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Hollow Fox Abduction - Mar 01

Faker Fox - So, did they or didn't they? Go to the Moon, I mean. The Fox TV network has an undistinguished record in the field of  television documentaries. The network motto could well be "Never Let the Facts Get in the Way of a Good Story" In fact the word documentary is not really accurate in describing the ill-researched, biased, sensationalist drivel that they unashamedly peddle. Earlier instances of such tabloid TV are "Signs from God" and the deplorable "Powers of the Paranormal: Live on Stage!" which incidentally featured, amongst others, the self-publicist, second rate conjurer and cutlery curver Uri Geller, an old favorite of 80. The latest program in this vein aired on February 15th in the US and will doubtless be inflicted on the rest of the world in due course. Any residual goodwill that 80 might have felt towards Fox for "The Simpsons" evaporated with the broadcast of "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?". The hoary old idea that the Apollo Moon landings were faked up in a film studio somewhere has been around for a good few years though why Fox has chosen to revive it now is a puzzle. ( A desire for cheap ratings and contempt for the viewers' intelligence is a strong possibility) The only opposing view was from the late Brian Welch from NASA PAO - and these were short selective quotes from a man who could not have seen the finished program.


OJ on Mars, not! - Fox's farrago is possibly a case of life imitating (poor) art in the form of the 1978 movie Capricorn One. This piece of tosh tells the story of NASA's plot to fake a Mars landing when the real mission proves too technically challenging. Then an intrepid reporter (not from Fox) finds out the cover-up and the murders begin. Featuring actors of the caliber of Telly Savalas and O J Simpson (Simpson's character cuts and runs from the murders - spooky deja vu!) the movie was inexplicably provided with technical advice by NASA itself! What on Mars did they think they were doing? Perhaps the old "all publicity is good publicity" adage held sway at the time. If so times have changed and the agency has issued a rebuttal to Fox citing among other more obvious points the fact of the existence on Earth of what are indisputably 363 kilograms of Moon rocks. It also helps to imagine the field day the Soviets would have had over such a hoax and you can bet they were following and tracking the Apollo missions veerrry closely.


Bad Astronomy Good - The NASA page notwithstanding the best web site that deals with the "hoax that wasn't" is a site that 80 has intended to feature for some time,  Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy. Not only does it comprehensively trash the Fox nonsense but also deals with a range of other topics. Most fun is a review of several "space" movies pointing out where occasionally Hollywood got it right and rather more often, abysmally wrong. This is done in a lighthearted fashion but nevertheless makes the point that authenticity and research can add to and not detract from a good story. Space Cowboys, Armageddon and Contact are featured but not Capricorn One - after all they never went anywhere. Bad Astronomy - highly recommended.


Mars Wreck - Now please indulge 80 a moment while we revisit another daft idea that won't go away - yes it's Face on Mars time again! Well no, not really, this time you will be relieved to know this has nothing to do with Richard Hoagland and his Face nuts. This neatly laid out site looks again at the outcrop of rock at Cydonia Mensae and sees not a face but a crashed spaceship (described by the site's originator as "a somewhat farfetched theory" - somewhat is not the half of it)The author of this site, We Must Go has a neat set of buttons next to the images of Martian landscapes which when pressed superimpose the features and markings (hallucinations?) that he/she apparently sees. 80 must admit that after exhaustive and close examination of the evidence presented here the crashed spaceship theory is at least as likely as a face - but see Aliens about Face. (Navigation of the We Must Go pages is rendered more than a little irritating with pop-ups and nag screens asking if you wish to make it your home page - one "NO" should be sufficient and repeated importuning is hard on this visitor's patience.) Also visited are the "Sculpted Mountains of Phlegra Montes" - again with overlays for those who cannot see the artificial features and in particular a row of monumental sculptures. Viewing these blurred images and the enhancements one word springs into 80's mind - Rorschach.


S is for Skeptic - Which link leads into the next web site The Skeptic's Dictionary - subtitled A Guide for the New Millennium. Described as "over 400 skeptical definitions and essays on occult, paranormal, supernatural and pseudoscientific ideas and practices with references to the best skeptical literature" by the originator Robert Todd Carroll, a Professor of Philosophy at Sacramento City College. This site was looked at before by 80 but it has since grown larger and more comprehensive. Well laid out and searchable it goes beyond the original brief with a Suburban Myth section and Mass Media Bunk so that when your newspaper or TV station (Fox?) serves up something questionable, see if the Skeptic's Dictionary has an entry on the subject. It serves as a good reference source for all manner of beyond the fringe subjects and also has links to a good number of other fascinating web pages. (One of the best of these is Hillhouse Psychic Detective Agency - a vital stop if you are plagued by ghosts and the like. As Hillhouse says "By working with our highly trained, Certified Psychic Technicians (CPTs) you can be sure that your difficulties will be sincerely and discreetly eliminated. Hillhouse also guarantees a 0% Residual Paranormal Aftereffect (RPA). Once we kill a ghost, it stays killed! No other company can make this offer! Remember: If you believe, then we believe!" X-Files look out!


