Sunday, July 31, 2005

More Exeter sighting coverage:

'Odds are there’s intelligent life outside of Earth'

"David said the object was as large as two aircraft carriers. It was long and silver, with windows equally spaced around its center. After what felt like several minutes, he said the object started changing colors to an orange-ish red and similar-colored flames billowed from underneath. But there was no smoke or noise. The object eventually stretched to double its size and disappeared."

5 comments:

Mac said...

I don't immediately consider this proof of ET visitation. (I'm critical of the usual variant of the Extraterrestrial Hypothesis anyway.) Viewed as an isolated incident, this might be chalked up to the misidentification of some weird secret blimp. But it falls into a context of similar encounters that argues against it being an "airship" -- not to mention its disappearing act. True, the military is testing various types of "invisibility," but I don't think this is what "David" saw.

Either way, I think we're pursuing a legitimate UFO sighting.

Unknown said...

I wonder what the odds are of finding intelligent life ON Earth?

Kyle said...

w.m. bear...

B-I-N-G-O!!!!!

No matter the provenance or the witness, the entire question of military/government/UFO connections is so rife with misinformation, disinformation, propaganda, innuendo, crazies, and greed, that smelting anything of value from such ore is a waste of time.

It is a subject best handled by civilians with no military involvement, IMO.

The taint is far too strong and we don't even know who we can trust...do we?

Kyle
UFOreflections.blogspot.com

Mac said...

It takes a certain courage to ditch the "will to believe" and look at things anew, which is exactly what Redfern has done.

Kyle said...

wm bear, and others -

Nick has done a great service. I thoroughly enjoyed the book, and have been following his ongoing debate over the details on Updates.

I don't think I've ever been as impressed by his wit, grace under considerable fire, and adherence to a few core "leaps" which taken in toto provide at LEAST a potent counter to the ET crash Roswell idiom.

For me, Roswell has never been the "Roswell-etta Stone". Too much government involvement, and too much time and faded memories.

But Nick's book isn't really about Roswell.

It's about what's wrong with trusting a government and a military not to do heinous things, and trusting them not to hide it when they do...and not to lie to cover it up.

That touches on EVERY military or government-related case.

Kyle