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About Jason
Conspiracy Theories?
04/21/2014
55 Comments
This morning I read an interesting diatribe by the pseudonymous Annoyed Librarian in the Library
Journal
in which he criticizes the Carnegie Free Library in Connellsville, Penn. for inviting longtime
UFO researcher Stan Gordon to deliver a presentation on flying saucers at the library. The presentation
occurred
on Saturday, and it isnt really the kind of thing Id comment on except that I couldnt get
over the title of Gordons book: Silent Invasion: The Pennsylvania UFO-Bigfoot Casebook.
Gordon claims to have been involved in ufology since 1959, and his reputation rests on his
investigation of the 1965 Kecksburg UFO crash. Although mainstream sources attributed the
fireball seen December 9 of that year to a meteor or to a
failed Soviet satellite, Gordon believes that a
spacecraft shaped like a
beehive (or a turd, frankly) crashed in Pennsylvania. The programs Nazi UFO
Conspiracy (2008 on Discovery, now airing on American Heroes) and Ancient Aliens (S04E09,
2012)
claimed that the craft was in fact a Nazi time machine that moved
forward from WWII to 1965 before
exploding. The Science Channels
Dark Matters (2011)
concurred, but thought it was more likely due
to Nazi antigravity technology rather than time travel. Still: Flying space Nazis.
partial list--Unsolved Mysteries, Inside Edition, A Current Affair, Creepy Canada, Alien Mysteries,
Close Encounters,
etc. He is always discussing material from his heyday in the late 1960s
to the early
1970s, before the conspiracy apparently clamped down on the truth.
About Me
I'm an author and editor who
has published on a range of
topics, including
archaeology, science, and
But what interests me is the way Gordons ideology has gradually transformed along with conspiracy
culture in general. Beginning a nuts-and-bolts UFO investigator looking for metal fragments of
tab.
physical craft, he gradually expanded his conspiracy to include government cover-ups, the paranormal,
and, of course, Bigfoot. Last year he participated in the filming of two Bigfoot films, one a docudrama
and the other a documentary, and he also was a key speaker atand I didnt know this existedthe
Mothman Festival, an entire festival devoted to the mystery of a monster that was almost certainly an
owl.
According to Gordon, Bigfoot isnt just a hairy ape-like creature but is instead intimately connected to
space aliens: there may be more to the Bigfoot mystery than a flesh and blood explanation. (Here is a
link to an interview
in which Gordon and Jeffery Pritchett explore whether Bigfoot is a space alien or,
but of course, a Biblical Nephilim-giant; as I have learned the Nephilim-Watchers myth is the
centerpiece of all fringe history.) The U.S. government is, naturally, deeply interested in the Bigfoot
question as one way of learning more about the space aliens theyve been trying so hard to cover up. In
so doing, Gordon hits a
number of the key defining traits of conspiracy culture: that mysteries are all
connected, that the government is conspiring to suppress the truth, and that there is a discoverable
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
hidden reality to UFOs. His website homepage currently features a computer-generated image of a
green-eyed Bigfoot emerging from a flying saucer.
Of course you know this was all anticipated by the Looney Tunes, who
placed Gossamer the Hair
Monster in outer space and under the control of Marvin the Martian in Duck Dodgers and the Return of
the 24th Century (1980),
a made-for-TV cartoon. It is not one of Warner Bros. best efforts, clearly
because this was the conspiracy engaging in its penchant for spilling the beans by making its Bigfoot
plans known. The Hair Monster had previously been a Frankenstein-like creation of mad scientists
modeled on Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff in his two classic-period appearances in Hair-Raising Hare
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ufologists desire to deliver his message not just to audiences that sought out his uniquely Looney
Tunes view of Bigfoot but to public library patrons under the imprimatur of the libraries. Annoyed
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Librarian
sees this as parallel to the decay of the History networks into the aliens and conspiracy
channels:
Blog Roll
Thats the sort of source librarians should be questioning, not promoting. When it comes to
information, shouldnt libraries be a refuge against the sensationalist nonsense that passes for
educational TV? [] The sort of thing that TV networks start showing when they have abandoned
educational TV and want to lure the gullible masses shouldnt be the sort of thing libraries host to
get people through the doors, unless the purpose is to show how gullible people use
hearsay and a
the absence of proof to support their conspiracy theories.
