by AgentAppleseed » Mon Sep 06, 2010 12:57 am
It would seem I got here late, and certain issues have been cleared up but heres my two cents.
LOL! That`s the spirit Silvertop. Clarke is most definitely a bits and pieces man. . A cut and paste man. A collage artist!
As Sherlock might say-"The game is most definitely afoot", and this latest round began when Nevels came out with his testimony. People are getting nervous, and I for one am delighted!!! By my estimation, Its about time they should be getting nervous. Its about time, they started losing some sleep.
[DC]-"Col Conrad’s story puts a completely different perspective on the case and directly challenges the story of his deputy, Charles Halt."
Clarke begins, as per usual, with a totally sensationalistic comment, designed to throw the reader off kilter while meanwhile allowing Clarke, to quickly move in, and begin pumping air into his new piece, while laying his "golden egg" in the minds of the reader while they recover from the shock. Not until later, upon the completion of the first read through, does the old familiar farting sound begin to reach our ears, of air escaping from out the ass of this latest pumped up, and over inflated attack on the witnesses credulity and the cases validity in general. Minus Conrad`s statement, its all been said before. How many times can Clarke re-arrange and repackage the same piece over and over until he realizes he`s got zippo.
[Ted Conrad]:- “Col Halt can believe as he wishes. I’ve already disputed to some degree what he reported. However, he should be ashamed and embarrassed by his allegation that his country and England both conspired to deceive their citizens over this issue. He knows better.”
Well, if Conrad knows better, maybe he should start doing some talking. If I`m not mistaken, Its long past high time!! And when I say he needs to start doing some talking, I`m not talking about hiding behind David Clarke and having him do it for him either.
[DC]- Col Conrad told me he finds it very difficult to comment “given how huge the story has grown from its humble beginnings to the sensation it has now become”. He adds that he wants to “avoid the appearance of validating any of the stories have sprung up in the years since (1980).”
The statement above is typical of Clarkes tendency to quote selectively while leaving hugely ambiguous gaps in order to keep the reader guessing as to what exactly is meant by the underlined. Note also, that he has quoted twice here. I believe that the first quote is entirely unrelated to the second. Those two quotes were never meant to be joined together in the unholy matrimony that has given birth to the context Clarke has delivered them unto, here. What is meant by "any of the stories". Clarke, like Ridpath before him, is playing with the matches again.
[Ted Conrad]: - Three security SP’s were dispatched to investigate. They returned after more than an hour and went off duty at their shift change early that morning, at around 0700
Now..., I remember..., some time ago, Clarke and Ripath kicked up a huge stink, about how people just couldn`t have been out in the forest for the length of time they were claimed to have been out there. Subsequently I don`t recall Clarke ever having acknowledged the fact he has been proven to be wrong about that either. Anyway, he conveniently sidesteps around the issue here.
[Ted Conrad]: -“Lt Col Halt’s report of more lights both on the ground and in the sky brought quite a few people out of their houses at Woodbridge to see what was there. These people included myself, my wife, Lt Col Sawyer (the Director of Personnel), his wife, and several others listening to my radio and looking for the lights Halt was describing. Despite a sparkling, clear, cloudless, fogless night with a good field of view in all directions, we saw nothing that resembled Lt Col Halt’s descriptions either in the sky or on the ground. This episode ended in the early morning hours of [28 December 1980].
Taken at face value, and in the context Clarke wants us to believe the statement was made, it would be fair to say that what is being suggested here, is that Conrad`s statement contradicts Halts. However, this is yet again another shining example of Clarkes cutting and pasting. A totally ambiguous statement, with no reference to hour of the day or night, which is meant to lead the reader to the conclusion that Conrad is stating that all of the above was happening as Col Halt was having his encounter. There are no details, such as what direction Conrad was facing, where he was looking etc. Was Conrad in a position suitable enough to have allowed him a visual perspective on either Halts position, or that of the object in question? You know....the usual iddy biddy details like those, that Clarke would usually crucify somebody over. Col Conrad needs to come out and speak with the people directly involved! My advice-Unless you hear it from Conrad`s mouth, don`t believe a word of it!!
