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- A REVIEW OF MIB (MEN IN BLACK)
- A History
- By Linda Murphy
-
- From 'Astronet Review' No. 1 February 1992.
-
- A lot of people have heard of something about "MIBs" without
- really knowing any of the details.
- The purpose of this article is to acquaint readers with MIBs
- history, how they are related to the cover-up allegations, along
- with associated reference material and names of files which
- contain more current thoughts on the subject.
- When the Condon Committee was sampling public attitudes
- toward UFOs they gave this statement to a cross-section of the
- American Public: "A government agency maintains a Top Secret
- file of UFO reports that are deliberately withheld from the
- public." The respondents were supposed to answer TRUE or FALSE. A
- substantial majority, sixty-one percent, thought that the
- statement was true while only thirty-one percent said it was
- false. Among teenagers, the credibility gap was even wider - 73
- percent believed the statement to be true. General opinion
- studies conducted by the Condon Committee, and other surveys
- about UFOs came up with the rather paradoxical facts that there
- were more people who believed in a conspiracy of silence about
- UFOs than believed in UFOs in the first place.
- It has ofen been said that we Americans today are a bit
- paranoid; that we always tend to believe that something is out to
- get us, or something is being kept from us. It certainly seems
- that we were a bit paranoid about UFOs.
- Most people thought vaguely in terms of an Air Force
- conspiracy or a CIA conspiracy or even of a world-wide scientific
- conspiracy. It was generally acknowledged that the reason behind
- such a conspiracy was a desire on the part of those in power to
- hide the "truth" from the public because people would panic if
- they kney that we really were being visited by superior creatures
- from another world. Conspiracy theorists constantly hearkened
- back to the old "War of the Worlds" broadcast, and the panic it
- started.
- Such a belief, however, is rather too simple for the true
- connoisseur of conspiracies. He has long ago rejected the simple,
- straightforward Air Force-CIA-science establishment cover-up as
- too obvious, and really rather ridiculous. The conspiracy
- connoisseur pointed out quite correctly that no government or
- group, no matter how powerful, could possibly suppress so much
- sensational information for so long - no earthly group that is.
- If the extraterrestrials WANTED to make themselves known then
- they would land in a central place, and all the feeble earthly
- cover-up would simply be blown away. It is out of this sort of
- background that the legend of the Men In Black arose. It concerns
- strange little men in dark suits who drive around in big shiny
- cars and harass people who claimed to have seen a UFO.
- The origin of the Men In Black legend can be pinpointed
- fairly exactly. Back in 1953 a man by the name of Albert K.
- Bender was running an oranisation called the International Flying
- Saucer Bureau (IFSB) and editing a little publication called
- Space Review that was dedicated to news of flying saucers.
- The IFSB had a small membership despite its rather grandiose
- title, and Space Review reached at best, no more than a few
- hundred readers. But they were all deeply devoted to the idea
- that flying saucers were craft from outer space. In common with
- other true believers, these saucer buffs were convinced that they
- were in possession of a great truth, while most of the rest of
- the world remained in darkness and ignorance. They felt very
- important, and thus it was with a sense of surprise, even shock,
- that they opened up the October 1953 issue of Space Review and
- found two unexpected announcements: "LATE BULLETIN. A source
- which the IFSB considers very reliable has informed us that the
- investigation of the flying saucer mystery and the solution is
- approaching its final stages. This same source to whom we had
- referred data, which had come into our possession, suggested that
- it was not the proper method and time to publish the data in
- Space Review."
- The second and more shocking item read: "STATEMENT OF
- IMPORTANCE: The mystery of the flying saucers is no longer a
- mystery. The source is already known, but any information about
- this is being withheld by order from a higher source. We would
- like to print the full story in Space Review, but because of the
- nature of the information we are very sorry that we have been
- advised in the negative."
- The statement ended with the ominous sentence, "We advise
- those engaged in saucer work to please be very cautious." Bender
- then suspended the publication of Space Review, and dissolved the
- IFSB.
