It’s been a busy season. The Mexican Air Force UFO sightings, caught on camera, and the story of Dan Burisch on Coast to Coast AM have captured the attention of UFO researchers and enthusiasts. Were the images captured by a Mexican Air Force camera really extraterrestrial spacecraft encircling the warplane or were they simply another form of swamp gas?
We’ve covered the gamut of the explanations in this issue, including one provocative view that the balls of light are actually manifestations of a deep-blue, experimental neutral-buoyancy aircraft designed for surveillance purposes. Why the lights seemed to surround the Mexican Air Force plane as if they were involved in combat maneuvers is another story.
Then there’s the Dan Burisch story. Follow the posting threads on www.godlikeproductions.com and you will see the history of this story played out over a number of years and sixteen (and counting) volumes of chatter as of our printing deadline. Are the people on this list of such fragile egos that they have to pin their hopes for a greater tomorrow on Dan Burisch, or is there something to this story that the posters on this list have discovered, leaving the rest of ufology in the dust?
We have a number of opinions here, as well. Ron Garner, one of those who helped get the story out into the public, has decided to stick with Burisch’s parents and talk about Black Ops. Bill Hamilton, one of the original researchers who brought Ron and Linda Moulton Howe into the story, says that whatever the veracity of the story might be, it was about to lead him to whomever was orchestrating the story. George Noory and I called for Burisch to take a polygraph test, not because we had an unfailing belief in the reliability of these things, but because we wanted to get Burisch in front of investigators who knew how to ask hard questions and gauge his reactions. We’re still hoping he will step forward.
Then there are the professional reporters who have covered the story: George Knapp, newsman from KLAS-TV in Las Vegas (and long-time reporter of certain UFO-related matters on the side), and Jarred Schenke, a business reporter from Atlanta. Their coverage speaks for itself, and speaks rather convincingly, for my money, because they dug up real facts about Danny Burisch, Debbie Burisch, Marci McDowell (B. J. Wolf), and the people these folks have tangled with.
But, I believe the most astounding piece of information in this issue comes from Paul H. Smith, the Army remote viewer that George Noory and I have been interviewing. In his new book, Reading the Enemy’s Mind, as well as in our conversations, Major Smith alluded to the fact that remote viewers discovered they were able to travel in time as well as in space.
However, in a stunning revelation, Paul Smith describes a remote-viewing session he experienced in which he saw the Iraqi attack on the USS Stark way back in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war. He describes the attack in minute detail, perceiving not only the Iraqi military’s ordering the attack from a headquarters far inland, but the emotional reactions of the crew of the Stark watching the Exocet missile approach over the surface of the water.
Major Smith also was able to view the attack from a Saudi AWACS, whose crew had monitored the entire event. He heard the squeal and screech of metal as the missiles found their target, and the explosion as one of the missiles detonated. It must have been a heart-wrenching experience. However, the really big news about this was not the author’s ability to remote view the event, it was his ability to remote view it 48 hours before it took place. Paul H. Smith remote-viewed into the future to witness an attack that had not yet occurred. And that is the most amazing piece of information in this issue.