| 
			  
			  
			  
			
			
 UFO Phenomena and the 
			Self-Censorship of Science
 by George C. Andrews
 
 In the field of UFO research, there is a constant tug-of-war between 
			zealot skeptics and zealot true believers, which like a 
			Punch-and-Judy show distracts public attention from open-minded 
			attempts to address the real issues, since both of these groups have 
			their minds made up in advance.
 
 It is unfortunate that a large proportion of the academic community 
			falls into the category of zealot skeptics, insofar as UFO phenomena 
			are concerned. Although regrettable, this is understandable, since 
			any other attitude endangers the grants on which their livelihood 
			depends, as well as their prestige in the hierarchy's pecking order.
 
 The treatment Dr. John Mack received from his colleagues and the 
			trustees at Harvard after his book on UFO abductions was published 
			amply illustrates what happens when a previously respected professor 
			investigates a taboo subject and comes up with unconventional 
			conclusions. However, Dr. Mack emerged from the controversy 
			relatively unscathed, when one compares what happened to him with 
			what happened to Dr. James E. McDonald about a quarter of a century 
			earlier.
 
 Dr. James E. McDonald was Senior Physicist of the Institute of 
			Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Arizona. He thought that 
			the Federal Power Commission was evading the evidence concerning UFO 
			involvement in the total power failure that paralyzed New York on 
			July 13th, 1965, and dared to say so in front of a Congressional 
			committee. His courageous statements on this and other occasions 
			triggered a torrent of derision and abuse, and he was ostentatiously 
			ostracized by his colleagues, in ways reminiscent of the treatment 
			Dr. Mack recently received from his colleagues at Harvard. However, 
			unlike Dr. Mack, Dr. McDonald was shortly thereafter found dead 
			under suspicious circumstances, which to this day have not been 
			satisfactorily elucidated.
 
 Arbitrary denial of the reality of UFO phenomena by the academic 
			community, in spite of the substantial evidence to the contrary 
			which has been surfacing persistently at irregular intervals for the 
			last fifty years, demonstrates a self-censorship that amounts to an 
			abdication of responsibility and is incompatible with the principles 
			on which their work is supposed to be based.
 
			  
			No matter what the subject matter, scientific 
			research is supposed to be carried out impartially, following the 
			trail of truth wherever it may lead, without skewing the results one 
			way or another to make them fit preconceived biases. It should make 
			no difference if the results are unpopular or subject to ridicule by 
			the ignorant who have not bothered to examine the evidence 
			themselves, even if some of the ignorant happen to be in positions 
			of authority that control research grants and advancement in the 
			academic hierarchy. 
 It is the academic research community which sets the tone for 
			so-called serious media coverage, as well as statements made by 
			government representatives. Because it has systematically 
			deprecated, minimized or denied evidence out of fear of ridicule, 
			for a full half-century adopting an attitude of zealous skepticism, 
			the academic community now bears a large part of the responsibility 
			for the catastrophic present situation, in which the population as a 
			whole must adjust to the shock of acknowledging the reality of the 
			alien presence on this planet, although deeply conditioned for fifty 
			years to dismiss it as a laughing matter, as easily controlled as a 
			television set.
 
			  
			Of course, the decision made in 1953 by 
			
			the CIA's 
			Robertson Panel to pursue a policy of systematic ridicule towards 
			civilian UFO reports is also a major factor in the equation. This 
			decision illustrates the extent to which contemporary science is 
			influenced by the military/industrial complex, since that disastrous 
			policy is still being implemented to the present day. 
 What is the evidence I claim is being arbitrarily denied?
 
			  
			An 
			incident witnessed by a single person is always open to question, 
			and an eyewitness report on its own does not constitute substantial 
			evidence. However, in the investigation of a traffic accident or a 
			crime, if there are multiple witnesses who independently give 
			similar descriptions of the event, their cumulative testimony tends 
			to be taken seriously in a court of law.  
			  
			If there are literally hundreds or even thousands of 
			witnesses independently giving similar descriptions of an event, the 
			cumulative weight of their testimony becomes overwhelming. Long-term 
			patterns over periods of sever-al decades that include entire 
			populations of towns and cities making similar reports should be 
			considered scientifically as even more decisively significant, no 
			matter what the subject matter. 
 The exception is the taboo topic of UFO phenomena. There are 
			literally hundreds of examples I could point to, but one incident 
			illustrates particularly well how this taboo operates.
 
