with the possible
exception of Phil Klass.
Phil Klass is the skeptic-emeritus of the UFO
world. His quarterly newsletter generally scoops everyone else, with the possible
exception of Jim Moseley. Even if you don't agee with his conclusions you should get the
newsletter just to so you can tell your friends, "Yes, I already knew about
that," when they breathlessly tell you of Budd Hopkins' latest alien abduction of the
century.
We
all seek balance in life, even more so when studying such controversial topics as
unidentified flying sauers. If you believe UFOs are alien craft, come to Earth for reasons
unfathonable to humans, or if you believe UFOs are actually hoaxes or misidentifications
of natural phenomena, you should read this. Mr. Sheaffer expands on his (now out of print)
UFO Verdict and demonstrates how an approach which does not presuppose the
"alien hypothesis" leads to quite different conclusions than you'd expect.
Fortunately, this was marketed as fiction, or the game would be up for
Majestic Twelve! John Oliver Banion is (apparently) abducted by aliens and becomes a
virtual messiah for UFO movement. But was he really abducted, or was it a screwed-up
misinformation campaign by the super-secret group, Majestic Twelve?
MJ-2 says:
"This is the worst thing to happen to Majestic Twelve since that book about the real
Roswell cover-up! Uh, that microphone isn't live, is it? Never mind."
What
goes around, comes around. And such is the case with the Hudson Valley UFO sightings of
1982. In this case, enormous, boomerang-shaped craft moved slowly in the skies above quite
neighborhoods. And they kep coming back...