UFOs
over Texas?
2:54PM
Tuesday January 22, 2008
By Peter Griffin
UFOs
photos are always blurry - can nobody hold a camera still?
I
suppose it's what I get for staying up late channel-surfing. I ended up watching
Larry King Live on CNN, where the aging host devoted an hour of prime time viewing
(US prime-time) to the UFO sightings earlier this month in Stephenville, Texas.
Enough
people saw the lights over Stephenville on the 8th of January to suggest there
was something unidentified in the air and yes, quite possibly flying. Since then
the debate over what the lights were has been fierce.
Larry's
show last night ran like a bad mockumentary as he ping-ponged between UFO witnesses,
UFO sceptics and those who believe the US Government has been covering up the
existence of UFOs for years.
This
is sort of how the conversation ran:
"It
was a city in the air. It flew south behind our house. We hear tens of thousands
of people saw it," said Erin Watson, a witness of the 1997, still-unexplained
"Phoenix lights"."People see lights in the sky. The key here is
interpretation of those lights," countered retired US air force pilot James
McGaha who said the Phoenix sightings were actually of military flares.
"It's
the biggest story of the millennium...ignored for over sixty years," said
Stanton Friedman, the physicist and UFO researcher.
"The
president of the United States does not speak for six billion earthlings,"
he added, quite bizarrely.
"But
we've never met any of these aliens. Nothing has ever come forward," Larry
himself chipped in.
And
so it went on for an hour with no discernable conclusion or revelatory details
emerging, except maybe an explanation of the magneto-aerodynamic control system
which allows the UFOs to fly through the air at high-speed without making any
noise.
This
sort of stuff rarely bubbles over into mainstream TV viewing these days, though
the number of UFO sightings since the 9/11 attacks is apparently up considerably.
The internet is a different story - it's a treasure trove of UFO speculation,
shaky video clips of "authentic" UFO sightings (why can no one hold
the camera still on these things, ever?).
There's
the Out of the Blue UFO conspiracy documentary narrated by Peter Coyote which
Larry plugged on the show, and is available on YouTube.
Here's
a selection of the "best" UFO videos culled from archives around the
world.
There's
even a good deal of internet real estate devoted to New Zealand UFO sightings,
particularly the infamous 1978 sighting of the lights over Kaikoura. Here's the
YouTube video of the 1978 ABC News report, the report on the sighting from Ufocasebook.com
and New Zealand's own Wikipedia entry devoted to UFO sightings.
Then
there's this essay at Ufocusnz.org.nz titled: "A human upgrade program orchestrated
by extraterrestrial contact: the evidence and implications". Try reading
that with a straight face.
UFOs
have been documented and dissected ad infinitum on the internet and technology
is only making the source material, the photos and the videos, available to a
wider audience.
But
there's still nothing out there that makes me think there might, just might, be
visitors from outer space doing fly-pasts in flying saucers. But it is the last
big question facing humanity - are we alone? That's why I wasted an hour watching
Larry King. I want to know.
Meanwhile,
the conjecture will continue buzzing away with the internet its chief forum.