Best TRINITY: The Best-Kept Secret By Paola Leopizzi Harris
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Ebook About Hard evidence has existed since 1945 for the actual recovery of unidentified flying craft in the United States, according to a new research book, "TRINITY: The Best-Kept Secret" written by two seasoned analysts of the global patterns behind the UFO phenomenon. Italian investigative journalist Paola Leopizzi Harris and French-born information scientist Dr. Jacques F. Vallée have teamed up to uncover the details of a New Mexico crash in 1945, fully two years before the well-known incident at Roswell and the famous sighting by pilot Kenneth Arnold in 1947.Over several site investigation surveys Harris and Vallée reconstructed the historic observations by three witnesses, two of whom are still living, who described to them the circumstances of the crash, with details of the recovery of a nearly-intact flying vehicle and its occupants by an Army detachment. Combining their long experience in field research around the world, the authors have documented the step-by-step efforts by the military to remove the object, an avocado-shaped craft weighting several tons, from the property where it crash-landed during a storm. Surprisingly, the literature of the field only includes a few passing mentions about the case, and only one (foreign) TV documentary has mentioned it, but the correlation between the crash of the extraordinary object and the explosion of the first atom bomb at White Sands, less than 20 miles away, has been missed. Harris and Vallée suggest that the correlation is significant for physical, geographic and biological reasons, quite apart from the obvious strategic implications. The witnesses were able to observe not only the actual crash of the object on their property but every step of the military efforts to lift it and take it away. Fearing retaliation, they remained silent for some 60 years about what they had seen and done over those nine days at the site while the recovery was proceeding. When placed in the context of the history of chemical and physical analysis of retrieved UFO debris--an area where Harris and Vallée have long collaborated—the devices observed by the witnesses raise a number of very important scientific questions.The Honorable Paul Hellyer, former Minister of National Defence of Canada, has stated: “Paola Harris and Jacques Vallée have spent much effort doing field research on location (…) It is now time that their discovery be revealed to the world.” Christopher Mellon, former deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, called the data “fresh reason to believe that our government is concealing physical proof of alien technology. Read the book, and if persuaded, join the millions of other Americans seeking a straight answer.” And Professor Paul Hynek added that the research “reveals a new UFO history.”Book TRINITY: The Best-Kept Secret Review :
I'm bewildered. I'm only a decade younger than Vallee (he is 82, his co-author is also elderly) and have followed his career as a UFO pioneer researcher and visionary thinker since the earliest days. I watched as the publication date of this book kept changing and eagerly anticipated its release. The book as originally described seems to have been quite different from the book as actually released. I'd been expecting either a summation of Vallee's lifetime of work or a breakthrough in his thinking. Instead, I get a pretty thin crashed-saucer tale.I have a hard time believing Vallee actually wrote this book. He has always seemed a meticulous researcher and author, yet this book is rambling, repetitive and full of typos and odd capitalization (at least in the Kindle edition). My suspicion is that this book is much more co-author Paola Harris than Vallee.Despite having been neck-deep in ufology for 60+ years, I had never heard of Harris, an Italian researcher. Her path apparently didn't cross Vallee's until 2019. She had been investigating the event that is the subject of this book for years. Based on the many (too many) transcripts of interviews in the book, she seems to be of the "Oh, wow, tell me more!" school of researcher.The story is that two kids - 7 and 9 - heard a large avocado-shaped alien craft smash into a radio tower in close proximity (both geographically and time-wise) to the Trinity A-bomb test site in 1945. They visited the crash site and saw little insectoid creatures through binoculars. They later entered the craft and removed a bracket. The bracket appears distinctly 1940's terrestrial, has metric-sized holes and metric dimensions, and tests as a perfectly ordinary alloy. They also collected a large bagful of mysterious angel hair that they handed out to family and friends, some of whom used it to decorate Christmas trees, as well as a piece of Roswell-like mystery metal that they later used to repair a windmill.Completely unlike the Roswell crash, the military retrieval was remarkably slow, low-key and sloppy. Other locals visited the site and picked up small pieces the military had simply tossed into crevices or covered with dirt.The two kids eventually parted ways and sat on the story for nearly 60 years. What we know now rests almost exclusively on their recollections as old men (one now dead), bolstered by the recollections of a woman relative who saw some of the material (retrieved by her grandfather) years later.The book doesn't even touch upon the possibility that this may be a fabricated or grossly misremembered event. Yet we know from Roswell that seemingly credible