Depending on the poll referenced, between 34-42% of Americans believe in UFO's, extraterrestials, etc.
As a frequent listener to the late radio host Art Bell, creator of the overnight program Coast to Coast AM, I listened carefully to his reports of UFOs, alien encounters, and government secrecy. His show became a gathering place for conspiracy theorists, believers, and the merely curious, often featuring dramatic calls from people claiming insider knowledge.
One of the most famous came on September 11, 1997, when a man identifying himself as a former Area 51 employee phoned in, frantic and panicked, to claim that “extradimensional beings” had infiltrated the military and were planning mass disasters to depopulate the planet. The call cut off abruptly, sparking rumors of a cover-up, though the caller later admitted it was a hoax.
Bell himself claimed a personal encounter: in 1994, he and his wife reported seeing a massive triangle-shaped UFO, an event he later had memorialized in a painting.
Over the years, Bell argued that the government was hiding the truth about extraterrestrials and sometimes even complicit in related global events. Though he retired from Coast to Coast AM in 2003, he returned with a new program, Midnight in the Desert, to continue his explorations into the unexplained.
That is the last thing we need now. The arrival of aliens. They will be arrested, put in a cage and sold. Save the UFOs.
ReplyDeleteAs a regular listener of the Art Bell Show over the years, I noticed the shows technique, modus operandi. A farmer would give precise details of the exact day and time in 1947 when the flying saucer landed in his field, even a weather report or some other detail. The only thing missing was any actual evidence of the craft that landed on his property; no photos, no vehicle parts, no remembered interaction with the aliens.
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