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…..What is sinister in all this — which would explain FOX and the Pentagon beginning to push it — is spreading the impression that “all aliens are dangerous.”
This can be used for extremely dangerous new ways to manipulate and even stampede the public.
In fact, many but not all aliens are humans like us, just far more advanced, and with benevolent intentions.
As such, they can blend in perfectly among us. The only unusual thing is their height, the men being 6’5″ or taller, and often blond hair, blue eyes and good looks, the result of centuries of eugenics. They have sex, use the toilet, laugh, cry, get hungry, eat food (often including a delicious, steaklike meat grown in a petri dish) — they are simply human.
There are also non-human but humanoid ETs (with one head, two arms, two eyes, two ears, two legs, etc., like us) who are kind and mean us well. Because their appearance is,however, so strange and even scary to us, they prefer to not appear in public.
Anyway, this Berkshires incident would seem to be an abduction by unfriendly, ruthless Grays.
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…… Inside The 1969 Berkshire UFO Incident That Shook A Small Massachusetts Town
On September 1, 1969, about 40 people in Berkshire County, Massachusetts reported seeing a UFO — and one boy named Thomas Reed claimed that he and his family were all taken aboard.
In 1969, residents of Berkshire County in Massachusetts went into a panic after multiple people reported seeing a UFO. The furor over the sightingufo reached far beyond the area and captivated people all over America. In Roswell, New Mexico, a replica of the alleged vessel was even displayed at the International UFO Museum.
What Was The Berkshire UFO?
According to witness accounts, the UFO in question was a disk-shaped craft that performed acrobatic maneuvers in the sky above the Berkshires. It’s unclear exactly how long the phenomenon lasted, but many witnesses of alleged UFO encounters describe losing track of time.
The Berkshires is a region of rural highlands in western Massachusetts. It encompasses large swaths of wilderness, making it a popular tourist destination for hikers and nature lovers during the summer. The Berkshires are also made up of mostly small towns, which, in the case of curious extraterrestrial beings, makes it an ideal spot to visit.
However, the seemingly brief UFO encounter was apparently powerful enough to leave a lingering sense of mass confusion in its wake. Schoolchildren were drawing UFOs in class while adults called in to the local radio station to explain what they had seen.
“We had listeners call the radio station that evening,” said David Isy, general manager of local radio station WSBS. “At the time they didn’t know it was a UFO, they just, you know, called the station to say something bizarre has happened.”
It was later estimated that about 40 people reported seeing the UFO. Some of them who were children at the time still live in the area today.
The witness accounts were so plentiful and compelling that the local Great Barrington Historical Society recognized the encounter as “the first off-world/UFO case in U.S. history” about 45 years later.
But did the 1969 Berkshire UFO incident actually happen?
Whether or not you believe the witness stories, the Berkshire UFO in 1969 was no doubt a remarkable event for the townspeople of Sheffield.
According to Reed’s account, he saw the UFO when he was 9 years old on Sept. 1, 1969, while he was in the car with his mother, grandmother, and brother.
As Reed recalled, the family was heading home from their restaurant Village on the Green and he was busy giving his brother a little fireball candy. Suddenly, they noticed a mass of glowing lights peaking out from behind the lush trees on the empty road.
The strange lights continued to spill out from behind the trees as the family crossed the covered Sheffield bridge, but they didn’t know what to make of the sight.
“We all looked at it because it was kind of a self-contained glow,” Reed said. “It rose up a little bit. It looked like it followed the dirt road, which I’m sure it probably didn’t, but it appeared that way because we could see it through the trees. The light started to bleed through once we broke into a little bit of a clearing. We could see inside the car so the light was flooding inside the car.”
“We encountered something,” Reed said. “It was definitely not of this world. We had a black and white television at time and the imagery that we saw on this thing was unbelievable. There were lights that looked like fluorescent tubing inside this hangar.”
“This hallway we had seen was circular with a Y-configuration almost to control the flow of traffic. This one room had a bowed-in wall that was rounded. This was not something that you would have seen in 1969 anywhere else. I have no idea where I was, but I know that what I saw was very different than anything I’ve even seen today 50 years later.”
More astonishingly, there were no more glowing lights, Reed said.
Reed has been the most vocal witness to the 1969 Berkshire UFO. He helped convince other witnesses to pool money together to erect a 5,000-pound concrete monument, which was built by the covered Sheffield bridge where he saw the UFO with his family. Benching and lighting decorations were also placed around the monument after it was erected.
Later, Reed formed the non-profit UFO Monument Park Inc. to maintain the plot of land where the monument stood.
Small Town Controversy
Word of the 1969 Berkshire UFO reached beyond Sheffield. In Roswell, New Mexico (the location of another infamous UFO encounter), the International UFO Museum put up a display of the alleged Berkshire craft.
Disagreements between those who believe the UFO monument marked a significant event in the town’s history and those who saw the monument as an eyesore began to boil over.
In 2019, just about four years after it was erected, the town removed the Berkshire UFO monument. The town’s attorney’s assessment that the monument had been erected on town property quickly paved the way for lawful removal.
According to Reed, there were no issues with the town officials during the plans to build the UFO monument. But officials painted a different story.
“It’s kind of on town property and no one decided it could go there,” said Town Administrator Rhonda LaBombard. “The town has bylaws and if we let one place put something up then why can’t someone else? I don’t want that to happen.”
In 2018, a spokesperson for Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, whose signature was sealed onto the UFO monument, told the Boston Globe that the signature had been issued in error. The Great Barrington Historical Society, which described the mass Berkshire UFO sighting as a “significant and true” event in 2015, backpedaled on its support, too.
In 2019, after there were no efforts by Reed and his colleagues to remove the structure, the town hauled away the UFO monument for good.
“The monument was removed at considerable expense to the town,” said Selectman Martin Mitsoff, who could not give the precise cost of the removal. “Unfortunately, the party responsible was not responsive.” Meanwhile, Reed said that he and his colleagues would fight the removal.
After learning about the Berkshire UFO incident of 1969, watch three videos of UFOs filmed by Navy pilots that were declassified by the Pentagon and then explore Skinwalker Ranch, a real-life hotbed for paranormal activity.
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