callmesnake
Skilled Investigator
I don't buy into conspiracy s#%t. But does anyone think that it leads people down a dark path. Where they can't trust anything that's said to them.
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Yes. Some.I don't buy into conspiracy s#%t. But does anyone think that it leads people down a dark path. Where they can't trust anything that's said to them.
I don't buy into conspiracy s#%t. But does anyone think that it leads people down a dark path. Where they can't trust anything that's said to them.
The thread title is are UFOs a gateway drug and then the post mentions conspiracies. My understanding is that UFOs, originally, in the US, were not folded into the rhetoric of conspiracy the same way they are today. (For that matter, the rhetoric of conspiracy itself has evolved and expanded.) It's an interesting question either way.
Agreed on UFO's as a valid intellectual exercise. The mystery is so unique, with so many different facets to the phenomena that it affords the opportunity to use the imagination and engage in intellectual pursuits from a wide range of perspectives and fields of study. It is extremely flexible this way hence the many comparisons to ghosts, religious experiences, dreams, medical experiments, rites of passage, alternate dimensions, ancient astronauts, mythic teachings and so on. Really, whatever thinking cap you want to put on the UFO lends itself nicely to such investigations and allows for many, many permutations as the history of ufology is filled with such pursuits. This often makes me wonder whether or not the whole ball of wax is simply a symbol for our times, one that communicates not too much differently than our age old beliefs about gods coming down from the skies and our ongoing promethean relationship to technology. Is this the archetypal force that Mulvaney is talking about above?You could also take Jerome Clark's stance. I think it is in one of his appearances in an episode here (and on one of the transcripts on the Paracast+) where he says studying UFOs is a valid intellectual exercise even if you've never seen one. On the other extreme are the folks trying to find out the truth about themselves via regressive hypnosis. Others have had really unusual experiences that freak them out, and still others suffer from one or another kind of mental illness, either short or long term. There is no single gateway and no one dark path.
Yes there are many paths to darkness and personal deconstruction, but I must say the UFO, and encounters with their occupants, lend themselves most nicely to mental unrest. Thinking creatively and curiously about them can be very enjoyable and may not necessarily alter the mind, but taking them into your reality, and making their reality a part of your own frame of reference for how to know the world leads to parts unknown, to undiscovered countries and I question how sane such pursuits are, both for the practitioner and for any followers such thinking may accumulate.