[Ted Conrad]: -1.At the end of the session, I asked him to draw a picture of the object he had seen, which he did freehand." 2.-"Jim Penniston is the only first-hand observer I was able to interview"
1.-Just goes to show that Penniston has been drawing pictures of the damned thing for years, and Clarke and Ridpath have known it all along!! But for the sake of Jim Pennistons artistic aesthetic, the drawings have always been of a triangular object just like what he describes, both now and then.
2.-Hmmm, that`s interesting, I wonder why? Does Conrad mean the only witness he ever interviewed, or at a particular time?
[Ted Conrad]: -“As mentioned above, we had people in position to validate Halt’s narrative, but none of them could…"
Well now, that`s quite strange considering there seems to be quite a few who can validate Halt`s narrative.
Again, in light of the strange nature of this comment, its more likely, that this quote, has been taken out of context, and Conrad was referring to being unable to validate Halts claims at a particular point in time.
Also, the use of the word narrative is interesting, considering the word narrative is usually used, when referring to something that is written down, ie, a report, or a written story, (narrative being a written description of events in the order they are supposed to have happened).
Now take note of the following:-The previous three paragraphs, are made up of quotations from Conrad. Clarke presents these three paragraphs as though Conrad were describing one long continuous series of events, as they happened, and, in the order they happened. However, in the beginning of the fourth paragraph Conrad uses the word narrative and this gives me a clue that Conrad is referring to a written report. If so, this calls into question the idea that the three previous paragraphs were ever meant to be chained together in one long continuous statement by their original author, and most certainly calls into question, the idea that the quote above was meant to be taken in the same context as the previous paragraphs. This re-arranging of words, paragraphs and whole statements is typical of Clarkes treatment of witness testimony.
[Ted Conrad]: -There were no conspiracies, no secret operation, no missile accident, and no harsh interrogations by OSI [Office of Special Investigations, USAF]. I was in a position to know about the OSI. It was a special organisation with a special mission. They had their own chain of command, but in practice the OSI commander kept me informed of any ongoing investigations they had. Someone reporting unexplained lights would not normally have been subject to OSI attention. They were after serious lawbreakers, including drug traffickers, security risk, and the like.
Interestingly, Conrad seems to deny the incident could have been caused by any secret military activities at all. He seems to be adamant about it too! I don`t buy it! Although I agree that the incident was not a military exercise of some sort I would question any claims made to a certainty from people who were not directly involved at close quarters with the phenomenon itself.
[Ted Conrad]: - They had their own chain of command, but in practice the OSI commander kept me informed of any ongoing investigations they had
This is conjecture on Conrad`s part. Maybe his ego would like him to think he knew about everything that went on. Even "Need to know"? Personally, Id take that with a grain of salt, however, that doesn`t mean I don`t think its a fair statement for Conrad to have made. I don`t dispute anything Conrad says! I dispute that Clarke can be trusted in any way at all, to deliver any of Conrad`s statements in the same context they were intended, based on prior experience.
[DC]-“In the final analysis, the Rendlesham Forest lights remain unexplained. I think they are explainable, but not with the information we have been able to gather…
They certainly wont be explained by David Clarke anyway, not when he continues to intervene in events surrounding the release of information about this event in the most strangest manner, and when he quotes, misquotes, cuts, copies and pastes his way to whatever collage of truth, he.., like Ridpath before him, ...would like to be remembered for!
Question 1-[DC]: Can you confirm Halt's story about the airman interrupting the party saying "It's back"
[Ted Conrad]: The comment "it's back" was relayed to me by Lt. Col. Halt. I don't know who told him that or why. There were no claimed sightings that night. The statement might have been simply an "attention getter".
We all know there were sightings that night. It was Englund who said "Its back" or "The UFO is back" or something to that effect. Of course it would be easier for Clarke, if it were true that Col Halt was lying and nobody made that statement at all. Something which; I hasten to add he cant prove. The words "attention getter" remind me of how Halt described his report to the M.O.D when he explained that the report was intended to try and hook the M.O.D into opening an investigation into the incident.
