Or, would the US Air Force lie to the public for any other possible reasons? Stanton Friedman summarizes the US Air Force's lies since the Roswell incident in this order:
[list=1][*] A flying saucer(throw this one out right away)
[*] A radar reflector and weather balloon
[*] A Mogul balloon train over 500 feet long with 23 balloons, sonobuoys, etc.
[*] And most recently, a Mogul balloon train plus crash test dummies dropped at least six years AFTER the 1947 crashes Southeast of Corona and West of Magdalena.”[/list]
Some of us in this thread tend to want to ignore the US Air Force's whistleblowers testimonies as being credible evidence whatsoever. They were inebriated "rum soaked" pilots and officers in charge of guarding nuclear weapons installations etcetera and so on.
But when it comes to the US Air Force's official and ever changing explanations pawned off on the public concerning Roswell, do we take them seriously and accept their story(s) as truth? Or is it only retired US Air Force officials who have taken up imbibing and are not to be believed? Apparently it doesn't pay to be a whistleblower in the US Air Force, or NASA, or the CIA, NSA, US Army, US State Dept. US Government etc because then suddenly they are not so credible. Why is it that only after quitting or retiring from the US government agencies do these people suddenly take up drinking and telling tall tales? Are they just trying to command attention? Are their government pensions too small to live on, and now they have to write science fiction stories to supplement their incomes?