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I believe that specifically the paragraph that starts with "If, though, it was ..." is far too insinuating. It should not be the purpose of an encyclopedia to imply that the US government is lying, as much as this paragraph does. Especially the sentence that US military might hold 'alien' weapons is beside the purpose of an encyclopedia article. Still... I didn't change the text because I'd like to hear other opinions about this first... ] 6 Jan 2004
==New Section: Roswell as misidentified military programs: The Air Force reports and Project Mogul==


The next section has been added, though it is not yet complete. I've written the 1994/5 Air Force report section, but have not yet written the "critique" part beyond the opening paragraph, and left a lot of the following stuff intact.
----


I've also eliminated some duplicated sections, and some stuff which rests on the POV assumption that a cover-up was covering up something sinister.
This article makes a couple of logical leaps that cannot be supported. You say that if it were ever established that the thing that crashed at Roswell was indeed an alien craft, this was would prove that (a) the film of the purported autopsy of an alien would be verified as true, and (b) it would be proven that the USA has adopted alien technology.


I'll address the critiques of the 1994 report, then move onto the 1997 report and ITS critiques next.
Neither of these outcomes follows at all.


] 03:17, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
If the film was bogus rather than a true record of an actual alien autopsy, then any proof that whatever crashed was alien would not suddenly convert the film from being bogus to being true. The same argument for the alien technology - because just because the US govt could be proven to have had contact with alien life forms does not of itself prove that they have been able to adopt any of their technology. Cheers ] 10:20, 15 Mar 2004 (UTC)


----


:Just added the "critques" section of the Air Force reports section. Next: Moore's Mogul flight 4 reconstruction with references to critisims (like Rudiak's), and then the 1997 Air Force Case Closed report.
I call Six Days... a "semi"documentary because some of the framing elements are staged. The Maysles Brothers, it ain't. Will elaborate in a separate entry on the film at some point. ] 29 Apr 2004


] 20:33, 2 October 2006 (UTC)
==POV==
This article is heavily slanted toward the idea that there was an alien crash and cover up at Roswell in 1947. It is structured in such a way that dissenting viewpoints are immediately rebutted and often unfairly. For instance it was noted that the the governement has suggested that people who claim to have seen bodies may be remembering the bodies of dummies used in the 50's and 60's and mistakely associating them with the Roswell crash. The article then claim that this is at odds with the original report which does not mention bodies. But how was a report written in '''''1947''''' supposed to mention events that would not occur until the 1950s! The article is full of these problems to the point that fixing it will be a very involved process. The article also ingnores any significant problems with the conspiracy theory.--] 13:29, 19 May 2005 (UTC)


::Now I've added the Mogul flight reconstruction. Next is the 1997 Air Force report addressing aliens.
----


::] 20:57, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
The "original report" referred to was the Air Force's 1994 report, not 1947. I thought this was clear but apparently not. (BTW, there was no 1947 public investigation and "report", just brief press releases, which are something else entirely.) Regardless, a minor edit was added to remove any ambiguity. I've also added some language to make it clearer that other counterarguments presented elsewhere represent the POV of some.


The 1994 report did indeed skirt the issue of bodies, instead saying it wasn't necessary to consider because the crash was caused by a Mogul balloon, which didn't have an alien crew therein. That was how the Air Force in 1994 (not 1947) worded it and dealt with it.


==Major Edits==
I felt the article as originally written was heavily slanted towards the skeptical viewpoint, and for balance, opposing arguments were presented while leaving the skeptical viewpoint in place. E.g., there really is zero historical evidence to support Roswell as a "broken arrow" atomic accident--there were no bombs in the atomic arsenal then and no records of such a crash. Why not point that out? Encyclopedia articles are supposed to be based on facts, not mere speculation. (Incidentally, the first "broken arrow" air crash in the U.S. was near Albuquerque in 1950, not Roswell in 1947.)


I've done some major editing, first adding the 1997 Air Force report. I still have to complete the critique, and a follow-up on how many of the UFO researchers have been discredited (Scmitt; Alien film; Majestic, etc)
Regarding a Mogul crash, why not point out that there are also serious objections with that theory. It is just another POV of some and certainly not a given. There is another side to this.


I've also taken out a lot of stuff that was a) redundant (like the FBI transcript, stuff on the Ramey photo, etc.,) b) stuff which was not about Roswell (general stuff about UFOs don't speak to Roswell itself) and c) stuff which will be dealt with briefly later (or in the case of the "strange experiments theory already in the later developments section). Most of the stuff gone is stuff that has been established to be hoaxes - like the Alien autopsy. They will be afforded brief mentions.
Unlike many encyclopedia articles, Roswell is not a neutral subject and there are strong viewpoints on both sides, which need to be presented in as factual a way as possible while trying to maintain a sense of overall neutrality. Some point/counterpoint is essential when dealing with such topics. I do have a POV but did strive for balance and to let both sides have their say.


Thanks for the patience, folks, I am nearly done.
If you think a brief counter to the "conspiracy theory" is warranted, go ahead and add it.
BTW, labeling something a "conspiracy theory" is already loaded and expressing a strong POV, as are some who label legitimate researchers as "believers" or "UFO buffs" or "conspiratorialists." These are propaganda terms and have no place in an encyclopedia article. Simply say something like, "An argument against this theory is..." or "Advocates of this position believe ...", or similar neutral wording to that effect.


] 22:01, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
Incidentally, the presented theories from Pflock's book, such as the burned bodies from an aircraft accident years later or "the blunder of a particular officer suffering from an attack of hubris" are best described as highly biased, wild-assed speculation rather than fact-driven. They probably don't even belong in an encyclopedia article. I considered editing them out entirely, but left them in without rebuttal so that a particular skeptical POV could be presented. ]


-----


==Too Biased Toward Air Force's Claims==
I feel that the article is not POV, although it could use some cleaning up in that regard. Why is it NPOV? Because it describes the existent viewpoints, and in this case, there are two important ones - that there was an alien crash and a coverup, or that there was not. Argumentation is presented for both viewpoints, and the chosen argumentation is that which is indeed usually presented by supporters of either viewpoint.


I appreciate the work, Canada Jack, and your summaries are good. But I think they're skewing the article too much, turning it almost into a report on the Air Force reports. (And "Case Closed" this story is not, regardless whose story you ''personally'' happen to believe. The cultural mythos surrounding this topic is already way too big and fascinating for such a simple, "factual" or "scientific" dismissal.) This is supposed to be a NPOV article on the Roswell Incident, which would ideally give reasonable weight to all important dimensions of the story, and not tip the scales too much towards one particular theorist's claims (in this case, those by Colonel Richard Weaver of the USAF). I personally don't buy the alien crash-landing story myself, but I don't think the Mogul explanation fits the evidence either, particular as detailed by Stanton T. Friedman. Also, the "strange experiments theory" you mention above, especially as described by Nick Redfern in ''Body Snatchers in the Desert'', most definitely warrants more space on this article, since it strikes an intriguing "third possibility" that isn't covered by either polarity currently outlined--i.e., the Project Mogul and Alien Spaceship theories. I don't have time to write such a thing myself, at least not in the immediate future, but if anyone out there is knowledgeable about that White Sands/Japanese ] angle (including perhaps you, Canada Jack?), it would be great to include a full description about that. And, as I'm suggesting, it would be ideal to cut down the length of the Air Force 'Case Closed' summary as well--and not just because it makes the Misplaced Pages entry for Roswell just a bit toooo lonnnngggg...
All arguments are supposed to be placed together with their refutals. That's what makes sense. With how, before crash-support arguments, words and phrases like "as some continue to instist", "if indeed it was", etc., are inserted, I absolutely fail to see how this article is biased towards the crash point of view. ] 22:26, 20 August 2005 (UTC)


The truth is out there. :)
== Clinton comments completely out of context ==


] 19:16, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
The section about Bill Clinton's Roswell statement is inaccurate and out of context, it implies he was in the Irish Republic when a member of the press put a question about Roswell to him. None of that happened, he was not "asked", he wasn't in the Republic.


What actually happened was this (I saw the speech on television, it was a big event at the time): He was on a trip to Northern Ireland (which whether you agree with it or not is part of Britain, and officially recognised as such by the Irish Republic's new constitution). He was due to switch on the Belfast Christmas tree lights. Before doing so he gave a speech during which he read out several letters sent to him by children from Northern Ireland before he came there.


::Well, I've just added the critiques to the Air Force's 1997 report, so perhaps some of your objections have been met. AS for the cultural mythos surrounding the event, it would seem to me the rather lengthy list of cultural references and my note that despite the Air Force reports, most people believe that "something happened" at Roswell partly answers that.
--
Sorry, but if you want be TOTALLY accurate, Northern Ireland is NOT part of Britain, it's part of the UK.
--


::But one point is valid - and that is the "weight" to the Air Force reports, and its considerable length. Once I'm done - and all I now have left is a smaller section on some of the post Air Force developments (which unfortunately for the UFO-believer side, involves a lot of subsequent discrediting of many chief witnesses and a few authors) - I will suggest we split the Air Force reports off to another page, replaced with a precis section on it. But I think the Air Force reports deserve a fair bit more coverage than before, and to be allowed to "stand alone" without tons of POV arguments. The critiques sections, I would say, have some pretty potent arguments against the reports, and they stand. But before, we didn't get a clear picture as to what the Air Force actually argued. For example, there were numerous explanations in the 1997 report as to how six-foot dummies could be mistaken for four-foot aliens found in the report, yet that was never apparant before. Or to the rather basic point that witnesses actually described themselves these aliens as perhaps being "dummies."
Most of them were (obviously) to do with the peace process which he'd invested a lot of time in, but as a moment of light relief he said that a child (can't remember the name, let's call him Timmy) had written to ask if alien bodies were recovered by the US Air Force in Roswell in 1947 and being stored at a secret base. Clinton had a broad smile on his face when answering the question, "No, Timmy, as far as I know they did not. And if they DO have them stored somewhere, I want to know about it!" There wasn't an ounce of seriousness in the statement, and it's impossible to tell from it if Clinton has any genuine interest in Roswell at all.


::My particular problem with the Redfern idea is that it seems ad-hoc, coming almost 60 years after the events in question, without any concrete evidence from ANYWHERE that these sort of experiments were being carried out. A short mention suffices, I believe. I mean, why not time travellers? or assuming some of the fictional treatments mentioned in the end may be true? IMHO we stick to the scenarios which carry a lot of adherents, make some references to others. But perhaps others could chime in here?
----
OK, so in the interest of absolute factual accuracy, let's change Ireland to Northern Ireland and reword slightly to indicate that he was responding to a letter from a child.


::] 00:26, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
The fact that the question was in a prescreened letter rather than a spontaneously asked question actually strengthens the argument about Clinton's interest. Prearranged presidential statements are usually carefully vetted to prevent Presidents from saying the wrong thing. Out of all the things Clinton could have responded to, he and his staff deliberately had him answer a potentially loaded question about Roswell, something they could have easily avoided. The question is why?


== Wikiproject Paranormal ==
Also read the part about Clinton instructing Webster Hubbell to find out about UFOs. That's in Hubbell's book written after he left the White House. That's a fact, not an interpretation. Clinton also had a book on Roswell (the first one by Randle and Schmitt) on his Presidential bookshelf when his books were inventoried while he was under investigation by Kenneth Starr. That's another fact. The book was given to him by Paul Davids, who produced the HBO movie "Roswell." According to Davids, his father, Dr. Jules Davids, was one of Clinton's professors at Georgetown. That was the connection between Davids and Clinton.


I just wanted to take a minute to say hello and let the folks who regularly watch this article know that Wikproject Paranormal has selected this article as our collaboration of the month. So don't be surprised if you see some new faces sprucing up the article and speaking up here on the talk page. We'd ideally like to get this article up to snuff to have it featured on the main page, so if we do something too drastic or that you disagree with please just let us know. Thanks &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 17:17, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Another indication of Clinton's deep interest in UFOs was attested to by senior White House Correspondent Sarah McClendon, who noted other senior officials in the White House were also briefed on the matter. See, e.g., http://www.thecosmicfrontier.com/Cosmic/Sara%20Article117.htm .
:I'm a bit late to the party I guess... but I'd figured I'd lend a hand. The article actualy looks quite good. Just some ruff edges. ---] (]|]) 20:05, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
::Yup. Check the ToDo list and the discussion at the bottom; we've only got a little bit to go before we've got ourselves as GA! --] 00:03, 2 November 2006 (UTC)


==New page for Air Force reports==
The recent quotes on Roswell and UFOs from N.M. Governor Bill Richardson, Clinton's DOE head, and John Podesta, Clinton's chief of staff, are also part of the public record. ] 22 May 2005


I've split off the main body of text for the Air Force report to a separate page, and drastically shortened the text here on the same subject.
----
I'm not saying ANYTHING about Clinton's opinions on Roswell, I have no idea what they are. The other references you mention sound like more important sources about this topic.


] 17:45, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
All I'm saying is I saw the speech and the particular reference included in the article doesn't really tell you anything about Clinton's views either. If you want to present convincing evidence of something you have to be careful not to read too much into less convincing things.


:That's great, Canada Jack. The new Air Force page is good. ] 01:39, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
The context of the speech was in a region where there had been mass murder for 40 years, with literally thousands of people killed, beaten and jailed in a self-sustaining cycle of violence and persecution from both sides that seemed to have no end in sight. The work Clinton was doing in Belfast was literally a matter of life and death for his audience, the Good Friday Agreement which he helped to broker was hanging in the balance.


==The Cold War, military experiments and flying saucers==
The speech was meant about very serious issues but it also needed to be upbeat and hopeful, especially as it was at Christmas, so Clinton needed a few lighter items completely unconnected to any of the feuds in Ulster.
I think this section needs to be removed, with what's absolutely needed for context merged into other sections of the article. This is about UFO phenominon in general, and doesn't even mention Roswell. While I accept that it helps set the tone for the article, surely wikilinks to the relevant material would be more appropriate. --] 17:56, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


You asked why he mentioned Roswell as if the reference had no reasonable explanation, but it definitely does have an eminently reasonable explanation: Clinton wanted to lighten a serious speech in a very serious life-threatening situation with something totally utterly unlikely to offend either Catholics or Protestants, so what could be less likely to offend than a joke about aliens?


::Since most of the material comes up later, that's probably a good idea.
Also, at the time he made the speech Roswell was very much a "pop culture" reference with the recent huge successes of things like X-Files, Independence Day and Men In Black, and nearly all politicians love to make references to anything that's fashionable (that's why George W Bush tried a Segway in front of TV cameras, for example).


::] 18:32, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
As well as Roswell, in the same speech he also talked about the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, saying he didn't have their amazing athletic ability. It lightened the speech and was another pop culture reference (the MMPR were extremely popular at the time), just like the Roswell mention.
:::I agree that a lot of this text is superfluous, but I'd like to see the information about the rise of UFO reports in that time period retained; I think it's important context. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 18:51, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
::::It is, yes, but I don't think it belongs here. Perhaps there's another article it can be linked to (or one can be created) instead? --] 18:55, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
:::::I think any discussion of critics' rebuttal of Roswell as an alien incident would not be well served without context about the rise of weather balloons and subsequent rise of UFO reporting. It doesn't have to be extensive, but this article should at least touch on it, IMO. I've significantly cut out the extraneous detail about Soviets and the Cold War, except what's necessary to explain why there were so many secret weather balloon projects. I've left the bit in about the couple but I wouldn't object to it being deleted. I'm not sure this is the best place for the section, though -- it may need to be moved down or merged elsewhere. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 18:57, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
::::::Well, if it's neccisary for the criticism section, perhaps it can be worked in there. --] 21:28, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


== Concern about copyrighted information ==
----
First of all, I got the date of Clinton's Belfast comments on Roswell wrong. It was November 30, 1995, not 1999 (this has been corrected). I am looking at Clinton's comments in a much broader context than you are. It is part of the public record that various people in the Clinton White House were very interested in the subject, including the Clintons. For more on this, see:


As I've been copyediting this article today, I've noticed a large number of quotation marks that appear as ” -- rather than " (you can see the difference when you click on edit). This generally happens when text is cut and pasted from another source. This makes me wary of the potential for copyright violations in this article. We should be especially watchful of this and fix it where needed. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 18:56, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Another important part of the context is to realize that Clinton made his Belfast comments just a few days before the Air Force issued their final version of their initial Roswell report. (They issued a short "executive summary" a year before in Sept. 1994, what Newsweek magazine called a "preemptive strike," but their much longer "phone book" version came out right after Clinton's remarks.)


Given the context, I seriously doubt Clinton's remarks were made for comic relief, though they were made in a light-hearted manner. This tone has a rather more direct interpretation than Clinton doing a stand-up comedy act to relieve tension in Northern Ireland. One has to realize that taboo subjects like UFOs and Roswell are one of the third rails of politics. Almost no politician dares to go near it for fear of ridicule. New Mexico Congressman Steven Schiff, who got the initial Roswell GAO probe going, was the rare exception. Clinton couldn't publicly discuss the subject with total seriousness. Hence the lighthearted approach, giving him plausible deniability should he be asked afterwards whether he did take it seriously. In the meantime, Clinton and his speechwriters were delivering a prepared, carefully worded message to the Air Force. "You didn't touch the subject of bodies in your first report, I'm the President, and I want to know."


::I've included many direct quotes, but noticed that there were differences in the quotation mark styles. Not knowing what was "style" and what was not, I may have cut and copied some of those quotation marks as they existed earlier (to preserve open and closed quotes). Those quotes are cited by source. Often these quotes appear in multiple sources citing the original source, and I assumed that there was a "fair use" to using verbatim quotes - from witnesses - especially if those quotes appear in public documents such as the Air Force reports.
(You might be interested to know that when the Air Force issed their press release about the Roswell report a few days after Clinton's comments, they quoted the first half of Clinton's remarks, that he was unaware of a saucer crash at Roswell, as supporting their conclusions, while leaving out the second half of his remarks, that the Air Force hadn't told him anything and also hadn't addressed the issue of bodies. Talk about quoting out of context!)


::If there is a question about lifting actual text as if I wrote it, everything down to the Air Force reports (and including same) is what I wrote, except where I use quotes or paraphrase the opinions of others with a citation.
A year and half later out came the "crash dummy" report. This was released exactly on the 50th anniversary of ]'s sighting of June 24, 1947, and also just in time for Roswell's 50th anniversary. This again was no accident, but another "pre-emptive strike" by the AF public relations spin-meisters.


::I'll be happy to clarify any concerns here and can flag what is not "fair use". For example, quoting an author rather than a quote of a witness.
Incidentally, Clinton's remarks did not predate X-files, but they did predate Independence Day (1996) and Men In Black (1997), and also "The Rock" (1996), which also mentioned Roswell. Even if these popular movies somehow made Roswell "fashionable," they had nothing to do with what Clinton said before they came out.
] 00:03, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)


] 20:04, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
== source? ==
:::Absolutely, bits of quotes are definitely fair use. I mentioned that only as a general caution flag -- not meaning to accuse anybody of anything deliberately malicious. Thanks Jack. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 20:07, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


No offence taken. This is only the second article I have written, and I am not sure what is and isn't fair use and I appreciate any comments like the above so I do this in the proper fashion. Suffice to say, I've assumed that any direct quote needs to be cited, and any specific claim (like "some say x is a liar") needs a reference. And that lifting text from books or websites and plonking them down and not indicating such is plagarism. That's why I took great care to make sure I actually composed the article and cited anything I didn't write.
"It should also be known that a theory has been postulated that the Roswell incident was, in fact, a mid-air collision between two alien spacecraft. The first completely fragmented and its remains were found over Mack Brazel's ranch. The second, according to witnesses and people who uphold this theory, landed a short distance away. It was reported that four extraterrestrial entities were found--one alive, one dying, and two dead. This was witnessed by many people, including a university professor and his class, who were going on a field trip. Then the army came, warned the others away, and took care of the crash. The surviving alien was christened Extraterrestrial Biological Entity 1 (EBE-1), and survived at a safe house in New Mexico until 1952, where it died of unknown causes."


BTW, so far, things look good - when you guys are done (I hope you don't tear what I've done to shreds) I'll address some of the citation issues I've already seen. For example "11" crash sites has a specific source.
Where's the source for this?


Keep up the good work.
---
Not sure, but I've seen SciFi movies claiming things like that.
Like most if not all "proof" of aliens at Rosswell it seems to be a myth perpetuated by UFO adherents and SciFi authors in order to make themselves look important and/or make money out of disinformation.
After all, UFOs sell a lot more books and advertising revenue than do weather balloons.


] 20:30, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
At current the only evidence for any alien involvement are the original two newspaper articles which are nothing more than speculation from junior USAAF officers who had no experience or knowledge of Mogul balloons.
The "disc shaped" object might well have existed but in fact be a roughly circular piece of mylar from the balloon (for example) misidentified as something else (or maybe the latter part was omitted by the press to stir up a story that wasn't there).


== Roswell as an alien recovery and government cover-up ==
This artile is seriously slanted towards the "believer" point of view. For example, testimony of purported witnesses to the event is offered as being a true and accurate repetition of their statements, but the article doesn't say who reported their testimony, an important element in judging whether to credit that the "witness" ever said it.
I'm not quite sure to make of this section. Much seems to be a rehash of information from earlier sections, the rest is unsourced, and the whole thing talks about its topic assuming it is correct. Any thoughts about what to do here? --] 21:49, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


== Use of terms_UFO_and_purported_ ==


::In fact, the several scenarios come from the two cited sources, which, IMHO, more or less incorporate the general thrust of those who assert aliens were recovered and the government is lying about it. I could draw from more sources, but I think that would be redundant and simply gratuitously add a lot of extraneous sources when only several here need suffice.
This may be nitpicking on my part, but it seems like the use of purported describing the UFO crash is unnecessary, as it is very widely believed that something did indeed crash at Roswell. It is only the identity of the object that is in dispute. All that UFO means is Unidentified Flying Object. This would include flying saucers and weather balloons--exept of course that many people claim they know what the object was so calling it unidentified would to them be a misnomer. My recommendation for the first sentence is one of the following:


::The main differences in the various scenarios is which precise landing sites were the focus of alien recoveries, and which precise dates the recoveries started on.
The Roswell UFO incident is the crash of an unidentified flying object (UFO) in Roswell, New Mexico, USA, in 1947.


::As for the comment that it is a rehash of earlier sections, I am not sure that is completely accurate - though certain interpretations of events are mentioned, the actual scenario is nowhere else depicted and the reasons certain witnesses are said to have been here or there really only becomes apparent when you see the timelines presented.
Or, if you would prefer to avoid the term UFO entirely:


::It "assumes it is correct" only because it presents the case at face value - and I took care to underline that that is what THEY believe, not what is "self-evident" or what have you. AS I said when I took on this task, presenting the cases here is very difficult because of the widely divergent beliefs on what is valid and what is not. Presenting the sides as I have done here more or less at face value I believe answers that problem.
The Roswell UFO incident is the purported crash of an object in Roswell, New Mexico, USA, in 1947, which some claim to have been a weather balloon or other man-made device, and others claim to have been a flying saucer.


::In the end, it is up to the casual reader to decide who has the more believable story here, and as long as I present the sides fairly, I think we can let the reader decide for himself. There is more than enough opportunity beyond the text itself to explore the issues on thier own via the links etc.
] 00:11, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
:Regardless of what UFO means, the common usage of it is going to be for alien spacecraft, not Unidentified Flying Object as it stands. Using UFO broadly instead of its common use will only slant the article to the casual viewer. -] 19:10, August 13, 2005 (UTC)


::] 01:38, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
== Influence (small suggestion) ==


:::I haven't read the sections in question in any depth yet (I may have time to do so tomorrow), but (with apologies if I've put words in your mouth) I think Inshaneee is probably searching for ways to trim the article. It's '''way''' too long, and streamlining overly verbose passages and removing redundancies is one easy way to do that without losing significant information. That's just what I did to the "cultural" section, for instance -- I removed the most superfluous references and edited the rest to be within 2-3 lines of text. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 05:33, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Didn't the TV show ] do an entire episode about Roswell too? I'd write up the details....but I don't actually know them.--] 22:48, July 25, 2005 (UTC)
:In essence, they go through a singularity and end up in Roswell, where ] is tossed about and his wreckage left on the desert is thought to be a spacecraft, while ] is the alien. -] 19:13, August 13, 2005 (UTC)


::::Precisely, ripley, thank you. This article is almost twice as long as the suggested article length, but I think there's plenty of places (like here) where we can merge content or simply make things more concise. --] 15:06, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
== UFO game series ==


Certainly condensing or eliminating the section will save space, I am just concerned that the alien recovery scenario will therefore be accorded short shrift.
A strong influence can be seen in UFO (later X-Com) games
where SECTOIDS default alien race + UFO`s are EXACTLY THE SAME
as in Roswell


But that's just my opinion - if there is a concensus that omitting such information still satisfies the objectives of wikipedia, so be it. As I said before, I am new here...
--Rastavox 01:24, 11 September 2005 (UTC)


] 16:13, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
== The Leak-Free Conspiracy ==


:I think, as long as it can be sourced, we can cut most of it out (I don't think a complete timeline is neccisarily needed), and merge it elsewhere. --] 16:18, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
One of the things which has always amazed me about the Roswell "alien" claim is that this is a conspiracy theory with no leaks. If anyone can track down the people who organised this completely leak-free conspiracy, I think the current POTU would be interested, and some previous Presidents would have been more than happy to meet those guys!


Regardless of what is decided, what we leave here does need to be re-edited for tone. As it stands, it presents the entire scenario as fact (hence, if edited down to the relevent points, it would be much easier to present as an allegation). --] 16:34, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
: It is also interesting to note that none of the first-hand witnesses to what actually happened near Roswell in July 1947 ever said that they saw aliens. ] ] 15:59, 13 September 2005 (UTC)


:Personally (and this is just my opinion), I'd completely seperate the different versions of this incident (coverup, balloon etc), and then present the pro followed by con/dubunk for each version together, with both the pro-con/debunk presented as if they were fact. As things stand, its one persons version against another and we frankly don't know which veriso is true, if any. Treat everything as if it were credible and true and let the reader decide which side they believe.
== reverted ==


:] 20:12, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
I reverted the last edits because of NPOV issues. To begin with, the article was almost totally on the pro-extraterrestial spacecraft POV. When I started working on the article, ALL of the sources listed were from the pro-ET POV. There was almost no balance. I tried to make it more balanced, but even then it was strongly pro-ET POV. I put in undisputed facts about what was actually reported at the time. Now someone is claiming that I'm putting in POV!


::I'm just talking terminology, such as 'alleges', ect. --] 20:24, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
I changed some inflamatory wording, for instance "claim". The Air Force didn't "claim" that the debris was from a Mogul balloon, they proved it beyond a reasonable doubt. But I didn't say that in the article, I said that their conclusion was that it was a baloon. All the ET-POV has is second-hand rumors.


==Ramey and Brazel==
A "claim" is a statement made without proof. I can claim that my neighbor threw trash in my yard. That is a claim. If I have proof then it goes beyond a claim. Like in a court of law ... evidence. And, similarly, all the ET-POV has is hearsay. ] ] 00:56, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
Some questions/observations about these guys and their treatment in the article:


1) Is the Ramey telegraph image really that significant? Though I sympathize with the UFO crowd, I think this piece of "evidence" is pretty silly, as one can't really tell anything (IMHO) from looking at that picture. Now, if the image has been discussed by some of the major writers on Roswell, then I suppose it can stay, with proper citations, but if it's just something posted on someone's website, then I think we can remove it. What do other people think? (I'll admit that I don't know as much about Roswell as some of the people here, so if I'm realy out-of-touch, just let me know).
------------


2) Maybe I'm not reading closely enough, but it's not clear to me what Brazel actually thought about the debris he found. Did ''he'' think it came from a weather balloon, or did he think it was from a UFO?
Your extreme bias is again showing. You repeatedly claim the Air Force proved its case, end of story, and then use language in the article saying as much. Please don't pretend that the language of your edits doesn't have a strongly biased POV. When you state that the A.F. presented "overwhelming evidence" showing a Mogul balloon explained Roswell, you are using blatantly obvious POV language. When you state about their "crash dummy" report, "They showed that the testimony of the people saying they had seen bodies near Roswell was in good agreement with actual events..." you are again using POV language that has no place in an encyclopedia article. When you state above, "I put in undisputed facts about what was actually reported at the time," you are again making a biased POV statement. The point is the "facts" are disputed. There are inconsistencies in newspaper accounts, and the independence of the accounts, such as Brazel's, are also disputed. Just because the newspapers were told certain things by the military doesn't necessarily make them true.
Thanks, ] 17:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)


One other thing: It's my understanding that the crash occurred closer to ] than Roswell. Is this true? If so, I think it should be mentioned in the article. ] 17:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
A "claim" is indeed a statement made without proof. You then again assert that the Air Force somehow proved its case, somehow confusing "evidence" presented with proof. No, your BELIEF that the A.F. proved their case is just that, your personal belief.


I honestly don't see how "claim" is "inflamatory" language. The Air Force did indeed make unproven claims. Do you really think 6 foot human mannequins or a man with a swollen head from a balloon accident would be confused with small aliens with big heads or that witnesses could be so grossly confused about times, locations, and body descriptions because of "time distortion" of memory? Well maybe you believe such rubbish, but most people don't (including most of the normally cynical press, BTW) and such absurd claims hardly constitute "proof."


