Declassified UFO / UAP Document

Jacques Vallee on Christopher 'Kit' Green (II of II) (excerpts from Forbidden Science 4)

📄 Journal entries

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TL;DR

These journal entries by Jacques Vallee document his complex, multi-year relationship with Dr. Christopher 'Kit' Green, a scientist with intelligence community ties. The text highlights the contradictions in Green's public and private stances on UFOs, the role of intelligence-linked figures in shaping the UFO narrative, and Vallee's skepticism toward the 'mental virus' theories promoted by Green.

This document consists of a series of journal entries written by Jacques Vallee between June 1993 and October 1999, detailing his ongoing interactions and observations regarding Dr. Christopher 'Kit' Green. The entries provide a complex, often contradictory portrait of Green, a scientist with deep ties to the intelligence community, including the CIA. Vallee documents Green's shifting perspectives on the UFO phenomenon, noting that while Green initially dismissed UFOs as non-existent—attributing sightings to military operations, environmental agents, or 'contagious' mental illness—he simultaneously maintained high-level contacts with international UFO research projects, such as the French GEPAN and the British Ministry of Defence. Vallee expresses significant skepticism regarding Green's claims, particularly those involving 'The System' and Green's assertion that the UFO phenomenon is a form of 'mental virus' or 'folie à deux' that spreads among the population. The entries also detail the involvement of other figures, such as Ron Pandolfi, Dan T. Smith, and Bob Bigelow, in the broader landscape of UFO research and intelligence-linked activities. Vallee recounts meetings and conversations where rumors were planted, allegedly by the CIA, to manipulate researchers or test their credibility. A recurring theme is the tension between the 'official' narrative provided by intelligence-linked individuals and the 'ground truth' sought by researchers. Vallee describes his own reluctance to be drawn into these circles, noting his decision to decline work with Joe Firmage and his critical stance on the 'psychological paradigm' of dissociation that Green and others promoted to explain abductee experiences. The document concludes with Vallee's observations on Green's move to Singapore for General Motors and his own decision to keep his thoughts to himself, reflecting a deep-seated distrust of the information environment surrounding the UFO topic.

The second scenario is that the core story, the UFO story, is real in what you and I have called the 'coffee cup' sense. But it creates spinoff stories that infect people. In other words, it spreads a mental virus to which people fall victim.

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