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14 January 2026
- 01:1801:18, 14 January 2026 Nickell, Joe (hist | edit) [5,636 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Joe Nickell is an American investigator, author, and prominent public skeptic known for examining paranormal and pseudoscientific claims, including UFO sightings, alien abduction narratives, contactee stories, and UFO-related hoaxes. In the history of ufology, Nickell occupies a central oppositional role: he treats UFO claims as investigable propositions that frequently fail under reconstruction, documentary verification, and controlled reasoning...")
- 00:5700:57, 14 January 2026 Nye, Bill (hist | edit) [3,354 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bill Nye is an American science educator and media personality whose relevance to UFO discourse comes primarily through his role as a mainstream scientific authority. Although not a ufologist, Nye is often cited in debates about the evidentiary value of UFO sightings, the plausibility of extraterrestrial visitation, and what kinds of data would be required to justify extraordinary conclusions.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Nye’s cultural prominen...")
- 00:3900:39, 14 January 2026 Novella, Steven (hist | edit) [3,618 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Steven Novella is an American physician and science communicator known for his work in organized skepticism and public critique of pseudoscience and paranormal claims. Although not a ufologist in the traditional sense, Novella is a prominent figure in UFO discourse because skeptics function as an integral counterpart to belief-driven ufology—challenging claims, analyzing evidence quality, and emphasizing psychological and methodological explana...")
- 00:3500:35, 14 January 2026 Noel, Christopher (hist | edit) [3,492 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Christopher Noel is a UFO/UAP journalist and author associated with contemporary media-driven ufology. In a landscape where modern UAP discourse blends official statements, pilot testimony, leaked imagery, and online analysis, Noel’s role is primarily interpretive and communicative: presenting cases, summarizing developments, and sustaining public attention through accessible narrative.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Modern ufology increasingly re...")
- 00:2800:28, 14 January 2026 Nelson, Buck (hist | edit) [3,157 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Buck Nelson was an American contactee associated with the 1950s “space brother” era, a period when UFO experiences were often framed as benevolent contact carrying moral, spiritual, and cautionary messages. Nelson’s claims placed him within the contactee tradition that preceded the later abduction-centered era, emphasizing friendly beings, repeated meetings, and a quasi-prophetic worldview oriented around peace and human development.</p> <...")
- 00:2400:24, 14 January 2026 Napolitano, Linda (hist | edit) [3,939 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Linda Napolitano is an experiencer figure in modern ufology best known for claims of an “urban alien abduction” occurring in New York City, often associated with the Brooklyn Bridge/Manhattan waterfront area. Her account became one of the most widely circulated abduction narratives of the late twentieth century, notable for its setting (a densely populated city), its claims of multiple corroborating observers, and its subsequent promotion wit...")
13 January 2026
- 23:2923:29, 13 January 2026 Monroe, Robert (hist | edit) [3,882 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Robert Monroe was an American consciousness explorer best known for out-of-body experience (OBE) reports and the development of techniques intended to induce altered states. Although not primarily a ufologist, Monroe became deeply influential in UFO culture because his framework supports interpretations of non-human intelligence that are not limited to physical spacecraft. For many modern UAP communities, Monroe provides a foundational model: the...")
- 23:2323:23, 13 January 2026 McCampbell, James (hist | edit) [3,649 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>James McCampbell is an engineer and UFO author associated with technically framed arguments that UFOs represent advanced non-human technology. His work belongs to a long tradition of “engineering ufology,” where the goal is to interpret sightings and case reports as evidence of craft performance beyond known human capabilities. McCampbell’s influence lies in offering a structured, seemingly quantitative narrative for believers who want UFO...")
- 23:1623:16, 13 January 2026 McGaha, James (hist | edit) [3,326 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>James McGaha is a UFO skeptic and commentator whose background in aviation and military contexts has made him a credentialed voice in critical analysis of UFO claims. In the broader discourse, McGaha represents an important counterpoint: the idea that trained observers can still misinterpret, and that extraordinary interpretations require strong evidence beyond testimony and ambiguous imagery.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>In UFO debates, aviation...")
- 23:0823:08, 13 January 2026 Marden, Kathleen (hist | edit) [3,360 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Kathleen Marden is an American UFO investigator and author best known for her association with the Betty and Barney Hill abduction case—one of the foundational narratives of modern experiencer ufology. Her work focuses on preserving case history, clarifying documentary records, and maintaining public attention on the Hills as a central reference point for later abduction claims.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Marden’s significance derives from c...")