Heres where I am of two minds about this. Are libraries intended to curate information for the purpose
of public education, or are they designed to provide access to multiple points of view even when
they
are wrong? My gut reaction is to say that if a local author wrote a
book, then it seems like the library
ought to offer a venue to talk about it, but on the other hand we all know that there are obvious limits
that libraries would never cross. They wont let a Neo-Nazi
present a speech on anti-Semitism, nor
would they offer racists a platform for arguing the inferiority of various races. So at some level,
libraries arent simply offering their floor to all comers.
This is also the reason that the History and H2 claims, expressed directly to me last year, that they
simply offer a platform for their talents various points of view ring so hollow. They arent public
access TV, and obviously, theyd never broadcast a show denying the Holocaust, advocating the Black
Supremacist movement (yes, its a real thing), or calling for a communist revolution, even though all of
these claims have supporters. When you look at the American Heroes Channela poor mans History
Channel circa 2001you see programs (just last night) about the quest to find Noahs Ark, the spear
that pierced Christ, and the hunt for the Garden of Edenbut not shows about why Hinduism is the
one true faith, or the quest for Xenus volcano. So they are making choices
of some kindbased on
perceptions of the audiences attitudes and values.
Are libraries more like TV networks, playing to popular prejudices, even when those ideaslike
Bigfoots UFO taxi serviceare scientifically unsupportable? Or are libraries curated
forums designed
Collections
Ancient Aliens Reviews
America Unearthed Reviews
Categories
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
to educate the publicand if so, who makes the decisions about what they should teach? These arent
easy questions, especially when we realize that as far as the audiencethe publicis concerned,
having a speaker at the library is a de facto endorsement of the speaker, no matter how many
disclaimers you issue.
So what I have learned from all of this is that the idea that Bigfoot rides in a flying saucer is not just a
stupid Ancient Aliens episode but an apparently established part of conspiracy culture. Will wonders
never cease?
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Comments
J.A.D
04/21/2014 2:43pm
gone FOIA & asked for old BLUE BOOK era documents,
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Reply
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[jad]
04/21/2014 2:54pm
December 2012
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
Jason, you know the answer to this, textbook disputes often hit
at the local school district level and can get very fierce, often in
often very difficult, sometimes not buying at all for a local library
ones JFK is said to have written for his famous political book. i
libraries still for high school and college level papers, not all is
online and many things after 1999 are often pay as you go like
JSTOR. this sorta freezes our sciences at the 911 cusp of the
August 2012
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April 2012
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December 2011
Reply
Dave Lewis
04/21/2014 9:35pm
JAD you are making sense today. Did you get back on your meds or what?
Reply
luv...
04/23/2014 5:34pm
poster who does brief one liners and they do not have periods in
are not the earlier A.D. postings, i tried [jad] and (jad) to have a
try not to have my "caps" button on, but i can be gonzo when i
other threads are why the blog exists. i am in the category of the
a small lab can test samples in the field. Two separate teams saw
tree moss and hoped they were Bigfoot hairs. Science is science.
KIF
November 2011
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04/21/2014 2:51pm
An Over-Educated Grunt
04/21/2014 2:51pm
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
stranded on Earth in their eternal war with the Greys." Pretty sure that GURPS Black Ops
discussed the possibility back in the late '90s, early 2000s, for that matter. However, gracing the
pages of an RPG and being given public speaking space by your local library are two different
beasts, since no one expects the truth from a game that actively encourages you to make stuff up.
On the other hand, I'm torn. If the library is giving him a voice as a local author, fine, most
libraries have a "woo" section anyway. The library's not really supposed to be there to cast
judgment on whether books are good or bad, they're supposed to be there to cast judgment on
whether books are stocked and shelved. And yet... frankly, anyone who believes that Bigfoot
rides around in UFOs doesn't need encouragement and legitimacy. Encouragement alone,
perhaps; I can see him being tremendous fun at the local comic and gaming store, or in a New
Age bookshop, but the very perceived neutrality of libraries gives him a legitimacy that he
doesn't deserve.
