UFOs Unmasked 
   The Story of an Unfolding Cosmic Put-on 
Are our skies haunted by an invisible parallel reality? 
What sinister forces materialize, frighten and misguide the human race? 
Will aerial phenomena and UFO entities interfere directly in world events? 
John Keel, UFO Investigator 
Author:   Our Haunted Planet 
The phenomenon [UFOs] is dependent on belief, and as more and more people 
believe in flying saucers from other planets, the lower forces can manipulate 
more people through false illumination. 
I have been watching, with great consternation, the worldwide spread of the UFO 
belief and its accompanying disease. 
If it continues unchecked we may face a time when universal acceptance of the 
fictitious space people will lead us to a modern faith in extra-terrestrials that will 
enable them to interfere overtly in our affairs . . ." 
Jacques Vallee, UFO Investigator Author: Messengers of Deception
I have written this book because I am concerned with the changes which would 
be triggered by the belief in an outer-space invasion, real or simulated. . . 
I continue to regard this phenomenon as a manifestation of a reality that is larger 
and more complex than a simple visit by interplanetary travelers . . . I believe 
there is a system around us that transcends time as it transcends space . . . 
The UFOs are a physical manifestation that cannot be understood apart from 
their psychic and symbolic reality. What we see here is not an alien invasion. It is 
a control system which acts on humans and uses humans. 
                             UFOs Unmasked 
                                by Sidney Reiners 
 Hollywood   turned its attention in the early 1980s to the ultimate frontier, the 
universe. Following the intergalactic cops and robbers of Star Wars, but not a 
spin-off or imitation of it, came Close Encounters of the Third Kind, a movie and 
novel about a man who sees a UFO and, in spite of the government's best 
efforts, arrives at a secret landing site and hitches a ride with spacemen who look 
like raw bread dough. The thinly plotted story follows the popular theory that 
UFOs are vehicles controlled by intelligent beings from other planets. 
Search for the Truth 
But is this the truth behind UFOs? If so, are the occupants friendly, or are they 
technologically superior badniks about to enslave us and demolish our culture, as 
happened in Africa and America under the impact of European civilization? 
Although the history of UFOs is filled with cases of burns, assaults, emotional 
disturbance, and even death, Close Encounters sought to allay our fears. When 
the spaceship lands, the "ufonauts" show themselves to be very peaceful and 
friendly, returning unharmed some pilots who had been missing since World War 
II. (They hadn't even aged. How much friendlier can you get?) 
But is that what those shimmering craft and glowing globs really are? Are they 
run by beings, friendly or otherwise, from outer space, or could there be a 
completely different explanation? And is there an even closer encounter - of the 
fourth kind? 
Solving the Mystery 
John Keel, investigator of UFOs and related phenomena, believes we will solve 
the mystery, not by tracking those elusive disks in the sky, but by studying the 
contactees - not the obvious lunatics, but those perfectly normal men and women 
who, while commuting to work or mowing the lawn encounter the ufonauts. 
Take, for example, Elaine Thomas, forty-eight; Louise Smith, forty-four; and 
Mona Stafford, thirty-five, all of high moral character and apparently conventional 
living. The night of January 6, 1976, they were traveling from Stanford to Liberty, 
Kentucky, where they live. At 11:30 PM they noticed a large, disk-shaped object 
with a glowing white dome and colored lights. Mrs. Smith lost control of the car 
as it suddenly sped to eighty-five mph and then was dragged backward. The 
women passed out. 
The next thing they knew, they were driving to Louise's home, but instead of 
being about midnight, it was 1:30 AM. Louise said her neck hurt. Mona looked 
and saw a strange red mark like a burn. Elaine's neck had the same type of 
mark. 
Some time later, under hypnosis, the three ladies recalled a horrifying experience 
in which strange beings had conducted painful physical examinations of them. 
Detective James Young of the Lexington, Kentucky, police department 
administered lie detector tests and concluded that "these women actually believe 
they did experience an encounter." 
