Newspaper reporters sired during an era of journalistic grit are disappearing almost too fast to count, as their very industry is flushed away due to a declining readership, hedge fund greed and, to be brutally honest, centers of so-called education which can barely teach up-and-coming adults to read, let alone think.
Journalist Billy Cox, now on his own like so many others of his craft, continues to do those interested in UFOs a high favor by continuing to make sense of facts and findings that often get mangled in the process of communication.
Cox's impressions of this month's "open" congressional UFO alias UAP hearings are worth their weight. Contact his site via the link in my link list.
Fortunately, Frank Warren (UFO Chronicles -- see link) also features Billy Cox's articles on occasion.
Today, we unapologetically feature a direct quote from Billy Cox's latest writing in the visual displayed here. He couldn't have said it better or asked a more all-encompassing question.
Shooting the kids, Texas style: That makes two 18 year old individuals responsible for mass-murder in the past week or so. What to do? Don't ask me, I can't fix what society and political monsters have created for young people over the decades. I do know this -- when shooters go bat-crazy at the trigger, there's no place better for exercising their murderous skills than places where there are no competing guns to interfere. Like schools.
While national, state and local politicians and TV talking heads consume the next few days calling for absurd solutions to reel in and condemn metal instead of mental, I will patiently sit back and wait for a potential Supreme Court decision that allows all manner of people to carry and conceal firearms capable of curtailing mass-murder incidents, car-jackings, street crimes and other brutal pop-up occasions in short order. Cops are great, but arriving just in time to take photos and draw chalk lines isn't much of a solution for an incident that started and ended only precious minutes before.