Chief Gleeby
Member
So this is my first thread on Metabunk, and after doing some searching I couldn't find any similar threads, but as a former believer this is something that's consistently bothered me over the years:
"Just -How- large would a secret UFO/UAP retrieval/reverse-engineering coverup program have to be to work?"
Primarily, the following:
1. How many People would have DIRECT knowledge of what (aliens!) they were dealing with, and still be able to keep it a secret over the course of (let's assume) 80 years?
2. How much the scale of such an operation would cost (Including personnel, places to store/test UAP) on a country by country basis or through any kind of joint effort?
3. Once calculated, how funds for such programs could be diverted from the various factions of the world without arousing suspicion (enough to uncover the secret)?
4. How any one country (or multiple through combined effort) is able to identify a UFO/UAP anywhere in the world, with such ruthlessness and efficiency that it is able to effectively locate and capture it (or any remains), whilst also being able to do so in such a quick and timely manner that the secret does not get out (Assuming that at least one such event -has- happened near a public settlement)?
5. How much of a risk the 'Conspiracy' has had over the last 30 years. Can a secret of this scale and magnitude realistically have remained secret with all the innovations in technology and communication available to an individual?
I'm a layman in all professions related to this topic, specifically though I'm interested in the human cost/factor: How many people would know the secret with absolute certainty? How many people below that would have hunches or ideas that what they were working on/retrieving was something weird, but never allowed access, or -any- opportunity over 80 years to smuggle out irrefutable evidence?
What got me thinking about this topic is when I asked AI to do a deep dive on it, and it linked me to this university of oxford article, specifically about this paper, all about the viability of keeping a secret in a group of people before something gives.
All those years of watching X-Files with all those monsters and cryptids, and it turns out The Smoking Man was the most unrealistic thing!
"Just -How- large would a secret UFO/UAP retrieval/reverse-engineering coverup program have to be to work?"
Primarily, the following:
1. How many People would have DIRECT knowledge of what (aliens!) they were dealing with, and still be able to keep it a secret over the course of (let's assume) 80 years?
2. How much the scale of such an operation would cost (Including personnel, places to store/test UAP) on a country by country basis or through any kind of joint effort?
3. Once calculated, how funds for such programs could be diverted from the various factions of the world without arousing suspicion (enough to uncover the secret)?
4. How any one country (or multiple through combined effort) is able to identify a UFO/UAP anywhere in the world, with such ruthlessness and efficiency that it is able to effectively locate and capture it (or any remains), whilst also being able to do so in such a quick and timely manner that the secret does not get out (Assuming that at least one such event -has- happened near a public settlement)?
5. How much of a risk the 'Conspiracy' has had over the last 30 years. Can a secret of this scale and magnitude realistically have remained secret with all the innovations in technology and communication available to an individual?
I'm a layman in all professions related to this topic, specifically though I'm interested in the human cost/factor: How many people would know the secret with absolute certainty? How many people below that would have hunches or ideas that what they were working on/retrieving was something weird, but never allowed access, or -any- opportunity over 80 years to smuggle out irrefutable evidence?
What got me thinking about this topic is when I asked AI to do a deep dive on it, and it linked me to this university of oxford article, specifically about this paper, all about the viability of keeping a secret in a group of people before something gives.
Which, assuming Grimes' model is accurate, and that we're coming up to 80 years since Roswell... well, it doesn't look too promising does it!External Quote:
In each case, the number of conspirators and the time before the conspiracy was revealed were over-estimated to ensure that the odds of a leak happening were a 'best case scenario' for the conspirators – around a four in one million chance of deliberate or accidental exposure.
Dr Grimes then looked at four alleged plots, estimating the maximum number of people required to be in on the conspiracy, in order to see how viable these conspiracies could be. These include: the theory that the US moon landings were a hoax (411,000 people); that Climate Change is a fraud (405,000 people); that unsafe vaccinations are being covered up (22,000 people assuming that only the World Health Organisation and the US Centers for Disease Control are conspirators and that others involved in advocating, producing, distributing and using vaccines are dupes. 736,000 people if, as would be more likely, pharmaceutical companies were included); that the cure for Cancer is being suppressed by the world's leading pharmaceutical firms (714,000 people).
Using the equation, Dr Grimes calculated that hoax moon landings would have been revealed in 3 years 8 months, a climate change fraud in 3 years 9 months, a vaccination conspiracy in 3 years 2 months, and a suppressed Cancer cure in 3 years 3 months. In simple terms, any one of the four conspiracies would have been exposed long before now.
He then looked at the maximum number of people who could take part in an intrigue in order to maintain it. For a plot to last five years, the maximum was 2521 people. To keep a scheme operating undetected for more than a decade, fewer than 1000 people can be involved. A century-long deception should ideally include fewer than 125 collaborators. Even a straightforward cover-up of a single event, requiring no more complex machinations than everyone keeping their mouth shut, is likely to be blown if more than 650 people are accomplices.
All those years of watching X-Files with all those monsters and cryptids, and it turns out The Smoking Man was the most unrealistic thing!