Widening the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence

The Allen Telescope Array (Courtesy Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer, SETI Institute)
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) has been dominated for its first half century by a hunt for unusual radio signals. But as he prepares for the publication of his new book The Eerie Silence: Are We Alone?, Paul Davies tells Physics World readers why bold new innovations are required if we are ever to hear from our cosmic neighbours.
Writing exclusively in March’s Physics World, Davies, director of BEYOND: Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science at Arizona State University in the US, explains why the search for radio signals is limited and how we might progress.
As Davies writes, “speculation about SETI is bedevilled by the trap of anthropocentrism – a tendency to use 21st-century human civilisation as a model for what an extraterrestrial civilisation would be like… After 50 years of traditional SETI, the time has come to widen the search from radio signals.”
Questioning the idea of an alien civilisation beaming radio signals towards Earth, Davies explains that even if the aliens were, say, 500 light years away (close by SETI standards), the aliens would be communicating with Earth in 1510 – long before we were equipped to pick up radio signals. (more…)
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The Future of Energy: An Emerging Science by Dr. Thomas Valone
A new 220 page softcover book discusses the latest emerging energy technologies and mankind’s history of energy and its future trends. Includes an examination of the sociopolitical aspects of man’s use of energy.
In a world of uncertainty about the future, The Future of Energy: An Emerging Science by Thomas Valone offers “…hope for solving the world’s looming energy shortage,” according to Science magazine, since it considers things we have barely imagined in search of new carbon-free technologies.
Containing a myriad of new energy technologies assembled into archetypal categories, a sociological perspective emerges along with the science. Well funded, emerging energy sources such as dense plasma focus fusion, powdered metal-burning engines, wireless transmission of electricity, space-based solar power, piezoelectric highway electricity generators and zero point energy are given simple and short summaries.
Recent Conferences on Future Energy sponsored by the author’s institute, offering the best examples of emerging future energy sources, are also listed and described.
“[I]t would be foolhardy not to assess a broad spectrum of advanced energy sources, converters, and enabling technologies.” - Martin Hoffert, et al., Science, Vol. 300, 25 April 2003, p. 581 (more…)
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Can a Plant Be Altruistic?
Ability of jewelweed to recognize ‘relatives’ from ’strangers’ helps shift resources for growth.
The concept of altruism has long been debated in philosophical circles, and more recently, evolutionary biologists have joined the debate. From the perspective of natural selection, altruism may have evolved because any action that improves the likelihood of a relative’s survival and reproduction increases the chance of an individual’s DNA being passed on. Social behavior, kin recognition, and altruism are well known in the animal kingdom; however, although plants have the ability to sense and respond to other plants, their ability to recognize kin and act altruistically has been the subject of few studies.
In a paper published in the November issue of the American Journal of Botany , Ph.D. candidate Guillermo Murphy and Dr. Susan Dudley explore kin recognition in Impatiens pallida, commonly known as yellow jewelweed. Yellow jewelweed individuals are often found growing in close proximity to related individuals and are known to respond strongly to aboveground competition, making this species a likely candidate for kin recognition. (more…)
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Communicating Person to Person Through the Power of Thought Alone

Dr. Chris James demonstrating brain to brain communication using BCI to transmit thoughts, translated as a series of binary digits, over the internet to another person whose computer receives the digits. (University of Southampton)
New research from the University of Southampton has demonstrated that it is possible for communication from person to person through the power of thought alone.
Brain-Computer Interfacing (BCI) can be used for capturing brain signals and translating them into commands that allow humans to control (just by thinking) devices such as computers, robots, rehabilitation technology and virtual reality environments.
This experiment goes a step further and was conducted by Dr Christopher James from the University’s Institute of Sound and Vibration Research. The aim was to expand the current limits of this technology and show that brain-to-brain (B2B) communication is possible. (more…)
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Physiological Markers for the Near Death Experience?
Critical Care doctors at The George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates studied the brain waves of seven dying patients. Each patient had normal brain activity in the moments before they were removed from life support with critical illnesses such as multi-organ failure, metastatic cancer or cardiac arrest. Each subsequently experienced a sudden electrical ‘alertness’ or spike in brain waves in the moments before they died. The spikes came in the same moments just before each patient’s death. They rose to comparable levels and were consistent in duration.
What does this suggest about the workings of our brains as we die? The researchers offer an intriguing theory: could this be physiological evidence of the often reported Out Of Body or Near Death Experience – a cascade of vivid images or memories as patients slipped from consciousness. (more…)
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Electromagnet Flux Energy Research