This wording is significant. In recent times several contactees have passed 
psychiatric and lie detector tests while solemnly stating that the UFOs are from 
Clarion, Zomdic, Thythan, Blaau, or a large number of other planets with science- 
fiction-type names, or, even more incredibly, from Venus, Mars, and Jupiter. 
Who's Lying? 
Who's lying? Somebody - or is it everybody? - is wrong but believes he is right. 
The contactees may not be liars, but someone is. Could it be the ufonauts 
themselves? 
Recently some of those mysterious space beings in their flying machines have 
abandoned their vehicles and appeared directly. One lady was lying in bed when 
they supposedly entered, painlessly opened her cranium, and gave her an 
"implant" that enables her to receive communications with them. Many others 
claim to have had a similar experience, resulting in changes in behavior and 
greater "cosmic consciousness." One man who says he has had an implant 
relates that when he hears a beep he can go outside and see UFOs over his 
house. Although many implant victims have been examined, even X-rays fail to 
show anything material. What is going on? 
The Ultra-terrestrials 
Mr. Keel's intensive study of contactees has led him to a startling conclusion. 
Although he remains an atheist and skeptic, he has become convinced that 
UFOS are not from other worlds but from Earth - and not from a secret base 
under the North Pole, either. He believes flying saucers are not machines at all, 
but materializations of beings he calls ultraterrestrials. He feels this is the only 
explanation that deals with all the various aspects of the phenomenon: flying at 
astounding speeds with no sonic boom, apparently being metallic and yet 
transparent, changing shape, making nearly right-angle turns at fantastic speed. 
The phenomenon, be believes, receives overall guidance from "a great intelligence."
and "it makes itself visible from time to time . . . It can take any form 
it desires, ranging from the shapes of airplanes to gigantic cylindrical spaceships. 
It can manifest itself into seemingly living entities ranging from little green men to 
awesome one-eyed giants. But none of these configurations is its true form." 
Demonopoly 
"The UFO phenomenon," he says, "is actually a staggering cosmic put-on, a joke 
perpetrated by invisible entities who have always delighted in frightening, confusing, and 
misleading the human race." That is quite a description for someone who doesn't believe 
the Bible, isn't it? We would say he is describing demons. 
But is he right? Is there an occult connection? Notice the comments of Miss Lynn Catoe, 
of the Library of Congress, who read hundreds of UFO articles and books during the 
compilation of a bibliography for the air force. "A large part of the UFO literature is linked 
with mysticism and the metaphysical," she says. "It deals with subjects like mental 
telepathy, automatic writing, and invisible entities." 
Merging Evidence 
More and more serious students of the problem are turning to what Christians 
would call a spiritual explanation (in the sense of 1 Timothy 4:1, 1 John 4:1, and 
Revelation 16:14), but in our age of disbelief in the supernatural it is expressed in 
scientific terms. The late Dr. J. Allen Hynek, consultant for Close Encounters, 
who has been called the Galileo of scientific ufology, believed UFOs may be part 
of a "parallel reality" that inhabits our planet, undetected by us except as it 
chooses otherwise. 
Astronomer Jacques Valle says, "We are not dealing with successive waves of 
visitations from space. We are dealing with a control system. . . I suggest it is 
human belief that is being controlled and conditioned." 
Kenneth Arnold, who originated the term "flying saucer," stated in 1955 that he 
believed the    "saucers" were not necessarily mechanical but a form of living 
energy. The list of serious researchers holding a similar opinion is growing. 
The Changing Game 
There are several aspects of the UFO phenomenon that make investigators 
doubt the "spacemen from other planets" or extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH). 
One is the way it has manifested itself over the years, for it is not just since World 
War II that UFOs have existed. Reports have occurred for centuries. A 
considerable number were sighted in the 1800s, and the form they took then was 
far different from what it is now. 
