UFO THEORISTS LIVE AMONG US
UFO
Theorists Live Among Us
Found
on www.theblackvault.com
Source www.cmonitor.com/stories/news/local1001/ufos_2001.shtml
(Author not given)
October 16, 2001
In
his belief that the Sept. 11 tragedies could have been avoided, Ted
Loder is not alone. The
theory on which he hangs his claim, however, is not the kind you'll
hear on World News Tonight or in the local barbershop.
The
United States has access to zero-point energy technologies and
anti-gravity propulsion, Loder told a gathering of about 25 people
at the Unitarian Universalist Church last week.
But a small government group is guarding them fiercely from
the public.
And
that's not all its hiding...
They
may not be little, they may not be green, they may not even be men.
But extraterrestrial beings exist, and they are regular
visitors to Earth, says Loder, a crisp-looking UNH science professor
with none of the eccentricities one might associate with a person
devoted to such topics.
After
collecting and documenting evidence of aliens for four years, Loder
knows all about the little-green-men stereotypes that accompany his
work.
"You
can't do a UFO story without colored lights on everybody...big black
coats and fog," said Loder, who has helped gather testimony from
more than 400 government witnesses for an initiative called the
Disclosure Project.
"All
the major religions are based on testimony," he said.
"Our legal system is based on testimony...and yet, when a
military captain says, 'I saw a UFO,' he's laughed at and made fun
of."
No
one in last week's audience, however, was laughing at Loder's
claims. His presentation
was part of a 10-week series called "Beyond UFOs: Alien Identities,
New Age Spirituality and the Future of Humanity."
Among series participants, alien life is, if not a
unanimously accepted reality, at least a serious possibility.
"I
already know that this phenomenon is real," said Bill Cain of Bow,
who has attended all of the Beyond UFOs classes.
A
professional photographer, Cain says he has personally sighted UFOs
three times. Shooting a
solar eclipse in Istanbul last year, he caught several strange
floating objects in his images.
Minutes later there was a major earthquake.
Cain believes it may not have been a coincidence.
But
Loder's ETs are a more benevolent breed.
In fact, he believes aliens may ultimately save us from
ourselves. Some of his
witnesses for the Disclosure Project testified about a UFO sighting
over a cluster of missile silos in Montana.
As the strange crafts flew over, they said, the missiles
inexplicably shut down.
"ETs
are not going to let us blow up this planet," Loder said.
If
they possess more maturity than humans, aliens are not as far ahead
of us as we may think, Loder said.
Multiple witnesses tell of inventors who have devised ways to
access zero-energy technology, only to have their inventions stolen
or bought out. Those who
resist selling out have been threatened and harassed until they give
in, he said.
Why
keep these scientific breakthroughs secret?
"Money, money, money, money, money," Loder said.
Zero-energy technologies have the potential to make power plants,
dams, oil refineries, even roads obsolete.
The world economy as we know it would be turned on its ear.
Nor
would we be at war right now, Loder said.
If we weren't dependent on oil to fuel our SUVs, we wouldn't
have sent troops to Saudi Arabia a decade ago.
And if we didn't have troops in Saudi Arabia, Osama bin Laden
might have spared us his terrorist attacks.
Of
course, if the power to free ourselves from fossil fuels is such a
secret, it follows that alien existence must be kept from the public
eye, Loder said. If
evidence leaks out, he said, "People are going to realize that
they've been hoodwinked for 50 years."
This
hoodwinking is no small project either, according to Loder.
Witnesses to this great cover-up include military and
intelligence officers, airline pilots and NASA officials, he said.
An air traffic controller reported seeing a UFO hovering at
80,000 feet. John
Callahan, a former FAA division chief, testified last May about a
1986 incident involving a UFO and a Japanese airliner.
He was instructed to cover up the evidence, he said.
Donna Hare, a NASA design illustrator, testified that UFOs
were routinely airbrushed out of high-altitude photos of the Earth.
A military officer said he served on a retrieval team for
twenty years, picking up dead ETs and helping live ETs escape.
Documenting these stories has been Loder's passion for the past four
years. Intrigued by UFOs
since childhood, he became a believer while in Virginia visiting his
cousin, a lawyer and brigadier general in the Army reserves.
His cousin explained the Disclosure Project, a research
organization gathering evidence of alien visits since 1992.
After
spending a week training and countless hours observing the night
sky, Loder began helping to gather and compile witness testimony.
In 1997 he persuaded Gov. Jeanne Shaheen to send him to
represent New Hampshire at a specific briefing for Congress.
New Hampshire was one of just two states that sent
representatives.
Congress was less than convinced.
The majority of elected officials are not in on the great
cover-up, Loder said.
But entertaining stories of aliens is hardly the politically
expedient thing to do.
The Disclosure Project is still pressing for a series of
congressional hearings.
In May the organizers held a conference for the National Press Club,
sharing their theories with more than 200 reporters, who broadcast
the event around the world.
Public response has run the gamut, said Loder.
Even in last week's small but eclectic crowd, this range of
belief and disbelief could be seen.
One
woman interrupted Loder with claims that NASA officials would not
allow such a ruse, that NASA's raison d’être is the exploration of
space and whatever it may hold.
Other
audience members nodded agreement to Loder's theories, adding
comments of their own.
Don
Johnson, who helped organize the series along with Sophia Eastley,
has been researching statistical evidence of UFOs for 40 years.
It took him 35 years to become a believer.
Collecting data from sightings, he started mapping them
according to sidereal time.
Amazing patterns began to emerge, he said.
"That
was the end of my objective career," he said.
Scott
Ormsbee, a Reiki master and energy mystic who attended the class
with his wife, says he doesn't care whether something is out there.
That concerns him is what's inside him.
"The only way to get free is to go within yourself," he said.
"Everything else is just a distraction."
To
find out more about the Disclosure Project:
http://www.disclosureproject.org |
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