Dr. James Schwartz lights up three 800-Watt bulbs with his solid state aluminum-bismuth panel system.
As always, PESWiki is a great source for finding some of the latest “free energy” devices being promoted by inventors around the world (many of whom turn out to be hoaxes, something that PES and Alan Sterling work hard to bring to light.)
Here’s the latest unverified report:
Inventor, James B. Schwartz of the Philippines, has come up with a device that allegedly puts out six kilowatts of electricity from the surroundings, using a solid state arrangement in a panel made from “left-handed material” — Aluminum and Bismuth interwoven with coils — tying into the Earth’s frequencies.
He’s apparently presently in process of testing and refining the design. (Video follows… (more…)
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More Real-Life UK UFO X-Files Released

Nick Pope formerly ran the British Government's UFO Project and is now recognised as one of the world's leading experts on the unexplained. See his web site at nickpope.net for more information.
Nick Pope notes: “The latest batch of MoD UFO files has been released today (August 17) at the National Archives. There are 14 files, covering the period 1981 - 1996 and collectively, there are several thousand pages of documentation. I welcome the release of these real-life X-Files. This is a real blast from the past for me as I led the investigations into many of these cases that have now been declassified. Most sightings had conventional explanations but some were a complete mystery. There are cases where UFOs flew over RAF bases and instances where jets were scrambled to try and intercept a UFO being tracked on radar. There were also some near-misses with commercial aircraft. Whatever you think about UFOs, these sorts of cases show that there are serious defense, national security and air safety issues involved. The files also contain reports of crop circles and alien abductions.”
The official UK National Archives news release follows:
UFO files: attempted abductions and scrambled fighter jets
It can be nice to feel needed - but two men returning home from an evening out in Staffordshire were less than happy when a lemon-headed alien supposedly appeared beneath a hovering UFO and wanted to take them away.

Sketch of a UFO made by a witness. Catalogue reference DEFE 24/1963 p53
Dashing to their local police station, the terrified men filed a report which ended up with the Ministry of Defence. It can now be found among the many mysterious incidents featured in official UFO files released today.
The files are available to download for free for one month from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos, where you can also find a wealth of information on the files, and a videocast by UFO expert Dr David Clarke.
The release is part of a three-year project by the Ministry of Defence and The National Archives to open up these records to a worldwide audience. This fourth instalment consists of 14 files of sightings, letters and Parliamentary Questions spanning from 1981 to 1996. (more…)
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FalconView Goes Open Source for Corporate, Environmental, Government and Other Users

The FalconView development team from the Georgia Tech Research Institute displays the new open-source version of FalconView software. (Georgia Tech photo: Gary Meek)
The Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) has released an open-source version of its popular FalconViewTM software. The program displays topographical maps, aeronautical charts, satellite images and other maps, along with overlay tools that can be displayed on any map background. The new open-source version of FalconView was described during a presentation on August 12 at the Military Open Source Software conference in Atlanta.
The U.S. Department of Defense has used the FalconView software program since the 1990s to analyze and display geographical and other data crucial to mission planners. The program’s ease of use, open architecture and interoperability all contribute to its popularity. There were an estimated 45,000 users before the open-source version was released. (more…)
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Kapanadze’s Third-Party Testing of Their 100 kW Free Energy Device

