Uproar from October’s “balloon boy” UFO hoax in Colorado might soon land on a new target. Richard and Mayumi Heenes are now expected to plead guilty to charges being filed against them. But their manipulation of the media and false reports to perpetrate a hoax simply mirrors the official policy of the U.S.
However, like a mirror image, their hoax is reversed. Instead of tricking the media and the public into thinking a UFO is a balloon, they tricked them into thinking their son was on a balloon that looked like a UFO. In 1947, the U.S. Army knew that the now famous “UFO” crash at Roswell, N.M. involved an aerial craft not made on Earth.
The first Army press release about the Roswell UFO crash stated that very clearly. But then the Army held a press conference to change their story and deny the craft was extraterrestrial. They showed debris from a weather balloon and lied by saying it was debris from the wreckage of what was wrongly thought to be a craft from outer space.
A lot of people are angry at being tricked into thinking that Falcon, the 6-year old son of Richard and Mayumi Heenes, was in the runaway hot air balloon on October 15. They are also angry that at reports that the publicity stunt cost an estimated $1 million in tax dollars. Many want the Heenes to pay back that expense.
What the media failed to report is that the Heenes’ hoax mirrors the decades long official U.S. policy of perpetrating UFO-related hoaxes against the public at taxpayer expense. But instead of costing taxpayers $1 million, estimates are that the U.S. Government has spent over $1 trillion in conducting the most expensive and elaborate hoax in the history of the world.
In 1952, the CIA formed the Robertson panel to deal with unwanted public interest in UFOs. The result became an official U.S. policy to debunk all credible UFO reports and ridicule and discredit anyone making such reports. Over the years, the policy has been applied not only through the use of extensive ridicule by the mass media, but through threats, harassment, physical assault, and worse. This was done to silence witnesses of credible UFO reports, and to reduce public interest in UFO phenomena. The UFO topic was more classified than even the hydrogen bomb.
That the corporate media would go along with such a campaign of ridicule and debunking is no surprise considering U.S. government control over the media. According former CIA Director, William Colby (1920-1996), “The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media.”
The estimated $1 trillion cost of this extreme secrecy over UFO-related reports and projects might seem unbelievable. How could that much taxpayer money be siphoned off without public knowledge? One clue came from a CBS News interview with Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld January 29, 2002. Rumsfeld stated that, “According to some estimates we cannot track $2.3 trillion in transactions.” CBS News calculated that to be “$8,000 for every man, woman and child in America.” By comparison, the Heenes’ hoax would cost about one third of one penny for every man, woman, and child in America.
What will happen as more Americans find out they have been victims of a massive hoax and fraud by their own government? Will that evoke anything similar to the outrage they feel towards the Heenes? Will the U.S. Government plead guilty to its perpetual and costly hoax against the American public? Or is it “too big” to prosecute?
Perhaps these are the questions talk show hosts should be discussing now that the balloon boy hoax is old news. If the Heenes’ UFO hoax helps expose the costly government hoax that has lasted over 60 years, they could very well end up with a reality TV show after all.
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Comments
Well done Jeff, Love this one. We have been doing our best to expose the people to thruth in hopes to light that fire under their rearends but it still may not work. Before we know it all of our rights will be signed away without our permission and the majority of people will stand in awe and disbelief when they discover what hass happened and yet still do nothing. Its only because people do not know how to do it ....something that is. Where are the teachers who can instruct the rest of us how to "fire" or resign all government leaders and obtain the power to police every agency within? The CIA, FBI, FEMA, all military branches and of course NASA as well. We say it time to band together in such a faschion that is organized, mighty in numbers, powerful in aspects of defence in the form of law before that too is changed behind our back, and do something outside the box. It may get uncomfortable but it needs to be done for the sake of human kind. We the people purchased the truth,its ours
You are claiming that an example of this is the original reports from the Roswell "Case" were reports of aliens.
Well.... lets look at the balloon boy story. The original reports were that the balloon had the boy in it, so does that mean that the initial report was right and the second story was a coverup? Or does that mean that the media does not always get the reports right at the beginning of a story.
Where does Peckman get this stuff?
1) "estimates are that the U.S. Government has spent over $1 trillion in conducting the most expensive and elaborate hoax in the history of the world." I can find no other such estimate online. Is this Peckman's (made up) estimate?
2) There doesn't seem to be a legitmate source for the Colby quote; it gets sent around and around the internet and printed in conspiracy books. Is that Peckman's source get this?
3) BTW, Peckman buys into Stan Romanek's fakery.
Is Jeff Peckman stupid, self-deluding, or just a liar? I can't decide!
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