from Examiner Website
A new breed of UFOlogist has emerged as critics of the burgeoning exopolitics movement.
It’s no surprise that in the lead up and success of the world’s first Exopolitics Summit in Barcelona, Spain, that UFOlogists would increasingly perceive exopolitics as an existential threat. The existential threat, according to UFOlogists acting as gatekeepers for “legitimate UFO research,” is that exopoliticians mix reliable with unreliable UFO sources in their analyses.
Indeed, this mixing of reliable and unreliable sources leads to a special form of hysteria among gatekeepers of legitimate UFO research.
Existential hysteria leads to UFOlogical gatekeepers claiming in all seriousness that exopolitics has become the main obstacle to genuine UFO disclosure. The reality is that after six decades of earnest activity, UFOlogy has failed to take humanity to the promised land of genuine government disclosure of UFOs, and a new set of pioneers have stepped in to light the way.
These
exopolitical pioneers believe that a nuanced consideration of ALL
evidentiary sources and related political processes will expose the truth
behind the extraterrestrial hypothesis – that some UFOs are interplanetary
in origin.
In such an endeavor, any evidence deemed to be unreliable, tainted, not consistent with facts, is jettisoned in order not to corrupt the raw pool of reliable data needed to convince UFO skeptics. The end result of this rigid filtering process is a pool of data that UFOs are indeed real and have important national security implications.
For example,
UFOs outperform modern aircraft, have crashed and been retrieved in
mysterious circumstances, and are often sighted near nuclear
installations.
Indeed, former
employees of government agencies go as far as claiming that UFOs are
related to mistaken identification of covert military programs such as the
U-2 and Oxcart spy
planes.
Most importantly, exopoliticians point to a psychological warfare program that began in the early 1950s to debunk, discredit and misinform the public about the truth behind the extraterrestrial hypothesis.
Declassified documents reveal that psychological warfare was a key feature of a Majestic Project initiated during the height of the flying saucer phenomenon in the early 1950s. Three 1952 Top Secret memos from the Joint Chiefs of Staff titled, "Joint Logistic Plan for MAJESTIC" (above images) were declassified in 1976 and state:
The significance of this set of memos is that it shows that in 1952 a project called MAJESTIC was underway and this involved significant support across a wide spectrum of areas that would be expected for something involving UFOs and the extraterrestrial hypothesis.
The psychological warfare program led to many genuine witnesses of UFOs and their alleged occupants being discredited, harassed or intimidated into silence.
A key part of the discrediting of witnesses was to taint their reliability by removing supporting evidence, silencing independent observers, creating false documents, fabricating claims, character assassination and many other measures found in any psychological warfare manual.
These actions against UFO witnesses had many similarities to the FBI’s COINTELPRO.
The 1975 Church Committee described COINTELPRO as follows:
Covert Actions Against American Citizens Living in America
In the case of
witnesses of UFOs and/or their alleged interplanetary occupants, I have
referred to this elsewhere as Galactic
COINTELPRO.
Many sources deemed “unreliable” by modern UFO gatekeepers may in fact have been subjected to psychological warfare techniques intended to discredit their testimonies or supporting evidence such as photos, films, etc. Alternatively, some witnesses may be actively participating in a psychological warfare technique based on “hiding the truth in plain sight”. This involves genuine information being disseminated by discredited sources in an effort to get the general public to dismiss important information concerning UFOs and extraterrestrial life and technology.
Finally, some
sources deemed to be “credible”, may in fact be part of a psychological
warfare program to steer the public into unproductive lines of inquiry
into the UFO phenomenon.
Special note should go to Robert Hastings, author of UFOs and Nukes, who excels in hysterical overreaction when it comes to the use of sources he declares unreliable. David Biedny and Gene Steinberg, hosts of Paracast Radio have consistently shown an astounding lack of intellectual honesty in declaring which sources or witnesses they find reliable or not.
For example, they had image expert Jim Dilettoso appear as guest who promptly revealed that 40 of the earliest Billy Meier photos were real, and that models were then created for hoaxed photos for comparative purposes. Totally ignoring this very important information, Biedny and Steinberg go on to declare that the Billy Meier photos are fraudulent based on their analysis of later hoaxed photos.
Finally, small
mention should also be made of retired Air Force Captain Robert
Salas who in a moment of poor judgment deigned to join the existential
hysteria created by Hastings, Biedny and Steinberg, and penned an article attacking
exopolitics pioneers who had the temerity to support his work while also
supporting those he deems unreliable.
Beware the artificial dichotomies created by the new breed of UFOlogical gatekeepers who deign to declare from on high which sources are reliable and unreliable based on framing the UFO issue as a strict scientific problem.
The truth of the extraterrestrial hypothesis will be found by a more nuanced approach that rightfully considers its political and national security aspects.
Michael Salla Exopolitics Summit
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