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My grandfather was once in one of those "Secure Areas"

He opened up a door when nobody was looking and peered into the restricted area just to find a busted up and gutted Russian tank

2006-08-29 18:10:46 · answer #1 · answered by valkyrie hero 4 · 1 0

Oh, yeah, if it's on X-Files and there's a video game you know it's gotta be legit. The Pentagon always notifies the entertainment industry when it gets in some fresh aliens.

In fact what we've got here is a showcase example of the American genius for hype. Officially, at least, there's no such place as "Area 51." The name refers to a six-by-ten-mile section numbered 51 on an old grid-type map of the Nevada A-bomb test site.

Now part of the Nellis Air Force Range, Area 51 is the home of a used-to-be-secret-but-everybody-and-his-dentist-knew-about-it airfield at Groom (dry) Lake. The Pentagon reportedly has used the airfield to test spy planes and more recently the F-117A Stealth fighter.

For years the military didn't acknowledge the existence of the Groom Lake facility, and even now it speaks only vaguely of "testing ... technologies and systems" there. This of course made Area 51 the perfect place for UFO buffs to store hypothetical alien spacecraft.

What really put Area 51 on the map, so to speak, were the revelations of an enigmatic character named Bob Lazar, who operated a photo lab in Las Vegas. In 1989 Lazar told a Las Vegas TV anchorman that he was a physicist who'd been hired to "reverse engineer" one of nine alien spacecraft stored at a facility supposedly near Groom Lake that Lazar called "Area S-4."

Lazar claimed he had a top-secret security clearance for this job. So what did Mr. Trustworthy do? After only a few months he took some UFO enthusiasts to a spot near the secret base so they could see the alien spacecraft fly. On the last such visit guards caught them, and Lazar claims that shortly thereafter his employment at S-4 ended.

Lazar's description of the spacecraft was filled with enough technical mumbo jumbo about antimatter propulsion systems to persuade people he knew what he was talking about. But the key academic credentials he claimed didn't check out, he'd earlier filed for bankruptcy, and he's since been convicted of pandering.

Yeah, I know: presidential material. But even a lot of people in the UFO community now think Lazar's a flake.

Not that it matters. State highway 375, which runs past Nellis Air Force Range, has now become a sight-seeing stop for UFO buffs hoping for a glimpse of a flying saucer. (Supposedly the primo viewing spot is a certain "black mailbox." Where the aliens get their welfare checks, I bet.)

Some nights you can see lights. Glenn Campbell, a well-known researcher of Area 51 mysteries who's skeptical about flying-saucer sightings, says they're "meteors, flares, aircraft lights, and many manifestations of the bombing runs and war games" at Nellis. But sure, they could be emissaries from beyond the stars.

Now the state of Nevada has declared the road "Extraterrestrial Highway" and promotes it as a tourist destination. Larry King's been out there. So have the networks, Hollywood, the New York Times. In case you missed any of the coverage, Campbell keeps copies on his wonderfully informative Web site (www.ufomind.com/area51). Just shows you the impenetrable veil of secrecy the Pentagon has been able to draw over the whole affair.

Legal action may eventually pry a few more facts loose. Some workers at Groom Lake have sued the U.S. Air Force, saying they were injured by toxic waste burning at the site. Site? What site? the feds said initially. (They finally caved on that point.) Dismissed on national-security grounds, the case is now being appealed.

But why wait? You want to see beings from another planet, go out to the black mailbox. There are bunches of 'em, looking up.

2006-08-29 19:01:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I didn't think there was such a thing as 'former' area 51 workers. Not any who live to tell about it anyway... Sorry, just finished re-watching The X-Files.

2006-08-29 18:12:35 · answer #3 · answered by soulgirl76 4 · 0 0

Yeah... they said that they were really working on such things like the stealth bombers, and since it was the cold war, they wanted to keep it top secret. Now of course the locals in nearby towns muct have seen and heard strange things in the sky, so they sent guys down to the coffee shops and bars to spread tales of alien spacecraft and the like.

Of couse the pro-alien activists say that this story is another elaborate conspiracy to hide the "real truth". Clearly there was something going on there, whether it was stealth aircraft (which we now know exist) or UFOs (which have never been reliably observed).

2006-08-29 18:13:48 · answer #4 · answered by jellybeanchick 7 · 1 0

Not a worker but I was an alien there for 3 months.

2006-08-29 18:10:19 · answer #5 · answered by Mav 6 · 1 1

There are lots of people who would make fun of the prospect of altering their destinies. This is because it thinks that no one gets more that what is written in his destiny.

2016-05-17 03:04:16 · answer #6 · answered by david 2 · 0 0

Yes. Unfortunately, they are living inside my head and they won't leave.

2006-08-29 18:08:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Bob Lazar
V.L. Custer
Anthony Hilder

You didn't hear it from me. ok? OK?

2006-08-29 19:10:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ofcourse

famous one is this


http://www.cutepiggy.com/lazar_talks





here u can see couple of them on tape

2006-08-29 18:42:56 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

not if they know what's good for them...

2006-08-29 18:11:37 · answer #10 · answered by larry n 4 · 0 1

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