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My
review of "You can't tell the people"
This is undeniably a thorough, complete and updated analysis.
It is not simply a re-hash of old information. It benefits
from a fresh review of existing information and from new evidence uncovered
by the author's own research. The evidence is sometimes confusing,
sometimes conflicting and sometimes worrying but always fascinating. The
author weaves a mass of disparate pieces of evidence into a coherent
corroborated version of the events.
"You
can't tell the people" is likely to strengthen previously
held beliefs, whether they are for or against the possibility that
a UFO landed in Rendlesham Forest. If you think 'something else' happened, and
that the UFO story is deliberate disinformation to cover up, say,
a military error, this is discussed in detail, too. If you believe
that nothing at all happened, and that the evidence is all manufactured,
this book might even make you angry. Whatever your pre-conceived ideas,
this book will not leave you un-moved.
One query I had before reading this book was "why on
earth did Larry Warren call his book 'Left at East Gate' when, if you
turn left at RAF Woodbridge East Gate, you bump into the perimeter fence?"
The answer is out there - or rather, that particularly mystery is eloquently unravelled in "You
can't tell the people."
Sometimes
the conclusions reached by the author's analysis do not seem entirely
un-prejudiced, perhaps coloured by a previously held belief in UFOs.
Others hold different views, such as "nothing happened at all"
- none of this is included in the book.
However, whether you're a believer, a detractor, or
are yet to be convinced about UFOs or government disinformation, or their
methods of persuasion, this book is acomprehensive
source of material which cannot fail to raise many questions, not
least of which is "what exactly did Margaret
Thatcher mean, when she unwittingly gave Georgina the title for this book?"
BUY THE BOOK! |