(San Francisco Chronicle - July 9, 1947)The landing created by the imaginative journalist, became then a crash.First of all, the debris found didn't look like a disc, the object didn't land but crashed, and it's not true that the rancher McBrazen stored any disk.In the evening of July 8, the Army Air Force base in Fort Worth had examined the wreckage and identified it not as a flying saucer, but as a high altitude weather balloon carrying a radar target made of aluminum and balsa wood. An AAF news release correcting the misidentification was published RDR on July 9, but by then it was too late. The Roswell paper, sheriff's office and the Air Force base were already being bombarded by calls from all over the country, mostly journalists looking for a story.Anyone who reads what Stanton Friedman and many others wrote about the Roswell incident, must have a powerful will to believe in the myth of the crashed Flying Saucer. Friedman rediscovers the forgotten Roswell event in 1978 when he was giving a lecture in Baton Rouge and received a phone call from a man who told him that he had handled the wreckage of a crashed spaceship.By the way, Jesse Marcel, the man who made the claim, couldn't remember either the month or even the year of the event.Of course, the Roswell incident is given by those who believe in the UFO=Extraterrestrial hypothesis as an evidence of what they say. But there is more: the whole incident can also be interpreted as a failed piece of disinformation directed to the Soviet Union in the beginning of the Cold War. The unwanted echo in the American press forced the disinformers to go back to the real thing: the weather balloon. UFO Phenomenon is old, perhaps older than men, and truth is that never was any crash of extraterrestrial or para-terrestrial artifacts whatever these are.
For anyone interested in tracing the story of Roswell through its many different variants, we suggest reading:
UFO Crash at Roswell: The Genesis of a Modern Myth. Benson Saler, Charles A. Ziegler, and Charles B. Moore. Smithsonian Institution Press. Washington and London. 1997.
Tomas Scolarici
Credit: ovni-news.blogspot.com
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