Question 2-[DC]: Was any of the radio chatter from Halt's team that you overheard recorded?
[Ted Conrad]: None of Lt. Col. Halt's radio comments were recorded to my knowledge. There were recordings made on an audio tape machine that he was carrying at the time.
The other witnesses claim security control recorded the nights proceedings . Cant wait to hear those particular tapes!Conrads response is boilerplate
Question 3-[DC]: Why did it take almost 3 weeks for you to report the incident to the MoD?
[Ted Conrad]: I thought my previous narrative covered the timing of our report fairly well. It took us a few days to sum it all up and get it to Moreland's office. I can't speak for the timing after that.
Clarke implies, as he has done for years, that the incident was dealt with, in a lackadaisical fashion, which to him, suggests the entire matter was treated as a non-issue or a matter of very low priority. By the way, he`d expects you to believe it too! All of the reasons for this have already been explained.
Question 4-[DC]: In your letter you say you think the incident is "explainable"; what explanation do think might apply?
[Ted Conrad]: The search for an explanation could go many places including the perpetration of a clever hoax. Natural phenomenon such as the very clear cold air having a theoretical ability to guide and reflect light across great distances or even the presence of an alien spacecraft. If someone had the time, money and technical resources to determine the exact cause of the reported Rendlesham Forest lights, I think it could be done. I also think the odds are way high against there being an ET spacecraft involved, and almost equally high against it being an intrusion of hostile earthly craft.
While being drunk, blind, and having a hell of an imagination to boot, maybe, just maybe then, I might think very clear cold air and reflected light could look like an alien spacecraft!! Lets have an investigation then, lets open it all up and see what really went on, that`s what everybody wants, isnt it?
Question 5-[DC]: Why do you think the incident has been sensationalised?
[Ted Conrad]: Dr. Clarke, I think you are best qualified to answer this question. There are many reasons for the exponential expansion of UFO stories. All media need news to sell. When news is short, more gets invented. People want to be important to the extent they help make up some news.
Clarke and Ridpath have sensationalized the most flimsiest evidence imaginable, to suit their personal theories!
[DC]: Col Halt is on record (2009) as saying the UFOs were ET craft and the event has been covered up by the US and UK governments etc, what's your comment on that?
Question 6-[Ted Conrad]: Col Halt can believe as he wishes. I've already disputed to some degree what he reported. However, he should be ashamed and embarrassed by his allegation that his Country and England both conspired to deceive their citizens over this issue. He knows better.
I cant wait to hear Conrad justify that statement in his own words, on his own terms, in an arena where there are no agendas. Clarke, running out of questions for which he can gain no satisfactory answers, decides to continue by repeating himself.
Question 7-[DC]: Can you comment on the ground traces and alleged higher radiation readings detected in the forest?
[Ted Conrad]: Sgt. Nevels, the Geiger counter operator, initially reported slightly elevated readings. after his first visit to the location. However on a subsequent verbal report, he gave the radiation levels as equal to the normal background "noise". As a matter of fact any evidence at the alleged landing site (if any) was so unremarkable that some people eventually became unsure as to the exact landing site.
Those pesky verbal reports, you just never can track em down when they are needed.
Question 8-[DC]: Do you recall what Penniston told you and what became of his sketch?
[Ted Conrad]: I do recall Penniston's story and he did leave me with a sketch of an object he claimed to have seen. I left the sketch in my desk drawer and the story was summarized in Halt's letter
You know something? If Id been making as much fuss for all these years as Clarke and Ridpath have, around this particular issue, let alone balance an entire illusion precariously around a half assed claim that Penniston had only started talking about a structured object, after a hypnosis session, only to have my ass torpedoed out of the water, and my entire theory along with it, Id do the decent thing and just admit I was wrong.
Clarke and Conrad then go on to discuss the constabulary coming to the scene, all of which is nothing new, and which to Clarke would seem to back up his claim of nothing having happened because the police were unimpressed by the landing site. Does any of that really matter?. Clarke is going over old ground which doesn`t impress me at this stage of the game.
