Friday, March 12, 2010

Staged Events: Eliciting "Accurate Emotional Response" in Students

Since 9/11, the United Kingdom has been a land where a bizarre blend of an Orwell/Kafka tinged atmosphere of fascist laws, bureaucrats obsessed with  minutia of the mundane, and  overt, heavy handed laws and practices rule. I’ve often commented that what goes on in England in particular is the prototype for what  soon appears over here. Maybe altered slightly to blend in with American culture; ease itself into our lives so we don’t even notice, but, present. Creepy, sucking your soul out of you, keeping you in the glided cage present. The UK is the playground of the industrial military globalists, no doubt about it.

Staged and scary events in schools in England, the United States, and most recently, Scotland, are one of these chillingly bizarre actions perpetuated by whatever forces are behind these post 9/11 games.  Parents are not notified of  these little scenarios, which are enacted in ways that have students believe it’s really happening. Teachers, sometimes with the complicity of local law enforcement, blithely manifest scenes as if they’re actual events. For some interesting reasons and one with no doubt all kinds of hidden motivations, England staged several fake (but said to be real to the students) UFO crashes, complete with missing -- “abducted” -- teachers and dead aliens.(I wrote about the odd crashed UFO scenarios for UFO Digest in August of 2009: My Teacher Was Abducted By Aliens: Preparation for Fake Disclosure? )

The latest of these fake events: a Holocaust themed scenario, at St. Hilary’s Primary in Scotland:
Students were “hysterical” after deputy head teacher Elizabeth McGlynn segregated nine youngsters in Gerry Blair’s P7 class and told them they were being taken away from their families.
The purpose of this was to give students an idea of what victims of the Holocaust went through:
insight into the horrors of the Holocaust as part of a project they are doing about the Second World War.
The teacher, Mrs. McGlyn, told students:
she had a letter from the Scottish Government saying nine children had to be separated from their classmates.
She told the shocked youngsters those who were born in January, February and March had lower IQs than other children, ‘due to lack of sunlight in their mother’s womb’, and that they had to put yellow hats on and be sent to the library.

When one child asked if that meant they might have to go to an orphanage, they were told that might be a possibility. At that point many of the children became very distressed. One boy kicked his chair over, one was angry and demanded to speak to someone in charge but most were crying on a scale ranging from mildly to severely.

The students were then told, after about fifteen minutes, that it was all an exercise and not really happening, but that the role playing would continue.

Now here’s the really interesting thing. When a parent, furious at the school for allowing such a thing, asked why anyone in authority thought this was a good idea, she was told:
they didn't inform the children beforehand because they wanted the children to experience an ‘accurate emotional response’ to this scenario in order for it to be reflected in their story writing.

This was the same reason given in other staged scenarios, that, and to encourage critical thinking. Usually these exercises are embedded in creative writing courses.  Eliciting emotional response from children seems to be the goal. Why? What is the real agenda? Under the guise of fostering creative writing skills or encouraging imaginative thinking,  eliciting intense emotional states from children is the objective.

The school defends the role play, downplaying the impact on students -- and parents:
Schools commonly engage in drama-based exercises which encourage children to use their imagination and act out a character. These role play situations are designed to help children understand diversity and develop empathy for the victims of prejudice and are usually very well received by pupils.
 
The shared facts of these staged events:
  • Parents are not informed of these events or exercises
  • Students are led to think these events are real
  • Sometimes local law enforcement is in on the staged event
  • Frightening and violent themes are chosen: crashed UFOs, dead aliens, missing humans, the threat of being kidnapped, etc.
  • By the authorities own admission, the goal is to have children “to experience an ‘accurate emotional response’  to these events.


What is the hidden goal behind the need to generate intense emotional reactions of fear, hysteria, and anger from children? Who determines what is an “accurate”  reaction?

What happens if a student doesn’t respond “accurately?” 

Notes:
St Hilary's Primary kids traumatized by teachers’ Holocaust game
My Teacher Was Abducted By Aliens: Preparation for Fake Disclosure?
Follow-up: Staged Alien Events and Schools
Night of the Living Jackboots

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Zorgy Winners

I just want to say, even at the late date, congratulations to all who won the Zorgy, and congratulations to the nominees as well! Which, ahem, I was one of, much to my surprise.

I'm glad Tim Binnall won for best paranormal podcast, congratulations to Tim, and Paratopia, Jeremy Vaeni's podcast, came in second which was good to see.  Other categories were harder to decide who to vote for, since there are so many excellent blogs and researchers out there. The Daily Grail also won, and glad to see Lesley's Debris Field came in third! Loren Coleman won for best researcher, and I don't have any problem with that; though my vote went to Redfern, because of the diversity of topics he explores, and his willingness to take a sometimes controversial view of things. (Roswell, cross-over cases, paranormal Bigfoot, etc.)