::The Ramey telegraph is one of the later developments in the case, largely promoted by David Rudiak as describing "victims of the wreck." There was a lot more on this before, I reduced it to a short paragraph, but in terms of emphasis I'm not so sure it is truly the "smoking gun" some claim it to be.
I have no problem with the A.F. arguments being briefly summarized with neutral language, but I have a big problem with your language and your rants defending A.F. methods, which you just reinserted. This section as orginally written was a quick summary for the general reader of recent Roswell theories, including Air Force conclusions, using neutral language. Some arguments for and against the Mogul theory were presented further below. Then you jump in and change the language to the A.F. absolutely proving their case and inserted a lot of unnecessary and biased material. Every time I tried to make the language more neutral, such as using "claim," you couldn't stand that. No the A.F. always "showed" beyond all doubt. No, they claimed to show, just as the pro-ET POV claims to show. It only goes beyond claims if the evidence presented by one side or the other is absolutely incontestable, which it is not, despite your personal _opinion_ to the contrary.


:::I think the short paragraph is fine, but it definitely deserves a mention (i.e., DON'T DELETE IT, please). I've been a student of the Roswell story for well over a decade, and I think anyone interested in the subject needs to know about the Ramey memo. One can play with the images in Photoshop oneself and bring out details that aren't just products of Rudiak's biased imagination. But the fact is, this is one of the ONLY pieces of objective, hard evidence that the Roswell "crashed vehicle" (alien or otherwise) proponents have going for them, so it's very important amidst all the endless eyewitness and first-, second-, and third-hand anecdotes. Rudiak has downloadable versions of the memo . ] 01:07, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
It is also not your place to literally invent rationales for why the Air Force didn't interview or mention key witnesses to bodies, reasons even the A.F. didn't use. They originally said that witnesses to bodies were not credible and besides, there were no aliens bodies on Mogul balloons. (Of course, in 1997, those same unreliable witnesses suddenly become credible, even the hoaxers, and by gosh, there was something to those body stories after all.) I tried to quickly summarize their actual arguments, but you removed that, and reinserted your own personal rationales for them not dealing with bodies. Again, an encyclopedia article isn't supposed to be your personal soapbox.


::As for Brazel - and for anyone quoted in those early reports (Brazel was dead by the time this became a big deal years later) - the only description of this as a "flying saucer/disc" comes from the initial press release. Brazel at best says it's NOT a weather balloon as he had seen those before, but as is noted no one knew what a "flying saucer" was supposed to look like just days after the phrase was coined.
I also removed your paragraph on Gen. Exon, because it was indeed redundant. The skeptical position about Exon had already been amply made in a paragraph in the previous section. There was no need to repeat it, interrupt the flow of the article, and unnecessarily lengthen it with your POV defense of the A.F. ignoring Gen. Exon. It's completely out of place.


::As for Corona, this is one of the numerous crash sites put forward by UFO researchers, though none are specifically mentioned save for San Agustin. Not sure if we need to be specific?
I also notice you are putting an endless number of unnecessary links to skeptical treatments of the Roswell case, even extremely trivial treatments. A few carefully chosen ones would suffice. The A.F. report has been linked to more than once. So has Peebles. Isn't once enough? Maybe you hope to sway readers through shear numbers of links to skeptical articles?


:::It's worth mentioning Corona. That's the nearest identifiable 'town' to where the Foster ranch debris field was located, by all accounts. Nobody has ever claimed the crash happened ''in'' Roswell. It's just the nearest big town/city. ] 01:14, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
There is no need to insert the texts of the FBI telegram or Brazel's interview into the article. Simple links to the text would be sufficient. Be warned, I'll insert links to differing interpretations of the same material.


] 19:16, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
The reason the article is beginning to turn into an unreadable monstrosity is that you are inserting all sorts of unnecessary, highly biased, and often inaccurate material. You need to learn to edit more effectively and be much more terse in your points. And for godssake, stop the soapbox rants and try to keep your language more neutral. We all have our biases. But you don't even seem to recognize that you are biased. At the very least, try to curb the highly biased POV language, please.


:::Thanks for your responses. I just found describing all the alleged crash sites, so I guess there's been a debate over it. I'm not sure how the article should treat this issue, but the most important thing is to stress at all points that the crash, wherever it was, did not occur in Roswell proper (and I think the article does this, for the most part). ] 20:29, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Having said all that, I would like to comment further about your repeated claims that the A.F. unquestionably proved their case.


As I mentioned in the article itself, something like 11 crash sites have been claimed. The above-mentioned site lists six sites, some around the ranch and therefore close to Corona, others not. And the Air Force centred on two accounts, one near San Agustin (no where near Corona) and the other Jim Ragsdale accounts which I believe were not near Corona.
What the Air Force really did to "prove" their case was interview a carefully selected and small group of people to give it a one-sided Mogul slant and ignore, ridicule, or carefully edit all contradictory evidence and witnesses.


"Roswell" is pretty good shorthand for the claims, though not geographically accurate. But since there are many claims as to crash sites and none which could be deemed "official" (try, for example, get Randle and Friedman to see anything eye-to-eye, for example...) by definition, I was rather vague other than to suggest they were claimed to be linked to the Roswell UFO incident.
The whole report is shabby affair of distorted evidence written by AFOSI officers, i.e., counterintelligence people. The head guy, Col. Richard Weaver, used to teach propaganda courses and there is some evidence he was involved in putting out UFO disinformation in the 1980s. Guys like Weaver are trained and paid to lie and deceive. That's their job. Even the GAO in their investigation said the Air Force wasn't cooperating and was hiding something. And contrary to all government protocol, the Air Force deliberately preempted the findings of the GAO by putting out its "Executive Summary" 9 months before the GAO had finished. What they should have done is given their findings to the GAO for them to include in their final report. But these weren't independent historians the Air Force used to "investigate." Instead they used their own internal spook unit to investigate themselves, a classic example of the fox guarding the hen house.


] 21:41, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
As for their carefully selected group of witnesses, Mogul engineer Charles Moore, has since been shown to be a hoaxer (though I don't think he started out that way). In his book published in 1997 he fraudulently calculated a trajectory for his Mogul Flight #4 to try to "prove" winds would take it to Brazel's place. (The fact that his calculation is fraudulent can be unambiguously proven from his own math.) Also, might I point out, that Moore was in no way directly involved with Roswell. He wasn't in the military, he wasn't at Roswell base; he wasn't on the Brazel debris field to see what was really there; he wasn't in Fort Worth when the story switched to a weather balloon. He's another one of those second-hand witnesses telling stories decades after the fact, frequently changing his story and clearly lying at times to promote his lost Mogul hypothesis. But his second-hand, decades-after testimony is probably OK with you because it fits your prejudices.


==Ibid==
Another witness, Sheridan Cavitt of the Roswsell CIC, was the only witness interviewed by the A.F. who was directly involved. But he was also clearly lying in his interview on a number of major points and his testimony actually does NOT support Mogul, unless you think a Mogul crash would be no bigger than his living room and he could find it in the middle of nowhere without help from rancher Brazel, whom he claimed he never met. He also denied there were any markings or "hieroglyphics" on the debris, the infamous "flower patterns" that were supposed to be the "proof" that this was from Mogul. Instead he said stories of "hieroglyphics" were the inventions of crashed saucer promotors trying to make money. Did you also know that before being interviewed by the A.F., Cavitt denied for years being at Roswell or in any way being involved? His wife Mary told researchers that he would never talk about what really happened.


Could users please reframe from using ''ibidem'' (ibid) as a citation mark. I know that it's proper reference form in research papers, but sections get moved around so much on pages like this that it is not always clear what is the original citation being referenced actually is (if indeed it has not been changed or deleted by another user). Instead just use a named reference tag < ref name = ABC > ref details < / ref> and then < ref name = ABC / > there after. If you do this, it will automatically Ibid for you. If you want to include the page number, just put it in brackeds after you close the reference tag.
Unlike somebody like Marcel, Cavitt had nobody to back him up, conflicting with everybody else's testimony, including his wife. His CIC aide Lewis Rickett contradicted him, saying the metal was indeed anomalous, there was high secrecy and security including secret shipments of debris, and there was a large, follow-up clean-up operation at the ranch which he witnessed. Marcel, of course, contradicted him about the debris, large debris field, and being with Brazel. So did Mack Brazel himself in his interview, saying that "a man in plain clothes" accompanied Marcel and him to his ranch. How does this square with Cavitt saying he had never made Brazel or not going out with Marcel? Or how does Brazel's 1947 statement of the crash site being 200 yards across or Marcel's 1947 statement from the AP that debris was scattered over a SQUARE MILE fit with Cavitt's statements of a tiny balloon crash no bigger than his living room that could all fit in the trunk of a car?


Thank you
And Cavitt and Moore were the Air Force's star witnesses.


] 18:58, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
As for your precious contemporaneous news stories, since when does contemporaneous necessarily equal true or accurate, which seems to be your logic? Similarly, since when does decades later or second-hand testimony necessarily equal false, which also seems to be your logic (but only when applied to "pro-ET" testimony, not to "pro-Mogul" testimony)? Contemporaneous simply means that is how the press reported the story, i.e., that is what they were told by various sources and how the various reporters and editors interpreted it. The many Roswell press stories back then were not uniform and full of contradictions. You also seem to make no allowances for even the possibility that the press was being lied to about some things, or even the FBI in their telegram. (There's a whole documented history of the FBI usually being kept out of the loop by the Air Force on the UFO question, and J. Edgar Hoover being furious about it.)


==Roswell as misidentified military programs: The Air Force reports and Project Mogul==
Note the telegram also mentions only a singular balloon and radar target--inconsistent with a Mogul. That story came directly from Gen. Ramey, who had his intel officer Kirton give it to the FBI.
I just noticed that this section begins with a link to ]. I think this presents a great opportunity to cut down this section, as it is essentially ALL duplicate material from that article (including the image). --] 18:43, 17 October 2006 (UTC)


::In fact, the Air Force section was all on the Roswell page, so I created a new page and moved most of the material over there, drastically cutting down the Roswell section.
What about Brazel's balloon story? Did you mention that it is full of internal inconsistencies (e.g., Brazel basically recanted it at the end) or did you mention testimony of about 10 other witnesses, including the Roswell base provost marshall, that Brazel was detained by the military, and directly admitted to one witness, Frank Joyce, of being coerced into changing his story? Most of that is first-hand testimony from people who were there.


::] 15:51, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
If multiple-witness testimony like that was admitted in a court of law that a key witness had been coerced by the prosecution into changing testimony, a mistrial would likely be declared. (And BTW, even second-hand testimony is admittable evidence in a court of law and frequently used. Only debunkers who don't like what they hear reject it, unless, of course, it supports their own POV.)


:::Alright, cool. Still, we need to further cut down the section on this page now (including removing the image), since there's no need to duplicate content. --] 16:11, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
How about Marcel's 1947 balloon comments? Again you failed to mention that Marcel and Gen. Dubose stated that everybody was under orders from Gen. Ramey and that the weather balloon was just a cover story to get the press off their backs. Dubose stated he was ordered from Washington to start covering it up. Don't you find it interesting that the AFOSI agents never quoted Dubose's testimony about the cover-up, one of their own generals and an important first-hand witness? No I suppose not. I'm sure you have another rationalization for that as well, why they treated Dubose as a complete nonentity, just like Gen. Exon, another of their generals.
::::I cut down on the length of the title... seemed to stretch out the TOC a bunch. ---] (]|]) 20:02, 1 November 2006 (UTC)


== Precis ==
Is it therefore surprising that both Dubose and Marcel would be quoted in Ramey's presence telling a balloon story back in 1947? It's very simple. Both men were under orders to do that. Under the circumstances, two military guys could hardly tell the press back then that the balloon story was a setup ordered by the general, now could they?


I'm about to undertake what will probably be a fairly major precis of the article, trimming extraneous information where I can (without removing significant content -- for instance we can just say "at another ranch" instead of "at the Foster Ranch 70 miles away from Roswell" without removing much significant information). But, I have little personal knowledge of the story so if I end up inadvertently removing something you feel is significant to lay readers' understanding, please let me know. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 18:42, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
But no doubt, you will dismiss this as well, even though they were first-hand witnesses, because both men told their stories decades later when they were civilians. By your usual inconsistent logic, only stories told by old Mogul guys decades later who had no direct involvement should be be accepted as evidence, if not "proof." Only ET-POV testimony is "hearsay."
::I'm not convinced this is a good move. If you change "at the Foster Ranch 70 miles away from Roswell" to "at another ranch" you are likely to be asked for details. Removing informative text is not helpful IMMHO. ] 20:08, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
:::Saying "Foster ranch" begs the question of who "Foster is," and that means more information that adds nothing. That it was a ranch 70 miles from Roswell I think is enough, but I'm open to hearing others' opinions. Or is it important in a non-obvious way whose ranch it was on? &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 22:22, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
But even back in 1947, Marcel slipped in that the debris was scattered over a square mile, totally inconsistent with what was displayed in Ramey's office or what would even be expected from a Mogul balloon crash. And even back in 1947 Gen. Ramey was always describing the debris as coming from one balloon and one radar target, again totally inconsistent with a Mogul. And even back in 1947 (and today) his weather officer stated that what he saw was from an ordinary, single weather balloon that could have come from anywhere.
:I couldn't make it through the whole thing today, but did do most of the article. I've also moved off what amounts to block quotes from various primary witnesses into its own article, ]. It may also be a good idea to move the secondary witnesses there too, but I don't want to be too hasty. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 19:51, 18 October 2006 (UTC)


IMHO, if you are to move the primary witnesses to a new page, you should do likewise to the secondary witnesses. As it stands (and I realize you are only partway through this) we jump from contemporary news reports to the more fantastic and mostly second-hand accounts of aliens etc.
Wasn't Mogul supposed to be multiple weather balloons and multiple radar targets. Where are they in the balloon photos taken? Where's the so-called "flower tape" that's suppose to clearly link Ramey's balloon debris with Mogul? Those balloon photos have been blown up and carefully scrutinized, including by the Air Force, and even they admitted that their photoanalysts couldn't find any evidence of it in the photos.


I'd suggest moving ALL statements across (and, I realize, you may be in the midst of doing exactly that), and to leave a failry brief into on the main page along the lines of: There are numerous witness accounts which roughly fall along the lines of descriptions of similar material from the ranch to Ft Worth; later accounts tell of alien recoveries and witness intimidation, etc.
So please tell us what the "overwhelming evidence" is that so clearly proves Roswell was caused by a Mogul balloon.


] 15:16, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
Governments do put out cover stories to conceal secrets. When the first A-bomb was tested at Trinity, the cover story was that an ammunition dump had exploded. When the U-2 was shot down, the cover story was that it was an errant NASA weather plane that crashed because the pilot passed out from oxygen deprivation. The CIA even had NASA contrive phony transcripts of the pilot's last conversations and repainted another U-2 with a NASA symbol and phony ID number and then showed it to the press. The U-2 incident is a great example because it shows the lengths the government will go to cover up their secrets. The only reason they recanted is because they had no choice. Unfortunately for them, the Soviets within a week produced both the live pilot and the spy cameras from the plane and caught the Eisenhower Administration in an awkward lie.


:Personally I agree, but I wanted to give people time to adjust to the idea of moving any of the statements at all -- if nobody objects today then we should go on and complete the move I think. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 15:27, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
But by your logic, the official story as originally reported in the newspapers is necessarily the 100% unvarnished truth, even all the lying and contrived "evidence" that goes with it, like the phony NASA weather plane explanation, pilot transcripts, and repainted U-2. These are quite similar to Gen. Ramey's singular weather balloon story, what both Marcel and Dubose stated was the cover story to get the press off their backs. But because such comments didn't appear in the newspapers in 1947, you will no doubt continue to dismiss their testimony as unreliable or "hearsay" because it doesn't fit your own POV.
]


== Beyond Top Secret ==


==Rewrites==
Just a quick note on the meaning of top secret. In the article, someone states that the truth is "beyond top secret," but in actuality, that isn't saying much. "Top Secret" is the second lowest clearance that can be granted in the military. Secret clearance is given to every officer as soon as they commission, and several immediately get "Top Secret" if their job involves any kind of intelligence.


Just redid the "Air Force" section, just to more properly summarize what the new page says. (What was there didn't really speak to it) The "witness" sections, just moved, should get a similar rewrite on both the "Roswell" page and on the newly created page. I'll do it eventually if you guys don't.
-------------


] 19:18, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
No, the part about "the truth" being "beyond top secret" is not correct. Part of Gen. Dubose's testimony was about receiving calls from Gen. McMullen in Washington about what had just been discovered at Roswell. Dubose said McMullen ordered him not to discuss this with anyone, that it was so secret that it went "beyond top secret." Dubose was saying that what was happening at Roswell had a very, very high level of security. You can hear a short audio of Dubose saying this at this link: Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
:Go for it! Thanks CJ. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 21:17, 20 October 2006 (UTC)


== NPOV == ==Cultural influence==
I'm going to be working on this section in my userspace, as it's poorly organized and could use some pruning. So, if anyone has suggestions, let me know. ] 19:48, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
I've added NPOV back to the article. It is a long way from NPOV. the reasons are too numerous to list. But I would like to mention that if you look at ], he is holding a drawing of what he said he saw, and it was not a saucer. He said that the objects moved as if they were saucers skimming across water, he didn't say they looked like saucers. ] ], 21:39, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
:Just thinking outloud here, but do you think the 'tourism' section would be better suited to the actual Town article, with a mention here? --] 16:33, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
::Perhaps, but I think a paragraph about it here is justified, since it helps demonstrate the ongoing cultural resonance of the Roswell incident. The incident has ''profoundly'' affected the town, and I could have gone into a lot more detail than I actually did. If space continues to be an issue, however, I'll see if I can trim it down. ] 16:48, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
:::(For the record, there is NOTHING about tourism on the town's page). --] 16:52, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
::::Hmmm... Judging by comments on that article's talk page, it seems that the editors want to keep the UFO stuff to a bare minimum. They probably expected this page to talk about it. However, everything I've found suggests that UFO tourism has become an important part of the town. It'll be the first thing any directory or travel site mentions. ] 17:19, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
::::Addendum: there ''is'' a brief line about tourism at the town page: "Roswell has benefited from interest in the alleged UFO incident, and in more recent times the business community has deliberately sought out tourists interested in UFOs." I do think that the town page should go into this in more detail. However, I still contend that ''this'' article would not be comprehensive without its own paragraph about tourism. ] 17:22, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
:::::Any detailed examination should probably reside on the city's article itself, but I don't have a problem with a short paragraph stating that it's impacted the town's tourism. We could perhaps place it with the paragraph about the museum. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup>!


: Additional reference: The UFO Encyclopedia, by John Spencer: ",,, he described the formation of the objects ads moving 'like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water'. ... Although often held as a description of the 'shape' of the objects, it was infact intedned to be a description of their 'movement'. Arnold in fact described the objects as boomerang-shaped, althugh he later referred to them as disks... This point was not picked up at the time and and there was a general perception that Arnold had reported a saucer shape. The significance of this is that it shows the power of the media in influencing the public's perception of events ..." ] ], 22:01, 2 December 2005 (UTC)


==Good job==
--------------
== NPOV ==
I've added NPOV back to the article. It is a long way from NPOV. the reasons are too numerous to list. But I would like to mention that if you look at ], he is holding a drawing of what he said he saw, and it was not a saucer. He said that the objects moved as if they were saucers skimming across water, he didn't say they looked like saucers. ] ], 21:39, 2 December 2005 (UTC)


Just want to say that you guys have done a good job of paring this article down and keeping the essence here. I might have a couple very minor things to tinker with but over-all, it looks good.
: Additional reference: The UFO Encyclopedia, by John Spencer: ",,, he described the formation of the objects ads moving 'like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water'. ... Although often held as a description of the 'shape' of the objects, it was infact intedned to be a description of their 'movement'. Arnold in fact described the objects as boomerang-shaped, althugh he later referred to them as disks... This point was not picked up at the time and and there was a general perception that Arnold had reported a saucer shape. The significance of this is that it shows the power of the media in influencing the public's perception of events ..." ] ], 22:01, 2 December 2005 (UTC)


I was considering adding a short section on how many Roswell claims have now been proven to be frauds, and how some UFO authors have dismissed some of their own research (but which is still touted on some websites as "evidence"), but this seems now to be extraneous.
-----------


I could still do this if it is felt to be necessary. Otherwise I think this is pretty well done.
You could start by reading the Wiki ] article which has some of Arnold's 1947 contemporaneous quotes (according to you, those are the only ones that count) plus his drawing from July 12, 1947, to Army Air Force intelligence. Notice, no "boomerang" descriptions and his drawing is of a thin flat object, rounded in front, chopped and coming to a point in the back, i.e., very saucer-like, and just like his quoted verbal descriptions. For a very complete listing of Arnold's 1947 quotes describing both shape and motion see .


] 22:27, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
It wasn't until five weeks after Arnold first reported his sighting that he told two AAF intelligence officers (during the ] that ONE of the objects was boomerang or sickle-shaped, but the other EIGHT objects were as he drew them in his report to AAF intelligence. It wasn't until 3 years later that Arnold complained that he was misquoted, but there are numerous contemporaneous quotes from Arnold in 1947 where he definitely used words like "saucer-shaped" and "disk-shaped" and "pie-plate" in describing the shape. I doubt this will convince you of anything because you don't seem to like being confused by FACTS. Anything that doesn’t conform to what you read in Klass you claim to be NPOV. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


--------------
===List===
Points on the 12/2/05 version of the article


::Some of the more recent edits here don't make much sense to me.
1. Paragraph starting "Within an hour " says "...began changing the story. The object retrieved was now ......" I don't like the tone of this - it makes it sound as if they were doing something sinister.


::Omitting the Air Force reports - which identified the likely source of the 1947 debris - while including Bill Clinton's opinion, seems a rather strange choice here.
:Why is it sinister and what's wrong with it? It's a statement of fact as to what happened. Within an hour after the Roswell press release of the "flying disk" came out, Ramey started putting out a different story. That's also the way the 1947 press reported it, such as the N.Y. Times: "Within an hour after Lieutenant Haught had given new impetus to the 'flying saucer' derby, his boss, Brig. Gen. Roger Ramey, had a somewhat different version of the "flying disk." Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


::The key aspects of the skeptical response surely are a) accounting for whatever was found on the ranch in 1947 and b) explaining the reports of aliens.
2. In the caption of the photo of General Ramey "...A controversial message ..." It is known what message he holds in his hand. There was an attempt to determine what it was that failed, plus there was what appeared to be a fake interpretation of it.


::Surely the Air Force reports deserve a paragraph or a section, with a redirect to the page.
:What the heck is meant by “It is known what message he holds in his hand?” The Air Force did claim in 1994 that a government photoanalysis lab (which they have never identified) allegedly couldn't read anything in the message. Researcher Dennis Balthaser has spent the last 6 years filing FOIA requests and trying to get the actual written report of what the analysis really said and has been given the runaround by the Air Force. (See )


] 18:10, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
:It's amazing that you've determined that there is a "fake interpretation" of it. As usual you confuse your opinion and biases as being the same thing as incontestable fact. Below you are further claiming that the photo of the message was faked, which proves you know absolutely nothing. People should follow the link to the message and determine for themselves if nothing can be read, as the A.F. claimed. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
:::I think the problem is that the Air Force reports already have their own article. So all we need in this article is a brief summation, which I believe is what's there. If someone wants more detailed information they can click on the other article. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 18:22, 26 October 2006 (UTC)


3. Paragraph on Gen DeBose - What was he ordered to "cover up"? The secret Project Mogul or a flying saucer? To say that he was covering up something without saying what it was or why is misleading. Also, he said this in the mid 1990s, when he was nearly 90 and his memory was clearly failing (Klass, 89-94).


Sorry, when I checked earlier, that section had been completely omitted, now it has been reinstated along with some other stuff which probably should be there too.
:The Roswell base press release issued by base commander Col. Blanchard said they had recovered a "flying disk." There was press feeding frenzy when this went out over the wire, and Dubose said he received a call from Gen. McMullen, acting chief of staff of the SAC, ordering him to start a coverup to kill the story and get the press off their backs. They were trying to kill the ongoing press story of the "flying disk", not Project Mogul. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


What was there and now seems to be back is imho adequeat.
4. the paragraph starting "Gen. Ramey also had": "Wright Field also stated that they disagreed with the weather balloon assessment" I'm fairly certain that this was said without seeing it. It is misleading, leading the reader to think that Wright Field did not think it was a balloon/radar reflector.
:What's ironic is that it was you who insisted on putting the text of the telegram into the article. Now you don't like having it pointed out that portions of the telegram contradict the weather balloon story. The telegram reads, "MAJOR CURTAN FURTHER ADVISED THAT THE OBJECT FOUND RESEMBLES A HIGH ALTITUDE WEATHER BALLOON WITH A RADAR REFLECTOR, BUT THAT TELEPHONIC CONVERSATION BETWEEN THEIR OFFICE AND WRIGHT FIELD HAD NOT BORNE OUT THIS BELIEF." The Air Force in their 1994 Executive summary quoted the first part but chopped out the last part about Wright Field disagreeing--talk about "misleading!")


Maybe I should wait until the edits are done (d'oh!)
:What's so hard for you to understand here? It clearly states that Wright Field disagreed with Kirton's given assessment of a weather balloon and radar reflector? Wright Field wouldn't need to see it given a suitable verbal description over the phone. Radar reflectors were simply balsa wood kites with a foil/paper covering. There's not that much to describe. Balloons are balloons. And the Mogul balloon materials back then were no different that standard weather balloon equipment. Also part of Dubose's story was of an earlier, highly secret shipment of debris from Roswell to Fort Worth to Washington and then to Wright Field. Wright Field may already have had a chance to examine the debris from this earlier shipment, another reason they might disagree. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


] 18:49, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
5. The paragraph starting "Shortly after the new press release ...", "The base provost marshall likewise later confirmed that they were holding Brazel at the base" - it is probably not true that Brazel was held or detained (Pflock, 169-171).


:I think we're really moving along nicely; once we can finish off those concerns in the 'to do' list, we'll be ready for a Peer Review, and then I'm confident a GA nom will pass for sure. --] 01:10, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
:There are about a dozen eyewitnesses to Brazel being accompanied by military officers in Roswell, being kept at the base, being forced to change his story, or complaining bitterly afterwards to family and friends of being held at the base and treated badly by the military. The base provost marshal, William Easley, the man in charge such things, admitted that they held Brazel at the base. But in your world of denial, if a debunker like Pflock says it never happened, then it never happened. Pflock’s mere assertion (based on what exactly—psychic abilities of a man who was never there?) trumps the testimony of a dozen eyewitnesses, including the base provost marshal. Figures. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
::Yes, definitely doing much better. I think the intro paragraphs are handled pretty well, but the rest of the article just feels too choppy and I'm not exactly sure how to fix it. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 16:03, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
:::The intro paragraph is way to long is the problem (one of the GA/FA requirements); and yes, we should discuss an overall structure for the rest of the article. --] 16:06, 27 October 2006 (UTC)


I like the new intro (concise, but informative!), but I think 'background' is still a bit redundant. Can the material in there be merged to other parts of the article (what's not already covered in more detail elsewhere)? --] 00:16, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
5.1 Later in that paragraph "Also contradicting the initial balloon story, Brazel said at the start of his interview that he "whispered" to Sheriff Wilcox that "he might have found a flying disk." It is misleading to say that this contradicts the balloon story. Brazel found the debris, he didn't know what it was. The modern UFO era had just started, and there was a flurry of excitement and sightings. Then he heard about flying saucers, and thought this might be one. He never said it had a saucer shape or anything like that.
:I had the same thought... I wasn't sure where to merge it. I think were talking about a fundemenal article structure shift and I don't realy know the topic well enough to do that myself. ---] (]|]) 00:24, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
::I have rejigged the intro to help make it more encyclopedic. Happy to help with other improvements too. ] 00:31, 3 November 2006 (UTC)


Why not simply omit the "background" section as the new intro concisely sums up the controversy, while the remaining sections spell out the event?
:Brazel is seemingly describing balloon material, even mentions everything being held up by a “balloon”, then absolutely recants the story at the end saying that what he found didn’t resemble “in any way” the other weather balloons he had previously found. The weather balloons used on a Mogul were no different than the weather balloons used anywhere else—they were exactly the same thing. If Brazel had actually found balloon material, as he initially stated, then Brazel at the very least would have known he was dealing with some sort of balloon. He would have told the Sheriff Wilcox when he first came to Roswell that he had found some sort of balloon, not “whispered” to him that maybe he had found a ”flying disk.” That’s one thing inconsistent with Brazel’s balloon descriptions. Another is Wilcox’s press statement that Brazel came in saying he had found a “weather meter.” That absolutely contradicts Brazel’s unambiguous statement that what found absolutely was not some sort of weather observation device. The article as written is pointing out the various ‘’contemporaneous’’ stories of what happened are inconsistent.