 I'll begin by specifying my sources, which are articles in the 
			following newspapers:
 
				
					
					
					Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock, AR, January 
					23, 1988
					
					Arkansas Democrat, Little Rock, AR, January 
					23, 1988
					
					Gazette, Texarkana, TX, January 23 & 24, 
					1988
					
					BEE, Dequeen, AR, January 28, 1988
					
					Northwest Arkansas Times, Fayetteville, AR, 
					February 4—8 and March 27, 1988
					
					McCurtain County Gazette, Idabel, OK, April 
					10, 1988 
			The magnitude and extent of the incidents that began 
			to be reported on January 19, 1988, from Little River County in 
			Arkansas were on a scale that went beyond any other UFO phenomena 
			that occurred in 1988. The incidents clustered around the towns of 
			Foreman and Ashdown in south-west Arkansas, near the Texas border. A 
			few sporadic sightings had occurred in previous months, including a 
			low-altitude sighting of a UFO as large as a football field in 
			November, 1987, but the witnesses did not dare speak out for fear of 
			ridicule.  
			  
			The local population tends to be quite conservative, 
			and the first witnesses to go public after a UFO chased three women 
			in a car at terrifyingly close range on January 19, 1988, were 
			subjected to persistent harassment and ostracism, until hundreds of 
			citizens began seeing the phenomena simultaneously and its reality 
			became undeniable.  
			  
			A typical report described  
				
				... a ball of light that was as big as a hay 
				wagon at first, but which got smaller when as many as 100 people 
				gathered to look at it. The object changed color from red to 
				green to blue. It was first seen near ground level, then flew 
				high into the sky. It got under the moon and it looked just like 
				a star up there until everyone went away, then it came back 
				down. When it was up off the ground, lights were flashing, and 
				you had to see it to believe it.  
			Witnesses included a professional astronomer, an Air 
			Force veteran with 1,800 hours of flying time who had been a 
			navigator on a B-52, a science teacher who had been selected as a 
			finalist for the NASA "teacher in space" program, and a design 
			engineer familiar with propulsion systems. Photos were taken that 
			neither the Arkansas Sky Observatory, NORAD [North American Air 
			Defense Command] or NASA were able to give plausible explanations 
			for.  
			  
			However, Clay Sherrod, the Director of the Arkansas 
			Sky Observatory, succeeded in insulting everyone's intelligence by 
			maintaining that the extremely mobile metallic objects with 
			multicolored flashing lights being perceived simultaneously by whole 
			crowds of people, hovering at low altitude then suddenly rising 
			straight up at incredible speed, performing maneuvers such as no 
			known aircraft can perform, were either misidentifications of the 
			planet Venus or moonlight reflecting off the bellies of white snow 
			geese flying overhead. 
 Although newspaper coverage of the incidents ceased on March 27, the 
			incidents continued to occur for approximately one full year well 
			into 1989, without even being mentioned in the local press. They 
			were considered no longer newsworthy, having been persistently 
			disparaged by the authorities and the national news media, which 
			parroted the "planet Venus" and "moonlight reflecting off the 
			bellies of snow geese" explanations made by the Director of the 
			Arkansas Sky Observatory, who was hundreds of miles away from the 
			scene of the action in his office in Little Rock.
 
 Besides the many eyewitness reports of UFO sightings, there have 
			been many cases that involve craft landings, sometimes with physical 
			evidence of landing traces left behind after the craft's departure. 
			These traces of physical evidence have often been carefully 
			investigated, and once again there are literally hundreds of 
			examples I could point to. However, one specific case is outstanding 
			because of the remarkable way these details were supported by the 
			meticulously conducted research of high-level scientists, which 
			backed up the anecdotal eyewitness reports with hard physical 
			evidence.
 
 Trans-en-Provence is a little village near Avignon in France. The 
			incident took place there at 5:10 P.M. on January 8, 1981. Renato 
			Nicolai, aged 55, a retired mason who had become a farmer, saw a 
			strange aircraft land in his garden, where it remained for about one 
			minute. It then took off and disappeared over the horizon.
 
 Mr. Nicolai thought that it was probably some sort of experimental 
			craft being tried out by the French Air Force. He did not believe in 
			flying saucers. That evening when his wife came home from work, he 
			described to her what he had seen. The next morning she went with 
			him to look at the markings on the ground, then told a neighbor 
			about the incident. The neighbor was frightened and informed the 
			police.
 
