Category Archives: Crop Circles

Crop Circles

SETI, Leslie Kean, and staying stuck

Leslie Kean, the great journalist who’s the subject of  two of my recent posts, writes about crop circles and about UFOs. Seeing her in the media is a squirm.

Leslie is interviewed in a 9-minutes segment on Seth Shostak’s weekly radio show. Seth heads up SETI. The interview is a classic example of the media fog machine and of why fundamental change is resisted by the powers that be. With a possibility of the biggest story ever, why cynicism and suppression? Aha. Seth Shostak would be out of job if the intelligence he is looking for already has arrived.

My hat’s off to Billy Cox, writing in DeVoid: The mainstream media’s lonely UFO web log. He skewers Seth Shostak deliciously, and it’s a pleasure for anyone who likes to see the bad guys get theirs.

Weird scenes inside the gold mine

by Billy Cox

The SETI Institute’s podcast interview with journalist Leslie Kean on Monday should be Exhibit A in the case to disqualify it from any future American media discussions on UFOs. That won’t happen, of course, but if you’re on the fence about SETI’s mind set, you need to give this a serious listen(Link). When it comes to sophistry, SETI’s “Skeptic Check: The Saucer’s Apprentice” is stone-cold gold.

Hosted by astronomer Seth Shostak, the SETI thing — also known as “Our Monthly Look at Critical Thinking” — was 50 minutes of mostly rehash bemoaning the lack of UFO evidence to study. It featured the predictable reassurances of experts like Phil “Bad Astronomy” Plait and Skeptical Inquirer managing editor Benjamin Radford, alongside Harvard alien abduction skeptic Susan Clancy. There was also an attempt to nudge Indiana University folklorist/abduction researcher Thomas Bullard into the skeptic’s corner, but alien abduction is another discussion altogether.

What made the session noteworthy was its invitation to Kean, whose skillfully presented UFOs: Generals, Pilots and Government Officials Go On the Record(Link) confronts debunkers with their most formidable challenge in recent memory. But it became immediately clear that Shostak (“I have an open mind”) not only wasn’t interested in evidence, he probably hadn’t bothered to read the book.

In his subsequent discussion with Radford, Shostak stated: “The other argument that’s frequently made is that scientists simply dismiss this phenomenon out of hand, that they won’t look, and this is one of the arguments in the new book by Leslie Kean … that there may be something real here and nobody will look at it …”

“Well, there’s a couple of errors right there,” Radford replied. “First of all, UFO sightings have been investigated. The claim that the U.S. government has never looked into these things is patently false. They have looked into these things …”

Whoa, time out. Kean mentioned Project Blue Book, the USAF study, in On the Record. Who claimed Uncle Sam “has never looked into these things”? Nobody. Except maybe Radford. Shostak, who didn’t bother to correct him, is a clever guy who really knows how to bait the hook. Here’s how he opened the Q&A with Radford:

“Ben, in your long career as someone who has investigated UFOs and sorted through the evidence, has there ever been a case that convinced you that aliens have visited the planet?”

Who said anything about aliens? Kean’s book dealt with an extraterrestrial hypothesis — the hypothesis that keeps SETI in business — but as she told Shostak earlier on the show, “I’m not even willing to assume that these are aliens.” On the Record deals with radar data, military reports, analysis of plant and soil damage, photo analysis, etc. Reviewing the data doesn’t amount to endorsing aliens. Shostak knows that. And yet, his tortured contortions to avoid said evidence are becoming cartoonish.

“You say a lot of them are disc-shaped,” he countered to Kean, “but isn’t the fact that we call them flying saucers, that we expect them to be disc-shaped, simply due to a reporter’s error back in 1947, when Kenneth Arnold … said he saw objects that moved across the sky like saucers skipping in water, he wasn’t describing the shape of course, he was describing the motion, and ever since, people have seen saucers — that strikes me as a little odd.”

Kean corrected him by mentioning the multiple shapes on record, and added that the USAF coined the UFO term for accuracy’s sake. Shostak was all over the board, even invoking Carl Jung’s collective unconscious as a possible explanation for abductions without mentioning how the Swiss psychoanalyst ultimately concluded UFOs had a physical component that could not be confined to symbolic projections(Link) .

Kean was interviewed for half an hour, knowing in advance their discussion would be trimmed for length. Two UFO cases came up: the 2006 Chicago O’Hare incident, and the 1989-90 Belgian triangle wave. The latter involved an F-16 scramble, radar data, detailed photo analysis, and a military press conference assembled by the colonel in charge of the Air Force investigation, who would later become a Major General . You don’t need a crystal ball to figure out which incident got sliced out of  Kean’s nine-minute segment.

The Belgian investigation, “which included a group of university scientists working on it outside of the government,” Kean wrote in an e-mail to De Void, “would have made a strong case for the listeners as to the genuine mystery here. The O’Hare case does not have the same level of gravitas because it was not repeated, and because it didn’t involve an official investigation and a report by a Major General, who had worked closely with scientists over an extended period.”