- The tone of the announcements would have been familiar to
- anyone who had much experience with occult organizations.
- Occultists often claim they are in the possession of some great
- secret which, for equally secret reasons, they cannot reveal.
- Even the appeal, "please be very cautious" was not unique. It
- made those engaged in "saucer work" feel more important. After
- all, who is going to bother to persecute you if you are just
- wasting your time?
- Shortly after Bender closed down his magazine and
- organization he gave an interview to a local paper [in] which he
- asserted that he had been visited by "three men wearing dark
- suits" who had ordered him "emphatically" to stop publishing
- material about flying saucers. Bender said that he had been
- "scared to death" and that he "actually couldn't eat for a couple
- of days.". Some of Bender's former associates tried to press for
- a more satisfactory explanation, but to all questions he replied
- either cryptically or not at all.
-
-
-
- This state of affairs created considerable confusions among
- the flying saucer buffs. What were they to think about such a
- strange story? Some were openly skeptical of Bender's tale. They
- said that his publication and organization were losing money and
- the tale of the three visitors who "ordered" him to stop
- publishing was just a face-saving gesture. Yet, as the years went
- by the "Three Men In Black" began to sound more respectable and
- they took on a life of their own. Some of Bender's friends first
- thought that the Men In Black were from the Air Force or the CIA,
- and indeed Bender's original statements do seem to sound like
- [the men could have been] government agents. But after a while
- the Men In Black began to assume a more extraterrestrial, even
- supernatural air.
- Finally in 1963, a full decade after he first told of his
- mysterious visitors, Albert Bender elaborated further in a book
- called "Flying Saucers and the Three Men In Black". It was a
- strange, confused and virtually unreadable book that revealed
- very little in the way of hard facts, but did significantly
- enhance the reputation of the Men In Black as extraterrestrials.
- The book also introduced into the lore "three beautiful women,
- dressed in tight white uniforms." Like their male counterparts in
- black, the women in white had "glowing eyes".
- But even before the publication of Bender's book in 1963, the
- Men In Black (or MIBs as they were known to insiders) had already
- been reported to be visiting others besides Alber Bender. By now
- they have been reported so often that they have become an
- established part of the UFO history. The Men In Black, naturally
- enough,wear black suits. They also usually wear sunglasses,
- presumably to disguise their "glowing eyes". Most of them are
- reported to be short and delicately built with olive complections
- and dark, straight hair. They are often described as "Gypsies" or
- "Orientals". Most MIBs are reported to travel in groups of three
- and usually ride around in shiny, new, black cars - often
- Cadillacs. These cars are even supposed to "smell new". Sometimes
- the MIBs pose as investigators from the CIA or some other
- government agency. They may flash official-looking credentials.
- but these can never be checked out. Occasionally the MIBs display
- badges withstrange emblems on them, or have unrecognizable
- symbols painted on their cars. The purpose of the visits seems to
- be to get people who have seen UFOs to stop talking about them,
- of somehow to confuse and frighten the witnesses.
- People who worry about MIBs tend to lump all sorts of
- mysterious visitors into the category, even if they don't wear
- black, have no glowing eyes nor show any of the familiar MIB
- characteristics. The primary qualification for the Men In Black
- is that they be of unknown origin, and that they appear to act
- oddly and vaguely menacing.
- Some of those who write about UFOs and other strange
- phenomena rather casually mention "countless" cases where people
- have been visited by Men In Black. In reality these "countless
- cases" are difficult to pin down. In fact, there really seems to
- be a rather small number of MIB cases where there are any details
- availabe at all.
- The impression given by the writers is that the publicized
- cases represent only "the tip of the iceberg". Beyond these, say
- the writers, are many "more sensational" cases, the details of
- which cannot be revealed for a variety of reasons. In any event
- solid evidence for a vast number MIB cases is lacking. But we
- are, after all, dealing with beliefs as much as with reality, and
- 'impression' is an important one.
