Miguel ("Red Pill Junkie") Romero begins an historical consideration of UFO Contacteeism with this remarkable and intimate personal glimpse of George King's UFO religion. We also get to see photos of several ufologists whose work we often profile. A rather different tack than King's was employed by
The Man Who Tried to Contact Aliens from His Grandma's Living Room. Sean O'Hagan relates one person's solitary quest to reach out to the cosmos with a mixture of hard technology beaming "an elaborate 30-year art performance" of music. Nick Redfern pivots to a consideration of the
Whom the earthlings seeking or claiming contact were dealing, as well as the
Why--what interested these aliens about humankind. Were these beings indeed
Alien Space Brothers or Manipulative Beings from Here on Earth? Nick frames the "Why" against the context of nuclear proliferation in the 1950s. For the "Who," Nick suggests we consider Mac Tonnies' theme in
The Cryptoterrestrials: A Meditation on Indigenous Humanoids and the Aliens Among Us, published by Anomalist Books. (WM)
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