French engineer Henri Giffard built the first controllable dirigible in 1852, powered 
by steam and plodding along at seven MPH. IN 1897 David Schwarz flew a few 
miles when a gas leak brought him down. However, while earthlings were 
struggling to develop the first dirigibles, the ufonauts were making close 
encounters of the ludicrous kind in complex, speedy "airships" that looked as 
though Rube Goldberg had designed them. At that point they didn't claim to be 
from other planets, but some of the navigators looked Oriental (still a frequent 
feature of the mysterious visitors). 
The construction of the machines and the conduct of the navigators were as 
varied, inconsistent, and absurd as today. Reliable witnesses claimed to have 
run into them while the spacemen had landed for repairs, or they saw them drop 
a wheel, a newspaper, a potato. The crew of one low-flying airship was heard 
singing "Abide With me"! And all this before 1900, when Count Zeppelin flew 
three and a half miles at 18 mph in his first airship. 
Then, just as the Wright brothers began experimenting with flight, the UFOs 
began appearing as graceful, speedy (for the times) airplanes. On August 30 and 
31, 1910, a long black object flew over Manhattan, accompanied by the sound of 
an engine. Hundreds of people saw it, complete with red and green lights, as it 
circled the Metropolitan Life Building several times and swooped so low over 
Madison Square that "it seemed to brush the top of the trees," the New York 
Tribune of the date reported. In 1910 there were thirty-six licensed pilots and 
fewer airplanes. None of the few pilots in the New York area was up that night. In 
fact, they avoided hazardous Manhattan at any time. 
After World War II, with man's tremendous advances in air engineering, UFOs 
began taking the form we now see, being, as always, close enough to present 
technology to be conceivable but advanced enough to be bewildering. and the 
"plastic" qualities seem to have increased. Occasionally they have changed 
shape before the eyes of witnesses, in some instances becoming transparent or 
turning into what appear to be conventional craft, leaving the observer self- 
doubting and embarrassed. 
From Other Worlds? 
Indeed, this marvelous malleability is another difficulty in the ETH. Suppose for a 
moment we adopt that viewpoint, excluding all theological considerations. 
Suppose life has just evolved. The chances of its happening once, anywhere, 
place it in the realm of the virtually impossible, but just suppose. How often would 
life evolve elsewhere? we can unhesitatingly give a mathematically valid answer: 
never. But just suppose it did. And suppose some of those civilizations somehow 
conquered space. The chance that they would stumble across our little speck in 
the universe is so remote it  probably cannot even be calculated. But if they did, 
out of the numerous sightings of their craft we would surely expect to see some 
basic patterns emerge. 
But after analyzing 434 descriptions, the air force was unable to find one single 
basic uniformity. Even ETH advocate Wendelle Stevens, who has collected over 
a thousand UFO photos, admits, "There seems to be an almost infinite variety." 
Evidently the humanoids never encountered Henry Ford! 
The Occult Connection 
The ufonauts are equally facile at varying their own appearance. Some have skin 
like fish scales; others are furry. Some have eight-fingered hands; others no 
arms. Their messages are also diverse, contradictory, and cultic. UFOs are 
closely tied to poltergeists, reincarnation stories, supernormal knowledge of 
languages, automatic writing, "prophecies," and communication with the 
supposed spirits of the dead, 
Israeli psychic Uri Geller believes his paranormal abilities began at age three of 
four after being knocked unconscious by a silvery mass of light from the sky. He 
now claims to have extensive contacts with the space beings. 
Whether or not UFOs or their occupants exist as real objects or are  the result of 
hallucinations, either self-induced or imposed by a deceiving intelligence, the 
most significant and irrefutable  fact is that thousands of persons are being 
influenced, even dominated by the phenomenon. A closer encounter of the fourth 
kind may be the possession or obsession of the mind by these beings. And the 
experience is essentially religious, with obvious elements of the occult. 
For his book Revelation: The Divine Fire, researcher Brad Steiger interviewed 
scores of psychics, would-be prophets, and contactees. He found that whether 
they were in communion with what they believed to be spacemen, God and 
angels, or the dead, the information they received was essentially the same. This 
is true even of specific bits of information. 
