|
Skinwalker review and Strange Airplanes in Chinese Skies
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2005/Dec-03-Sat-2005/news/4607292.html
Dec. 03, 2005 Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
JANE ANN MORRISON: Knapp shows guts by treading on shaky ground of UFO sightings
Courage is required of any journalist who admits to believing in the possibility of UFOs because your peers turn on you. And your bosses worry that a UFO-loving reporter might lose some credibility with the public.
Courage also is necessary to live on a remote Utah ranch and stay there for 20 months even when frightening and unexplained things occur as soon as you move in.
George Knapp doesn't lack courage. And he's just co-authored a book about the family in Utah whose ranch was a site of unexplained paranormal activities.
Knapp expects to be ridiculed once again by colleagues, and he's ready for that as he starts promoting his first book "Hunt For the Skinwalker." Ever since Knapp first broadcast a series in 1989 about mysterious happenings in the Nevada Test Site's Area 51, he's been mocked, even though the series won national journalism awards.
"The ridicule comes from my fellow journalists," Knapp said. "The public can't get enough of it."
The KLAS-TV, Channel 8 newsman is at the forefront of news stories covering political corruption and the mob, but the one subject the public brings up to him most often is UFOs.
Knapp doesn't say yes, but he also doesn't say no when asked whether he believes in UFOs. Speaking carefully, he said that even if you eliminate the hoaxers and the deranged, there are still weird things happening out there.
"They can't be explained, and they haven't been investigated," Knapp said.
The events at a ranch in Utah that he and medical researcher Colm Kelleher wrote about are unique, he said. "They're ongoing, in one spot, over a long period of time." And they have been researched.
After the strange activities drove the family out, Las Vegas businessman Robert Bigelow bought the ranch in 1996 and paid for a research team to study it for years.
The book covers the period when the family lived there, and the studies by researchers afterward. Because of the sensitivity of the subject, the book is light on real names and doesn't reveal the exact location of the ranch 150 miles from Salt Lake City in the Uinta Basin.
The book tracks the history of the types of paranormal activities found at the ranch and explains that "skinwalker" is a witch that takes the shape of an animal and cannot be killed. The opening chapter, which chronicles their first paranormal encounter with a wolf that would not die, is a gripper.
As a believer in leaving trouble behind, I questioned why the family stayed when things were disappearing inside and outside the house, UFOs were floating around, their three dogs were killed in gruesome fashion and their cattle were mutilated. "At the end, the family was sleeping on the floor in one room together," Knapp said.
So why not leave instead of waiting 20 months?
The father was a proud, stubborn man, Knapp said. "He was convinced the military was doing it, and he was going to catch them."
He didn't catch them, and the book offers no conclusions for what caused the strange happenings at Skinwalker Ranch.
Knapp himself made four trips to the ranch, spending a total of 12 days there. "I thought my inherent weirdness quotient would attract something."
So the researchers made noise, lit fires, disturbed the earth and tried to attract the weird by strapping Knapp to a chair in the middle of the night "to see if something would come to get me."
He waited about 45 minutes. Nothing happened.
The only creatures that came to get him were mosquitoes.
I'm not a believer, partly because of my long-ago experience with a mischievous aunt who once reported seeing a UFO. She swore it was true, the story was printed in an Arkansas newspaper, and when UFO researchers interviewed her, she relayed detail after detail of her experience and never cracked. However, I knew it was a big, whopping lie enriched by Jim Beam.
So I became a doubter. My one overnight trip to Rachel in search of aliens and UFOs ended in failure to find either, although it was unbelievably fun.
So while I'm a skeptic, I won't deride Knapp. It takes guts to put your professional reputation on the line for something you believe in that seems downright goofy to most mainstream journalists.
Jane Ann Morrison's column appears Monday, Thursday and Saturday. E-mail her at Jane@reviewjournal.com or call 383-0275.
http://english.epochtimes.com/news/6-1-8/36675.html
Strange Airplanes Appeared in the
Sky of the Bohai Sea The Epoch Times Jan 08, 2006
Unexplained phenomena may be rare in our day-to-day lives, but they do sometimes occur. For example, many people in Beijing have claimed to have seen girls from ancient times dancing on the walls of the Forbidden City. A full explanation for this phenomenon has yet to be established.
Recently, China's CCTV reported that six Chinese Air Force pilots of the Flight Performance Teams witnessed a large unidentified aircraft formation flying toward them resulting in a near mid-air collision. Air traffic control radar systems were unable to observe and/or record the unidentified formation. This unexplained phenomenon has resulted in several unanswered questions.
On the CCTV program "Approaching Science", Feng Yi, deputy team lead of the Chinese Air Force Flight Performance Team, a top level pilot with 3,000 hours of flying experience, talked about this unusual experience. Feng and his team were conducting the performance training over the Bohai Sea. At 9 a.m., the flight team reached an altitude of 21,000 feet. Suddenly a large unidentified formation of planes appeared just about 30 miles left to them flying from southeast to northwest. Feng reported this observation immediately to the air traffic control center and requested them to conduct a search. Air traffic control replied that no other airplanes were flying in the area at that time.
Feng reasoned that perhaps he had imagined it all. But, all his teammates have also seen the same aircraft formations. Perhaps even more surprising to Feng was the fact, that the airplanes both he and his team have seen, all represented different countries from different periods of history. Propeller types as well as jets had been included in the formations.
After returning to the airport, Feng examined the air traffic control records. The records confirmed, that no other planes have been present in the area at the time when Feng and his teammates had reported their observations.
Some experts suggest that it all was an illusion. Others suggest that it is highly unlikely that all of the pilots had the same illusion at the same time. Some experts believe that perhaps an electromagnetic field exhibiting the recording properties similar to that of a video recorder may explain the phenomena. Still other experts suggest that perhaps it was a scene from another dimension or even another time.
Whatever the facts are, these unexplained phenomena still await answers.
|