Flying Saucers Quotes

Quotes tagged as "flying-saucers" Showing 1-6 of 6
Terence McKenna
“If you cross an onion with a UFO, what you get is a flying saucer that brings tears to your eyes.”
Terence McKenna

“Dialectic concepts can permit the existence of UFOs and other life-forms... Even if these reports of flying saucers are fantasies, as is possible that the majority may be, many of them, their historical basis is correct… the scientific capacity of human beings is determined by their social organisation... The answers to these mysteries would lie in a study of Marxism." From Les Soucoupes Volantes (Flying Saucers)”
Juan R Posadas

Stephen        King
“She had been amazed-and a little relieved-to discover that she was not concealing some private neurosis; almost all imaginative people heard voices. Not just thoughts but actual voices inside their heads, different personae, each as clearly defined as the voices on an old-time radio show. They came from the right side of the brain, the teacher explained-the side which is most commonly associated with visions of telepathy and that striking human ability to create images by drawing comparisons and making metaphors.
There are no such things as flying saucers.”
Stephen King, The Tommyknockers

Thomm Quackenbush
“I know for a fact the first UFOs reported in modern times, just before the crash at Roswell, were boomerang shaped and were reported as 'flying saucers' to describe the motion of their flight, like a saucer skipping over water. Yet immediately after, people saw and photographed saucer-shaped objects. Boomerang-shaped objects were rarely seen. Now people mostly report seeing large triangles instead of discs or boomerangs, because that is what they are told to expect to see.”
Thomm Quackenbush, Artificial Gods

“Conversation between Marsha Carol Watson Gandy and her Father: Captain Samuel Marshall Watson: "Daddy, do you believe in flying saucers?" Her father replied: "I sure do.”
Summer 1955: Captain Samuel Marshall Watson and daughter: Marsha

J.L.  Haynes
“The shell, it looks alive…” Zara stands awestruck, admiring the seamless shape of the gravity-defying vessel. “Classic flying saucer look, no seams, as if it was moulded into shape,” she touches the shell, it recoils away from her hand, “it feels alive.”
A metallic voice sounds, reverberating around the vessel. A feminine voice.
“Assertion. I am alive and right here in front of you—who pray tell are you?”
J.L. Haynes, Zara Hanson & The Mystery of the Painted Symbol