Thursday, 26 September 2019

The Infamous NAZI Bell - The Dad Blogs Already

It can be rather fun to see the lengths reachable by current UFO/historical theorizing. Roland Horn's article will likely short your mental circuits well before you get to the 1950s exploits of Charles August Albert Dellschau, born in Berlin in 1830. (Later on in the saga we see some dates have likely been altered in translation.) It may surprise no one that Horn takes inspiration from Mike Bara. Rich Reynolds has been energized by a passage in Otto Billig's Flying Saucers: Magic in the Skies: A Psychohistory to note Betty/Barney Hill Information I Never Knew. Rich's notion "that stress and other pathologies are responsible for some flying saucer incidents" can get lost in the exchanges of Commenters, which turn from a corrective debate upon the importance of primary source use into personal invective. Though perhaps potentially even more controversial than the Hills, Rich's article on The 1973 Pascagoula Event elicits only far more civil commentary. A sidelight upon yet another classic case involving entities is Nick Redfern's A Flying Humanoid -- And It Wasn't Mothman. Nick considers a strange English incident associated with a very strange patch of Staffordshire territory. Nick's possible explanation may send you back to those great old James Bond movies! (WM)

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from THE ANOMALIST http://bit.ly/2lZ0rQd

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