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Exopolitics & Life in the Universe
From:
ICIS-Institute for Cooperation in Space
Date:
10/07/05 02:22:54
To:
info@peaceinspace.com
Subject:
Coop Radio: Hon. Paul Hellyer & Canada - Exopolitics & Life in the
Universe

http://exopolitics.blogs.com/exopolitics/2005/10/coop_radio_hon_.html
Coop Radio: Hon. Paul
Hellyer & Canada – Exopolitics & Life in the Universe
When: Monday October
10, 2005 at
Noon – 1 PM
Pacific Time
Where: Coop Radio: CFRO 102.7 FM Vancouver, B.C.
LISTEN LIVE:
http://www.coopradio.org
Host: Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd
In its continuing
Public Affairs series on Life In the Universe:
http://exopolitics.blogs.com/exopolitics/2005/04/coop_radio_spec.html
On Thanksgiving Day
(Canada) Coop Radio will broadcast the Hon. Paul Hellyer’s speech to
the Toronto Exopolitics Symposium, held September 25, 2005 at
Convocation Hall, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CANADA.
In 1963, Hon. Paul
Hellyer became Minister of National Defence in the cabinet of Lester
B. Pearson, who won the Nobel Peace Prize. Mr. Hellyer was Minister
of Defence from 1963-1967. Throughout his life, Hellyer has been
opposed to the weaponization of space. He supports the
Space Preservation Treaty to
ban space weapons.
Hon. Paul Hellyer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Hellyer
GUESTS: Victor
Vigianni & Mike Bird, Directors
EXOPOLITICS TORONTO: A Symposium on UFO Disclosure and Planetary
Directions Symposium
http://www.exopoliticstoronto.com/index.html
Click here to view
the historic speech given by Hon. Paul Hellyer at the Toronto
Exopolitics Symposium and Planetary Direction. (You can save it on
your hard drive or watch it streaming)
http://www.checktheevidence.com/video/
Also, you can view
the Discovery Channel's TV coverage of this Toronto event at their
video archives here:
http://www.exn.ca/dailyplanet/view.asp?date=9/27/2005
Former Canadian
Defense Minister Speaks Out on Extraterrestrial Visitors &
Government Secrecy
On September 25, 2005, Hon Paul Hellyer, the former Canadian
Minister for National Defense gave a speech in Toronto at an event
titled: "Exopolitics Toronto: A Symposium on UFO Disclosure and
Planetary Direction" (www.exopoliticstoronto.com)
. Hellyer described his time as Minister for Defense from 1963-1967
where the occasional UFO sighting report crossed his desk. He claims
to never have had time for what he considered to be a "flight of
fancy", but nevertheless retained an interest in the UFO phenomenon.
While Minister for Defense, he was guest of honor at the opening of
the world's first UFO landing pad at
Alberta,
Canada in 1967. He thought it an innovative idea from a progressive
Canadian community willing to pay for his helicopter ride, but did
not give much thought to UFOs as having serious policy implications.
He also describes a private UFO sighting he later had with family
and guests, but once again attributed it to a 'flight of fancy'
rather than anything having serious policy implications.
Hellyer's position on
UFOs dramatically changed after watching the late Peter Jennings
documentary special, "Seeing is Believing" in February 2005. Hellyer
decided to read a book that had been idly sitting on his book shelf
for two years. Philip Corso's, The Day After Roswell, sparked
intense interest for Hellyer in terms of its policy implications.
Corso named real people, institutions and events in his book that
could be checked. Intrigued by the policy implications, Hellyer
decided to confirm whether Corso's book was real or a "work of
fiction". He contacted a retired United States Air Force General and
spoke to him directly to verify Corso's claims. The unnamed General
simply said: "every word is true and more". Hellyer then proceeded
to discuss the "and more …" with the general and claimed he was told
remarkable things concerning UFOs and the extraterrestrial
hypothesis that interplanetary visitors have been here since at
least 1947. Finally convinced that the UFO phenomenon was real
Hellyer decided to come forward and speak at Exopolitics Toronto
about some of the "most profoundly important policy questions that
must be addressed." (for speech go to:
www.checktheevidence.com/video/
). The policy questions Hellyer addressed in his talk are both
profound and vitally important for citizens of every nation of
Earth.