Constable-Only lights visible in this area was from Orford light house. Search made of area – negative.”
Good enough boys, job well done, must`a been the lighthouse again! Come on back to the station for some coffee and donuts!
None of the above is enough to balance an entire lighthouse theory on. Just because there`s a lighthouse in the area doesn`t mean a lighthouse was responsible for the objects seen. This is the most conceited rubbish ever shat on this entire scenario and my heart goes out to the guys for having to put up with the absolute idiots this case has been mauled by, and who have spouted this kind of rubbish for the last 30 odd!
[DC]- What should we make of these mutual contradictions and inconsistencies? Col Conrad sums it up as follows:
“As we have seen, there were many embellishments to the story during the 1981 and subsequent years. Most of us had to put this aside and move on with our lives, jobs and careers.”
Clarke implies Conrad is accusing Penniston, Burroughs, and Halt, of embellishing their accounts. Let Conrad come out from behind David Clarke, (a man who has proven time and time again, that nothing he says can be trusted as far as presenting fair, unbiased reproductions of third party statements, and a man who has used witnesses to further his own particular agenda) and speak directly to the witnesses themselves, or on face-book, or on this website, where there are NO agendas, and people can speak their minds in an open and honest fashion. After this, I`m sure Conrad will be haunted by the decision he made to allow himself to be interviewed by Clarke for years to come!
[DC]-[/b]"However, his(Conrad`s) clear testimony concerning the events of 27/28 December stand in stark contrast to those of his deputy, Charles Halt. Conrad’s recall of Sgt Penniston’s account of his experience on the “first night” also directly contradicts his subsequent account of having approached and touched a landed object, which he was able to sketch and photograph. In turn Penniston’s account is inconsistent with that of his colleague John Burroughs, who says he only saw lights.
Conrad is perfectly entitled to disagree with Col Halt if he so wishes. However, Clarke would have it, that Conrad disagrees that Penniston got close enough to touch a landed object which he was then able to sketch and photograph. Is this meant to mean it didn`t happen? Or does it mean Conrad says it didn`t happen? Why didn`t Clarke ask Conrad about the Photographs? He dodges this subject skillfully. Why didn`t Clarke ask Conrad about the symbols? Maybe he did, but didn`t like the answer he got. And Ill tell you why: Quite simply, there`s no way on Gods green earth Jim Penniston came up with those symbols himself, on his own, out of his own imagination. Clarke and Ridpath KNOW this, they`ve always had a problem explaining this particular aspect, because they know Penniston, and they know what those symbols are about, and they are stumped!! The only way out is to claim that those symbols appeared after a hypnosis session, as Ridpath has claimed in the past, an origin as he has also attributed to the the drawing of the craft, if I`m not mistaken.
Clarke continues huffing and puffing, and inflating his balloon to a size it was never meant to surpass, with quotes from other people who were far on the periphery, uninvolved, and who all skillfully dodge around the real issues as they did back in 1980, in order to protect themselves from scrutiny by the OSI and any other parties put on their tails, from those higher up the chain of command than themselves.
[b]Lord David Trefgarne-"...it is highly unlikely that any violation of UK airspace would be heralded by such a display of lights. I think it equally unlikely that any reconnaissance or spying activity would be announced in this way. We believe that the fact Col Halt did not report these occurrences to MoD for almost two weeks after the event, together with the low key manner in which he handled the matter are indicative of the degree of importance in defence terms which should be attached to the incident." (DEFE 24/1924/1)
I agree. Military operations would certainly not have been heralded in such an obvious fashion. Perhaps this statement was made in that particular context as it certainly sounds like it was. This misquote would be in keeping with Clarkes track record too.
