Dr Garry Nolan on Materials Recovered from UFOs

in #ufo10 months ago

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The above image was made with stable diffusion using the prompt 'ufo crashing in a field.'

There's been a new UFO disclosure development worth mentioning. Dr Garry Nolan recently went on camera to assert that UFOs are real and have been visiting Earth for a long time. Nolan said he doesn't think there are biological extraterrestrials here. Instead, he suggests that the phenomena we're seeing is probably the ET equivalent of unmanned drones and robots.

One area where Nolan expressed unshakable certainty involved recovered materials from downed UFOs. He said that our government and big defense firms have long possessed such materials, and that a major effort to study them was underway. Nolan claimed to know people involved in this research, and to have almost been given access to them through one of his companies at one point. This isn't exactly a new revelation, but it does add weight to the mythology around materials recovered from downed UFOs.

Nolan has a long history working in the gray area where intelligence and defense meet. He's also no stranger to the spotlight. At one point, he analyzed the brain scans of 100 people who had been harmed by UFO encounters. Here's some of what a New York Post article said about that:

Dr. Garry Nolan, a Professor of Pathology at Stanford University who has published more than 300 research articles and holds 40 US patents, has spent the past decade analyzing materials from alleged Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon (UAP). ... His involvement with UAP began after he was asked to use his "blood analysis instrumentation" to help with cases of pilots who were close to alleged UAPs and "horrible" brain damage. ... Ultimately, his team learned the people, who they originally thought were damaged, had an "over-connection of neurons between the head of the caudate and the putamen." The number of people that had this "over-connection" led to the open question: "Did coming in contact with whatever it was cause it or not?" Nolan said that approximately a quarter of the MRI patients, who claimed they had an encounter, died from their injuries. And the majority were found to have symptoms identical to Havana syndrome. But some people who had seen UAPs didn’t have Havana syndrome, and instead, [displayed] a wide range of symptoms.

Limited hangout

Personally, I feel like Nolan's latest interview is part of a larger limited hangout that began a few years ago. I think they're sharing minor details while keeping the true scope and scale of the phenomenon hidden. The broader narrative emerging from this limited hangout treats UFOs as a threat, though Nolan pushed back against this threat narrative a little in the interview.

One area where I agree with Nolan involves the impact of UFOs on culture. Nolan implied that the origins of major religions were all wrapped up in UFO experiences, which is an idea that I find silly. But the related idea that UFO experiences have shaped culture in more diffuse ways makes perfect sense. Just knowing that reality is far bigger than we can make sense of, or far deeper, is powerful.

There's no way to know what the government or defense contractors really know about UFOs. Individual experiences of the phenomenon, on the other hand, seem to be commonplace. Thousands and maybe millions of people have had encounters that they can't explain. In rare cases, these encounters have physically harmed the brains of experiencers. But the vast majority of the time, the experiences people have of UFOs are merely anomalous, and anomalous experiences often seed creativity.

Last fall, sitting around a fire, a family member told us about a UFO she'd seen in the rural Midwest in the 1990s. Until that point, she'd never told anyone else about her experience. Whether the UFO disclosure happening now is a limited hangout or not, it serves to normalize the whole conversation. So much so that respectable people like this relative now feel emboldened to begin telling their stories.


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I've seen them and I have witnesses to me seeing them.

Nice. Anything more you want to share about what you saw?

I'm on a road facing east. Trees and cabins to my right, an open park/field to my left. In front of me is more of the road which eventually ends at another road and beyond that is wilderness consisting of mostly grass and marshland, and a few tree patches but nothing dense. It's dark aside from a couple streetlights. One streetlight above me, one more down the road in front of me.

One rather large orange light appears in the distance in front of me. Like a glowing ball but it's not lighting up the area around it or under it.

It came from the south which is the area with limited visibility, traveling north, moving slow. It would have been above the wilderness area flying maybe three times higher than the height of the trees, not high at all, and not far from where the road ends. Then it stops in line with the road I'm on. Just stays there. I'd guess 100 to 200 meters away.

Then one by one, three more appear. Same flight pattern. Identical elevation, speed, all of it. Identical color, identical size. Equal distance apart as well. They all stop in almost the same spot.

The first one starts heading east. The other three followed. Single file just like before. Moving slow for quite awhile until I couldn't see them anymore. Didn't vanish. Just far away.

  • quick edit to add I was on foot walking with my kids, and there was no sound.
  • I'm off with the distance. Just measured on google maps. They were about 500 meters away.

Good stuff! With everything you're saying here, it's making me want to question everything more and stay a bit humble about what I claim to be true when it comes to UFOs. You're so right that these anomalous UFO experiences often seed creativity, which can make it easier to manipulate us when the rollout of information by covert government and military entities is intentionally designed to control the narrative and shape public debate. Yet I think the movie/tv industry should really hop on the UFO stuff with more positive storytelling. What seems important is that we cultivate a collective open, curious mind to UFOs rather than fear, propaganda, and violence.

For sure. Hollywood's portrayal of UFOs is too negative and not all that creative.

The collective cultivation of an open and curious mind would indeed be better: )