Reply
04/21/2014 3:10pm
if Bigfoot was once real say 100,ooo to 200,ooo years ago and
Bigfoot lore we have evolved over the last century? we see the
save for CHINA's jaws & teeth that are very large, that are from
the odds are way less for an intact skeleton like Turkana Boy's
being found over the next three decades. the "beastie" may have
once existed, i'm assuming the intestinal tract has five seperate
[jad]
04/21/2014 3:17pm
being powdered up. Bigfoot lore may have had more instances of a
very ancient set of bones being a starting point. Bear hairs often are
Prof. Sykes was part of for 3 episodes. i think like troll myths etc
we are taling about extremely ancient oral histories. this is like the
Bazooka Bill
04/21/2014 3:24pm
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
Here we go
Again
[jad]
04/21/2014 3:24pm
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/oct/17/yeti-dna-ancient-polar-bearscientists
[jad]
04/21/2014 3:26pm
[jad]
04/21/2014 3:34pm
equal & even amount of public access, if they are being ethical,
even if their local school district orders text books more often from
New York than from Texas. this cuts both ways, we see the areas
or the regions that prefer the Texas textbooks also may have kids
going onto Cal-Tech or M.I.T but to get into either school, The NY
SAT scores. Bigfoot ain't why good students can flunk outta M.I.T!
[jad]
04/21/2014 3:37pm
(jad)
04/21/2014 5:03pm
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
General Bootcamp
04/21/2014 3:13pm
I once attended a funny talk during the 1990s and some of the audience expressed
contempt (Adrian Gilbert was promoting his latest)
Reply
Graham
04/21/2014 6:29pm
Actually you can push it back further. There are at least two episodes of The Six Million
Dollar Man (Mid 1970's/Early 1980's) that feature Bigfoot as the 'guardian' of Aliens.
Reply
An Over-Educated Grunt
04/21/2014 9:40pm
Gah, that's right, I'd forgotten about the Six Million Dollar Man and Bigfoot!
That was before my time, but that's a legendary example of shark-jumping.
Mark E.
04/21/2014 10:29pm
Conceptually I would go back to 1953 with the movie "Robot Monster" where
the Ro-Mon actor is dressed in a gorilla suit with a space helment (actually a
diving helmet and antenna attached).
Jason Colavito
04/22/2014 6:23am
Shawn Flynn
04/21/2014 3:49pm
Nazi Bigfoots (Bigfeet?) are (Time?)traveling by UFO in PA? I can't say I've noticed but we
probably should alert X-Com so they can scramble their interceptors.
Reply
(jad)
04/21/2014 3:56pm
keep in mind there is a ww2 era loose rule of thumb where 1/10th
of any set of Nazis are actually "fifth column" Stalinists and any
dissembling Nazis who have lied lied lied to their fellow comrades!
Reply
(jad)
04/21/2014 4:00pm
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
An Over-Educated Grunt
04/21/2014 4:01pm
Matt Mc
04/21/2014 4:05pm
(jad)
04/21/2014 5:03pm
Mandalore
04/21/2014 5:05pm
Steve In SoDak
04/23/2014 6:56am
(jad)
04/21/2014 4:11pm
it is 4:10 p.m on the East Coast and our local Marathon has
today happily, and have idle tyme today because its a big
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
(jad)
04/21/2014 5:02pm
(jad)
04/21/2014 5:04pm
(jad)
04/21/2014 5:31pm
i'd like to think private libraries are better run than our public
04/21/2014 5:33pm
Reply
Kal
04/21/2014 5:36pm
First of all, The crashed 'UFO' in the woods in the 1960s in Pennsylvania was not a UFO but a
downed Russian satellite. At the time it was not a mystery, The government swooped in and
took it.
The made up connections with bigfoot myth and aliens are just to explain
that they never, ever
find any evidence of bigfoot, ever. Nobody has ever actually found a body. If they were that
prevalent, one of them would have died somewhere on a road and we'd have a body. Or one
would get hit by a car on a highway.
Bugs bunny, ha! That's a good one. The hair monster explains it all.
Reply
04/21/2014 6:01pm
if its ball lightning or swamp gas and not even a physical object
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
Reply
KIF
04/21/2014 7:34pm
Didn't you know Bigfoot has paranormal powers that helps him from becoming
discovered?
