Secrecy, Science, and Deception From Roswell to Secret Programs (2018 Archives)
Analysis Summary
Summary
The person discussing the Roswell incident believes something significant happened there. They mention that many people, including researchers like Kevin Randall, have debunked claims about the event. The speaker argues that the official explanation of a weather balloon is weak and suggests that there may have been extraterrestrial evidence recovered. They reference Leonard Stringfield, who collected many crash retrieval stories. The speaker feels that Roswell is an important case in the study of UFOs. After discussing this, they express a desire to investigate further and share their findings with others, indicating a strong interest in the topic.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The discussion centers around the Roswell incident and its implications for government secrecy and crash retrievals. The speaker emphasizes the importance of historical events and the potential for hidden funding in UAP programs. Claims about the ATIP program's classification and funding levels are also explored.
The argument for crash retrievals developed during the 1970s, with Leonard Stringfield collecting numerous crash retrieval stories.
Hal Putoff
“I respect Put Off enough to think that he's not lying.”
Jesse Marcel
“He didn't just find a weather balloon.”
Kevin Randall
“He was debunked at least by Kevin Randall.”
Leonard Stringfield
“He was really the key guy.”
Michael Salah
“He's been talking about QAnon quite a bit lately.”
Managed by: U.S. Department of Defense
investigate UAPs
Something extraordinary happened at Roswell that required a great deal of press management and control over the event.
The argument for crash retrievals developed during the 1970s, with Leonard Stringfield collecting numerous crash retrieval stories.
Hal Putoff stated that the ATIP program was too classified for John Alexander to find evidence of it.
The $22 million spent on ATIP from 2007 to 2012 is insufficient and suggests that there may be hidden funding for more significant programs.