CONTENTS DELETED
The author has deleted this message.
|
Administrator
|
> > It seems that there've been a great number of testimonials
> > from government & military folks that there is proof, for > > example: http://www.disclosureproject.org/ > >Interesting site, Marc. Have you changed your opinion on >"real" UFO's then? I always thought you were a s(c/k)eptic >in this regard. I vary on the subject -- certainly when "UFO" first came out, I thought UFO's were real, and was motivated to watch the series because I thought it was going to be a non-fiction show about UFOs! (I was also into the whole "Chariots of the Gods" craze). In the years since I've gone back and forth on the subject, and decided that I really haven't researched the subject enough to have a knowledgeable opinion. But if I had the time and inclination, I'd certainly look at the stuff being presented on that website above, because it doesn't appear as "whacko" as a lot of UFO sites. Marc |
In reply to this post by Tafkar
CONTENTS DELETED
The author has deleted this message.
|
Like Marc, I read "Chariots of the Gods" as a young person and was probably
very influenced by it. Alot of what Von Daniken said makes sense to me - in fact I'd say at least one of my UFO stories (Shifting Sands esp) comes from his theories about ancient religions and civilizations having been "seeded" by alien intervention. There is alot of wacko stuff out there, esp those people who are convinced that they are some sort of messiahs sent from aliens (i.e. the Raelians) with a message for earth. The Day The Earth Stood Still notwithstanding, I rather doubt these people are on the up and up! However, there has been an enormous amount written about people who claim they are the victims of alien abduction (Whitley Streiber - Communion - for one), and since UFO the series was mainly about the aliens abducting humans and harvesting their organs, you can see that one may have influenced the other! Pam |
Wow, I remember having ALL the Von Daniken books, all
in paperback. I would pour over the photos and read his conclusions of pre-history UFO visitation. It had to be true! What other explanation was there? Wellll.... Most of Von Daniken's "discoveries" have been explainable as reasonable, down-to-earth artifacts, especially when you have a REAL expert of the ancient civilization's culture and history. I recently saw Von Daniken in a TV special with one of the stars from "Home Improvement" (wow, a real mental giant there!) and he was being shown all these things that absolutely had to be proof of ancient astronauts! What else could it be?? The truth is, you can fid anything in anything if you look hard enough. The guy is up there with Uri Geller and that ilk--total whackjobs. JF ===== __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com |
Hi JF and all - I too saw that docu with von Daniken and buddy from Home
Improvement. I know it's true you can find "truth" out there if you really want to, or not. The point for me is, that the original idea, that some or all of our ancient civilizations may have had some outside guidance, intrigues me. Remember in Star Trek there is the Prime Directive (non-interference in lesser developed societies)? But in TOS and all the later incarnations, stories appeared that showed the PD was often ignored or blatantly flouted. Anyhoo, I find some of these "theories" make for great UFO story ideas, and while I may not buy into 100%, they work for fiction. Pam |
In reply to this post by Tafkar
> You can fig anything if you try hard enough.
I'm not saying that I believe Daniken explain nations... some are very far out there. But...your above statement can work both ways. What if he is right or near enough right. It would throw most established science out the window. There was a interesting documentary on the early hunters of dinosaur fossils. One was a well respected scientist and the other a talented scientist but not well known. The two come to dislike each other because the respected scientist was not welling to accept new ideas. He did everything in his power to harm the reputation of the other scientist even stealing things that the other had found and claiming them as his own work. This is the man who wrote what the dinosaurs were like and that view is the one that most of us learned in school. The other scientist had a different view of them and because the other scientist had the reputation and the connections he saw to it that others work was laughed at. Now a hundred years later we are finding out that the well respected scientist did know what he was talking about. His view of what the dinosaurs were like was wrong according to the discoverys of more recent scientist. The thing is the things they are finding are what the less respected scientist tried to tell years ago. You can fig anything if you try hard enough even the truth. Don't make judgements till you consider all the facts and don't trust experts who have axes to grind. James K. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Pam McCaughey-2
----- Original Message ----- From: "Pamela McCaughey" <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 2:23 PM Subject: Re: [SHADO] Discovery. > Like Marc, I read "Chariots of the Gods" as a young person and was probably > very influenced by it. Alot of what Von Daniken said makes sense to me - in > fact I'd say at least one of my UFO stories (Shifting Sands esp) comes from > his theories about ancient religions and civilizations having been "seeded" > by alien intervention. > Hey Pam, Try "The Sentinal", by Arthur C. Clarke. Best one of all of them....IMHO. Dave H. |
In reply to this post by SumitonJD
----- Original Message ----- From: <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 9:41 PM Subject: Re: [SHADO] Discovery. > window. There was a interesting documentary on the early hunters of dinosaur > fossils. One was a well respected scientist and the other a talented scientist but > not well known. The two come to dislike each other because the respected > scientist was not welling to accept new ideas. He did everything in his power to > harm the reputation of the other scientist even stealing things that the other > had found and claiming them as his own work. This is the man who wrote what > the dinosaurs were like and that view is the one that most of us learned in > school. The other scientist had a different view of them and because the other > scientist had the reputation and the connections he saw to it that others work > was laughed at. Now a hundred years later we are finding out that the well > respected scientist did know what he was talking about. His view of what the > dinosaurs were like was wrong according to the discoverys of more recent > scientist. The thing is the things they are finding are what the less respected > scientist tried to tell years ago. > Is that the one where the guy made the TRex standing up, and he put the head on the tail? Dave H. |
In reply to this post by davrecon-3
Thanks Dave - isn't The Sentinal the inspiration for 2001 A Space Odyssey?
Pam |
----- Original Message ----- From: "Pamela McCaughey" <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 7:19 PM Subject: Re: [SHADO] Discovery. > Thanks Dave - isn't The Sentinal the inspiration for 2001 A Space Odyssey? > Pam > > > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > > > Sure was, but in a heavily altered state. It was adapted by Clarke to be made into the film by Kubrick. If you haven't read the book version of 2001, I suggest you do so. While I'm a voracious fan of Stanley Kubrick, and he did an awesome job with 2001, he varied greatly from Clarke's final book when he made the film. In the book form, Clarke spends a lot of time taking the reader through the alien's seeding and monitoring process, starting right from the beginning, the Dawn of Man, as it were. Wouldn't it have been interesting plot twist if Straker & Co. found out that we here on earth were just a cattle farm origionally set up by the aliens specifically for their purpose? We just happened to grow up a bit after some form of "forced abscence" of theirs, home planet crisis perhaps? They come back, thousands of years later, finding out we're not quite as easy pickings as they'd last left us. ....Nah, I like the old premise better..... Dave H. |
Dave - I LOVE your idea!!!!!! Pam
> |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |