Dec. 27, 2010 - Roswell, NEW MEXICO, U.S - An ''alien'' in a Christmas hat greets visitors at the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell. Many UFO enthusiasts believe an alien an spaceship crash landed on a ranch near Roswell in 1947. The UFO connection draws tourists to the small southern New Mexico town. (Credit Image: © l31/ZUMAPRESS.com/Global Look Press)
The British government did not dare to criticize people who turned to UFOs because they were afraid to turn voters against themselves in this way. Information about this became known thanks to recently declassified documents, The Times reports. The idea that flying saucers may exist in reality gained immense popularity in the late 70s. It came to the point that this issue was discussed at a UN meeting, the newspaper notes.
As it turned out, such an extravagant assumption caused serious discontent among British government officials. A 1979 civil service correspondence indicates that ministers were called upon to launch a public attack on “flying saucer nonsense.” But there were fears that such a frank position could offend voters who believe in alien civilizations.
“There is a temptation to get away from a clear answer about UFOs because of the thought that we may one day come into contact with the inhabitants of distant stars. Nevertheless, nothing indicates that ufology is nothing more than an absurd idea, and there is no evidence of the existence of an alien spaceship”, one of the service notes from 1979 said.
“Given the fact that 1979 was proclaimed the “Year of UFOs”, Her Majesty’s government seems quite appropriate to bring huge common sense to this matter and unconditionally attack ufology,” the authors of the document called. They linked the popularity of the aliens with the success of Stephen Spielberg’s Oscar-winning film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
According to officials, the topic of UFOs could be confusing or even cause concern for “less intelligent” people. Therefore, they called on the current government to take a more clear and uncompromising position on this issue. Nonetheless, Secretary of the Air Force James Wellbeauler believed that public condemnation of UFOs would split society. He called for any public statement to be softened, so as not to “overly humiliate alien believers.”
History, they say, is written by the victors. But what happens when the victors have…
On August 7, 1985, a group of Soviet astronomers made a discovery that would baffle…
In the opening months of 2025, the world stands at a pivotal crossroads, a moment…
Imagine a crisp, moonlit night, the kind where the air is thick with mystery and…
In a stunning turn of events that has captivated both professional astronomers and skywatching enthusiasts,…
A century-old secret may soon see the light of day. Deep within the labyrinthine Apostolic…