To: Solon who wrote (29638 ) 8/14/2012 9:55:44 AM From: Giordano Bruno Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69300 You may or may not be interested in this video. It isn't for everyone Public skepticism about the reality of UFO crashes stems from a near total absence of news coverage about such events. The naïve media consumer assumes that news organizations present a more or less complete picture of world events. Consequently, the absence of news about UFO crashes suggests to such people that crashes have not, in fact, occurred. Historically, however, leading news organizations have worked very closely with the federal government to censor news judged to have "national security" implications. This means that UFO crashes almost certainly would not have received much news coverage, especially by national-level news organizations. In this talk, Terry Hansen, author of 'The Missing Times: New media complicity in the UFO cover-up,' explains why news organizations cooperate with the government, how news censorship is achieved in practice, and how propaganda works to hide important events and reduce public curiosity. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAvJbnihvlQ&feature=player_embedded #! From Skeptic..."and in the end he demonstrates why science is the best tool ever devised to determine whether or not a belief matches reality." No thank you, I simply don't have that much faith in science's ever evolving postulations. And there is this: bmartin.cc Science may never fully understand consciousness but that's ok too. Consciousness may not want to be understood by science. How's that?-g- For science to claim that hallucinations can occur in every human sensory modality seems almost paranoid.