The reasons for the delay in reporting the incident, have already been established. It is certainly not a smoking gun for the skeptics. All of the witnesses, as verified by Conrad feared for their reputations and their careers, because they themselves, were left with no physical proof of what happened, and because of the very nature of what had occurred. Conrad makes his opinion on this known, but he himself agreed earlier on, in the statement attributed to him, that he too, feared to continue the investigation beyond a certain point saying: -"further investigation would likely gain us nothing but notoriety"
Clarke has absolutely NO excuse to repeat himself over and over the way he does. Let me make it clear that I don`t object to him repeating them, It simply re-enforces what I mean when I ask-Is this the best you can do Mr. Clarke? Of course, its obvious that this is all intended simply to raise old issues, dust them off, and present them as though they were new. Its also aimed at people who aren`t already thoroughly familiar with the event, and is probably enough to put off newcomers who would attempt to delve deeper into the subject. These are issues which have already been addressed and simply cause confusion and doubt in the minds of people interested in the subject, and who are vulnerable to doubt and confusion because of their misperception that this entire subject is all about what to believe and who to believe, instead of how to act.
Conrad makes his opinion on this known, but he himself agreed earlier on, in the statement attributed to him, that he too feared to continue the investigation beyond a certain point saying: -"further investigation would likely gain us nothing but notoriety". . These are issues which have caused confusion and doubt in the minds of people interested in the subject, people who are vulnerable to doubt and confusion because of their indecision.
Clarke has obviously had Conrad`s statement for quite some time now, he`s been keeping it for a rainy day, and unfortunately for him, that rainy day is now upon him. With the latest witness testimony from Monroe Nevels, it is getting harder and harder to maintain the position Clarke and others have enjoyed up until now. I don`t think Clarke fully appreciates the weight of Nevel`s testimony in light of all the facts, and everything we now know. It is my opinion that Clarke has misquoted Conrad wholesale here, as he has done repeatedly in the past with others. He has used what witnesses like John Burroughs have had to say and twisted it, in an attempt to suit it, to his own particular agenda.
Being skeptical is about filtering information. It should be part and parcel of a normal persons psychological make up. When someone feels the need to advertise themselves, and label themselves as being a skeptic, its time to question what it means: "to be a Skeptic". If it means blanket denial, on the basis of information being too hard to believe you`ve got a serious problem. If you know your Skeptics, as I like to think I do, having nurtured a skeptical streak myself, albeit an honest one, for a long period of time, and having studied what the published skeptics have had to say on these matters, over the years, then you, like me, will know by now, that most of them have an agenda, and by that, I mean that, even without claims of ties to the intelligence agencies or other shady organizations, it is apparent that these skeptics have agendas of their own, and those agendas, revolve around the pursuit of certain ideals, and those ideals etc are in my opinion, bizarre in the extreme. On the other hand, the intelligence agencies do not have ideals. Intelligence agencies have a job to do, and goals to accomplish. It is interesting to note that the intelligence agencies, and the skeptics share similar methods to achieve goals and ideals as and when they might relate to each other.
[DC]-"As was the case with the original Roswell incident, there is a great difference between the few certain facts that can be established from contemporary records and the elaborate legend that has grown up around the Rendlesham UFOs. The legend has been nurtured by tabloid headlines and sensational TV documentaries and today is so well known that the Forestry Commission have set up a “UFO trail” in the forest for pilgrims who wish to relive the story in their imagination. As the decades pass attempts to separate fact from fiction become increasingly difficult. All that can be said with certainty is that it is unlikely we will ever know what really happened in Rendlesham forest in December 1980."
The statement above, is all smoke and mirrors. Clarke generalizes wholesale, and does so, for effect. He is as guilty of sensationalizing evidence, as any of the myth making t.v shows he mentions. If the witness testimony is taken on its own, without t.v shows, without the sensationalism of tabloid journalism etc, we are still presented with a sequence of events, which if even half true, are sensational enough in their own right. The witness testimony speaks for itself. Take all the rest away and you`ve still got an event of considerable magnitude. Take out aliens, people from the future, and whatever else you choose too, you`ve still got a large group of people involved in something none of them could understand or relate too, and which made a considerable impression upon each of them.
In closing I just like to say that I agree with everything that has been said about what should happen next. Kudos to Robert Hastings, you said it all mate, the rest of us just mop up whats left, after youve been on a roll my friend!
At no time did I observe anything from the time I arrived at RAF Woodbridge.