Monday, January 31, 2022

Associated Press Reporter Sees "Much Ado About Nothing," Out In Field At Roswell. The General Said It Was Nothing

 The word from military sources on the Roswell is that there wasn't an incident.  Known facts plainly contradict this.

Let's go back.  I did about 20 posts on Roswell a few years ago.  I guess it's an addiction, because last week I drove through that part of New Mexico on a trip to Texas, went to the Roswell Alien Museum, and here I am.

    Stage 1)  First there was an incident. On  June 8, 1947, Roswell Army Air Field's press officer Walter Haut gave a release saying the base had a flying disk in its possession, and some of the material from it from was being flown to higher headquarters.  This was dictated by Colonel William Blanchard, base commander, who knew what a drastic announcement this was.  Haut signed an affidavit released after his death that Blanchard showed him an egg-shaped craft and two small bodies of a "crew. . . from outer space."

    Stage 2)  Next there wasn't a Roswell incident.  Hours later Blanchard's commander General Ramey held a press conference to explain a mistake had been made and all that landed in the field was a weather balloon.  That warranted being flown off right away to higher headquarters.  Yes.  He showed the press a practice or Rawin target that such a balloon might carry.  The press believed it and so did the world.  Town of Roswell didn't but . . .  

   Stage 3)  Next, once again, there isn't an incident.  When interest got whipped up four decades later, the Air Force did a new investigation and report.  We don't know what landed at Roswell, it said.  The records are gone.  How about that?  The best possibility is a top secret balloon, called Project Mogul, that sensed Soviet nuclear tests.  We don't know; that's our best guess. 

  Yet the Associated Press saw something not explained by either balloon story.  You can call it one thing or three things.  On July 8, 1947  AP New York told its El Paso, Tx photographer, Robin Adair, to hire a plane and go find out what happened with this flying saucer jazz at Roswell.  Adair gets a small plane and flies about 200 miles. Fort Bliss and the White Sands Missle Range in his way, so he loops out around.  His pilot takes him past Roswell heading north, because the word is already out that's where the "Something" landed. I mean the Nothing.

They study the countryside for something unusual:  one candidate.  A lot of troups and military vehicles are clustered and very busy on some open ranch land.  A substantial gathering, BEEG operation.  Couldn't miss it from a small plane.  But no details, as Robin Adair said in a 1993 interview.  "Even then, the place was surrounded by policemen [MPs] and FBI people," but the Army Air had nothing in the air and couldn't keep Adair's plane from flying over.  "We were afraid they would shoot at us.  We got as close as we could and we wanted to get lower, . . .[officers on the ground] just waved [possibly] politely telling us to get the hell away from there." 

   Adair also sees an area that looks scorched.  Funny, but yeh.  And there's a place gouged, "the way it cut in . . . whatever hit the ground wasn't wood or something soft.  It looked like it was metal."  It seemed to have hit and then been able to take flight again.  (p. 59, Witness to Roswell, Carey & Schmitt, 2009, New Page Books)

    These details are nice if, 75 years later, you're tryin' to find out what "went down," even though nothing did.

    Whoa.  In one flyover, Associated Press has seen three things no government explanation will ever account for, a big cleanup operation, scorching, and gauging.  Both basic and specialized Project Mogul balloons can crash-land without gouging, scorching or requiring big gather-up operations.  Intelligence officer Marcel had been out there a day or two before and had a truck big enough to hold balloon debris.  But they couldn't haul out one-tenth of this debris field.

    In the words of the Book of Mormon, I'm now going to say "Thus We See."  Thus we see that in one interview by UFO researchers of one photographer, the gov is lying to cover something up.   In 1947 they tell us one common weather balloon crashed and about 1997 they say they don't know but a Project Mogul balloon is the best guess.   Thus we see--one balloon does not a cleanup operation make.  Thus we see, one even fancy balloon crash does not a scorch nor a gouge visible from a plane make. 

    When you're caught in a lie, unable to account for what people saw happen, your credibility falls.  But not here. Of course they weren't caught in the lie by this piece of evidence until 45 years after the event. I mean, the NON-EVENT.  I keep thinking something happened at Roswell, but the Gov keeps straightening me out. 


    Here, though, my son Eric just doesn't think it likely that we've seen secret glimpses of intelligent life from some other star.  Neither does the science writer for the NY Times.  So they don't care about the details.  Of this Eric would say the reporter "saw something he didn't understand.  That's all we know."   End of discussion.  

    Well, I say we know and understand.  About 15 witnesses saw bodies not belonging to Earth, and 15 more saw a craft not like anything on Earth.

     Ed Sain was a private first class at Roswell.  Major Darden had him and a second airman, Corporal Raymond Van Why, ride out into the country and guard overnight the entrance to the site, the Nothing.  The major's orders were, "Shoot anything [trying to enter]."  Another order came from Colonel Loomis, to "shoot anything that isn't a rabbit." (Witness to Roswell, pp 139-140, interview 2005, p 167).  Good security even for a spy ballooon.  Sain told his son what he was guarding was the strangest thing he'd ever seen.

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