This article came to my mind after a
heated debate from another blog article. So I feel this is a subject that needs
to be brought up. Many investigators of phenomena such as ghosts, UFOs, haunting s, paranormal creatures and many unusual events often find themselves
in a situation where they need to know how to check out a hoax. This article
will provide a set of guidelines you can use to determine whether or not a
claim or a story you are examining is a hoax.
As a paranormal investigator or
researcher, it is your responsibility to discern between deception and truth.
The word "hoax" refers to those stories, videos or pictures where
there is intentional deception or fraud. For example, it's up to you, as the
unbiased observer, to separate the story that a homeowner may tell you about a
haunting from your own efforts to determine what's really causing the
phenomenon. However, there are times when the storyteller is a con artist, an
attention-seeker or a sociopath. As a paranormal investigator, you need to
remain vigilant against these types of people.
Identifying a Hoax Before
It Grows Legs
The field of the paranormal is filled with
tricksters. On YouTube, over half of the "ghost videos" are
fabricated or spoofed videos meant to poke fun at people who believe in ghosts.
Unfortunately these "hoaxes" are mixed in with a gold mine of video
that homeowners have shot featuring authentic paranormal phenomena. There is no
faster method to become disenchanted with a field of research than coming
across one or two of these ridiculous hoaxes.
Elements of a story, video or phenomenon
that will help you to immediately flag it as a potential hoax include:
•Is the
"evidence" in a format to be distributed to a large group of people,
such as an email distribution or a website?
•Does it fail to provide
legitimate and verifiable confirmation sources?
•Is the language used
either very emotional or highly technical?
•Is the source anonymous,
or is it impossible to verify the source's expertise?
Identifying a Hoaxer
While identifying a fabricated story may
be easy, identifying a hoaxer isn't. Hoaxers are essentially con artists who
are attempting to sell a particular audience on a paranormal story. The
following are common characteristics of such con artists.
•Chameleon: The con
artist adapts quickly, using the same lingo and basic core beliefs as the crowd
and incorporates those into the hoax.
•Charismatic: A clever
con artist can come across as extremely professional, successful and
charismatic.
•Techno-babble: They
often use poorly understood science to peddle certain "technology" or
research. They use meaningless phrases like "ectoplasm anomaly", or
"micro-cosmic harmonic stabilization", which sound no different than
highly technical phrases from a scientific journal to a layman.
•Nasty Skeptic: If you
ask a hoaxer for evidence, the con artist will act slighted and attempt to make
people feel that questioning the source of information will cause the
information to stop.
•Too Good To Be True: If
it sounds too good to be true, it is. Aliens do not offer secret free-energy
technology. Ghosts do not shoot dishes across the room while flickering the
lights and shooting ectoplasm from the walls. And, when Bigfoot is captured, he
likely will not be stored in an ice cooler available to the highest bidder.
Using common sense can go a long way when you research paranormal claims.
The following are examples of paranormal
hoaxes that took place over the past few years.
The Elevator Ghost Hoax
In early 2008, a creepy video surfaced on
YouTube and throughout the Internet, showing security camera footage of a
ghostly, stooped figure of an old woman haunting an office building in
Singapore. It quickly became well known as the "Raffles Place Ghost."
Later in the year, the GMP Group admitted they fabricated the video, at a cost
of $100,000, in order to "highlight the dangers of working late".
Many thousands of people had fallen for the hoaxed video.
The Aleshenka Creature
In August of 1996, a mentally ill elderly
woman named Tamara Vasilievna Prosvirina claimed that she'd discovered a small
creature in Kaolinovy, a small village in Chelyabinsk, Russia. Locals claimed
that the creature was extraterrestrial in origin. For years, Ufologists and
crypto zoologists believed that the creature was not of this world. However, in
2004, scientists from the Moscow Institute of General Genetics, used genetic
testing to prove that the creature was nothing more than a prematurely born
female baby with severe deformities.
Planet Serpo and the Human-Alien
Exchange Program
In 2005, a story about a human-alien
exchange program surfaced on the Internet. An anonymous person, claiming to be
a government insider, used free Internet email accounts to send poorly written
military journal entries written by military officers who allegedly visited the
alien planet. In 2006, investigators at Reality Uncovered, using email-tracing
evidence, revealed that the anonymous hoaxer was former U.S. Air Force Sergeant
Richard Doty, famous for his part in a number of past UFO hoaxes that he
distributed to UFO researchers Bill Moore and Linda Moulton Howe during the
1980s.
Bigfoot Found
During the summer of 2008, Matt Whitton
and Rick Dyer claimed that they'd discovered the body of Bigfoot in the
backwoods of northern Georgia. The hoax built up steam throughout the national
and international media as the two men claimed they had the corpse frozen in a
chest freezer. Self-proclaimed crypto zoologist Tom Biscardi picked up the
story and pushed it into the national news by promoting several large media
events. The two men sold the body to a research group called Searching for
Bigfoot, Inc. for $50,000.00. After thawing the creature, the hoax was revealed
when they discovered that it was nothing more than a rubber gorilla costume.
Thanks for this article, Chad. I've provided a link to it in my own blog https://skeptissimma.wordpress.com/2015/05/05/debunking-the-hoaxes/
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