Monstrous Scheme - In passing 80 notes that Nessie is back in the news - or rather yet another hi-tech search for the elusive (read non-existent) beastie. The grandly titled Global Underwater Search Team, GUST, plan to use a high resolution sonar system to scan through the murky peat-laden water - similar searches, albeit with less sophisticated gear, have drawn a blank previously and it is unlikely that this one will be any different. As 80 has remarked before there is simply not enough food in the Loch to sustain a population of large beasts such as Nessie is supposed to be. Much more debatable is the second part of GUST's strategy which is to use a large net with a trapdoor to catch the beast and snag a DNA sample before releasing it again. As wildlife authorities and others have pointed out the most likely result of such a strategy would be drowned otters or seals trapped underwater. The Nessie search is undoubtedly a good plug for the suppliers of the sonar gear etc and also for the Loch Ness tourist industry but if such a project results in one dead otter or seal, as far as 80 is concerned, then that is not a price worth paying.


Implants To Go - 80 has long been interested in the concept of extraterrestrial life and has often lamented the fact that most alien abductees are not exactly planet Earth's finest - now the answer may be at hand - Alien Abductions Incorporated. To quote this fine institution "Thousands of individuals are abducted by extraterrestrial beings each year. Who do the aliens choose, and why haven't they chosen you?" In a technological tour-de-force reminiscent of "Total Recall" AAI can implant an abduction experience into your brain including "one of our fetishist's specials--interspecies breeding, medical experimentation--it's all up to you. Whether you select a solo abduction or one of our special Group Abduction packages (great for corporate retreats, school groups, and theme parties), AAI gives you the best abduction for the lowest price."
Also on offer is the installation of your own front yard crop circle - a unique conversation piece. There is even an online
version of their Abductalizer - "the only machine in existence that is capable of accurately computing an individual's Personal Abduction Analysis Factor (PAAF)." Well, what are you waiting for?


Hollow Halley - Now 80 is the last to claim omniscience but had thought that the idea of the hollow Earth (and Venus and Mercury) started with Captain John Cleves Symmes in 1823 and since had been discredited but a glance at the Hollow Planets web site, the work of one Jan Lamprecht shows how wrong one can be. Lamprecht, an "original thinker" (OT) to use Patrick Moore's kindly term, not only seems to think the so-called terrestrial planets are hollow but also has an eye on the gas giants such as Jupiter as well (the words porcine aviation spring uncharitably to mind). Lamprecht traces the genesis of this idea to none other than Sir Edmund Halley. Lamprecht has obviously done a lot of research on the past history of the hollow Earth idea and fascinating reading it is. Sadly none of this makes any of it true and Lamprecht fails to refute the excellent evidence of the makeup of the Earth's interior gleaned from seismology and plate tectonics. In support of his ideas Lamprecht is happy to cite continental drift (plate tectonics) as a theory at first ridiculed and then accepted with obvious implications for his own theories, yet then goes on to suggest that plate tectonics may after all be an illusion. This seems to indicate a certain inconsistency and a tendency to cherry pick only supportive evidence - something many OTs do. Another hallmark of this mindset is to selectively appeal to religion/mythology (80 makes no great distinction between the two). This usually means an overdependence on Judaeo/Christian bible stories (for most published OTs seem to be heir to the Western tradition). Lamprecht at least includes a reference to Tibetan and Eskimo (sic) legend and even Dungeons and Dragons! (Nessie crops up here as well as it is suggested that the Hollow Earth may be a refuge for such lake monsters and assorted dinosaurs.) Another ransacker of the bible for evidence of his theories was Immanuel Velikovsky, he of the Solar System as a non-Newtonian pool table with comets turning into planets and careering around to fit biblical "events". (In fact Lamprecht's mention of "the work of a Russian scientist who believed that certain short period comets were ejected from Jupiter" would seem to refer to Velikovsky but 80 failed to find his name in the sources quoted. Strangely enough both L Sprague de Camp and Willy Ley are cited elsewhere on these pages which surely would have them spinning in their respective graves!)

  There is a great deal more on this site but some things are surprisingly lacking (did I hear the words rigorous proof?) for 80 is sadly unable to find a reference to Brinsley Le Poer Trench, one time president of Contact International and past vice-president of the British UFO Research Association, (see past View) who, in 1976, produced a book, "Secret of the Ages" linking UFOs with the hollow earth. In case Lamprecht has possibly missed this 80 offers the information to facilitate further research. Trench was also a member of the British House of Lords (or Jurassic Park) and initiated a debate on UFOs.


Miscellaneous Madness - A site worth noting, but possibly not for the sensitive, is Cruel Site of the Day. To 80's hardened sensibilities the sites featured are hardly cruel and some (certainly not all) are hysterically funny - but then humor is a personal thing as is the ability to even detect a joke in the first place. The latter trait is missing from the FBI who actually investigated the palpably fake Bonsai Kitten site which is "dedicated to preserving the long lost art of body modification in housepets". (But see an earlier View- on Cybercats.) Also worth a look and featured on Cruel Site is Fishing for Squirrels - which surely needs no explanation.

For those with time on their hands why not cut along to the Useless Information Page and learn the history of Flubber, Microwave Ovens and 80's old friend Mike the Headless Chicken!

 

Quotes

"The health food industry has successfully lobbied to prevent Codex from setting any standards or guidelines in relation to herbal remedies. Health food enthusiasts therefore have full licence to poison themselves as they see fit." Alan Randell of Codex, the advisory body for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization (quoted in New Scientist no.2281)

"Eat well, stay fit, die anyway." anon.

" There are three kinds of men. The ones that learn by reading. The few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves. "   Will Rogers

 
  

   

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