] 16:28, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
:Another huge inconsistency pointed out is the story Ramey had Marcel tell in Fort Worth of Brazel immediately cleaning up the debris when he found it in mid-June and throwing it under some brush. This directly contradicted Brazel’s story of not thinking much of it and not picking anything up until July 4.


:Assuming the information is elsewhere in the article I'd be cool with that. Just move the citations somewhere else that their relevant. ---] (]|]) 16:42, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
:One of your problems Bubba, is you don’t like hearing about all the conflicting stories. You use the usual Klass tactic of highly selective quotation from Brazel’s interview, and leave out the rest of the important context of all the various and conflicting ways the story was actually reported back in 1947. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


::Agree with J.smith. --] 16:49, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
6. The paragraph starting "Sheriff Wilcox was also quoted ..." at the end of the paragraph: "Various Wilcox family members would later claim that he was threatened by the military." The daughter of Wilcox said this in a March 1991 interview, when it was popular to say such things. According to a contemporaneous (July 8, 47) report "Wilcox said that the military indicated to him it would be best if he did not say anything." Hardly a threat. Pflock (172) says that her report is second-hand and unsubstantiated, not credible, and came in the weeks following similar tales on 'Unsolved Mysteries'.


== Evaluation of External Links ==
:The usual bunch of denial and assertions masquerading as facts. Both Wilcox's daughters said their father was pressured into cooperating, also hinted at by Wilcox’s actual contemporaneous AP quote of “I’m working with those fellows at the base,” in explaining why he wasn’t going to give further details about what Brazel’s object looked like. That quote predates the “Unsolved Mysteries” story by over 40 years. Wilcox’s granddaughter said she learned from her grandmother that Wilcox’s cooperation was anything but friendly. She claimed her grandmother told her the military came and told both she and her husband they would be killed if they didn’t keep their mouths shut and cooperate. According to the family and one of Wilcox’s deputies, the military’s treatment so demoralized him that he lost all interest in being Sheriff and didn’t seek reelection.
Well, in the spirit of WP:NOT a collection of links and WP:EL, lets evaluate the external links section.
Here's the criteria I'd like to use:
:# Does the website linked provide useful information not already available on wikipedia?
:# Does the website infringe on any one's copyrights?
:# Is the website a "mushroom"? (Ie, springs up over night and all it has to stand on is bullshit)
:# Is the link redundant to a link already in the references section?
If no to 1 and/or yes to any of the rest, then it's time to remove it. ---] (]|]) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
::P.S. This is an invitation for discussion... I'm not trying to own the page:) ---] (]|]) 00:46, 2 November 2006 (UTC)


* Documents, Timeline, Air Force reports, Witness List.
:The quote you gave ("Wilcox said that the military indicated to him it would be best if he did not say anything.") is ''not'' "contemporaneous," but from Jason Kellahin, the AP reporter at Brazel's press conference (as usual, you don’t have even your basic facts straight). It's in Kellahin’s affidavit from 50 years later. He's also one of the eyewitnesses who stated Brazel was accompanied by military officers to the interview. (But you and Pflock don't want to believe it, therefore it never happened.) Note that Kellahin’s independent account is perfectly consistent with the Wilcox family members and the actual contemporaneous quote direct from Wilcox of “working with those fellows at the base.”
**'''Evaluation:''' Good site, but redundent to citation.
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove from EL, leave in citation. ---] (]|]) 21:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Concur. --] 03:28, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* , ''The Roswell Report Fact vs. Fiction in the New Mexico Desert''
**'''Evaluation:''' Domain is linked to under a citation, but to a diffrent article.
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove or replace with a link to roswellfiles.com/ ---] (]|]) 21:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Is there a place for this in the Air Force reports article? If so, remove. --] 03:28, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' Domain seems to be down
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove if someone else confirms it's down. ---] (]|]) 21:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Down for me too. --] 03:28, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' Airforce's official explination. Not used elseware in the article.
**'''Recommendation:''' Looks good: Keep ---] (]|]) 21:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Concur. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' - Geocities personal website... But it seems to contain some well researched material
**'''Recommendation:''' Tentative keep ---] (]|]) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Weak keep. Does appear some reasonably sane legwork was done. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* , mostly old ] files, 1000+ pages (very long download)
**'''Evaluation:''' 80meg document... something like 900+ pages.
**'''Recommendation:''' Keep... this is exactly what external links are for. ---] (]|]) 21:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Concur. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* Criticism of the 1997 USAF "Case Closed" or "crash dummy" report, from Dr. Mark Rodeghier, director of the ] in ].
**'''Evaluation:''' A rebuttle of the government's explination writen by Mark Rodeghier of the Center for UFO Studies.
**'''Recommendation:''' Keep. <nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>
***Concur. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* from Roswell researcher ]
**'''Evaluation:''' Appears to be one man's rantings about how the official reports are wrong.
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
***Note: ] seems to be a fairly notable... and his notability comes from being a Roswell researcher. It looks like notable rantings. :) My '''Recommendation:''' keep. ---] (]|]) 15:41, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' Detailed canvassing of witnesses of the event as well as historical background.
**'''Recommendation:''' Keep. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
***Agreed. Fairly reliable website too. ---] (]|]) 15:41, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* ; includes some witness interviews, ] information requests, Roswell summary, and more.
**'''Evaluation:''' Summary of events as well as theories.
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove. What isn't redundant is unsupported theories of one man. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
***Looks like he's hawking CDs and Tapes too... *shrug* not needed, remove. ---] (]|]) 15:41, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
***Agreed ---] (]|]) 15:41, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* ; excellent research.
**'''Evaluation:''' One man's theory about irridation experiments.
**'''Recommendation:''' Weak remove. I wouldn't use it as a source, so I wouldn't want to link to it. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' Seems almost entirely redundant to "Debunkery of the Ramey message" below. **'''Recommendation:''' Remove ---] (]|]) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Concur. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* (skeptical look at both sides)
**'''Evaluation:''' Semi humorous summary of events. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
**'''Recommendation:''' Remove. Nothing new here. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* (debunkery with many links to other debunking articles and books)
**'''Evaluation:''' Often quoted skepdic.com. Material is mostly redundant to Misplaced Pages. **'''Recommendation:''' Keep ---] (]|]) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Remove simply because it is mostly redundant. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
* (skeptical)
**'''Evaluation:''' Rundown from Project Mogul's perspective.
**'''Recommendation:''' Keep. Lots of new, well researched material. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' - AOL personal website... But it seems to contain some well researched material. Seems redundant to "History of Roswell for July 1947" however.
**'''Recommendation:''' Tenitive keep ---] (]|]) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
***Weakly concur. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
*
**'''Evaluation:''' Collection of photos from Roswell.
**'''Recommendation:''' Weak keep. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)


Addtionally, I strongly support the removal of all the 'fringe' links, simply because they are fringe viewpoints. --] 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
:That something funny was going on with Wilcox is also apparent in the fact that he was giving different, conflicting stories to various news people. As to when Brazel found the object, he told UP “about 3 weeks ago,” but told AP "two or three days before." As to when Brazel first came to his office, he told UP Sunday, July 6, or “the day before yesterday,” but told AP “yesterday” or “Monday.” His statement that Brazel came in thinking he had found a “weather meter” conflicted with Brazel saying he told the sheriff he thought he found a “flying disk” and that what he found was absolutely not a weather device. Wilcox couldn’t give a straight, consistent story, maybe sometimes forgetting or confusing the story he was supposed to tell with what really happened.
:Yeah... ok, removed. I should have included it in this list, but silly section edit threw me off:) ---] (]|]) 21:11, 6 November 2006 (UTC)


== skeptics ==
:Yes, the family accounts of threats are second-hand and can’t be “substantiated” with some sort of document. But the multiple accounts are all consistent, including Kellahin’s and Wilcox’s 1947 quote. They would certainly be admissible in a court of law. There is ‘’zero’’ evidence the various statements were inspired by “Unsolved Mysteries” or confabulated by family members. Pflock’s other assertion that they are “not credible” is again merely his personal opinion, not a statement of fact. You, as usual, don’t seem to know the difference. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


Who are these anonymous skeptics that the article keeps talking about? Seems a bit of a weasel word in context. I marked a few with {{tl|who}} but I decided that wasn't realy a good way to do it it. ---] (]|]) 21:57, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
7. The paragraph starting "A number of UFO researchers ..." says "the U.S. government was withholding or suppressing information. " We now know that they were suppressing information about ].


:Yet again you are confusing your personal ''assumption'' based on your obvious personal biases, as being the same thing as incontestable fact. There are, e.g., zero documents about a Mogul balloon being recovered at the Brazel ranch. Mogul kept detailed records of what happened to their balloons, yet over several years of balloon launches there was not one balloon that landed or passed anywhere near the ranch, much less one from June/July 1947. There isn't even any conclusive document showing that there ever was a launch of a Mogul Flight #4, what the Air Force claims (with zero evidence) was recovered at the ranch. Flight #4 is a convenient scapegoat because with zero documentation, all sorts of details for it (like its supposed makeup and trajectory) can and have been confabulated to try to force-fit it as a "solution."


::Well, I wrote most of the article. And a lot of those "anonymous skeptics" are in fact fully cited elsewhere. I'm not sure what to do here. If the consensus here is that I should add citations, I could supply multiple sources for each instance of "skeptics say". Exactly how should this be cited? By specific multiple references? or by the name of the skeptic alone?
:It is also not true that the public was told nothing about the existence of Project Mogul. That's nonsense! As the people involved admitted, there was no way to keep the balloon launches themselves secret. The crashed balloons were being found all the time by civilians, including in June/July 1947. Nothing was classified about the equipment, and only the purpose was classified at the time. It was so non-secret that a mock Mogul launch with radar targets was held for the press on July 9, 1947, at Alamogordo and used to try to explain recent UFO reports in the area and what the rancher supposedly found. If you read the 1980 "The Roswell Incident", one of the project balloons was considered in this first Roswell book. Mogul super-secret? Nonsense! Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


] 15:40, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
8. The paragraph starting "Even more controversial ..." says "... primarily second-hand accounts from friends and family members of those involved..." I did considerable reading on this, and all such reports are second-hand or worse. No first-hand report mentioned aliens. Furthermore, there are no contemporary reports of aliens or anything resembling a flying saucer, even second-hand.
:::It would be helpfull to replace "skeptics" with the name or names of notable skeptics who hold the view. ---] (]|]) 15:54, 7 November 2006 (UTC)


::::Perhaps (where overlap exists) it would be possible to restructure the wording a bit so that near the beginning it can say, "Skeptics such as X and Y", and then refer back to that. --] 16:21, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:The article as written already says all this, so what's the problem? Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


8,1 Later in the paragraph "Ramey's 1947 statements of the object being about 25 feet across if reconstructed" he may be referring to an inflated weather balloon.


Gotchya.
:There are numerous quotes attributed to Ramey of him saying the foil-covered "box kite" was 25 feet across if reconstructed. E.g.:


I'll do this over the next few days.
:Washington Post:
:Army Air Force officials here were as flabbergasted as the rest of the world. But under the personal direction of Lieut. Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, acting AAF chief, who dropped into the Washington AAF public information headquarters in the midst of the excitement, they burned up the wires to Texas and New Mexico. They got from Brig. Gen. Roger Ramey, Eighth Air Force Commander, a description of the object. It was "of very flimsy construction -- almost like a box kite", made of wood and with a cover "like tinfoil"...Ramey said he hadn't actually seen it himself as yet. He went to take a look, and called back that it was about 25 feet in diameter.


] 16:35, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:Associated Press:
:"The material had been described as of flimsy construction about 25 feet in diameter, covered with tinfoil-like substance and built on a framework of light wood. It was badly battered."


:Excellent. This is one of the hard fixes... but it can be a major blockade in the way of FA status. ---] (]|]) 19:20, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:United Press stories:
:"AAF spokesmen would say only that the 'saucer' was a flimsily-constructed, kite-like object measuring about 25 feet in diameter and covered with a material resembling tinfoil."


:"Ramey informed his Washington superiors that the object was 'of very flimsy construction--almost like a box kite'. He said it had been smashed and apparently was made with a cover of some kind of material like tinfoil . Reports from Ramey, AAF spokesman in Washington, and Sheriff George Wilcox of Roswell indicated that the object, if reconstructed, would have a diameter of 25 feet."


I've done about half of the "skeptics say..." fixes in the skeptical response section. ANy comments? So far so good?
:''Later’’ one of Ramey’s spokespeople, intelligence officer Kirton, told the FBI and Reuters, that it was the balloon that was 20 across. But these weren’t the original quotes from Ramey. It was yet another inconsistency in the official story. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


] 17:22, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
8.2 At the end of the paragraph "...balloon does speak specifically of "the 'disc'" and "the victims of the wreck" ...", with an external link - this is apparently fake. If you compare the curvature of the edge of the paper in the "Ramey message, high-resolution scan" with the actual photo, you can see that it doesn't match. There simply isn't enough detail in the photo to blow it up enough to read. Also, on the external link it is interesting to note that it is copyrighted by David Rudiak. That means that he is claiming that he wrote it. If the text was really from a government document, it would be in the public domain and he could not copyright it.

:Excellent! This article will make GA in no time and well well-prepared for peer-review for FA. ---] (]|]) 18:32, 8 November 2006 (UTC)


:::I'm pretty well done now. I tried to match the reference formatting, but someone better at this better take a look. If there are any more references you need, let me know.

] 20:49, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

::::Awesome job! We've just got two more links in "Arguments from Authority" that need to be made in-line, and that's all of 'em! --] 20:56, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Just did a fix to the first Timothy Printy reference near the top of the section, don't forget that.

] 21:04, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

:::::I meant the ones labeled '2' and '3' in the third paragraph. --] 21:08, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

== Combining sections... ==

I'd like to combine
Further reading (Skeptics)" & "Sources (generally "pro-UFO" explanations)". They seem redundant and judgemental... thoughts or objections? ---] (]|]) 21:16, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
:I never was a fan of those titles...I'd like to know what purpose those links serve before anything is done. Are the 'sources' actual sources? If any are, I'd remove the 'generally' and make everything that isn't (including the skeptics) 'further reading'. If they're not, just merge 'em all into a 'further reading' section, although if that's the case, we may need to evaluate whether they belong there at all. --] 21:28, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
::I can see the value of such a list... but I haven't read any of those books so I I can't relay judge them on an individual basis. I'll combine the lists and see if I can fix the formatting some. ---] (]|]) 21:39, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

== extend colab... ==

I made an appeal on the colab page to extend the collaboration for this article. I think major progress has been made and I'd like to see this submitted to FA before we move on. ---] (]|]) 21:18, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

==Secondary pages==

Just a note here about the secondary pages, specifically the Witness page and the Air Force Report page. Is it necessary to tackle those as well?

I bring it up in particular because one of the strong advocates of one side of the debate on Roswell has in the past few days decided to transform what I felt was a fairly balanced, NPOV presentation of the various witness accounts to the Roswell UFO incident into a fairly slanted POV presentation, IMHO.

] 20:12, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

==Peer Review==
Some of the bigger points brought up on the peer review:
*"Other theories" section too long (perhaps another sub-article candidate?) (My thoughts: Is Timothy Printy really a reliable source? If not, we can remove his objections)
*Reorganization may be needed; suggestion was 'background', 'materials found', 'theories', 'recent developments', and 'in popular culture'
*<s>Use ] to make the one or two very long quotes look more presentable.</s>
*All instances of "X claims", "X alleges", "X asserts" need citation.
*<s>In "Contemporary accounts of evidence found", it says "A telex uncovered in the 1990s". How was it uncovered?</s>
*News section doesn't really talk much about how the press initially believed it was a flying saucer, or what impact that had. (While this would be nice, and possibly necessary for a FA, I wouldn't make this a top priority)
*In "Conspiracy theories", the alternative account recounted there is quite long, and feels awkward in context. (I'd suggest making it into a summary rather than a blow-by-blow)
--] 17:52, 11 November 2006 (UTC)

== Further reading... ==

Well, I reformatted the section. Combined both lists, sorted by authors last name and found ISBNs for everything but one book.
:Thomas R. Morris & Theresa J. Morris, with Sally Hester ''"Roswell Connection", 2006''
I'm not sure who listed it, but if you have it on hand can you grab the ISBN from the front cover? Anyone have any comments on the reorganisation?---] (]|]) 21:03, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
:I went ahead and removed all of the books that were also listed as citations. --] 21:25, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

==Revert War on "]"==

As noted above, please draw your attention to the "]" page where one ufo-advocate has been reverting the POV contributions of his I have been editing into NPOV.

I just fixed up the page again, and I feel if we let the page get "taken over" by one side than a great deal of effort here may be for naught.

] 21:57, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

:I think some of his material does have merit; since it doesn't appear he's reading the article talk page, you may want to try contacting him on his user talk page. --] 22:42, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

He routinely dismisses my approach as being "censorship." And he has a bone to pick for debates we had over on Space.com years ago. If you feel that what I have done here is "censor" one side, then maybe you are okay with what he is doing over there.

I feel he is turning the Witness page into a very one-sided page with not only extended asides with comments in the text like "witness x described what clearly was no 'weather balloon' " etc., but extended criticisms of the few witnesses there who thought the incident was just a weather balloon or some such object.

But each and every witness here has their critisms, and to include those asides would completely bog down the article into a debate which I feel is already addressed on the main Roswell page and the Air Force page - that ufo researchers assert certain accounts are not to be believed and that an active cover-up was in place. Similarily, skeptics' critiques of those witnesses who they view as not credible are on the main page.

My main issue here is that this guy has a history of viewing his clearly POV contributions as being "factual" and NPOV.

Watch what he inserts and tell me if it is POV or not.

] 22:54, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

:...As I just said, I think some of his insertions have merit. That doesn't mean I agree with all of it, and it doesn't mean I condone his attitude. However, wholesale reversions solve nothing. Talk to him about the SPECIFIC parts you have a problem with and why, and see how things go from there. --] 23:00, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

::Do we even need this article? It seems alot of that goes into a level of detail we don't need to go into. ---] (]|]) 23:02, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

:::No comment on that either way, but for the record, it was split off from this article in an attempt to shorten it. --] 23:05, 9 November 2006 (UTC)


I've had a discussion with Dr Fil, after leaving most of what he feels should be in, but he seems to feeel that TONS of extra stuff is needed, stuff which I pointed out largely simply repeats what others say. The article - which was long enough anyway - now is probably way too long. Since he larrgely reverts what I have done and deletes my requests for quotes, perhaps someone ELSE should go in there and suggest that we don't need 20 alien accounts when four or five will suffice.

] 19:35, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

==Grammatical tense==
Comment about the "Arguments from authority" section -- When describing the contents of Randle and Schmitt's two books, we shift from the past tense to the present tense. "<span style="color:red;">Kevin Randle and Donald Schmitt initially focused on Marcel and the ranch as the main crash site in their 1991 book UFO Crash at Roswell. </span>(past tense) <span style="color:green;">Then, in their next book, The Truth About the UFO Crash at Roswell, the crash happens several days later and at a location far from the Foster ranch. Marcel and Brazel are relegated to a lesser roles and, as The Roswell Files notes, the new accounts contradict the old accounts</span>." (present tense). I think we should rewrite this section and stick to one tense (whichever would be most appropriate). Any thoughts? ] 19:11, 10 November 2006 (UTC)
:Past, definitely. The crash isn't happening as we write this. --] 19:47, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

==Added post-1995 developments==

I've added what I intended to include in the article originally (and which I feel needs to be here for additional context). And that is some of the detail behind prominent UFO researchers concluding that there were no aliens involved (mentioned in the intro), the revelation of shoddy research and split between two major Roswell authors (alluded to earlier), and the discrediting of several prominent witnesses.

I think this adds more to the article, but if you guys don't, well, do what you will.

] 21:40, 10 November 2006 (UTC)
:While the prose is fine there seems to be a bias in the selection of events that make up the story being told... were there not "positive" developments happening at the time? (I can't answer that as I'm not an expert in the subject) If not... then the section is great. (Except we have 10 new citations to fix;)) ---] (]|]) 21:54, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

I think the "bias" is covered by the other stuff in "recent developments." The point to underline here is that up to about 1995, the UFO interpretation was by far the dominant one. Once the Air Force published its reports and a) a plausible explanation for the debris was suggested and b) ufo researchers were shown not to be doing their homework, the field changed. Once-strong advocates dismissed any alien presence.

A lot of the stuff on the internet today is a rehash of long-discredited (by ufo researchers) evidence, the added section hints at the problems with a lot of the "research" done to suggest aliens were involved.

] 23:00, 10 November 2006 (UTC)


==Someone PLEASE help out at ]==

Dr Fil has gone completely overboard now, he's probably tripled the size of this once-manageable article and ignored my comments and critiques on what he has done.

At first, He seemed confused about the way I structured it, complaining that "primary" witnesses were taken off and put elsewhere, and inserting various POV comments about witnesses who saw this as a balloon or whatever while leaving witnesses with testimony of claimed sinister goings-ons at face value.

Realizing this stemmed from a lack of clarity about what was meant about "primary," I reworded everything so as to make it clear the intent of the sections - the first part focussed on witness accounts to the debris as described in 1947; the second part to accounts of aliens and cover-ups etc.

I also reiterated my intent here to present witness statements at face value. Since the vast majority of these statements could be considered "pro-ufo," I thought this was a balanced approach.

Perhaps now realizing my intent, he has ceased to keep reinserting irrelevant stuff and stuff into the wrong section, but has turned into the Sorcerer's Apprentice, burying the page with endless accounts.

I also asked him to clarify a quote he inserted. He says Brazel Jr described a gouge of specific dimensions. While this quote may exist somewhere, I think it was important to a) supply the actual quote or b) say who claims he said this. Which is what I am led to believe wikistyle. He refuses to do either, saying the source at the end of the quote that is there has it. I've put a "citation" mark up three times and simply omits it without seriously responding to my request for a proper note on this.

Worse, in a section on Cavitt, a witness who supplied an account which suggests explicitly no alien craft was involved, he seems determined to discredit the account by saying some researchers said he denied ever being there. I repeatedly have omitted it asking why it is relevant, since NO ONE disputes he was in fact present. To me, if one doesn't know this person was in fact there, the comment may discredit the account which, no doubt, is the POV insertion's intent.

But the biggest problem now is that he has ignored my main entreaty - to resist the temptation to load the page down with extraneous material and limit the various sections to several preferabbly first-hand accounts, and to have a link like "for more, see here." Instead, he has now expanded the "alien" part to 21 quotes, including quotes which only remotely suggest anything (like Zimmerman's) and, again, ignoring and not responding to my requests to keep the article length reasonable.

My attempts to simply apply the standards to the page I, after all, created, have been met with cries of "censorship" etc.

I'd appreciate someone else going in there are weighing in on what I see as a hijack of the page by a strong pro-UFO advocate. He was a major cause of why the original Roswell page was a complete one-sided mess, he is well on the way to doing the same on the "witness" page.

] 03:20, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

:You might want to take this to ], since this goes farther than just an editing concern, and none of us are really neutral anymore. --] 15:57, 15 November 2006 (UTC)


==Conspiracy section redo==

It seems to me that the biggest hole here is the conspiracy section. How about I do a rewrite with a structure somewhat like the Other Theory section, with the proper references etc.?

] 20:59, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
:Best of luck CJ. It's a mess. Just the first paragraph of that section alone needs attention. For instance, it needs a few <nowiki> {{fact}}s </nowiki> added, as I have indicated here:
:::"By the early 1990s, some UFO researchers<nowiki> {{who}} had concluded that the original 1947 accounts were almost exclusively cover-ups. {{fact}} Based on the accounts of witnesses given after 1978, these researchers asserted that once word reached military authorities detailing the recovery of a UFO, {{fact}} officials switched the real debris for weather balloon debris {{fact}} in time for the press conference. {{fact}} Then officials intimidated Brazel {{fact}} into portraying the material as consistent with a weather balloon during his press conference {{fact}}. They claimed that at the same time the press was reporting that a rancher had mistaken a weather balloon for a flying saucer, the military was engaging in a large recovery operation, {{fact}} sealing off large areas and warning ]s to be quiet {{fact}}, in some cases threatening them with death {{fact}}</nowiki> if they dared tell anyone what they saw."
:Misplaced Pages is making a lot of unsupported claims. ] 21:29, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
::Whoa, whoa. I'm pretty sure a citation after "some UFO researchers claim" could clear up all of those fact templates. --] 21:34, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Yeah, this is entirely doable.

First, I'll do a rewrite of this, then I'll add all the necessary citations.

] 21:37, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

:Only one or two fact tags would be needed to make the point. ---] (]|]) 21:42, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
::Well now, that's a revelation. It's not about making a point, it's '''only''' about Misplaced Pages demonstrating accuracy and integrity. If we make extraordinary claims, we are duty bound to provide adequate evidence for those claims, each and every one of them, or remove them. InShanee's assertion that ''a citation after "some UFO researchers claim" could clear up all of those fact templates'' is far from true. A citation he suggests, to justify "some UFO researchers claim", could never adequately substantiate the claim made later in the paragraph that the military threatened some civilians with death. It, and others, need their own references/cites. ] 23:21, 15 November 2006 (UTC)


There are in fact specific claims that the military threatened to kill people if they spoke. I originally wrote the body of the section thinking it was adequate to refer to one or two sites for the scenario laid out, I realize now that is wholly inadequate and, besides, it can be presented far better and more spefically, along the lines of, "by 1994 UFO researchers such as Kark Pflock, Stanton Freidman and the team of Kevin Randle and Don Schmitt had interviewed several hundred people they claimed had some involvement with the events reported in 1947... New claims emerged such as from Schmitt and Randle detailing a military cover-up (source)..."

So, like in the skeptical section following, there will be specific references to specific claims.

] 00:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
::::Just a point. I didn't necessarily challenge specifics, I am merely pointing out each piece of information needs its own justification, and balance if it exists. ] 00:57, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

:Moriori, a single citation could, theoretical, cover the entire paragraph. InShanee wasn't wrong. It really depends on the variety of sources being used. Adding 15 {{tl|fact}} tags is actually quite disruptive to the flow of the article. Please, no more Ad hominem arguments.
:Yes, we need citations there... 15 <nowiki>{{fact}}</nowiki> tags is not a very civil way of dealing with it. ---] (]|]) 00:33, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
::Do you want Misplaced Pages to have some semblance of scholarship? Any significant claim has to be referenced/cited, even in paranormal articles A claim that the military threatened people with death cannot be justified by a cite supporting different information. There is no way a single citation could cover the whole paragraph. It's quaint that you say "15 <nowiki> {{fact}} </nowiki> tags is not a very civil way of dealing with it". Now how is that incivil? And where's the ad hominen. Still, you actually agree we need citations, and if I hadn't forced the issue we may never have ever seen them. I guess the whole article will get a makeover. It sure needs it. ] 00:57, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

:::"...where's the ad hominen." -> "Do you want Misplaced Pages to have some semblance of scholarship?" Or maybe that is a straw man argument? *shrug*
:::But, in any case, covering a paragraph in {{tl|fact}} is excessive. The {{tl|fact}} tag is a communication device. It communicates your belif that there is a need for a citation in a paticular point in an article. That message can be communincated with much fewer. ---] (]|]) 02:19, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
:::: An ad hominen was conveyed in a passage of text that didn't actually exist? How ironic, but I guess we are discussing an article about the paranormal. I am working hard to resist being sarcastic here. Suffice to say I '''know''' that <nowiki> {{fact}} </nowiki> is a communication device. Suffice to say too that I '''know''' it signals a point that needs citing. What I also know is that if there are several points needing referencing/citation, then it saves time to tag them all at the same time. Unfortunately, it demonstrates to readers that the article is probably not a reliable source of information. The only way to fix that is to provide the requested cites, all of them, and to junk claims that cannot be supported. That applies to all articles in Misplaced Pages. ] 03:02, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
:I figured I'd give you a more recent example. Whatever. All I've seen from you in regards to the paranormal project and articles has been aggression. All I was trying to do was to get you to calm down some. I caused more anger and aggression...so I'll leave. I'll keep out of this article for a while. ---] (]|]) 05:52, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
::Statements must be supportable/supported, whether in talk or article, a fundamental requirement of creating an encyclopedia. Asking for verification is hardly aggression, except maybe in the minds of people asked to justify article content who get their hackles up if their opinion is challenged. You never caused the slightest anger or aggression in me, so I never ever needed calming down. Well, you leave if you wish J.s but I'll stick around to help improve this article. Heaven knows it certainly needs it. ] 07:50, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
:::You're not improving anything by misusing fact tags. You're completely misunderstanding the paragraph you've started an argument over. All that's needed is a citation as to who or what group of individuals is making the claims in the paragraph; we don't need to 'prove' that there was military harrassment or anything else, merely that someone asserts there is. That's how policy works here. --] 16:23, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
::::I prefer Misplaced Pages's '''official policy''', which in part says the following -- "Editors should provide a reliable source for material '''that is challenged''' or likely to be challenged, '''or it may be removed'''......The burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material." Not only that, NPOV basically demands balance, so when someone says the military threatened people with death, the article should also explain that the people making that claim have been criticised for their dubious research methods. ] 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

I just want to say one thing: Moriori, your misrepresenting my point. I've made tons of calls for citations here. ---] (]|]) 17:56, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
:J.s, nowhere have I said you have not made tons of calls for citations. You are making my point for me -- that what we write here has to be supported by evidence.] 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

Since I started this particular thread, I should point out that it was I, not you Moriori, who suggested a rewrite with proper citations was required. The main problem is that the way it was written, simply supplying citations for the statements would be, in my view, clumsy. So I propose to redo the section in a similar manner as the skeptic section to better reference this.

