A film without silly music and sound effects exploring the NDE (Near Death Experience), UFO/UAPs and abduction phenomena might be interesting. I believe these things are all part of a larger equation of human evolution and knowledge.
It'd be interesting to see the entire sequence in chronological order. If the shooter didn't see anything, I'd also like to see the photos in which the object did not appear for deeper context. Wonder how many frames there were all together?
It is interesting that Billy mentioned the side story to the Phoenix Lights encounter of the four young men who disappeared a day after that event, sometimes called the 'Lauder Case'. There have been a few investigative ventures (aka the Blair Witch type) into what happened to these guys including a film or two. None of which have really come up with anything substantial in solving this missing persons case. The one human option for solving the case was that the men ran into a known cultist in the area that did them in and buried them in parts not found. However a coroner eventually listed the four of them as not surviving from a bear attack (so obviously not true). In any case, as Billy said that side riddle to this day has not been resolved just like our UFO mystery. I for one still hold out hope that we get to 'disclosure' whatever that means in my lifetime. Even if that means chaos and cultural disruption. May not be any worse than it already is.
If it turns out that consciousness is more fundamental than matter-energy then our reality is collection of mutually compatible ideas simulating a very complex system. Everything we know is true, we just got it backwards, and any concept compatible with our reality is possible, including plenty of aliens and potentially a lot of paranormal phenomena.
One could argue the idea above has a 50:50 chance of being correct, given that the only alternative is a cause-and-effect reality that can be traced back to an effect without a cause.
When the choice is between weird and impossible, weird has to be considered.
Thanks for another brilliant and insightful piece. It does seem somewhat absurd to be preoccupied with “little green men” as the Titanic hits the iceberg; and yet I can’t help wondering whether the decades-long MIC deception about UFOs has, if only unconsciously, poisoned our collective trust in our institutions, much as old family “secrets” have a way of deforming the present. The past lives in us whether or not we know it.
Spot on. UFOs were the first leak in the dike for the dismantling of the legislative branch's co-equal status so many decades ago. Lawmakers never knew what hit 'em, the abuses accelerated, and now our "public servants" appear powerless in trying to regain control of the accountability duties they so passively relinquished. But we all know who's paying for their negligence now.
We’re all paying for it, metaphorically, but those legislators got paid for their passivity, literally. The MIC spread itself far and wide in as many Congressional districts as possible, so as to maximize their influence. “Our” (really their) legislators were paid to remain quiet and asleep, and they happily took the cash. Call it hush, hush money.
The guy's a frickin encyclopedia. When I asked if there were any UFO flix that featured time travelers, here's what he wrote:
"The short answer to your question is...none. However:
First, there are a few movies that feature Einstein-ian relativity paradoxes. According to the theory of relativity, you would age slowly while travelling at or faster than the speed of light, which is a kind of time travel.
In the Disney flick Flight of the Navigator (1986) a kid gets abducted when he's 8 years old and returns to Earth 8 years later without having gotten any older. He was travelling at lightspeed in an alien craft and did not age. Although there's a UFO in this one, there aren't any aliens to speak of.
At the end of Close Encounters (1977) a group of abductees are returned to Earth, some seemingly from the 1800s, without having aged. One of the technicians quips that, "Einstein was right," while another retorts, "Einstein was probably one of them."
Perhaps the closest thing to alien time travel appears in the feature Millennium (1989), in which Kris Kristofferson plays an airline crash inspector who learns that people from the future are abducting those whom they know are destined to die in a crash and bring them back to the future because the human race is sterile in the future. The abductors are human beings, though.
Another near miss was an episode of the classic Star Trek show entitled "Tomorrow is Yesterday" that aired in 1967. In the episode the Enterprise travels back in time to the 20th Century and is intercepted by a fighter jet. Kirk blows up the plane but beams the pilot on board the starship. To the pilot, the advanced technology of the Enterprise appears to be of alien origin, especially when he gets a gander at Mr. Spock. The episode has affinities with the Mantell case, in which the pilot died while chasing what he thought was a UFO.
Although it's not a film, the novel Nighteyes (1989) by Garfield Reeves-Stevens, has a plot in which the ufonauts, who have the appearance of Grays, are time travelers from a future in which modern humans are needed to improve the gene pool in a decadent future. The book was alleged to have provided inspiration for the (alleged) Linda Napolitano abduction.
In terms of non-fiction books, check out Time Streams by Jenny Randles and Identified Flying Objects by Dr. Michael P. Masters, both of which make a case for time-travelling aliens from our future.
BTW, years ago I wrote a piece entitled "Time Anomalies and Flying Objects," which was never published. The piece was mostly about airplanes that experienced weird time anomalies.
Hope the above answers your questions, regards, Paul M."
A film without silly music and sound effects exploring the NDE (Near Death Experience), UFO/UAPs and abduction phenomena might be interesting. I believe these things are all part of a larger equation of human evolution and knowledge.
If there's no silly music and SFX, people will move on to cat videos.
Billy, a smoking gun UFO case (in my opinion) has surfaced in Argentina.
https://ufointel.substack.com/p/news-article-real-tourists-capture
Alfred Roesberg
It'd be interesting to see the entire sequence in chronological order. If the shooter didn't see anything, I'd also like to see the photos in which the object did not appear for deeper context. Wonder how many frames there were all together?