I was especially glad to see UFO Hunters win; that show seemed to get a lot of unfair negative comments from some inside the UFO circus so glad to see they won.

It's a silly thing and no one wins anything but silly and fun are good things... so thank you to the 9 people who voted for me (hey, that's something!) and again, congratulations.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Follow the Mystic Orb on UFO Mystic . . .

I am so jazzed and honored to announce that I'm now blogging at UFO Mystic, along with two other newer bloggers over there -- Lesley Gunter and Scott Corrales -- and of course, Greg Bishop and Nick Redfern and Craig Woolheater.

My first post over there is on those strange beams of light being reported: Beams of Light.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Pyramid Beam of Light Synchronicity!

The past few days had me working on two articles. One on the strange beams of light beaming down on witnesses, and the other on that, as well as the pryamid-triangle type of balloon like "UFOs" seen in December of last year. The latter article was just published on UFO Digest, the other hasn't yet been published.

From the UFO Digest article: 'New' UFOs: Of Triangles and Beams of Light:
on the recent beams of white light reported by witnesses in Oregon, Wisconsion and elsewhere:

Lately, beams of white and/or blue-ish hues have been beaming down on people, both in heavily populated areas, like West Linn, Oregon, as well as rural areas.
Theses beams of light light up large areas, are disconcertingly bright, and almost seem to go after humans, in the sense they appear right where humans will see them. Whether or not that last part is due to the specifics of the UFO, or coincidence, too early to tell. Me, always leaning on the paranoid suspect side of events like this, considers these weird beams to be intentionally staged “UFO” events. One beam of light contained a humanoid, reptilian type figure! Alien? Always a possibility. But (back to my paranoid suspect nature) a Project Blue Beam, hoaxed by psy-ops MIB types, event. 

Regarding the triangle, or more accurately, pryamid shaped UFOs from late last year:

Another new kind of UFO event were the strange balloon type triangles that appeared in Russia, China, England and Mexico in December of last year. Again, as with the beams of bright white light, these triangles are not the decades old giant black triangles seen by thousands of witnesses (myself included) the world over. These are more pyramid shaped; floating balloon type type objects floating in the skies.
Contrasting the two; beams of light, pryamid-triangle objects:
While the pyramids and beams of light are different in terms of type and behavior, they share the fact they are “new” types of UFO, something not seen before. And given their behavior, they are very likely man made. Purposes for the objects -- beams of light, floating pyramids -- may be very different, but they share things in common. What they share is covert activity over populated areas, performing for humans, and coveting secrecy as to their origin or purpose.
Beams of light, floating triangle-pyramids, both seem to appear in clusters. They’re not isolated events. A bunch of balloon type pyramids, a handful of white beams of light shooting down from the skies. Something, human or not, wants to get our attention.
And now, for a merging and a moment of synchroncity; Strange Planet gives us a report of beams of light shooting down into Mayan pryamids from July of 2009 with Mayan Pyramid Shoots out Beam of Light, in a Thunderstorm, as UFOs Hover All Around!:
Apparently, someone on vacation with their family, the beam shoots through the capstone of the Mayan pyramid, a thunderstorm ensues, and photos are captured of DOZENS of UFOs, on film, and even more on radar! 
There are several images of these beams of light on the Strange Planet blog, take a look and watch for updates, as I'm sure Dennis Whitney at Strange Planet will provide us with as soon as he gets them. 
 

Frank Feschino's Flatwoods Monster on Monster Quest!



Thursday, March 4, 2010

Travis Walton, Colin Andrews at McMinnville UFO Fest

McMinnville, Oregon's annual UFO Fest in May has speakers Travis Walton and Colin Andrews among the presenters:
McMINNVILLE, Ore.—Tuesday, March 2, 2010—The buzz is building as we get closer to the 11th Annual UFO Festival on May 14 and 15, 2010, hosted by McMenamins Hotel Oregon (3130 NE Evans St., [503] 472-8427 or [888] 472-8427). The festival, set in a small town in the middle of Oregon wine country, explores and celebrates the possibilities of life beyond Earth. We will welcome keynote speaker and author James Clarkson, a well-known UFO investigator; U.K. crop circle expert Colin Andrews; and UFO witness and abductee Travis Walton, on whom the book and Hollywood film “Fire in the Sky” was based. Passes are $10 per event, $15 for two events or $25 for all three events; UFO passes are available beginning March 15 at ufofest.com.
We're already booked! See you there...