First, Hellyer claimed that evidence concerning UFOs is the
"greatest and most successful cover up in the history of the world".
He confirmed that senior political officials even at the rank of
Minister of Defense, a position he himself occupied, are simply out
of the loop when it comes to information concerning UFOs and
visiting extraterrestrials. From a democratic perspective, that
raises many concerns about oversight, transparency and
accountability of those in control of the information, technology
and projects concerning the extraterrestrial visitors.
A second profound
policy question concerns the designation by the U.S. military of
visiting extraterrestrials as an 'enemy'. According to Hellyer, this
had led to the development of "laser and particle guns to the point
that they can be used against the visitors from space." It is this
targeting of visiting extraterrestrials that concerns Hellyer, and
he asks "is it wise to spend so much time and money to build weapon
systems to rid the skies of alien visitors?" Hellyer poignantly
raises the key policy question: "Are they really enemies or merely
legitimate explorers from afar?" Hellyer's question raises profound
importance in understanding the relationship between visiting
extraterrestrial civilizations and world peace.
The third policy question arose from the recent decision by
President Bush to build a base on the moon. Hellyer believes this is
the activation of a plan first launched by
Col
Corso's mentor, Lt General Arthur Trudeau to build a base from which
visiting extraterrestrials could be monitored and possibly targeted
as they approach the Earth. Hellyer outlined his opposition to the
weaponization of space, something that the liberal government of
Canada is currently opposed to. The weaponization of space remains a
key policy issue clearly has profound policy issues from the
perspective of extraterrestrial visitors to Earth.
Finally, Hellyer declared that the "time has come to lift the veil
of secrecy" and to have an "informed debate about a problem that
doesn't officially exist." Understanding the evidence concerning the
UFO phenomenon is vital to fully preparing citizens around the world
for the truth concerning extraterrestrials, despite official denial
and secrecy by those "in the loop". He calls for major global
initiatives to fully prepare global citizenry for the truth. He
endorses a position taken by key exopolitical researchers such as
Alfred Webre to prepare for a "Decade of Contact" where humanity is
prepared for the truth about extraterrestrial visitors through
informed debate and education.
Paul Hellyer is the
first senior politician to openly come out and declare the truth
about the extraterrestrial presence. He is blazing a trail that many
other senior politicians are destined to take. It will be wise if
the world's senior politicians quickly learn more about this
remarkable Canadian statesman and heed his important advise about
data on extraterrestrial visitors and the "profoundly important
policy questions that must be addressed."
© Michael E. Salla, PhD
Sept 29, 2005
http://www.exopolitics.org
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2005/09/11/pf-1212477.html
September 11, 2005
Hellyer takes up the cause
of believers in UFOs
By JOHN WARD
OTTAWA (CP) - Paul Hellyer, onetime cabinet minister and a political
chameleon who went through Liberal and Tory colours before founding
two political parties of his own, has a new cause - UFOs.
Hellyer is to be a featured speaker at a UFO conference in Toronto
later this month and organizers are making much of his credentials
as a former defence minister in the Pearson administration 40 years
ago.
Skeptics are, well, skeptical.
The 82-year-old Hellyer says he believes not only that UFOs are
extraterrestrial visitors, but that some governments - the United
States at least - know all about it and are covering up.
He says he believes American scientists have re-engineered alien
wreckage from a supposed UFO crash at Roswell, N.M. in 1947 to
produce modern technical marvels.
"I believe that UFOs are real," he said in a recent interview. "I'll
talk about that a little bit and a bit about the fantastic coverup
of the United States government and also a little bit of the fallout
from the wreckage, by that I mean the material discoveries we have
made and how they've been applied to our technology."
Hellyer was once a political star. He was first elected to the
Commons in 1949 at the age of 25, at that time the youngest person
ever to win a seat.