 A contingent of the Draguignan police came to Mr. Nicolai's farm. He 
			described the craft to them as approximately 6 feet in length and 7 
			1/2 feet in diameter. The color was a dull gray, like that of lead. 
			The shape was flat and circular, bulging slightly above and below. 
			The craft rested on small telescopic legs. There was no light, and 
			no smoke or flames. There was no sound except for a faint whistling. 
			It first appeared at an altitude of about 150 feet, like a mass of 
			stone falling. However, it came down lightly on the ground. He 
			approached it and could see the craft clearly. He had advanced about 
			thirty paces toward it, when it took off at very high speed. When he 
			saw the object from beneath, it was round, and had four port-holes.
 
 The police reported that there was a circular outline about half to 
			three-quarters of an inch deep and 7 1/4 feet in diameter, with skid 
			marks at two places. The site had the appearance of a circular 
			stain, being darker in color than its surroundings. The police 
			collected samples of soil and vegetation along a straight line 
			through the impact site, writing on each sample taken its distance 
			from the impact site.
 
			  
			Upon their return to Draguignan, they transmitted 
			their report and the samples to GEPAN (Group for the Study of 
			Unidentified Aerial and Space Phenomena), which is a branch of
			CNRS 
			(National Center of Space Research, the French equivalent of NASA).
			 
			  
			GEPAN passed the samples on to INRA (National 
			Institute of Agricultural Research) and several other government 
			research institutes for analysis. GEPAN personnel visited the site 
			to take further samples on two other occasions. On June 7, 1983, 
			after two and a half years of analyses, a bulky preliminary report 
			which assembled data from the different laboratories was turned in.
			 
			  
			The government scientists attributed the circular 
			outline to a soil fracture caused by the combined action of strong 
			mechanical pressure and a heat of about 600°C, which is about 
			1100°F. Dr. Bounias, who was the Director of the Biochemical 
			Laboratory at INRA, had personally taken charge of the examination 
			of the plant specimens. He carried out the analyses in the most 
			rigorous fashion possible. First he established samples from plants 
			of the same species (alfalfa), taken at different distances from the 
			point of impact. Then he and his assistants meticulously analyzed 
			the photosynthetic pigments (such as carotene, chlorophyll, and 
			xantophyle), the glucides, the amino acids and other constituents.
			 
			  
			He found differences sufficiently important that the 
			statistical significance of the results is irrefutable. Certain 
			substances that were present in the close-range samples were not 
			present in those taken further away, and vice versa. The 
			bio-chemical trauma revealed by examination of the leaves diminished 
			as the distance from the UFO impact site increased. Some of the 
			plants had been dehydrated, but were not burned or carbonized.
			 
			  
			The following year control samples were taken from 
			the site, which confirmed the changes made in the vegetation. After 
			completing the analyses, Dr. Bounias made the following formal 
			statement:  
				
				"We worked on very young leaves. They all had the 
			anatomic and physiologic characteristics of their age. However, they 
			had the biochemical characteristics of advanced senescence, or old 
			age! This bears no resemblance to anything known to exist on our 
			planet."  
			Dr. Bounias refused to speculate about the cause of the strange 
			facts he had established, or to propose any explanation at all for 
			them. 
 Although neither Dr. Bounias nor the French government have followed 
			through on the implications of this evidence, or proceeded any 
			further with it, at least as far as the general public is concerned, 
			the Trans-en-Provence case remains one of the most strongly 
			substantiated investigations of landing traces in the history of UFO 
			research.
 
 Another aspect of UFO research which involves physical evidence is 
			
			the crop circles, though there has been much dispute over whether 
			they are caused by UFOs or by human hoaxers. I believe that some are 
			made by UFOs, and some are made by human hoaxers. Other theories 
			have been proposed, but at present these are the only ones that have 
			retained their
			plausibility, since freak whirlwinds and hypothetical plasma 
			vortices cannot by any stretch of the imagination explain 
			geometrically precise pictograms and other complex symbolic 
			formations.
 
			  
			From 1978 to 1989, the shapes were for the most part 
			simple circles. However, since 1989, the patterns have become more 
			and more intricate, eliminating the possibility that they could be 
			caused by unusual meteorological conditions. 
 The summer of 1991 was a quantum leap as patterns of rings and 
			circles became true complex pictograms. Straight bars, or boxes, and 
			arcs, both inside and outside of circles, were combined with circles 
			and rings to form complex pictograms. Some pictograms combined more 
			than thirty elements.
 
 Crop circle developments during the summer of 1991 were well 
			described by Michael Chorost in the October 1991 issue of the MUFON 
			[Mutual UFO Network] UFO Journal:
 
				
				One of the most interesting formations was a 
				representation of the Mandelbrot set, a two-dimensional graph 
				made famous by chaos theory . . . the last two seasons of crop 
				circles have clustered densely in a tiny area containing 
				Europe's most remarkable ancient constructions: Avebury, Silbury 
				Hill, Windmill Hill, Barbury Castle, Adam's Grave, the White 
				Horses, and the East and West Kennet Long Barrows. . . . I 
				invite my readers to consider that the mystery of the crop 
				circles is very much like the mystery of the megaliths. 
				   