Inspired Intention: Animal Journal

I don't know why I felt compelled to do this, but I had a strong sense from somewhere in my outstretched mind to begin a journal relating to animals. Noticing them, my responses to them, theirs to mine, and theirs in general whether I have anything to do with it or not. My own animal companions, and others. (Including cryptids, cryptos, and other non-human animals.) After a few days I am amazed at how much animal related interactions and observations, signs and synchronicities, have announced themselves.

Maybe the animal is a focus point to anchor intent and synchronicities, although I'm not sure what the intent is, yet, or what I can learn from this exercise. But it's been poetic in a some ways, relaxing, enjoyable, and interesting. Sometimes like an active meditation.

As I go through this process I'll share some journal entries. Maybe it will evolve, with drawings for example, maybe not. I don't know where it will go but I feel like it is a good choice to follow this "animal message."

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

From 'The Secret Sun': Torchwood's Children of Earth, and More

A fairly new blog (to me) and one of my favorites, is The Secret Sun. I love the newest post up there: Torchwood: (Suffer the) Children of Earth. Torchwood is my favorite TV show of this genre ever, and that includes X-Files, which I thought I'd never say. Of course, it isn't a contest. Secret Sun makes connections; not only with this post on the last Torchwood season, but with all kinds of esoteric items. If you haven't visited The Secret Sun, be sure you do so. It's among  the best esoteric blogs around.

Related posts:
On my blog UFO Mary: Stairway to Sirius: The (Pink) Star of the Sea

New Edition of Vintage Contactee Book: Over the Threshold

Contactee Dana Howard's book Over the Threshold has been reprinted by Tim Beckley's Global Communications. The book includes an introduction by yours truly. It's available at Amazon.com.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Blog: The UFO Chronicles

Just a general comment about The UFO Chronicles -- it's a solid blog, meaning, UFO Chronicles is a blog that consistently gives the rest of us "nuts and bolts" news of UFO sightings, interviews, news updates on same. A simple thing I guess, and maybe obvious, that it's easy to take for granted. Reading blogs like UFO Chronicles confirms that sightings of UFOs are happening every day, and just about everywhere. So thank you to Frank Warren for bringing us stories of UFO reports.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Zorgy Awards

Paul Kimball's blog The Other Side of Truth has his Zorgy Awards up again: Zorgy Awards Categories include Best Paranormal Blog, Best Paranormal News blog, Best Podcasts, etc.

Congratulations to everyone who's nominated! Glad to see Binnall of America coming in strong. And congratulations to Lesley of The Debris Field, for best news blog. To my surprise, this very blog The Orange Orb, is in the Best Paranormal Blog category. I'm seriously quite surprised for a few reasons (but hey, after all, I did come in third one year!) but thanks to those that nominated me. I don't expect to win; there are excellent and polished blogs like UFO Mystic and Cryptomundo, which are deservedly in the lead. Hard choice to make, which one to vote for.

So take a look and cast your vote for your favorites. . .

High Strangeness Bigfoot

I have links and some comments on my Frame 352 blog about the wonderfully intriguing article, with accompanying comments, about "paranormal" Bigfoot on the very excellent Blogsquatcher blog, take a look. At last count there were 45 comments!

Another New Contributor to WOE!

I am very pleased to announce that Interstellar Houswife has joined us at WOE. All our contributors are amazing; such varied perceptions and takes on things, and backgrounds, and it is so wonderful to have these women contributing, and I thank each one of them.

So welcome ISH, and look for posts by other contributors here as well. Also, you can check out everyone's websites and blogs by clicking on their names in the menu on the left.

Welcome, ISH!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Eagle Synchronicity

I had just finished my Trickster's Realm column for BoA today on eagles and UFO events. Part of that column includes this experience I wrote about on Saucer Sightings. Later, Jim, not knowing I had just written the TR piece, says to me: "There's an eagle ..." meaning an eagle on TV. The sound was off and I wasn't looking up; I'm on the laptop. Then I go to the Register Guard newspaper site and find the following disturbing item about horse deaths in Toppenish, Washington:

TOPPENISH, Wash. — Yakama Nation police are investigating the deaths of at least 11 horses near the southern boundary of the tribe’s reservation over the last few months.

Tribal Council Chairman Harry Smiskin told the Yakima Herald-Republic that few details were available, including whether the deaths are related.

Motorists reported seeing the carcasses from Highway 97 in the Satus Pass area, where thousands of horses roam in herds. Len Schulmeister, the owner of Pine Springs Resort, which is 13 miles north of Goldendale on Highway 97, said he had seen eagles eating at the carcasses of three or four horses.

Speculation has focused on whether the horses were killed as bait by eagle hunters.