He went on to become a cabinet minister, ran for the Liberal
leadership against Pierre Trudeau, switched parties to the
Conservatives and ran for that party's leadership, too. He
eventually founded two other political parties, Action Canada in
1971 and the Canadian Action party in 1997.
He says his conviction that UFOs are real arose from reading in
recent years, not from anything gleaned from secret archives during
his time in office.
"I've been a skeptic for quite a while but I've been exposed to more
and more information recently and have just decided to take a
stand," he said.
Organizers of the MUFON conference - the name is an acronym for the
Mutual UFO Network - see Hellyer's participation as giving
legitimacy to the cause.
The conference is billed as "Canada's first major UFO symposium
calling for complete government disclosure concerning the reality of
UFOs and the extraterrestrial presence on Earth."
"Mr. Hellyer's involvement will increase the impact of the
symposium," says a conference news release.
Victor Viggiani, a retired educator who is an organizer of the
event, calls him a featured speaker.
"We're depending on him to be a real focal point," Viggiani said.
"We're using his sort of experiences to demonstrate that national
political figures can come out and talk about this."
He says Hellyer has a simple point to make: "Let's start telling the
truth about what we all know is really happening in the skies and
journalists start paying attention, that's basically going to be his
message."
Does Hellyer feel he's being used?
"I think they are trying to make the most of my appearance."
His participation is exasperating for David Gower, a spokesman for
Skeptics Canada, a group dedicated to rational thinking and to
debunking paranormal claims.
"This sort of thing is a big feather in their cap, to come across
people like him," says Gower, who is dismissive of the whole UFO
mystique.
"There's no convincing evidence that can be anything other than
personal anecdotes or allegations that can't be proven," he said.
He said UFO enthusiasts have a quasi-religious fervour that often
makes them impervious to doubt.
"There is a deep-seated need, a desire in people, to feel that
there's something in control somewhere, bigger than they are,
something that can give some kinds of answers."
Trying to wean people away from UFO beliefs is like "nailing Jello
to the wall," he said.
Viggiani says UFOs could be a boon for mankind. He says they have
technology that could solve the world's energy problems "in one fell
swoop."
This is where the conspiracy theory takes off for him.
"For some strange reasons, our governments can't come forward to
talk to us about what these energy sources are," he says. "Because
oil is just about $70 a barrel and that would undercut a lot of the
power structure, the World Bank . . . the fossil fuel industry.
"They are just not prepared to handle this."
Hellyer, too, thinks there are important secrets to be learned.
"I think, frankly, that the subject should be taken seriously,
because there are consequences that have real effects or could have
real effects on the people of the world and I think there should be
discussion of it."
While some believers think western governments have actually
negotiated with extraterrestrials, Hellyer doesn't go that far.
"To my knowledge, it's just visitations," he says.
Although his participation in the conference is likely to draw
ridicule, Hellyer said he's used to that after his roller-coaster
political life. "It wouldn't be the first time, would it?"
VICTOR VIGGIANI –
“Lights in the Sky”
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Features/2005/09/15/1218331-sun.html
September 15, 2005
Lights in the sky
By BRODIE FENLON, TORONTO SUNThe truth is out there -- and it may be
as close as your own backyard.
Two months ago, on July 14 at 11:45 p.m., Nova Williams was sitting
with her dog on the backyard patio of her family's Toronto home when
she saw a shooting star flash past her head.
Only it wasn't a shooting star.
Williams said she took a closer look and described what she saw as a
glowing object shaped like "a boomerang upside down" zooming east to
west over Kingston Rd. at about the same altitude as would fly a
small single-engine aircraft.
But unlike a Cessna, this object made no sound. Williams, 35, said
it sped up and slowed down in one fluid motion, then stopped
suddenly and hovered.
Moments later, it moved south -- without turning -- toward Lake
Ontario, then returned and flew out of sight, she said.
"There was no engine sound. It was an eerie quiet," said Williams,
who quickly sketched what she saw on a computer paint program. "I
thought it was kind of neat. It didn't frighten me because I had
seen something like it before."
---
Every year, in every corner of this country, hundreds of Canadians
like Williams are seeing and reporting mysterious objects in the
night sky.
