UFOs, JFK and Elvis - Conspiracies You Don't Have to Be Crazy to Believe by Richard Belzer
tackles some of the biggest conspiracy theories and cover-ups this side of Roswell.
Just what is it that the U.S. government doesn't want you to know about the
number of strange UFO encounters by Gemini and Apollo astronauts? What is
it that they don't want you to know about the JFK assassination, Area 51,
or what the American astronauts really found on the moon? What about the
face on Mars or the link between the Nazis and the U.S. space program?
Belzer, best known for his role as Detective Munch on TV's Homicide
delivers a witty rant in which he proclaims that all the conspiracy theories
you've ever heard about the Kennedy assassination are true (even, apparently,
the ones that contradict each other) and that UFOs and their occupants are
pretty much everywhere.
Richard Belzer turns his acerbic wit from standup comedy to
conspiracy-buster. The writing style is engaging and does an intriguing
job pulling people and their stories together. Some readers may not care
for his factoid approach to zing the reader with new tidbits and twisted
facts, but AAER loved his Saturday Night Live writing style
and says this is a must read book.
Belzer sensibly avoids pretending to have the answers, opting instead
to focus on the questions themselves, such as: Did NASA regularly suppress
UFO sightings by Apollo and Gemini astronauts? And what about that giant
face on the surface of Mars? Is that real or what?
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UFOs, JFK and Elvis - Conspiracies You Don't Have to Be Crazy to Believe
Belzer writes this book about government conspiracies regarding everything
from JFK's assassination to the existence of UFO's. With his great comic timing
which includes great imitations, the desription of the Alabama farmer explaining
his encounter with a UFO is worth the price of the book.
As Belzer explains in his own words, "I'm not asking you to believe every
conspiracy theory you'll find in this book. . . . I didn't write this book to
give you all the answers. The Warren Commission did that, and the answers were
all wrong. I wrote this book to inspire you to do what the powers that be wish
you wouldn't and to question authority."
AAER says, "If you are starting to get paranoid about UFOs, then read this
book, and soon you will become paranoid about government instead." To order your
copy, click on the bookcover above.
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