Although eagle hunting is illegal, selling the feathers can be lucrative. (source: Register-Guard)
Everything about this story is tragic, including the weird reference to eagle feathers.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Anya is a Channel: New Women of Esoterica Contributor

Anya is a channel is our latest writer to join Women of Esoterica, and her first piece is does justice to the "esoteric" in WOE. Antediluvian Dreams and the Collective Unconscious: A very well written essay on the late, great Alexander McQueen, discusses the fashion designer's creativity that found inspiration in the esoteric:
The genius of Mr. McQueen's approach that was so different than his peers was that he frequently mined the subterranean depths of his own dreams and nightmares and came out with something that Jungian psychoanalysts could only refer to as a byproduct of the "anima"-- that of the feminine unconscious of the male, the shadow self, the primitive feminine, the Hindu goddess Kali the Destroyer compassionately rebuilding the lover she has thoughtlessly trampled in her blind dance of ecstasy, the witch, the Cassandra, the reptilian part of our gene code, the canary in a coal mine laying in wait in all of us, waiting to reveal the message.


Wednesday, February 10, 2010

All This Knocking Has Me Wondering... Things To Be Seen?

My previous post had me thinking of attention, which led me to intent, which led me to... all kinds of things, (except getting ready for work, which is what I should be doing!) -- but yesterday, and the past week or so really, I've been thinking about sightings. My own sightings of UFOs, which have been plenty, and some have been dramatic. While I've seen some odd and interesting things in the past few years, nothing I can say that's been ... well.. "big time." I want big time! I know, be careful what you wish for.  More specifically, I've been wondering about the whys of sightings; why have they seemingly diminished? Are "they" done with me? Am I with them? Something else altogether? And so on...

So, in connection with the knocks, and I have no idea why this is pulling me in that direction, the intent is out there: let's see something! It'll be interesting to see what the day holds...

Knockings

Just a no account, very small odd thing that happened yesterday. Started off with my hearing huge, loud thuds, very distinct, against the side of my house. It sounded like someone hitting the side of the house with a board or something. So I go outside, look down the driveway, and see . . . nothing. No one. No person, animal, or anything at all that could have made a sound like that. It wasn't a sound from far off bouncing off the house, --- this was a definite sound of something hitting the house. If it was a person doing it, I would have seen them walk away; simply no way I wouldn't have, given the layout of the place, and so on.

I go into work, just arriving, door of my room is open, and I hear loud knocking from somewhere out in the hall. Lots of activity in the building and that hall, including custodians and maintence workers, but they usually try to not do stuff like that doing school hours, and, again, I would have seen whatever, or whoever, was making the sound. But when I go out into the hall, I don't see anything.

Later that day, I'm outside on the school grounds, and hear a few loud thudding, knocking sounds. Look around, don't see anything that could be the cause of the sound.

I am sure in all three cases, there is an reasonable explanation for the sounds; but it was a bit eerie -- especially the knocks I heard at my house -- and, that this knocking occurred three times on the same day.

Within the framework of mundane occurrances being the cause for the sounds is room room for synchronicity and signals. Something is wanting my attention. Now I have to figure out what!

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Richard Dolan Responds . . .

On Alfred Lehmberg's News to Chew, we find Richard Dolan's response to Michael R. Schuyler's criticisms of Dolan's research. Excellent response from Dolan. Hat tip to Lesley at The Debris Field for link.

On a related side note, Dolan responds to Schuyler's criticism of Linda Moultan Howe, a woman insulted and made fun of by many. All her years of research, her hard work, her contributions, are considered nil by some critics. At the risk of sounding boring and quaint I'll say it -- sometimes I don't wonder if those criticisms are nothing more than sexist comments. I think Howe has been naive at times, and I don't agree with her take on the paranormal perspective of UFO research, and a few other areas of disagreement, (including what I've heard and observed on a personal level) but the point is, this isn't a personality contest. And to dismiss someone with such disdain, who's given the field so damn much, is ignorant. I'll be open and say I don't like Peter Davenport; I don't like him personally (I've had two interactions with him that have just put me off, sister!) and I don't like his politics. In fact, the pompous stuffed shirt makes me laugh. But so what? No one cares, except me. I can attack him, or I can appreciate his decades of hard work -- work that very few else have attempted to do, especially those critics -- and that's what counts, not that he's a verbose bag of wind.

Research in this field is a chimera; it's hard to ever really get at "it" -- all we can do is do our best, and get as close to it as we can, with honesty and integrity.

Many who criticize -- who attack -- don't do much in ways of contributions to understanding the UFO phenomena. And if you believe their line that their contribution is the so-called calling out of others, or "exposing" people, for some imagined greater good of self-imposed UFO Policedom, you'd be mistaken, as they most surely are.