Copyright © 1999 Nando
Media
Copyright © 1999 Christian Science Monitor Service
From Time to Time: Nando's in-depth look at the 20th century
By NEIL IRWIN
(August 17, 1999 3:21 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com) - Who's going to expose the massive
government conspiracy to hide the truth about extraterrestrials visiting our
planet? Instead of "The X-Files' " Mulder and Scully, it might have to be the
House and Senate.
At least that's the hope of some UFO activists, who are taking a decidedly
new tack toward bringing out the truth about past sightings and contact with
alien spacecraft.
Some of the more vigilant flying-saucer enthusiasts have formed the
Extraterrestrial Phenomena Political Action Committee (X-PPAC), the nation's
first official UFO lobby.
Giving up on the men in black, UFO activists are taking their case to the men
and women in charcoal gray.
Stephen Bassett, executive director of X-PPAC, is now a registered lobbyist,
roaming the halls of Congress to alert members to the supposed cover-up of UFO
sightings.
"I can assure you there are plenty of people in this town who take this very
seriously," says Bassett of his meetings with public officials.
That is, those willing to brave what Bassett calls the "ridicule curtain,"
the tendency to dismiss his group as kooky.
Bassett believes that alien life has existed on Earth since at least 1947,
and that a group of elites in the nation's military-industrial complex are
keeping it secret.
But with the end of the Cold War, word of the cover-up has started to leak
out, he says. Former officials, aware of what was going on, have started
approaching UFO activists to tell the secrets they have seen - off the record,
of course.
So the truth, as it were, is out there. But how to get it out?
That's where X-PPAC comes in. It wants Congress to hold hearings on the
subject. Bassett is certain that in such a venue, former government officials
would talk.
There may be a problem with this strategy, however. Many congressmen may be
reluctant to hold public hearings on the issue since, according to the shocking
1994 headlines of the Weekly World News, a supermarket tabloid, 12
senators are space aliens.
Of course, if this is true, these influential lawmakers would probably prefer
their true identities not be exposed. The list includes Phil Gramm of Texas,
former astronaut John Glenn of Ohio (now retired from the Senate) and Orrin
Hatch of Utah. Indeed, Hatch, who is running for the White House, would thus be
the first alien president of the United States.
"We were assured he could become president of Mars, but the senator's wife
does not want to travel," deadpans his spokesman, Paul Smith. "So we're putting
our hopes on people voting him in as president of the United States."
Others in Washington take the conspiracy allegations with a bit less levity.
"The belief that the CIA has or continues to participate in a government-wide
conspiracy to cover up or withhold evidence of UFOs is patently absurd," says
agency spokesman Tom Crispell.
Could Crispell himself be part of the conspiracy? "I can assure you that I
have never seen a UFO or alien body anywhere in the world," he adds. A Defense
Department spokeswoman refused to comment on the allegations of a conspiracy at
all.
Bassett himself discounts the hypothesis that members of Congress are in on
the conspiracy, though. "Deep within the bowels of this intelligence complex are
career people who view senators and presidents as mere transients. They keep
them out of the loop if they can."
There may be a reason this sounds so much like "The X-Files." Bassett says
the television show presents an accurate, if overdramatized, picture of the
conspiracy. "I think Chris Carter (the show's producer) has sources on the
inside."
(c) Copyright 1999. The Christian Science Publishing Society