I DON'T proprose a detailed refutation of the various claims within the section, those critiques belong in the skeptical section and in the Air Force report section. And, it should be noted, while many people said many things - including that they received death threats - it is up to the reader to see what seems more likely, not for us to tell them what is the more likely scenario.

A careful reading of the claims will find that a lot of them stem from Randle/Scmitt who it has been shown employed dubious research methods to come to their conclusions. It makes their claims suspect, in my view. But they form the basis for much of what this incident has become.

Dr Fil over in the Witness page has gone a bit overboard (in my view) in inserting millions of witness statements, so there will be an opportunity here not only to access the author's claims, but the witness claims as well.

] 15:31, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

:CJ, you say (regarding death threats) that "it is up to the reader to see what seems more likely, not for us to tell them what is the more likely scenario"? How can they check out the source of extraordinary claims if the claims aren't sourced? They can't! How can they judge which is the most likely scenario if only one scenario is presented to the reader? They can't. Where's the NPOV? Why are you compelled to point out that it was you who suggested a rewrite and cites? That's a non sequitur if ever I saw one. Whatever, it is good if there is opportunity to access witness claims as you say, but balance is important too.

:As a postscript CJ, can you direct me to evidence that names anyone who reported seeing an object '''flying''' near the site where the whatever it was, was found. Perhaps the name of this article should be ''Roswell incident'', without any mention of unidentified '''flying''' object. ] 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

The problem with the section is that originally it was written as an example of the scenarios which UFO advocates promoted. As such, there were one or two sources - to those who promoted those scenarios. The "NPOV" approach was to present those accounts at face value - so, the initial 1947 reports were presented, then the "ufo" accounts, then the skeptical response. These sections have to, I feel, be better names.

That approach was taken for the simple reason that there is very little people agree on in terms of the truth of this incident. Further, a good deal of the evidence is hotly disputed. To wade through the debate, one has to know what the sides say happen.

As to the specific claims, witness claims in fact cover all this territory on the "witness" page. The problem identfied is that now it is a bit unclear as to where this stuff is sourced and I for one have said I will do a rewrite to more clearly present this case - specific to the various ufo advocates - with reference to where a lot of these claims arise (to be found on the witness page).

Far from being the only case presented, right below is the skeptical response to this, including a link to the Air Force reports which were so compelling that a) several prominent UFO advocates concluded there were no aliens involved and b) at least some of the ufo research was exposed as shoddy if not fraudulent. (That fallout is noted too)

I personally feel this needs a bit more work to make the sections more coherent, to make this section closer to the feel of the skeptic section where we go from specific advocate to other specific advocate, and make asides like "see Witness Accounts page."

As for the specific point about witnesses to objects flying, there in fact appeared at the time, in 1947, witness accounts from people saying they saw strange objects flying overhead. See this skeptical website page for more: http://members.aol.com/TPrinty/sighting.html

] 17:00, 17 November 2006 (UTC)

::All this fingerpointing is rather pointless. What, precisely, is the disputed text? &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 17:23, 1 December 2006 (UTC)

== GA nom ==
I think we're looking pretty good at this point. Unless there's any major objections, I'm going to nominate this as a Good Article tomorrow. --] 15:27, 17 November 2006 (UTC)

::I still think we need to clean up the section we talk about above. Won't be too hard, I say give it a week or so.

::] 17:07, 17 November 2006 (UTC)


==Redo of "witness" section==

I've done a major redo of the "witness" section, more specifically identifying the various authors and claims, and changing section headings to reflect what may be a better approach here.

Obviously, I need to get all the references done and someone who knows what they are doing (not me) will need to wikify it all.

But this is the basis of what I think this should look like - any comments?

] 21:40, 22 November 2006 (UTC)

::I just moved around a bit of the "skeptic" section, new titles etc. I think it makes more sense to start with the Air Force reports as they form the basis for much of the skeptical response.

::To me, the article now is much more coherent, though I still need to supply some more references in the "aliens" section and I may not be able to do much of that for a week or so.

::Once that is done, THEN maybe we can submit this for GA!

::] 19:25, 24 November 2006 (UTC)

:::I know I've brought this up before, but any thoughts on the ] of some of the skeptical sources? For example, who the heck is Timothy Printy? --] 22:47, 30 November 2006 (UTC)

Anything he has said - in terms of what others have claimed - has been verified by other sources in my experience. The guy is pretty meticulous and is one of the best sources I've seen to wade through just about every aspect of the controversy.

Is there anything in particular you mean when you talk about "reliability." Most of the references I have here for him are on his opinion which is just that - his opinion. Is there something specific about his sources you are referring to? If so, I can try to verify those references.

] 15:48, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

==Image text==

Below the image of 2 men posing with some of the balloon, it says "see below for an enlargement", yet there is no enlargement below. Was there? Should there be? If not, the text should be removed. ] 17:24, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
:There was... not sure what happened to it. Ummm weird. ---] (]|]) 20:07, 26 November 2006 (UTC)

==Possible revert war==

I've noticed that one of the advocates of the ufo interpretation has decided to declare the article "biased" and, without discussion, start inserting pro-ufo interpretations into the section describing the skeptical viewpoint.

I've dealt with this guy for a long time in other venues and while his point of view is clear and he is entitled to it, he tends to seek to counter every view that might cast doubt on the ufo interpretation.

It took me a long time to clean up the mess that was largely his creation and let stand a fairly balanced NPOV article, he seems to think otherwise and is at it - again.

] 15:29, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

:Let's not start talking like he's a vandal just yet. As I said when I reverted him, since the current version of the page is based on broad consensus, he needs to bring any large scale changes here before implementing them. Additionally, dispute tags should not be applied when a single editor is challenging consensus. --] 15:48, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Well, I didn't mean to suggest "vandal," but Dr Fil is what I would call a very passionate advocate of one point of view here. In my experience, he tends to see any claims which spells out the other point of view as "biased" and requiring counter-arguments, while claims supporting his views are left as is. It's not been easy to attempt - as I have - to present both sides of an argument without POV asides - and to have that left undisturbed by Dr Fil. This is what happened on the "witness" page where he insisted on inserting comments and asides which had the effect of disputing the credibilty of a witness he disagreed with.

And here it seems he is attempting to do the same, so that one side is presented, then the other - but since he disputes the other side, he feels the need to insert tons of counter-arguments.

] 16:35, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

:We shouldn't be making any accusations whatsoever. Let's just see how this plays out. --] 17:16, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Okay, agreed.

] 17:21, 5 December 2006 (UTC)


:Maybe the dumbest and falsest things you've said yet. So now the message is a "fake", is it? (Not even Klass or Pflock said that—unlike you, they knew it was real.) The message as held in Ramey's hand is upside down. It's been turned right-side up in the enlargement. That's why the "curvature doesn't match." If you knew anything, you would know this. If anybody doubts this, they can order their own prints of the enlargement and full photo from the Univ. of Texas at Arlington. As for picture quality of the message, the Wiki version has been greatly reduced in size and quality to save space and to comply with Fair Use laws. Where did you get the idiotic idea that Rudiak claimed he wrote the message? What's copyrighted are the graphics, not the message within in. As to readability, people should go to the links and judge for themselves. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
---------- ----------


"Vandal" indeed. I have been listed among the top 100 contemporary Ufologists and am considered an expert in the field, including the Roswell incident, which I have intensively studied for many years. I have visited the area, interviewed witnesses, dug into archives, and know most of the major researchers, with whom I have exchanged information. I have written various published articles on some phases of the story which I have delved into in depth and have been interviewed several times for TV documentaries on the subject, exactly because I am considered one of the experts. I have also written a great deal of Misplaced Pages material and edited a great deal more.
Some other points:

In short, I am exactly the sort of highly knowledgable EXPERT contributer a real Encyclopedia would want helping write this and associated articles. I have had problems before dealing with hard-core skeptics who think they should have complete control over the contents of these highly controversial UFO articles, but I have always been able to edit material. But not here. Instead it either gets instantly deleted or has to pass through some sort of "consensus" board of censors for approval for anything I write. I am not even allowed to post Totally Disputed NPOV or Out of Balance notices. The administrator Inshanee (greatly exceeding his authority and violating the rules of Misplaced Pages) instantly deleted these as well. According to him, this wasn't the "consensus" view. I think he misses the point and why Misplaced Pages rules allow anyone to post these notices (note, e.g., how the wording says an "individual Misplaced Pages member" objects, not a "consensus" objects). The so-called "consensus" article may very well be full of serious factual errors, badly slanted, out-of balance, etc. Even when I think a POV label should be pulled, I always give the person at least a couple of days to make their case, if not several weeks. But again not here—instant deletion.

So here we have the situation where I, an actual expert on the subject, am being blockaded from making any contributions, including making simple factual corrections. Censorship is censorship, whether Inshanee likes me using the word or not. E.g., it is NOT true that only three people were photographed in Fort Worth (there were four, the fourth being Irving Newton, the weather officer), or that Marcel is the only known person to have accompanied debris from Roswell to Fort Worth (Robert Porter was another, and the names of other crew members are known as well, such as the acting base commander Lt. Col. Payne Jennings, who piloted the plane), or that Marcel had no radar experience (one of his official military occupations was radar intelligence officer). When I tried to make two of those simple corrections, they got deleted knee-jerk fashion along with everything else I tried to add.

Another one of Canada Jack's simple erroneous "facts" is that Sheriff Wilcox confirmed Brazel's mid-June discovery date in United Press stories. Yeah, but what about Associated Press stories where Wilcox contradicted his UP statements by saying Brazel made his find "several days ago"? Wilcox also contradicted himself as to when Brazel came to office (AP: the day before; UP: the day before yesterday). And Wilcox further contradicted Brazel's story by claiming (UP) that Brazel came in reporting a "weather meter", whereas Brazel said he told the Sheriff that maybe he had found a "flying disc" and also stated that what he found definitely wasn't any sort of weather observation device.

Such contradictions in the reporting were pointed out in the article previously, but Canada Jack made sure the reader wouldn't be "confused" by the alleged "pro-UFO" contradictions when he totally rewrote the article to his personal slant. He also freely editorializes instead of sticking to facts. E.g., instead of simply stating that Brazel's stated date of discovery disagreed with the base press release of "sometime last week", he instead editorializes that the press release was probably wrong because it was "fourth hand". Total speculation like that has no place in an encyclopedia article, but CJ obviously added that because he wants the article skewed in that POV direction. To those familiar with these Roswell debates, the Brazel's mid-June discovery date is considered debunking dogma because it supports their Mogul balloon theory; they definitely do not like having pointed out it conflicts with the early July discovery date from other contemporary accounts.

Here is another topic Canada Jack definitely does not like being raised: the question of Brazel being in military hands and likely coerced when he made his statements. Over on "Witness Accounts of the Roswell UFO incident", under "Accounts of Intimidation," I tried to insert 14 (!!) different eyewitness accounts of people seeing Brazel surrounded by military in Roswell, being incarcerated at the base, stating he been forced to change his story, complaining bitterly afterwards about his treatment by the military, saying he sworn an oath not to talk about what really happened, etc. Well Canada Jack thinks he owns this page as well and can unilaterally decide what goes in there. I tried to put this material in there four times, and guess what? He deleted it four times. He basically admitted he didn't want the material there because he again thought it was giving the article a "pro-UFO" or "pro-alien" POV (huh?), even though there wasn't a single word in that material to that effect. However, I think he understands full well what conclusion readers might well draw, which is why he doesn't want it in there. But I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship" here, as Inshanee has privately admonished me, even though obvious censorship is exactly what is going on.

Now over here on the Roswell UFO incident, the subject is very briefly touched on by Canada Jack, but the testimony is grossly misrepresented (he mentions only one witness, Paul McEvoy, the editor of the Roswell Daily Record), and then the witness' statement is ridiculed using a "citation" from fellow debunker Tim Printy (basically, argument by assertion or authority: it didn't happen because Tim Printy says so). Hey, what about the other 13 witnesses, such as Jason Kellahin, who was there with McEvoy and covering the story for AP, or the base provost marshal Edwin Easley, who admitted they held Brazel under guard (i.e., against his will) at the base for several days? Canada Jack ridiculing McEvoy and deliberately omitting even a mention of the other corroborating accounts is more of his blatant editorializing and slanting of the article to his personal POV. (That's why it's downright pathetic when he claims to be writing the article with a NPOV, "cleaning up the mess", and repeatedly attacking me as highly biased and POV. He should look in the mirror.)

So again, I, a mere expert on the subject, tried to insert a little balance and accuracy back into the article by quickly noting that dismissal of McEvoy's statement was nothing more than argument by assertion and then noting that there were many other witnesses corroborating McEvoy, such as Kellahin and Easley. Well, doggone it, I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship", but can anyone guess what happened when I tried to insert this?

If the "skeptical viewpoint" or any viewpoint is grossly distorting the facts (Marcel not knowing anything about radar, only McEvoy being a witness to the military and Brazel, etc.), a properly written Encyclopedia article should at the very least point out this out (if not delete it entirely for being nonfactual). But one of Canada Jack's editing POV ploys is to isolate topics so that contrasting information and corrections can't be made. Instead he tries to spin it as "inserting pro-ufo interpretations into the section describing the skeptical viewpoint" and "he tends to seek to counter every view that might cast doubt on the ufo interpretation." Well, a curse on me for trying to be actually FACTUAL by noting Marcel's record shows he was a radar intelligence officer or that numerous witnesses (not one) spoke of Brazel in military custody. Please explain how making those CORRECTIONS is "inserting a pro-ufointerpretation" into the article. Another thing I did was delete another very obvious editorial comment of Canada Jack's that had no place in any encyclopedia article, that the second Randle/Schmitt book was totally unreliable as a reference. (I am communicating with Randle right now about this, and he, no doubt is going to have a few choice words to say.) I also notice that both Randle/Schmitt books were deleted from "Further reading" along with the original Berlitz & Moore book. Whether one considers them reliable or not, they are widely acknowledged as being among the major books written on the subject and should be there. But when I tried to reinsert them, guess what?

I feel I have many justifiable grievances here. There is a good deal very wrong and heavily biased with this article as currently written (mainly by Canada Jack, a well-known Net debunker of the Roswell case, under his other alias of "Johnny Cannuck"). Yet I'm not being allowed to make any changes or even complain about the state of the article by posting disputed tags at the top. Canada Jack can freely and disingenuously accuse me of vandalism, bias, and "NPOV", while he editorializes the article at will and deletes any of my material at his personal whim, and yet I am the one getting admonished by the administrator for using the word "censorship" in frustration over what is happening. This is a total perversion of what Misplaced Pages is supposed to be about.
I am going to have a great deal more to say about this article as it currently stands. ] 17:35, 8 December 2006 (UTC)



==Here we go again...==

::Well, I would say a lot of what Dr Fil says here illustrates why he can't be trusted to make this a NPOV article, which is why I started the rewrite several months ago.

:::"I have written various published articles on some phases of the story which I have delved into in depth and have been interviewed several times for TV documentaries on the subject, exactly because I am considered one of the experts."

::Which, if I understand Misplaced Pages policy, pretty well disqualifies you from taking control of a page as you have attempted to do here, and on the "witness" page as well. If I am not mistaken, a published author on the subject can't be WRITING the page here at Misplaced Pages which discusses that same author's work. Perhaps Dr Fil can do us all a favour here and identify himself so we can be assured that he is not in fact doing this.

:::"So here we have the situation where I, an actual expert on the subject, am being blockaded from making any contributions, including making simple factual corrections."

::In fact, you had inserted a pile of "context" to quotes in an attempt to dismiss the skeptical argument. The structure of the page was to present the "UFO" argument - with what I must say are EXTREMELY extensive witness accounts to buttress that claims - WITHOUT "context" - and then do the same with the skeptical response (which, together, has far less coverage than the "ufo" argument).

::The issue of your knowledge of the issue is beside the point, the point is you are an ADVOCATE of one side who clearly seeks to turn the argument one way. The FACT that the ufo accounts are left there without "context" yet you feel this need to supply "context" to the skeptics demonstrates you are utterly incapable of putting aside your bias and fairly allowing the sides to present their case.

::Besides, some of your complaints about "facts" are simply wrong:

:::"it is NOT true... that Marcel is the only known person to have accompanied debris from Roswell to Fort Worth"

::Who said it was? OBVIOUSLY he didn't take the material - alone - from Roswell to Ft Worth. Sometimes Dr Fil, in his haste, doesn't read too carefully: "...Jesse Marcel, the only person known to have accompanied the Roswell debris from where it was recovered to Fort Worth..." and later "...Jesse Marcel. He was the only person known to have accompanied the debris from the ranch to Fort Worth..."

:::"...or that Marcel had no radar experience (one of his official military occupations was radar intelligence officer)."

::Again, where is this claimed? What WAS claimed was: "there is no evidence in Jesse Marcel’s military record that he had any experience with the material used in balloon trains." No where is there a statement which says that Marcel was unfamiliar with radar. The crucial point was: Was he familiar with radar reflectors from balloon trains, an unusual piece of equipment if one had never encountered them before. And there is no evidence he in fact was. And that's all that the skeptics - who make the claim - said.

:::"When I tried to make two of those simple corrections, they got deleted knee-jerk fashion along with everything else I tried to add."

::To me, there is only a single "correction" to be made - that a fourth person was photographed with the debris. This is hardly an earth-shattering correction, for sure, but the other "corrections" are a) wrong and b) is an attempt to counter a skeptic's argument which is clearly a POV "correction."

::Then we read this:

:::"Another one of Canada Jack's simple erroneous "facts" is that Sheriff Wilcox confirmed Brazel's mid-June discovery date in United Press stories. Yeah, but what about Associated Press stories where Wilcox contradicted his UP statements by saying Brazel made his find "several days ago"? Wilcox also contradicted himself as to when Brazel came to office (AP: the day before; UP: the day before yesterday). And Wilcox further contradicted Brazel's story by claiming (UP) that Brazel came in reporting a "weather meter", whereas Brazel said he told the Sheriff that maybe he had found a "flying disc" and also stated that what he found definitely wasn't any sort of weather observation device."

:::"...instead of simply stating that Brazel's stated date of discovery disagreed with the base press release of "sometime last week", he instead editorializes that the press release was probably wrong because it was "fourth hand". Total speculation like that has no place in an encyclopedia article, but CJ obviously added that because he wants the article skewed in that POV direction."

::Again, I have to wonder: Did you bother reading what we've written? The controversy with the dates "June 14" and "several days ago" are noted as BOTH are mentioned in contemporary accounts. Because the "several days ago" comment comes from the Roswell base release, it is, at best, a fourth-hand account (Brazel told the sheriff who told Marcel who told Blanchard who dictated it to Huat who told news people, perhaps over the phone, the story). The June 14th date comes from a story which quotes the man who actually first saw the debris. I mention the controversy, but I lead with the June 14th date because it is closer to the source, which most would likely do under this circumstance. I don't see this as "editorialing," just noting which account is closest to the source.

::Here is the passage on the page: "This exact date (or "about three weeks" before July 8) is a point of contention, but is repeated in several initial accounts, in particular the stories that quote Brazel and in a telex sent a few hours after the story broke quoting Sheriff George Wilcox (whom Brazel first contacted). The initial report from the Roswell Army Air Field said the find was "sometime last week," but that description may have been a fourth-hand account of what Brazel actually said, and mentions the sheriff as the one who contacted them about the find."

::I fail to see how that "editorializes" that the "last week" date is wrong - I simply state what seems closer to the source from the contemporary account. It IS controversial, which is why a) I STATE the controversy and b) justify leaning to the "June 14" date.

::The ONLY time this becomes an issue is if one side or another seeks to attach a date for whatever scenario they like. And when it comes to the UFOligists, even THEY can't agree on a date that fits. For the purposes of the page, the specific debate really doesn't swing readers one way or the other - they are aware of the controversy, to see why it is important, one must visit the various advocates detailed accounts of WHY the date is important.

::His charge that this is a "POV" article is therefore nonsensical.

:::"To those familiar with these Roswell debates, the Brazel's mid-June discovery date is considered debunking dogma because it supports their Mogul balloon theory; they definitely do not like having pointed out it conflicts with the early July discovery date from other contemporary accounts."

::Simply put, that is false. It really doesn't matter WHEN, if you believe Mogul as an explanation, the debris was first seen. As long as it was AFTER June 4th, it's fine. June 14th, July 2nd, whatever. But, like it or not, Dr Fil, various accounts say "June 14th," and all the section does is recount the story as originally presented in 1947. Most of the accounts are consistent with "June 14th," some say within a few days of July 8th - they are noted. What's your problem?

::As for the part about when Brazel came in, THAT discrepancy is noted as well: "On July 7, Brazel saw Sheriff Wilcox and "whispered kinda confidential like" that he may have found a flying disc. Another account quotes Wilcox as saying that Brazel reported the object on July 6."

:::"Here is another topic Canada Jack definitely does not like being raised: the question of Brazel being in military hands and likely coerced when he made his statements. Over on "Witness Accounts of the Roswell UFO incident", under "Accounts of Intimidation," I tried to insert 14 (!!) different eyewitness accounts of people seeing Brazel surrounded by military in Roswell, being incarcerated at the base, stating he been forced to change his story, complaining bitterly afterwards about his treatment by the military, saying he sworn an oath not to talk about what really happened, etc. Well Canada Jack thinks he owns this page as well and can unilaterally decide what goes in there. I tried to put this material in there four times, and guess what? He deleted it four times. He basically admitted he didn't want the material there because he again thought it was giving the article a "pro-UFO" or "pro-alien" POV (huh?), even though there wasn't a single word in that material to that effect. However, I think he understands full well what conclusion readers might well draw, which is why he doesn't want it in there. But I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship" here, as Inshanee has privately admonished me, even though obvious censorship is exactly what is going on."

::Actually, I am glad you raised this, because this illustrates PERFECTLY what I mean when I suggest Dr Fil can't remove his bias from these pages.

::When I created the other page, on witness accounts, I included a section on "witness intimidation," and I included half a dozen or so accounts from various witnesses claiming this. Then, Dr Fil came in and added piles more accounts and added a NEW section - for accounts dealing with this particular witness. Why is this so important? Why does Dr Fil INSIST on including not one but 14 accounts about a SINGLE witness? Because he seeks to make a case about OTHER witness statements. He seeks to counter the various OTHER statements from this person, to suggest that anything he said in 1947 had to be taken with a grain of salt.

::I REPEATEDLY told him that this was inserting a POV argument into the page. And that the page is simply a collection of unadorned accounts from witnesses who described debris, aliens, coverups and intimidation. He sought to turn this into the case for not only one side of the debate, but a particular viewpoint held by several UFO authors that a) certain witnesses are not to be believed (hence his insistence in inserting "context" to those whose testimony might suggest non-alien explanations) and b) certain witness statements are not to believed owing to coerced testimony (in particular, Brazel's). I told him of this objection and others, and told him that at best AN account from this witness of his intimidation would suffice, in the "witness intimidation" section. It seems this does not sit well as he insists on making a case for his viewpoint.

::What is laughable about his cries of "censorship" is that if you look at the page, you will find about 80 per cent of the quotes describing a) aliens b) cover up and c) witness intimidation. NO WHERE do you find stuff like "this was clearly no alien spacecraft" or whatever. But in Dr Fil's mind, I have somehow "censored" his views even though DOZENS of accounts suggesting aliens are there with NO "context" from the skeptical viewpoint!

::Which tells me that Dr Fil is not capable of anything close to an NPOV as he seeks to completely slant an article one way even when it already IS largely on that side of the debate (!).

::When I discuss the ufo interpretation on the main page, this is what I say: "And further accounts seemed to establish that Mack Brazel had been held in military custody and otherwise intimidated into changing his descriptions of what he saw so as to be consistent with the emerging “cover up” identified by the authors."

::Some "censor."

:::"Now over here on the Roswell UFO incident, the subject is very briefly touched on by Canada Jack, but the testimony is grossly misrepresented (he mentions only one witness, Paul McEvoy, the editor of the Roswell Daily Record), and then the witness' statement is ridiculed using a "citation" from fellow debunker Tim Printy (basically, argument by assertion or authority: it didn't happen because Tim Printy says so)."

::Another indication that he seeks this to be not an elucidation of the various sides of this debate, but a forum for him to attack any account which is at odds with his personal belief.

::I CLEARLY state the case that he makes - accounts were coerced by intimidation, mentioning the particular person he speaks of by name, suggesting that accounts from him were lies forced out of him by the military, and MOST IMPORTANTLY, identifying the authors who made that claim - and THEN I state the skeptic's view saying that the original accounts suggest he WASN'T coerced and mentioning a skeptic BY NAME who suggests that one witness who said otherwise has an important contradiction.

::What Dr Fil doesn't seem to get here is that this is not the place for the debate - it is the place to lay out the cases. OF COURSE Dr Fil doesn't agree with the skeptic's explanation, but HIS explanation is there, as are TONS of witness statements, unencumnered by skeptical "context," AS IT SHOULD BE IF THIS IS TO BE AN NPOV ARTICLE. The same applies to the skeptics! InShane was RIGHT to delete your additions here - you were attempting to debunk one side of the debate on the very sectiion their case is made! THAT'S POV!!!

:::"Canada Jack ridiculing McEvoy and deliberately omitting even a mention of the other corroborating accounts is more of his blatant editorializing and slanting of the article to his personal POV. (That's why it's downright pathetic when he claims to be writing the article with a NPOV, "cleaning up the mess", and repeatedly attacking me as highly biased and POV. He should look in the mirror.)"

::If the above doesn't underline that Dr Fil doesn't get it, nothing does. I made the ufo case on this issue. I made the skeptic's case on this issue. I provided links and sources whereby one can read more on each side. To Dr Fil, that's clearly not good enough. The skeptics have to be countered in their own section, lest any reader think that their argument has any validity. Well, that's not the function here of the page, Dr Fil. The function here is to simply present the cases, unadorned, and let the reader decide. As long as each side is presented fairly, that should suffice. This falls apart when one chooses to remove that objectivity on one side or the other.

::So far, I've seen no complaints about me misrepresenting the pro-ufo side, which is good. Because I believe I fairly present their case, and fairly present the sequence of events which led them to their various conclusions. That says to me that a good part of this is fine. But to aloow Dr Fil free reign here - well, by his comments we can see the true agenda here. The skeptic side is wrong in his view and must be SHOWN to be wrong at each opportunity. That is not NPOV.

:::"Another thing I did was delete another very obvious editorial comment of Canada Jack's that had no place in any encyclopedia article, that the second Randle/Schmitt book was totally unreliable as a reference. (I am communicating with Randle right now about this, and he, no doubt is going to have a few choice words to say.) I also notice that both Randle/Schmitt books were deleted from "Further reading" along with the original Berlitz & Moore book. Whether one considers them reliable or not, they are widely acknowledged as being among the major books written on the subject and should be there. But when I tried to reinsert them, guess what?"

::I can't speak to the list of books as I didn't create that, though I do agree that the Randle/Schmitt books should be included in the lists on this page, and I in fact mention their importance: "Dennis’ accounts were featured in Randle and Schmitt’s 1991 “UFO Crash at Roswell,” one of two books they co-authored. This book, along with “The Truth about the UFO Crash at Roswell,” published in 1994, remain highly influential in the UFO community, their interviews and conclusions widely reproduced on websites. "

::As for this "totally unreliable" comment supposedly made, here is what I in fact wrote: "Later, discrepancies with certain accounts and problems with research done by Donald Schmitt would cause Kevin Randle to reject much of the evidence from The Truth About the UFO Crash at Roswell, yet many who embrace the UFO explanation still quote many of these accounts."

::Nowhere do I say "totally unreliable": I simply state a fact. Randle has repudiated large portions of the very book he wrote. I spell out the problems Randle HIMSELF identified with not only some of the star witnesses from the book, but with his fellow researcher Schmitt. Schmitt did much of the research and Randle publiclly said that Scmitt is a "liar"; He also publiclly doubts Dennis' story which, you have to admit, take up a good portion of the book; and he also now casts serious doubt on Kaufman's credibilty, another main witness in the book. These are no mere quibbles, Dr Fil, they form a chief part of this book and, more to the point, I document the claim made in the statement.

] 22:01, 8 December 2006 (UTC)

::::There is definitely a lot of animosity between us, but this ALSO has everything to do the extreme bias, lack of balance, many mistakes, and overall poor structuring and narrative of the article. (E.g., the reader is just dropped into the Brazel interview, FBI telegram, and base press release with absolutely no idea as to what led up to any of these or how they relate to one another. This is just plain bad history telling. The "Background" section needs to be greatly expanded on and rewritten in order to lead the reader logically into the material that follows.)

