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Conspiracy

How they hide the evidence

By T.K. Randall
September 30, 2010 · Comment icon 74 comments

Image Credit: Rob Pongsajapan
Anthony Bragalia examines how evidence from the Roswell Incident may have been covered up.
If bodies and materials from the alleged UFO crash of Roswell in 1947 were indeed retrieved by the military then how did they go about hiding and storing that evidence in a way that could be kept secret but still facilitate access to examine it ?
Most all that is written about the Roswell UFO crash of 1947 is focused on the event itself. But if such a crash occurred, the involvement by elements of military and intelligence would be ongoing. The craft, debris and bodies must have been stored and studied in subsequent decades. Even today there must exist an infrastructure in place to store, secure and examine the craft and corpses. Who does this involve? How many would be needed? How difficult would it be to keep secret the physical artifacts of the greatest secret in history?


Source: UFO Iconoclast(s) | Comments (74)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #65 Posted by psyche101 14 years ago
I'm really looking forward to your thoughts on this one psyche. Nice pic btw! I am still going through it, and checking sources, but I do find this a point very well worth considering: It’s like the phenomena has changed as society has progressed and I don’t think it’s coincidental that 500 years ago, people were seeing fairies and were taken to the fairy kingdom where they had to procreate with the fairy queen, or whatever. Then they come back and two days had gone by. Two thousand, three thousand years ago the gods came down from the sky. People who are like vehemently nuts and bolts E... [More]
Comment icon #66 Posted by lost_shaman 14 years ago
It may not have been aliens at all. Perhaps it was as Nick Redfern suggested, test subjects, some of whom suffered from the disease Progeria. Here is a wiki about the disease. If the disease is genetic and only occurs once in every 8 million live births and most of those who suffer from the disease tend to die at relatively young ages, then based on the population size of the U.S. and the number of live births in the 1930s and 1940s it seems to me the stable population of those suffering from this disease in the U.S.should only be around 4-8 people and most of these should be minor children. T... [More]
Comment icon #67 Posted by mcrom901 14 years ago
so the above U.S. estimates are likely generous. deep bow shaman.... actually you're being too generous here.... considering the implausibilities i would say its statistically more likely that it was manbearpig... well.... reference clicky
Comment icon #68 Posted by booNyzarC 14 years ago
If the disease is genetic and only occurs once in every 8 million live births and most of those who suffer from the disease tend to die at relatively young ages, then based on the population size of the U.S. and the number of live births in the 1930s and 1940s it seems to me the stable population of those suffering from this disease in the U.S.should only be around 4-8 people and most of these should be minor children. The number of live births being relatively stable during these years, on average it should take 3 years to achieve 8 million live births in the U.S. during this time frame. The ... [More]
Comment icon #69 Posted by mcrom901 14 years ago
@mcrom - I'm not trying to say that he's got the whole story right, but to call this implausible simply tells me that you probably haven't read the book and looked at his presentation. He ties it all together nicely, as far as I'm concerned, and it makes far more sense than some flying saucer crashing in the desert. It should be at your local library if you want to check it out for yourself. cheers mate.... i haven't read the book.... and i don't think i will... nevertheless, the following review from amazon sums it up for me.... I like Nick Redfern. We've exchanged emails over the years and h... [More]
Comment icon #70 Posted by Dancingtiger 14 years ago
I read the post last night and it ended up popping around in my head while I tried to read before bed. I find the ideas presented as the basic structure in the post interesting. I can not say with any confidence that this is exactly what happened, mystery solved. It is possible, makes more sense then some of the other plots that have been chipped at and shined to make presentable for public consumption. I did no home work yet on it, so I feel iffy on making any concrete statements. Doesn't that sound like I am trying to cover my ass, lol. One thing I do know about Progeria is that rarely live ... [More]
Comment icon #71 Posted by lost_shaman 14 years ago
I definitely understand how those numbers look and I felt the same way initially. It would seem that American sufferers of progeria are unlikely source subjects for these experiments - and indeed they are. But a huge part of Redfern's theory is based on a Japanese division known as Unit 731, which his sources assert was brought to the US under Operation Paperclip. This Unit 731 carried out experiments in Japan during the war, and Progeria was apparently much "more common in Japan and Sardinia than in any other regions in the world. In fact, of the approximately 1,000 cases currently reported, ... [More]
Comment icon #72 Posted by skyeagle409 14 years ago
skyeagle409 writes: On the contrary, Colonel Madison, the Air Force's own project officer for test dummy operations, and who provided the material used in tthe Air Force's 1997 Roswell Report, had sucessfully debunked the very report that you were using as a reference. pysche101 responds: That is not true. You keep saying so, but repeating it does not make it true. It is a case of sour grapes and I think Madson should shut his stupid mouth before his siblings have to pay for his shortsightedness. His argument is a straight out case of sour grapes. Anyone can see that. Just like Moore and the b... [More]
Comment icon #73 Posted by booNyzarC 14 years ago
Well that's different, what you're talking about now is Werner's Syndrome, not Progeria, that occurs more frequently in Japan than anywhere else. The problem for Nick here is that these people don't present symptoms until after puberty in the form of premature aging, so a 30 year old may look to be 50-60 years old. Not nearly as "Alien" looking as a kid with Progeria. Werner's Syndrome is a form of Progeria, actually (from my understanding, which is that of a layman. So I openly admit I could be wrong). And yes, now that I'm home and look back to the referenced quote from the book, Redfern spe... [More]
Comment icon #74 Posted by psyche101 14 years ago
skyeagle409 writes: On the contrary, Colonel Madison, the Air Force's own project officer for test dummy operations, and who provided the material used in tthe Air Force's 1997 Roswell Report, had sucessfully debunked the very report that you were using as a reference. pysche101 responds: Now, that is very amusing, because: As I had correctly asserted, the very report which you used as a reference, has been sucessfully DEBUNKED!! What more is there to say?! No you did not, and have not, asserted anything correctly with regards to the Roswell incident. The only information you have contributed ... [More]


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