by
Michael E. Salla, PhD December 15, 2004
The study of
the UFO phenomenon has long been dominated by researchers
whose primary backgrounds have been in the natural sciences such as
Astronomy, Physics, Engineering, Aviation, etc. Donald Keyhoe,
Allen Hynek, Edward Ruppelt, and Stanton Friedman are
some examples of distinguished UFOlogists whose competence in these
fields have been a chief characteristic of their careers and have won the
admiration of many in the field of Ufology. The methodologies used
by ’Ufologists’ in general has been to rigorously use their
professional training to work through UFO reports,
photographic evidence, FOIA documents, witness testimonies, archival
records, etc., to reach some agreement as to what can be known with
reasonable certainty regarding UFO related evidence and the
extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH).
Ufologists view their research as consistent with
natural scientific standards which they aggressively defend against the
skepticism and dismissive attitudes thrown towards them by the scientific
community in general. Winning the respect of mainstream scientists by
using methodologies appropriated from the natural sciences to produce top
quality research that stands the scrutiny of critics and skeptics has been
an important goal of Ufologists. In adhering to this high standard
of natural science methodology, Ufologists tend to be parsimonious
and in turn are dismissive of controversial sources of evidentiary
material, or evidence that can’t be substantiated using the scientific
standards promoted by Ufologists. This can be lauded since gaining
scientific acceptance for the rigorous research of anomalous phenomena
that substantiates the ETH is a desirable goal. Yet on the
other hand one can question what is the cost of maintaining a rigorous
natural sciences methodology that is very parsimonious in its approach to
various evidentiary sources that allegedly substantiate the
ETH? There is also a bias here as to what is scientific and
what isn’t.
The cost in my view is unnecessarily large which is why
I’m appealing to Ufologists to move beyond the myopic
focus of gaining acceptance from scientific colleagues by using
methodologies appropriated from the natural sciences, and to more
seriously consider an exopolitical approach to the ETH.
There are many reasons that can be cited for why an exopolitical approach
is warranted in dealing with the UFO phenomenon and the
ETH.
One, the ETH behind
the UFO phenomenon was never an exclusively technical
problem that required a natural scientific methodology in addressing.
There was also a very clear political and national security dimension
behind the UFO phenomenon and the ETH. This is
made very clear in events such as General Voyt Vandenberg rejecting
the initial Estimate of the Situation presented by the
Project Sign team in 1948 on grounds that were political and
national security related rather than technical
(see
HERE). This and many other examples
drawn from the national security dimensions of the UFO
phenomenon merits political analysis of the ETH by
researchers using methodologies derived from political science. This
necessarily requires breaking free of an exclusive technical analysis by
Ufologists using natural science methodologies, and moving into the arena
of exopolitics. Thus exopolitics focuses on the study of the key actors,
institutions and processes behind the UFO phenomenon and the
ETH.
Two, the general public
overwhelming believe that the ETH is true and that a
political cover-up is underway. A 2002 Roper poll confirmed that almost
70% of the US public support the ETH and believe that a government
cover up is underway (http://www.scifi.com/ufo/roper/04.html). While it
is legitimate to point out the science is not conducted by public opinion
polls, it is equally legitimate to point out that public policy/national
security policies are influenced by public opinion. So while the natural
sciences may dismiss the relevance of public opinion in conducting pure
science, this approach is not shared by political science where public
opinion is any important factor in the formulation and implementation of
public policy and national security policy.
Three,
the testimony of numerous whistleblowers that has been compiled by the Disclosure Project points to the extensive
national security cover up of evidence validating the ETH.
Steven Greer’s work in
gaining the testimony and/or commitment of up to 400 whistleblowers for
possible disclosure before a US congressional committee has brought into
the public arena a wealth of information that has great exopolitical
significance.
Finally, the evidence provided by UFO
sightings, alleged extraterrestrial abductions/contacts, remote viewers,
and other evidentiary sources is overwhelming in scope and details
concerning the ETH. These reasons all contribute to the central
premise of exopolitics that evidence supporting the ETH is
overwhelming and we need to start thinking about the political
implications of the cover-up that has been underway for more than five
decades.