Glowing orange orbs. Delta-shaped wings. Silent cigar-shaped craft.
Saucers and balls of coloured lights that hover, then move too
quickly -- and in too many directions -- to be conventional
aircraft, they claim.
Even the fiercest of cynics would be hard-pressed to dismiss some of
the UFO reports filed since 2000 with a variety of federal agencies
and obtained by the Sun.
They include bizarre sightings by RCMP officers, air traffic
controllers and dozens of military and commercial pilots -- even the
pilot of an aircraft carrying the prime minister during a flight
over Alberta in March 2004.
Officially, Transport Canada and the department of national defence
say they have no interest in UFO sightings, which they pass on to
Chris Rutkowski, a lone astronomer and volunteer in Winnipeg who
receives one or two reports a day.
Hundreds more are reported independently to the National UFO
Reporting Center (NUFORC), a Seattle-based organization that
receives, records and attempts to corroborate eyewitness accounts.
Others are sent to Canadian UFO researcher Brian Vike of HBCC UFO
Research, which has a comprehensive website that includes photos,
video footage, audio interviews of witnesses and a breakdown of
reports by province.
It's a global phenomenon that, according to these reports, has
repeatedly touched our own backyards. In the last three months, more
than 40 UFOs have been spotted in Ontario, including:
- Whitby, Aug. 12: A bright white shape like a "teardrop" raced up
into the sky at 1 a.m.
- Vaughan, July 13: An orange disc, its light fading in and out,
hovering over the IKEA store on Hwy. 7.
- St. Catharines,
July 5: Five friends camping in a park near the city claim they saw
six saucer-like objects at 2 a.m. One of the objects reportedly
dropped to within three metres of the ground and "emitted four
pulses" of blinding light. The anonymous witness who reported the
incident to NUFORC noted, "Three of my four friends made it clear
that they never wanted to speak of the event again."
- Toronto, July 3: A V-shaped formation of more than 20 glowing oval
objects flying over an apartment building at 919 Dufferin St.
Rutkowski, who describes himself as an "open-minded skeptic," said
the majority of UFO sightings he receives can be explained away as
satellites, aircraft or helicopters, the international space
station, search lights, astronomical anomalies like meteorites and
meteorological phenomenon such as ball lightning.
For instance, a "very bright light falling from (the) sky" reported
by the pilot of the PM's aircraft and a number of other airliners in
March 2004 was likely a meteorite.
But each year, there are a "handful to two dozen" well-documented
sightings in
Canada that simply can't be explained, Rutkowski said, noting he's
never seen a UFO himself.
Science, he added, has a done itself a great disservice by ignoring
a phenomenon that thousands of people around the world claim they
have witnessed.
"If it's not a physical phenomenon, it's at the very least a social
or psychological phenomenon and it should be investigated by
science," Rutkowski said.
"It's very good to approach this with an open mind, as long as it's
not so open your brain falls out."
Some of the most compelling reports obtained by the Sun were filed
by people whose jobs entail sober thought and rational observation
skills, such as pilots and police officers:
- The pilot of a Cessna Citation 560 twin-engine executive jet
reported a "very large stationary metallic object beside the moon at
a very high altitude" to air traffic control in Toronto on April 28,
2003. Several other pilots reported the same object, as the report
notes: "(Aircraft) reporting was flying between
Buffalo,
N.Y.,
and London,
Ont., and saw it for 30 min, and was flying at an altitude of
43,000, said (sic) the object was much higher. The shift supervisor
at Toronto
airport telephoned this in; he also said that several other
(aircraft) reported same UFO."
- The pilot of Air
Canada
Flight 1185 flying over Saskatchewan in December 2001 reported a UFO
to air traffic control in
Winnipeg.
The report, which was submitted to the Canadian Air Defence Sector,
noted: "The (aircraft) pilot observed strobes and flashing lights
which he estimated to be (7,600-9,000 metres) above him ... The
co-pilot of the (aircraft) flight observed same. Pilot noted that it
did not look like a satellite."
- An officer with the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary watched for
about an hour and a half as two white objects moved north to south
over Seal Cove in the Conception Bay area of the province on Aug. 3,
2001.
