http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/living/people/13067611.htm

Posted on Thu, Nov. 03, 2005

ALIEN ABDUCTION REPORTS ARE RISING — AS SEEN ON TV

By Amy Wilson

Herald-leader Staff Writer


A few quick questions: Have you seen beams of light
come into your room through a window? Have you ever
woken up startled? Do you have chronic sinusitis? Do
you have to sleep against a wall? Ever been afraid of
your closet? Have ringing in your ears? A fear of
doctors? Had the feeling you were going crazy? Are you
aware of the cosmos, interested in ecology, the
environment, vegetarianism?

Did you answer "yes" to one or more?

The good news is, welcome to the club. The bad news
is, according to a study conducted in 2002 by the
Roper Center for Public Opinion, these are a few of 58
positive indicators that you might be one of the 3.7
million Americans who say they have been abducted by
aliens.

Even better news? There's about to be a bunch more of
you.

It seems that you can Google "alien abduction," read
big books, do extensive research and still come up
with one conclusion: The more TV you watch, the more
knowledge you have of the appearance and behavior of
abducting aliens. And the more knowledge you have, the
more likely you are to be abducted.

Or think you've been abducted.

Or are willing to try to convince the rest of us that
you've been abducted, experimented on, had your eyes
pulled out, your private parts probed and your nose
implanted with some kind of thing that only the aliens
can find on careful review.

So with the loyal sci-fi audience success of the new
alien-themed dramas Threshold on CBS and Invasion on
ABC -- last week, they netted 6 million and 3 million
viewers, respectively -- the aliens might be coming
soon to a back road, bedroom or bus station near you.

Ever since 1966, when Betty and Barney Hill first went
public with a tale of aliens sampling their DNA, there
has been a virtual epidemic of alien takings.

The abduction of the Hills made big news at the time.
In 1961, the couple had reported only seeing bright
lights.

But in 1966, when they went to a hypnotist, Betty
revealed her brave endurance of a painful nose probe
and, as if that weren't enough, she gave researchers a
star map she'd glimpsed while aboard the ship.

Barney was a little less specific under hypnosis. So
the practitioners asked him to draw a picture of his
abductors. He did: big bald head, little slanty black
eyes, no mouth, skinny. Today, it's a kind of
prototype of creatures known by alien experts as
"grays."

Thing is, Barney's description was exactly what the
aliens had looked like on an episode of The Outer
Limits. That episode, "The Bellaro Shield," had aired
a little more than a week before Barney drew his
picture.

Many believers

According to the Roper poll -- which, it should be
noted, was conducted for the Sci-Fi Channel --
"two-thirds of Americans say they think there are
other forms of intelligent life in the universe, and
nearly half say they think UFOs have visited the earth
in some form or that aliens have monitored life on
earth. In fact, more than one in three believed that
humans have interacted with extraterrestrial life
forms."

As to alien kidnappings and probings, "one in five
Americans say that abductions have taken place." And
among those who believe in abductions, one-third claim
to have experienced, or know someone who has
experienced, a close encounter.

Elizabeth Loftus, the much-acclaimed psychologist at
the University of California-Irvine who successfully
debunked the theory of repressed memory, said
television "gives visual plausibility to an abduction
explanation" for any number of things -- nightmares,
moles on our skin, loneliness, sexual abnormalities.
People simply want to understand why they are
experiencing some abnormal, frightening or confusing
things.

In the 1980s, those same symptoms were typically
explained away as "suddenly remembered sexual abuse,"
she said. It depended, she said, on which kind of
therapist was consulted.

"If you were steered to a satanic therapist, it was
Satan doing it," she said. "If you went to an
alien-abductionist therapist, it was the aliens. If
you went to a therapist who believed everything
stemmed from forgotten child or sexual abuse, bingo,
that was it."

Loftus, who has served as an expert witness on many
such cases, has proved in the laboratory that such
memories can be implanted. The problem in those cases,
she says, is that there is no evidence that any of
that -- the alien abduction, the sexual abuse, the
satanic visitation -- ever occurred. (No doubt, she
said, tragic and horrible sexual abuse does occur, but
rather than being repressed, it is vividly remembered.
The kind that needs to be "suggested" to a patient is
something else altogether.)

Susan Clancy, a psychologist at Harvard University,
agreed. In her just-published book, Abducted: How
People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens,
Clancy postulates that increased claims of abduction
are "false memories," which are not the same as lies.
They are created explanations, maybe even a part "of a
larger spiritual quest," she said. "They're looking
for answers to something bigger. They are looking for
a meaning they don't get from science."

And where do they get the palette?

In the 1950s and '60s, Clancy said, aliens were
represented in movies as robots or serpents, but the
Outer Limits-Barney Hill drawing won the day. That's
who people see. That's who they expect to see.

"Today," Clancy said, "my 2-year-old, who can't tell
you the difference between a dog and a cat, can pick
out the right alien. TV taught her that."

Eerie coincidences

So where does this leave the famous Stanford, Ky.,
abduction case -- which many believers cite as the one
that can't be explained away -- nearly 30 years after
its original telling?

On Jan. 6, 1976, Mona Stafford, Louise Smith and
Elaine Thomas, three ordinary rural Kentucky women,
reported that they had been driving on U.S. 27, 35
miles from Liberty, their hometown, when their car
came under the control of outside forces, they said. A
glowing laserlike beam sucked them off the road. Then
things kind of went blank.

When the women came to, they said, they found
themselves in the car -- but all were missing about 90
minutes of their memories. They called the police the
next day. Their story was in all the papers.
Polygraphed, they were unshakable.

Coincidentally, The UFO Incident, an NBC-TV movie
starring James Earl Jones as Barney Hill and Estelle
Parsons as Betty, was first shown Oct. 20, 1975, just
10 weeks before the eerie episode on U.S. 27. In fact,
the number of reported UFO abductions after that
television movie aired simply mushroomed.

Also, the National Enquirer tabloid had offered a cash
prize of $100,000 for definitive proof of
extraterrestrial life, but in 1976, the year of the
U.S. 27 incident, the prize was bumped to $1 million.
In the decade before 1975, there had been 50
abduction-type reports -- about five a year. From 1976
to 1978, the rate was about 50 a year.

Still, the Kentucky case remained famous because the
women -- two are now dead and one moved west, where
she could talk about the experience and not be
ridiculed, she said -- stuck to their story. The
academic who hypnotized them and the Lexington police
lieutenant who polygraphed the trio are both dead. The
Mutual UFO Network investigator who interviewed them
is likewise unreachable.

Abduction reports tend to come in waves, almost as if
they are the fashion. Why? Because socially, the
experience has no downside. Unlike people who are
sexually abused or who are victims of satanic rituals,
alien abductees tend to be proud and talkative about
the experiences. It makes them special.

It has done something else, Harvard's Clancy said.
Three good decades of TV and movies have made aliens
less scary than, say, terrorists. So we embrace them,
especially now.

ABC and NBC, the networks behind Invasion and
Threshold, are counting on it.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Have you been abducted?

To view the list of 58 positive indicators for alien
abduction, go to http://groups.msn.com/
ProjectUFO-AbductionSupport
Center/abductionsigns2.msnw. You must register to
access the site, but it's free.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reach Amy Wilson at (859) 231-3305 or 1-800-950-6397,
Ext. 3305, or [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Nephilim's Paranormal Investigations - http://paranorm.cjb.net


                
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