Decades
of stories and research into strange lights, hovering crafts and
bizarre beings have been flung like a tennis ball between two courts of
belief and skepticism. The two form a continuum of rigid debunking
disbelief all the way to blind faith belief. Between those two points
there is a lot of ground to cover.
Through the years
the topic has been muddied by clouds of competitive military might,
dueling scientific achievements, and political-social-economic forces
playing a game of coverup, obfuscation, and lies about scientific
possibilities and activities.
Scanning back over the
last 70 years it is possible to see clearly - as records are made public
- and scientific certainties are no longer so firmly in place, that we
may not have known as much as we kept telling ourselves we knew.
One
of the worst foundations of this series of events was a government that
believed it had to protect its people from everything. Facts could not
be handled - and in the early years of the 20th century when literacy,
education, and scientific knowledge was not as widespread that might
have been true. Even then, however, our culture swelled with amateur
astronomers, geologists, electrical hobbyists, and more. Correctly
handled, our society and culture could have been easily led into
understanding and accepting as nonthreatening the probable reality of
humanity not being alone in the universe.
This parental
control of society by the government led directly to the UFO outbreak
of the 1950's through the 1980's. The reality of the situation aside,
the mishandling of experiences, the 'swamp gas' scenarios, and the
ridicule of those who were witnesses or promoted an alternative
scientific paradigm, did not serve the public or the government well.
The
more something remains hidden, out of reach, unexplored, the easier it
is to control the storyline. What results is reaction and bizarre
stories, Draconian conspiracy theories, and more emerge.
As
I have noted before, the long time 'truth' was there was absolutely NO
water on the planet Mars. Suggestions of it were ridiculed, discounted,
and swept off the discussion table. This happened repeatedly.
Then,
one day, it was no longer the 'truth'. No apologies. No Will
Rogers-like amused scratching of the head drawling, well, I guess we
were wrong about that...
Now,as the Navy re imagines a
better way to survey witnesses of 'unexplained phenomena and crafts' and
the Pentagon admits they have tracked those nonexistent things in the
sky and scientists are admitting that there can be areas that leave them
pretty stumped. They do not, despite decades of claiming otherwise,
have all the answers no matter how hard they look.
One
of the most important features of those heady days of the early 20th
century was the involvement of people - people who observed the natural
world, who looked to the sky - and became aware of what was 'normal' up
there enough to recognize when something appeared that was beyond the
everyday. Walk done any street and see people have their eyes fixed on
cell phones, attention on earbuds in their ears or fixated on hurrying
to the next event on the schedule. Light pollution has stolen our night
skies and fear of crime keeps people huddled inside.
One
of the closing lines in a favorite classic Sci-Fiction movie is
'keeping looking to the skies'. If we are no longer looking up,
observing around us, and becoming in touch with what is normative, how
will we ever recognize the new or the strange when it arrives? At the
rate of modern observation skills of the natural world we will not need
to worry about that asteroid coming to wipe out the world. No one will
be aware it is up there - remember all eyes glued to cell phone screens
- and recognize it as out of the normal.
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