Richard Thieme rearranged his world view when he was a young ordained Episcopal priest in 1978 in Utah and introduced to the first shake of an earthquake. A Vietnam War veteran at Hill Air Force Base outside Ogden set the UFO subject on him.
The two were in a quite church basement and it was not a traditional confession. While the USAF pilot had no first-hand experience with The Great Taboo, he spoke with confidence and he knew people, according to Thieme. The war veteran hinted that mankind chase them but it is difficult to catch them.
Throughout 15 years after he heard such story, Thieme has been hearing variations of similar story from other pilots who were scared to come out and shared their stories publicly because of the stigma. The evident application of so advanced technology that it seemed impossible prompted Thieme to get out from institutional belief. He left the ministry in 1993 to restructure his idea of reality, explained Thieme.
Recently, Thieme is a professional lecturer and an author on social impact of high technology and human evolution highlighting on information security. His works were featured in the International UFO Reporter, Salon, and Forbes. However, his big impact is being a contributor to “UFOs and Government: A Historical Inquiry.” He is one of the editors of the 580-page book.
During the days of extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH), authorities could offer free-spoken speculation without fear of ridicule such as Navy Commander and guided-missile Chief Moulton Taylor. Assuming that other planets have the same order of intelligence, others can also build such craft. According to Thieme, mankind may witness the U.S. and Russia as one defending Earth against attack from space. Thieme believes that ETH is the least unlikely hypothesis.
Thieme quoted Richard Feynman who said that anomalous fact is the most powerful thing in the world. What else must be true if Feynman is right?, asked Thieme, who once asked researcher Richard Hall about what he saw as the next move. Hall said “It is likely not up to us… it is up to them.”
The two were in a quite church basement and it was not a traditional confession. While the USAF pilot had no first-hand experience with The Great Taboo, he spoke with confidence and he knew people, according to Thieme. The war veteran hinted that mankind chase them but it is difficult to catch them.
Throughout 15 years after he heard such story, Thieme has been hearing variations of similar story from other pilots who were scared to come out and shared their stories publicly because of the stigma. The evident application of so advanced technology that it seemed impossible prompted Thieme to get out from institutional belief. He left the ministry in 1993 to restructure his idea of reality, explained Thieme.
Recently, Thieme is a professional lecturer and an author on social impact of high technology and human evolution highlighting on information security. His works were featured in the International UFO Reporter, Salon, and Forbes. However, his big impact is being a contributor to “UFOs and Government: A Historical Inquiry.” He is one of the editors of the 580-page book.
During the days of extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH), authorities could offer free-spoken speculation without fear of ridicule such as Navy Commander and guided-missile Chief Moulton Taylor. Assuming that other planets have the same order of intelligence, others can also build such craft. According to Thieme, mankind may witness the U.S. and Russia as one defending Earth against attack from space. Thieme believes that ETH is the least unlikely hypothesis.
Thieme quoted Richard Feynman who said that anomalous fact is the most powerful thing in the world. What else must be true if Feynman is right?, asked Thieme, who once asked researcher Richard Hall about what he saw as the next move. Hall said “It is likely not up to us… it is up to them.”