It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by HRegressor
That film was revealed a hoax so he couldn't of seen that one, is Linda trying to trick us?
Originally posted by HRegressor
I would say no more than 4.
Originally posted by weedwhacker
(I assume, perhaps, the ones with most replies may be most interesting?) Thought about checking through them in order, older to newer...don't want to waste time, though, on the duds.....:
Originally posted by crowdedskies
Here is the other interview which contradicts the one in the OP. It gets interesting at 4:27 into the clip, when asked specifically about ETs in area 51. I did not embed it as I do not want to disrupt this thread.
www.youtube.com...
Drawing © 1998 by "Kewper," former U. S. Army cryptographer who saw this extraterrestrial biological entity in August 1958 dressed in a human T-shirt at an underground installation inside the Papoose Mountains near Groom Lake called S-4, Area 51, Nellis AFB, Nevada.
Originally posted by crowdedskies
Since he is the same guy in the clip in the OP, I am just trying to establish if he has actually encountered aliens.
Uhouse claimed to have helped build flight simulators to train human pilots to fly alien craft. Like Lazar's story, Uhouse's claims had remarkable internal consistency, were limited in scope to what he actually "saw" and had no obvious personal motivation.
Bill Uhouse (who I called "Jarod 2" in the Desert Rat) has gone to the other side. According to family members, he died this past May in Pennsylvania.
As you may recall (Desert Rat #24, #27, #28, #32, #33, #37 and maybe a few more), Uhouse claimed to have helped build flight simulators to train human pilots to fly alien craft. Like Lazar's story, Uhouse's claims had remarkable internal consistency, were limited in scope to what he actually "saw" and had no obvious personal motivation. I "believed" his story, at least inasmuch as I believe anything.
Were his claims true? I still don't know. All I do know is that Uhouse became difficult to deal with. I got uncomfortable with his racist invective and his abusive behavior toward other people I knew. When the invective turned against me personally, I simply withdrew. Someone can hold all the keys to the universe, but if they're going to be a jerk on this planet I'm not going to deal with them!
If the story was fake, did he make it up himself or was he put up to it by someone else, like a sinister government agency? It certainly doesn't make sense to me why he would concoct this tale in his later years, but stranger things have lurked in the hearts of men. My own personal conclusion was simply that I didn't care anymore. A story like that depends almost entirely on how much confidence you have in someone's personality, and after a year or so, I lost that confidence.
At his own request, Uhouse's death was virtually kept secret, with even some family members not learning of it until now. Perhaps now that he has passed, more about him will come out and the story will eventually resolve itself.
(We should all remember this ourselves: We may be able to control our own press releases while we are alive, but once we die, our privacy evaporates.)
Posted by Glenn Campbell
Originally posted by pilotdavems In fact, I'd bet most folks don't really have any idea how high an F-15 can actually fly. And that's old tech.
Originally posted by zorgon
Originally posted by HRegressor
That film was revealed a hoax so he couldn't of seen that one, is Linda trying to trick us?
The question would first be... Who revealed it as a hoax?
Originally posted by HRegressor
I would say no more than 4.
Based on what?
Originally posted by cosmicsculptor
never saw this one! thanks , i hope to meet jrod one day