| This
is a very remarkable book.
Not only because it completely wipes
away all intellectual relevance around the
many glossy UFO books with sensational
stories and ditto photo's. Not only because
it was written back in the 1960's and didn't
lose one inch of it's actuality along the
decades.
The book is remarkable because it
makes sense out of those things concerning
the UFO phenomena that usually doesn't make
any sense.
An example. When the UFO's were flying
over the western world in the 1800's, they
didn't look at all like the pictures we all
know. And the aliens also looked
quite different.
Many people who think that UFO's do not
exist use these facts to proof that they
can't possible be somewhere other than in
the fantasies of failed writers.
But there are still plenty facts that
simply proofs the existence of these
machines and their inhabitants.
The writer of Operation Trojan Horse
makes sense out of what seems to be
non-sense. He makes a lot of sense!
Instead of going after the many stories,
trying to (dis)proof the authenticity of
them, John A Keel simply looks at the
actions of the Unidentified Flying Objects
throughout history.
In the big picture that comes to the
surface, we are introduced to an intelligent
Master Plan. It appears that UFO's have been
developed in an adjustment to human
perception. More simply put: they look the
way they want us to see them.
Keel doesn't really go in to the
temptation to answer, or even ask where
UFO's come from. In fact, he leaves these
things over to the reader. A reader who
knows that that question is not so relevant
when it comes to this whole issue.
John Keel simply bypasses all the crap in
this whole UFO story. The sensational
stories, the irrelevant questions, the
paranoia. He goes straight to the core of
the matter.
He ends his book in a state of
"reasonable confusion". Operation
Trojan Horse is clearly in effect and it
involves a lot of bizarre technology.
But being a believer in a-theism and
evolution, Keel has some intellectual
problems to overcome. A matter which he
considers private and not the subject of
this book. Fortunately.
Because that makes it even more
interesting for Truth Seekers.
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