				Each consists of compelling geometric forms. No 
				one knows why they were made, nor why they are where they are. 
				Nor do we know how either were made. Perhaps the two mysteries 
				are deeply intertwined. Not that either one "caused" or 
				"inspired" the other, but that the two phenomena somehow "talk" 
				about the same thing, a thing still unknown to us, or "do" a 
				single thing, taken together as a total system. It could be that 
				solving one mystery will automatically solve the other. 
				 
			Chorost goes on to describe the research results of 
			Marshall Dudley, a systems engineer for Tennelec/Nucleus of Oak 
			Ridge, Tennessee, as well as those of Michigan biophysicist Dr. W. 
			C. Levengood.  
			  
			Dudley detected significant isotope changes in the 
			soil samples from crop circles he had been provided with, and Levengood found that cell pits in plant cells in the affected 
			formations had been subjected to rapid heating that had separated 
			the cell pits. He found this to be true in samples from England, the 
			United States and Canada. 
 Another major breakthrough was made by Gerald Hawkins, the author of 
			Stonehenge Decoded, who discovered that in eighteen photographs of 
			crop circle formations, there was a repeated pattern of frequency 
			ratios that are equivalent to the diatonic scale (the white keys on 
			a piano). In addition to that finding, he has outlined four new 
			theorems about relationships of triangles to circles to squares that 
			he finds in the crop circle formations, and these theorems do not 
			exist in any known academic text.
 
 That is a very brief condensation of a large amount of highly 
			complex technical research. In light of the fact that there is 
			strong and abundant evidence in support of these results, one would 
			think that the news media would eagerly leap upon so thoroughly 
			substantiated a sensational story, and proclaim it to the world in 
			banner headlines and TV special features.
 
 
			
			What actually happened?
 
 The world news media instead leaped eagerly on a flimsy story full 
			of holes: that two British senior citizens had "confessed" to 
			hoaxing the circles with no equipment except some planks. This was 
			triumphantly pro-claimed to the world as the final and definitive 
			solution to the mystery of the crop circles, in spite of the obvious 
			fact that two men with planks can-not produce significant isotope 
			changes in the soil, nor heating so rapid that it separates the cell 
			pits without leaving burn marks on the outside of the plants.
 
			  
			Other obvious impossibilities deliberately ignored 
			were how these two senior citizens had managed to make so many 
			hundreds of circles without having once been detected, or how they 
			managed to make patterns of such precision and size and complexity 
			with planks while working in the dark. All the factual evidence was 
			deliberately ignored in order to convince the public that the 
			mystery of the crop circles had now been at least definitely solved: 
			Doug and Dave did it.  
			  
			The public was bombarded with ten-second TV shots of 
			Doug and Dave flattening some wheat with some planks, until finally 
			the vast majority was conditioned into accepting this absurdity as 
			the proven explanation. The minority of those who persisted in 
			trying to point out flaws in this explanation was then subjected to 
			scathing ridicule and social ostracism.  
			  
			Vast numbers of copy-cat imitators followed the 
			example set by Doug and Dave, and have ever since devoted themselves 
			to muddying the water and confusing the research picture, egged on 
			with the full collaboration of the news media, intent on 
			trivializing the subject. 
 In spite of the sabotage and harassment, the research haltingly 
			continues. An intriguing development that occurred recently in 
			England is that a group of hoaxers busily at work making yet another 
			faked crop formation noticed several balls of light hovering above 
			them, which seemed to be under intelligent control. This frightened 
			them to the point that they abandoned their work and fled from the 
			field. There are now quite a few eye-witness reports of small white 
			discs and grapefruit-sized balls of light seen in the vicinity of 
			the crop formations, and the small white discs have been captured 
			twice on videotape.
 
 Some of the crop formation patterns resemble traditional geometric 
			artwork of indigenous tribal cultures from all over the world so 
			closely as to be identical. Without exception the religious 
			traditions of these indigenous cultures describe contacts with 
			celestial beings in deep antiquity at the time of their tribal 
			origins.
 
			  
			
			According to researcher Colin Andrews, all but a few 
			of the symbols on the panels from the wreckage in the so-called 
			Roswell film have been clearly and precisely reproduced in the crop 
			circle glyphs. 
			
 
			
			
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