Tezcatlipoca
Senior Member.
Also even just within the Brown reference. There's two parts to this, the "leak" and the document "leak" (and self-debunk).We're all a bit off topic at this point, so what the hell?
That's an interesting point. I would argue, from the skeptical point of view, in the UFO world, much of the stigma is self generated. I'll use one example so I don't ramble too much.
Two of the bigger names in the UFO world are George Knapp and Jeremy Corbel. Corbel regularly releases supposed secret videos from the military, they appear at many UFO conferences and more recently Michael Brown, the leaker of the Immaculate Constellation program files, was on their podcast/ YouTube program. They present a lot of UFO evidence. Evidence we skeptics are supposed to take seriously.
Both of them also defend the incoherent and un-evidenced ramblings of Bod Lazar. Lazar's stories about him working on "sport model" flying saucers at Area 51, his multiple degrees from schools he never attended and claims of keeping the highly unstable element 115 in his kitchen are sketchy at best. When one delves into them, they are ludicrous. Yes, his first interviews in the late '80s made Knapp national news, but instead of moving on, 30 years later Corbel produced a whole documentary trying to keep Lazar and his stories going and defending all the BS Lazar trolled out over the years, because it was about UFOs.
For me, this creates a "stigma". When someone says "did you see the evidence Corbel posted today?", my first thought is, he thinks Bob Lazar has element 115 in his kitchen, why would I take anything he presents seriously?
This repeats in UFOlogy continuously. Every fuzzy light in the sky is an alien space ship. Even when things like the Chilean Air force UFO are identified as an airliner, many in the UFO world insist it isn't. A supposed crashed UFO under a mesa that no one has seen is reported to have superconducting ceramics on Secrets of Skinwalker Ranch. The Buga ball in Colombia. Batman balloons. Christmas shows reflecting off the clouds. It's this constant barrage of nonsense trolled out as "evidence" of UFOs and aliens that creates the stigma.
The "leak" - They claimed "Immaculate Constellation" was an actual program, but the entire way they explained it was instead as a Control System for specific types of imagery. When we talk Special Compartmented Informtion/SCI, a "Control System" is when you see fancy terms like GAMMA, HCS, TALENT KEYHOLE, etc. These are not programs at all what so ever - but may be connected to one/a series of specific programs. The Control Systems are basically the widest categorization for SCI (with compartments and subcompartments being below that respectively). You can get read-in/granted access at this level but most folks would be dealing with the compartment/subcompartment level not the overall CS.
The document "leak" - As we find out, "Immaculate Constellation" was in fact not a program, nor a real thing even. It was referenced in a concept proposal for a single training exercise as a simulated control system not an actual one.
Edited with a slight note: On the leak, they also clearly had access to the accurate information here the entire time. I don't really see a feasible way that occurred unless Brown was lied too. Same hand though, he did give enough detail in the original "leak" (pre-docs) that would indicate he did have/read at least some of the relevant documents - the context of which was very clear and overtly written.
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