Monday, December 29, 2014

"Hunt For The Skinwalker" Critique

"Hunt For The Skinwalker" Critique: A Workingman's Criticism. Some of you may have heard of the "Skinwalker Ranch" in New Mexico where the Gorman family was driven out by UFOs that, among other things, butchered their cows, transported their prize bulls, and incinerated their Blue Heeler dogs. It was enough to make your blood boil.
    My first criticism is that the National Institute for Discovery Science which bought the ranch from the beaten-up Gormans did not aggressively begin digging into the soil since the Gormans had heard machinery and other noises emanating from beneath the ground. The prior owners, who had also fled the ranch, warned the Gormans not to dig into the ground. That's exactly what the National Institute for Discovery Science should have done. The staff might have found out that there was a military base underneath them as was suspected by some of the local Ute Indians. Digging might also have provoked a response that the scientific staff could have exploited. The staff would have used well the services of a tough, street-smart private investigator. This was no scientific laboratory but a crime scene. The big question was whose military base was beneath the Skinwalker Ranch?
    My second criticism is that the Gormans did not make lemonade out of a lemon, but allowed themselves to be pushed around and their animals killed by a demonic force. The Gormans eventually cut and ran as losers with gaping emotional wounds. Instead, they could have opened up the ranch to the media. If the media had access to what went on, something would have been done after the subequent publicity of the demonic happenings at the ranch. The world would not have allowed it to go on. The United States wouldn't have allowed it to go on. As a former "historical interpreter " or tour guide for Colonial Williamsburg, I know that the Gormans could have opened their ranch to tours and made a fortune. I know the Gormans wanted their privacy, but the UFOs and ETs weren't giving it to them anyway. You don't cut and run. The Gormans were extremely hard working, intelligent, proud people. Running hurt them far more than any lack of privacy which would only be temporary anyway.
    For the Bigfoot enthusiast, there were two possible Sasquatches in the book. The first one appeared when the Gormans allowed a tourist to meditate in one of their pastures. A Bigfoot appeared, running into view, went right up to the meditator and roared into his face. The poor tourist almost became unconscious with fright, a typical close-quarters result with a Wildman. The second Sasquatch came out of a vortex that opened in the sky, revealing another world.
    "Hunt For The Skinwalker" was an intense read.

Www.blackfloridapanther.blogspot.com thanks you for reading " The Bigfoot Advocate." With your help, I am trying to prevent what happened to the American Indian happening to Bigfoot or worse. Peter Nickerson  352-359-0850.

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