100 kw "free energy" generator by Kapanadze being low load test by a third party.
According to Sterling D. Allan of Pure Energy Systems News, a video has been posted showing the setup of the one hundred kilowatt free energy generator by Tariel Kapanadze’s group as it is being third-party tested.
Allan writes: “On July 9, we posted a featured page on a Georgia Republic inventor, Tariel Kapanadze and his group, who apparently claim to have invented a 5 kilowatt free energy generator. We reported that in a demonstration video the device appears to produce copious amounts of energy from no visible source. We also speculated that it could be getting its energy via inductive coupling to the local utility.
“However, all of that is blown away by a video they posted on July 22 showing third party testing of not a 5 kW system, but a 100 kW system.” Read The Full Article.
FREE ENERGY GENERATOR BY KAPANADZE 100 KW
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Ufology for the New Millennium
by Nike Pope
This article was originally written prior to the British MoD releasing many of its UFO investigation files.
Introduction
The summer months of 1997 saw ufology in the public eye to a greater extent than any time than I can remember. The fiftieth anniversaries of Kenneth Arnold’s “flying saucer” sighting, coupled with the fiftieth anniversary of the Roswell incident were events which attracted the attention of the mainstream media, and therefore presented ufology with a tremendous opportunity to put forward its case to a wider audience than usual. There were numerous television programmes and features devoted to the subject, and a whole host of books were published at around the same time. But despite all this exposure, was the cause of ufology actually advanced? Indeed, are we at all clear what we mean by ufology, and what its aims should be? And does the recent demise of some of the glossy ufological magazines mean that the bubble has burst, and that a saturated market is beginning to bite back? In the course of this article I intend to give ufology a health check, and put forward some ideas for some initiatives which I believe may help us make some progress. I also want to use this article to say a little about how I have been affected by my involvement in ufology, and in particular I intend to address some of the accusations and questions that crop up about my role. (more…)
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New Free Energy Claim - the Kapanadze Generator

