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Post by auntym on Aug 26, 2012 13:24:41 GMT -6
UFOTV® Presents : Col. Philip J. Corso - The Lost Interview on UFOs Uploaded by UFOTVstudios on Sep 3, 2011 From UFOTV®, accept no imitations. The following uncut interview was filmed for the feature film - "UFOs: 50 Years of Denial." In memory of Col. Philip J. Corso - May 22, 1915 - July 16, 1998, and his contribution to UFO and ET Disclosure. NOW on DVD - UFOs: 50 Years of Denial - Special Expanded Edition, Cat#U640, Go to www.UFOTV.com.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 26, 2012 14:41:17 GMT -6
Corso bothers me for one very big reason and maybe it's not so important to those who don't remember Korea but he fabricated stories of the POW's that hurt families over here. I think he may have learned to lie with the best of the politicians During the Korean War (1950–1953), Corso performed intelligence duties under General Douglas MacArthur as Chief of the Special Projects branch of the Intelligence Division, Far East Command. One of his primary duties was to keep track of enemy prisoner of war (POW) camps in North Korea.[2] Corso was in charge of investigating the estimated number of U.S. and other United Nations POWs held at each camp and their treatment. At later hearings of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs, Corso provided alleged first hand testimony, since debunked completely, that many hundreds of American POW's were abandoned at these camps.[3][4] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_J._Corso
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Post by paulette on Aug 27, 2012 11:32:02 GMT -6
I certainly am not informed enough to judge the veracity of this man's story. When he spoke about how one does not get the truth from the government or the Pentagon - this I believe. Just because so much is buried (not just UFO stories). I know first hand (living in the States when the Viet Vets came home) that they brought a strain of gonnorhea (a sexually transmitted disease) that was intentionally spread to the sex trade workers of Vietnam by the Vietcong and for which there was (at least at that time) NO CURE. A young man told me that he had been told that even with a condom, he was putting any sexual partner at great risk. He was very bitter about this. Bet you didn't read about this in any report from the government or in Time magazine! None of those flag waving happy wives got that news either - or if they did, it was in their house after the parade was over.
So were there abandoned POWS? - and how thorough an investigation of the "debunking" was there? I don't know. He was certainly in highly responsible positions (getting Jews out of Europe, etc) to stoop to telling tales to get attention.
We do a lot of speculation here and I appreciate the posting of information by those of you that do this regularly very much. It's like a search engine for unspoken of things. I like that. I don't mind not knowing whether to believe a particular story or not.
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Post by auntym on Aug 27, 2012 12:12:33 GMT -6
while reading the book THE DAY AFTER ROSELL by Col. Philip Corso.... the hair on my arms were standing up.... to me, that has always been a sign i am reading or hearing the truth... i always believed Col. Corso...
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Post by Deleted on Aug 27, 2012 12:42:07 GMT -6
I do know he falsified Korean reports..long ago I heard about that before any UFO interest surfaced..what he is saying now about the UFO's I don't know..he may be truthful about it and I'm always willing to believe the government covers up anything it doesn't quite understand...not wishing to seem as igannant as they are. I'll give him a 50/50 chance of being on the level. I detest a liar and not quick to forgive that kind of betrayal.
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Post by skywalker on Aug 27, 2012 18:42:45 GMT -6
The government lies all the time and they order their employees to lie too. Just because somebody lies while under orders to do so that doesn't mean they will continue to lie later on when not under orders...but it doesn't mean they won't either. I think it would be wise to view anything he says with a healthy level of suspicion.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 27, 2012 21:45:48 GMT -6
That would be the way I see it. Being on the government's payroll isn't the best reference as far as I'm concerned
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Post by auntym on Jan 25, 2014 14:36:07 GMT -6
Wednesday, January 22, 2014 Philip Corso and The Day After Roswell, AgainPosted by Kevin Randle (Blogger’s Note: In the last few days I have been asked about Philip Corso and his tales of seeing the Roswell bodies and of seeding alien technology into American industry. I have updated the information to reflect what we now know. This is my take on the stories Corso told, and once again, I find myself attempting to explain why I don’t accept what he said as real.) As everyone now knows, Philip Corso burst on the Roswell UFO scene in the summer of 1997 with the publication of his book, The Day After Roswell. It was Corso’s story of his involvement with the flying saucer crash at Roswell, first as an officer at Fort Riley, Kansas, and later as a staff officer in the Pentagon, the Eisenhower White House, and finally on the staff of Lieutenant General Arthur Trudeau. Corso claimed that he had been responsible, under orders from Trudeau, for leaking bits and pieces of alien technology to American industry for reverse engineering, duplication and replication. There is no doubt that Corso had served as a military officer and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel. He served in World War II and stayed on active duty until he retired and did work for Trudeau. Although he did say that he had retired as a full colonel, there is no evidence to back up this claim. It was during his assignment at Fort Riley that Corso was introduced, according to him, to the alien crash at Roswell. Corso, again according to him, was an above average bowler and because of his skill was invited to participate on a Fort Riley team by then Master Sergeant Bill Brown (which is a name nearly as common as John Smith for those who wish to attempt to learn more about this guy). Corso was surprised because enlisted men weren’t supposed to fraternize with officers at that time, but apparently Corso’s skill was such that the master sergeant took a chance and breached military protocol. The friendship that developed between Corso and the master sergeant, who he now called by the nickname Brownie, would play an important role in what would happen on the evening of July 6, 1947, after the arrival of a “secret” convoy. Corso was assigned as the post duty officer, in charge of security and as he described it, the “human firewall between emergency and disaster.” As he walked his