- Often the MIB cases that we know of are not quite as
- sensational as Albert Bender's three visitors, but they are
- unsettling nevertheless. Take the case of California highway
- inspector Rex Heflin. On August 3, 1965, Heflin claimed to have
- taken a series of Polaroid photos of a UFO from his car while
- parked near the Santa Ana Freeway. The pictures were quite clear
- and they showed an object shaped rather like a straw hat
- apparently floating above the ground. These pictures got a great
- deal of publicity, and are still among the most frequently
- reprinted UFO photos. Heflin's story was investigated by the Air
- Force shortly after it became known. It was also looked into by
- investigators for the Condon Committee during their inquiry. (The
- committee investigator produced a pretty fair imitation of the
- photos by suspending the lens cap of his camera in front of his
- car with a thread and photographing it through the car window.)
- In addition, a host of unofficial UFO groups tackled the case in
- their own way.
- There was considerable suspicion on the part of official
- investigators that the photos had been faked, but this was
- difficult to prove of disprove without the original pronts.
- Being Polaroid photos, there were no negatives.
- Heflin said that he had turned over three of the four
- originals to a man (or two men - the stories differ) who claimed
- that he represented the North American Air Defence Command
- (NORAD). NORAD denied that they had ever sent out an
- investigator, or indeed, that they had the slightest interest in
- the photos. The mysterious person who is alleged to have taken
- the photos has never been identified.
- On October 11, 1967, over two years after Heflin's original
- sighting, but while the Condon investigation was going on, Heflin
- reported another encounter with mysterious visitors. A man who
- said that he was Captain C.H. Edmonds of the Space Systems
- Division, Systems Command, a unit of the Air Force that had been
- involved in the first investigation of his UFO photos, came to
- his home. During the interview the man who called himself Captain
- Edmonds asked Heflin if he wanted his original photos back. When
- Heflin said no, the man was "visibly relieved". Inexplicably, the
- man then began discussing the Bermuda Triangle. This is an area
- near the island of Bermuda where a number of mysterious
- disappearances of airplanes and ships have been reported. These
- disappearances have been linked by some to UFOs, though the
- connection does not seem very convincing.
-
-
- While this strange interview was going on, Heflin said that
- he saw a car parked in the street. It had some sort of lettering
- on the front door but he could not make it out. To quote the
- Condon Report description of the incident, "In the back seat
- could be seen a figure and a violet (not blue) glow, which the
- witness attributed to instrument dials. He believed he was being
- photographed or recorded. In the mentime his FM multiplex radio
- was playing in the living room and during the questioning it made
- several loud audible pops." All attempts by the Air Force,
- various civilian researchers and the Condon Committee itself to
- find "Captain C. H. Edmonds" failed. As far as can be determined,
- no such person has ever existed.
- A much more bizarre story was supposedly told by an unnamed
- family who had sighted a UFO. Sometime after the sighting they
- said that they were visited by a very strange individual. Ivan
- Sanderson, who reported the incident in his book "Uninvited
- Visitors", described the individual thus: "almost seven feet
- tall, with a small head, dead white skin, enormous frame, but
- pipe-stem limbs." This oddity said he was an insurance
- investigator and that he was looking for someone who had the same
- name as the husband of this family. He indicated that the man he
- was looking for had inherited a great deal of money. Continued
- Sanderson; "This weird individual just appeared out of the night
- wearing a strange fur hat with a visor and only a light jacket.
- He flashed an official-looking card on entry but put it away
- immediately. Later on when he removed his jacket he disclosed an
- official-looking gold shield on his shirt which he instantly
- covered with his hand and removed."
- The strange visitor asked some personal questions about the
- family, but nothing at all about the UFOs. The creepiest part of
- the whole affair came when the eldest daughter of the family
- noticed that the "investigator's" tight pants had ridden up his
- skinny leg, and she saw a green wire running out of his sock, up
- his leg and into his flesh at two points. After the interview,
- the "investigator" got into a large, black car which contained at
- least two other persons, and seemed to disappear on an old dirt
- road that led from the woods. The car drove off into the night
- with its headlights off.