A Georgia Republic inventor, Tariel Kapaladze, claims to have invented a 5 kilowatt free energy generator.
Recently (July 9), a new entry on PESWiki calls attention to yet another “free energy” generator claim as yet unverified by known independent investigators.
The PESWiki entry notes:
“A Georgia Republic inventor, Tariel Kapaladze, claims to have invented a 5 kilowatt free energy generator. In a demonstration video, the device appears to produce copious amounts of energy from no visible source. Though it appears to be extracting energy from the aether (, some people think it could be a matter of stealing energy from the electrical grid through inductive coupling. The necessary parameters seem to be present. (more…)
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British Remote Viewing Investigation
by Nick Pope
Remote viewing involves attempting to use psychic abilities to locate individuals and items. The technique was developed at Stanford Research Institute in the Seventies, but the US military quickly realised the potential value of this work and, concerned by reports of Soviet research into parapsychology, set up their own classified projects. The most famous was codenamed Project Stargate and involved the use of psychics to try and locate targets such as US hostages, weapons and drugs shipments, terrorist headquarters and patrolling Soviet submarines.
Although remote viewing was never in Nick Pope’s formal terms of reference, he was frequently approached by people who claimed to have psychic abilities and who wanted to volunteer their services as ‘psychic spies’. Nick discussed this with various colleagues in the MoD and carried out some basic testing of people claiming to be psychics, but was not sufficiently impressed by the results to take the matter any further.
In 2007 the Ministry of Defence released a study into remote viewing, in response to a request made under the Freedom of Information Act. It showed how in 2001, shortly after 9/11, the MoD had attempted to recruit psychics to track down targets which almost certainly included Osama Bin Laden and weapons of mass destruction. (more…)
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Ufology and Science
by Nick Pope
What is the relationship between ufology and science? “You get an ology, you’re a scientist”. So said the character “Beattie” in the famous 1980s British Telecom TV advertisement. That said, the scientific community clearly doesn’t recognize ufology as a legitimate part of science, standing in its own right alongside subjects such as biology or psychology. Some ufologists are scientists and some scientists are favorably disposed towards ufology, but generally speaking the scientific community regards ufology as a hobby, if indeed it pays the subject any attention at all. Does any of this matter and what, if anything, can be done to change this state of affairs?
History
At official level, science and ufology have cohabited, though they have been uneasy bedfellows. We should not forget that in America, long before his involvement with the Center for UFO Studies, the astrophysicist Dr J. Allen Hynek was appointed as scientific consultant to the USAF’s UFO projects, Sign, Grudge and Blue Book. The MOD’s UFO project owes its very existence to a scientist. Papers declassified by the Ministry of Defence in 2001 and released under the Freedom of Information Act show that the Flying Saucer Working Party - the UK’s first official study into the UFO phenomenon - was set up as a direct consequence of the MOD’s Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Henry Tizard. In response to a wave of UFO sightings in the UK and indeed all around the world, Tizard’s view was that “reports of flying saucers ought not to be dismissed without some investigation”. Earlier still, in the Second World War and immediately thereafter, another famous scientist - the MOD’s Director of Scientific Intelligence, Professor R. V. Jones - had probed mysterious reports of so-called “Foo Fighters” and “Ghost Rockets”. The forms which Project Blue Book and the MOD’s equivalent used to record UFO sightings were designed with input from scientists, so as to facilitate the recording of the information required for meaningful investigations to be undertaken.
Science versus Government
The position of scientists within government has always been odd. The civil service, the military and the intelligence agencies all know they need scientists, but somehow they are a breed apart, misunderstood and sometimes feared. Sometimes they can wield enormous power, as in the case of Frederick Lindemann. Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell) was Churchill’s key scientific adviser. Nicknamed “The Prof”, Churchill invariably deferred to him on most scientific matters and it is interesting to note that it was Lindemann’s agreement with the Air Ministry’s skeptical assessment about UFOs that almost certainly persuaded Churchill to take no further action or interest in the subject, following his famous July 1952 enquiry about UFOs. But people like Lindemann are the exception. From Peter Wright to Dr David Kelly, government scientists sit within the Establishment, but are somehow not quite a part of it. The relevance of this is that official UFO projects such as Blue Book, the MOD’s UFO project and others have never really made as much use of scientists as might have been the case. Even Hynek was somehow set apart from the rest of the United States Air Force team, as opposed to being an integral part of the project.
The British Position
The British Government’s UFO project had no full-time scientific adviser. Arrangements have varied over the years, but during my tour of duty and at most other times, staff undertaking UFO investigations have been able to call on scientific expertise on an ad hoc basis. This has generally involved specialists in the Defence Intelligence Staff, in particular those working in scientific and technical intelligence. Clearly this is an area about which I can still say little, despite the MOD having released some documents detailing the liaison. Of course, I would have like to have had a full-time scientific consultant, embedded in the project. An astronomer or an astrophysicist perhaps, or maybe an aeronautical engineer. A psychologist would also have been useful. But I can think of few managers who wouldn’t want more resources and, as ever, there are numerous competing requirements. So the scientific advice I received was delivered on an “as required” basis. Whether I wanted a radar tape interpreted or a photograph analyzed, there was always somebody who I could call on for assistance.
Project Condign
I should make mention of Project Condign, not least because it has its roots in discussions that I had with scientific and technical intelligence staff in 1993, years before the study was actually undertaken. Famously, we convinced people to endorse such a study by dropping the loaded term UFO and replacing it with UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena). But I’d left the UFO project by the time Project Condign was undertaken and whereas I worked hand-in-glove with the Defence Intelligence Staff, my successors, for a number of reasons, did not enjoy such a close working relationship, and remained at best not involved and at worst entirely unsighted on the work. The final report was a disappointment. Though the single author worked tremendously hard, he had been hampered by the secrecy of the study. Consequently, none of the consultation and peer review that one would expect in a proper scientific study was undertaken. This was, essentially, one man reading some of the MOD’s old files and scouring the literature for papers on atmospheric phenomena. The irony was that by straying into such areas the author ended up trying to explain one mystery for which there is no scientific consensus (UFOs) with others (exotic atmospheric plasmas, earthlights and the effect on the brain of electromagnetic fields). That’s bad science.
Science versus Ufology
Outside official government projects, the position has always been more difficult. Scientists have often been fierce critics of ufology. From Donald Menzel to Sir Patrick Moore, many scientists have been ufology’s harshest critics. The irony here is that good ufology should be indistinguishable from any other scientific programme. Good examples of such “scientific ufology” include the Hessdalen Project in Norway, or BUFORA’s Anamnesis Project. Sadly, much ufology is not scientific, either because investigators (skeptics and believers alike) are conclusion-led, or because they lack the appropriate expertise and resources, or both. This is a shame. I have met both scientists and ufologists, and discussed ufology at science festivals and the Science Museum. With their passion for knowledge, the two “sides” have more in common than they might first realize.
Two Studies and Two Results
Let’s not get drawn into absolutes. Science is a broad church and even on a very narrow subject one finds different theories, with different conclusions often being drawn from the same data - not unlike ufology! Often, there is no “scientific consensus”. A good example of this is the debate surrounding the nature of the hypnotic state and the validity of regression hypnosis in recovering memories. What can better illustrate this lack of consensus than comparing the Condon Report with The Sturrock Report? The Condon Report was the result of a study undertaken by scientists at the University of Colorado and its skeptical conclusions led to the USAF’s Project Blue Book being formally terminated. The Sturrock Report was compiled by astrophysicist Peter A. Sturrock and others and was based on the work of a panel of scientists who reviewed data in some of the most intriguing UFO cases. Billed as the first major scientific inquiry into UFOs since the Condon Report, Sturrock and his colleagues effectively overturned the Condon Report conclusions.
Science and Abductions
None of this is to say that we should blame scientists for not taking an interest in ufology. As I said earlier, some scientists have become involved in ufology and were great friends to the subject. Dr J. Allen Hynek is one example, changing his views and becoming involved in civilian ufology after Project Blue Book was closed down. Dr John E. Mack is another more recent example. Mack was Professor of Psychiatry at the prestigious Harvard Medical School and was challenged by Budd Hopkins to look at the alien abduction phenomenon. He took up the challenge and became a great champion of the subject. Although often criticized by ufologists and labeled as debunkers, scientists such as Susan Blackmore, Chris French, Susan Clancy and Richard McNally have at least got involved. Ufology cannot have it both ways and yet many ufologists deride scientists for not paying the subject attention, then criticize those that do, because they disagree with their conclusions. Despite their obvious skepticism that any of the abductees have been taken on board an extraterrestrial spacecraft, ufologists might find some common ground with the likes of Clancy and McNally if they looked hard enough. As a result of experiments, both Clancy and McNally have said there is no evidence of any psychopathology in the abductees - they’re not mad. Furthermore, because the abductees exhibit physical symptoms (e.g. increased perspiration and heart rate) when recalling their experiences, when a control group asked to retell a fictitious but traumatic account display none, Clancy and McNally think it unlikely the abductees are lying. Ufologists and the abductees themselves should welcome this and make more of it.
Ufology versus SETI
Nothing typifies the current state of affairs better than the relationship between ufology and SETI. Here are two groups of people who should regard themselves in an overlapping field. SETI practitioners use radio telescopes to listen for transmissions from other civilizations, while many ufologists believe extraterrestrials have already visited Earth. Generally speaking, each regards the other’s activities as silly and pointless. SETI practitioners close their minds to the faster-than-light travel (or other exotic travel such as use of wormholes) that is required for viable interstellar travel. Ufologists question whether extraterrestrial civilizations would generate detectable radio signals at all (Writer and philosopher Terence McKenna once said “To search expectantly for a radio signal from an extraterrestrial source is probably as culture bound a presumption as to search the galaxy for a good Italian restaurant”). Logically, SETI supporters and ufologists should be saying “Look, I don’t know much about your discipline, but it seems to me that we’re both interested in the same thing, though we’re coming at it from opposite ends of the spectrum and trying two very different approaches. I guess we’re covering all the bases”. But they don’t. They bicker and fight and disparage each other, making both sides look foolish and wasting valuable time that could better be spent on research and investigation. Some of the biggest names in both fields are guilty here, though I’m pleased to say that when I met Frank Drake (generally regarded as “the father of SETI”) he seemed genuinely interested and open-minded about ufology. My own view is that SETI might beat ufology to the finishing line. Proof is difficult in ufology and short of the archetypal landing on the White House Lawn, it will be difficult to convince society as a whole that extraterrestrials exist. But a signal from space? It couldn’t be faked and it couldn’t be denied. Of course, picking up a signal doesn’t mean any extraterrestrials have ever actually visited the Earth, but it would prove the existence of other civilizations - a good start for any pro-ETH ufologist.
Conclusion
Investigations undertaken by government UFO projects have generally been carried out in a scientific manner, though even they have struggled to obtain the full-time scientific support that would have been more desirable. Ufologists and scientists are generally wary of each other, though some bridges have been built. More can and should be done. Good ufology (official or private) should be science-based, but it often isn’t. Ufology is a quest for knowledge and if done properly should involve the application of a rigorous investigative methodology. It seems to me that this definition isn’t that far from the definition of science itself.
For further information, see Nick Pope’s web site: http://www.nickpope.net/index.html
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The Scientific Power of Prayer?
Novel social history of intercessory prayer studies reveals growing religious diversity and diminishing belief in science to measure the value of prayer.
Health and religion have always been intertwined, most obviously through prayer on behalf of the sick. Does intercessory prayer for sick people actually help heal them? For thousands of years some people have believed so. But new Brandeis University research in the Journal of Religion this month shows that over the last four decades, medical studies of intercessory prayer—the prayer of strangers at a distance—actually say more about the scientists conducting the studies than about the power of prayer to heal. (more…)
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Real British “X-Files” - Official UFO Indifference Rather Than Conspiracy and Cover-up
by Nick Pope