- 22:5822:58, 13 January 2026 Menzel, Donald H. (hist | edit) [3,768 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Donald H. Menzel was an American astronomer whose public skeptical writings made him one of the most influential anti-UFO voices of the twentieth century. In ufology history, he represents the institutional scientific rebuttal: a confident insistence that UFO reports can be explained by natural phenomena, observational error, and psychological factors. His role is central because it shaped how mainstream science and media treated UFO claims for d...")
- 22:4822:48, 13 January 2026 Menger, Howard (hist | edit) [3,520 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Howard Menger was an American contactee whose claims of friendly extraterrestrial meetings placed him among the defining figures of the mid-century contactee movement. Unlike later abduction-era narratives focused on trauma and medical procedures, the classic contactee tradition emphasized benevolent visitors, moral teachings, and spiritual transformation. Menger’s story contributed to this optimistic, message-centered phase of UFO mythology.</...")
- 22:4122:41, 13 January 2026 McMoneagle, Joseph (hist | edit) [3,877 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Joseph McMoneagle is an American former U.S. Army intelligence officer widely known for his association with remote viewing—claims that individuals can perceive distant or hidden targets through anomalous means. While remote viewing is not inherently ufology, McMoneagle became a significant crossover figure because remote-viewing narratives often intersect with UFO mythology, including alleged hidden bases, non-human intelligences, and classifi...")
- 22:3222:32, 13 January 2026 McDivitt, James (hist | edit) [3,493 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>James McDivitt was an American astronaut whose name entered UFO history through a widely discussed mid-1960s sighting episode associated with spaceflight operations. In ufology, McDivitt is used as an exemplar of “elite observer credibility”—the idea that highly trained pilots and astronauts provide especially weighty testimony. His case illustrates how observational ambiguity can persist even with skilled witnesses, becoming a long-lived d...")
- 22:2522:25, 13 January 2026 Marcel Jr., Jesse (hist | edit) [3,319 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jesse Marcel Jr. became a notable figure in Roswell mythology due to his claims that he saw unusual debris at home as a child after his father, intelligence officer Jesse Marcel, participated in the 1947 recovery. His testimony functions as a second layer of witness support—often cited as “family corroboration” that the material appeared strange. While not a ufologist, he became embedded in ufology as a recurring documentary and interview p...") originally created as "Marcel, Jesse Jr."
- 22:1722:17, 13 January 2026 Marcel, Jesse (hist | edit) [3,698 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jesse Marcel was a U.S. Army Air Forces intelligence officer whose role in the 1947 Roswell incident made him one of the most important military-linked figures in UFO history. Although Roswell’s initial headlines quickly shifted toward mundane explanations, later decades transformed the event into the archetypal “crash retrieval” story. Marcel’s later recollections became pivotal in this transformation, helping turn Roswell from a brief n...")
- 22:0622:06, 13 January 2026 Méheust, Bertrand (hist | edit) [3,751 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bertrand Méheust is a French researcher whose work treats UFO narratives as culturally structured phenomena. Rather than focusing solely on whether craft are physical and extraterrestrial, Méheust analyzes how encounter stories echo older mythic, folkloric, and cultural patterns. His approach is influential among scholars and ufologists who argue that the phenomenon must be understood as an interaction between external stimulus (if any) and hum...")
- 21:5921:59, 13 January 2026 Michel, Aimé (hist | edit) [3,864 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Aimé Michel was a French writer and ufologist whose work helped shape European approaches to UFO reports as patterned phenomena. Rather than treating sightings as isolated curiosities, Michel emphasized waves, geographic distributions, and the possibility that UFO events exhibit structure. His concept of “orthoteny” became one of the best-known attempts to extract hidden order from the sprawling, inconsistent UFO report record.</p> <h2>Back...")
- 21:5221:52, 13 January 2026 Mitchell, Edgar (hist | edit) [3,957 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Edgar Mitchell was an American astronaut and Apollo moonwalker whose later-life advocacy made him one of the most prominent “astronaut voices” in modern ufology. Mitchell’s importance lies in the cultural weight of his background: a spaceflight hero publicly asserting that UFOs were real and that secrecy had shaped public understanding. His post-NASA career positioned him as a bridge between mainstream institutional legitimacy and the discl...")
- 21:4921:49, 13 January 2026 Mellon, Christopher (hist | edit) [4,734 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Christopher Mellon is a U.S. national security professional whose public advocacy helped catalyze the modern UAP era. Unlike traditional ufologists, Mellon’s importance is rooted in institutional credibility and policy leverage. He became a pivotal figure in reframing UFOs—rebranded as UAP—as an issue of airspace safety, intelligence collection, and governmental oversight rather than purely as a fringe mystery.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>M...")
