Roswell:
The Truth Behind the Crash
This photograph was taken by Perry Purple, correspondent
for The Daily Times of Pawtropolis, on July 2, 1947 near Roswell, New
Mexico.
UFOs are real, we just can’t prove it yet …
or can we?
By Louis the Naval Commander
Dear Humans,
As you probably already know if you are a subscriber to Scoop Schaumburg's
Dispatch (click HERE
for this week's edition.), there are two alien species that have been
visiting the planet Earth for centuries. One group of aliens, the Arjogun,
look like what people call the Alien Grays. They are cold, evil beings
bent on destroying the planet. The other group of aliens, the Orishans,
look like teddy bears when they go into a state of suspended hibernation.
These two groups have been fighting on Earth under the noses
of humans for the last 6 decades.
For
more details about this war, read “The Teddy Bear Conspiracies”
by Myke Feinman. Click on picture for ordering details!----------------->
Meanwhile, this week we bring you some new UFO information
never before published in the Dispatch.
Did you know that 40 millions Americans believe that we
are being visited by alien life?
That was a statement made by the late Peter Jennings in a UFO special
that aired last spring (2005) entitled “When it comes to UFOs --
Seeing is Believing.”
Now consider this fact: There are 100 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy
alone. And there are more than 100 billion galaxies in the universe. That
means there are 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars in the cosmos.
“To suggest that we are alone is inexcusably egocentric,”
Jennings reported.
On June 24, 1947 (just days before the now infamous crash
of a flying saucer at Roswell, New Mexico), Kenneth Arnold, a pilot, saw
9 dish-shaped objects over a mountain in America. He believed he was witnessing
a military experiment. He reported it was just as much a mystery to him
as it was to everyone else.
Peter Jennings reported that over the next few weeks, there
were many “hundreds” is UFO sightings in America.
And of course, we all know about the crash at Roswell, New
Mexico, on July 2, 1947 as can be read in “The Teddy Bear Conspiracies”
by Myke Feinman.
Because of all the sightings of UFOs, the Army Air Force
launched an investigation on September 23, 1947 into a situation the Army
thought was “something real.”
According to Peter Jennings, this was the start of the Cold
War, and Americans feared the enemy might be flying a new type of aircraft.
After about a year, the Army realized the Soviets couldn’t
be creating this aircraft. Many witnesses were seeing cigar-shaped aircraft
gigantic objects hovering, and then zooming away at a high rate of speed.
Air Force General Hoyt Vandenberg was not sold on the idea
that the Earth was being visited by aliens in 1948.He said since there
are only eye-witness accounts, and no concrete proof (the photo was not
yet published of Schaumburg’s saucer crash).
However, in 1952, the Air Force received more UFO reports
than in any other year in history.
So the Air Force tried to downplay the enormous amount of
UFO sightings that were concentrating on Washington, D.C.
In July of 1952, Peter Jennings reported that the Pentagon
telephones were overwhelmed by calls reporting UFOs. This clogged communication
channels. The armed forces reasoned that this public hysteria could lead
to vulnerability.
“It was not the UFOs that threatened the nation,”
Jennings reported. It was the public hysteria they were causing.
So what does the government do? The armed forces decided
to make UFOs the subject of ridicule.
Then
came the movies such as “Earth vs. the Flying Saucers” and
“The Day the Earth Moved.”
The Air Force continued its investigations of UFOs, but
its purpose was to debunk them. They would determine that UFOs were weather
balloons, or rare atmospheric conditions. This strategy backfired. The
Air Force hired a civilian scientist named Dr. J. Allen Hynek. He worked
on Project Blue Book from 1948 to 1969.
“Hynek was the lead investigator,” Jennings
reported. “His job was to try and explain it. The more cases he
saw, the more he realized he couldn’t explain it away. Hynek became
a believer after 20 years. He was a scientist. Others were not. Hynek
spent the rest of his life investigating and calling for scientific investigation.”
Now, in the meantime, mainstream scientists categorically
reject eyewitness accounts. In a court of law, eyewitness accounts are
the highest form of evidence. In the court of science, eyewitness accounts
are the lowest form of evidence.
So, meanwhile, the government is funding a project called
Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), which listens for radio
signals from space.
Also, there is a movement across the planet that investigates
the so-called alien abductions. Jennings reported that some psychologists
claim that hypnotism induces the myth of abduction.
Which brings us back to the famous crash at Roswell, New
Mexico, July 2, 1947. This crash provided researchers with some concrete
evidence -- the debris from a crashed space ship. The crash site contained
such artifacts as I-beams with pinkish writing. This crash was national
news when it was reported in 1947. It was just a New Mexico newspaper
that reported the incident.
The U.S. Army Air Force issued a press release stating that
a crashed flying “disc” was recovered at a site near Roswell,
New Mexico!
Unfortunately, the day after the press release was issued;
the Army issued another press release debunking the first press release.
Meanwhile, a researcher named Stanton Friedman, 30 years
later, interviewed Jesse Marcel, an intelligence officer who first came
upon the crashed debris in 1947. Marcel told Friedman that the debris
was not man-made, like tin foil. The debris was of a type of metal that
could not be bent, even with a sludge hammer. A sludge hammer couldn’t
even dent the metal.
In 1994, the Air Force said that the debris found at Roswell,
New Mexico, was from “Project Mogul,” and was wood and aluminum
foil from a high-altitude balloons used to spy on the Russians.
But this is obviously the Air Force’s attempt to again
debunk an authentic UFO sighting, this time with real evidence of a crashed
flying saucer.
Meanwhile, one in five Americans believe that alien abductions
are taking place, even though there is no evidence other than accounts
retrieved with hypnosis.
So scientists, and UFO researchers continue to clash, despite
the evidence mounting daily. There are so the issues of vast distances
required to go from planet to planet. Space travel is tough. It’s
more than just building a better rocket. Einstein said that light travels
at 186,000 miles per second, and that that is the maximum speed for matter.
Man-made objects travel at 11 miles per second as a top speed so far.
“A civilization that could harness the power of the
stars could open portholes to go enormous distances in the blink of an
eye,” Jennings reported.
What makes you think there aren’t civilizations that
have harnessed such power?
Are aliens among us? Who knows?
Love,
Louis
Government
pulled pulp publication because it contained color cover painting of a
real alien
By Andy Adorable, USMC private first class
July 1947 --- Did you humans know that a pulp magazine was
published right after the crash at Roswell, and was pulled from the shelves
the next day?
The publication, known as “Superlative Tales,”
was a fledgling pulp science fiction publication, published by a group
of starving writers who put their life savings into the publication and
distribution of their new magazine.
The first issue, dated July 10, 1947, made it to the newsstands,
but was pulled the next day.
The cover painting contained a picture of what looks like
an Arjogun alien smoking inside his helmet and brandishing a space ray
gun .
There were several short stories in the magazine, including
one tale that is about aliens who look like teddy bears and evil alien
grays to are fighting them (sound familiar)?
The story, by a man named Max Wild, rings beary true, and
could be why the magazine was pulled from the shelves.
Meanwhile, the fledgling company, Superlative Publications
Inc., went out of business because they could not sell their new publication.
Why was it pulled from the shelves?
What secrets about real aliens did it reveal?
To order a copy, click SUPERLATIVE
TALES!
Love,
Andy
 
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