- In addition to scaring and intimidating people, visits of
- MIBs are also supposed to produce a variety of unpleasant
- physical symptoms. Bender said he suffered from headaches, lapses
- of memory and was plagued by strange odours following the first
- visit of the Men In Black. Others who say they have had similar
- visitations have made similar complaints.
- Another eerie thing attributed to MIB types, is the ability
- to look like anyone they want to. Some UFO researchers claim that
- MIBs have been posing as THEM in order to silence potential
- witnesses. John Keel, who has written a number of UFO books ,
- said that he had encountered people who refused to believe that
- he was who he said he was. "Later contactees (those who say they
- are, somehow or other, in contact with the space people) began to
- whisper to local UFO investigators that the real John Keel had
- been kidnapped by a flying saucer and that a cunning android who
- looked just like me had been substituted in my place. Incredible
- though it may sound, this was taken very seriously, and later
- even some of my more rational correspondents admitted that they
- carefully compared the signatures on my current letters with
- pre-rumour letters they had received."
- As we said earlier, each era tries to explain strange
- encounters in terms of its own system of beliefs. I have been
- struch by the similarity of some of these MIB cases with medieval
- tales of encounters with the devil or some of hes demons. The
- devil, for example, was very often described as a man dressed in
- black. The ability to change shape and appear in any form was
- commonly attributed to demons, who were able to take the shape of
- a victim's friends and neighbors and even assume the likeness of
- angels and saints. Many of those who said that they had met the
- devil complained of the same range of physical symptoms reported
- by those who encounered the MIBS.
- The shiny new cars associated with MIBs is reminiscent of the
- Haitian belief in an evil society of sorcerers called "zobops".
- Haitians say that if you see a big, new car going along the road
- without a driver, it's under the control of the "zobops", and you
- had better not try to interfere with it.
- Now, I am not trying to imply that the MIBs are agents of the
- devil, or vice versa, anymore than I would try to say that the
- little green men from Mars were really the fairy folk of past
- generations. It is just that our visions and fears often remain
- the same over the ages, and only our explanations for them
- change.
- Of course, encounters with the devil during the Middle Ages
- were generally more frightening and overpowering experiences than
- current experiences with MIBs. Everbody believed in the devil,
- while today everybody does not believe in the creatures from
- outer
- space. Mideval society took devil stories in dead earnest, and
- anyone who made such a report might find himself facing a painful
- death at the stake. The worst one can expect from reporting a MIB
- encounter is a certain amount of disbelief and ridicule. In
- general, MIB tales are considered too bizarre even to be reported
- in local newspapers. They are published only in magazines and
- books put out for and by UFO enthusiasts.
- Usually such publications are provately printed and are read
- by only a few hundred. A few books however, have been issued by
- major publishers and have reached a far wider audience. These
- cases are also occasionally discussed on radio and TV talk shows,
- so the information gets around more widely than one might think.
- A lot of people have heard of "something" about MIBs without
- really knowing any of the details.
-
- There is one incident which bared certain similarities to the
- traditional MIB case that did receive very wide publicity. This
- is the story of the "kidnapping" of Betty and Barney Hill. While
- most of the MIB cases do not appear directly to involve a UFO,
- this one does. The couple was driving to their home in
- Portsmouth, New Hampshire, from Canada on the night of September
- 19, 1961. They were on an isolated stretch of road when they
- spotted what they thought was a flying saucer abouve them. Then
- followed two completely blank hours in their lives. They could
- remember nothing from the time they saw the UFO until a time two
- hours later when they found themselves in their car several miles
- down the road from where they had seen the UFO. For months after
- this experience both of the Hills suffered from severe
- psychological distress. Finally they consulted a psychiatrist,
- who hypnotized them, and under hypnosis the Hills revealed a
- strange story of being kidnapped and taken aboard a flying
- saucer.
