Kevin Randle cuts through the weaknesses of a fact-grounded tv series that's stretched to fill an allotted time slot to uncover some takeaways from its latest two episodes. He seems dead on about both installments, in particular when boring through what
was presented to what
wasn't, ostensibly from fear of some kind of retribution. In light of the island's role in the 2004 Nimitz story, Brett Tingley ponders whether a
Missing Helicopter Found Crashed on UFO Hot Spot Catalina Island is just coincidence, or something more. We vote coincidence, but appreciate the background information, including the UFO tourist data. Tingley is already wondering about possible connections between present, recent, and past events, and a mythology may be forming around the uncertain and disputed core of facts in the Navy/UFO encounters. Bryan Sentes offers
A Speculation on the Making of a Modern Myth. Only here it's Bob Lazar, the resurrected Area S-4 reverse engineer, perhaps star and dupe in a "Gnostic-paranoid speculation concerning the manipulation if not outright fabrication of our collective imaginarium." While Bryan concentrates upon "manipulated imaginaria," Rich Reynolds is asking the simple question
How Did Roswell Steal the Spotlight from Ken Arnold's Spectacular "Flying Saucer" Sighting?. Or perhaps that isn't such a simple question. (WM)
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from THE ANOMALIST http://bit.ly/2JekSjN
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