As far as criticisms of my own exopolitics research is
concerned, let me set the record straight by saying that I don’t consider
myself to be a UFO researcher or Ufologist in search of evidence
proving the existence of the UFO phenomenon, but a political scientist
using qualitative analysis of the various sources of evidence pertaining
to non-disclosure of an extraterrestrial presence. I rely heavily on the
testimonies of a variety of whistleblowers in drawing my exopolitical
analyses of various issues relevant to the ETH. The criteria I have used
in assembling these sources for my exopolitical analysis in have included
the following:
-
Coherence -
testimony is marked by absence of conflicting statements and internal
contradictions
-
Consistency
- testimony is consistent with two or more independent
sources
-
Motivation
- individual is motivated to disseminate information for legitimate
purposes rather than out of a desire for recognition, monetary
compensation, or political advantage
-
Integrity -
individual displays high degree of principle in responding to
intimidation, harassment or other negative behavior
-
Independence - individual is not unduly influenced by
government intelligence agencies and/or extraterrestrial
race
-
Evidence -
is there physical evidence to substantiate the claims of
witness/whistleblower/remote viewer
The above
criteria are helpful guides for any competent researcher in determining
the validity of a particular category of testimony or evidence concerning
the ETH. Due to these criteria having a mix of objective and
subjective features, there is a need for the competent researchers to deal
with the available material using an inclusive or broad multi-disciplinary
approach. A parsimonious approach as to what constitutes credible
evidence/testimony for extraterrestrial researchers
is untenable due to the inherent difficult of making conclusive statements
about the range of testimonies that
witnesses/contactees/whistleblowers make available. The subject
matter is often so exotic and government interference with evidence,
witnesses and whistleblowers is so pervasive that excluding some
categories of evidence is untenable and methodologically unsound. While
the above criteria may not satisfy the parsimonious researcher seeking a
restricted pool of data from which to draw reliable conclusions that might
impress colleagues in the natural sciences, the above criteria provide a
safety net for ensuring reliable and accurate information for research
into the ETH.
Furthermore, there has also been
criticism of my exopolitics research in terms of my using
"material from the internet" rather than presumably reports,
interviews and analysis gained from field research, laboratory analysis
and archival research favored by 'serious Ufologists’. This is what
was actually said in a Washington Post interview by Peter
Carlson where I referred to my use of the internet to support my
exopolitics research on the alleged
Eisenhower-extraterrestrial meeting:
'he
[Salla] says, he found evidence of ET visitations --
including the Ike encounter -- on the Internet. "There’s a lot of stuff
on the Internet," he says, "and I just went around and pieced it
together"’
(http://www.exopolitics.org/Wash-Post-Ike and
ETs.htm).
Now the quote
refers primarily to extraterrestrial visitations and the
Eisenhower-Extraterrestrial
encounter where most of the material for that meeting
was found using sources available on the internet. It should be pretty
clear that evidence of an Eisenhower-extraterrestrial meeting is
not going to be readily available using FOIA requests,
archival research, and involves citing some of controversial
whistleblower sources whose work is freely available on the
internet. In addition, I conducted a number of interviews with various
individuals with information on the alleged Eisenhower meeting
which I did not disclose in the Washington Post article. While I
see no problem in using internet sources for building a case for an
undisclosed extraterrestrial visitation that resulted in a series of
secret agreements with the U.S. government, I was never claiming that this
was exclusive and sufficient for exopolitics research, and I did
use additional sources of information such as confidential interviews to
support this research.
The sources of evidence for the
exopolitics research I conduct are wide ranging and the internet is
an acceptable though not exclusive source of evidence for exopolitics.
Part of the problem with internet research is that there is an inherent
bias in Ufology which uses primarily methodologies appropriate to the
natural sciences, rather social sciences. The qualitative methodologies I
use involve analyzing the credibility, coherence, consistency and clarity
of whistleblowers whom I cite and who I have interviewed in a number of
cases. Ufologists would instead focus on the credentials and empirical
evidence that can be validated which in the case of controversial
whistleblowers is often not possible.
The justification I use for
the different exopolitical sources I cite is found in an online study
paper I published in January 2003 (see HERE), which was revised for the first chapter of my
book, Exopolitics (Dandelion Books,
2004). Many sources of whistleblower, abductees/contactees, remote viewing
and other information are found on the internet. Some of the
whistleblowers I cited gave lectures/interviews or released material that
is widely available and in some cases ONLY available on the internet.
While the internet is an important source for gaining evidence of the
extraterrestrial visitations, this does not make it exclusive, nor does it
obviate the need for field work, interviews, archival research and
laboratory analysis when appropriate. There is some sort of balance in
qualitative and quantitative methodologies required here and while
elusive, this is something worth exploring when it comes to the
ETH.
Exopolitics is gaining popularity because the
general public have tired of Ufologists debating ad
nauseum technical information validating the ETH. The
public are seeking objective political analysis of the ETH which is
substantiated by an overwhelming body of evidence that validates the
ETH, and how and why government authorities are not
disclosing information. I hope that Ufologists give
exopolitics research more serious attention rather than simply promoting
Ufology as a discipline that is based on the methodological biases drawn
from the natural science backgrounds of most Ufologists.
The cost for
not taking exopolitics more seriously is that Ufology risks
losing touch with what most concerns the general public about what
evidence overwhelmingly points to as an undisclosed extraterrestrial
presence. The long term cost to Ufology for not
taking exopolitics seriously is Ufology risks becoming a
politically irrelevant hobby, or at worst, a complicit actor in
suppressing evidence supporting the ETH.
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