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Jacques Vallee Discusses UFO Control System - UFO Evidence
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Jacques Vallee Discusses UFO Control System
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Jerome Clark, FATE Magazine, 1978
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Summary: Noted scientist-UFO researcher proposes a startling theory about what UFOs
may be, how they behave and what we can do about them. Interview by Jerome Clark.
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Dr. Jacques Vallee, a French-American computer specialist with a background in
astrophysics, once served as consultant to NASA's Mars Map project.
Jacques Vallee is one of ufology's major figures - and also its most original thinker.
Vallee, who holds a master's degree in astrophysics and a Ph.D. in computer
science from Northwestern University, was an early scientific proponent of the
theory that UFOs are extraterrestrial spaceships. His first book, Anatomy of a
Phenomenon (Henry Regnery, 1965), argued eloquently that "through UFO activity
… the contours of an amazingly complex intelligent life beyond the earth can already
be discerned." In Challenge to Science - The UFO Enigma (Regnery, 1966) he and
Janine Vallee (who is a psychologist by training, with a master's degree from the
University of Paris) urged the scientific community to consider the UFO evidence in
this light.
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But by 1969, when he published Passport to Magonia (Regnery), Vallee's
assessment of the UFO phenomenon had undergone a significant shift. Much to the
consternation of the "scientific ufologists" who had seen him as one of their
champions, Vallee now seemed to be backing away from the extraterrestrial
hypotheses and advancing the radical view that UFOs are paranormal in nature and
a modern space age manifestation of a phenomenon which assumes different
guises in different historical contexts.
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" When the underlying archetypes are extracted," he wrote, "the saucer myth is seen
to coincide to a remarkable degree with the fairy-faith of Celtic countries … religious
miracles… and the widespread belief among all peoples concerning entities whose
physical and psychological descriptions place them in the same category as the
present-day ufonauts."
In The Invisible College (E.P. Dutton, 1975) Vallee posits the idea of a "control
system." UFOs and related phenomena are "the means through which man's
concepts are being rearranged." Their ultimate source may be unknowable, at least
at this stage of human development; what we do know, according to Vallee, is that
they are presenting us with continually recurring "absurd" messages and
appearances which defy rational analysis but which nonetheless address human
beings on the level of myth and imagination.
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"When I speak of a control system for planet earth," he says, " I do not want my
words to be misunderstood: I do not mean that some higher order of beings has
locked us inside the constraints of a space-bound jail, closely monitored by psychic
entities we might call angels or demons. I do not propose to redefine God. What I do
mean is that mythology rules at a level of our social reality over which normal
political and intellectual action has no power…."
Vallee is also coauthor, with J. Allen Hynek, of The Edge of Reality (Regnery, 1975).
A resident of the San Francisco area, he is completing a book which further
develops his theories concerning UFO phenomena.
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We have talked together at some length about his beliefs. The following interview is
a report of these conversations:
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Clark: Since the great autumn 1973 sighting wave public attitudes about the UFO
phenomenon seem to have changed dramatically, to the extent that society may be
entering a pivotal period in its perception of the problem. What do you think will
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Vallee: First, I expect increased government and scientific attention to it. More
researchers will be pursuing the physical evidence aspects, conducting much more
sophisticated investigations of traces left at landing sites and so on. The people
moving into the field now are good physicists and good engineers who know what
they are doing and who are convinced it is time for them to get involved.
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At the same time I expect that public opinion will change also. Initially it probably will
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move strongly toward the extraterrestrial explanation. Most people see only two
ways to look at the problem - either it's all nonsense or we're being visited from
outer space. The current spate of movies, books and magazine articles is going to
push people toward the extraterrestrial hypothesis. After that I expect a backlash
effect may push them in the other direction. I don't know where that's going to leave
scientists who want to do research.
Clark: You say that scientists are entering ufology in search of physical evidence.
But is there physical evidence? And if there is, are they going to find it? What
happens if they don't?
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Vallee: If I were speaking for them I would say, "Jerry, it's premature to ask those
questions." One doesn't know the answers until one really looks - and so far nobody
has looked very seriously. So far the people who have looked have been military
types searching for enemy craft or direct threats to national security. Or they've been
superficial investigators, dedicated civilians with good training but limited time and
limited resources.
But you're asking me what I think. I think there are physical data. They are very, very
interesting. They may contain a message. My inclination is to look at the message
both in a physical sense and in a symbolic sense, but that's because I'm an
information scientist and not a physical scientist. I look for the meaning behind the
object.