::::Also Misplaced Pages ENCOURAGES articles of highly controversial subjects to have back and forth contrasting discussions and rebuttal arguments so that both sides get presented and arguments get balanced out. But here it is not only discouraged but actually FORBIDDEN. I'm not allowed to add, correct, or delete a single thing, even add disputed banners, contrary to all Misplaced Pages rules. ] 03:24, 11 December 2006 (UTC)

:::As I've said before, what's between you two goes deeper than this article, and it needs to be taken to dispute resolution, not here. --] 15:07, 9 December 2006 (UTC)

Well, it's been extremely frustrating to try to do this with someone who in my view does not operate on good faith. Sure, we take differing viewpoints on this, but I think my approach has been fairly balanced. I have tried to present both sides at face value and without editorializing, which I believe is the only way to go here.

It seems he takes issue with this approach but from what I have seen from the above is really a complaint that boils down to "you aren't allowing me to insert counter arguments to what the skeptics say, you are therefore censoring me."

My suggestion here would be to focus on the case made by the ufo side, and if that is found wanting - perhaps, for example, we could insert one of his quotes on Brazel's abduction there (though I think it more properly should be on the "witness" side) that might lessen the blow.

As you can see from the above, there are arguments and counter arguments to what happened at Roswell. My approach was to basically state the cases without weighing down the pages with a lot of extraneous and side issue debates. So we see, first, what was actually reported in 1947 with asides to the various discrepancies as there wasn't complete consistency with the sequence of events as reported in 1947.

Then, giving a sense of how the ufo researchers came to believe there was far more to the story, starting with Marcel and the early books, moving onto the first alien accounts and the authors in the 1990s, with some more recent stuff. A side page supplied a lot of the accounts from which both sides drew their arguments, but instead of further weighing down THAT page, I thought the best approach was to divide the accounts up by subject matter. Dr Fil doesn't agree, he says that it would be better to do it in terms of a sequence of events, with corroborating statements from some what I would view as peripheral players who nevertheless tended to buttress the accounts of more direct witnesses, even if they didn't actually see the debris or aliens or what have you.

I didn't agree with that approach as I felt it best to mirror the basic structure of this page and I further feel that by in effect recreating the ufo-believers' argument via a sequence of accounts (which is why, in part, I felt a new section on a particular witness's alleged intimidation was not warranted and POV) the purpose of the exercise is defeated if we are left with the argument for aliens as some particular authors believe it is.

The skeptics section gives THEIR counter-argument with a side page on the Air Force reports. On the Air Force page, I explained the basis for their conclusions and note the controversy and some of the arguments against the report.

But that in my view already exists on the main page in the case for the ufo interpretation.

Dr Fil seems quite angry that I noted Randle's repudiation of much of the evidence found in some of the books published, but that alas is a matter of public record.

I think my approach is the best one given the very strong views on both sides. I've at times allowed a bit of bias to slip through, so I have addressed those concerns where I believe they are warranted.

But the critiques above, save for the minor points mentioned, do not carry any weight, in my view.

In my view, the choice is between what I have done, with modifications where needed, or Dr Fil's approach which amounts to a yelling match back and forth between proponents of each side.

Dr Fil should concentrate not on what the skeptics say - since that is THEIR opinion - he should ensure that the case FOR aliens is fairly presented. He doesn't agree with their side, he has counter-arguments. But this is not where they are to be presented. The skeptics have THIER say, just as the ufo believers do.

] 00:53, 10 December 2006 (UTC)

:I say again, this really should be taken to mediation between you two at this point. --] 23:42, 10 December 2006 (UTC)


It seems to me that judging by the collaboration going on here the past few months, my approach has been accepted. I'm open to correcting any innacuracies, or adding information to the "alien reports emerge" section if anyone finds that section wanting. And, of course, if someone is to spell out a better way to present the cases NPOV, then I think we are open to suggestions.

] 15:01, 11 December 2006 (UTC)

:::"There is definitely a lot of animosity between us, but this ALSO has everything to do the extreme bias, lack of balance, many mistakes, and overall poor structuring and narrative of the article. (E.g., the reader is just dropped into the Brazel interview, FBI telegram, and base press release with absolutely no idea as to what led up to any of these or how they relate to one another. This is just plain bad history telling. The "Background" section needs to be greatly expanded on and rewritten in order to lead the reader logically into the material that follows.)"

:::Well, I fail to see the bias here. My approach, I believe, REMOVES the bias by simply presenting the story as it evolved. Sure, the reader is "dropped into" the Brazel interview, as in 1947 that is what we were told. Much later, various sides had strongly differing interpretations of that interview - that Brazel was coerced into saying something different vs. he was talking accurately about what he said.

:::UFO researchers have created a rather elaborate sequence of events based on various witness accounts which suggest far more to the story than what was presented in 1947. However, skeptics and the Air Force sees this reconstucted sequence of events as a cobbled-together collection of accounts, many of which are not credible or contradictory, many of which have been attached to the Roswell incident to lend the alien cover up scenario credibility. Many of which, in other words, do NOT accurately reflect what happened.

:::To do as Dr Fil suggests would, without making it clear, add what a lot of ufo researchers BELIEVE is the "true" sequence of events, with possible asides to skeptics. A sequence which in the manner it is presented would not be understood by the casual reader to in fact be a reconstruction based on the presumption that there was a cover-up of an alien recovery. THAT is what existed before, and it was ludicrously one-sided, it was POV. Apparently, Dr Fil believes that was "balanced."

:::All I have done is taken an NPOV approach, reproducing as best we can the sequence of events as intitially reported. There are discrepancies in the intitial reporting - those are noted. Where is the "bias" there? Then we present the various interpretations, such as the belief that an elaborate cover-up was proceeding, and aliens were being recovered. Without rebuttals. THEN, the skeptical viewpoints. Without rebuttals.

:::BOTH viewpoints are explored later in the appropriate sections which spell out the various cases. In a case where such strongly held interpretations essentially tell completely different stories, it makes sense to me to present the ORIGINAL story and then the various interpretations, rather than wade into a complicated debate right from the start which in the original form of this page, was extremely confusing to all but the ones who knew the story very well.

:::The original approach made it incomprehensible to all except those who were already very familiar with the incident. And THAT is not what can we can assume here at wikipedia.

:::The narrative is NPOV because it HAS to be NPOV for anyone new to this to understand what happened. Presenting the narrative AS IT WAS REPORTED can't be seen as "bias" as long as I underline that that was how the story was presented. The DEBATE started many years later when sides chose to see certain parts as either part of a cover-up of an alien recovery or simply a story of a misidentified balloon train grown fantastic.

:::Over the past few months, Dr Fil, we've worked on this page in this manner and the consensus here seems to be that this approach is the desired one.

:::You've identified "errors," but save for saying "three" appeared in the photos instead of "four," the other errors you identified were in fact misreadings on your part.

:::"Also Misplaced Pages ENCOURAGES articles of highly controversial subjects to have back and forth contrasting discussions and rebuttal arguments so that both sides get presented and arguments get balanced out. But here it is not only discouraged but actually FORBIDDEN. I'm not allowed to add, correct, or delete a single thing, even add disputed banners, contrary to all Misplaced Pages rules."

:::The approach was to leave those viewpoints to the sections that present the sides of the cases. Your rebuttal approach ignored that structure and was deleted by others. As I have said several times, if you feel your side has not been fairly presented in its section, we are open to discussion about how to alter that.


:::No one here has a monopoly on the truth. To presume someone DOES is a fatal mistake. All we can do is present the arguments as they stand, no matter how flawed or how many rebuttals you can think of. We could do an entire page, for example, on the issue of Brazel's incarceration. I just don;t see the point in getting mired in such a debate. One side says he was coerced and that coercion was part of a cover up effort, and there are witnesses to that effect. The other side said he wasn't, and there are witnesses to THAT effect. The controversy is mentioned, but to flesh it out into a full-borne debate is a waste of time and space.
9. Meteorologist Irving Newton was called to look at the debris, and he immediately identified it as a weather balloon with a Rawin radar reflector. (Korff, 126). General Ramey had been suspicious of Maj. Marcel's identification as a flying disc from the beginning and called in Newton (Peebles, 249, et al). General Ramey already suspected that it was from a balloon. Facts such as this are conveniently left out of the article.


:::] 15:29, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
:So again, what exactly is the problem? “Conveniently left out of the article?” Maybe you should learn how to read because this is already in the article, such as the quote from United Press where Ramey said "It looks to me like the remnant of a weather balloon and a radar reflector." Newton is mentioned in newspaper articles as being brought in afterwards to make Ramey's identification official. That's the way the story was actually reported back in 1947 and that is how the article is written up. Marcel is also quoted from AP giving a balloon story. Exactly how many balloon quotes from 1947 would satisfy you? Space did not permit other quotes from Ramey and Dubose indicating that they thought it was a weather balloon/radar reflector. The points of contention are Marcel and Dubose later saying they were acting under orders when they gave weather balloon descriptions plus both saying that this was a cover story. This is again pointed out in the article. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
::::I don't know what all has come between you two, but I can't read the voluminous amounts of text that are being dumped into this page. It looked, on a cursory glance, as if Dr. Fil has brought the debate over the ] article here. Don't do that. This talk page is for discussing '''this''' article and '''this''' article only. Keep disputes over other articles on their pages. Also, please remember to keep discussions focused on actual article content. It can be tempting to use these pages to debate the rightness or truth of certain theories, but that's not what these pages are for. They're for discussing discrete changes to the article itself, and nothing more. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 16:41, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
::::In fact, that's what happened -- Dr Fil reposted an enormous bloc of text that he had originally posted at the fork article. I have removed it. Keep discussions about that article on that article's talk page. It has no place here. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 17:02, 12 December 2006 (UTC)


I think I've made the case. In fact, I've done so repeatedly, the "case" being the approach to the structure here.
10. On September 23, 1947 (2-1/2 months after the alleged crash at Boswell) Lt. General ] (commander of Air Material Command) issued a report stating "Due consideration must be given to the following ... (2) The lack of physical evidence in the shape of crash recovered exhibits which would undeniably prove the existence of these objects." This was the report that lead to the establishment of ]) to investigate reports of flying saucers - yet General Twining said that there has been no recovered crashed saucer. This report was made public years before the book entitled ''The Rowsell Incident'' by Berlitz and Moore (Peeples, 250) Again, such facts are left out of the article. (Incipiently, the book by Berlitz and Moore leaves out this inconvenient fact too.)


In fairness to Dr Fil, besides his inclusion of all those witness accounts of Brazel's incarceration, his debate DOES reside on this page.
:Twining's memo was classified at only a "Secret" level, not "Top-Secret", and had a long list of government agencies who were reciprients (whom Twining wanted to participate in a comprehensive investigation of UFOs). The point: a recovered UFO, if it existed and Twining knew of it, would be classified Top Secret and not mentioned in a lower classified document. Thus the Twining memo proves nothing one way or the other regarding a crash. (As for leaving out “inconvenient facts”, I notice you neglected to mention Twining’s memo also saying the flying saucers were real. Also just about every Roswell book you can name mentions that Twining’s memo also said there was no physical evidence and then debates the possible significance. “The Roswell Incident” was an exception, not the rule. Did Peebles mention that? Who’s leaving out the “inconvenient facts here?)


But, as I've pointed out, the structure here stands as this is what the consensus over the past few months seems to be.
:Like a lot of other documents, it's all in the interpretation. How about J. Edgar Hoover's memo a week after the Roswell incident where he grouses about the Army grabbing the "La." disk and not letting the FBI have a look at it? Is that proof of a Roswell UFO crash or is Hoover referring to another "disk" incident? Again, it's in the interpretation. Does "La." stand for "Louisiana" or something else, like "Los Alamos"?


Again, I think we are open to suggestions, if Dr Fil has any, to how the ufo argument is presented, if he feels that there are points to be fleshed out or omissions clarified. But I personally don;t feel any need to change the structure as it stands.
:There are other FBI documents from 1949 that specifically refer to recovery of crashed saucers and alien bodies. Again is this “proof,” or is it, as some have argued, a case of the FBI field agents repeating unsubstantiated rumors?


] 19:28, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
:There are some other Army documents from January 31, 1949, referring to the huge ] sighting of January 30 near Roswell. The documents indicated they were treating it as a possible crashed UFO incident, and a huge search and investigation was launched. A great deal of this investigation was mentioned at the Los Alamos conference on the green fireballs 2 weeks later. (Remember, the article you inappropriately just flagged as inaccurate because one of your skeptical heroes, Peebles, badly misrepresented what really happened at the meeting?) If they were searching for possible crashed UFO a year and a half later, does this constitute "proof" of an earlier crash?
:To the extent that discussions are focused on this article, that's fine. I removed the portions that were not. May I ask that you please try to make your comments concise? Misplaced Pages isn't a forum and it's not an email listserv so space is limited. As well, we're all volunteers with finite time. Stay on topic, resist the urge to debate the rightness of some theory or another, and above all be as brief and polite as possible. (This applies equally, I'm responding underneath Jack's text but I direct it to Dr Fil also). It will help if you will curtail using carriage returns quite so much. You'll notice I've typed multiple sentences and haven't used one. Sometimes it makes sense, but for example in your response directly above this one you use one sentence per line, which makes discussions scroll way too quickly (which in turn makes them too disjointed and difficult to digest in this particular medium). &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 22:41, 12 December 2006 (UTC)


Okay, in future, I will be brief, and will lose the carriage returns - I am fairly new here, getting up to speed. There is one thing that I think Dr Fil was right on, and that is the inclusion of the two Schmitt/Randle books. He has the info on the ]. I note within this page that one of the authors - Randle - has publicly parted with his co-author over various issues and has also dismissed the credibility of several key witnesses in the books, but as I also say, the books retain enormous influence in the pro-ufo community and are widely cited, therefore they should be included in the "further reading" section. ] 02:45, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
:You can't cite just one document, selectively quote from it, parrot your usual one-sided Philip Klass, Karl Pflock, or Curtis Peebles spin, and have a fair and balanced article. How big an article do you want here, anyway--booksize? That's what it would take to go into all these various facets and properly debate them. There simply isn't space unless you want to write another, associated article. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005
:Thanks Jack, this place has a pretty steep learning curve so don't sweat anything! I didn't mean that message to come out harshly so I hope you didn't take it that way. You're doing great here. &mdash; ]\<sup>]</sup> 20:43, 13 December 2006 (UTC)


==Rewrite of UFO Books and Skeptics sections==
11. Several formerly secret documents prove that it was from a balloon. In particular, the "Combined History of the 509th bomb group... July 1947", said "The Office of Public Information was kept quite busy during the month answering inquires on the 'flying disc', which was reported to be in the possession of the 509th. The object turned out to be a radar tracking balloon." (Peeples, 249). (The FBI document is another one, and it is in the article.)


I've been doing a bit of an expansion of the case for UFOs at Roswell as it evolved via the various books published over the year, including more specific quotes for the cases etc. I feel it needs a bit more detail (not tons), and I think I will rewrite the skeptic section. As it stands, the article is almost there but not quite. ] 15:48, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
:What nonsense! These no more constitute "proof" than the newspaper articles where Gen. Ramey was also saying it was a weather balloon/radar target. The FBI telegram merely repeated Ramey's new story that was told them by one of Ramey's intelligence officers (Major Kirton) acting under Ramey's orders. (AF intelligence was generally antagonistic toward the FBI knowing too much, and if you knew anything about UFO history you would know that Hoover became so furious with being cut out of the loop that he ceased cooperation with the AF on UFO investigations in October 1947 after becoming aware of a particularly insulting intelligence memo concerning the FBI's proposed role.)


::I've just redone the "New witness accounts and Roswell UFO books" section to better expand on the development of the "UFO" story. Accordingly, I've moved some accounts - the Rudiak "photo" account and the General Exon account to "new developments" as they came later. I will follow-up with a redo of the skeptical response section to more closely follow the sequence in the preceding section. ] 20:45, 15 January 2007 (UTC)
:There never was anything "secret" about 509th History. That’s another thing you dreamt up. You try to make it sound like it was some super-secret Pentagon document. It is a low-level, unclassified document, much like a base newspaper, and was obviously doing nothing more than repeating the official public party line, not disclosing state secrets. On the same page of the base history is other super "secret" stuff such as who visited the base, the intelligence office needing a new stenographer, or how they were busy preparing for Air Force Day. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


Okay, I've pretty done what I think needs to be done. Hopefully, someone will properly format this for me, assuming this meets with general approval. ] 19:41, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
12. I don't think it is emphasized in the article, but it seems unlikely that an alien spaceship would have been made up of kite-like materials held together with "Scotch" tape.


==Dummies and Mogul?==
:Another inane, Klass-aped argument. This is supposed to be an encyclopedia article, not a debunker propaganda piece full of ridicule, which is apparently what you want. As pointed out in the article, one of the big disputes is over what was REALLY found out on the Brazel debris field, i.e., was the new story put out by Ramey true or was it a cover story and disinformation? This also goes to the question of whether other witnesses like Brazel and Wilcox were giving independent accounts or were being coerced into cooperating by the military. But with your usual illogic and extreme bias, you assume that Ramey's balloon/radar target story was necessarily true, and from this unproven premise dismiss in your mind every single bit of evidence that might contradict it. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


I watched a program on National Geographic that said Roswell was nothing more than a weather balloon experiment, and the "alien bodies" were just crash test dummies.
13. For some 30 years after the incident, it wasn't even considered a UFO event. Additionally, when UFO buffs were asked for lists of their best cases, Roswell wasn't even listed.


But is there a connection between dummies and Mogul, which is seems to be the most popular explanation of the debris? Were dummies on the Mogul aparatus, and what were they for if it was just for listening? Or was the debris more than one experiment that crashed in the same place?
:Which is totally irrelevant and proves nothing. (But if Klass or Pflock or a Peebles use the argument, you just have to parrot it as some sort of imaginary “showstopper”) Please tell us what does this has to do with the evidence and facts of the case as they NOW exist? Other conventional, embarrassing incidents have also gotten buried by governments, largely forgotten, and may only be uncovered decades later. So what? Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


:No, no dummies with Mogul. Mogul was assigned to detect possible Soviet atomic blasts and was equipped with microphones. In their Report on the Roswell incident in 1994, the USAF bypassed the alien aspect, but in their publication "Case Closed" in 1997 they deal with it contending much later crashes of devices with dummies had misled people to think they saw alien bodies. The USAF "evidence" is based on the home-made speculation that all the eye witnesses had memory deficiencies (leading to mixing up things or substituting earlier memories by later ones or even invent "memories"), what surely CAN happen once in a while but hardly with ALL witnesses regarding ONE single event (besides, these alleged deficiencies were not at all checked with the involved). -- ] 15:35, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
Well, those are a few points in section 1... ] ], 14:57, 3 December 2005 (UTC)


Instead of misrepresenting what the Air Force said, why not direct them to the page on the subject? Air Force reports on the Roswell UFO incident has the two reports spelled out without the POV stuff above. I've reverted the original intro which was the result of a lengthy edit process - someone it seems saw fit to simply chuck out that work with a POV intro. The old intro had a link to the Air Force reports page which spelled out what they said. (The link is also elsewhere in the article as it stood) The claim above that the Air Force case is "home-made speculation that all the eye witnesses had memory deficinies" tells me a) the writer here has not read the Air Force report in question and b) hasn't even bothered to read Wiki's page on the same subject.
===discussion===


We all are at perfect liberty to disagree with what person A says or what person B says. We are NOT at liberty to misrepresent what person A or person B said, however, ESPECIALLY when there is a page here at wiki which spells out the case they made.
Did the head of the Eighth Army Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas, Brigadier General Roger Ramey, change the story within an hour of the release? IF so ... mabey "retracted" or "transformed" or "switched" could be used. Why is this sinister if this is what occuered? ] 15:33, 3 December 2005 (UTC)


] 00:56, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
:I agree. Why does the use of this word convey anything “sinister.” According to various newspaper stories such as the New York Times, San Francisco Examiner, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, Fort-Worth Star-Telegram and others, Ramey did indeed begin to change the story to a weather balloon and radar target starting within an hour of when the Roswell press release first went out over the AP wire. Three hours after the press release, this became the official story after Ramey brought in his weather officer to confirm the identification he had already been putting out. I don’t understand what the big problem is with the word “change” here. The official story did indeed change from recovered “flying disk” to weather balloon/radar reflector. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


==Intro rewrite and revert==
The caption of the photo should be changed. <strike>Isn't that a weather balloon photo? Mabey state what the pohoto was. ] 15:37, 3 December 2005 (UTC)</strike> (Caption changed) Made a link to the "controversial message" section. ] 21:31, 4 December 2005 (UTC)


Bwilcke redid the intro twice and it's been reverted twice, viz:
What was he ordered to "cover up"? from his affidavit ... the "weather balloon explanation for the material was a _cover story_ to divert the attention of the press". ] doesn't seem too much of an impartial expert on this subject (but is an "expert" against) ... I don't know how "clear" the failing was (seems to be a character assassination" ... from the various material through a search I seen), but mentioning that this was said in the mid 1990s (years after the event) may be a _factual thing_ to say (time can cloud memories). ] 16:00, 3 December 2005 (UTC)


:"Thirty years later, former Roswell AAF intelligence officer Jesse Marcel confessed the crash of a UFO back then. Three UFO researcher teams (Moore/Berlitz, Randle/Schmitt, Friedman/Berliner) confirmed Marcel's testimony on the basis of a great number of witnesses. 1994 the congress had the General Accounting Office (GAO) carry out an archive search for documents possibly related to the incident, whatever it was, with no results except that Roswell AAF documents regarding the period 1947 – 1949 were missing and the obligatory documentation on their deletion not found. The US Air Force at once undertook an own archive search with the result of only one document (teletype) found, and claimed "no indication" of a UFO crash but "most probably" a crash of a weatherballoon train in connection with Project Mogul. 1997 the US Air Force repeated this result in a further publication, adding - especially concerning the "alien" aspect - the memory of the witnesses unreliable, and declared "Case Closed". UFO researcher criticized this as unfounded und incorrect and presented more evidence supporting their case. Some other UFO researchers as well as "skeptics" joined the case of the Air Force and tried to strengthen their stance. There has been a passionate debate ever since about what really happened."
:Dubose's testimony about as to what happened in Ramey's office dates back to 1979 (14 years before he died) and is in "The Roswell Incident." Quote:


I reverted to the original intro as did InShanee the second time around. I think InShanee and I agree that what was originally there and what we reverted to was the best NPOV intro that we had and seeing that it was the result of a fairly intensive edit process, it should stand. IMHO, there are several problems with the Bwilcke new intro, such as "...Jesse Marcel confessed the crash of a UFO..." which to me is clearly POV and probably not accurate anyway. "Confessed" implies that Marcel revealed the truth that a UFO crashed, a "truth" which is in fact hotly disputed. Further, and I think most of the named pro-ufo authors would agree here, Marcel simply voiced his BELIEF that there had been a cover-up of a UFO, he didn't in fact reveal some secret file that indicated aliens had been recovered. Further, as InShanee indicated in his revert, this information is quite specifically spelled out in the body of the page, the Air Force reports have their own pages which spell ojt their conclusions and the controversies (like the missing documents) which are properly there and not in the intro. Besides, there is a misrepresentation of what the Air Force in fact said in this intro - it was more that witnesses reported what they in fact said WERE dummies but pro-ufo authors had omitted their prosaic descriptions and fixed these often undated occurences with the events as described in July 1947. It didn't simply say the memories were "unreliable."
:" observed that there had been received 'orders from on high to ship the material from Roswell directly to Wright Field by special plane.' He added that the general (Ramey) was in complete charge and the rest of the officers and men involved 'just followed orders.' The general was most concerned that the large number of press reporters present be 'taken off his back in a hurry.' The weather balloon story was a fabrication designed to accomplish that task and 'put out the fire' at the same time."


As indicated in both the original intro and the Bwilcke intro, "there has been a passionate debate ever since," and I and others here have strived these past few months to give a balanced presentation of the facts which, it seems, has largely been embraced with a few notable exceptions (see above). My take on this leans towards the skeptical, but as long as we present the case for and against in as neutral a way as possible - and as long as we accurately portray the sides in a manner THEY present their side, then we are on stable ground. ] 16:34, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
:Thus Dubose was describing a weather balloon cover-up from the time he was first interviewed and his testimony agreed with Marcel’s about this. It is also interesting that following Roswell, Dubose, along with Roswell C/O Col. Blanchard (who issued the “flying disk” press release) recommended Marcel for promotion to Lt.-Colonel in the Reserve. Furthermore, in Blanchard’s fitness evaluation of Marcel the following Spring (where Blanchard upped Marcel’s numerical rating to “Superior”), Dubose was the co-signer, and recommended that Marcel attend command officer training school. The point is, if Marcel had screwed up and misidentified balloon material as a “flying disk,” Dubose would have known about it. I seriously doubt that under those circumstances he would have recommended him for promotion or for command officer training. Dr. Fil 7 December 2005


== Wiki is Not a crystal ball ==
===discussion===


This whole article should go. Its just a list of things people dreamed up out of their own paranoia and lack of education. You ought to be able to accept the idea that Roswell was the result of a rocket flight from White Sands by former Nazi rocket scientists. Their existence in this country was secret. The whole thing flew funny because of ionization during re-entry, and caused von Braun to get together with Hannes Alfven and have him write a textbook about ionization in 1949 - called _Cosmic Electrodynamics_ In the preface Alven says he cant reveal who asked him to do the work.
Did the head of the Eighth Army Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas, Brigadier General Roger Ramey, change the story within an hour of the release? IF so ... mabey "retracted" or "transformed" or "switched" could be used. Why is this sinister if this is what occuered? ] 15:33, 3 December 2005 (UTC)


The secrecy of White Sands led to the first versions of Dyna-Soar not to be understood. Even as late as 1962, no one understood that magnetic fields that were causing the X-15 to roll during flight. Modern Space Shuttles have the same defect - they were designed for hypersonic flight through fluids. The next shuttle ought to be designed for flight through magnetic fields. In the meantime, this wiki article documenting everyones paranoid ideas ought to be deleted. Mr Grant ought to know enough to be able to verify my scientific claims. And the Help files can tell you that Misplaced Pages is not designed for documenting things people imagined or were afraid of because they were uneducated.
The caption of the photo should be changed. <strike>Isn't that a weather balloon photo? Mabey state what the pohoto was. ] 15:37, 3 December 2005 (UTC)</strike> (Caption changed) Made a link to the "controversial message" section. ] 21:31, 4 December 2005 (UTC)


Conventional Theories/Skeptics
What was he ordered to "cover up"? from his affidavit ... the "weather balloon explanation for the material was a _cover story_ to divert the attention of the press". ] doesn't seem too much of an impartial expert on this subject (but is an "expert" against) ... I don't know how "clear" the failing was (seems to be a character assassination" ... from the various material through a search I seen), but mentioning that this was said in the mid 1990s (years after the event) may be a _factual thing_ to say (time can cloud memories). ] 16:00, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
Satellite imagery - Project Corona
It seems possible that the Roswell incident of July 1947 might have been a failed attempt to retrieve film from space. Possibly the Corona Project was named for Corona, New Mexico which is the site of the Roswell incident.
V-2 engineers at White Sands were working on taking photos from space and had perfected a technique for orienting the camera by 1948. http://www.infoage.org/paperclip.html Remember that the existence of German rocket scientists 100 miles away at White Sands was classified. Five flights in April and May 1947 included experiments in photography, but the next published photo flight was not made until December.
It was well known from Eugene Saenger's work that a rotating disk allowed for an even distribution of convective and radiant heat during reentry. What they did not know until around 1949 and the work of Hannes Alfven, was the large amount of re-entry heat due to ionization.
The first photographs from space were successfully returned to earth on July 26, 1948. http://www.wsmr.army.mil/pao/FactSheets/V2/v-2.htm


21:44, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
:Gen Ramey corrected the story. The "flying disc" report was issued before ramey even saw the debris. Ramey didn't "change his story", as the term is generally used. ] ], 21:57, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


:This article is well sourced and relevant for what it is. Your misunderstanding of wikipedia policy is thorough; the interviews and opinions linked to here were not 'imagined'. --] 21:52, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
::Bubba inventing things again. Where does it say that Ramey "changed HIS story"? By any definition of the word "change", Ramey did indeed change the original story from Roswell base that they had recovered a "flying disc." With Ramey it became a weather balloon and radar target.


The Air Force, in its reports from the 1990s, addressed the specific question of whether the Roswell incident involved misidentifed rocket programs. It found no link between the tests undertaken and the reports received concerning recovered debris and aliens. ] 22:30, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
::As to semantics, "corrected" is automatically a POV or spin word, because it directly implies the original story was incorrect. In contrast, "change" is a completely neutral or NPOV word. Dr Fil, 11 December 2005

Latest revision as of 05:02, 28 November 2023

This is an archive of past discussions about Roswell incident. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page.
Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4Archive 5

New Section: Roswell as misidentified military programs: The Air Force reports and Project Mogul

The next section has been added, though it is not yet complete. I've written the 1994/5 Air Force report section, but have not yet written the "critique" part beyond the opening paragraph, and left a lot of the following stuff intact.

I've also eliminated some duplicated sections, and some stuff which rests on the POV assumption that a cover-up was covering up something sinister.

I'll address the critiques of the 1994 report, then move onto the 1997 report and ITS critiques next.