post, checking the security, he failed to find Sergeant Brown where he was supposed to be. Instead, Brown was in the doorway of the veterinary clinic. There was something inside that Corso just had to see. Forget for the moment that Brown would have had no reason to enter the building unless there was some sort of a disturbance inside, or that the secret convoy of five “deuce and half” (two and a half ton trucks) with its accompanying “Low boy” side by side trailers would have been guarded by the men who brought them to Fort Riley to ensure that the contents were not compromised. Forget also that the best evidence suggests that the material from the crash was shipped by air to its various destinations because it was the quickest and safest way to move it and the 509th Bomb Group had access to a wide range of military aircraft. Corso, in his first-hand account, claimed that the convoy stopped at Fort Riley, and the Military Police assigned to it as guards were all armed, which, of course, they would be so that wasn’t unusual. These guards, once the material was secured in the veterinary clinic, apparently abandoned their posts to leave the guarding of the crates to the local soldiers. These guards would have been no reason to unload the cargo, so there is no reason that it would have been in the veterinary clinic but without this wrinkle Corso’s story collapses. Those local soldiers, being curious men, began to search the material from the top-secret convoy. What they found so upset them that they risked the wrath of the post duty officer and court martial by telling him that there was something he had to see. Brown told Corso that he had to take a look at what the convoy was transporting. Corso warned Brown that he wasn’t supposed to be there and had better leave. Brown, apparently ignoring this advice, which would actually have the force of a lawful order, said that he would watch the door while Corso snooped. Inside the building, Corso found the crates but hesitated at prying open any of them, which would have been closed with a seal to expose any tampering. He searched among them until he found one that had apparently already been opened by the Fort Riley soldiers so that the nails were loose. He opened that crate and then looked down inside. In a glass tube containing a blue fluid, floating, suspended, was what Corso thought, at first, was a small child. Then he knew it wasn’t a child, but a human-looking creature with “bizarre-looking four-fingered hands... thin legs and feet, and an oversized incandescent light bulb-shaped head...” CONTINUE READING: kevinrandle.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/philip-corso-and-day-after-roswell-again.html
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Post by auntym on Nov 15, 2018 12:16:54 GMT -6
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Post by auntym on Apr 12, 2019 14:15:34 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/04/the-roswell-ufo-the-corso-claims/ The Roswell UFO: The Corso Claimsby Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/April 13, 2019 In the summer of 1997, one of the most controversial UFO-themed books ever written was published. Its title was The Day After Roswell. It was written by William Birnes (the editor of the now-defunct UFO Magazine and of History Channel’s also defunct UFO Hunters) and Philip Corso (the subject of the book). Specifically, he was Lieutenant Colonel. Philip J. Corso. U.S. Army. Corso’s story was both amazing and groundbreaking. But, was it true? That, quite possibly, was the biggest and most important question of all. While some in the field of Ufology firmly embraced the story, many certainly did not, preferring instead to view the book as either government disinformation – intended to confuse the truth of what really happened at Roswell, New Mexico back in the summer of 1947 – or nothing more than an elaborate and ingenious hoax designed to make money from the gullible and the “I want to believe” crowd. According to Corso, in near-singlehanded fashion he spearheaded a top secret program designed to seed alleged alien technology and wreckage – recovered from the Foster Ranch, Lincoln County, New Mexico by the U.S. Army Air Force’s 509th Bomb Wing in July 1947 – into the private sector. As a result of this wholly clandestine operation, so Corso maintained, the United States was soon able to understand, and even back-engineer, at least some of the extraterrestrial materials found on the ranch. Fiber-optics, transistors, night-vision equipment, and computer chips, were all, allegedly, a direct outgrowth of the extensive studies of the Roswell materials. But, it’s not so much the technology reportedly found at Roswell that I’m focusing my attentions on. Rather, it’s the bodies of the beings allegedly found strewn around the crash site. Contrary to what the UFO community said or assumed at the time and since, Corso never explicitly stated that the Roswell corpses were extraterrestrial. In fact, what he really said was quite the opposite. In Corso’s story the so-called “Grey aliens” are actually created, built, or grown to perform specific tasks. As for the creators of the Greys, it was they, Corso repeatedly maintained, who were the real aliens. Corso also said that, as far as he was personally aware, no one has ever seen the real aliens, only ever their black-eyed, large-headed worker-drones that are so well known in the field of Ufology. As for Corso himself, he stated: “…perhaps we should consider the EBEs [Extraterrestrial Biological Entities] as described in the medical autopsy reports humanoid robots rather than lifeforms, specifically engineered for long distance travel through space or time.” Corso expanded on this, outlining the profoundly weird nature of the Greys: “While doctors couldn’t figure out how the entities’ essential body chemistry worked, they determined that they contained no new basic elements. However, the reports that I had suggested new combinations of organic compounds that required much more evaluation before doctors could form any opinions. Of specific interest was the fluid that served as blood but also seemed to regulate bodily functions in much the same way glandular secretions do for the human body. In these biological entities, the blood system and lymphatic systems seem to have been combined. And if an exchange of nutrients and waste occurred within their systems, that exchange could have only taken place through the creature’s skin or the outer protective covering they wore because there were no digestive or waste systems.” Today, more than two decades after The Day After Roswell surfaced, the undeniably strange story of Colonel Corso continues to divide the UFO research field. It probably always will. Me? I’m sticking to the scenario laid out in my 2017 book, The Roswell UFO Conspiracy. mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/04/the-roswell-ufo-the-corso-claims/
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