This approach then brings up the question, "who are we going to call?" I pose that question to those UFO researchers upon whose shoulders the responsibility ultimately rests. Why "stand ye here gazing" at the government when you are the ones who will have to do this? Gird up your loins now for action and provide the strategy, the manpower, the facilities, and ultimately the phone number to call for this great task at hand.
Probably the greatest good that we might do in the field of UFO investigation is to gather up our abductees who are suffering from their experiences, get them the medical/emotional help they need, and turn them from hapless victims to overcomers in their responses to their captors, not in a physical manner which may be dangerous, but in the expertise to wriggle much needed information out of their captors stealthily. A shift in effort from knocking on government doors could be made to equipping our abductees with whatever they need to be proactive, but abductees seem to have been relegated to the lowest position on the totem pole of importance. Our abductees are on the front lines of contact with these beings. They see them up close and personal. They see the insides of the crafts. They hear things and touch things. UFO observers on the ground just see lights in the sky. What can you learn from just lights? Work with the abductees!
Military training teaches one who is captured to respond with name, rank, and serial number. The task before us might be to formulate the same kind of rote response, but one that will also yield information about these unknown beings. We must grease the wheels of creativity. We must challenge ourselves to regurgitate a similar reply during an alien abduction that would yield the most useful information. Perhaps the answer lies in posing pregnant questions; that is, meaningful questions, that will allow for the gathering of information but will not give away our intentions. This, of course, is reliant upon the opportunity in the abduction and the lucidity of the abductee. Ideally, the abductee needs to be armed with questions which fit the category of "innocent as doves and wise as serpents," which on the surface, appear benign in nature, while at the same time, deemed important enough to the inquirer to warrant an answer.
Coming up with those kind of questions is not an easy task. A hundred direct questions beg to be asked but would not be feasible under such stress. For one thing, aliens are not stupid. It is believed that they can read minds and are much more advanced than us. We seemingly cannot compete against their brain power. Therefore, a question not only has to be so ingrained into the mind of their victims that it becomes automatic, it also has to be one that the abductees can think about without giving away motive. It must be formulated strategically as well to get enough information from the answer to arrive at some conclusions. Simple questions of few words, easily remembered.
We can also realize that one problem with this approach is that the answers received may not be true, but let us not be put off by that. Not many courses of action are available to choose from. The proof in the pudding is in comparison of many answers and not being reliant upon just one.
An example of one innocent question which abductees could always ask is this: What time is it?
This simple question might give us an idea of what aliens consider as time, a very important component in what their civilization is all about or to determine if they are immortal spiritual beings. If their answer is the same as our time, the conclusion may be that they are not interdimensional beings afterall but live within our plane of existence. If it is some other time like the future, we may conclude that they could be time travelers. If this question is asked by many over numerous abductions, then collected and compared, we may take a few baby steps in the right direction.
What questions might you think of to ask? What evidence gathering strategy can you develop? What else might be included in an abductees' "name, rank, and serial number" response to be used again and again over many abductions and then analyzed?
Now, the questions for us to answer are, "how are we going to train abductees" and "to whom do we give information gained?" The first is unanswerable at the present time. This will depend upon the willingness and fortitude of each abductee to become proactive and overcome their fears as well as a central gathering place is needed to work with them confidentially and train them in evidence gathering.
As to who might receive the information, the alienabductee.org site has recently set up a database for this type of information. You can access it yourself and report anything you see or your experiences and remain anonymous if you wish. Analysis of information will be an ongoing comparison and study, and perhaps for now, this could act as a preliminary gathering point in lieu of a physical place. This database is located at: ParaNexus Registry of Anomalous Events.
Like most of you, I, too, sit and watch the UFO documentaries and view sightings on YouTube. I read UFO forums, books, and articles. I have seen mysterious forms in the sky. But time and again, I think to myself, "For God's sakes, people, get yourselves together!" Whether it is a war of stealth, intellect, or opportunity, this looks like war. Yet the cavalry is not coming. Time to circle the wagons ourselves. Our future well-being may depend upon how we approach this today. Who will step up to the plate and swing?
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