Canada Jack 03:17, 29 September 2006 (UTC)


Just added the "critques" section of the Air Force reports section. Next: Moore's Mogul flight 4 reconstruction with references to critisims (like Rudiak's), and then the 1997 Air Force Case Closed report.

159.33.10.92 20:33, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

Now I've added the Mogul flight reconstruction. Next is the 1997 Air Force report addressing aliens.
Canada Jack 20:57, 3 October 2006 (UTC)


Major Edits

I've done some major editing, first adding the 1997 Air Force report. I still have to complete the critique, and a follow-up on how many of the UFO researchers have been discredited (Scmitt; Alien film; Majestic, etc)

I've also taken out a lot of stuff that was a) redundant (like the FBI transcript, stuff on the Ramey photo, etc.,) b) stuff which was not about Roswell (general stuff about UFOs don't speak to Roswell itself) and c) stuff which will be dealt with briefly later (or in the case of the "strange experiments theory already in the later developments section). Most of the stuff gone is stuff that has been established to be hoaxes - like the Alien autopsy. They will be afforded brief mentions.

Thanks for the patience, folks, I am nearly done.

Canada Jack 22:01, 7 October 2006 (UTC)


Too Biased Toward Air Force's Claims

I appreciate the work, Canada Jack, and your summaries are good. But I think they're skewing the article too much, turning it almost into a report on the Air Force reports. (And "Case Closed" this story is not, regardless whose story you personally happen to believe. The cultural mythos surrounding this topic is already way too big and fascinating for such a simple, "factual" or "scientific" dismissal.) This is supposed to be a NPOV article on the Roswell Incident, which would ideally give reasonable weight to all important dimensions of the story, and not tip the scales too much towards one particular theorist's claims (in this case, those by Colonel Richard Weaver of the USAF). I personally don't buy the alien crash-landing story myself, but I don't think the Mogul explanation fits the evidence either, particular as detailed by Stanton T. Friedman. Also, the "strange experiments theory" you mention above, especially as described by Nick Redfern in Body Snatchers in the Desert, most definitely warrants more space on this article, since it strikes an intriguing "third possibility" that isn't covered by either polarity currently outlined--i.e., the Project Mogul and Alien Spaceship theories. I don't have time to write such a thing myself, at least not in the immediate future, but if anyone out there is knowledgeable about that White Sands/Japanese Unit 731 angle (including perhaps you, Canada Jack?), it would be great to include a full description about that. And, as I'm suggesting, it would be ideal to cut down the length of the Air Force 'Case Closed' summary as well--and not just because it makes the Misplaced Pages entry for Roswell just a bit toooo lonnnngggg...

The truth is out there. :)

Kosmocentric 19:16, 10 October 2006 (UTC)


Well, I've just added the critiques to the Air Force's 1997 report, so perhaps some of your objections have been met. AS for the cultural mythos surrounding the event, it would seem to me the rather lengthy list of cultural references and my note that despite the Air Force reports, most people believe that "something happened" at Roswell partly answers that.
But one point is valid - and that is the "weight" to the Air Force reports, and its considerable length. Once I'm done - and all I now have left is a smaller section on some of the post Air Force developments (which unfortunately for the UFO-believer side, involves a lot of subsequent discrediting of many chief witnesses and a few authors) - I will suggest we split the Air Force reports off to another page, replaced with a precis section on it. But I think the Air Force reports deserve a fair bit more coverage than before, and to be allowed to "stand alone" without tons of POV arguments. The critiques sections, I would say, have some pretty potent arguments against the reports, and they stand. But before, we didn't get a clear picture as to what the Air Force actually argued. For example, there were numerous explanations in the 1997 report as to how six-foot dummies could be mistaken for four-foot aliens found in the report, yet that was never apparant before. Or to the rather basic point that witnesses actually described themselves these aliens as perhaps being "dummies."
My particular problem with the Redfern idea is that it seems ad-hoc, coming almost 60 years after the events in question, without any concrete evidence from ANYWHERE that these sort of experiments were being carried out. A short mention suffices, I believe. I mean, why not time travellers? or assuming some of the fictional treatments mentioned in the end may be true? IMHO we stick to the scenarios which carry a lot of adherents, make some references to others. But perhaps others could chime in here?
Canada Jack 00:26, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Wikiproject Paranormal

I just wanted to take a minute to say hello and let the folks who regularly watch this article know that Wikproject Paranormal has selected this article as our collaboration of the month. So don't be surprised if you see some new faces sprucing up the article and speaking up here on the talk page. We'd ideally like to get this article up to snuff to have it featured on the main page, so if we do something too drastic or that you disagree with please just let us know. Thanks — ripley\ 17:17, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

I'm a bit late to the party I guess... but I'd figured I'd lend a hand. The article actualy looks quite good. Just some ruff edges. ---J.S (t|c) 20:05, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
Yup. Check the ToDo list and the discussion at the bottom; we've only got a little bit to go before we've got ourselves as GA! --InShaneee 00:03, 2 November 2006 (UTC)

New page for Air Force reports

I've split off the main body of text for the Air Force report to a separate page, and drastically shortened the text here on the same subject.

Canada Jack 17:45, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

That's great, Canada Jack. The new Air Force page is good. Kosmocentric 01:39, 21 October 2006 (UTC)

The Cold War, military experiments and flying saucers

I think this section needs to be removed, with what's absolutely needed for context merged into other sections of the article. This is about UFO phenominon in general, and doesn't even mention Roswell. While I accept that it helps set the tone for the article, surely wikilinks to the relevant material would be more appropriate. --InShaneee 17:56, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


Since most of the material comes up later, that's probably a good idea.
Canada Jack 18:32, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I agree that a lot of this text is superfluous, but I'd like to see the information about the rise of UFO reports in that time period retained; I think it's important context. — ripley\ 18:51, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
It is, yes, but I don't think it belongs here. Perhaps there's another article it can be linked to (or one can be created) instead? --InShaneee 18:55, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I think any discussion of critics' rebuttal of Roswell as an alien incident would not be well served without context about the rise of weather balloons and subsequent rise of UFO reporting. It doesn't have to be extensive, but this article should at least touch on it, IMO. I've significantly cut out the extraneous detail about Soviets and the Cold War, except what's necessary to explain why there were so many secret weather balloon projects. I've left the bit in about the couple but I wouldn't object to it being deleted. I'm not sure this is the best place for the section, though -- it may need to be moved down or merged elsewhere. — ripley\ 18:57, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Well, if it's neccisary for the criticism section, perhaps it can be worked in there. --InShaneee 21:28, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Concern about copyrighted information

As I've been copyediting this article today, I've noticed a large number of quotation marks that appear as ” -- rather than " (you can see the difference when you click on edit). This generally happens when text is cut and pasted from another source. This makes me wary of the potential for copyright violations in this article. We should be especially watchful of this and fix it where needed. — ripley\ 18:56, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


I've included many direct quotes, but noticed that there were differences in the quotation mark styles. Not knowing what was "style" and what was not, I may have cut and copied some of those quotation marks as they existed earlier (to preserve open and closed quotes). Those quotes are cited by source. Often these quotes appear in multiple sources citing the original source, and I assumed that there was a "fair use" to using verbatim quotes - from witnesses - especially if those quotes appear in public documents such as the Air Force reports.
If there is a question about lifting actual text as if I wrote it, everything down to the Air Force reports (and including same) is what I wrote, except where I use quotes or paraphrase the opinions of others with a citation.
I'll be happy to clarify any concerns here and can flag what is not "fair use". For example, quoting an author rather than a quote of a witness.

Canada Jack 20:04, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Absolutely, bits of quotes are definitely fair use. I mentioned that only as a general caution flag -- not meaning to accuse anybody of anything deliberately malicious. Thanks Jack. — ripley\ 20:07, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

No offence taken. This is only the second article I have written, and I am not sure what is and isn't fair use and I appreciate any comments like the above so I do this in the proper fashion. Suffice to say, I've assumed that any direct quote needs to be cited, and any specific claim (like "some say x is a liar") needs a reference. And that lifting text from books or websites and plonking them down and not indicating such is plagarism. That's why I took great care to make sure I actually composed the article and cited anything I didn't write.

BTW, so far, things look good - when you guys are done (I hope you don't tear what I've done to shreds) I'll address some of the citation issues I've already seen. For example "11" crash sites has a specific source.

Keep up the good work.

Canada Jack 20:30, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Roswell as an alien recovery and government cover-up

I'm not quite sure to make of this section. Much seems to be a rehash of information from earlier sections, the rest is unsourced, and the whole thing talks about its topic assuming it is correct. Any thoughts about what to do here? --InShaneee 21:49, 11 October 2006 (UTC)


In fact, the several scenarios come from the two cited sources, which, IMHO, more or less incorporate the general thrust of those who assert aliens were recovered and the government is lying about it. I could draw from more sources, but I think that would be redundant and simply gratuitously add a lot of extraneous sources when only several here need suffice.
The main differences in the various scenarios is which precise landing sites were the focus of alien recoveries, and which precise dates the recoveries started on.
As for the comment that it is a rehash of earlier sections, I am not sure that is completely accurate - though certain interpretations of events are mentioned, the actual scenario is nowhere else depicted and the reasons certain witnesses are said to have been here or there really only becomes apparent when you see the timelines presented.
It "assumes it is correct" only because it presents the case at face value - and I took care to underline that that is what THEY believe, not what is "self-evident" or what have you. AS I said when I took on this task, presenting the cases here is very difficult because of the widely divergent beliefs on what is valid and what is not. Presenting the sides as I have done here more or less at face value I believe answers that problem.
In the end, it is up to the casual reader to decide who has the more believable story here, and as long as I present the sides fairly, I think we can let the reader decide for himself. There is more than enough opportunity beyond the text itself to explore the issues on thier own via the links etc.
Canada Jack 01:38, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
I haven't read the sections in question in any depth yet (I may have time to do so tomorrow), but (with apologies if I've put words in your mouth) I think Inshaneee is probably searching for ways to trim the article. It's way too long, and streamlining overly verbose passages and removing redundancies is one easy way to do that without losing significant information. That's just what I did to the "cultural" section, for instance -- I removed the most superfluous references and edited the rest to be within 2-3 lines of text. — ripley\ 05:33, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Precisely, ripley, thank you. This article is almost twice as long as the suggested article length, but I think there's plenty of places (like here) where we can merge content or simply make things more concise. --InShaneee 15:06, 12 October 2006 (UTC)

Certainly condensing or eliminating the section will save space, I am just concerned that the alien recovery scenario will therefore be accorded short shrift.

But that's just my opinion - if there is a concensus that omitting such information still satisfies the objectives of wikipedia, so be it. As I said before, I am new here...

Canada Jack 16:13, 12 October 2006 (UTC)

I think, as long as it can be sourced, we can cut most of it out (I don't think a complete timeline is neccisarily needed), and merge it elsewhere. --InShaneee 16:18, 12 October 2006 (UTC)

Regardless of what is decided, what we leave here does need to be re-edited for tone. As it stands, it presents the entire scenario as fact (hence, if edited down to the relevent points, it would be much easier to present as an allegation). --InShaneee 16:34, 25 October 2006 (UTC)

Personally (and this is just my opinion), I'd completely seperate the different versions of this incident (coverup, balloon etc), and then present the pro followed by con/dubunk for each version together, with both the pro-con/debunk presented as if they were fact. As things stand, its one persons version against another and we frankly don't know which veriso is true, if any. Treat everything as if it were credible and true and let the reader decide which side they believe.
perfectblue 20:12, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
I'm just talking terminology, such as 'alleges', ect. --InShaneee 20:24, 25 October 2006 (UTC)

Ramey and Brazel

Some questions/observations about these guys and their treatment in the article:

1) Is the Ramey telegraph image really that significant? Though I sympathize with the UFO crowd, I think this piece of "evidence" is pretty silly, as one can't really tell anything (IMHO) from looking at that picture. Now, if the image has been discussed by some of the major writers on Roswell, then I suppose it can stay, with proper citations, but if it's just something posted on someone's website, then I think we can remove it. What do other people think? (I'll admit that I don't know as much about Roswell as some of the people here, so if I'm realy out-of-touch, just let me know).

2) Maybe I'm not reading closely enough, but it's not clear to me what Brazel actually thought about the debris he found. Did he think it came from a weather balloon, or did he think it was from a UFO? Thanks, Zagalejo 17:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

One other thing: It's my understanding that the crash occurred closer to Corona, New Mexico than Roswell. Is this true? If so, I think it should be mentioned in the article. Zagalejo 17:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)


The Ramey telegraph is one of the later developments in the case, largely promoted by David Rudiak as describing "victims of the wreck." There was a lot more on this before, I reduced it to a short paragraph, but in terms of emphasis I'm not so sure it is truly the "smoking gun" some claim it to be.
I think the short paragraph is fine, but it definitely deserves a mention (i.e., DON'T DELETE IT, please). I've been a student of the Roswell story for well over a decade, and I think anyone interested in the subject needs to know about the Ramey memo. One can play with the images in Photoshop oneself and bring out details that aren't just products of Rudiak's biased imagination. But the fact is, this is one of the ONLY pieces of objective, hard evidence that the Roswell "crashed vehicle" (alien or otherwise) proponents have going for them, so it's very important amidst all the endless eyewitness and first-, second-, and third-hand anecdotes. Rudiak has downloadable versions of the memo available here. Kosmocentric 01:07, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
As for Brazel - and for anyone quoted in those early reports (Brazel was dead by the time this became a big deal years later) - the only description of this as a "flying saucer/disc" comes from the initial press release. Brazel at best says it's NOT a weather balloon as he had seen those before, but as is noted no one knew what a "flying saucer" was supposed to look like just days after the phrase was coined.
As for Corona, this is one of the numerous crash sites put forward by UFO researchers, though none are specifically mentioned save for San Agustin. Not sure if we need to be specific?
It's worth mentioning Corona. That's the nearest identifiable 'town' to where the Foster ranch debris field was located, by all accounts. Nobody has ever claimed the crash happened in Roswell. It's just the nearest big town/city. Kosmocentric 01:14, 14 October 2006 (UTC)

Canada Jack 19:16, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for your responses. I just found this page describing all the alleged crash sites, so I guess there's been a debate over it. I'm not sure how the article should treat this issue, but the most important thing is to stress at all points that the crash, wherever it was, did not occur in Roswell proper (and I think the article does this, for the most part). Zagalejo 20:29, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

As I mentioned in the article itself, something like 11 crash sites have been claimed. The above-mentioned site lists six sites, some around the ranch and therefore close to Corona, others not. And the Air Force centred on two accounts, one near San Agustin (no where near Corona) and the other Jim Ragsdale accounts which I believe were not near Corona.

"Roswell" is pretty good shorthand for the claims, though not geographically accurate. But since there are many claims as to crash sites and none which could be deemed "official" (try, for example, get Randle and Friedman to see anything eye-to-eye, for example...) by definition, I was rather vague other than to suggest they were claimed to be linked to the Roswell UFO incident.

Canada Jack 21:41, 15 October 2006 (UTC)

Ibid

Could users please reframe from using ibidem (ibid) as a citation mark. I know that it's proper reference form in research papers, but sections get moved around so much on pages like this that it is not always clear what is the original citation being referenced actually is (if indeed it has not been changed or deleted by another user). Instead just use a named reference tag < ref name = ABC > ref details < / ref> and then < ref name = ABC / > there after. If you do this, it will automatically Ibid for you. If you want to include the page number, just put it in brackeds after you close the reference tag.

Thank you

perfectblue 18:58, 14 October 2006 (UTC)

Roswell as misidentified military programs: The Air Force reports and Project Mogul

I just noticed that this section begins with a link to Air Force Reports on Roswell UFO Incident. I think this presents a great opportunity to cut down this section, as it is essentially ALL duplicate material from that article (including the image). --InShaneee 18:43, 17 October 2006 (UTC)

In fact, the Air Force section was all on the Roswell page, so I created a new page and moved most of the material over there, drastically cutting down the Roswell section.
Canada Jack 15:51, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Alright, cool. Still, we need to further cut down the section on this page now (including removing the image), since there's no need to duplicate content. --InShaneee 16:11, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
I cut down on the length of the title... seemed to stretch out the TOC a bunch. ---J.S (t|c) 20:02, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

Precis

I'm about to undertake what will probably be a fairly major precis of the article, trimming extraneous information where I can (without removing significant content -- for instance we can just say "at another ranch" instead of "at the Foster Ranch 70 miles away from Roswell" without removing much significant information). But, I have little personal knowledge of the story so if I end up inadvertently removing something you feel is significant to lay readers' understanding, please let me know. — ripley\ 18:42, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

I'm not convinced this is a good move. If you change "at the Foster Ranch 70 miles away from Roswell" to "at another ranch" you are likely to be asked for details. Removing informative text is not helpful IMMHO. Moriori 20:08, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Saying "Foster ranch" begs the question of who "Foster is," and that means more information that adds nothing. That it was a ranch 70 miles from Roswell I think is enough, but I'm open to hearing others' opinions. Or is it important in a non-obvious way whose ranch it was on? — ripley\ 22:22, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
I couldn't make it through the whole thing today, but did do most of the article. I've also moved off what amounts to block quotes from various primary witnesses into its own article, Witness accounts at Roswell. It may also be a good idea to move the secondary witnesses there too, but I don't want to be too hasty. — ripley\ 19:51, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

IMHO, if you are to move the primary witnesses to a new page, you should do likewise to the secondary witnesses. As it stands (and I realize you are only partway through this) we jump from contemporary news reports to the more fantastic and mostly second-hand accounts of aliens etc.

I'd suggest moving ALL statements across (and, I realize, you may be in the midst of doing exactly that), and to leave a failry brief into on the main page along the lines of: There are numerous witness accounts which roughly fall along the lines of descriptions of similar material from the ranch to Ft Worth; later accounts tell of alien recoveries and witness intimidation, etc.

Canada Jack 15:16, 19 October 2006 (UTC)

Personally I agree, but I wanted to give people time to adjust to the idea of moving any of the statements at all -- if nobody objects today then we should go on and complete the move I think. — ripley\ 15:27, 19 October 2006 (UTC)


Rewrites

Just redid the "Air Force" section, just to more properly summarize what the new page says. (What was there didn't really speak to it) The "witness" sections, just moved, should get a similar rewrite on both the "Roswell" page and on the newly created page. I'll do it eventually if you guys don't.

Canada Jack 19:18, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

Go for it! Thanks CJ. — ripley\ 21:17, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

Cultural influence

I'm going to be working on this section in my userspace, as it's poorly organized and could use some pruning. So, if anyone has suggestions, let me know. Zagalejo 19:48, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

Just thinking outloud here, but do you think the 'tourism' section would be better suited to the actual Town article, with a mention here? --InShaneee 16:33, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps, but I think a paragraph about it here is justified, since it helps demonstrate the ongoing cultural resonance of the Roswell incident. The incident has profoundly affected the town, and I could have gone into a lot more detail than I actually did. If space continues to be an issue, however, I'll see if I can trim it down. Zagalejo 16:48, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
(For the record, there is NOTHING about tourism on the town's page). --InShaneee 16:52, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Hmmm... Judging by comments on that article's talk page, it seems that the editors want to keep the UFO stuff to a bare minimum. They probably expected this page to talk about it. However, everything I've found suggests that UFO tourism has become an important part of the town. It'll be the first thing any directory or travel site mentions. Zagalejo 17:19, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Addendum: there is a brief line about tourism at the town page: "Roswell has benefited from interest in the alleged UFO incident, and in more recent times the business community has deliberately sought out tourists interested in UFOs." I do think that the town page should go into this in more detail. However, I still contend that this article would not be comprehensive without its own paragraph about tourism. Zagalejo 17:22, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Any detailed examination should probably reside on the city's article itself, but I don't have a problem with a short paragraph stating that it's impacted the town's tourism. We could perhaps place it with the paragraph about the museum. — ripley\!


Good job

Just want to say that you guys have done a good job of paring this article down and keeping the essence here. I might have a couple very minor things to tinker with but over-all, it looks good.

I was considering adding a short section on how many Roswell claims have now been proven to be frauds, and how some UFO authors have dismissed some of their own research (but which is still touted on some websites as "evidence"), but this seems now to be extraneous.

I could still do this if it is felt to be necessary. Otherwise I think this is pretty well done.

Canada Jack 22:27, 25 October 2006 (UTC)


Some of the more recent edits here don't make much sense to me.
Omitting the Air Force reports - which identified the likely source of the 1947 debris - while including Bill Clinton's opinion, seems a rather strange choice here.
The key aspects of the skeptical response surely are a) accounting for whatever was found on the ranch in 1947 and b) explaining the reports of aliens.
Surely the Air Force reports deserve a paragraph or a section, with a redirect to the page.

Canada Jack 18:10, 26 October 2006 (UTC)

I think the problem is that the Air Force reports already have their own article. So all we need in this article is a brief summation, which I believe is what's there. If someone wants more detailed information they can click on the other article. — e. ripley\ 18:22, 26 October 2006 (UTC)


Sorry, when I checked earlier, that section had been completely omitted, now it has been reinstated along with some other stuff which probably should be there too.

What was there and now seems to be back is imho adequeat.

Maybe I should wait until the edits are done (d'oh!)

Canada Jack 18:49, 26 October 2006 (UTC)

I think we're really moving along nicely; once we can finish off those concerns in the 'to do' list, we'll be ready for a Peer Review, and then I'm confident a GA nom will pass for sure. --InShaneee 01:10, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
Yes, definitely doing much better. I think the intro paragraphs are handled pretty well, but the rest of the article just feels too choppy and I'm not exactly sure how to fix it. — e. ripley\ 16:03, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
The intro paragraph is way to long is the problem (one of the GA/FA requirements); and yes, we should discuss an overall structure for the rest of the article. --InShaneee 16:06, 27 October 2006 (UTC)

I like the new intro (concise, but informative!), but I think 'background' is still a bit redundant. Can the material in there be merged to other parts of the article (what's not already covered in more detail elsewhere)? --InShaneee 00:16, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

I had the same thought... I wasn't sure where to merge it. I think were talking about a fundemenal article structure shift and I don't realy know the topic well enough to do that myself. ---J.S (t|c) 00:24, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
I have rejigged the intro to help make it more encyclopedic. Happy to help with other improvements too. Moriori 00:31, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

Why not simply omit the "background" section as the new intro concisely sums up the controversy, while the remaining sections spell out the event?

Canada Jack 16:28, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

Assuming the information is elsewhere in the article I'd be cool with that. Just move the citations somewhere else that their relevant. ---J.S (t|c) 16:42, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
Agree with J.smith. --InShaneee 16:49, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

Evaluation of External Links

Well, in the spirit of WP:NOT a collection of links and WP:EL, lets evaluate the external links section. Here's the criteria I'd like to use:

  1. Does the website linked provide useful information not already available on wikipedia?
  2. Does the website infringe on any one's copyrights?
  3. Is the website a "mushroom"? (Ie, springs up over night and all it has to stand on is bullshit)
  4. Is the link redundant to a link already in the references section?

If no to 1 and/or yes to any of the rest, then it's time to remove it. ---J.S (t|c) 00:42, 2 November 2006 (UTC)

P.S. This is an invitation for discussion... I'm not trying to own the page:) ---J.S (t|c) 00:46, 2 November 2006 (UTC)

Addtionally, I strongly support the removal of all the 'fringe' links, simply because they are fringe viewpoints. --InShaneee 15:12, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

Yeah... ok, removed. I should have included it in this list, but silly section edit threw me off:) ---J.S (t|c) 21:11, 6 November 2006 (UTC)

skeptics

Who are these anonymous skeptics that the article keeps talking about? Seems a bit of a weasel word in context. I marked a few with {{who}} but I decided that wasn't realy a good way to do it it. ---J.S (t|c) 21:57, 6 November 2006 (UTC)


Well, I wrote most of the article. And a lot of those "anonymous skeptics" are in fact fully cited elsewhere. I'm not sure what to do here. If the consensus here is that I should add citations, I could supply multiple sources for each instance of "skeptics say". Exactly how should this be cited? By specific multiple references? or by the name of the skeptic alone?

Canada Jack 15:40, 7 November 2006 (UTC)

It would be helpfull to replace "skeptics" with the name or names of notable skeptics who hold the view. ---J.S (t|c) 15:54, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps (where overlap exists) it would be possible to restructure the wording a bit so that near the beginning it can say, "Skeptics such as X and Y", and then refer back to that. --InShaneee 16:21, 7 November 2006 (UTC)


Gotchya.

I'll do this over the next few days.

Canada Jack 16:35, 7 November 2006 (UTC)

Excellent. This is one of the hard fixes... but it can be a major blockade in the way of FA status. ---J.S (t|c) 19:20, 7 November 2006 (UTC)


I've done about half of the "skeptics say..." fixes in the skeptical response section. ANy comments? So far so good?

Canada Jack 17:22, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Excellent! This article will make GA in no time and well well-prepared for peer-review for FA. ---J.S (t|c) 18:32, 8 November 2006 (UTC)


I'm pretty well done now. I tried to match the reference formatting, but someone better at this better take a look. If there are any more references you need, let me know.

Canada Jack 20:49, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Awesome job! We've just got two more links in "Arguments from Authority" that need to be made in-line, and that's all of 'em! --InShaneee 20:56, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Just did a fix to the first Timothy Printy reference near the top of the section, don't forget that.

Canada Jack 21:04, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

I meant the ones labeled '2' and '3' in the third paragraph. --InShaneee 21:08, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Combining sections...

I'd like to combine Further reading (Skeptics)" & "Sources (generally "pro-UFO" explanations)". They seem redundant and judgemental... thoughts or objections? ---J.S (t|c) 21:16, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

I never was a fan of those titles...I'd like to know what purpose those links serve before anything is done. Are the 'sources' actual sources? If any are, I'd remove the 'generally' and make everything that isn't (including the skeptics) 'further reading'. If they're not, just merge 'em all into a 'further reading' section, although if that's the case, we may need to evaluate whether they belong there at all. --InShaneee 21:28, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
I can see the value of such a list... but I haven't read any of those books so I I can't relay judge them on an individual basis. I'll combine the lists and see if I can fix the formatting some. ---J.S (t|c) 21:39, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

extend colab...

I made an appeal on the colab page to extend the collaboration for this article. I think major progress has been made and I'd like to see this submitted to FA before we move on. ---J.S (t|c) 21:18, 8 November 2006 (UTC)

Secondary pages

Just a note here about the secondary pages, specifically the Witness page and the Air Force Report page. Is it necessary to tackle those as well?

I bring it up in particular because one of the strong advocates of one side of the debate on Roswell has in the past few days decided to transform what I felt was a fairly balanced, NPOV presentation of the various witness accounts to the Roswell UFO incident into a fairly slanted POV presentation, IMHO.

Canada Jack 20:12, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

Peer Review

Some of the bigger points brought up on the peer review:

  • "Other theories" section too long (perhaps another sub-article candidate?) (My thoughts: Is Timothy Printy really a reliable source? If not, we can remove his objections)
  • Reorganization may be needed; suggestion was 'background', 'materials found', 'theories', 'recent developments', and 'in popular culture'
  • Use quotation templates to make the one or two very long quotes look more presentable.
  • All instances of "X claims", "X alleges", "X asserts" need citation.
  • In "Contemporary accounts of evidence found", it says "A telex uncovered in the 1990s". How was it uncovered?
  • News section doesn't really talk much about how the press initially believed it was a flying saucer, or what impact that had. (While this would be nice, and possibly necessary for a FA, I wouldn't make this a top priority)
  • In "Conspiracy theories", the alternative account recounted there is quite long, and feels awkward in context. (I'd suggest making it into a summary rather than a blow-by-blow)

--InShaneee 17:52, 11 November 2006 (UTC)

Further reading...

Well, I reformatted the section. Combined both lists, sorted by authors last name and found ISBNs for everything but one book.

Thomas R. Morris & Theresa J. Morris, with Sally Hester "Roswell Connection", 2006

I'm not sure who listed it, but if you have it on hand can you grab the ISBN from the front cover? Anyone have any comments on the reorganisation?---J.S (t|c) 21:03, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

I went ahead and removed all of the books that were also listed as citations. --InShaneee 21:25, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

Revert War on "Witness accounts of the Roswell UFO incident"

As noted above, please draw your attention to the "Witness accounts of the Roswell UFO incident" page where one ufo-advocate has been reverting the POV contributions of his I have been editing into NPOV.

I just fixed up the page again, and I feel if we let the page get "taken over" by one side than a great deal of effort here may be for naught.

Canada Jack 21:57, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

I think some of his material does have merit; since it doesn't appear he's reading the article talk page, you may want to try contacting him on his user talk page. --InShaneee 22:42, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

He routinely dismisses my approach as being "censorship." And he has a bone to pick for debates we had over on Space.com years ago. If you feel that what I have done here is "censor" one side, then maybe you are okay with what he is doing over there.

I feel he is turning the Witness page into a very one-sided page with not only extended asides with comments in the text like "witness x described what clearly was no 'weather balloon' " etc., but extended criticisms of the few witnesses there who thought the incident was just a weather balloon or some such object.

But each and every witness here has their critisms, and to include those asides would completely bog down the article into a debate which I feel is already addressed on the main Roswell page and the Air Force page - that ufo researchers assert certain accounts are not to be believed and that an active cover-up was in place. Similarily, skeptics' critiques of those witnesses who they view as not credible are on the main page.