Exactly! 👍🏻👍🏻
On 23 March, I reported on the real Phoenix Lights UFO video.
The enormous, triangular UFO was filmed by Terry Proctor in Carefree, Arizona (Cave Creek Road & Carefree Highway), at 8:28 p.m. MT.
https://ufointel.substack.com/p/ufo-video-the-phoenix-lights-2-the
Alfred Roesberg
It is interesting that Billy mentioned the side story to the Phoenix Lights encounter of the four young men who disappeared a day after that event, sometimes called the 'Lauder Case'. There have been a few investigative ventures (aka the Blair Witch type) into what happened to these guys including a film or two. None of which have really come up with anything substantial in solving this missing persons case. The one human option for solving the case was that the men ran into a known cultist in the area that did them in and buried them in parts not found. However a coroner eventually listed the four of them as not surviving from a bear attack (so obviously not true). In any case, as Billy said that side riddle to this day has not been resolved just like our UFO mystery. I for one still hold out hope that we get to 'disclosure' whatever that means in my lifetime. Even if that means chaos and cultural disruption. May not be any worse than it already is.
I have old sci-fi VHS tapes - do you want them? I can drop 'em off. Super great intellectual, but Billy written-all-over-it article.
I'm humbled. Check FB msg.
If it turns out that consciousness is more fundamental than matter-energy then our reality is collection of mutually compatible ideas simulating a very complex system. Everything we know is true, we just got it backwards, and any concept compatible with our reality is possible, including plenty of aliens and potentially a lot of paranormal phenomena.
One could argue the idea above has a 50:50 chance of being correct, given that the only alternative is a cause-and-effect reality that can be traced back to an effect without a cause.
When the choice is between weird and impossible, weird has to be considered.
“My feeling is, we really can’t handle the truth. Maybe it’s beyond our science and beyond our reasoning...”
Yeah, that's pretty much been my take for a long while. Maybe that's a cop-out, but nothing makes sense anymore.
As to Spielberg, I hope his new flick takes us in a new direction, 'cause the old one has run its course.
Thanks for another brilliant and insightful piece. It does seem somewhat absurd to be preoccupied with “little green men” as the Titanic hits the iceberg; and yet I can’t help wondering whether the decades-long MIC deception about UFOs has, if only unconsciously, poisoned our collective trust in our institutions, much as old family “secrets” have a way of deforming the present. The past lives in us whether or not we know it.
Spot on. UFOs were the first leak in the dike for the dismantling of the legislative branch's co-equal status so many decades ago. Lawmakers never knew what hit 'em, the abuses accelerated, and now our "public servants" appear powerless in trying to regain control of the accountability duties they so passively relinquished. But we all know who's paying for their negligence now.
We’re all paying for it, metaphorically, but those legislators got paid for their passivity, literally. The MIC spread itself far and wide in as many Congressional districts as possible, so as to maximize their influence. “Our” (really their) legislators were paid to remain quiet and asleep, and they happily took the cash. Call it hush, hush money.
I knew Paul. I have a copy of his first book. We worked together for a bit.
The guy's a frickin encyclopedia. When I asked if there were any UFO flix that featured time travelers, here's what he wrote:
"The short answer to your question is...none. However:
First, there are a few movies that feature Einstein-ian relativity paradoxes. According to the theory of relativity, you would age slowly while travelling at or faster than the speed of light, which is a kind of time travel.
In the Disney flick Flight of the Navigator (1986) a kid gets abducted when he's 8 years old and returns to Earth 8 years later without having gotten any older. He was travelling at lightspeed in an alien craft and did not age. Although there's a UFO in this one, there aren't any aliens to speak of.
At the end of Close Encounters (1977) a group of abductees are returned to Earth, some seemingly from the 1800s, without having aged. One of the technicians quips that, "Einstein was right," while another retorts, "Einstein was probably one of them."
Perhaps the closest thing to alien time travel appears in the feature Millennium (1989), in which Kris Kristofferson plays an airline crash inspector who learns that people from the future are abducting those whom they know are destined to die in a crash and bring them back to the future because the human race is sterile in the future. The abductors are human beings, though.
Another near miss was an episode of the classic Star Trek show entitled "Tomorrow is Yesterday" that aired in 1967. In the episode the Enterprise travels back in time to the 20th Century and is intercepted by a fighter jet. Kirk blows up the plane but beams the pilot on board the starship. To the pilot, the advanced technology of the Enterprise appears to be of alien origin, especially when he gets a gander at Mr. Spock. The episode has affinities with the Mantell case, in which the pilot died while chasing what he thought was a UFO.
Although it's not a film, the novel Nighteyes (1989) by Garfield Reeves-Stevens, has a plot in which the ufonauts, who have the appearance of Grays, are time travelers from a future in which modern humans are needed to improve the gene pool in a decadent future. The book was alleged to have provided inspiration for the (alleged) Linda Napolitano abduction.
In terms of non-fiction books, check out Time Streams by Jenny Randles and Identified Flying Objects by Dr. Michael P. Masters, both of which make a case for time-travelling aliens from our future.
BTW, years ago I wrote a piece entitled "Time Anomalies and Flying Objects," which was never published. The piece was mostly about airplanes that experienced weird time anomalies.
Hope the above answers your questions, regards, Paul M."