Go back to the thread. I gave you plenty of excerpts from Hendry's book. Since you appear to be too lazy to go back and read them, I will produce some of the information for you:
Atmospheric refraction - an illusion of motion can be created by the same process that makes stars appear to flash colors. The different wavelengths are refracted ("bent") at different angles, resulting in a shifting position. This effect is especially pronounced near the horizon. These motions have been described in a variety of ways, but they are usually alwasy confined to the area the full moon occupieds (a diameter of 0.5 deg of arc), although excursions up to 2 deg or more were alleged.
Witnesses have seen stars:
***dart up and down (many cases)
***wiggle from side to side (many cases)
***Zigzag
***execute loops and figure eights (many cases)
***drift "like a pendulum" - cases 450 and 1086
***rise like a "leaf falling up" for two hours -case 329
***ascend and descend in steps (one case)
***meander in square patterns..even an A shape
Fluctuating light or flashing colors have made many witnesses think that the star is rotating. Also, many have equated rapid dimming and brightening of scintillating stars with back-and-forth motion. (Hendry 27)
Additionally, the effects of scintillation played a role in what people perceived as far as shape goes:
Included among these shapes are: discs and discs with domes ("Like two plates put together"-case 332; "elongated, as big as a distant plane"-case 377; "dome on top and bottom" - for one and a half hours in case 332), domes, a "plate with a hole in the center," vertically oriented small triangles, ovals, a football ...even "teacups," "Mexican somberos," and "bananas as large as the moon, shrinking back down to a star." People have seen "spikes," beams," "appendages," and sparkles shooting out in all directions
from bright stars. (Hendry 28)
From the William Viezee's Optical mirage in the Condon study.
When the image is small and bright, as may be the case at night, large fluctuations in brightness and under unusual conditions in color can give an illusion of blinking, flashing, side to side oscillation, or motion toward and away from the observer. The effects associated with scintillation can dominate the visual appearance of any bright point-object in the area between the horizon and approximately 14 degrees above the horizon. (Bantam paperback page 253)
Yeah sure, these are
assertions that scintillation can cause such effects, but I asked you to provide the scientific
evidence (from research papers, articles on the subject, whatever documents you can) that show the physics involved that might CAUSE the effects.
I suppose that because you CANNOT do so, it must mean that there is absolutely NO evidence to support the assertions made by the people in these “UFO studies”. It is that simple Astrophotographer – and I thought YOU as an self proclaimed amateur astronomer would be a
least familiar with such documentation – so why cannot you provide the EVIDENCE that scintillation CAN couse the effects noted.
If you have enough money to invest in a computer, a copy of the book from an online used bookseller is well within your means. Stop exaggerating.
My computer was donated to me – and who are you to make such assertions about people’s financial ability? You have NO idea how many people actually live do you Astrophotographer! You have this unfounded belief that people who suffer financial deprivation must all be inarticulate yokels who don’t have computers, etc… you have NO idea about the human condition at all do you.
Feel free to present your peer-reviewed articles. As I stated, the effects of scintillation give the impression of these things to the observer. It is NOT that the star actually does these things. The observer attributes these variations in brightness/flickering/shifting of colors as motion, splitting apart, shooting out beams of light, etc.
So you say… but it is YOU who makes the claim and it is therefore YOU who needs to provide the “peer-reviewed articles”! Wow, talk about shifting the burden of proof from the claimant…
Simply you cannot provide such evidence and as such I am therefore entitled to reject your claims in this direction.
Completely rejecting known case histories of how people misperceive stars. Once again, you reject your scientific training in favor of what you desire.
You CLAIM that “stars” were the explanation and you BASE that claim on your
alleged scintillation effects – yet you provide NO evidence that such effects ACTUALLY occur in the real world!
Until you answer my straight question, I am not going to play your game. Is the O'hare case your BEST CASE. If so, explain why and then we will go into the details. Until you do, I am not going to play "musical base cases" with you. If you want me to focus on the details and do the research for you, then I want it to be ONE CASE.
So don’t play. I have answered your question MANY times over. Just because you do not like the answer, you are going to pack up your bat and ball and go home?