My main issue here is that this guy has a history of viewing his clearly POV contributions as being "factual" and NPOV.

Watch what he inserts and tell me if it is POV or not.

Canada Jack 22:54, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

...As I just said, I think some of his insertions have merit. That doesn't mean I agree with all of it, and it doesn't mean I condone his attitude. However, wholesale reversions solve nothing. Talk to him about the SPECIFIC parts you have a problem with and why, and see how things go from there. --InShaneee 23:00, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
Do we even need this article? It seems alot of that goes into a level of detail we don't need to go into. ---J.S (t|c) 23:02, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
No comment on that either way, but for the record, it was split off from this article in an attempt to shorten it. --InShaneee 23:05, 9 November 2006 (UTC)


I've had a discussion with Dr Fil, after leaving most of what he feels should be in, but he seems to feeel that TONS of extra stuff is needed, stuff which I pointed out largely simply repeats what others say. The article - which was long enough anyway - now is probably way too long. Since he larrgely reverts what I have done and deletes my requests for quotes, perhaps someone ELSE should go in there and suggest that we don't need 20 alien accounts when four or five will suffice.

Canada Jack 19:35, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

Grammatical tense

Comment about the "Arguments from authority" section -- When describing the contents of Randle and Schmitt's two books, we shift from the past tense to the present tense. "Kevin Randle and Donald Schmitt initially focused on Marcel and the ranch as the main crash site in their 1991 book UFO Crash at Roswell. (past tense) Then, in their next book, The Truth About the UFO Crash at Roswell, the crash happens several days later and at a location far from the Foster ranch. Marcel and Brazel are relegated to a lesser roles and, as The Roswell Files notes, the new accounts contradict the old accounts." (present tense). I think we should rewrite this section and stick to one tense (whichever would be most appropriate). Any thoughts? Zagalejo 19:11, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

Past, definitely. The crash isn't happening as we write this. --InShaneee 19:47, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

Added post-1995 developments

I've added what I intended to include in the article originally (and which I feel needs to be here for additional context). And that is some of the detail behind prominent UFO researchers concluding that there were no aliens involved (mentioned in the intro), the revelation of shoddy research and split between two major Roswell authors (alluded to earlier), and the discrediting of several prominent witnesses.

I think this adds more to the article, but if you guys don't, well, do what you will.

Canada Jack 21:40, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

While the prose is fine there seems to be a bias in the selection of events that make up the story being told... were there not "positive" developments happening at the time? (I can't answer that as I'm not an expert in the subject) If not... then the section is great. (Except we have 10 new citations to fix;)) ---J.S (t|c) 21:54, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

I think the "bias" is covered by the other stuff in "recent developments." The point to underline here is that up to about 1995, the UFO interpretation was by far the dominant one. Once the Air Force published its reports and a) a plausible explanation for the debris was suggested and b) ufo researchers were shown not to be doing their homework, the field changed. Once-strong advocates dismissed any alien presence.

A lot of the stuff on the internet today is a rehash of long-discredited (by ufo researchers) evidence, the added section hints at the problems with a lot of the "research" done to suggest aliens were involved.

Canada Jack 23:00, 10 November 2006 (UTC)


Someone PLEASE help out at Witness accounts of the Roswell UFO incident

Dr Fil has gone completely overboard now, he's probably tripled the size of this once-manageable article and ignored my comments and critiques on what he has done.

At first, He seemed confused about the way I structured it, complaining that "primary" witnesses were taken off and put elsewhere, and inserting various POV comments about witnesses who saw this as a balloon or whatever while leaving witnesses with testimony of claimed sinister goings-ons at face value.

Realizing this stemmed from a lack of clarity about what was meant about "primary," I reworded everything so as to make it clear the intent of the sections - the first part focussed on witness accounts to the debris as described in 1947; the second part to accounts of aliens and cover-ups etc.

I also reiterated my intent here to present witness statements at face value. Since the vast majority of these statements could be considered "pro-ufo," I thought this was a balanced approach.

Perhaps now realizing my intent, he has ceased to keep reinserting irrelevant stuff and stuff into the wrong section, but has turned into the Sorcerer's Apprentice, burying the page with endless accounts.

I also asked him to clarify a quote he inserted. He says Brazel Jr described a gouge of specific dimensions. While this quote may exist somewhere, I think it was important to a) supply the actual quote or b) say who claims he said this. Which is what I am led to believe wikistyle. He refuses to do either, saying the source at the end of the quote that is there has it. I've put a "citation" mark up three times and simply omits it without seriously responding to my request for a proper note on this.

Worse, in a section on Cavitt, a witness who supplied an account which suggests explicitly no alien craft was involved, he seems determined to discredit the account by saying some researchers said he denied ever being there. I repeatedly have omitted it asking why it is relevant, since NO ONE disputes he was in fact present. To me, if one doesn't know this person was in fact there, the comment may discredit the account which, no doubt, is the POV insertion's intent.

But the biggest problem now is that he has ignored my main entreaty - to resist the temptation to load the page down with extraneous material and limit the various sections to several preferabbly first-hand accounts, and to have a link like "for more, see here." Instead, he has now expanded the "alien" part to 21 quotes, including quotes which only remotely suggest anything (like Zimmerman's) and, again, ignoring and not responding to my requests to keep the article length reasonable.

My attempts to simply apply the standards to the page I, after all, created, have been met with cries of "censorship" etc.

I'd appreciate someone else going in there are weighing in on what I see as a hijack of the page by a strong pro-UFO advocate. He was a major cause of why the original Roswell page was a complete one-sided mess, he is well on the way to doing the same on the "witness" page.

Canada Jack 03:20, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

You might want to take this to Mediation, since this goes farther than just an editing concern, and none of us are really neutral anymore. --InShaneee 15:57, 15 November 2006 (UTC)


Conspiracy section redo

It seems to me that the biggest hole here is the conspiracy section. How about I do a rewrite with a structure somewhat like the Other Theory section, with the proper references etc.?

Canada Jack 20:59, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Best of luck CJ. It's a mess. Just the first paragraph of that section alone needs attention. For instance, it needs a few {{fact}}s added, as I have indicated here:
"By the early 1990s, some UFO researchers {{who}} had concluded that the original 1947 accounts were almost exclusively cover-ups. {{fact}} Based on the accounts of witnesses given after 1978, these researchers asserted that once word reached military authorities detailing the recovery of a UFO, {{fact}} officials switched the real debris for weather balloon debris {{fact}} in time for the press conference. {{fact}} Then officials intimidated Brazel {{fact}} into portraying the material as consistent with a weather balloon during his press conference {{fact}}. They claimed that at the same time the press was reporting that a rancher had mistaken a weather balloon for a flying saucer, the military was engaging in a large recovery operation, {{fact}} sealing off large areas and warning ]s to be quiet {{fact}}, in some cases threatening them with death {{fact}} if they dared tell anyone what they saw."
Misplaced Pages is making a lot of unsupported claims. Moriori 21:29, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
Whoa, whoa. I'm pretty sure a citation after "some UFO researchers claim" could clear up all of those fact templates. --InShaneee 21:34, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Yeah, this is entirely doable.

First, I'll do a rewrite of this, then I'll add all the necessary citations.

Canada Jack 21:37, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Only one or two fact tags would be needed to make the point. ---J.S (t|c) 21:42, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
Well now, that's a revelation. It's not about making a point, it's only about Misplaced Pages demonstrating accuracy and integrity. If we make extraordinary claims, we are duty bound to provide adequate evidence for those claims, each and every one of them, or remove them. InShanee's assertion that a citation after "some UFO researchers claim" could clear up all of those fact templates is far from true. A citation he suggests, to justify "some UFO researchers claim", could never adequately substantiate the claim made later in the paragraph that the military threatened some civilians with death. It, and others, need their own references/cites. Moriori 23:21, 15 November 2006 (UTC)


There are in fact specific claims that the military threatened to kill people if they spoke. I originally wrote the body of the section thinking it was adequate to refer to one or two sites for the scenario laid out, I realize now that is wholly inadequate and, besides, it can be presented far better and more spefically, along the lines of, "by 1994 UFO researchers such as Kark Pflock, Stanton Freidman and the team of Kevin Randle and Don Schmitt had interviewed several hundred people they claimed had some involvement with the events reported in 1947... New claims emerged such as from Schmitt and Randle detailing a military cover-up (source)..."

So, like in the skeptical section following, there will be specific references to specific claims.

Canada Jack 00:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

Just a point. I didn't necessarily challenge specifics, I am merely pointing out each piece of information needs its own justification, and balance if it exists. Moriori 00:57, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
Moriori, a single citation could, theoretical, cover the entire paragraph. InShanee wasn't wrong. It really depends on the variety of sources being used. Adding 15 {{fact}} tags is actually quite disruptive to the flow of the article. Please, no more Ad hominem arguments.
Yes, we need citations there... 15 {{fact}} tags is not a very civil way of dealing with it. ---J.S (t|c) 00:33, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
Do you want Misplaced Pages to have some semblance of scholarship? Any significant claim has to be referenced/cited, even in paranormal articles A claim that the military threatened people with death cannot be justified by a cite supporting different information. There is no way a single citation could cover the whole paragraph. It's quaint that you say "15 {{fact}} tags is not a very civil way of dealing with it". Now how is that incivil? And where's the ad hominen. Still, you actually agree we need citations, and if I hadn't forced the issue we may never have ever seen them. I guess the whole article will get a makeover. It sure needs it. Moriori 00:57, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
"...where's the ad hominen." -> "Do you want Misplaced Pages to have some semblance of scholarship?" Or maybe that is a straw man argument? *shrug*
But, in any case, covering a paragraph in {{fact}} is excessive. The {{fact}} tag is a communication device. It communicates your belif that there is a need for a citation in a paticular point in an article. That message can be communincated with much fewer. ---J.S (t|c) 02:19, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
An ad hominen was conveyed in a passage of text that didn't actually exist? How ironic, but I guess we are discussing an article about the paranormal. I am working hard to resist being sarcastic here. Suffice to say I know that {{fact}} is a communication device. Suffice to say too that I know it signals a point that needs citing. What I also know is that if there are several points needing referencing/citation, then it saves time to tag them all at the same time. Unfortunately, it demonstrates to readers that the article is probably not a reliable source of information. The only way to fix that is to provide the requested cites, all of them, and to junk claims that cannot be supported. That applies to all articles in Misplaced Pages. Moriori 03:02, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
I figured I'd give you a more recent example. Whatever. All I've seen from you in regards to the paranormal project and articles has been aggression. All I was trying to do was to get you to calm down some. I caused more anger and aggression...so I'll leave. I'll keep out of this article for a while. ---J.S (t|c) 05:52, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
Statements must be supportable/supported, whether in talk or article, a fundamental requirement of creating an encyclopedia. Asking for verification is hardly aggression, except maybe in the minds of people asked to justify article content who get their hackles up if their opinion is challenged. You never caused the slightest anger or aggression in me, so I never ever needed calming down. Well, you leave if you wish J.s but I'll stick around to help improve this article. Heaven knows it certainly needs it. Moriori 07:50, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
You're not improving anything by misusing fact tags. You're completely misunderstanding the paragraph you've started an argument over. All that's needed is a citation as to who or what group of individuals is making the claims in the paragraph; we don't need to 'prove' that there was military harrassment or anything else, merely that someone asserts there is. That's how policy works here. --InShaneee 16:23, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
I prefer Misplaced Pages's official policy, which in part says the following -- "Editors should provide a reliable source for material that is challenged or likely to be challenged, or it may be removed......The burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material." Not only that, NPOV basically demands balance, so when someone says the military threatened people with death, the article should also explain that the people making that claim have been criticised for their dubious research methods. Moriori 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

I just want to say one thing: Moriori, your misrepresenting my point. I've made tons of calls for citations here. ---J.S (t|c) 17:56, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

J.s, nowhere have I said you have not made tons of calls for citations. You are making my point for me -- that what we write here has to be supported by evidence.Moriori 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

Since I started this particular thread, I should point out that it was I, not you Moriori, who suggested a rewrite with proper citations was required. The main problem is that the way it was written, simply supplying citations for the statements would be, in my view, clumsy. So I propose to redo the section in a similar manner as the skeptic section to better reference this.

I DON'T proprose a detailed refutation of the various claims within the section, those critiques belong in the skeptical section and in the Air Force report section. And, it should be noted, while many people said many things - including that they received death threats - it is up to the reader to see what seems more likely, not for us to tell them what is the more likely scenario.

A careful reading of the claims will find that a lot of them stem from Randle/Scmitt who it has been shown employed dubious research methods to come to their conclusions. It makes their claims suspect, in my view. But they form the basis for much of what this incident has become.

Dr Fil over in the Witness page has gone a bit overboard (in my view) in inserting millions of witness statements, so there will be an opportunity here not only to access the author's claims, but the witness claims as well.

Canada Jack 15:31, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

CJ, you say (regarding death threats) that "it is up to the reader to see what seems more likely, not for us to tell them what is the more likely scenario"? How can they check out the source of extraordinary claims if the claims aren't sourced? They can't! How can they judge which is the most likely scenario if only one scenario is presented to the reader? They can't. Where's the NPOV? Why are you compelled to point out that it was you who suggested a rewrite and cites? That's a non sequitur if ever I saw one. Whatever, it is good if there is opportunity to access witness claims as you say, but balance is important too.
As a postscript CJ, can you direct me to evidence that names anyone who reported seeing an object flying near the site where the whatever it was, was found. Perhaps the name of this article should be Roswell incident, without any mention of unidentified flying object. Moriori 23:12, 16 November 2006 (UTC)

The problem with the section is that originally it was written as an example of the scenarios which UFO advocates promoted. As such, there were one or two sources - to those who promoted those scenarios. The "NPOV" approach was to present those accounts at face value - so, the initial 1947 reports were presented, then the "ufo" accounts, then the skeptical response. These sections have to, I feel, be better names.

That approach was taken for the simple reason that there is very little people agree on in terms of the truth of this incident. Further, a good deal of the evidence is hotly disputed. To wade through the debate, one has to know what the sides say happen.

As to the specific claims, witness claims in fact cover all this territory on the "witness" page. The problem identfied is that now it is a bit unclear as to where this stuff is sourced and I for one have said I will do a rewrite to more clearly present this case - specific to the various ufo advocates - with reference to where a lot of these claims arise (to be found on the witness page).

Far from being the only case presented, right below is the skeptical response to this, including a link to the Air Force reports which were so compelling that a) several prominent UFO advocates concluded there were no aliens involved and b) at least some of the ufo research was exposed as shoddy if not fraudulent. (That fallout is noted too)

I personally feel this needs a bit more work to make the sections more coherent, to make this section closer to the feel of the skeptic section where we go from specific advocate to other specific advocate, and make asides like "see Witness Accounts page."

As for the specific point about witnesses to objects flying, there in fact appeared at the time, in 1947, witness accounts from people saying they saw strange objects flying overhead. See this skeptical website page for more: http://members.aol.com/TPrinty/sighting.html

Canada Jack 17:00, 17 November 2006 (UTC)

All this fingerpointing is rather pointless. What, precisely, is the disputed text? — e. ripley\ 17:23, 1 December 2006 (UTC)

GA nom

I think we're looking pretty good at this point. Unless there's any major objections, I'm going to nominate this as a Good Article tomorrow. --InShaneee 15:27, 17 November 2006 (UTC)

I still think we need to clean up the section we talk about above. Won't be too hard, I say give it a week or so.
Canada Jack 17:07, 17 November 2006 (UTC)


Redo of "witness" section

I've done a major redo of the "witness" section, more specifically identifying the various authors and claims, and changing section headings to reflect what may be a better approach here.

Obviously, I need to get all the references done and someone who knows what they are doing (not me) will need to wikify it all.

But this is the basis of what I think this should look like - any comments?

Canada Jack 21:40, 22 November 2006 (UTC)

I just moved around a bit of the "skeptic" section, new titles etc. I think it makes more sense to start with the Air Force reports as they form the basis for much of the skeptical response.
To me, the article now is much more coherent, though I still need to supply some more references in the "aliens" section and I may not be able to do much of that for a week or so.
Once that is done, THEN maybe we can submit this for GA!
Canada Jack 19:25, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
I know I've brought this up before, but any thoughts on the reliability of some of the skeptical sources? For example, who the heck is Timothy Printy? --InShaneee 22:47, 30 November 2006 (UTC)

Anything he has said - in terms of what others have claimed - has been verified by other sources in my experience. The guy is pretty meticulous and is one of the best sources I've seen to wade through just about every aspect of the controversy.

Is there anything in particular you mean when you talk about "reliability." Most of the references I have here for him are on his opinion which is just that - his opinion. Is there something specific about his sources you are referring to? If so, I can try to verify those references.

Canada Jack 15:48, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Image text

Below the image of 2 men posing with some of the balloon, it says "see below for an enlargement", yet there is no enlargement below. Was there? Should there be? If not, the text should be removed. 81.77.11.237 17:24, 26 November 2006 (UTC)

There was... not sure what happened to it. Ummm weird. ---J.S (t|c) 20:07, 26 November 2006 (UTC)

Possible revert war

I've noticed that one of the advocates of the ufo interpretation has decided to declare the article "biased" and, without discussion, start inserting pro-ufo interpretations into the section describing the skeptical viewpoint.

I've dealt with this guy for a long time in other venues and while his point of view is clear and he is entitled to it, he tends to seek to counter every view that might cast doubt on the ufo interpretation.

It took me a long time to clean up the mess that was largely his creation and let stand a fairly balanced NPOV article, he seems to think otherwise and is at it - again.

Canada Jack 15:29, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Let's not start talking like he's a vandal just yet. As I said when I reverted him, since the current version of the page is based on broad consensus, he needs to bring any large scale changes here before implementing them. Additionally, dispute tags should not be applied when a single editor is challenging consensus. --InShaneee 15:48, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Well, I didn't mean to suggest "vandal," but Dr Fil is what I would call a very passionate advocate of one point of view here. In my experience, he tends to see any claims which spells out the other point of view as "biased" and requiring counter-arguments, while claims supporting his views are left as is. It's not been easy to attempt - as I have - to present both sides of an argument without POV asides - and to have that left undisturbed by Dr Fil. This is what happened on the "witness" page where he insisted on inserting comments and asides which had the effect of disputing the credibilty of a witness he disagreed with.

And here it seems he is attempting to do the same, so that one side is presented, then the other - but since he disputes the other side, he feels the need to insert tons of counter-arguments.

Canada Jack 16:35, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

We shouldn't be making any accusations whatsoever. Let's just see how this plays out. --InShaneee 17:16, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Okay, agreed.

Canada Jack 17:21, 5 December 2006 (UTC)


"Vandal" indeed. I have been listed among the top 100 contemporary Ufologists and am considered an expert in the field, including the Roswell incident, which I have intensively studied for many years. I have visited the area, interviewed witnesses, dug into archives, and know most of the major researchers, with whom I have exchanged information. I have written various published articles on some phases of the story which I have delved into in depth and have been interviewed several times for TV documentaries on the subject, exactly because I am considered one of the experts. I have also written a great deal of Misplaced Pages material and edited a great deal more.

In short, I am exactly the sort of highly knowledgable EXPERT contributer a real Encyclopedia would want helping write this and associated articles. I have had problems before dealing with hard-core skeptics who think they should have complete control over the contents of these highly controversial UFO articles, but I have always been able to edit material. But not here. Instead it either gets instantly deleted or has to pass through some sort of "consensus" board of censors for approval for anything I write. I am not even allowed to post Totally Disputed NPOV or Out of Balance notices. The administrator Inshanee (greatly exceeding his authority and violating the rules of Misplaced Pages) instantly deleted these as well. According to him, this wasn't the "consensus" view. I think he misses the point and why Misplaced Pages rules allow anyone to post these notices (note, e.g., how the wording says an "individual Misplaced Pages member" objects, not a "consensus" objects). The so-called "consensus" article may very well be full of serious factual errors, badly slanted, out-of balance, etc. Even when I think a POV label should be pulled, I always give the person at least a couple of days to make their case, if not several weeks. But again not here—instant deletion.

So here we have the situation where I, an actual expert on the subject, am being blockaded from making any contributions, including making simple factual corrections. Censorship is censorship, whether Inshanee likes me using the word or not. E.g., it is NOT true that only three people were photographed in Fort Worth (there were four, the fourth being Irving Newton, the weather officer), or that Marcel is the only known person to have accompanied debris from Roswell to Fort Worth (Robert Porter was another, and the names of other crew members are known as well, such as the acting base commander Lt. Col. Payne Jennings, who piloted the plane), or that Marcel had no radar experience (one of his official military occupations was radar intelligence officer). When I tried to make two of those simple corrections, they got deleted knee-jerk fashion along with everything else I tried to add.

Another one of Canada Jack's simple erroneous "facts" is that Sheriff Wilcox confirmed Brazel's mid-June discovery date in United Press stories. Yeah, but what about Associated Press stories where Wilcox contradicted his UP statements by saying Brazel made his find "several days ago"? Wilcox also contradicted himself as to when Brazel came to office (AP: the day before; UP: the day before yesterday). And Wilcox further contradicted Brazel's story by claiming (UP) that Brazel came in reporting a "weather meter", whereas Brazel said he told the Sheriff that maybe he had found a "flying disc" and also stated that what he found definitely wasn't any sort of weather observation device.

Such contradictions in the reporting were pointed out in the article previously, but Canada Jack made sure the reader wouldn't be "confused" by the alleged "pro-UFO" contradictions when he totally rewrote the article to his personal slant. He also freely editorializes instead of sticking to facts. E.g., instead of simply stating that Brazel's stated date of discovery disagreed with the base press release of "sometime last week", he instead editorializes that the press release was probably wrong because it was "fourth hand". Total speculation like that has no place in an encyclopedia article, but CJ obviously added that because he wants the article skewed in that POV direction. To those familiar with these Roswell debates, the Brazel's mid-June discovery date is considered debunking dogma because it supports their Mogul balloon theory; they definitely do not like having pointed out it conflicts with the early July discovery date from other contemporary accounts.

Here is another topic Canada Jack definitely does not like being raised: the question of Brazel being in military hands and likely coerced when he made his statements. Over on "Witness Accounts of the Roswell UFO incident", under "Accounts of Intimidation," I tried to insert 14 (!!) different eyewitness accounts of people seeing Brazel surrounded by military in Roswell, being incarcerated at the base, stating he been forced to change his story, complaining bitterly afterwards about his treatment by the military, saying he sworn an oath not to talk about what really happened, etc. Well Canada Jack thinks he owns this page as well and can unilaterally decide what goes in there. I tried to put this material in there four times, and guess what? He deleted it four times. He basically admitted he didn't want the material there because he again thought it was giving the article a "pro-UFO" or "pro-alien" POV (huh?), even though there wasn't a single word in that material to that effect. However, I think he understands full well what conclusion readers might well draw, which is why he doesn't want it in there. But I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship" here, as Inshanee has privately admonished me, even though obvious censorship is exactly what is going on.

Now over here on the Roswell UFO incident, the subject is very briefly touched on by Canada Jack, but the testimony is grossly misrepresented (he mentions only one witness, Paul McEvoy, the editor of the Roswell Daily Record), and then the witness' statement is ridiculed using a "citation" from fellow debunker Tim Printy (basically, argument by assertion or authority: it didn't happen because Tim Printy says so). Hey, what about the other 13 witnesses, such as Jason Kellahin, who was there with McEvoy and covering the story for AP, or the base provost marshal Edwin Easley, who admitted they held Brazel under guard (i.e., against his will) at the base for several days? Canada Jack ridiculing McEvoy and deliberately omitting even a mention of the other corroborating accounts is more of his blatant editorializing and slanting of the article to his personal POV. (That's why it's downright pathetic when he claims to be writing the article with a NPOV, "cleaning up the mess", and repeatedly attacking me as highly biased and POV. He should look in the mirror.)

So again, I, a mere expert on the subject, tried to insert a little balance and accuracy back into the article by quickly noting that dismissal of McEvoy's statement was nothing more than argument by assertion and then noting that there were many other witnesses corroborating McEvoy, such as Kellahin and Easley. Well, doggone it, I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship", but can anyone guess what happened when I tried to insert this?

If the "skeptical viewpoint" or any viewpoint is grossly distorting the facts (Marcel not knowing anything about radar, only McEvoy being a witness to the military and Brazel, etc.), a properly written Encyclopedia article should at the very least point out this out (if not delete it entirely for being nonfactual). But one of Canada Jack's editing POV ploys is to isolate topics so that contrasting information and corrections can't be made. Instead he tries to spin it as "inserting pro-ufo interpretations into the section describing the skeptical viewpoint" and "he tends to seek to counter every view that might cast doubt on the ufo interpretation." Well, a curse on me for trying to be actually FACTUAL by noting Marcel's record shows he was a radar intelligence officer or that numerous witnesses (not one) spoke of Brazel in military custody. Please explain how making those CORRECTIONS is "inserting a pro-ufointerpretation" into the article. Another thing I did was delete another very obvious editorial comment of Canada Jack's that had no place in any encyclopedia article, that the second Randle/Schmitt book was totally unreliable as a reference. (I am communicating with Randle right now about this, and he, no doubt is going to have a few choice words to say.) I also notice that both Randle/Schmitt books were deleted from "Further reading" along with the original Berlitz & Moore book. Whether one considers them reliable or not, they are widely acknowledged as being among the major books written on the subject and should be there. But when I tried to reinsert them, guess what?

I feel I have many justifiable grievances here. There is a good deal very wrong and heavily biased with this article as currently written (mainly by Canada Jack, a well-known Net debunker of the Roswell case, under his other alias of "Johnny Cannuck"). Yet I'm not being allowed to make any changes or even complain about the state of the article by posting disputed tags at the top. Canada Jack can freely and disingenuously accuse me of vandalism, bias, and "NPOV", while he editorializes the article at will and deletes any of my material at his personal whim, and yet I am the one getting admonished by the administrator for using the word "censorship" in frustration over what is happening. This is a total perversion of what Misplaced Pages is supposed to be about.

I am going to have a great deal more to say about this article as it currently stands. Dr Fil 17:35, 8 December 2006 (UTC)


Here we go again...