Let me give you an example of what I mean. Recently Paul Cerny investigated a
case in northern California in which two older persons saw a UFO take off.
Afterwards they saw a sort of ring on the ground. Within the ring they found some
molten metal and a pile of sand.
Obviously here is physical evidence. Two tangible things - the molten metal, which
turned out to be brass, and the sand. I took some of the latter to a geologist friend
who knows about sand. He said it was highly unusual because it did not contain
quartz and it was not stream sand or beach sand or residue from mining or anything
else. It seemed to be artificial sand created from grinding together stones of different
origin.
Well, to a physicist that may not mean too much. It's an indication of something that
turns out to be absurd. We can put it alongside other cases of physical traces and
then we may start looking for patterns which might lead us to a better understanding
of the modus operandi of whoever's doing all this.
In that sense, yes, there is physical evidence. But if you mean physical evidence in
the sense that we're going to discover somebody's propulsion system from it, I
would have to say I don't expect that to happen.
Clark: Can we infer from the existence of physical evidence, then, that there is a
physical cause?
Vallee: If the UFO phenomenon had no physical cause at all, there would be no way
for us to perceive it because human beings are physical entities. So it has to make
an impression on our senses somehow. For that to take place, it has to be physical
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at some time.
Clark: So in other words there is such a thing as a solid, three-dimensional flying
saucer.
Vallee: No, I didn't say that. That may or may not be true. I don't think there is such a
thing as the flying saucer phenomenon. I think it has three components and we have
to deal with them in different ways.
First, there is a physical object. That may be a flying saucer or it may be a projection
or it may be something entirely different. All we know about it is that it represents a
tremendous quantity of electromagnetic energy in a small volume. I say that based
upon the evidence gathered from traces, from electromagnetic and radar detection
and from perturbations of the electromagnetic fields such as Dr. Claude Poher, the
French space scientist, has recorded.
Second, there's the phenomenon the witnesses perceive. What they tell us is that
they've seen a flying saucer. Now they may have seen that or they may have seen
an image of a flying saucer or they may have hallucinated it under the influence of
microwave radiation, or any of a number of things may have happened. The fact is
that the witnesses were exposed to an event and as a result they experienced a
highly complex alteration of perception which caused them to describe the object or
objects that figure in their testimony.
Beyond there - the physical phenomenon and the perception phenomenon - we
have the third component, the social phenomenon. That's what happens when the
reports are submitted to society and enter the cultural arena. That's the part which I
find most interesting.
Clark: Before we go into that, let's clarify your views on the nature of the physical
aspect. When I asked you if there was such a thing as a solid, three-dimensional
flying saucer, I was thinking in these terms: Let's suppose that somebody says he
has seen a UFO, the bottom part of which was flat and circular. He says he saw the
object come down, settle on the soil and then fly off again, leaving a flat circular
impression. Doesn't that clearly suggest the presence - at least for the duration of
the sighting - of a solid object whose physical structure was more or less as the
witness perceived it?
Vallee: Not necessarily. We have evidence that the phenomenon has the ability to
create a distortion of the sense of reality or to substitute artificial sensations for the
real ones. Look at some of the more bizarre close encounter cases - for example the
incident from South America in which one man believed he had been abducted by a
UFO while his companion thought he had boarded a bus which had suddenly
appeared on the road behind then.
It is conceivable that there is one phenomenon which is visual and another which
creates the physical traces. What I'm saying is that a strange kind of deception may
be involved.
Clark: In other words the physical traces are placed there as ostensible confirmation
of what the senses perceived?
Vallee: Yes. It's comparable perhaps to the strategic deception operations of the
British during World War II to fool the Germans. They created artificial tank tracks in
the desert and in other ways simulated the passage of large armored divisions. They
even caused dust storms to perpetuate the illusion, which the Germans found very
convincing indeed.
In the UFO context that might explain cases such as the one in California I
mentioned earlier, in which the "physical evidence" left in the wake of the UFO
appearance really seemed to have no clear, unambiguous connection with the
perceived "object."
Clark: What do you think happens during the "UFO experience?"
Vallee: We don't know. There is no question that something happens. It seems as if
an external force takes control of people. In the close encounters people may lose
their ability to move or to speak; in the abduction cases, which are the most extreme
example, they gradually enter into a series of experiences during which they lose
control of all their senses. Do they experience what they think they experience?
Suppose you, an outside observer, had been there. What would you have seen?
Clark: I can think of several cases which might suggest I would have seen the same
thing they saw. To cite an example, one of the famous Venezuelan humanoid
encounters of late 1954 was independently observed by a doctor some distance
from the scene.
