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Truth embargo : UFOs are suddenly all the talk in Washington

After 75 years of taboo and ridicule, serious people can finally discuss the mysterious flying objects, and even skeptics say that's a good thing.

As UFO buzz enthralls D C , believers and skeptics agree: The truth is out there

As UFO buzz enthralls D.C., believers and skeptics agree: The truth is out there Alex Seitz-Wald © Provided by NBC News WASHINGTON Stephen Bassett and Mick West don’t agree on much. Bassett has devoted much of his adult life to proving UFOs are helmed by aliens, and West has devoted much of his to proving they are not. But they both agree on one thing: It’s good that, after nearly 75 years of taboo and ridicule going back to Roswell, New Mexico, serious people are finally talking seriously about the unidentified flying objects people see in the skies. “If you look at the level of public interest, then I think it becomes important to actually look into these things,” said West, a former video game programmer turned UFO debunker. “Right now, there is a lot of suspicion that the government is hiding evidence of UFOs, which is quite understandable because there s this wall of secrecy. It leads to suspicion and distrust of the government, which, as we�

The Strange Nordic Alien Encounters of a Congresswoman Candidate

The Strange Nordic Alien Encounters of a Congresswoman Candidate
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Doc Talk: Taking trains, dancing through age, visiting Earth (maybe), fighting for justice

Sadly, the Depression-era photos, film clips, and stories in Michael Uys and Lexy Lovell’s “ Riding the Rails” (1998) don’t seem much different from those of today’s victims of a pandemic and a failed economy. Inspired by Thomas Minehan’s 1934 book, “Boy and Girl Tramps of America,” Uys solicited letters from those who had survived that experience. He received over 3,000 replies. He and Lovell narrowed these subjects down to 10 men and women — then in their 70s and 80s — who recall the thrill and misery of jumping freight cars, fleeing the brutal railroad police nicknamed “bulls,” enjoying the mixed hospitality of hobo settlements called “jungles” where girls sold themselves for 50 cents and you might be killed for your shoes, travelling across the country from one harvest to the next, and hitching rides heading nowhere. One poignantly relates the utter loneliness felt when dropped off by a driver on a cold nigh

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