Well, I would say a lot of what Dr Fil says here illustrates why he can't be trusted to make this a NPOV article, which is why I started the rewrite several months ago.
"I have written various published articles on some phases of the story which I have delved into in depth and have been interviewed several times for TV documentaries on the subject, exactly because I am considered one of the experts."
Which, if I understand Misplaced Pages policy, pretty well disqualifies you from taking control of a page as you have attempted to do here, and on the "witness" page as well. If I am not mistaken, a published author on the subject can't be WRITING the page here at Misplaced Pages which discusses that same author's work. Perhaps Dr Fil can do us all a favour here and identify himself so we can be assured that he is not in fact doing this.
"So here we have the situation where I, an actual expert on the subject, am being blockaded from making any contributions, including making simple factual corrections."
In fact, you had inserted a pile of "context" to quotes in an attempt to dismiss the skeptical argument. The structure of the page was to present the "UFO" argument - with what I must say are EXTREMELY extensive witness accounts to buttress that claims - WITHOUT "context" - and then do the same with the skeptical response (which, together, has far less coverage than the "ufo" argument).
The issue of your knowledge of the issue is beside the point, the point is you are an ADVOCATE of one side who clearly seeks to turn the argument one way. The FACT that the ufo accounts are left there without "context" yet you feel this need to supply "context" to the skeptics demonstrates you are utterly incapable of putting aside your bias and fairly allowing the sides to present their case.
Besides, some of your complaints about "facts" are simply wrong:
"it is NOT true... that Marcel is the only known person to have accompanied debris from Roswell to Fort Worth"
Who said it was? OBVIOUSLY he didn't take the material - alone - from Roswell to Ft Worth. Sometimes Dr Fil, in his haste, doesn't read too carefully: "...Jesse Marcel, the only person known to have accompanied the Roswell debris from where it was recovered to Fort Worth..." and later "...Jesse Marcel. He was the only person known to have accompanied the debris from the ranch to Fort Worth..."
"...or that Marcel had no radar experience (one of his official military occupations was radar intelligence officer)."
Again, where is this claimed? What WAS claimed was: "there is no evidence in Jesse Marcel’s military record that he had any experience with the material used in balloon trains." No where is there a statement which says that Marcel was unfamiliar with radar. The crucial point was: Was he familiar with radar reflectors from balloon trains, an unusual piece of equipment if one had never encountered them before. And there is no evidence he in fact was. And that's all that the skeptics - who make the claim - said.
"When I tried to make two of those simple corrections, they got deleted knee-jerk fashion along with everything else I tried to add."
To me, there is only a single "correction" to be made - that a fourth person was photographed with the debris. This is hardly an earth-shattering correction, for sure, but the other "corrections" are a) wrong and b) is an attempt to counter a skeptic's argument which is clearly a POV "correction."
Then we read this:
"Another one of Canada Jack's simple erroneous "facts" is that Sheriff Wilcox confirmed Brazel's mid-June discovery date in United Press stories. Yeah, but what about Associated Press stories where Wilcox contradicted his UP statements by saying Brazel made his find "several days ago"? Wilcox also contradicted himself as to when Brazel came to office (AP: the day before; UP: the day before yesterday). And Wilcox further contradicted Brazel's story by claiming (UP) that Brazel came in reporting a "weather meter", whereas Brazel said he told the Sheriff that maybe he had found a "flying disc" and also stated that what he found definitely wasn't any sort of weather observation device."
"...instead of simply stating that Brazel's stated date of discovery disagreed with the base press release of "sometime last week", he instead editorializes that the press release was probably wrong because it was "fourth hand". Total speculation like that has no place in an encyclopedia article, but CJ obviously added that because he wants the article skewed in that POV direction."
Again, I have to wonder: Did you bother reading what we've written? The controversy with the dates "June 14" and "several days ago" are noted as BOTH are mentioned in contemporary accounts. Because the "several days ago" comment comes from the Roswell base release, it is, at best, a fourth-hand account (Brazel told the sheriff who told Marcel who told Blanchard who dictated it to Huat who told news people, perhaps over the phone, the story). The June 14th date comes from a story which quotes the man who actually first saw the debris. I mention the controversy, but I lead with the June 14th date because it is closer to the source, which most would likely do under this circumstance. I don't see this as "editorialing," just noting which account is closest to the source.
Here is the passage on the page: "This exact date (or "about three weeks" before July 8) is a point of contention, but is repeated in several initial accounts, in particular the stories that quote Brazel and in a telex sent a few hours after the story broke quoting Sheriff George Wilcox (whom Brazel first contacted). The initial report from the Roswell Army Air Field said the find was "sometime last week," but that description may have been a fourth-hand account of what Brazel actually said, and mentions the sheriff as the one who contacted them about the find."
I fail to see how that "editorializes" that the "last week" date is wrong - I simply state what seems closer to the source from the contemporary account. It IS controversial, which is why a) I STATE the controversy and b) justify leaning to the "June 14" date.
The ONLY time this becomes an issue is if one side or another seeks to attach a date for whatever scenario they like. And when it comes to the UFOligists, even THEY can't agree on a date that fits. For the purposes of the page, the specific debate really doesn't swing readers one way or the other - they are aware of the controversy, to see why it is important, one must visit the various advocates detailed accounts of WHY the date is important.
His charge that this is a "POV" article is therefore nonsensical.
"To those familiar with these Roswell debates, the Brazel's mid-June discovery date is considered debunking dogma because it supports their Mogul balloon theory; they definitely do not like having pointed out it conflicts with the early July discovery date from other contemporary accounts."
Simply put, that is false. It really doesn't matter WHEN, if you believe Mogul as an explanation, the debris was first seen. As long as it was AFTER June 4th, it's fine. June 14th, July 2nd, whatever. But, like it or not, Dr Fil, various accounts say "June 14th," and all the section does is recount the story as originally presented in 1947. Most of the accounts are consistent with "June 14th," some say within a few days of July 8th - they are noted. What's your problem?
As for the part about when Brazel came in, THAT discrepancy is noted as well: "On July 7, Brazel saw Sheriff Wilcox and "whispered kinda confidential like" that he may have found a flying disc. Another account quotes Wilcox as saying that Brazel reported the object on July 6."
"Here is another topic Canada Jack definitely does not like being raised: the question of Brazel being in military hands and likely coerced when he made his statements. Over on "Witness Accounts of the Roswell UFO incident", under "Accounts of Intimidation," I tried to insert 14 (!!) different eyewitness accounts of people seeing Brazel surrounded by military in Roswell, being incarcerated at the base, stating he been forced to change his story, complaining bitterly afterwards about his treatment by the military, saying he sworn an oath not to talk about what really happened, etc. Well Canada Jack thinks he owns this page as well and can unilaterally decide what goes in there. I tried to put this material in there four times, and guess what? He deleted it four times. He basically admitted he didn't want the material there because he again thought it was giving the article a "pro-UFO" or "pro-alien" POV (huh?), even though there wasn't a single word in that material to that effect. However, I think he understands full well what conclusion readers might well draw, which is why he doesn't want it in there. But I'm not supposed to use the word "censorship" here, as Inshanee has privately admonished me, even though obvious censorship is exactly what is going on."
Actually, I am glad you raised this, because this illustrates PERFECTLY what I mean when I suggest Dr Fil can't remove his bias from these pages.
When I created the other page, on witness accounts, I included a section on "witness intimidation," and I included half a dozen or so accounts from various witnesses claiming this. Then, Dr Fil came in and added piles more accounts and added a NEW section - for accounts dealing with this particular witness. Why is this so important? Why does Dr Fil INSIST on including not one but 14 accounts about a SINGLE witness? Because he seeks to make a case about OTHER witness statements. He seeks to counter the various OTHER statements from this person, to suggest that anything he said in 1947 had to be taken with a grain of salt.
I REPEATEDLY told him that this was inserting a POV argument into the page. And that the page is simply a collection of unadorned accounts from witnesses who described debris, aliens, coverups and intimidation. He sought to turn this into the case for not only one side of the debate, but a particular viewpoint held by several UFO authors that a) certain witnesses are not to be believed (hence his insistence in inserting "context" to those whose testimony might suggest non-alien explanations) and b) certain witness statements are not to believed owing to coerced testimony (in particular, Brazel's). I told him of this objection and others, and told him that at best AN account from this witness of his intimidation would suffice, in the "witness intimidation" section. It seems this does not sit well as he insists on making a case for his viewpoint.
What is laughable about his cries of "censorship" is that if you look at the page, you will find about 80 per cent of the quotes describing a) aliens b) cover up and c) witness intimidation. NO WHERE do you find stuff like "this was clearly no alien spacecraft" or whatever. But in Dr Fil's mind, I have somehow "censored" his views even though DOZENS of accounts suggesting aliens are there with NO "context" from the skeptical viewpoint!
Which tells me that Dr Fil is not capable of anything close to an NPOV as he seeks to completely slant an article one way even when it already IS largely on that side of the debate (!).
When I discuss the ufo interpretation on the main page, this is what I say: "And further accounts seemed to establish that Mack Brazel had been held in military custody and otherwise intimidated into changing his descriptions of what he saw so as to be consistent with the emerging “cover up” identified by the authors."
Some "censor."
"Now over here on the Roswell UFO incident, the subject is very briefly touched on by Canada Jack, but the testimony is grossly misrepresented (he mentions only one witness, Paul McEvoy, the editor of the Roswell Daily Record), and then the witness' statement is ridiculed using a "citation" from fellow debunker Tim Printy (basically, argument by assertion or authority: it didn't happen because Tim Printy says so)."
Another indication that he seeks this to be not an elucidation of the various sides of this debate, but a forum for him to attack any account which is at odds with his personal belief.
I CLEARLY state the case that he makes - accounts were coerced by intimidation, mentioning the particular person he speaks of by name, suggesting that accounts from him were lies forced out of him by the military, and MOST IMPORTANTLY, identifying the authors who made that claim - and THEN I state the skeptic's view saying that the original accounts suggest he WASN'T coerced and mentioning a skeptic BY NAME who suggests that one witness who said otherwise has an important contradiction.
What Dr Fil doesn't seem to get here is that this is not the place for the debate - it is the place to lay out the cases. OF COURSE Dr Fil doesn't agree with the skeptic's explanation, but HIS explanation is there, as are TONS of witness statements, unencumnered by skeptical "context," AS IT SHOULD BE IF THIS IS TO BE AN NPOV ARTICLE. The same applies to the skeptics! InShane was RIGHT to delete your additions here - you were attempting to debunk one side of the debate on the very sectiion their case is made! THAT'S POV!!!
"Canada Jack ridiculing McEvoy and deliberately omitting even a mention of the other corroborating accounts is more of his blatant editorializing and slanting of the article to his personal POV. (That's why it's downright pathetic when he claims to be writing the article with a NPOV, "cleaning up the mess", and repeatedly attacking me as highly biased and POV. He should look in the mirror.)"
If the above doesn't underline that Dr Fil doesn't get it, nothing does. I made the ufo case on this issue. I made the skeptic's case on this issue. I provided links and sources whereby one can read more on each side. To Dr Fil, that's clearly not good enough. The skeptics have to be countered in their own section, lest any reader think that their argument has any validity. Well, that's not the function here of the page, Dr Fil. The function here is to simply present the cases, unadorned, and let the reader decide. As long as each side is presented fairly, that should suffice. This falls apart when one chooses to remove that objectivity on one side or the other.
So far, I've seen no complaints about me misrepresenting the pro-ufo side, which is good. Because I believe I fairly present their case, and fairly present the sequence of events which led them to their various conclusions. That says to me that a good part of this is fine. But to aloow Dr Fil free reign here - well, by his comments we can see the true agenda here. The skeptic side is wrong in his view and must be SHOWN to be wrong at each opportunity. That is not NPOV.
"Another thing I did was delete another very obvious editorial comment of Canada Jack's that had no place in any encyclopedia article, that the second Randle/Schmitt book was totally unreliable as a reference. (I am communicating with Randle right now about this, and he, no doubt is going to have a few choice words to say.) I also notice that both Randle/Schmitt books were deleted from "Further reading" along with the original Berlitz & Moore book. Whether one considers them reliable or not, they are widely acknowledged as being among the major books written on the subject and should be there. But when I tried to reinsert them, guess what?"
I can't speak to the list of books as I didn't create that, though I do agree that the Randle/Schmitt books should be included in the lists on this page, and I in fact mention their importance: "Dennis’ accounts were featured in Randle and Schmitt’s 1991 “UFO Crash at Roswell,” one of two books they co-authored. This book, along with “The Truth about the UFO Crash at Roswell,” published in 1994, remain highly influential in the UFO community, their interviews and conclusions widely reproduced on websites. "
As for this "totally unreliable" comment supposedly made, here is what I in fact wrote: "Later, discrepancies with certain accounts and problems with research done by Donald Schmitt would cause Kevin Randle to reject much of the evidence from The Truth About the UFO Crash at Roswell, yet many who embrace the UFO explanation still quote many of these accounts."
Nowhere do I say "totally unreliable": I simply state a fact. Randle has repudiated large portions of the very book he wrote. I spell out the problems Randle HIMSELF identified with not only some of the star witnesses from the book, but with his fellow researcher Schmitt. Schmitt did much of the research and Randle publiclly said that Scmitt is a "liar"; He also publiclly doubts Dennis' story which, you have to admit, take up a good portion of the book; and he also now casts serious doubt on Kaufman's credibilty, another main witness in the book. These are no mere quibbles, Dr Fil, they form a chief part of this book and, more to the point, I document the claim made in the statement.

Canada Jack 22:01, 8 December 2006 (UTC)

There is definitely a lot of animosity between us, but this ALSO has everything to do the extreme bias, lack of balance, many mistakes, and overall poor structuring and narrative of the article. (E.g., the reader is just dropped into the Brazel interview, FBI telegram, and base press release with absolutely no idea as to what led up to any of these or how they relate to one another. This is just plain bad history telling. The "Background" section needs to be greatly expanded on and rewritten in order to lead the reader logically into the material that follows.)
Also Misplaced Pages ENCOURAGES articles of highly controversial subjects to have back and forth contrasting discussions and rebuttal arguments so that both sides get presented and arguments get balanced out. But here it is not only discouraged but actually FORBIDDEN. I'm not allowed to add, correct, or delete a single thing, even add disputed banners, contrary to all Misplaced Pages rules. Dr Fil 03:24, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
As I've said before, what's between you two goes deeper than this article, and it needs to be taken to dispute resolution, not here. --InShaneee 15:07, 9 December 2006 (UTC)

Well, it's been extremely frustrating to try to do this with someone who in my view does not operate on good faith. Sure, we take differing viewpoints on this, but I think my approach has been fairly balanced. I have tried to present both sides at face value and without editorializing, which I believe is the only way to go here.

It seems he takes issue with this approach but from what I have seen from the above is really a complaint that boils down to "you aren't allowing me to insert counter arguments to what the skeptics say, you are therefore censoring me."

My suggestion here would be to focus on the case made by the ufo side, and if that is found wanting - perhaps, for example, we could insert one of his quotes on Brazel's abduction there (though I think it more properly should be on the "witness" side) that might lessen the blow.

As you can see from the above, there are arguments and counter arguments to what happened at Roswell. My approach was to basically state the cases without weighing down the pages with a lot of extraneous and side issue debates. So we see, first, what was actually reported in 1947 with asides to the various discrepancies as there wasn't complete consistency with the sequence of events as reported in 1947.

Then, giving a sense of how the ufo researchers came to believe there was far more to the story, starting with Marcel and the early books, moving onto the first alien accounts and the authors in the 1990s, with some more recent stuff. A side page supplied a lot of the accounts from which both sides drew their arguments, but instead of further weighing down THAT page, I thought the best approach was to divide the accounts up by subject matter. Dr Fil doesn't agree, he says that it would be better to do it in terms of a sequence of events, with corroborating statements from some what I would view as peripheral players who nevertheless tended to buttress the accounts of more direct witnesses, even if they didn't actually see the debris or aliens or what have you.

I didn't agree with that approach as I felt it best to mirror the basic structure of this page and I further feel that by in effect recreating the ufo-believers' argument via a sequence of accounts (which is why, in part, I felt a new section on a particular witness's alleged intimidation was not warranted and POV) the purpose of the exercise is defeated if we are left with the argument for aliens as some particular authors believe it is.

The skeptics section gives THEIR counter-argument with a side page on the Air Force reports. On the Air Force page, I explained the basis for their conclusions and note the controversy and some of the arguments against the report.

But that in my view already exists on the main page in the case for the ufo interpretation.

Dr Fil seems quite angry that I noted Randle's repudiation of much of the evidence found in some of the books published, but that alas is a matter of public record.

I think my approach is the best one given the very strong views on both sides. I've at times allowed a bit of bias to slip through, so I have addressed those concerns where I believe they are warranted.

But the critiques above, save for the minor points mentioned, do not carry any weight, in my view.

In my view, the choice is between what I have done, with modifications where needed, or Dr Fil's approach which amounts to a yelling match back and forth between proponents of each side.

Dr Fil should concentrate not on what the skeptics say - since that is THEIR opinion - he should ensure that the case FOR aliens is fairly presented. He doesn't agree with their side, he has counter-arguments. But this is not where they are to be presented. The skeptics have THIER say, just as the ufo believers do.

Canada Jack 00:53, 10 December 2006 (UTC)

I say again, this really should be taken to mediation between you two at this point. --InShaneee 23:42, 10 December 2006 (UTC)


It seems to me that judging by the collaboration going on here the past few months, my approach has been accepted. I'm open to correcting any innacuracies, or adding information to the "alien reports emerge" section if anyone finds that section wanting. And, of course, if someone is to spell out a better way to present the cases NPOV, then I think we are open to suggestions.

Canada Jack 15:01, 11 December 2006 (UTC)

"There is definitely a lot of animosity between us, but this ALSO has everything to do the extreme bias, lack of balance, many mistakes, and overall poor structuring and narrative of the article. (E.g., the reader is just dropped into the Brazel interview, FBI telegram, and base press release with absolutely no idea as to what led up to any of these or how they relate to one another. This is just plain bad history telling. The "Background" section needs to be greatly expanded on and rewritten in order to lead the reader logically into the material that follows.)"
Well, I fail to see the bias here. My approach, I believe, REMOVES the bias by simply presenting the story as it evolved. Sure, the reader is "dropped into" the Brazel interview, as in 1947 that is what we were told. Much later, various sides had strongly differing interpretations of that interview - that Brazel was coerced into saying something different vs. he was talking accurately about what he said.
UFO researchers have created a rather elaborate sequence of events based on various witness accounts which suggest far more to the story than what was presented in 1947. However, skeptics and the Air Force sees this reconstucted sequence of events as a cobbled-together collection of accounts, many of which are not credible or contradictory, many of which have been attached to the Roswell incident to lend the alien cover up scenario credibility. Many of which, in other words, do NOT accurately reflect what happened.
To do as Dr Fil suggests would, without making it clear, add what a lot of ufo researchers BELIEVE is the "true" sequence of events, with possible asides to skeptics. A sequence which in the manner it is presented would not be understood by the casual reader to in fact be a reconstruction based on the presumption that there was a cover-up of an alien recovery. THAT is what existed before, and it was ludicrously one-sided, it was POV. Apparently, Dr Fil believes that was "balanced."
All I have done is taken an NPOV approach, reproducing as best we can the sequence of events as intitially reported. There are discrepancies in the intitial reporting - those are noted. Where is the "bias" there? Then we present the various interpretations, such as the belief that an elaborate cover-up was proceeding, and aliens were being recovered. Without rebuttals. THEN, the skeptical viewpoints. Without rebuttals.
BOTH viewpoints are explored later in the appropriate sections which spell out the various cases. In a case where such strongly held interpretations essentially tell completely different stories, it makes sense to me to present the ORIGINAL story and then the various interpretations, rather than wade into a complicated debate right from the start which in the original form of this page, was extremely confusing to all but the ones who knew the story very well.
The original approach made it incomprehensible to all except those who were already very familiar with the incident. And THAT is not what can we can assume here at wikipedia.
The narrative is NPOV because it HAS to be NPOV for anyone new to this to understand what happened. Presenting the narrative AS IT WAS REPORTED can't be seen as "bias" as long as I underline that that was how the story was presented. The DEBATE started many years later when sides chose to see certain parts as either part of a cover-up of an alien recovery or simply a story of a misidentified balloon train grown fantastic.
Over the past few months, Dr Fil, we've worked on this page in this manner and the consensus here seems to be that this approach is the desired one.
You've identified "errors," but save for saying "three" appeared in the photos instead of "four," the other errors you identified were in fact misreadings on your part.
"Also Misplaced Pages ENCOURAGES articles of highly controversial subjects to have back and forth contrasting discussions and rebuttal arguments so that both sides get presented and arguments get balanced out. But here it is not only discouraged but actually FORBIDDEN. I'm not allowed to add, correct, or delete a single thing, even add disputed banners, contrary to all Misplaced Pages rules."
The approach was to leave those viewpoints to the sections that present the sides of the cases. Your rebuttal approach ignored that structure and was deleted by others. As I have said several times, if you feel your side has not been fairly presented in its section, we are open to discussion about how to alter that.
No one here has a monopoly on the truth. To presume someone DOES is a fatal mistake. All we can do is present the arguments as they stand, no matter how flawed or how many rebuttals you can think of. We could do an entire page, for example, on the issue of Brazel's incarceration. I just don;t see the point in getting mired in such a debate. One side says he was coerced and that coercion was part of a cover up effort, and there are witnesses to that effect. The other side said he wasn't, and there are witnesses to THAT effect. The controversy is mentioned, but to flesh it out into a full-borne debate is a waste of time and space.
Canada Jack 15:29, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
I don't know what all has come between you two, but I can't read the voluminous amounts of text that are being dumped into this page. It looked, on a cursory glance, as if Dr. Fil has brought the debate over the Witness accounts at Roswell article here. Don't do that. This talk page is for discussing this article and this article only. Keep disputes over other articles on their pages. Also, please remember to keep discussions focused on actual article content. It can be tempting to use these pages to debate the rightness or truth of certain theories, but that's not what these pages are for. They're for discussing discrete changes to the article itself, and nothing more. — e. ripley\ 16:41, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
In fact, that's what happened -- Dr Fil reposted an enormous bloc of text that he had originally posted at the fork article. I have removed it. Keep discussions about that article on that article's talk page. It has no place here. — e. ripley\ 17:02, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

I think I've made the case. In fact, I've done so repeatedly, the "case" being the approach to the structure here.

In fairness to Dr Fil, besides his inclusion of all those witness accounts of Brazel's incarceration, his debate DOES reside on this page.

But, as I've pointed out, the structure here stands as this is what the consensus over the past few months seems to be.

Again, I think we are open to suggestions, if Dr Fil has any, to how the ufo argument is presented, if he feels that there are points to be fleshed out or omissions clarified. But I personally don;t feel any need to change the structure as it stands.

Canada Jack 19:28, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

To the extent that discussions are focused on this article, that's fine. I removed the portions that were not. May I ask that you please try to make your comments concise? Misplaced Pages isn't a forum and it's not an email listserv so space is limited. As well, we're all volunteers with finite time. Stay on topic, resist the urge to debate the rightness of some theory or another, and above all be as brief and polite as possible. (This applies equally, I'm responding underneath Jack's text but I direct it to Dr Fil also). It will help if you will curtail using carriage returns quite so much. You'll notice I've typed multiple sentences and haven't used one. Sometimes it makes sense, but for example in your response directly above this one you use one sentence per line, which makes discussions scroll way too quickly (which in turn makes them too disjointed and difficult to digest in this particular medium). — e. ripley\ 22:41, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

Okay, in future, I will be brief, and will lose the carriage returns - I am fairly new here, getting up to speed. There is one thing that I think Dr Fil was right on, and that is the inclusion of the two Schmitt/Randle books. He has the info on the witness page.. I note within this page that one of the authors - Randle - has publicly parted with his co-author over various issues and has also dismissed the credibility of several key witnesses in the books, but as I also say, the books retain enormous influence in the pro-ufo community and are widely cited, therefore they should be included in the "further reading" section. Canada Jack 02:45, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

Thanks Jack, this place has a pretty steep learning curve so don't sweat anything! I didn't mean that message to come out harshly so I hope you didn't take it that way. You're doing great here. — e. ripley\ 20:43, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

Rewrite of UFO Books and Skeptics sections

I've been doing a bit of an expansion of the case for UFOs at Roswell as it evolved via the various books published over the year, including more specific quotes for the cases etc. I feel it needs a bit more detail (not tons), and I think I will rewrite the skeptic section. As it stands, the article is almost there but not quite. Canada Jack 15:48, 12 January 2007 (UTC)

I've just redone the "New witness accounts and Roswell UFO books" section to better expand on the development of the "UFO" story. Accordingly, I've moved some accounts - the Rudiak "photo" account and the General Exon account to "new developments" as they came later. I will follow-up with a redo of the skeptical response section to more closely follow the sequence in the preceding section. Canada Jack 20:45, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

Okay, I've pretty done what I think needs to be done. Hopefully, someone will properly format this for me, assuming this meets with general approval. Canada Jack 19:41, 16 January 2007 (UTC)

Dummies and Mogul?

I watched a program on National Geographic that said Roswell was nothing more than a weather balloon experiment, and the "alien bodies" were just crash test dummies.

But is there a connection between dummies and Mogul, which is seems to be the most popular explanation of the debris? Were dummies on the Mogul aparatus, and what were they for if it was just for listening? Or was the debris more than one experiment that crashed in the same place?

No, no dummies with Mogul. Mogul was assigned to detect possible Soviet atomic blasts and was equipped with microphones. In their Report on the Roswell incident in 1994, the USAF bypassed the alien aspect, but in their publication "Case Closed" in 1997 they deal with it contending much later crashes of devices with dummies had misled people to think they saw alien bodies. The USAF "evidence" is based on the home-made speculation that all the eye witnesses had memory deficiencies (leading to mixing up things or substituting earlier memories by later ones or even invent "memories"), what surely CAN happen once in a while but hardly with ALL witnesses regarding ONE single event (besides, these alleged deficiencies were not at all checked with the involved). -- Bwilcke 15:35, 24 January 2007 (UTC)

Instead of misrepresenting what the Air Force said, why not direct them to the page on the subject? Air Force reports on the Roswell UFO incident has the two reports spelled out without the POV stuff above. I've reverted the original intro which was the result of a lengthy edit process - someone it seems saw fit to simply chuck out that work with a POV intro. The old intro had a link to the Air Force reports page which spelled out what they said. (The link is also elsewhere in the article as it stood) The claim above that the Air Force case is "home-made speculation that all the eye witnesses had memory deficinies" tells me a) the writer here has not read the Air Force report in question and b) hasn't even bothered to read Wiki's page on the same subject.

We all are at perfect liberty to disagree with what person A says or what person B says. We are NOT at liberty to misrepresent what person A or person B said, however, ESPECIALLY when there is a page here at wiki which spells out the case they made.

Canada Jack 00:56, 25 January 2007 (UTC)

Intro rewrite and revert

Bwilcke redid the intro twice and it's been reverted twice, viz:

"Thirty years later, former Roswell AAF intelligence officer Jesse Marcel confessed the crash of a UFO back then. Three UFO researcher teams (Moore/Berlitz, Randle/Schmitt, Friedman/Berliner) confirmed Marcel's testimony on the basis of a great number of witnesses. 1994 the congress had the General Accounting Office (GAO) carry out an archive search for documents possibly related to the incident, whatever it was, with no results except that Roswell AAF documents regarding the period 1947 – 1949 were missing and the obligatory documentation on their deletion not found. The US Air Force at once undertook an own archive search with the result of only one document (teletype) found, and claimed "no indication" of a UFO crash but "most probably" a crash of a weatherballoon train in connection with Project Mogul. 1997 the US Air Force repeated this result in a further publication, adding - especially concerning the "alien" aspect - the memory of the witnesses unreliable, and declared "Case Closed". UFO researcher criticized this as unfounded und incorrect and presented more evidence supporting their case. Some other UFO researchers as well as "skeptics" joined the case of the Air Force and tried to strengthen their stance. There has been a passionate debate ever since about what really happened."

I reverted to the original intro as did InShanee the second time around. I think InShanee and I agree that what was originally there and what we reverted to was the best NPOV intro that we had and seeing that it was the result of a fairly intensive edit process, it should stand. IMHO, there are several problems with the Bwilcke new intro, such as "...Jesse Marcel confessed the crash of a UFO..." which to me is clearly POV and probably not accurate anyway. "Confessed" implies that Marcel revealed the truth that a UFO crashed, a "truth" which is in fact hotly disputed. Further, and I think most of the named pro-ufo authors would agree here, Marcel simply voiced his BELIEF that there had been a cover-up of a UFO, he didn't in fact reveal some secret file that indicated aliens had been recovered. Further, as InShanee indicated in his revert, this information is quite specifically spelled out in the body of the page, the Air Force reports have their own pages which spell ojt their conclusions and the controversies (like the missing documents) which are properly there and not in the intro. Besides, there is a misrepresentation of what the Air Force in fact said in this intro - it was more that witnesses reported what they in fact said WERE dummies but pro-ufo authors had omitted their prosaic descriptions and fixed these often undated occurences with the events as described in July 1947. It didn't simply say the memories were "unreliable."

As indicated in both the original intro and the Bwilcke intro, "there has been a passionate debate ever since," and I and others here have strived these past few months to give a balanced presentation of the facts which, it seems, has largely been embraced with a few notable exceptions (see above). My take on this leans towards the skeptical, but as long as we present the case for and against in as neutral a way as possible - and as long as we accurately portray the sides in a manner THEY present their side, then we are on stable ground. Canada Jack 16:34, 1 February 2007 (UTC)

Wiki is Not a crystal ball

This whole article should go. Its just a list of things people dreamed up out of their own paranoia and lack of education. You ought to be able to accept the idea that Roswell was the result of a rocket flight from White Sands by former Nazi rocket scientists. Their existence in this country was secret. The whole thing flew funny because of ionization during re-entry, and caused von Braun to get together with Hannes Alfven and have him write a textbook about ionization in 1949 - called _Cosmic Electrodynamics_ In the preface Alven says he cant reveal who asked him to do the work.

The secrecy of White Sands led to the first versions of Dyna-Soar not to be understood. Even as late as 1962, no one understood that magnetic fields that were causing the X-15 to roll during flight. Modern Space Shuttles have the same defect - they were designed for hypersonic flight through fluids. The next shuttle ought to be designed for flight through magnetic fields. In the meantime, this wiki article documenting everyones paranoid ideas ought to be deleted. Mr Grant ought to know enough to be able to verify my scientific claims. And the Help files can tell you that Misplaced Pages is not designed for documenting things people imagined or were afraid of because they were uneducated.

Conventional Theories/Skeptics Satellite imagery - Project Corona It seems possible that the Roswell incident of July 1947 might have been a failed attempt to retrieve film from space. Possibly the Corona Project was named for Corona, New Mexico which is the site of the Roswell incident. V-2 engineers at White Sands were working on taking photos from space and had perfected a technique for orienting the camera by 1948. http://www.infoage.org/paperclip.html Remember that the existence of German rocket scientists 100 miles away at White Sands was classified. Five flights in April and May 1947 included experiments in photography, but the next published photo flight was not made until December. It was well known from Eugene Saenger's work that a rotating disk allowed for an even distribution of convective and radiant heat during reentry. What they did not know until around 1949 and the work of Hannes Alfven, was the large amount of re-entry heat due to ionization. The first photographs from space were successfully returned to earth on July 26, 1948. http://www.wsmr.army.mil/pao/FactSheets/V2/v-2.htm

21:44, 8 February 2007 (UTC)

This article is well sourced and relevant for what it is. Your misunderstanding of wikipedia policy is thorough; the interviews and opinions linked to here were not 'imagined'. --InShaneee 21:52, 8 February 2007 (UTC)

The Air Force, in its reports from the 1990s, addressed the specific question of whether the Roswell incident involved misidentifed rocket programs. It found no link between the tests undertaken and the reports received concerning recovered debris and aliens. Canada Jack 22:30, 8 February 2007 (UTC)