A Change of Pace and an Update

This blog has been really heavy lately. (As are the times.) So I thought I would lighten things up with a excerpt from the novel I’m writing, Majestic Seventeen. As you may guess, it’s about the UFO Phenomenon. Another one of my lifelong obsessions.

I had the basic kernel of the story years ago, when I first read the book Mirage Men by Mark Pilkington. The UFO lore was so rich and complex, led in so many dimensions, I was surprised it didn’t appear more in popular entertainment. It would be fun to write.

I missed the whole “Glowing Auras and Black Money” article furor originally. But when the three videos GIMBAL, GOFAST, and FLIR made worldwide news I clued back in, and realized now was the time for this story.

At this point in the story my main character, Carmen Acevedo, has already been nabbed by Majestic because he’s seen too much:



“You pendejos really are spying on us!”


Quinn grunted with what seemed like amusement. “We spy on everyone. Most people are boring as shit.”


Carmen saw no need to disbelieve him. “What about Emilio?”


Whitmer fiddled with his phone, and an image came up of a terrified-looking cousin Emilio in an interrogation room. The timestamp said 12:04 AM. Three hours ago? Emilio was being badgered by three men in Air Force uniforms, but he quickly conceded and signed a paper, just like Carmen had. Then he was hustled out of the room.


“Mr. Diaz got quite a scare, but he realizes now that your message was a matter of national security. Will he be quiet?” Whitmer asked coyly.


“Yes,” Carmen said. Emilio was a stand-up guy. If asked to keep quiet by appealing to his patriotism, he would.


“Then let’s go,” Whitmer said, and exited the car. Quinn followed.

When Carmen got out of the car, he realized where they were. In the distance, lit by floodlights, was the famous Vehicle Assembly Building, looming huge and white. Closer and to the right, there was a rocket in a gantry, also lit by floodlights. The limo was parked on an ancient, cracked slab of concrete. The sound of the Atlantic surf came distantly from what must be the east.


“This is Kennedy Space Center.” Carmen had come here on a Boy Scout trip. Once seen, it wasn’t forgotten. “Why are we here?”

With an annoying smirk, Quinn pointed upwards.

Carmen looked up.


He saw nothing.


Or did he?

There was something up there—some weight or mass in the air above them. Carmen realized he could no longer hear the surf, the insects. A weird silence had descended.

Then a deep, subsonic humming arose from the silence. The sense of weight, oppression increased. The hair stood up on his arms and neck.

“What—?”


“Just wait,” Quinn said, grinning.

A column of red light suddenly pierced the darkness, shining down from—
—a ship, a craft, an aircraft? It was triangular, black, and huge—stupefyingly huge. Like a building flying. Stories tall, wide as a football field.
It descended over them, silent but for that humming noise—no engines, no wind from its descent. It fell eerily down from the sky, too quiet, too slow.

About thirty feet over their heads, it stopped. Its surface was matte black and featureless, except for a faint tracery of pattern—circuitry maybe. The red light had been replaced by three smaller white lights at the corners. A cylinder extended down from its underside; a door opened. A lift.

Carmen tried to speak, couldn’t. Swallowed, tried again. “Where are we going?”


“Alaska,” Quinn said, and stepped in the lift.


Whitmer gestured, after you, and Carmen steeled himself and entered as well.


Some doors you can never go back through.

I hope you like it! I’m all but done with the first draft.

My Thoughts on the Pentagon UAP Report

 I’ve always loved weird science. Since I was a little kid reading the TIME LIFE Mysteries of the Unexplained books at the public library.  UFOs, Bigfoot, poltergeists, all of it. The Philadelphia Experiment. “Fortean phenomena.” Weird science. I love it! It fires my imagination.

I’ve been studying the UFO phenomenon my entire life.

So I have some thoughts about the Pentagon report on “Unexplained Aerial Phenomena” that dropped last week.

Much of the “UFO community” are infuriated at what they find to be weak tea, after 70 years of waiting.

But really, anyone who thought the report was going to include high-definition video of classic flying discs was letting their imagination run away with them.

If you read carefully, there are two major changes of policy in this report. 

First, the report says, “UAP clearly pose a safety of flight issue and may pose a challenge to U.S. national security.” [emphasis mine]

Since the Blue Book era onwards, the official position has been that UFOs/UAP represent no threat to national security. 

Second, the report suggests the phenomenon requires actual scientific study to increase understanding.

The conclusion of the Condon Report back in the 1960s stated that there was no scientific value to studying the phenomenon. This gave the Air Force the excuse it wanted to shutter Project Blue Book. 

Actually, three policy changes, now that I think of it — there are now formal procedures for the military to report UAPs.  

Previously, doing so could end a pilot’s or a scientist’s career through ridicule and ostracization.

This represents a 180 degree turn from previous policy. For generations, the official government position was ridicule and obfuscation. “Swamp gas.”

Now, suddenly UAPs are a threat to national security requiring rigorous scientific study (and more funding.)

Why? What changed?  

Mind, I don’t think it’s great that the phenomenon is suddenly being couched as a threat, a potential enemy.

But at least “the powers that be” are taking it seriously. 

They’re spoon-feeding us information here. But they ARE feeding us.  That is a huge change. 

Here is the report, so you can read it yourself. It’s only nine pages. Including two appendixes.

Make of it what you will.

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