SUBJECT: CAUTION RECOMENDED FOR UFO INVESTIGATORS FILE: UFO1613 =========================================================================== BBS: Flite-Line Date: 06-15-92 (15:59) Number: 4188 From: MIKE KEITHLY Refer#: NONE To: ALL Recvd: YES Subj: Caution For Ufo Investiga Conf: (46) UFO Networ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Forwarded from "Internet Alien Visitors Conference" * Originally by Jon Roland * Originally to All * Originally dated 15 Jun 1992, 12:15 From: jdr@starflight.Corp.Sun.COM (Jon Roland) Date: 15 Jun 92 05:50:13 GMT Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc. Message-ID: Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors CAUTION for UFO Investigators Copyright (c) 1991 Jon Roland There is an old saying, "Be careful what you ask for. You might get it." It applies to UFO investigators, most of whom are motivated to try to find out what is behind what so many people are reporting by a mixture of curiosity, fear, and a nagging suspicion that we are not being told something that we have a right to know. The UFO mystery has emerged as perhaps the major unsolved mystery of our time that is not being openly researched by organized, governmentally supported science. One family of hypotheses concerning this subject, first advanced by Charles Fort, one version of which I have discussed elsewhere (see "Speculations on UFO Technology and Operations"), supposes that at least one, and perhaps many, alien races are based in the vicinity of Earth, perhaps underground, and have been for a long time; and that lifeforms on the surface of Earth, including ourselves, are the subject of long-term study and perhaps experimentation by at least one of those races. The importance of this hypothesis is that, if valid, it could be dangerous to verify it, either for the investigator and his friends, or even for humanity as a whole. Much speculation on alien visitors tends to suppose that they are occasional visitors to Earth, based elsewhere, who regard us as less developed than themselves, but who still respect us as fellow sentients that may someday join them among the family of spacefaring civilizations. This may be wishful thinking, a projection of our attitudes toward primitive peoples in recent history. We must consider the possibility that they rather regard us as we regard laboratory rats, with little or no sympathy, as things which exist for their edification or amusement, and which they are prepared to manipulate or terminate when it suits their purposes to do so. If their purposes are scientific, then our continued existence may depend on us remaining interesting to their scientific studies. Experimenters don't care whether rats know about them, because rats can't discuss their situation among themselves, or contemplate different ways of behaving that are affected by their knowledge of the existence of the experimenters and their purposes. Rats that developed the ability to do that during an experiment would thereby become useless for behavioral studies. It would be a classic case of the problem of the subject being excessively altered by the act of observation. Although there is already a widespread belief among people that UFOs are evidence of alien beings, the lack of official acknowledgement that they are at least leaves most people not behaving much differently than they would if they were unaware of the phenomenon -- much like rats. Proof of the existence of aliens and of their role in our fate could change that situation suddenly. Before we find such proof, we need to consider the consequences of finding and disclosing it. We also need to consider the role of our species among other surface lifeforms, which may also be the subject of alien study --- ********************************************** * THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo * **********************************************