I actually asked you (if you did not like my answer) to specifically address the points made in my answer to you to show why I should answer differently, in the way you want, etc – but you could not even do THAT much.
I stated:
” As an example I stated (in reference to the Zamora case and you contention of “helicopter”) that for the military to strap a lunar surveyor to a helicopter, then to fly it 100 miles and OUT of the testing range, and INTO a small New Mexico town WAS an utterly implausible scenario. There are many reasons for this – but to think that the military would be so cavalier with multi-million dollar pieces of equipment so as to effectively place it out of immediate testing, observation and recovery range should something go wrong simply beggars belief. There is NO rational reason for them to DO such a thing. But THAT is not the oNLY reason that makes your “helicopter” hypothesis implausible. There is also Zamora’s description of the object, which resembles nothing like a helicopter!
Thus the helicopter hypothesis fails at every level you look at it from. First it is implausible that the military would do such a thing, and second it does not accord with the eyewitness descriptions of what the object looked AND acted like.”
It is far more plausible than an alien spaceship. We know the testing occurred at the time and that such a device existed. Therefore, it is far more plausible than something we do not know exists.
No-one is claiming alien spaceship oh God of the Red Herrings! LOL.
You DO NOT know the test occurred at the time. We have a “scheduled” test for the
morning of the day (which is certainly NOT “at the time”) and you have NO idea if this test even took place!
“Such a device existed”? You mean a helicopter and the lunar surveyor existed. Perhaps you have simply not looked at the comparison between what Zamora saw and a helicopter and lunar surveyor:
… This is what Zamora endorsed as an accurate representation of what he saw.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=364&pictureid=2239[/qimg]
This is a Bell 47G that the UFO debunkers
suppose Zamora actually saw...
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=364&pictureid=2241[/qimg]
...with the Lunar surveyor attached.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=364&pictureid=2240[/qimg]
I ask again: is it
plausible to imagine that Zamora failed to recognise a helicopter? From Quintanilla:
"There is no doubt that Lonnie Zamora saw an object which left quite an impression on him. There is also no question about Zamora"s reliability. He is a serious police officer, a pillar of his church, and a man well versed in recognizing airborne vehicles in his area. He is puzzled by what he saw, and frankly, so are we. This is the best-documented case on record, and still we have been unable, in spite of thorough investigation, to find the vehicle or other stimulus that scared Zamora to the point of panic." (emphasis mine. Rr.) (
http://www.nicap.dabsol.co.uk/zamora4.htm) ...
Re: Betty cash
Then we have to look at other sources for her injuries. As I suggested, a reaction to a chemical of some kind could possibly produce the symptoms.
Then provide the evidence. What chemical? Your solution suffers the same problems as the radiation solution.
It would not be the first time I have seen UFO proponents sit on key evidence and not present it (the witness statements from Rendlesham come to mind)
Sure, there are idiots, egotists, money-grubbers, hoaxers and liars in every field – but if you have evidence that relates to such in the Cash/Landrum case…then please present it, otherwise, your statement of mere unfounded and generalised assertions does not make such statements true!
However, you have yet to present evidence they saw the same helicopters in the same time period. One of your witnesses did not see them at the same time but hours later and just stated seeing helicopters. Just because they saw helicopters does not mean they saw the fleet of helicopters reported by Cash.
I don't recall the military ever stating national security. As for the noise, people usually complain to civilian authorities and not the military. This is especially true when there are no military bases nearby (as in this case). To reach the destination, the helicopters and the UFO would have to navigate near and over some major roadways. Are you implying that these roads were empty of any traffic?
The helicopter evidence is contained in the eyewitness statements. The witnesses saw them. The military denies them. It’s a mystery, but that is not the core of the UFO case. It is the UFO encounter that is the REAL mystery and the evidence of that encounter is in the injuries received by ALL of witnesses in the car at the time.
Your eyewitnesses are hearsay and one of them did not see the same helicopters. Only one saw the UFO and the helicopter witnesses never saw the UFO. If that is your confirmation, you are on some very weak ground. Based on the lack of confirmation of the helicopter fleet by the hundreds (if not thousands) that should have seen it, we have to seriously question the story as told. The medical records are the key. This is why I stated this case is "incomplete" because it relies on the witness story and claims of being injured. There is nothing to back up the claims.
