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UFOs, JFK, and Elvis : Conspiracies You Don't Have to Be Crazy to Believe

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Title: UFOs, JFK, and Elvis : Conspiracies You Don't Have to Be Crazy to Believe
by Richard Belzer
ISBN: 0-345-42918-4
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Pub. Date: 02 May, 2000
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $14.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4 (50 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Packed with real information and told as only Belzer can.
Comment: Not too many people who are experiencing the kind of success that Richard Belzer is today would attempt to tackle such a controversial topic as conspiracy research. But Belzer does it with humor and style. This is a book for both the novice and the serious researcher. If you believe that JFK was killed by a lone nut or that UFOs are totally without any serious merit, then do yourself a favor and read this book. Belzer is a comedian but he is also a serious man with great insight into the folly of the world. The bibliography alone is worth the purchase price. Belzer is the real deal.

Rating: 5
Summary: Factoid: This book may crush some cherished delusions.
Comment: I have to admit that I wasn't expecting much from this book when I bought it. I thought it would just provide a pleasant diversion during a long drive. (And, yes, I'm talking about the audiobook version. Reading while driving is just plain wrong, kids.) I didn't think a comedian/actor would have a proper understanding of the topics presented. Of course, I also never used to question such supposedly august institutions as the U.S. Department of Justice or The New York Times. It was a silly prejudice; Belzer is very knowledgeable. The references peppered throughout convinced me of this. The Belz provides an overview of various conspiracies that has surprising depth. In addition, the writing is very concise and powerful. I didn't find a dull moment in the entire book. And, even though the book would stand well on the organization of information and the excellent writing, the humor really helps put it above the standard conspiracy primer. It's not too over-the-top and not too desperately cynical. (The conspiracy rap at the end is a true masterpiece.) Get it and let the information work its way, unsettlingly, into your storehouse of popular delusions. Or scoff and go back to sleep like the rest of the sheep...but don't forget to keep laughing.

Rating: 3
Summary: You DO have to be crazy....
Comment: We all know that something fishy happened in Dealy Plaza on 11/22/63, and that our government cannot be trusted, but to suggest that people have been copulating with aliens is absurd. I find it interesting the Mr. Belzer failed to point out that UFO sightings have been plummeting since the end of the Cold War, and that these aliens people claim to encounter look suspisciously like the Hollywood aliens depicted in the movies during the fifties. Extra-terrestrials have become the new mythology, and belong in the same realm as werewolves and leprechauns, and are largely a symptom of a mass-hysteria and overactive imaginations. Just because people have seen objects in the air they can't indentify, it doesn't mean they are from other galaxies. Carl Sagan pointed out that the odds of intelligent life outside our solar system is highly likely, but the odds of those two civilizations ever crossing paths is tantamount to two chipmunks in North America finding each other. And, what all UFO pundits have failed to produce over the years is any tangible physical evidence of extra-terrestrial life; it's a lot of grainy, doctored photos and bogus testimonials. As far as the alleged lunar landing hoax, there were good reasons for our government to fake it for purposes of propaganda, but it was well within the realm of possibilty. My old eigth-grade math teacher told us that we had the mathematics to get to the moon in the late 1800's. Belzer resents the fact that such people who believe this nonsense are unfairly marginalized, but how else should rational people deal with paranoid delusions? That being said, the book was entertaining and I read it in one evening, but it was nothing more than a National Enquirer article on steroids. What cracks me up is how Belzer can promote this book with a straight face. I'm sure he's laughing because he got my money. And another thing, he never did tell us where Elvis was hiding! Three Stars!

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