Nick Pope (right) with actor David Duchovny and TV presenter Franky Ma at the UK premiere of The X-Files - I Want to Believe.
Some ufologists are now concerned not that the British military knows too much about UFOs, but that it knows too little. A cover-up would be deplorable, they say; but having your head in the sand because of the ignorance or prejudice of a few officials is far worse. In this article, Nick Pope, former UK Ministry of Defense UFO Project head , examines the evidence of a UK cover-up and comes to even more troubling conclusions.
On 5 November 1990 a squadron of Royal Air Force Tornado jets were flying over the North Sea, on their way back to their base. Suddenly, and to the amazement of all the experienced pilots, their aircraft were overtaken at high speed by a UFO. None of these trained observers were able to identify the craft that made our most sophisticated aircraft look obsolete by comparison, and a report of this encounter was sent by signal to the Ministry of Defence. What happened next? Were the pilots visited by anonymous intelligence officers, threatened with the Official Secrets Act and warned to keep quiet about their sighting? Or is the truth of the matter somewhat different?
Many ufologists are obsessed with the idea that elements of the British Government are involved in a conspiracy of silence about UFOs, and are actively suppressing the truth about this phenomenon. Such claims have persisted for years, but are often taken on faith rather than evidence. As is often the case when one examines such allegations critically, the real situation is not quite as people suppose. (more…)
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The Real British X-Files
By Nick Pope