Central Control 
For example, in 1967 mediums, psychics, and contactees around the world, 
many of whom did not even know of one another's existence, all made the same 
prediction, even phrased the same in different languages: about midnight, 
December 24, a bright light would appear in the sky, and then - worldwide 
holocaust. 
It is obvious, the world did not end that night. But this is one of the beings’ 
favorite games: set people up by giving them accurate predictions and then slip 
them the big one, the end of the world. Of course it doesn’t happen, and millions 
become even bolder in their disbelief in any day of reckoning. 
Commenting on this particular situation, in which he was deeply involved, Keel 
says, “the UFO contactees received the same identical messages as the trance 
mediums communing with spirits. . . .It was now clear (to me anyway) that all of 
these people were tuned into a central source.” 
Ripe for Belief 
The religious nature of Close Encounters has impressed many viewers. Jay 
Gould Baum, reviewer for the Wall Street Journal, says, in the February, 1978, 
issue of Science Digest, “Close Encounters is filled with a familiar religious awe, 
and infused with a belief in the actuality of UFOs . . . that is tantamount to faith. 
And this faith - wondrous and thoroughly spiritual - is registered in nearly every 
frame, reaching a climax in its messianic ending. For here we are shown the 
actual landing of a UFO which, descending like the Star of Bethlehem, bathes the 
world in heavenly light and emits musical tones that swell into a liturgical chant. . 
. . We are being offered nothing less than epiphany.” 
Mankind, unbelieving and self-willed, has largely destroyed faith in God and 
belief in the supernatural through what he calls “science.” But gazing awestruck 
into the heavens, we feel the crushing need to know “we are not alone” (the 
motto of Close Encounters). 
Return of the Gods 
The morally ambivalent gods of mythology died many centuries ago, being edged 
out of the cosmos by God’s revelation of Himself in Jesus Christ. But now we are 
devoted to excluding Him from our concept of truth and reality (i.e., mathematics 
and physics). 
However, man’s need for the spiritual, impelled by his intuitive belief in something 
greater than himself, continues. And so the gods have returned, not now clad in 
royal vestments and hurling thunderbolts from Olympus but dressed in laboratory 
style and darting laser beams from multicolored vehicles, bringing us little green 
(or is it tall blue?) men to assure us the universe really is a place of life - and 
maybe even of love. 
These superior beings have conquered time, death, war, space, and nearly every 
other limitation and defect. All this they claim to have done without the crudity of 
a cross, the sweat and blood of a dying sacrifice, the guilt and humiliation of 
being found sinful in ourselves, and without the repentance and self-denial of the 
gospel. An so it has ever been since Eve, the first contactee, held communion 
with an extraterrestrial intelligence speaking through a serpent at the tree of the 
knowledge of good and evil in the garden of Eden. 
Formula for Deception 
Will UFOs and their charioteers play an important role in end-time events, or will 
they continue as just one of the many paths seeming right to man but ending in 
death? While we cannot be sure, the fact that the entire phenomenon has been 
so carefully cultivated for decades on a worldwide scale indicates it is a major 
ingredient in Satan’s formula for deception. 
There are, for example, several ways it could support the rise and reign of 
antichrist. By appearing as a menace to all life on Earth, it could precipitate a 
rush toward world government, with democratic principles being lost in the panic. 
On the other hand, friendly ufonauts could very persuasively advise us to follow 
them if we want to solve all our problems as they have. And though he will      not 
be able to duplicate Jesus’ glorious return, Satan, the counterfeit Christ, must 
arrive somehow. 
Will he simply appear one day, or will he arrive in a “chariot of the gods”? (At 
least one national Christian magazine has seriously suggested this as the way 
Jesus may return and set up a kingdom on Earth.) We don’t know yet, and 
although quoting the ufonauts is a little like quoting the mugger who yells help 
when the police arrive, may there not inadvertently be much truth in the comment 
of one contactee who claims he was told, “My friend, this earth is the battlefield of 
Armageddon, and the battle is for men’s minds and souls”?