From WITNESS TO ROSWELLThe provost marshal at the RAAF in July of 1947, Maj. Edwin Easley, never told investigators anything other than that, as a retired military officer, he was sworn to secrecy and couldn't talk. But in his final days, he confessed to family members about seeing alien bodies from the crashed UFO.170Read more at location 2698
One of the officers in the crew was overheard to ask Ramey about the 1947 Roswell events: “What about it, General? What was that stuff?” To which Ramey responded, “It was the biggest lie I ever had to tell.... [It was] out of this world, son, out of this world.”186Read more at location 2913
After seeing a program on TV that featured the Roswell Incident, she at last asked him, “Well, Dear, is it true?” He answered, “Well, I suppose its time I should tell you. I've been meaning to for a long time. It's true.”Read more at location 3062
On his deathbed, according to Blanche Wahnee, her father gave his family one final caveat: “Whatever you do, don't believe the government. It really happened.”215Read more at location 3148
Are we to conclude that they are all lying—deceiving their loved ones at the end of their lives? To the surviving families, it remains a feeble, futile exercise at best. And for those few whose true love of family would inevitably outweigh love of country—though it may have taken a lifetime of denial—we strongly maintain that their dying words meet all the criteria for reasonable doubt.
Saturday, December 03, 2011
Roswell: Food for thought
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