You keep banging on about the helicopters. They are not a particularly important part of the case. You continue to make the assertion that people should have reported the helicopters to the authorities… but why? Do YOU report helicopters every time you see them? Of course you don’t!
The medical records? If you can find them, please pass them on, they would make interesting reading I am sure. That Cash and the others received injuries is NOT in question. It is QUITE obvious they did. Yet the way you tell it, the lack of access to the medical record
means that there were NO injuries. This is bunk! It is a bankrupt assessment from you.
No, I am stating that it is possible she received her illness from something else and not the UFO. How do you know she received them at the same time. Can you quote the doctors directly and what were their names?
LOL. “Something else”?
There are simply to many verifiable references to many public offices (Police, Doctors, Hospitals, Government and private organisations) that when the Air Force conducted its investigation, they would have been quick to point out ANY non-verifiable source. They did not and they have not. We can assume that the sources were verified and the story was substantially accurate and the injuries occurred. The law suit was subsequently unable to hold the government responsible beyond a reasonable doubt – (based no doubt on similar concerns YOU raise about the helicopter evidence) but that merely leaves us with the problem of
explanation! The basic facts are verified and have been verified by others before us. In light of the lack of plausible mundane explanations I merely assert “Dangerous UFO”.
Cash saw something she did not understand and got sick for various reasons. Perhaps she saw a single helicopter with a spotlight. Perhaps she walked into an area that had been chemical treated (pesticide or something similar) while viewing the helicopter. It is not the answer but it is a possible one. The mystery will never be solved but it is not evidence for anything exotic or unknown to science.
“Various reasons” (oh Master of the Red Herring)? But now you claim there WERE helicopters in the area… but I thought your claim was that people should have reported those and given that they did not, then helicopters were not there… yet you now WANT to claim “helicopters”…? the word begins with “h”…
…and “helicopter”… is not diamond shaped, spewing heat and flame from underneath…
Back to Zamora:
The suggestion is that it might have looked like a helicopter and not that it WAS a helicopter. IF it was not anything like a helicopter, why would he use that phrase? Why not state simply, "It WASN'T a helicopter". Grinder even mentioned that there was helicopter activity in the area. We can NOT draw a conclusion that the helicopter activity was related to white sands and the Surveyor tests but the statement about activity does not rule out the possibility that one of those helicopters was the Surveyor test program chopper.
Again you simply have no idea of how common people use common turns of phrase. Obviously you have never used the phrase yourself (or you would have admitted it).
“Funny looking helicopter If THAT is what it was”! Meaning of course that what was observed did NOT look like a helicopter!
We have failed to debunk any of them is YOUR OPINION, which is biased. I think the consensus in this forum is that there are potential explanations for all of them and that you have been presenting your cases in a manner that shows sloppy research and a desire to only look at one solution. As a result, you flippantly reject anything that suggests an alternate solution. The fact that you have been all over the place in your presentation and really have been unwilliing to give us ONE GOOD CASE, indicates your "evidence" is less than convincing.
But none of your “potential” mundane explanations are
plausible! You continue to make unfounded, generalised assertions based on your beliefs, yet provide no evidence to support such assertions. You merely ASSERT that the explanation was “X” (mundane object) – but never produce evidence that such an explanation is even
plausible. I have been giving you MANY “good” cases. Your unfounded assertions go
nowhere near explaining the cases.
So, this IS THE BEST CASE you can present? Because if it is, we can begin. However, until you can state it is the BEST cASE, I am not going to waste my time on you jumping around because it is a game of musical cases. We hop from one to the other and get absolutely no place because you are unwilling to consider other possibilities. BTW, using various UFO organizations and websites for your source material demonstrates you are not willing to look at anything beyond what they tell you. Have you done ANY research beyond what they feed you? Seems like a blind approach to the subject. More like a dog following its master down a single path. What a wonderful scientific approach.
A mass of unfounded, generalised assertion does NOT make a good case Astrophotographer and your merely repeating them over and over again does NOT make them true.
If you refuse to discuss the O’Hare case, then that is your prerogative.