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Exopolitics: Discipline of Choice for Public Policy Issues Concerning Extraterrestrial Life
There
is growing debate concerning 'exopolitics', which is oriented towards
public policy issues concerning extraterrestrial life; and its
relationship to UFOlogy, which primarily focuses on evidence concerning
unidentified flying objects (UFOs). Supporters of exopolitics largely
accept that the existence of extraterrestrial life has been abundantly
demonstrated by a vast pool of evidence over the last sixty years
provided by eyewitnesses, whistleblowers, scientists, 'experiencers'
and leaked government documents.
Supporters of exopolitics claim it is now time to focus on public
policy aspects of this evidence, rather than maintain a myopic focus on
proving to perennial skeptics that UFOs are real and a legitimate focus
on scientific study. Indeed, exopolitics supporters believe that much
of this skepticism is unwarranted and can be traced to the debunking
recommended by the CIA appointed Robertson Panel in 1953. The panel
delivered a report, the Durant Report,
that recommended debunking the 'flying saucer' phenomenon and the
possibility of extraterrestrial life, for national security reasons.
The Report stated: "The "debunking" aim would result in reduction in
public interest in "flying saucers" which today evokes a strong
psychological reaction."
Many individuals are still trying to
grasp what exopolitics is all about, and many 'UFOlogists' remain
highly critical of exopolitics as an emerging disciplinary approach to
public policy issues concerning extraterrestrial life. UFOlogists still
have difficulty grasping that exopolitics is the forerunner to a
legitimate academic discipline that will soon be established in every
major university. Critics of exopolitics
often tend to focus on some of the pioneers of exopolitical thought in
terms of their methods and ideas, rather than the identifying the
merits of a scholarly approach to public policy issues concerning
extraterrestrial life.
The present situation is some ways
analogous to the 19th century where there was much debate on how to
prepare individuals for studying public policy issues for careers in
international diplomacy and public office. Historians at the time
argued that efforts to establish the discipline of 'political science'
was ill founded, since the best preparation for a life dealing with
public policy issues was to read historical works by Arnold Toynbee,
Herodotus, Thucydides, etc. Well, political science developed anyway as
an academic discipline out of the department of history since it
fulfilled a functional need. The functional need was to better
understand public policy issues and how individuals could be trained to
professionally deal with these.
Political science is now the
discipline of choice for those wanting to study public policy issues
and to be professionally trained to work with these. During the 1860's,
political science departments began to emerge in many universities.
Similarly, exopolitics will be the discipline of choice for those
desiring to study public policy issues associated with extraterrestrial
life since it fulfills a functional need. The functional need is to
understand how extraterrestrial life impacts on public policy issues,
and to professionally train to deal with these. Exopolitics will be
first established in departments of political science as a legitimate
sub-field as is currently the case with 'international politics',
'foreign policy', 'comparative politics', 'political economy', etc., in
many political science departments. Eventually, exopolitics will emerge
as a distinct department with an interdisciplinary focus spanning
public policy issues relating not only to political science, but to
exoscience, exoreligion, exodiplomacy, etc.
Debunkers and
Ufologists in general are poor students of history not to have observed
how academic disciplines and sub-fields develop to fulfill functional
needs. They are remiss in not observing how exopolitics will fill the
functional need for the systematic study of public policy issues
concerning evidence of extraterrestrial life. The choice of the word
'exopolitics' to represent this nascent academic discipline has long
term strategic value due to the functional need it fills. Furthermore,
exopolitics is the term of choice to deal with public policy issues
like the national security cover up of extraterrestrial life and
technologies.
UFOlogy as a field has little academic future
since the functional need it serves will quickly be settled once the
existence of extraterrestrial life is accepted. The reality of UFOs
will be moot once they have been publicly identified as
'extraterrestrial', 'interdimensional' or 'extratemporal' in origin.
Those devoted to UFOlogy are missing a great opportunity to contribute
to establishing legitimate social science parameters for exopolitical
study. Exopolitics is here to stay as the discipline of choice for a
new branch of knowledge that will revolutionize academic studies and
the world as we know it.
***
Michael E. Salla, Ph.D
Kona, Hawaii
11/24/07
www.Exopolitics.Org
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 27 November 2007 )
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