See the book by Tom Burnette and Rob Riggs, "Bigfoot: Exploring the Myth
&
Discovering the Truth" (Llewellyn Publications, 2014)
Reply
Drew
04/21/2014 6:08pm
I'm a public librarian and I'd have no problem with a presentation on Alien Bigfoot being hosted
at my library. Heck, I'd probably attend it.
Trick is, there would need to be enough patron demand for the event to make it worthwhile. It
can't be just me and some dude who had a Bigfoot costume in his freezer at home. Maybe I
could lure in the patron I saw last week with the Exeter UFO Festival t-shirt or the lady I talked
with
back in December about Knights Templar in Rhode Island, but the three of us would not
justify even the small honorarium the library can afford
to pay the speaker.
Reply
Frugal Frank
04/21/2014 7:22pm
Payment....?
For what?
Reply
Only Me
04/21/2014 7:53pm
Ah, yes, good ol' Sasquatch. The only creature that remains unchanged, even as the story
surrounding it "evolves".
First, it was relegated to Native American folklore and tales of hairy "wildmen" encountered in
caves, abandoned mines and remote areas of the country, during the heyday of yellow
journalism.
Then, it became linked to aliens, because the areas rife with sightings overlapped areas also
heavy in reported UFO sightings.
Next, thanks to alleged and actual evidence (Jeff Meldrum's analysis of over 100 footprint casts
and over 50 photos of the same, the Skookum Cast, discovery of Gigantopithecus blacki teeth
and jawbone, etc.) Sasquatch was seen as a large, unknown North American primate.
Now, Sasquatch is once again linked to aliens, only this time, as a genetically-engineered, gold-
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
Regardless, even if a specimen (live or dead) is found, it's a foregone conclusion that the fringe
theorists and conspiracy mongers will not accept the "official story".
Reply
An Over-Educated Grunt
04/21/2014 9:42pm
Whatever the Man might find, the Bobes knows better. If he doesn't like donuts and
bacon, it's not really squatchy.
Reply
04/21/2014 9:57pm
Yes, Bobo Fay has every right to ask Scott Wolter about all the times
and then religiously buried in Minnesota over the last 300 years or so!
KIF
04/22/2014 9:52am
We now know squatchy has paranormal powers and is aware of humans being
in his area without seeing or smelling them
Daniel
04/21/2014 10:23pm
A few years ago, the library I was working at faced an issue right at the heart if the curator vs.
uncritical purveyor tension. It was at the gh water mark of the execrable Kevin Trudeau's career
in peddling textual snake oil with his "X Secret THEY Don't Want You to Know" series
of
books.
Our librarians could see them for the transparent bullshit that they were and refused to stock
them. Ultimately, we received so many repeated
requests (along with many accusations that we
were in cahoots with THEM
of course) that our head librarian relented and we ordered a few
copies
if his truly stupid and harmful health "secrets" book only on the condition that there be a
sign noting that the librarians did not recommend it as a trustworthy source, and listing several
other resources for actual health information.
This was not a perfect or even good solution, and it may have sine much to counteract the tacit
endorsement an item carries simply by being on the shelf, but it's always been a valuable
example of what a fine line we sometimes have to walk as information professionals.
Reply
Matt Mc
04/22/2014 7:57am
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
I like the idea of libraries have authors do presentations regardless of the subject matter.
Anything that
encourages and gets people to use this most wonderful of resources and maybe
donate or help with funding the library system.
I have wonderful fond memories of going to see Shel Silverstein and Barry Louis Polisar (two
local writers/artists in the area I grew up) as
a child and once I got to see Maurice Sendak read
from his books. As an
adult a local library let me and some friends run a film noir film series
discussing the how the films where able to address culture taboos
and there impact on
contemporary filmmaking. The series ran for about 5
years until DC cut funding and no longer
provided films at all but one library location.
So, at least for me, regardless of the subject I am happy to see and will encourage any event at a
public library. It is not that subject that should be judged but rather the encouragement of a great
resource that most take for granted and is always at risk for funding and budget cuts.
