You Think the Turber Material is Loopy? Here's an Example of Loopy from Facebook's UFO Community – UFO Conjectures

Whatever one thinks of Michael Turber’s allegations (and John Greenewald’s prior suggestions) of Air Force drones testing Naval Carrier Strike Groups, the tale Rich Reynolds relates from a Facebook post enshrines “loopiness.” It even begins incomprehensibly with “It was somewhere in the last week of June that a ufo crashed on Coopers ranch on July 2, 1947.” If not a spoof, it bespeaks “research” that involves gathering every sort of information on or just possibly related to a subject, source discrimination be darned, and stitching the whole into a congeries of sentences. Rather in the same editorial vein about people drawn into UFOs, Curt Collins and Claude Falkstrom team up to present UFO Canards Denied Place in Dustbin of History. Tim McMillan covers more on the sorrier side of ufology with Bob Lazar Says the FBI Raided Him to Seize Area 51’s Alien Fuel. The Truth is Weirder. Whatever one thinks of “element 115,” Lazar’s and Jeremy Corbell’s claims, and the law enforcement side, a human being’s untimely and likely criminal death has gotten dragged into the Area 51 whistleblower’s mess. The longtime KLAS-TV Las Vegas and UFO community fixture who first brought Lazar out of the shadows is himself making news, as a Local Television Behemoth Launches George Knapp-Themed UFO News Site. Predictably, this has gotten Jason Colavito up in arms, not because Knapp’s Mystery Wire news service exists, but because it’s backed by a media giant. Skip the comments section. (WM)

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