UFO
Researchers Seek 'The Truth'
By
Leonard David
Special Correspondent, SPACE.com
posted: 23 August 2007
06:53
am ET
DENVER,
Colorado With so much planet-hunting and -spotting going on, we are in
a showdown to see whether the universe is perhaps chock-full of extraterrestrial
life.
Distant
starfolk is one thing. Having ET stopovers here on Earth, via UFOs, is another.
And that was just the topic du jour here at the 38th Annual International UFO
Symposium, subtitled An Estimate of the Situation: The ET Hypothesis, held August
10-12 and sponsored by the Denver-based Mutual UFO Network, Inc., or MUFON for
short.
As
a yearly affair, the symposium provides a platform for specialists and investigators
that delve into UFOs, purported military cover-ups and denials, physical evidence
surrounding UFOs, as well as those "high strangeness" encounters with
alien visitors.
The
MUFON summit brought together more than 500 people a true gabfest for the
flying saucer devotee.
Passion
for the truth
James
Carrion, MUFON's International Director, said the organization is fervent about
resolving the scientific enigma known as unidentified flying objects.
"To
me, it's all about the truth. I have a passion for the truth," Carrion told
SPACE.com.
Still,
after decades of pursuing "the truth" behind UFOs, Carrion admitted
that the quest is befuddling. "Why is it always within out of reach...kind
of there, but it's not there?"
A
new MUFON initiative being implemented this year is outreach to engage mainstream
scientists, Carrion said, to assist in taking a more detailed look at the data.
An open letter to the professional scientific community is now being drafted,
to be issued before year's end, he said.
"We
have to gain respectability here ... so we're trying to kick-start intellectual
curiosity out there," Carrion added. "We know that there are folks in
academia who have an interest, but they don't know what to do with it."
The
MUFON strategy initially centers on the hypothesis that UFOs are human-manufactured
and then evaluate the data amassed to date against that premise, Carrion advised.
"If this triggers your intellectual curiosity ... help us out," he said.
Carrion
said that MUFON is also forming two research teams: One to dive into the history
of "UFOlogy" and government archives, the other to probe into the abduction
encounters.
"I'm
a skeptical believer," Carrion pointed out. "I've never seen a UFO.
But I've read enough of our own evidence. There's something real to this. To me,
it's an issue of what is it?"
Tell
it like it is
For
nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman, there is no doubt that some UFOs are alien
spacecraft. Moreover, the subject of flying saucers, in his view, represents a
"Cosmic Watergate" - a colossal government cover-up.
Friedman
is a globe-trotting lecturer on UFOs and is the original civilian investigator
of the celebrated UFO crash case in Roswell, New Mexico. That out-of-the-blue
happening supposedly occurred some 60 years ago, in 1947, involving no less than
two crashed saucers, strewn debris and recovered alien bodies, he reported at
the MUFON meeting.
"I
come on very, very strong. I'm not an apologist UFOlogist...I tell it like it
is," Friedman told SPACE.com. He senses that a "big sea change"
is taking place on several fronts.
"My
overall impression is that people are more ready to accept [UFO visitation] because
the world has changed...space travel being an important part of that," Friedman
noted. "What I'm saying is that the notion that most people don't believe
in UFOs isn't true."
Also,
the media is giving UFO sightings a much fairer shake than in the past, Friedman
suggested, citing not only Roswell coverage, but the reporting of UFO sightings
made at O'Hare Airport late last year and more revelation concerning the Phoenix
lights saga of March 1997.
"I
don't look for advocacy...I want fairness," Friedman added. "I feel
the world is ready. I'm outspoken, yes. But I try to make it a rule: Fact in hand
before mouth in gear."
Mind-bending
finding?
UFOs
as visitors from afar would be a simple, easy-to-grasp explanation, suggested
George Knapp, an investigative reporter for KLAS-TV in Las Vegas, Nevada. But
he wonders if there isn't a mind-bending finding waiting at the bottom of the
UFO barrel.
"It
seems to stay one or two steps ahead of what we can do...from airships to the
saucers, to giant flying triangles...almost teasing, taunting, or inspiring,"
Knapp told SPACE.com. Given cutting-edge physics, talk of the multi-verse and
parallel universes, along with threshold biological and computer work, there are
fundamental paradigm shifts ahead, he said.
"Although
we can't figure out a way to get there...doesn't mean they can't figure out a
way to get here," Knapp said. Involved in UFO reporting for some two decades,
Knapp said he's committed to the journalistic credo that the public has a right
to know.
"But
you know what? Maybe not! It goes against everything in my professional life that
I believe. What if it's not something we should know? That the truth is so unsettling
that our social institutions would, in fact, crumble," Knapp confided.
Knapp
underscored the prospect that perhaps we Earthlings live in the middle of some
other kind of intelligence. Perhaps our planet is nothing more than a cosmic drive-in
theater, he added, and UFOs skim in and out of our skies just to watch goofy movies.
"And
if it's something else - like they live here among us and everything we do is
like being in a glass shower - people are going to go crazy. So maybe there is
a reason for keeping this secret...and a need for government cover-up which I
believe there is," Knapp said.
Knapp's
on-air investigative work focuses primarily on government corruption and organized
crime. But asked about the angle that his next investigative piece on the UFO
phenomenon will take, he quickly responded. "Nothing I'm going to tell you
about."