When it comes to the matter of UFOs, it’s not a subject that just revolves around aliens, extraterrestrial crafts, alien abduction, and government cover-ups. There are also the connections that roll into such realms as the paranormal, the supernatural, and the occult. I know for sure that many people in Ufology don’t like to tie UFOs with the paranormal. Too bad: there is an undeniable component, and it should not be dismissed or ignored. For example, I made the connections between UFOs, aliens and the paranormal in my 2010 book, Final Events, a book that looked at how and why a small element of the U.S. government believed that the UFO mystery was/is demonic. Flying Saucer Review’s editor, Gordon Creighton, eventually came around to believing that our so-called aliens are really something very different: nothing less than Middle Eastern Djinn in cunning disguise. The very same goes for the late Rosemary Ellen Guiley. A good friend of mine, Rosemary also came to believe that the Djinn were linked to not just UFOs and aliens, but also cryptozoological creatures like Bigfoot and the werewolf-like Dog-Men. Today, however, I’m going to focus on one particular man: Trevor James Constable, a ufologist who was a big figure in the 1950s-era of Ufology.

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