- On Sept. 8, 2004, the pilot of an Air Canada flight from Vancouver
to Saskatoon reported a UFO "heading south at high speed -- passed
directly overhead."
But, even the best-trained eyes can be fooled.
Cpl. Ed Anderson and then-Const. Jeff Johnston were based at the
RCMP Pangnirtung detachment in Nunavut on Jan. 9, 2001, when they
were called by a resident to check out a red light hovering in the
sky over the remote northern hamlet on Cumberland Sound.
Armed with cameras and binoculars, the officers watched the
mysterious object for more than 20 minutes.
In their separate incident reports, the officers described a
stationary object that faded in and out "almost as though it was
slowly rotating in the sky." After about 10 or 15 minutes, the light
lowered until it was hovering above the ice, its light reflected in
the snow.
"It appeared to be like a cylinder-type shape. The light then
disappeared and was not seen again," Johnston noted in his report.
"At this point, writer has no idea what the object was ... It was
definitely a strange occurrence and at this time remains unexplained
and unidentified."
Reached by the Sun in
Moncton,
Johnston
said he and his partner reported their observations to several
agencies, including Norad. They were told the object was likely a
satellite that appeared odd because they were positioned so far
north.
The officers were satisfied with the explanation several nights
later when they saw the same object in the same location.
---
But for others, like Nova Williams, there is no earthly explanation
for what they see in the heavens.
An airshow enthusiast, a former volunteer auxiliary officer with
Toronto Police, and until recently, an employee of a provincial
professional association, Williams said she is certain that what she
saw is not from this world.
The Scarborough woman's July encounter was not her first: In the
early 1980s, when she was 12 or 13, she and her father were
stargazing in the same backyard when they saw three similar objects
flying in a V formation, she said.
Several times throughout that week, Williams said her family saw
"tonnes of disc-shaped objects darting in and out of each other
without losing speed" in the sky over their house. Her aunt was
"terrified" and has refused to speak of it since, she said.
Another unexplained encounter involved a bright beam of light from
the sky that filled the family's living room about six years ago
while she and her mother were watching late-night TV.
As strange as it all sounds, Williams is not afraid to speak out
about her experiences.
But when she recently asked her neighbours if they had seen the same
objects, she was met with an awkward silence before they changed the
subject.
"I think people are very narrow-minded," she said. "If they start
thinking about it, it frightens them. So they don't think about it
at all."
MIKE BIRD - They're
coming. Are we ready?
(The Globe and Mail is Canada's largest National Newspaper with 2.5
million Canadians who read the Globe throughout the week)
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20050924/UFOS24/TPEntertainment/?query=hellyer
They're coming. Are we
ready?
This weekend,
Toronto will
host some of the UFO community's more level-headed types, writes
ANTHONY REINHART.
They believe alien visitors are on the way, and we should be
prepared to make contact
By ANTHONY REINHART
Saturday, September 24, 2005 Page M3
On a warm September evening in 1975, while sipping pre-dinner drinks
outside with his family, Mike Bird found his truth right here -- not
"out there," as they would say later on the X-Files. From his perch
on Close Avenue in south Parkdale, Mr. Bird turned his 24-year-old
eyes to "a bright, fuzzy ball, just sitting there, shimmering" over
Lake Ontario.
"I watched it for two hours," says Mr. Bird, now 54, recalling how
he fetched his telescope and trained it southward. "My wife looked
at it, my parents looked at it. Before long, I was firmly convinced
that we were dealing with something real."
Tomorrow, at the University of Toronto's Convocation Hall, Mr. Bird
will join hundreds of fellow earthlings who, he hopes, will be
similarly convinced -- not only that UFOs exist, but that
governments know far more about extraterrestrial visitors than
they're letting on.
"It's not about selling T-shirts," he says of the event. "It's about
putting up the best speakers who can represent the position that we
are not alone."
The day-long symposium, dubbed Exopolitics Toronto, is an effort by
the UFO community's more moderate and serious adherents to prod
officialdom into opening its own X-files so that citizens of Earth
can plan for the day aliens make contact.