Shostak, naturally, had an explanation for everything. “Our choice of which parts of each interview to run were based on using the most compelling and clear stories,” he e-mailed De Void. “I think that O’Hare won out over the Belgian wave because of its immediacy, fame, and relevancy to our broadcast audiences. It certainly wasn’t an attempt to ‘load the dice’ in any way I can assure you.”

Maybe the weirdest part of “Our Monthly Look at Critical Thinking” was the kicker, reserved for a discussion of the best Hollywood ET spacecraft. For eight fetish-like minutes, Shostak and sidekick Molly Bentley detailed the special properties and features of the make-believe hardware in “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “District 9,” “Independence Day,” and 1953’s “War of the Worlds.”

De Void asked flat out if Shostak had actually read Kean’s book. Or the National Aviation Reporting Center on Anomalous Phenomena’s analysis of the O’Hare incident(Link) (a former NASA guy led the study). Or, for that matter, MUFON’s radar-saturated report(Link) on the 2008 Stephenville incident.

No reply yet on those questions. But we’ll keep you posted.

How a Quantum Leap Happens

This is a response I made in a dialogue I was having in one of several “featured conversations” that was on my html website. At that time I was having lots of exchanges, and they were the basis for naming our url “theconversation.org.”

This is the intro to the whole dialogue:
This conversation with Walter Starck, editor of the impressive Golden Dolphin Video CD Magazine,[Link] began when he wrote to the director of CROP CIRCLES: Quest for Truth, for which I am Executive Producer. I was so impressed with how he saw the crop circles and the world that I wrote to him, and each time he responds I am moved to tears by his insight and intelligence. I commend you to these quintessential communications that are “making sense of these times.”
Walter is part of my own worldwide web. He’s in Australia — and visited with me when he came to Los Angeles. This response I made to him ends with one of my all-time favorite quotes. Fyi, it’s from an article about growing marijuana.

It is such a pleasure to get your insightful communications, full of what I hold as core truths. Maybe this is my favorite line: “Expertise is on the path to knowing more and more about less and less until it knows everything about nothing.” And yes, yes, “That their meaning is not immediately clear and explicit is probably because they are intended to wake us up and make us think for ourselves not simply to instruct us.” This is the answer to the skeptics who point to how easy it would be for an advanced intelligence to be clear with us. And I think you’ve articulated the key to the significance of the circles, in that they challenge our deadly “unquestioning acceptance of our discrete individual existence.” If we understood what you say – “What we do to the world we do to ourselves” – everything would change.

You say, “The mass consciousness has a remarkable way of clinging to old ideas long past their use-by date; then, when it appears nothing will ever change, suddenly waking up and shifting to the new one.” Here’s one of my favorite quotes, that speaks to this:

“The controlling processes in photosynthesis begin at the atomic level, with the nucleus of the atom and its electron ring. Each orbit around the nucleus of an atom has a variety of potential energy levels at which electrons can move and still remain in orbit. If the electrons exceed the energy limits of their orbits they are forced to leave – to move into an orbit further from the nucleus and therefore an orbit which requires more energy to complete. This movement is the famous quantum leap which we have been using for years to describe an exponential increase of energy required to move from one plane to another. Knowledge, among other things, seems to operate according to this principle – you can acquire vast amounts of knowledge and still remain on the same plane, but there comes a point where the cumulative knowledge in your head – the cumulative creative energy you’re trying to deal with – requires a leap into another plane. Once you’ve made that first leap, you realize that, while knowledge is a cumulative process, it is not a progressive phenomenon. You do not move from plane to plane in a smooth, harmonious progression merely by storing up knowledge. You move from level to level, but always within the same orbit or plane, until you reach a point where you can no longer contain the creative energy you have been accumulating and remain within the same plane. So you make the quantum leap. And find yourself starting all over again, gathering energy on another level, always with successive levels above you, levels which are accessible only through the accumulation of vast amounts of knowledge, until once again the leap is within your ability. The life process in plants proceeds in this way, by quantum leaps of the atomic particles into a higher, more energetic plane.”

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Let Me Entertain You…

There are two interviews I did that are posted on YouTube that I liked a lot. I’d love it if you’d take a look.

Justin Brown, of Unified Field Radio, sure knew how to get me to tell you about what he posted(Link) Here’s what he wrote:

What a great show this is. Suzanne Taylor may be the most inviting and progressive woman in Los Angeles. She was with us this Saturday night and Suzanne is the producer and director of the groundbreaking films, “What On Earth? Inside the Crop Circle Mystery,” and “Crop Circles: Quest For Truth,” but she doesn’t stop there. She also facilitates theconversation.org, hosts lectures and get-togethers at her California home, and helps to usher in the new age of expanding consciousness with not only a sharp and open mind but with kind open arms. We speak about her movies, her gatherings, the latest crop of circles this year and what it all means. Tune in to capture her ambience but stay for the incredible enlightenment of the crop circles.

Although it’s radio, it’s on YouTube because there’s a slide show you can watch while we’re talking — of me, crop circles, and things from the two movies. In fact, this was one of my favorite radio shows. Justin is very sharp.

To see me being interviewed on camera, tune into trippy Aaron McCollum and The Truth Collective (link) There are lots of good visuals in a very sweet movie they made of the interview.

I’ve directed you to Part One of both interviews.  The other parts can be found if you fish around.