originally posted by: TheodorePenderhuges
a reply to: Ophiuchus1
Interesting. Here is a Knapp interview of Lear from early 1988, prior to Lazar’s story. He discuss all the different alien species plus MJ-12 and
the rest of the topics that encompass 80s UFO lore. By this time, Lear already has part of the frame work to Lazar’s tale. Here he speaks on Area
51 and a supposed EBE being kept there.
www.mysterywire.com...
First off let me say as I re-read the book in my previous posted link... it’s an interesting read all the way through.... when I first viewed it,
long ago, I didn’t pay much attention to what was written, only flipping through the pictures... but I’m finding out that some of the writings to
go with the pictures are compelling.
Now for The George and Lear show... it is possible that it might have helped to add and or lead an impressionable Bob down the road of UFOology.
Lear has a convincing demeanor.... personally I have my skeptic bias. To say that Roswell was the first UFO crash, if I understood him right, would
be false if you considered the Aurora Texas UFO crash of the late 1800’s as the first reported crash of what, to the people there at the time,
consider the craft unidentified. From the wiki ...”The Aurora, Texas, UFO incident reportedly occurred on April 17, 1897, when, according to locals,
a UFO crashed on a farm near Aurora, Texas. The incident is claimed to have resulted in a fatality of the pilot. The pilot was "not of this world" and
was said to be an alien. The pilot was buried at the Aurora cemetery......”
As for the EBE’s, Lear mentions..... that the EBE’s (1,2,3) have to have there own environment and to his knowledge cannot live for more than 20
minutes in our air. It seems to me that that cannot be the case. Unless a recovery team knows exactly where a craft is going to crash and be there
standing by for the big boom.... logistically there is no way imo, to reach the craft before the occupants die, or injured, or have survived and are
just there in their moment of their predicament. There is just not enough time to get to a crash site and search for injured, and then to put them in
some sort of mobile environmental chamber within 20 minutes. Something is wrong with that statement he made.
What actually perked my ears, was the mentioning of the Rod Serling Documentary where there is a segment of the Holloman AFB about 3 craft coming in,
and one landing and ocuppants coming out to talk to the personnel there.
I had never heard of that documentary. I found the full vid on YouTube bookmarked to view later.
edit on 21-10-2020 by Ophiuchus1 because: (no reason given)