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Originally posted by compressedFusion
I have been lurking on this site for a few years. I have focused exclusively on the Alien/UFO section. Over time, I came to realize that I'm not as interested in Ufology as I am with how we interact and treat each other when dealing with this fringe topic. I believe that people claiming contact are treated harshly by society far beyond the extraordinary nature of their claims.
We need to drastically take a stand on what evidence is presented and the claims that follow it.
from rejecting logic based on personal views
Originally posted by ArdenWolf
It's the general populace, the sheep of the nation you need to win over. That cannot be done if everything they see looks like a joke.
If you can sway the people the media will follow, because it's all about ratings.
When something gets massive funding, and it's the people supposedly on the side of disclosure and they put out something so far out there people cannot and will not be swayed by it, because it's asking them to take way too big a leap, it simply does more harm than good.
Sitting around singing kumbaya in hopes the aliens above come down to spread their peace and love to everybody is a quick way to get people to go, yeah, ok, nutjobs.
The enemies of the cause come on both sides of the fence, some may not mean to. ... on who's side are some people actually on?
To win, to defeat the ridicule, to get this topic taken seriously, there needs to be respectability, and to get that one needs to look respectable in the first place.
A lot of people want the truth, they know there's something going on. But in the end, they can't help but feel resentful for the extreme weird and bizarre even if they feel there is some truth to it. Why? Because it makes winning damn near impossible.
Ridicule, ridicule, ridicule. It is far and away the single most chillingly effective weapon in the war against discovery and innovation.
The more extreme a claim the more powerful the evidence required
Originally posted by lostgirl
Question: You talked about not wanting any part of doing hypnosis on people for MUFON
am I correct in assuming that you never underwent hypnosis by anyone?
I tried to evaluate not just what I was thinking or feeling, but also whether it was healthy for me to follow that to its logical end-result. The question was not, “Is this true?” but rather, “Is it good for my state of mind to focus on this, and where it’s likely to inevitably lead?” It’s an issue of priorities: truth matters to me, but my first goal is to survive, and survival requires my head be clear so I can function in the dangerous and desperate situations I often felt I found myself within. Fear is the Mind-Killer, was one of my favorite lines in the book Dune when I was about 18 years old. If I’m in a fugue of paranoia or terror or despair, my head is not clear.
I’ve had people say to me, “How can I not resent the aliens? And how can I not want to ‘find out more of the truth’ about what happened to me?” I can only say, “I don’t know. Will it help you feel better, or feel worse?” Because resenting the aliens doesn’t hurt them. And anybody who thinks going through a traumatic experience with aliens via hypnosis is not going to have any effect except ‘the information’ it provides is not well informed. Trauma is trauma. And most hypnotists in this social genre are not therapists.
Sometimes that is important to dig up, and therapeutic. Sometimes… it isn’t.
I’d spent over a decade of my life intensely focused on self-hypnosis, formally trained in hypnosis along the way, so I had a lot of opinions about that subject. People were surprised to find that was my personal focus right up until a couple years prior to the ‘Bewilderness’ era of time, and yet I’d never been hypnotized in any fashion about these experiences. But they didn’t see it how I saw it: my experience and perspective actually made me avoid it.
I met people that had been “mildly disturbed after a strange confusing dream” they only remembered fragments of – but they were helpless rape victims of weird creatures with god-like powers after some hypnotist “helped them find the truth.” Well maybe that was true, I have no idea. But did that really help them?
Most people I’ve met who seemed the most stable about all this remembered the experiences consciously. It’s possible this isn’t coincidence, and “allowance of memory” relates to an ability to adapt. Maybe digging it out hypnotically brings forth more than the psychology is ready to deal with.
I have seen a lot of psychological degradation and growing destabilization in people having these experiences, and I think it’s important to note that I am not saying they were crazy and so imagined them, I am saying that the experience of having them, combined with our cultural paradigms about all this, all the fear and confusion it causes, all the profound destruction to fundamental belief systems, is destructive and gets worse the more people focus on it.
Maybe partly because there just isn’t any closure, any answer, which is so exasperating. You reach a point where it seems like there is nothing more you can learn, like the available information in our culture just runs out and you come to a dead-end, with more questions than you began with and nowhere else to go.
At the time, I was working hard to stay positive. Perhaps if it had only been ‘aliens’ in my life it would have been different and I might have been more like others who wanted to investigate more of it. But I was having trouble with everything from alternate realities to overlapping identities, from a myriad of entities to constant missing time, and focusing on the many unhappy things that might also have happened to me that I didn’t fully remember, that seemed like it would have been far more harm than help.
The reason I ask is because it seems to me that your story might be of significant 'value' in research circles due to the lack of sources (i.e. excessive reading on abductions and possible 'leading' by hypnotists) of memory 'taint' you have been exposed to.
In the (albeit amateur) research I've done, I have found that in comparing stories, abductees harboring such tainted memories become very obviously so - which then rules them out (to me) as valid subjects for aiding in determining (if we ever can) the true nature of abduction phenomenon.
So...I'm wondering if you would be willing to tell me more of your story thru private messaging?
Originally posted by g2v12
Previous Reply..
edit on 2-9-2013 by g2v12 because: (no reason given)
I do however perceive the need for something more solid than a blurry photo or someone's story to be able to take any particular case as being potentially worthwhile.
It has long been my opinion that you cannot really investigate or even take a position on something properly if you start from a subjective basis.
That said, I would be surprised if people didn't also agree that there are a number of tales so far out there that it is very difficult to apply any element of credibility towards them.