- 21:4221:42, 13 January 2026 Meier, Billy (hist | edit) [3,900 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Billy Meier is a Swiss contactee who became internationally famous for claiming sustained contact with extraterrestrial “Pleiadians” and for producing a large archive of alleged UFO photographs, films, and extensive writings. In ufology, Meier represents the modern apex of contactee culture: a single individual generating a comprehensive narrative universe with supporting media artifacts, spiritual teachings, and apocalyptic warnings.</p> <h...")
- 21:3121:31, 13 January 2026 Moore, Bill (hist | edit) [9,061 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bill Moore was an American UFO researcher whose career became inseparable from the 1980s era of leaked-document narratives, insider sources, and the Majestic-12 controversy. Within ufology, Moore is remembered both for shaping a highly influential style of “paper trail disclosure” and for becoming emblematic of how intelligence-adjacent interactions can destabilize research integrity.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Moore emerged in a period when...")
- 21:2021:20, 13 January 2026 Marzulli, Lynn A. (hist | edit) [3,309 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>L. A. Marzulli is an American author and filmmaker prominent in “Christian ufology,” a subgenre that interprets UFO/UAP phenomena through biblical and spiritual warfare frameworks. Rather than treating UAP primarily as unknown technology or extraterrestrial visitation, Marzulli’s work emphasizes deception, metaphysical agency, and theological implications.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Marzulli’s background is rooted in evangelical media an...")
- 21:1221:12, 13 January 2026 Marler, David (hist | edit) [3,492 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>David Marler is a UFO historian and archivist recognized for documentation-first contributions to civilian ufology. His work emphasizes primary-source preservation and careful reconstruction of classic cases—an approach that aims to reduce folklore drift and provide reliable historical baselines for debate.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Marler’s reputation is anchored in archival competence: collecting, organizing, and interpreting documents su...")
- 20:5020:50, 13 January 2026 Maussan, Jaime (hist | edit) [3,728 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jaime Maussan is a Mexican journalist and television personality who became one of the best-known UFO popularizers in Latin America and beyond. His work is defined by media amplification: packaging sightings, witness accounts, and alleged evidence into public-facing narratives. Maussan’s reach made him a gateway for many Spanish-speaking audiences, but that same reach also made his controversies unusually consequential in shaping public percept...")
- 17:4217:42, 13 January 2026 Malone, Robert W. (hist | edit) [2,963 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Robert Malone is not primarily a ufologist, but he appears in some UFO-adjacent lists because disclosure-era media ecosystems frequently cross-pollinate with broader alternative-public-sphere figures. In such contexts, Malone’s significance is not grounded in case investigation, technical analysis, or archival UFO research; rather, it stems from overlap in audiences and platforms where institutional distrust and “hidden truth” narratives ci...")
- 17:2017:20, 13 January 2026 MacFarlane, Robert (hist | edit) [3,980 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Robert Macfarlane is primarily known as a literary writer on landscape, place, and cultural memory, but he is sometimes invoked in ufology-adjacent “high strangeness” discussions because his work takes the uncanny seriously as a human experience embedded in environment and story. In these circles, Macfarlane functions less as an investigator of UFO events than as an interpretive guide for how unusual experiences become meaningful—how they a...")
- 05:1505:15, 13 January 2026 Malanga, Corrado (hist | edit) [4,696 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Corrado Malanga is an Italian researcher associated with the abduction and experiencer wing of ufology, known for constructing detailed models of alleged non-human interference with humans. He is widely discussed for his reliance on hypnosis-derived testimony and for developing elaborate typologies of entities and mechanisms of control. Malanga’s work occupies a highly controversial zone: it is influential among believers who see abduction narr...")
- 05:0705:07, 13 January 2026 MacLaine, Shirley (hist | edit) [3,865 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Shirley MacLaine is an American actress and author whose relevance to ufology is primarily cultural: she helped popularize New Age spirituality and cosmic narratives that overlap with contactee and experiencer belief systems. While not a UFO investigator in the conventional sense, MacLaine’s books and public persona influenced the social environment in which UFO and “expanded consciousness” ideas became mainstream-adjacent in the late 20th...")
- 04:5604:56, 13 January 2026 McKinnon, Gary (hist | edit) [4,218 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Gary McKinnon is a British figure widely known in ufology-adjacent culture as the “UFO hacker,” accused of unauthorized access to U.S. government-related computer systems in the early 2000s. His case became a cultural landmark because it blended two powerful narratives: the belief that definitive UFO proof exists within classified systems, and the idea that determined outsiders might uncover it through digital intrusion. The resulting legal s...")