people fabricate all the time for seemingly inexplicable reasons. I see red flags all over the place, but Vallee and Harris take it all at face value. Given Vallee's expertise and experience, I found this jaw-dropping. The book is also disconcertingly sprinkled with favorable references to some of the most dubious characters in ufology - Timothy Good, Jaime Maussan, Philip Corso, Eric Davis. Really?All of this may have happened exactly as described. Ditto for Aztec and Roswell. UFOs may have been crashing in New Mexico in the 1940's like 18-wheelers on Interstate 40 today. But for that to be believable, we need much stronger evidence than is presented in this book. I actually found the lengthy discussions of the 1964 Socorro case and the 1965 Valensole (France) case - both of which I'm sure Vallee did write - far more interesting than the rest of the book. Both of those cases are far, far stronger than the one that is the subject of this book.One of Vallee's key contributions to ufology has been the notion that the UFO phenomenon isn't what it seems on the surface but is a control system that is manipulating humans and their thinking. It's all theater - the staged crashes, the creatures in apparent distress, the often absurd messages, the common proximity to atomic testing and nuclear sites. Although he doesn't use the term control system in this book, he still seems to be thinking along the same lines (as do I). He even touches on the increasingly popular notion that our entire reality may be a virtual one - basically someone else's computer game.What I found a bit disconcerting is that Vallee now seems to lean toward a benevolent purpose underlying this control system. The UFO events may be a warning about the path we're on, a Zen-like attempt to awaken us from our stupor. My thinking has led me in precisely the opposite direction. I suspect it's all an entirely non-benevolent deception and distraction. Another visionary, John Keel, warned about this decades ago and about too much involvement in ufology becoming a dangerous obsession, almost a form of madness. If this book was really written by Vallee, I would have some of those concerns about him. If he's mostly just attached his name to Harris's work - well, I'd find that a bit disconcerting as well. Surprised to learn that this long-awaited book had been published earlier than advertised, I purchased a digital copy yesterday and finished reading it less than 24 hours later. In giving the book my highest recommendation, let me make clear certain biases I brought to the reading, and that I also bring to this review.As a long-time observer of the UFO phenomenon, I have found Jacques Vallee the most perceptive analyst in our midst. This is the case not in spite of the fact that he invariably raises more questions than he answers, but precisely because this is his approach. When he first arrived on the scene called ufology several decades ago, he made clear that he would be taking a hard look at prevailing assumptions in the field. Vallee called upon his fellow researchers to join him in moving beyond the limited—and what he considered the increasingly obsessional—concern with whether UFOs are "extraterrestrial" in the conventional sense of that word, and to begin probing the UFO phenomenon's impact on culture and our collective psyches.In "Trinity," Vallee and his fellow researcher and coauthor Paolo Leopizzi Harris bring this approach to their exploration of a 1945 UFO episode that predated Kenneth Arnold's famous sighting (1947) of objects seemingly skipping through the air like "saucers," a word that went on to define popular expectations related to the alluring UFO acronym. For an overview of this fine book, I refer the reader to Amazon's summary description. Let me say a few words about how you might decide if you will find this work of interest, and perhaps of enormous value.If you have arrived at this review in hopes that the authors will provide long-sought confirmation that UFOs are simply visitors from hypothetical planets who just happen to be humanoid like us, and breathe our air, this book won't provide the certainty you seek. But if you are open to recognizing how and why the UFO phenomenon is far more subtle and complex than that facile explanation, this book will provide the evidence-based reasoning for that recognition. This, then, is your first decision.In putting forward the hypothesis that unidentified aerial phenomena are both physical and psychic in nature, Vallee doesn't stop there. He and coauthor Harris demonstrate in their approach to the 1945 Trinity event the kind of comprehensive, multidisciplinary investigations required for such a task. This includes a capacity to evaluate data quality, and to bring a more better analysis not only of the object being studied, but of the impact of the observation on the witnesses and their social environment.If you have read other UFO books, or if this is potentially your introduction to the literature, here's a brief test of whether to take the plunge. If you consider yourself...—open to transcending your categories—willing to finish reading the book different that when you started—not just looking to reaffirm the assumptions you may have arrived with—willing in fact to put your mind at risk...then I predict you’ll find this book well worth your time.I consider "Trinity: The Best-Kept Secret" by Vallee and Harris to be the best book on the subject, and will be surprised if it doesn't retain this status for quite some time. 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