Vallee: Yes, I'm familiar with that incident and similar ones. But that doesn't alter my
point. The doctor may have experienced the object as "real" but we don't know what
the nature of that reality is.
We know there are objects that contain a lot of energy in a small space. What do we
know about what happens to the human brain when it's exposed to a great deal of
energy? We know very little about that. We don't know much about the effects of
electromagnetic or microwave radiation on the brain, nor about the effects of
pulsating colored lights on the brain. The research into that is just beginning.
What we do know is that you can make people hallucinate using either lights or
microwave or electromagnetic energy. You can also make them pass out; you can
cause them to behave strangely, put them into shock, make them hear voices or
even kill them.
Clark: Is there any way to penetrate to the reality of the experience, for example
through hypnotic regression?
Vallee: I'm not sure that what we learn under hypnotic regression is useful. Hypnosis
is really a delicate technique and some of the people in our field who are using it are
doing more harm than good. If the hypnotist doesn't have medical training - and
most of these people have no medical training - the results may be disastrous for
the witness. But if the hypnotist does have medical training and doesn't have any
knowledge of the subject, he may ask the wrong questions. I think that may have
happened in the famous case of Betty and Barney Hill. The hypnotist was extremely
skilled but was not especially interested in UFOs and didn't know the background of
the problem.
Clark: What can we do, then?
Vallee: I'm not saying that hypnosis has no role to play in UFO investigation, nor that
it can't be helpful under certain circumstances when percipients are blocking from
their memories something they have seen or experienced.
The thing I really want to emphasize is that the investigator's first responsibility is to
the witness and not to the UFO phenomenon. The average witness is in shock
because he's had a very traumatic experience; what he's seen is going to change
his life. Your intervention, the very fact that you're talking with him about it, is also
going to have an effect on him. Now he may say to you, "I need help to understand
what I saw," but in fact he needs more immediate help as a human being who is
deeply troubled by a very disturbing experience.
Unfortunately this element has been neglected. The more UFO investigators try to
appear "professional," the more they ignore that human aspect - and by extension
their own ethical obligations. I want to convince my friends in UFO research that
whenever we have a choice between obtaining interesting UFO data and taking
chances with the life of a human being, we should forget the UFO data.
Another thing to keep in mind is that there are alternatives to the use of hypnosis.
These involve putting the percipient into a state of relaxed revery or free association.
There are several techniques that are equally as effective as hypnosis in bringing
out the hidden details but are must less harmful. Investigators really haven't made
use of these yet.
Clark: What do you think of the abduction cases?
Vallee: Again, I'm interested mainly in their symbolic contents.
Let me explain what I mean. We live in a society that is oriented toward technology,
so when we see something unusual in the sky we think of it in physical terms. How
is it manufactured? What makes it tick? What is its propulsion system? We tend to
assume that the physical phenomenon is its most important aspect and that
everything else is just a side effect and much less important.
But perhaps we're facing something which is basically a social technology. Perhaps
the most important effects from the UFO technology are the social ones and not the
physical ones. In other words the physical reality may serve only as a kind of
triggering device to provide images for the witness to report. These perceptions are
manipulated to create certain kinds of social effects.
If that's true, then the abduction cases are quite revealing. I am not concerned with
how many switches there were on the control panel or whether the percipient felt hot
or cold when he was inside the flying saucer. Those questions may be totally
irrelevant because maybe that person never actually went inside the object.
But the report is extremely important for its symbolic content. It can help us
understand what kinds of images are coming through. One might illustrate the
difference in this way:
An engineer observing a computer would want to look at the back and open up the
boxes. He would want to take a probe and examine the different parts of the
computer. But there is another way of looking at it; the way of the programmer, who
wants to sit in front of the computer and analyze what it does, not how it does it.
That's my approach. I want to ask it questions and see what answers I get. I want to
interact with it as an information entity.
In the case of the abductions I think we're dealing with the information aspect. I
came to that conclusion because abduction cases, in close encounter cases in
general, what the witness is saying is absurd.
Clark: What do you mean?
Vallee: I don't mean simply to imply that the account is silly. I mean it has absurdity
as a semantic construction. If you're trying to express something which is beyond
the comprehension of a subject, you have to do it through statements that appear
contradictory or seem absurd. For example, in Zen Buddhism the seeker must deal
with such concepts as "the sound of one hand clapping" - an apparently
preposterous notion which is designed to break down ordinary ways of thinking. The
occurrences of similar "absurd" messages in UFO cases brought me to the idea that
maybe we're dealing with a sort of control system that is subtly manipulating human
consciousness.