- 04:4704:47, 13 January 2026 McDonald, James E. (hist | edit) [4,422 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>James E. McDonald (commonly referenced in ufology discussions as James E. McDonald) was an atmospheric physicist whose advocacy for serious UFO study made him one of the most prominent scientific voices in mid-20th-century UFO debates. He argued that while many reports were explainable, a significant residue—often involving credible witnesses such as pilots—remained unexplained and warranted methodical investigation. His work is often invoked...")
- 04:3804:38, 13 January 2026 Maccabee, Bruce (hist | edit) [4,201 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bruce Maccabee is an American optical physicist and long-time civilian UFO researcher known for technical approaches to photographic and film evidence. Within ufology, Maccabee is often positioned as a “scientific-minded” investigator who sought to apply quantitative reasoning to a subject frequently criticized for anecdote-driven claims. His work is part of a broader tradition: using physics, optics, and image analysis to argue that certain...")
- 04:3104:31, 13 January 2026 Mack, John E. (hist | edit) [5,802 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>John E. Mack was an American psychiatrist whose engagement with alien abduction claims made him one of the most consequential—and polarizing—figures in late-20th-century ufology. Unlike traditional UFO investigators focused on radar, photographs, or aircraft performance, Mack centered his work on the testimony and psychological profiles of self-described abductees. His central public argument was not that abduction claims were easily “prove...")
- 04:1204:12, 13 January 2026 Laffoley, Paul (hist | edit) [3,474 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Paul Laffoley was a visionary artist and theorist whose work is ufology-adjacent through its integration of UFO motifs, interdimensional speculation, and elaborate systems-thinking presented in diagrammatic visual form. Rather than investigating sightings, Laffoley treated UFO and contact concepts as components of a broader metaphysical-technical architecture—an interpretive cosmology where consciousness, technology, and hidden dimensions inter...")
- 04:0504:05, 13 January 2026 Lore, Gordon (hist | edit) [3,048 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Gordon Lore is a UFO researcher and organizer remembered for long-term participation in case-file and organizational ufology. His influence is rooted in continuity work: helping preserve reports, sustain networks of investigators, and keep classic cases accessible to new generations of readers and researchers.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lore’s relevance emerges from the pre-internet era of ufology where organizations, newsletters, and conferen...")
- 03:5803:58, 13 January 2026 Lyne, Bill (hist | edit) [3,319 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bill Lyne is a conspiracy-oriented UFO author best known for sweeping claims about secret space programs, clandestine technologies, and alleged non-human infiltration of institutions. His work occupies an extreme end of disclosure-oriented ufology, where the primary explanatory principle is hidden control: that the most important facts are suppressed and that conventional institutions are compromised or deceived at a fundamental level.</p> <h2>B...")
- 03:4503:45, 13 January 2026 Leslie, Desmond (hist | edit) [3,470 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Desmond Leslie was an early flying-saucer-era author whose work helped shape mid-century public understanding of UFOs, particularly through contactee-oriented narratives and speculative historical framing. In ufology history, Leslie is often placed within the “myth formation” phase, when books and media created enduring expectations about contact, government secrecy, and cosmic meaning—often with limited evidentiary grounding by modern stan...")
- 03:3803:38, 13 January 2026 Luckman, Michael (hist | edit) [3,183 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Michael Luckman is an author whose ufology relevance is closely tied to cultural synthesis—presenting UFO themes through entertainment history, celebrity narratives, and broad-population storytelling. His work occupies a space between ufology and pop cultural commentary, treating UFO belief as both an anomalous phenomenon and a cultural movement that shapes—and is shaped by—media ecosystems.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Luckman’s backgroun...")
- 03:3103:31, 13 January 2026 Lorenzen, Jim (hist | edit) [3,372 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jim Lorenzen was a key figure in the institutionalization of early civilian ufology in the United States. Associated with major mid-century UFO organization-building, he helped create systems for collecting witness reports, organizing data, and distributing analysis through newsletters and books. In ufology history, he exemplifies the “archivist-organizer” role—less glamorous than celebrity whistleblowers, but essential to the movement’s...")
- 03:2303:23, 13 January 2026 Lorenzen, Coral (hist | edit) [3,340 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Coral Lorenzen was a major figure in mid-20th-century American ufology, best known for building and sustaining civilian infrastructure for UFO investigation and publishing. She is frequently associated with the organized case-file tradition—systematically collecting witness reports, correspondence, and clippings; producing newsletters; and presenting UFOs as a persistent anomaly deserving sustained attention.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lorenze...")
