From: ak35+@andrew.cmu.edu (Andy Kurtz)
Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors
Subject: Beckley/MIB review
Date: 7 Oct 93 15:16:04 GMT
Organization: Doctoral student, English, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA


Review:  The UFO Silencers:  Mystery of the Men In Black by ~famed
researcher~ Timothy Green Beckely (Inner Light Publications, New
Brunswick, NJ. :  1990.)  $9.95

This short review is for the benefit and information of those who have
an interest in MIB (most of us, I would assume).  


I think that all of us would agree that the Men In Black (MIB)
phenomenon is one of the more fascinating aspects of UFOlogy.   For
years, researchers and contactees (at all levels of encounter) have
reported being confronted by strange, threatening men, dressed in
ill-fitting, aging, black or brown suits, whose purpose is to ward off
the researcher/contactee from public pronouncements regarding specific
UFO encounters.  MIB are often described as being ~not quite right,~ as
having a death-like pallor, or of being jaundiced, of having strange,
slanted eyes, or of standing with their feet pointed outward at 180
degrees, all of which makes the encounter more uncanny and frightening. 
These visits are sometimes accompanied by extended periods of
surveillance in which the researcher/contactee may have their phone
tapped or their house staked-out.  In some instances the
researcher/contactee will also report poltergeist activity, feelings of
angst and paranoia, and most uncanny of all, encounters with the
doppelgangers of friends or relatives (who are doubles only in most
respects, making them doubly enigmatic and disturbing).  MIB have even
been known to aggressively pursue the researcher/contactee on the road
in their trademark luxury cars, sometimes causing potentially lethal car
accidents.   Whatever the variation of the theme, those who have
encountered MIB agree unequivocally;  they are evil, they are
malevolent, and they are, above all, powerful and dangerous.

In The UFO Silencers, Timothy Beckley has attempted to provide an
overview of important and representative MIB encounters.  According to
Beckley, MIB have been with us for many hundreds of years, speculating
that such diverse characters from the history of witchcraft and folklore
as the Elizabethan ~Black Men~, the Native American ~Black Man~ and late
nineteenth century reports of malevolent traveling salesmen (!), might
have been manifestations of what we now know as MIB (sans black
Caddilac, of course).  However, Beckley is mainly concerned with
post-Kenneth Arnold MIB encounters and the major portion of the 160 page
book consists of testimonials from witnesses and speculations by
scientists (with a couple of religious rantings and magical spells
thrown in for the benefit of all you new-age folks).

By far the most satisfying portions of the book are the first-hand
testimonials of encounters with MIB.  There are 10 such testimonials,
the variations between encounters such that they do not at all become
boring or repetitious.  Through these testimonials, we learn of the
varying degrees of malevolence that MIB are capable of.  From seemingly
benign, even saccharine manifestations (in the case of a 14 year-old
girl), to menacing zombies with laser and trans-dimensional weaponry, we
learn that MIB rely most of all on methods of psychological torture,
resorting to physical harm only when the researcher/contactee fails to
heed their initial warnings.  Beckley has wisely chosen to allow these
people to, for the most part, speak for themselves, the chapters reading
like unedited transcripts of interviews.  Though the syntactical
problems of everyday speech sometimes makes these encounters difficult
to follow, the fear, frustration, and unease that these people live with
all of the time is intact and identifiable.  Of note, in this regard,
are the illustrations.  Though the drawings add meaning to the
encounters, most effective is a photograph taken by the author of what
he contends is a MIB on surveillance.  Whether or not it is truly an MIB
(it could, after all, just be some fat dude waiting for the bus), is
really not all that important.  It occurs in the context of a very weird
and violent MIB encounter (laser-beams and doppelgangers) and I could
not help but to feel some of the powerlessness and the angst of the
contactees upon seeing it.

Though I think the testimonials are worth the price of the book, The UFO
Silencers is flawed in many, annoying respects.  First, let me be blunt.
 Beckley is a terrible writer.  The UFO Silencers is an English
teacher~s nightmare:  topic sentences, passive voice, dangling
modifiers, misplaced modifiers, no transitions between paragraphs,
spelling mistakes, non-idiomatic usage, and on and on.  It is, without a
doubt, the most poorly written book I have ever seen published. 
Personally I think this is inexcusable.   Second, Beckley does not
believe in citation.  Like any book based on research, The UFO Silencers
relies heavily on secondary sources.  However, not a citation is to be
found.  This is particularly frustrating to those of us who use books as
sources for other books and articles.  And last, there is a curious lack
of audience-awareness.  Who is this book for?  Sometimes it~s for the
new-age crowd (~Since war was declared (many eons ago in the
Heavenlies), Lucifer, son of the morning was thrust forth and literally
cast out of the Holy sphere...~);  sometimes it~s for the scientist
(~ROI readout time was 2,000 seconds for gross counts inside the area
where the depressed grass was found.  Naturally occurring Radon
daughters ranged from 123 to 178, with a naturally occurring
annihilation peak of 256.~); and sometimes it truly is for the
interested lay person who wants to know more about the phenomenon.  This
makes for a truly uneven and frustrating read:  Mr. Beckley, get an
editor!!

That~s about all I have to say about this.  I ordered it from a new-age
bookstore so it~s relatively easy to get and, despite some serious flaws
(which may, after all, reflect only my personal pet peeves), it is
informative and interesting.

ak





Date: Mon, 18 Oct 93 01:04:50 EDT
From: mcgrew@klinzhai.rutgers.edu (Charles Mcgrew)
To: ak35+@andrew.cmu.edu
Cc: mcgrew
Subject: Re: Beckley/MIB review


Hi,

   Nice review!  Would you mind if I included portions of it in 
my "ufo bibliography" file (available for ftp from ftp.rutgers.edu)?

Thanks!

Charles





Date: Mon, 18 Oct 1993 09:20:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: Andy Kurtz <ak35+@andrew.cmu.edu>
To: mcgrew@klinzhai.rutgers.edu (Charles Mcgrew)
Subject: Re: Beckley/MIB review
Cc: 
In-Reply-To: <9310180504.AA01325@klinzhai.rutgers.edu>

I'd be happy to have some or all of the review included in the FAQ.  Thanks!

ak

