SPACE-LIFE
REPORT
COULD BE SHOCK, UFOI, Vol. I, No. II (Dec 1960 - Jan 1961
issue)
The discovery of intelligent space beings could have a severe
effect on
the public, according to a research report released by the
National
Aeronautics and Space Administration. The report warned that
America
should prepare to meet the psychological impact of such a
revelation.
The 190-page report was the result of a $96,000 one-year study
conducted by the Brookings Institution for NASA's long-range
study
committee.
Public realization that intelligent beings live on other planets
could
bring about profound changes, or even the collapse of our
civilization,
the research report stated.
"Societies sure of their own
place have
disintegrated when confronted by a superior society," said the
NASA
report. "Others have survived even though changed. Clearly,
the better
we can come to understand the factors involved in responding
to such
crises the better prepared we may be."
Although the research group did not expect any immediate contact
with
other planet beings, it said that the discovery of intelligent
space
races "could nevertheless happen at any time."
Even though the UFO problem was not indicated as a reason for
the
study, it undoubtedly was an important factor. Fear of public
reaction
to an admission of UFO reality was cited as the main reason for
secrecy
in the early years of the AF investigation. (Confirmed to
NICAP's
present director in 1952-3, when the AF was planning to release
important UFO reports, also the famous Utah motion-pictures of a
UFO
formation.)
Radio communication probably would be the first proof of other
intelligent life, says the NASA report. It adds: "Evidences of
its
existence might also be found in artifacts left on the moon or
other
planets."
This report gives weight to previous thinking by scholars who
have
suggested that the earth already may be under close scrutiny by
advanced space races. In 1958, Prof. Harold D. Lasswell of the
Yale Law
School stated:
"The implications of the UFOs may
be
that we are already viewed with suspicion by more advanced
civilizations and that our attempts to gain a foothold elsewhere
may be
rebuffed as a threat to other systems of public order." (UFO
Investigator, Dec. 1958.)