There's some amazing stuff in amongst the mass of more routine material, says Nick Pope. UFOs seen by police officers and pilots, UFOs tracked on radar, craft seen performing speeds and maneuvers significantly in excess of those of our most advanced military aircraft, intriguing photos and videos...
Nick Pope used to work for the British Ministry of Defense and for 3 years headed up their UFO project. His remit was to investigate UFO sightings reported to the British government, looking for evidence of any potential threat, or anything judged to be of any “defence significance.”
Abstract
Late in 2007 the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) gave an undertaking to release its entire archive of UFO files. On May 14 2008 the National Archives released the first batch of files, leading to worldwide media coverage, including articles in the New York Times and coverage on CNN News. On October 20 2008 the National Archives released the second batch of files, again generating global media coverage, including a feature on ABC News’s Nightline. I used to work at the MoD on these files and although I left government service in 2006, I assisted the National Archives in the release process by reviewing the files, selecting cases of potential interest to the media and acting as someone to whom they would refer journalists wanting to discuss the files. I will set out the background to this release and explain how the French government’s 2007 decision to release its UFO files was a major factor in the UK decision, as was the fact that the MoD receives more FOI requests on UFOs than any other topic. I will then give detailed information about the files, explaining how much material there is, what it comprises and what the timeline is for full disclosure. I will also discuss the level of classification involved and the various FOI exemptions that mean certain information will not be released. Finally, I will pick out some cases from the newly released files and discuss the wider implications of this release. (more…)
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Mylow Magnetic Motor Hoax Revealed
Through good detective work by Touko Pouko, the Mylow Magnetic Motor that was receiving widespread attention has been proved a hoax. Mylow himself has admitted this (see last video posted here), coupled with a strange claim of having being coerced into faking his later demonstrations.
Here is Touko Pouko’s first video showing how Mylow faked his “magnetic motors.” (He suggests you use HQ and full screen if possible because some of the details are difficult to notice.)
Some of the still images available here:
http://touko.cjb.net/mylow/
You can spot the lines in some of the existing YouTube backups of Mylow’s videos if you watch them in HQ/full-screen.
Mylow fumbles with hidden drive belt on glass table video.
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Mylow Magnetic Motor Update
/Field Note
Update: This has now been proved to be a hoax. See “Mylow Magnetic Motor Hoax Revealed.”
Thanks to Alan Sterling’s updates and reporting on developments with the “Mylow” magnetic motor, a number of people have been working to replicate this. And while some have used the opportunity to raise even more skepticism, it turns out that building a motor that will work the way Mylow has reportedly demonstrated in his videos is a little more challenging that it first appears.
Background: An inventor from Chicago who goes by the pseudonym, “Mylow”, appears to have a knack for getting all-magnet motor designs to work that are based on the efforts of the late Howard Johnson. And he is intent on giving his design away to the planet in an open source manner.
On March 17, 2009, he posted his first video showing full rotation of the “Stonehenge model”, that Johnson worked on in the early 1980s to demonstrate to the U.S. Patent Office. (See earlier Mylow magnet motor report.) Mylow purposely kept his replication as close as possible to Johnson’s design — per the photos, not the patent. (more…)
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Exploring Conflicts Between Science and Religion

