Project Willow wrote:Eflis wrote:Obviously the crazy circus aids the PTB (and perhaps the phenomenon itself) while harming those who get ridiculed because of the absurdity factor that surrounds the subject.
I've had my fill of ridicule, and I've had my fill of gamers and that's the category in which I'd place your two sources.
And I've tried hard through my work in these fields of inquiry to eliminate or at least lessen the ridicule surrounding people who claim contact with all of these subjects.
Please help me understand how these two people, particularly Mr. Pflock, were "gamers."
Other than the ole "he's CIA so can't be trusted", what have you seen of Mr. Pflock, besides rational discourse, to jump to that conclusion?
I can understand that with Moseley there are at least 2 known incidences of fakery upon which he has been found guilty in your eyes - never mind that that was 50 freaking years ago.
Project Willow wrote:
Why the sideshow here?
What do you mean?
Project Willow wrote:
This reminds me of when Bryant published his book last year. In response to that a good percentage of the board went to work debunking DeCamp and dragging out and re-beating the corpse of Ted Gunderson. Few, if anyone, actually posted at length about what a profound work Bryant had done and its possible impacts. Now with Albarelli and others these subjects are making their way out of 'para' and into 'normal'. It's almost as if there were some kind of pull to keep them knee deep in woo.
Well, you've read his book... perhaps you heard his appearance and comments on my show in which he himself talks about all the UFO & JFK assassination connections he came across that led him to desire to maybe find some more significant link to those arenas.
So it's not like he's trying to distance himself from those areas of inquiry.
Project Willow wrote:
What I always appreciated about Jeff was that he expressed his outrage on behalf of those affected by a particular topic, no matter how seemingly far out. Can't say the same about everyone who is interested in "these subjects". Attempting to discover a mythical giant hairy hominid is nowhere near equivalent to exposing the tax-funded torture of private citizens. Frankly, if I ever met a feeling-less "It's all just so fascinating" attitude up close and in person, I'd probably be tempted to deck the guy.
Sasquatch doesn't need the justice system, I do. There's your line of segregation.
I too have appreciated Jeff's expression of outrage. I hope our fellow RI-folks outrage translates to real world activism.
While I agree that "exposing the tax-funded torture of private citizens" is far more important than "attempting to discover a mythical giant hairy hominid", I personally choose to do both and disagree with the label of mythical...
Dr. Goodall: Well now, you'll be amazed when I tell you that I'm sure that they exist.
Ira Flatow: You are?
Dr. Goodall: Yeah. I've talked to so many Native Americans who all describe the same sounds, two who have seen them. I've probably got about, oh, thirty books that have come from different parts of the world, from China from, from all over the place, and there was a little tiny snippet in the newspaper just last week which says that British scientists have found what they believed to be a yeti hair and that the scientists in the Natural History Museum in London couldn't identify it as any known animal.
http://www.bfro.net/news/GoodallTranscript.asp