Reply
KIF
04/22/2014 9:50am
BL
04/22/2014 12:34pm
I sit on my local library board of trustees. As a tax-payer funded entity open for use by all
citizens it is our belief that Freedom of Speech should be the over-riding policy here. A library
should provide access to information, but should not make the decision about what information
should be accessed by any individual. While I agree that Stan Gordon sounds ridiculous,
censorship by a government funded entity such as a public library is only a stone's throw away
from book banning and burning. Such policies would inevitably deteriorate to abuse and
propaganda dissemination.
Reply
BL
04/22/2014 12:38pm
Jason Colavito
04/22/2014 12:43pm
I think that's the key point. With libraries as a forum for free speech, authors
should be able to deliver their lectures, but I wouldn't want my tax money
going to fund UFO-Bigfoot conspiracy theories.
Drew
04/22/2014 6:55pm
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
Shane Sullivan
04/22/2014 1:36pm
could have children despite having been banished from the rest of humanity. Of course, the Land
of Nod is some kind of parallel world whose inhabitants can interact with us, but are invisible to
us, which is why Sasquatch has not been discovered by science.
BP
04/22/2014 3:04pm
Reminded me of an episode of The Six Million Dollar Man, with aliens controlling a
robot/cyborg Bigfoot.
Now as a librarian I'm torn over this (not the Bigfoot thing).
Reply
Robin S. Swope
04/22/2014 3:49pm
Stan Gordon is a great guy, and unlike a lot of researchers he is very skeptical. I know and have
worked
with Stan, and he has been as perplexed as anyone else with these UFO/Bigfoot
connections. He only relates real encounters as described by
their witnesses.
Reply
IMOHO
04/23/2014 10:28am
media from time to time has had offerings it has placed for the
to it has been put through a political litmus test on par with the
the informality of this blog, given that it gives one and all a bully
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
life experiances. There are rules inside the UFO community just
04/23/2014 10:38am
Stan Gordon was not trying to lie or deceive the public at
large.
this blog does not hold back his opinions, and people here are
04/23/2014 10:39am
Varika
04/22/2014 11:22pm
I will say this, having the local romance writer or fantasy writer deliver a talk isn't precisely all
about the scientific rigor, either. I have yet to read a romance novel that is a reliable guide to
ANYTHING, and believe me, I've probably read
THOUSANDS of the things. (They are my
mind-candy, don't judge me! :-P) Actually, the fantasy novels tend to be more reliable when it
comes to human interactions, if really nothing else at all. So just to start with, the assumption
that a library is there "to provide reliable information" is false--unless you're talking research
libraries rather than public libraries.
I personally am of the opinion that it is not the business of public libraries to censor OR endorse
information of any sort. When I go to my
local library, I don't want to be told that I shouldn't be
reading something because it contradicts the librarian's beliefs, or even because it contradicts the
laws of physics. The librarian doesn't have any clue why I'm reading the books I am. Wouldn't it
be a lot harder for you, Jason, to do your research on the kooky stuff you research for this blog if
you couldn't get to the sources for it all because somebody
just thought it wasn't worth reading?
And as a patron who had to involve the STATE GOVERNMENT in a dispute with a librarian,
I'm not exactly for the "right" of a library to refuse
"whoever they want" from using their
facilities. (Specifics: I am part of an organization of people who offer tests to get ham radio
licenses; we are a volunteer organization that is technically part of Homeland Security because
of the emergency services required of those who hold ham radio licenses. The librarian in
question would refuse and
"lose" our room bookings and hand them over to, oh, say, the local
chess club just because she didn't like ham radio. We had to get our local State Representative to
come out to the library and tell the woman
she was interfering with the operation of a federal
organization in order to get her to stop interfering that way. We no longer deal with the library,
but with the local hospital instead, because this woman's prejudice was back interfering in less
than two months. And yes, it was
definitely prejudice, since we made a point of being model
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Should Public Libraries Promote Stan Gordon's Bigfoot-UFO Conspiracy Theories? - JasonColavito.com
patrons, down to running the vacuum in the room if it was available.) Now, I don't think that the
library should PAY this man to come to the library,
but to say that he shouldn't be allowed to
apply for access to host his
lecture the same as any local patrons? That's just unfair.
Reply
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