Publicity for the film "Angels and Demons" screams "the battle between science and religion turns to war!" St. Lawrence University physics professor Aileen O'Donoghue has searched for – and found – a peaceful solution to the conflict, at least in her own life.
Publicity for the film version of Angels and Demons, based on the enormously popular book by Dan Brown and scheduled to open May 15, screams “the battle between science and religion turns to war!” St. Lawrence University physics professor Aileen O’Donoghue has searched for – and found – a peaceful solution to the conflict, at least in her own life, and described that journey in her 2007 book The Sky Is Not A Ceiling. O’Donoghue has read Angels and Demons, as well as Brown’s blockbuster with a similar theme, The DaVinci Code, and says she understands why we find stories about the crossroads of science and religion so compelling.
In Angels and Demons, symbologist Robert Langdon discovers the resurgence of a secret society promoting science over religion, called the Illuminati.
O’Donoghue’s discoveries may not be quite as dramatic, but they nonetheless make for compelling reading according to recent reviews. (more…)
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Cold Fusion Proven True by U.S. Navy Researchers - Will Suppression of this Science be Repeated?
by Mike Adams, NaturalNews Editor

Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons are pictured here in their lab, holding the equipment for their controversial cold fusion experiment. Fleischmann (on the right) had been one of Pons's teachers at the University of Southampton in England. This image is courtesy of the University of Utah.
The following article was originally published on NaturalNews.com. It details how cold fusion was already not just proven, but was gaining acceptance - so much so that the U.S. Navy sponsored research was even reporting “data supporting the reality of cold fusion.” - Editor
Thee world owes Fleischmann and Pons a huge apology: The cold fusion technology they announced in 1989 — which was blasted by arrogant hot fusion scientists as a fraud — has been proven true once again by U.S. Navy Researchers. In papers presented at this year’s American Chemical Society meeting, scientist Pamela Mosier-Boss presented data supporting the reality of cold fusion, declaring the report, “the first scientific report of highly energetic neutrons from low-energy nuclear reactions.” (more…)
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Cold Fusion Verification Experiment