Their beef about secrecy is an old one, easily dismissed by skeptics
inured to supermarket tabloids, sci-fi blockbusters and out-there
conspiracy theories. The trouble, Mr. Bird and his colleagues say,
is that credible data get overlooked in the process.
To them, official disclosure would not only help to silence the
skeptics, but also the wackier elements of the UFO community, who
only make the issue easier for the rest of us to laugh off and for
governments to avoid.
"I stopped reading science fiction once I saw that the UFO was
real," says Mr. Bird, the regional head of Mutual UFO Network (MUFON),
a small but committed international band of volunteer investigators,
founded in the United States in the 1960s. "It became science fact
that just hasn't been proven yet."
Soon after his
Close Avenue
encounter 30 years ago, Mr. Bird heard a radio ad for a night course
on UFOs at Castle Frank High School, taught by Henry McKay, founder
of MUFON
Canada. He
signed up, and a year later, he and Mr. McKay rounded up a dozen
others, rented a small bus and headed to a MUFON conference in
Michigan.
There, they heard J. Allen Hynek, the astrophysicist who set out to
debunk UFO claims for the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s -- only to
find that he couldn't. Dr. Hynek, who coined the term "close
encounters of the third kind" before Steven Spielberg made it
famous, was among the first scientists to lend credibility to UFO
study.
Mr. Bird, a computer programmer and recreational hockey player,
cannot claim similar credentials. He does, however, claim an
abundance of curiosity, fuelled by that first sighting in 1975, and
three more since then in the Toronto area.
In the early days, Mr. Bird would sit on the roof of his father's
cottage and scan the night sky, but he saw nothing but stars and
satellites. Subsequent sightings came during field investigations
for MUFON, which he sometimes conducts with other members, but not
his wife. ("She's not enamoured by it," he admits, "but she doesn't
think I'm a nut.")
The last one happened three years ago just west of the city.
"I was standing in a crop formation north of Milton," Mr. Bird says.
"I look up and I see this super-bright light up to the north and
west of me."
He watched the big light overtake a smaller one, from a plane, and
head east toward Pearson airport.
Thoughts that it might have been an unusually bright jetliner
disappeared weeks later when he found a similar report on the
Seattle-based National UFO Reporting Center's website. It described
a sighting near Kingston, several hundred kilometres to the east,
from the same night.
"To me, that's a match," Mr. Bird says, "but I don't need a match. I
need to get down to the hard work of making this mean something."
That can be a lonely job in Canada, much less Toronto. MUFON counts
just 50 members coast to coast, while similar local groups have come
and gone.
Mr. Bird hosts occasional meetings at an Etobicoke library, which
typically attract about 20 of the curious -- though few are curious
enough to join MUFON. All volunteer investigators must first pass a
test on the contents of a 311-page field manual, which sets out
strict procedures for evidence-gathering.
As for tomorrow's conference, advance ticket sales were slow this
week, but Mr. Bird, hoping for a crowd of at least 1,500, is banking
on a lot of walk-in traffic.
"We think we're bringing forth the best people on the planet," he
says of the five speakers on the bill. Most anticipated, perhaps, is
the latest addition to that list: Paul Hellyer, a former defence
minister in Lester Pearson's Liberal government, who believes that
UFOs exist, and that officials have been too quiet about it.
Also on the list are American author and historian Richard Dolan;
Italian journalist/researcher Paola Harris; researcher Stanton
Friedman of New Brunswick; and Stephen Bassett, Washington's only
registered UFO research lobbyist and a frequent speaker on
"exopolitics" -- the policies humans might employ in the event of
contact with extraterrestrial beings.
Like many in the movement, Mr. Bird puts great stock in the hundreds
of plausible, if unproven, accounts that MUFON has collected in
firsthand interviews, often from sources who are easy to trust:
astronauts, military and commercial pilots, police officers.
"If a pilot says a UFO hovered off the bow of his plane, it either
happened or it didn't," Mr. Bird says. "It's either yes or no, and
if we're not alone, our planet needs to know that so that we know
what to do tomorrow."
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