Gary C
Senior Member.
A few posts this summer have gotten me thinking about the role of societal changes in the creation of bunk, specifically UFOlogy.
One member pointed out that disk shaped space craft had appeared in the movies years before the term "flying saucer" was first used in the press.
The more recent NJ and Scandinavian 'Drone Flaps' obviously coincide with public and governmental debate over the use and misuse of drones domestically while a highly publicized drone war rages in the skies over Ukraine.
I'd like to start at the beginning, Roswell.
My parents were born in the 1920's coming of age in the Great Depression and WWII. They witnessed the creation of commercial air travel. They lived through the massed aerial combat of the war. Before WWII and with a few exceptions, only military personnel and a handful of well-heeled private citizens travelled by air. During WII tens of thousands died in airplane crashes both in and out of combat. After WWII, commercial air traffic exploded, sometimes literally. In my parents' lifetimes, the "plane crash" went from something that happened to an air mail pilot or a stunt performer to something that happened to the kid you grew up with. It became both common enough for ordinary citizens to discuss at length and rare enough to be newsworthy. I suspect this is the sweet spot for the birth of a pop culture mythos.
From Statistia - https://www.statista.com/chart/3335/people-killed-in-commercial-plane-crashes-since-1942/
(Note the spike beginning in 1946/47)
[Can we get Statistia approved as a safe source for links to graphics?]
Now what does a layperson know about aviation? Bernoulli's Principle? Unlikely. Meteorology? Not much. Navigation? Very little. Only one or two percent of the population have ever been on an aircraft yet the topic must come up with every morning newspaper featuring a photo of the most recent commercial or military accident.
Now the UFO phenomenon did not "take off" (sorry) until well after the actual Roswell incident, however the WWII generation it blossomed in was already primed with the necessary concepts for UFOlogy to take shape.
What other social transitions or conditions affected the spread or decline of UFOlogy or another fringe belief?
[Edited for clarity, I'm looking for more specific examples.]
One member pointed out that disk shaped space craft had appeared in the movies years before the term "flying saucer" was first used in the press.
The more recent NJ and Scandinavian 'Drone Flaps' obviously coincide with public and governmental debate over the use and misuse of drones domestically while a highly publicized drone war rages in the skies over Ukraine.
I'd like to start at the beginning, Roswell.
My parents were born in the 1920's coming of age in the Great Depression and WWII. They witnessed the creation of commercial air travel. They lived through the massed aerial combat of the war. Before WWII and with a few exceptions, only military personnel and a handful of well-heeled private citizens travelled by air. During WII tens of thousands died in airplane crashes both in and out of combat. After WWII, commercial air traffic exploded, sometimes literally. In my parents' lifetimes, the "plane crash" went from something that happened to an air mail pilot or a stunt performer to something that happened to the kid you grew up with. It became both common enough for ordinary citizens to discuss at length and rare enough to be newsworthy. I suspect this is the sweet spot for the birth of a pop culture mythos.
From Statistia - https://www.statista.com/chart/3335/people-killed-in-commercial-plane-crashes-since-1942/
(Note the spike beginning in 1946/47)
[Can we get Statistia approved as a safe source for links to graphics?]
Now what does a layperson know about aviation? Bernoulli's Principle? Unlikely. Meteorology? Not much. Navigation? Very little. Only one or two percent of the population have ever been on an aircraft yet the topic must come up with every morning newspaper featuring a photo of the most recent commercial or military accident.
Now the UFO phenomenon did not "take off" (sorry) until well after the actual Roswell incident, however the WWII generation it blossomed in was already primed with the necessary concepts for UFOlogy to take shape.
- Things in the air must be "flying"
- Things that fly have pilots operating them
- Things that can fly can crash
- Pilots die in crashes
- Government or military authorities engage in censorship regarding their activities [also a byproduct of WWII]
What other social transitions or conditions affected the spread or decline of UFOlogy or another fringe belief?
[Edited for clarity, I'm looking for more specific examples.]
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