I listen to a LOT of radio shows and read articles and soforth that reference ancient astronauts and how mankind may have been created by aliens visiting Earth eons ago that became thought of as gods and eventually became responsible for the creation of religions, etc. Even the Bible gets interpreted as descriptions of contact with E.T.s, and there are authors out there who write that peoples' encounters with benign and hostile aliens are really encounters with angels and demons. And I am very tired with all of it. I happen to be a religious person, AND I happen to believe that extraterrestrials visit Earth, but I don't think the two have anything to do with each other, apart from the fact that the same divine creator would be the source of all of it. Angels are angels, demons are demons, aliens are aliens. I have heard interviews with two different scholars (don't ask me to remember their names) debunking Sitchin and his theories on the Annanakie (or however you spell that). He said he had decoded the Sumerian texts and found all this lengthy and fascinatingly detailed E.T. stuff in them, but both the debunkers referenced a fairly recent public translation of those texts finally being published, and that none of what Sitchin talked about was anywhere to be found in them. When asked about this, all Sitchin could say was, "It's all in my books." I let Sitchin go at that point.
The UFO phenomenon to me is much more about modern cases and what can be gleaned from them. Things like accounts I have heard about both the Phoenix lights and the similarly shaped objects seen over the Hudson Valley of New York and how a few people in both cases reported seeing not just lights but structured craft- hundreds of feet wide in Hudson Valley, and up to a mile wide in Phoenix. Things like every single witness to the Travis Walton abduction in Arizona in 1975 passing lie detector tests about what they'd seen. (One failed initially, but retested years later and passed.) Things like the Hickson-Parker abduction case in Pascagoula, Mississippi, wherein the two men while sitting in a police station after the event were listened in on while they sat in a room alone together without knowing they were being listened to, and talked not about how they were going to get away with their lie but despaired about how no one would believe them about what had just happened. These are things that stick in my mind after many years of reading a lot of UFO books that I don't have in front of me now, so again, don't ask me for references. I just think there is a human element to the subject that can't be ignored. People get accused of telling these stories for attention, but the kind of attention they often get is hardly the kind anyone woul want.
The UFO phenomenon to me is much more about modern cases and what can be gleaned from them. Things like accounts I have heard about both the Phoenix lights and the similarly shaped objects seen over the Hudson Valley of New York and how a few people in both cases reported seeing not just lights but structured craft- hundreds of feet wide in Hudson Valley, and up to a mile wide in Phoenix. Things like every single witness to the Travis Walton abduction in Arizona in 1975 passing lie detector tests about what they'd seen. (One failed initially, but retested years later and passed.) Things like the Hickson-Parker abduction case in Pascagoula, Mississippi, wherein the two men while sitting in a police station after the event were listened in on while they sat in a room alone together without knowing they were being listened to, and talked not about how they were going to get away with their lie but despaired about how no one would believe them about what had just happened. These are things that stick in my mind after many years of reading a lot of UFO books that I don't have in front of me now, so again, don't ask me for references. I just think there is a human element to the subject that can't be ignored. People get accused of telling these stories for attention, but the kind of attention they often get is hardly the kind anyone woul want.
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