In the CBS 60 Munites Cold Fusion story, mention was made that the research by Fleischmann and Pons has now been replicated by a number of labs the world over. For those of us for whom this story is new news, it is perhaps useful to actually see an example of some of this work. The following is from a web site detailing cold fusion experiments done by one such lab. It is reproduced here for private and non-commercial use (with some images reduced) courtesy of JLN Labs, (http://jlnlabs.online.fr/cfr/html/hpcfr2.htm) the copyright holder. The author, Jean-Louis Naudin notes: “The Cold Fusion Reactor ( CFR ) is fully based on the work of the researchers Tadahiko MIZUNO and Tadayoshi OHMORI from the Hokkaido University in Japan. On May 7th, 2003, I have replicated successfully the Mizuno-Ohmori’s Cold Fusion experiment. I have used the experimental protocol fully described by Eugene F. Mallove at : http://www.amasci.com/weird/anode.txt.” - Editor
Test of the Cold Fusion Reactor v2.0 at High Power
created on May 8, 2003 - JLN Labs - Last update May 22, 2003 (more…)
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Manipulating Antidepressant Clinical Study Results by Cherry Picking Participants

"Results from research studies suggest more optimistic outcomes than may exist for real-world patients receiving treatment for depression," said Stephen Wisniewski, Ph.D., professor of epidemiology and co-director of the Epidemiology Data Center, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.
Findings from clinical studies used to gain Food and Drug Administration approval of common antidepressants are not applicable to most patients with depression, according to a report led by the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. Published in the May issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, the study suggests only a small percentage of people with depression qualify for these studies, and those who do not qualify are often treated with the same medications but may suffer poorer clinical outcomes.
A part of the National Institute of Mental Health-funded Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) project – the largest study of the treatment of depression conducted in the United States – researchers compared symptoms and outcomes in depressed patients who met phase III study inclusion criteria to those who did not. Phase III studies for antidepressants determine the effectiveness of the drug in comparison to a placebo. The inclusion criteria for these studies are not standardized nor subject to federal guidelines, resulting in some variation from study to study in the profile of eligible patients. Typically excluded are patients with milder forms of depression, who might be more likely to respond to a placebo drug, and those who may have chronic depression or psychiatric and medical co-morbidities – additional illnesses or conditions. (more…)
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More ‘60 Minutes’ Cold Fusion Follow Up
Comments and insights courtesy Craig Stangland & Sterling D. Allan

A report by CBS News' 60 Minutes on Cold Fusion, which aired April 19, 2009, was on the following day listed as their #1 "Most Viewed Videos" online.
The following is excepted from a news item on Sterling D. Allan’s PESWiki concerning the 60 Minutes Cold Fusion program.
First, on April 19, 2009, Craig Stangland <craig {at} sparkprintsolutions.com> wrote the following review of the program:
It was VERY encouraging from several points.
1. 60 Minutes did a great job covering the story that CF (cold fusion) is real.
2. They reviewed the history of CF, even going so far as going to England’s countryside to meet with Martin Fleischman, one of the two renounced electro-chemist scientists that were disgraced by their ever so smart peers. Even today, their names remain as a joke, even though 20 years later the proof to validate their work exists. There are numerous labs throughout the world trying to solve the unreliability of being able to repeatably make it work so as to commercialize it, even though the public still doesn’t know or believe it works. (more…)
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Fifth X-Conference Continues Calls for UFO Disclosure and UN Investigation
/Field Note
The Paradigm Research Group’s fifth X-Conference in Gaithersburg, MD wrapped up this week (April 17-19), followed with a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington, DC. (No relation to the X-Journals, by the way.)
This event is an integral part of The Paradigm Research Group’s advocacy work aiming to change government policy toward extraterrestrial-related phenomena, according to a press statement. “Since 1947 the United States has imposed a ‘truth embargo’ on formal acknowledgment of an extraterrestrial presence engaging the human race,” the group said in the statement. “This engagement has been confirmed by a mountain of evidence compiled by hundreds of researchers over six decades.” (more…)
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