Many believe that Area 51 is where scientists reverse-engineered alien technology that was recovered from crashes saucers in Roswell, New Mexico; oddly, there seems to be no evidence that the Pentagon has made use of any such advanced technology. "60 Minutes" correspondent Leslie Stahl suggested that the area was not UFO-related but instead a dumping ground for toxic waste.
Though the existence of the base was classified for decades, it has been officially acknowledged for nearly 20 years. It is a secret military base, and there are, of course, perfectly legitimate government and military reasons for keeping the base's activities secret that have nothing to do with aliens or UFOs. After all, the military needs places where they can test and develop new helicopters, airplanes, unmanned drones, and other technology away from public eyes. There is, of course, no way to selectively tell the public what's going on there, even if the government wanted to: spies and hostile foreign governments read the news and watch TV, too.
Debunked claims
Information vacuum
Area 51 is now firmly entrenched in the public discourse about government conspiracy and UFOs. As Thomas Bullard, author of "The Myth and Mystery of UFOs" notes, "After trust between government and public eroded with Vietnam and Watergate, Roswell and Area 51 entered the popular vocabulary as bywords for official double-dealing. Suspicions no longer fester only within the UFO community [but] have spread through the public at large to leave scarcely any visible line between perceptions of literal fact and 'X-Files' plots."
The basic, flawed premise behind the Area 51 mythology can be boiled down to this: The government won't reveal what's going on there, so it must be something ultra-super-amazingly secret. But, of course, Area 51 is only one of many military bases, national laboratories, and government scientific research centers across the country that deal with classified — even top secret — information, and where workers and visitors need security clearances.
As with any good mystery, many people still endorse stories about Area 51 based on anonymous sources, speculation, rumor and conspiracy. The irony is that even if the government gave public tours of Area 51 detailing all its current and past secrets, UFO buffs wouldn't believe a word of it; they'd dismiss it as a disinformation campaign designed to hide the real truth. There's no reason to think that anything alien is going on there, but where there is secrecy, there will be conspiracy.
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