Declassified UFO / UAP Document

Aerospace companies and UFOs 3

📅 1955 📍 Santa Monica, California; Owen Valley, California 📄 blog_post

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AI-Generated Summary

TL;DR

This blog post discusses historical claims that aerospace companies, specifically Douglas Aircraft, conducted internal UFO studies in the 1950s and 1960s. It suggests these studies concluded that UAP utilized multi-dimensional physics and identified specific geographic sites of interest.

This document is a blog post dated January 23, 2010, authored by Pauline Wilson, which explores the historical involvement of aerospace companies in the study of Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP). The author argues that examining the past activities of these companies is valuable for identifying trends and behaviors, suggesting that if a company established a UFO study project once, they are likely to do so again. The post highlights McDonnell Douglas, noting that they conducted a UFO study between 1966 and 1970. Furthermore, the author references Jacques Vallee's 'Forbidden Science Volume 2' to support a claim that a UFO study group existed at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica as early as 1955. According to the account provided, this group included individuals such as Wheaten, Ted Gordon, Klemperer, and Dave Crook. They were tasked by Douglas management with assessing Project Blue Book cases, including photos and films. The group reportedly concluded that the objects involved utilized 'multi-dimensional physics,' a finding they were subsequently instructed to 'forget.' The account also claims that this group identified 2,000 sites in the Owen Valley where objects appeared to enter and exit solid ground. Finally, the author discusses the National Security Agency's (NSA) refusal to release certain documents, suggesting that some references to 'balloons' in SIGINT documents may actually refer to Taiwanese-launched balloons over mainland China rather than UFOs.

Their conclusion, which they were asked to "forget," was that the objects used multi-dimensional physics.

Official Assessment

The author posits that aerospace companies have historically conducted internal UFO studies and that these activities may be recurring. The author cites a claim regarding a 1955 Douglas Aircraft study that concluded UFOs utilized multi-dimensional physics.

Key Persons