Article
There, a Conspiracy Theory
Sometime
in
June
1947
-
the
exact
date
still
remains
controversial
-
a
UFO
crashed
in
the
United
States
town
of
Roswell,
New
Mexico.
The
bodies
of
several
aliens
were
recovered
and
examined.
At
least,
that
is
what
numerous
UFO
books
report.
Films
about
the
Roswell
incident
resulted,
followed
by
pro
and
con
TV
documentary
spin-offs.
The
U.S.
Air
Force
denied
the
event
from
the
very
beginning.
It
claimed
a
surveillance
craft
crashed.
Later
clarified,
the
debris
came
not
from
an
extra-
terrestrial
vehicle,
but
from
a
so-called
weather
balloon
that
had
been
launched
in
Alamogordo.
The
apparent
corpses
were
reported
to
be
Test
Dummies.
These
human-like
figures
were
supposedly
used
to
test
parachutes
while
trigger-happy
soldiers
fired
on
them.
Also,
parts
of
a
strange
material
were
secured.
It's
called
memory
metal,
because
the
strange
alloy
possesses
the
ability
to
repeatedly
transform
itself
back
to
its
original
shape.
If
you
turn
this
material
on,
it
withstands
knife
scratches
or
other
damage,
then
stretches
and bends in a ghostly way until it resumes its original form.
On
August
28,
1995,
Fox
News
(a
U.S.
broadcasting
station)
released
film
in
which
two
men
in
lab
coats
dissected
a
body
and
cut
at
its
innards.
Produced
by
Ray
Santili,
the
film
became
known
as
The
Santili
Film.
A
year
later,
John
Humphreys,
a
British
specialist
in
cinematic
effects,
said
he
produced
an
alien
doll
made
of
latex
for
the
film.
This
was
done
according
to
instructions
from
Ray
Santilli.
After
the
broadcast
of
The
Santilli-Film
in
German-speaking countries, the press was unanimous: everything was faked.
Also,
within
the
dissected
corpse
was
a
so-called
Progeria
patient.
(These
are
people
who
already
look
old
as
children).
However,
by
then
I
had
voiced
protests.
Either
a
real
alien
or
a doll was used, but certainly not a Progeria patient. Why? Because Progeria sufferers are
born
human,
and
therefore
have
umbilical
cords
at
birth.
The
beings
on
the
dissecting
table
had
no
navel.
UFO-believers
were
shocked.
Was
it
all
just
lies
and
deceit?
Or,
perhaps a conspiracy from the Department of Disinformation?
Now,
a
book
with
hundreds
of
sources
on
the
old
and
eternally
young
matter
was
published
by
Kopp
Verlag.
[1]
The
two
authors,
Dr.
Thomas
Carey
and
Donald
Schmitt,
presented
new
documents.
Carey
is
a
doctor
of
anthropology
and
a
U.S.
Air
Force
veteran.
Donald
Schmidt
was
the
Director
of
the
Centre
for
UFO
Studies
for
many
years.
Both know the Roswell case from the very beginning.
First,
the
authors
present
the
story
of
Wright-Patterson
Air
Force
Base
and
describe
this
place
in
Dayton,
Ohio
as
the
true
site
of
Area
51.
Then
they
cleanly
assert
that
there
is
no
Hangar
18;
that
it
was
merely
an
invention
for
film.
However,
the
Wright-Patterson
Air
Force
Base
does
have
a
complex
building
with
the
number
18
(18A,
18B
to
18F).
Were
pieces
of
wreckage
actually
delivered
there
from
a
UFO
crash?
The
authors
confirm
this
and
quote
from
documents
of
deceased
witnesses:
“within
24
hours
after
our
find,
everyone
in
the
White
House
knew
that
what
we
had
found
could
not
come
from
this
world.”
(P.208).
And
what
is
this
strange
material,
this
memory
metal?
“The
more
you
put
the
material
together,
the
more
voltage
increased...we
could
not
break
it,
nor
even
scratch
it
in
any
way...We
held
a
lighter
to
one
end,
and
the
material
was
the
same
temperature
everywhere”.
But
what
about
the
extra-terrestrial
corpses?
Was
that
what
they
were?
Carey
and
Schmitt
quote
several
late
doctors:
“the
specimen
we
inspected
was
131
centimetres
tall...The
head
had
the
shape
of
a
pear
and
was
oversized
compared
to
human
proportions.
The
eyes
had
a
mongoloid
appearance.
The
ends
of
the
eyes
furthest
from
the
nasal
cavity
ran
at
a
10
degree
angle
diagonally
upwards.
Although
I
performed
no
detailed autopsy or examination of the head region, as this was not my area of expertise.”
Why not? Well, the witness was a dermatologist and only responsible for the skin.
What
do
Roswell
and
the
bodies
from
ET
have
to
do
with
our
theme?
Whether
it
is
aliens
in
the
past
or
in
the
present
-
any
influential
circles
launch
disinformation
campaigns.
And
this
was
so
perfect
executed,
that
the
establishment
only
accepts
their
opinions.
The
so-
called
reason
-
the
Zeitgeist
-
permits
nothing
else.
Does
that
sound
like
a
conspiracy
theory? Is it that easy?
Thanks
to
the
American
Freedom
of
Information
Act,
the
legally
guaranteed
freedom
of
information,
it
was
possible
for
some
groups
to
view
formerly
secret
government
files,
including
the
Robertson
Panel
Report.
This
report
tells
the
baffled
layman
that
the
government
gave
the
following
statements
in
the
1950s:
“All
intelligence
network
authorities
are
required,
for
the
purpose
of
discrediting
UFO-cases,
to
influence
the
mass
media
and
infiltrate
civilian
research
groups…to
render
UFO
reports
implausible
and
ridiculous…the
public
interest
in
UFO
cases
should
be
strongly
undermined…and
intelligence
agents
must
ensure
that
any
facts
used
by
researchers
be
targeted
through
deliberate
disinformation.”
This
is
called
a
conspiracy.
Not
of
spinsters,
but
of
government
officials.
Nothing
surprises
me
anymore.
Finally,
I
know
the
campaigns,
the
decades
generally
spent
against
the
AAS
topic.
The
most
absurd
part?
Hundreds
of
thousands
of
clever
astronomers
on
earth
search
for
life
in
the
universe.
Billions
of
Euros
have
been
spent
for
the
installation
of
parabolic
antennas,
satellites,
dishes,
and
astronomical
institutes.
Truly
honest
and
well-
trained people want to know: are we alone in the universe?
Yet
a
few
nebulous
tacticians
knew
the
answer
long
ago.
Would
that
those
involved
in
the
Roswell
case
were
still
alive,
they
would
be
held
before
an
international
court
for
misleading
the
public
and
wasting
taxpayer
money
-
no
matter
how
good
their
motives
were.
[1] Carey, T. and Schmitt, D.: Inside the Real Area 51. Rottenburg 2015.
[2]
Kean,
Leslie:
UFOs,
Generals,
Pilots,
and
Government
Officials
Break
Their
Silence.
Rottenburg 2012.