- The Hills didn't rush out and try to get publicity about
- their experience or write a book about it. In fact, they were
- remarkably quiet. But the incident did ultimately come to the
- attention of author John Fuller, who had already written an
- extremely popular UFO book. With the co-operation of the Hills
- and of their psychiatrist, Fuller produced another best seller,
- "The Interrupted Journey", which was first serialized in the now
- defunct 'Look' magazine.
- Though the book is carefully hedged with qualifications that
- the experience described might be a hallucunation or a dream
- rather than a "totally real and true experience", the distinct
- impression left by The Interrupted Journey on thousands of
- readers was that the experience was a "totally real and true"
- one.
- The people or entities that were supposed to be controlling
- the spaceship that kidnapped the Hills can be squeezed into the
- Men In Black lore. Barney Hill described one of his captors as
- looking like "a red-headed Irishman", hardly a MIB type. But
- another wore "a shiny black coat", with a black scarf thrown
- about his neck.
- Under hypnosis Hill drew a picture of "the leader" of his
- abductors. It is a strange insect like face with a wide, thin
- mouth and huge slanting eyes that seem to go halfway around the
- creatures' head. The eyes were the most frightening part of the
- saucer inhabitant's strange physiognomy. Once during a hypnotic
- session with the psychiatrist Barny Hill cried out in terror,
- "Oh, those eyes! They're in my brain!" Glowing eyes, you will
- recall, are considered some of the key characteristics of the
- typical Man In Black.
- Unlike many of the books written by or about people who say
- that they had encountered the inhabitants of UFOs, The
- Interrupted Journey carries real conviction. One gets the feeling
- that the Hills and Fuller are intelligent, sincere and sane
- people who really believe that what they described is what
- actually did happen.
- So this idea was planted in the minds of thousands of readers
- of The Interrupted Journey: UFOs can land, the extraterrestrials
- can kidnap ordinary people, subject them to a degrading and
- almost brutal examination and then wipe all memory of the
- incident from their minds, leaving behind only an unexplained
- sense of anxiety bordering on panic.
- Well, what does all of this mean? Are we being invaded by
- some weird bunch of extraterrestrials who have in the words of
- the "Shadow" radio show, "the power to cloud men's minds"?
- Frankly the evidence does not support such an alarming
- conclusion.
- Are all the stories hoaxes and hallucinations? Psychiatrists
- could certainly have a field day with many of these accounts.
- Symptoms such as loss of memory, severe anxiety and other
- unpleasant reactions strongly suggest that many of those who
- report such experiences are in a disturbed psychological state,
- though they would claim the disturbance was caused by the
- encounter with the strange visitor. In any event they do not make
- the most reliable of witnesses. Some of the other stories are
- almost certainly sheer fiction, made up either by some practical
- joker or by a writer of sensational books.
- Whether all the stories are real of unreal is not a question
- that we can answer conclusively here. The point is that we
- Americans are building a mythology for ouselves, just as the
- Europeans did with their tales of dragons, ogres and elves, and
- just as all people have done in all parts of the world in all
- ages.
- We have often prided ourselves on being a practical,
- hardheaded, no-nonsense sort of people who were immune to the
- irrational fears and superstitious notions of less clear-sighted
- and realistic folk. This proposition is demonstrably untrue and
- perhaps we are better off for it. Our monsters, our space people,
- even if they don't exist, if indeed they are rather silly, also
- make life more interisting and exciting.
-
- ***:::::::::***
-
- REFERENCES:
-
- Excalibur Briefing, Thomas E. Bearden, Strawberry Hill Press
- 1980.
- UFOs and Their Mission Impossible, Dr. Clifford Wilson, Signet
- Press.
- Flying Saucers on The Attack, Harold T. Wilkins, Ace Books 1954.
- MONSTERS: Giants and Little Men From Mars, Daniel Cohen, DELL
- Publications (paperback) 1975.
-
-