I also think that if there are no set minimum standards or innovation to investigating/evaluating & addressing these cases properly,
and if those standards were not applied consistently
and objectively,
UFO accounts of almost any nature will never be able to carry any weight, and therefore do they really hold any value as evidence to the wider world,
or provide some knowledge from which we could form a limited understanding of any alien life that might be out there?
What do they look like?
What kind of environment do they exist in?
What kind of technology do they have?
How do they communicate?
What is their ethical disposition?
etc
I feel that one of the weaknesses of the Alien Abduction cases in particular is the lack of consistent investigation over time, especially regarding those claiming repeat abduction.
If you look at other fringe subjects such as cryptozoology
and ghost hunting (I hate when the latter gets bundled into the same category as ufology as its not really related, albeit equally as entertaining)
I might be wrong in this, and perhaps efforts like this do/have happened but if aliens were visiting me regularly, you can guarantee I would at the very minimum have a smart phone on me at all times with GPS tracking features enabled and my home kitted out with surveillance equipment.
Secondly, if discourse was possible,
I would be urging the aliens to contact the UN or similar political bodies to organise the acquisition of the information they need in circumstances that are ethically acceptable.
In the modern world where even us mere humans have developed technology such as cloning etc, why would an alien race have any need to abduct some random person?
Originally posted by RedCairo
Radar
Physical Injury
Implants
a) clandestine /disinfo
b) psyche issues
Unfortunately, standards are nearly always going to be logical, which also means linear, which also means conforming to current understandings about everything from psychology to science.
various bits about research standards
cultural suppression
one or many?
a) Aliens not showing up for abductions
b) bilocation
Originally posted by RedCairo
"alien" diversity
I can't believe you said that. You almost put yourself into the wildest abductee category with that logic. That made me laugh out loud! I think your entire model of what is going on here must be radically different from mine.
1. Who says they're random?
2. Maybe they use our wombs for the first ~2.5 months so merely having a string of DNA is not enough.
3. Who says there are not other more bizarre but less savory elements involved (e.g. a species which perceives the frequencies the human body puts off during sex and orgasm)?
4. If there is more to the overall energetic compilation of the human than we realize -- and I'm overlapping into metaphysics here -- then a child conceived of two humans interacting may have some differences to something merely concocted in a lab, and/or, the womb-host may have certain physiological reactions more ideal for the role (it is certainly the case that much 'experience' of childbirth affects the body of mother and child -- read "Evolution's End" by Joseph Chilton Pearce, but prepare to cry for our species if you do -- so it doesn't seem like a stretch that some degree of this may happen as part of conception, as well).
Those are just off the top of my head. My point though is that your question is valid, but we do NOT know what is truly going on here, so any question that seems to "exclude X because it's just not logical" comes with inherent accidental bias.
Originally posted by ArdenWolf
Shows like ancient aliens, ufo hunters, ect are there because people are interested. However, due to the bad science and token wacko or wackos of these shows. No matter how interested someone might be in some of the shows claims and proofs, they are forced to denounce most of the show as a result. The bad science makes the few really good stuff in the shows questionable, and the crazy theories thrown out there that are completely unnecessary completely ruin it.
If you come across something that's odd and seems to not fit, something that creates a question that causes one to speculate "I wonder." It needs to be left at that. Maybe a "could it be something extraterrestrial is fine" but crazy theories trying to answer these questions need to be left out. For example William J. Birnes (UFO Hunters) and Giorgio Tsoukalos (Ancient Aliens) are some of the worse perpetrators of this dilemma, the things they say are often so crazy sounding and out there that really the shows end up doing more harm than good. It's pure entertainment and gives no respectability to the field.
If the only way you can get a show about these things on air is to make a joke of it, you're frankly better off not putting it on air at all. It's not getting the info out there, it's making what good info there is circumspect.
People are interested, people do want to know. But what they want to know is the evidence, not someone crazy theory or crazy sounding claims. If there isn't enough credible experiences and good evidence to fill shows with on their own. That is a problem. Extremes draw attention, but they draw the wrong kind of attention.
I've seen all of these shows, and I like when the good questions are asked and to good evidences presented and then shudder once certain people open their mouths and realize, welp that was now made pointless, good job guys.
It's a reasonable assumption that if there has been evidence that UFO's can be picked up by radar as with some of the stronger cases that we can expect this to generally be true and therefore could be considered as verification for a UFO sighting.
Regarding being beaten up: As you say its not really evidence.
Implants would be, but there doesn't appear to be any real evidence of implants to speak of?
Anything technological along these lines will have some kind of evidence in its construction that it is indeed technological
before meaning can be applied to any case in particular, the basic verification of things actually happening would need to be proven first.
If something is happening, its happening regardless of whether its aliens, special ops or, excuse the pun, fairies at the bottom of the garden. Either way, the reported events either happen or they don't the perpetrator is relatively immaterial at this point.
Psychological issues can absolutely discount a percentage of claims in this subject, and in fact I think it should be a key element of any research done around ufology on a case by case basis. That said, Its more of a difficult one than I think most people realise. There are too many instances of certain types of behaviour through history that have been considered mental illness (voices.yahoo.com... as a set of examples in the 1800s), to be able to safely blanket everyone who claims an alien abduction into that basket.
I would run not walk from any psych major licensed to force drugs down my throat in their ignorance. If I were seriously in trouble that's the last place I'd go for help. Drugs and labels won't help me. I want to figure myself out, not get chemically lobotomized.
Nevetheless, for wider society to lend credibility to the subject