Richard Dolan on VeritasRadio – Rethinking ET: UFOs for the 21st Century Mind
Richard Dolan is known for his meticulous research and has written many books on UFO history. Recently, he and his co-author Bryce Zabel wrote A.D. After Disclosure, which studies the ramification in a world where the reality of extraterrestrial life is a fact. Now Dolan is working on a new book ‘Rethinking ET: UFOs for the 21st Century Mind.’ In a world plagued with war, financial collapse, disease and societal problems, how relevant are UFOs these days. During this interview filmed at the 2013 International UFO Congress, Dolan explored all possibilities and the new technological advances that make the UFO topic more mainstream, yet difficult for researchers since affordable technology can produce Hollywood-like footage that can fool the most discerning eye. The interview is available on video (inside Veritas TV) and audio.
Sad, really. Dolan is a brilliant author, but it seems he has now bought into the idea that we will better off with the alien influence. The ETs don't see us as "space brothers" as I've heard people say. They see us as primitive creatures who happen to be sitting on some prime real estate. People use our problems, war, pollution, etc. to validate their claim that we need the
Well said.
Bravo to Mr. Dolan for taking an honest look at the dumbing down of our culture, and the "driven to distraction," superficiality that is encouraged. Thinking or pondering for oneself, without the help of electronic interface, is becoming a thing of the past, and "getting a life," is one massive cliche.'
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Sad, really. Dolan is a brilliant author, but it seems he has now bought into the idea that we will better off with the alien influence. The ETs don't see us as "space brothers" as I've heard people say. They see us as primitive creatures who happen to be sitting on some prime real estate. People use our problems, war, pollution, etc. to validate their claim that we need the
Well said.
Bravo to Mr. Dolan for taking an honest look at the dumbing down of our culture, and the "driven to distraction," superficiality that is encouraged. Thinking or pondering for oneself, without the help of electronic interface, is becoming a thing of the past, and "getting a life," is one massive cliche.'