- 03:1603:16, 13 January 2026 Lovelace, Terry (hist | edit) [3,139 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Terry Lovelace is an abduction experiencer-author best known for memoir-style accounts centered on an alleged encounter at a location commonly referred to as “Devil’s Den.” His prominence in contemporary ufology comes from the narrative power of his testimony and his emphasis on the psychological and social consequences of reporting extraordinary experiences.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lovelace’s public identity is built through self-rep...")
- 03:1003:10, 13 January 2026 Lina, Jüri (hist | edit) [3,084 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jüri Lina is an author whose work is frequently referenced in conspiracy and esoteric subcultures that overlap with certain strains of ufology. Rather than focusing on UFO cases directly, Lina’s relevance lies in interpretive framing: portraying world events as guided by hidden organizations and esoteric power structures, a theme that readily merges with UFO cover-up narratives.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lina’s writing emerges from traditi...")
- 03:0403:04, 13 January 2026 Loedding, Alfred (hist | edit) [3,382 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Alfred Loedding is remembered in UFO history as an engineer aligned with early, technically framed arguments that unidentified aerial reports warranted serious evaluation. In the mid-20th-century context—when aviation expanded rapidly and Cold War anxieties elevated airspace anomalies—figures like Loedding helped position UFOs as an engineering and intelligence problem rather than a purely sensational or mystical subject.</p> <h2>Background<...")
- 02:1902:19, 13 January 2026 Loeb, Avi (hist | edit) [4,082 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Avi Loeb is an astronomer whose prominence in ufology-adjacent discourse stems from his willingness to publicly entertain the possibility of extraterrestrial technology—most notably in discussions of the interstellar object ʻOumuamua—and from his advocacy for systematic, instrumented searches for technosignatures and anomalous phenomena. While not a traditional UFO investigator, Loeb is influential in reframing the conversation from witness...")
- 01:5401:54, 13 January 2026 Lindemann, Michael (hist | edit) [3,282 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Michael Lindemann is a UFO publisher, editor, and media figure whose significance lies in curation—collecting reports, publishing commentary, and providing platforms for voices within the UFO disclosure ecosystem. He represents a durable type in ufology: the organizer-communicator who shapes what audiences encounter, how themes are prioritized, and which narratives become central over time.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lindemann’s professional...")
- 01:4801:48, 13 January 2026 Levenda, Peter (hist | edit) [3,694 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Peter Levenda is an author whose work intersects ufology, occult history, intelligence narratives, and “deep politics” interpretations of modern culture. In UFO discourse, Levenda is frequently cited not for singular case investigations but for frameworks that reposition UFO history as part of broader clandestine ecosystems involving ideology, psychological operations, esoteric traditions, and state secrecy.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Levend...")
- 01:4301:43, 13 January 2026 LeVesque, Thomas Allen (hist | edit) [3,457 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Thomas Allen LeVesque is associated with contemporary ufology as a commentator and synthesis-oriented researcher focused on the modern “UAP era,” in which government acknowledgments, leaked videos, and congressional attention reshaped public discussion. His role is primarily interpretive: connecting disparate threads—historical cases, institutional statements, and whistleblower narratives—into coherent explanatory frameworks.</p> <h2>Bac...")
- 01:2101:21, 13 January 2026 Leir, Roger (hist | edit) [4,347 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Roger Leir was an American physician and ufology figure best known for claims that he surgically removed anomalous “implants” from individuals who reported alien abduction experiences. Leir’s work became prominent because it appeared to move abduction ufology from testimony and hypnosis into the realm of physical artifacts. His publications and interviews argued that certain recovered objects displayed unusual properties. Critics countered...")
- 01:1701:17, 13 January 2026 Layne, Meade (hist | edit) [4,217 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Meade Layne was an early American ufological theorist best known for promoting interpretations of UFOs as “etheric,” interdimensional, or ultraterrestrial phenomena. Rather than framing UFOs as craft arriving from other planets, Layne’s approach treated the phenomenon as originating from adjacent realities or subtle planes of existence. This perspective became one of the foundational pillars of “high strangeness” ufology, influencing la...")
- 01:1101:11, 13 January 2026 Lear, John (hist | edit) [4,199 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>John Lear was an aviation figure and prominent UFO conspiracy promoter whose influence lies in popularizing broad, dramatic claims about extraterrestrial presence and government cover-ups. Lear became a central voice in the late-20th-century shift from “sightings-focused ufology” toward “secret program ufology,” where the most important evidence is presumed hidden behind classification, black budgets, and institutional deception. His narr...")