Scott
Verified User
I'm not sure if there's a thread for this subject, but I couldn't find one, so making one now. I've read quite a few books in my life, though I fully admit that I used to read a lot more books then I read now, mainly because the internet now takes up most of my reading time. That being said, I still absorb books, though I now tend to absorb then by listening to them on audible.com while drifting off to sleep rather than reading them.
My most recent purchase on audible was Skinwalkers at the Pentagon, which can be seen here:
www.audible.com
The title is a bit hyberbole, but the description of the book isn't:
**
Skinwalkers at the Pentagon unmasks the massive scope of the Pentagon’s landmark UFO study that ran from the Defense Intelligence Agency in Washington, DC. The Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program or AAWSAP investigated the “Tic Tac” and other “nuts and bolts” UFO events, analyzed intrusions of UFOs onto US military bases, as well as probed the plethora of bizarre phenomena that government investigators encountered on Skinwalker Ranch.
Written by two program insiders and a respected journalist, Skinwalkers at the Pentagon comes to a conclusion that has never before been revealed!
UFOs often led to the “attachment” of strange phenomena to military personnel who visited the Ranch and brought “something” home to their families, resulting in frightening eruptions of paranormal events in their households that terrorized and sometimes injured their children.
By the end of the two-year program, more than 100 separate technical reports, some of which ran to hundreds of pages, were delivered to the Defense Intelligence Agency. Among them was a 149-page report on the Soviet (and now Russian) UAP investigation/analysis capability. Another detail is the design and the built of a functional prototype for an autonomous Unidentified Aerial Phenomena surveillance platform.
Skinwalkers at the Pentagon has been reviewed by the U.S. Department of Defense and cleared for public release.
**
Recently, I've been getting into fact based books that get into evidence that "we're not alone", though I've certainly absorbed books on other subjects. When I was younger, most of the books I read were of the sci fi variety, though I was exposed early to controversial subjects, getting into what many would label as "conspiracy theories", whether that be coverups of various aspects of certain wars such as the United States' wars in Korea and Vietnam, the effects of radioactive sites and materials and flaws in the medical system. Perhaps my first exposure to a film covering a controversial subject was Silkwood starring Meryl Streep, Kurt Russel and Cher. My mother, who was quite the activist back then, got the film on VHS and we sat down to watch it. I don't remember exactly how old I was, but I do remember not finishing the film as I was apalled at the callousness of what was depicted. My mother was upset that I wouldn't watch the whole thing but then started to get the fact that I was still pretty young- I can't really remember how young, but I suspect I hadn't yet gotten into my teens. I later read a book by my late brother in law on depleted uranium that I'm pretty sure was called "Depleted Uranium, Invisible War". I looked hard to find a formal description of the actual book, to no avail. The closest I could get was it being brought up in this 2001 New York Times article:
My most recent purchase on audible was Skinwalkers at the Pentagon, which can be seen here:

Skinwalkers at the Pentagon
Check out this great listen on Audible.com. Skinwalkers at the Pentagon unmasks the massive scope of the Pentagon’s landmark UFO study that ran from the Defense Intelligence Agency in Washington, DC. The Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program or AAWSAP investigated the “...

The title is a bit hyberbole, but the description of the book isn't:
**
Skinwalkers at the Pentagon unmasks the massive scope of the Pentagon’s landmark UFO study that ran from the Defense Intelligence Agency in Washington, DC. The Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program or AAWSAP investigated the “Tic Tac” and other “nuts and bolts” UFO events, analyzed intrusions of UFOs onto US military bases, as well as probed the plethora of bizarre phenomena that government investigators encountered on Skinwalker Ranch.
Written by two program insiders and a respected journalist, Skinwalkers at the Pentagon comes to a conclusion that has never before been revealed!
UFOs often led to the “attachment” of strange phenomena to military personnel who visited the Ranch and brought “something” home to their families, resulting in frightening eruptions of paranormal events in their households that terrorized and sometimes injured their children.
By the end of the two-year program, more than 100 separate technical reports, some of which ran to hundreds of pages, were delivered to the Defense Intelligence Agency. Among them was a 149-page report on the Soviet (and now Russian) UAP investigation/analysis capability. Another detail is the design and the built of a functional prototype for an autonomous Unidentified Aerial Phenomena surveillance platform.
Skinwalkers at the Pentagon has been reviewed by the U.S. Department of Defense and cleared for public release.
**
Recently, I've been getting into fact based books that get into evidence that "we're not alone", though I've certainly absorbed books on other subjects. When I was younger, most of the books I read were of the sci fi variety, though I was exposed early to controversial subjects, getting into what many would label as "conspiracy theories", whether that be coverups of various aspects of certain wars such as the United States' wars in Korea and Vietnam, the effects of radioactive sites and materials and flaws in the medical system. Perhaps my first exposure to a film covering a controversial subject was Silkwood starring Meryl Streep, Kurt Russel and Cher. My mother, who was quite the activist back then, got the film on VHS and we sat down to watch it. I don't remember exactly how old I was, but I do remember not finishing the film as I was apalled at the callousness of what was depicted. My mother was upset that I wouldn't watch the whole thing but then started to get the fact that I was still pretty young- I can't really remember how young, but I suspect I hadn't yet gotten into my teens. I later read a book by my late brother in law on depleted uranium that I'm pretty sure was called "Depleted Uranium, Invisible War". I looked hard to find a formal description of the actual book, to no avail. The closest I could get was it being brought up in this 2001 New York Times article: