Ann K
Senior Member.
It says it does but I can't find it anywhere. I'm on an iPad, so I don't know if that makes a difference.Does it not download when you click the link above?
It says it does but I can't find it anywhere. I'm on an iPad, so I don't know if that makes a difference.Does it not download when you click the link above?
maybe in Files?It says it does but I can't find it anywhere. I'm on an iPad, so I don't know if that makes a difference.
Perhaps the teachers were hoping some cheesy old sci-fi movies would convince the children that aliens are just ordinary people in funny costumes.I expect the Ariel teachers thought they were being helpful in some way.
This title must have been inspired by the "I want to believe" slogan of the iconic X-Files prop poster. This is my interpretation of the underlying theme:"The psychiatrist who wanted to believe"
His "report" is 80 pages or so but there are some pages previewed on his facebook post. Attached here as a PDF.External Quote:The Ariel School UFO incident was not a "Grey-alien visitation." It was an encounter with exotic, black-skinned, humanlike figures, three of whom behaved in coordinated but non-threatening ways near a silver, disc-shaped craft.
External Quote:
Have you ever heard the story of the aerial school UFO?
Probably. It's one of the most compelling UFO stories ever told, as is, of course, every UFO story ever told.
Now, if you're not familiar with this one, the summary of it is this. 62 primary school children saw a UFO and an
alien while on their mid morning break at the aerial primary school in Rua, Zimbabwe.
Um, compelling. Now, the part that makes people go, "Wow!" is that 62 kids saw it. They all reported the same thing.
None of them even knew what UFOs were, and they have never changed their story all these years later. What you may not
know, though, is that there is some powerful bullshitery at work here because in actuality, the number of kids
is unknown. They didn't exactly report the same thing. They absolutely and unquestionably did know about UFOs and most of them have changed their story. Some so much that they even admitted that they were lying. And that's fine. They were kids and that's what kids do.
Kids are kids and kids play and kids have imaginations and whatever. That's all fine.
But what I don't think is fine though is how this UFO investigation was conducted. If you take a look through the recorded on camera interviews, you'll notice just how much the MUFON investigator and the Harvard psychiatrist influenced these children's testimonies. And since we have the actual words that came out of their mouths, you'll also notice just how much their reports have been distorted and altered to make the story more compelling. Now, obviously, it's a bit rude to say that uh they intentionally distorted these children's testimonies. So, I'll just say it's irrelevant to me if they did it intentionally or not.
...
In the week leading up to the aerial school alien invasion, students at Ariel had a discussion in one of their general discussion classes about UFO. You got to be [ __ ] kidding me.
[laughter]
No, I am not kidding you, Ghoul. The kids were talking about UFOs that week. But why? Well, because Mean Gene at 9:00 p.m. on Wednesday the 14th of September, 1994, brother UFO mania hit Zimbabwe and was running wild. At 9:00 p.m. on
Wednesday, there was some [ __ ] in the sky flying slowly and silently that looked like a fireball or a comet or a
meteor. Now, a surprising statistic that I discovered recently is that not a large percentage of the world's population are astrophysicists. So, it's pretty normal for people to see things in the sky and not know what they are.
So, as would be expected, a multitude of reports were then made about this fireball or comet or meteor.
...
On to the next day, Thursday the 15th of September, 1994 ... a handful of pupils at Ariel Primary School apparently saw a UFO in the sky. Some of them said that it looked like a pencil or a cigarette
or a circle with a flashing light at one end. Here's what one of the kids said.
Quote, "The day before the spaceship came, my friends and I were sitting in the playground and one of my friends, her name's Emily, she looked up into the sky and she said, "Oh, there's a UFO. It flew along for about a minute or so and then it disappeared."
In case you were wondering, no, this is [laughter] not the actual sighting. The kids didn't actually report this at the time either, and they would only mention this later when talking about the famous sighting, which would only occur the next day. But, as is, of course,
tradition in UFO stories, these reports all got merged together to make something more compelling, which
ironically makes it less compelling when you find that out. Why don't people mention the sighting the day before?
Thanks for the video!Speaking of Ariel School videos on YT:
(1) Cynthia Hind wrote in The Proceedings of the 8th BUFORA International UFO Congress (ibid., PDF below),
-She didn't say "...the day before" (Thursday 15th September) so we're talking Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday.External Quote:
Some of the Standard Four's (10-year olds) had a discussion earlier that week in one of their general discussion classes about UFOs.
(2) At about 21:00 on the night of Wednesday 14th September, a stage of a Soviet Zenit-2 rocket, the launcher for Cosmos 2290, re-entered the atmosphere creating a bright fireball, disintegrating into a number of fireballs, seen over much of Zimbabwe. Many people at first thought it was a comet or meteor, and it generated many UFO reports.
This was nationwide news in Zimbabwe, and the state-owned radio broadcaster ZBC asked listeners to 'phone in with their accounts.
...the general discussion was likley due to the buzz around the reentry sighting on the 14th "earlier that week"
No one I've spoken to even remembers the discussion, so we may never know.That might be right, but Hind says the discussion was "earlier that week", which implies (to me) not the day before.
One of my thoughts is, if the discussion was the day before, Hind's phrasing might be seen as an attempt to distance it from the children's accounts.
If the classroom discussion was after the 14th September fireball, it can only have been on the 15th, the day before the kid's reported sightings.
Discussion about UFOs on the 15th; unsupervised kids report UFOs on the 16th. If Hind knew this, she didn't make it clear.
For those sensitive to such things, the language is sometimes a bit salty -- not horribly so, I'd say, but if that bothers you, be aware of it going in.
If they talked about that previous discussion several days (or longer) later, I find nothing surprising in not remembering which day it was. That's also true if asking young schoolkids about a date. The teachers undoubtedly had schedules and lesson plans, but that probably wouldn't cover a freewheeling discussion.That might be right, but Hind says the discussion was "earlier that week", which implies (to me) not the day before.
One of my thoughts is, if the discussion was the day before, Hind's phrasing might be seen as an attempt to distance it from the children's accounts.
The Jeremy Corbell level of swearing is unfortunate."What.......in the F'ing blue hell?!!"