Clark: But how do you prove that one is operating in a UFO context?
Vallee: I've always been unhappy with the argument between those who believe
UFOs are nonsense and those who believe they are extraterrestrial visitors. I don't
think I belong in either camp. I've tried to place myself between those two extremes
because there's no proof that either proposition is correct. I've come up with the
control system concept because it is an idea which can be tested. In that sense it's
much closer to a scientific hypotheses than the others. It may turn out that there is a
control system which is operated by extraterrestrials. But that's only one possibility.
There are different kinds of control systems - open ones and closed ones - and
there are tests you can apply to them to find out what kind of control system you're
inside. That leads to a number of experiments you can do with the UFO
phenomenon, whereas the other interpretations don't lead you to anything. If you're
convinced that UFOs are extraterrestrial, then about the only thing you can do is to
climb to a hilltop with a flashlight and send a message in Morse code. People have
tried that, I know, but it doesn't seem to work very will!
The control system concept can be tested by a small group of people - you don't
need a large organization or a lot of equipment - and you can start thinking about
active intervention in the phenomenon.
Clark: How could I prove to my satisfaction that there is a control system in
operations?
Vallee: If you think you're inside a control system, the first thing you have to look for
is what is being controlled and try to change it to see what happens. My friend Bill
Powers proposes the following analogy:
Suppose you're walking through the desert and you see a stone that looks as
though it was painted white. A thousand yards later you see another stone of similar
appearance. You stop and consider the matter. Either you can forget it or - if you're
like me - you can pick up the stone and move it a few feet. If suddenly a bearded
character steps out from behind a rock and demands to know why you moved his
marker, then you know you've found a control system.
My point is that you can't be sure until you do something. Then you realize that what
you were seeing, the thing that looked absurd and incongruous, was really a marker
for a boundary that was invisible to everybody else until you discovered it because
you looked for a pattern. I think that's exactly what we have to do with UFOs. We
have to do something that will cause them to react. And I don't mean building
landing strips in the desert and waiting out there to welcome the space brothers.
Clark: But what do you mean?
Vallee: I hesitate to be too specific. I'm speaking, as I'm sure you understand, of the
attempted manipulation of UFO manifestations. It's a pretty tall order. We're
assuming that there is a feedback mechanism involved in the operations of the
control system; if you change the information that's carried back to that system, you
might be able to infiltrate it through its own feedback.
Clark: How does one go about investigating UFOs, taking into consideration the
possible existence of a control system?
Vallee: You should work outside any organized UFO group. Also you must be very
careful about the types of instruments you use for your analysis. For example, I
have become increasingly skeptical of the use of computers in UFO research. We're
losing a great many data because of a certain situation that is developing: The field
researcher will spend a lot of time and money investigating a case. Typically he will
write it up in an excellent 10-to-20-page report; then he'll send it to his superiors in
the organization, assuming that they are going to put it on the computer and that in
this way it's going to add to some great body of knowledge.
But it doesn't. Investigators should understand that their reports go absolutely
nowhere. They end up in a drawer somewhere, they are never published, and
they're quickly forgotten. All that's left in the computer is a bunch of codes and
letters and numbers on magnetic tape somewhere and that's the end of that.
For another thing you don't want to go around chasing every UFO that's reported. If
a sighting gets a lot of publicity, you should stay the hell away from it. Instead you
should go after cases that you select yourself, ones that have received very little
publicity and you've heard about through personal channels. There are plenty of
those and they are surprisingly rich in content. You should take your time
investigating them. Get involved with the people as human beings. And then you
have to become part of the scene, getting as close as you can to what's happening
especially if it continues to happen.
Clark: Are you suggesting that the investigator should attempt to experience the
phenomenon himself?
Vallee: Yes, I think that's sound scientific practice.
Clark: But isn't that rather dangerous - in the sense that there's a real risk the
investigator, even if he is emotionally stable and intellectually sophisticated, might
be overwhelmed by the experiences involved?
Vallee: Yes, there are dangers. Witness what happened to Morris Jessup or to Jim
McDonald. But I think that now we're more aware of what the dangers are. Once
you realize the phenomenon may be deliberately misleading, then you can use
certain safeguards. I'm not saying that safeguards are always going to work. There
is an element of danger you really can't avoid. There's no way to do that kind of
study just by reading books.
It's a little bit like the study of volcanoes. You can learn a lot about them by watching
them from a distance but you certainly learn a lot more when you can be right there even if it's somewhat risky.
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