Rep. Luna Requests UAP Video, With a List of Names.

All you need is an enemy for there to be a "very real threat".
Do you even need that? If its unknown clutter of sufficient mass to cause damage if you hit it, the distinction between "hazard" and "threat" might not be as important to the hypotgetical sincerely concerned lay-person (in Congress or in UFOlogy) as that it is a potential problem.
 
If its unknown clutter of sufficient mass to cause damage if you hit it,
like birds

aircraft hitting unidentified "clutter" is just not a thing
the last incident that came even close was a ballasted weather balloon, and that never showed up as a glowing "orb" on any video or infrared
in fact, I can guarantee you that no pilot will crash willingly into a glowing orb, and any such collisions that have ocurred involved that "orb" being an anti-aircraft missile (which I admit are a threat, but not unidentified, and not on US territory¹).

¹ What we have seen on US territory is US agencies shooting at stuff, e.g. https://www.metabunk.org/threads/fa...mexico-airspace-for-10-days.14740/post-363954
 
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Just saw this today on Facebook. Christina Gomez is some sort of UFO reporter or content creator. Possibly a new wrinkle as getting the DoD to share UFOs and demanding UFOs from contractors hasn't worked, it's because the FBI has the real goods, at least according to Avi Loeb. Or more accurately according to Christina Gomez, according to Avi Loeb (bold by me):

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According to professor Avi Loeb, speaking on NewsNation, AARO — the Pentagon's designated UFO investigation office — admitted during his personal visit last year that the only UAP reports their staff could not explain came from FBI field agents. Not civilians. Not pilots. FBI agents who filed official reports that have never been released to the public. Loeb stated the details of those reports "may be quite significant" and called for more information to be made available.

Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna is believed to hold knowledge of specific documents tied to those FBI files — material that has never been brought before Congress.

Representative Tim Burchett recently confirmed in a secure briefing that a government source described both non-earthly life and non-earthly craft with verifiable specifics. And Representative Eric Burlison is now coordinating directly with the White House on disclosure language designed to force these files into the open. The FBI knew. The Pentagon confirmed it cannot explain what they saw. And Congress is finally building the mechanism to make it public.
So, maybe these videos are tied to the FBI somehow? Doesn't seem likely as many of them are from obvious DoD assets, but this is the UFO world and we're always trying to follow the queen or the ball under the cups.

Ms. Gomez claims in her FB post that the full article is available at UFOnews.co but I can't find the exact article at this moment.

The Facebook post can be found here:

https://www.facebook.com/official.cristina.gomez
 
External Quote:
According to professor Avi Loeb, speaking on NewsNation, AARO — the Pentagon's designated UFO investigation office — admitted during his personal visit last year that the only UAP reports their staff could not explain came from FBI field agents. Not civilians. Not pilots. FBI agents who filed official reports that have never been released to the public.

I vaguely remember a US TV series from 1993-2002 that dealt with UFOs and other anomalous phenomena being encountered by the FBI...
 
According to professor Avi Loeb, speaking on NewsNation, AARO — the Pentagon's designated UFO investigation office — admitted during his personal visit last year that the only UAP reports their staff could not explain came from FBI field agents.

What does "could not explain" even mean? Both UFO and UAP contain a "U" for "unidentified". In the case of persons, identification means being able to determine their names. In the case of projectiles or aircraft, it means, for example, being able to read their identification markings or unambiguously assign them, based on flight data, within the framework of registration with the military or civil aviation authorities.

In this sense, ʻOumuamua could not be identified, but it was characterized and given a name. Even if we may never know exactly what it was, it is now an unambiguously identifiable, registered object in space.

Why am I saying this? Loeb's statement is so vague that it leaves the aspect of identification entirely open. "Could not explain" can also mean the failure to recognize known, registered, or otherwise conventional aircraft. If "could not explain" refers instead to flight characteristics, then we are dealing with a process that lies squarely within the core competence of Metabunk. In this area, a great many sightings have in fact been explained. As is well known, however, this happens in a very gradual and incremental way.

Often the situation is quite clear, even if not identified in the strict sense. Sometimes it is both. Sometimes something can at least be explained to the extent that one can say the flight characteristics are not exotic. Often enough, it can be explained well enough to conclude, "Probably a balloon."

Please forgive me for spelling this out in such a roundabout way. My intention is precisely to illustrate how inadequate the quoted statement is, whether it originates with Loeb himself or whether it emerged in the course of being relayed in that social media post.

What frustrates me once again, as in the case of Obama, who in my view made irresponsibly careless UFO statements while the cameras were rolling despite knowing exactly how such remarks would be received by the public, is that such an under-complex statement is now coming from Harvard professor Avi Loeb. Given his entanglement with the UFO scene, he certainly knows what he is triggering with this.

Even AARO ultimately came to accept explanations that originated with Metabunk after initially ignoring them, and above all explanations publicly proposed by Mick West, after more or less official scientific institutions failed to get a handle on the issue themselves. From the context of the AARO reports, one can reasonably infer that cases such as FLIR1, Gimbal, and GOFAST are considered explainable by the agency, that is, effectively treated as explained, even if not formally identified. Yet it was acknowledged that the available data are insufficient for a definitive explanation. Loeb's statement leaves out such crucial distinctions.

In my view, that can only happen with clear intent and therefore raises suspicion of an agenda. Alternatively, it is simple carelessness. Of course professors sometimes talk nonsense. But carelessness is not what academic titles are awarded for. Am I being too strict?
 
One example of an "unexplainable" report by an officer is https://www.metabunk.org/threads/ne...klein-fairfield-county-ct-2022-orb-ufo.13792/ . It turned out that the officer likely saw an aircraft (and we know which one), but to find that out, a Metabunk member traveled to the location and took photos, based on which we were able to determine which parts of the officer's recollection were mistaken.

Or take this case https://www.metabunk.org/threads/news-nation-light-in-the-sky-video-tedesco-brothers.13684/ , a video taken by researchers with an RV full of electronics, which would have remained unexplained if Mick/Metabunk hadn't determined the actual camera position and direction, which differed from what the Tedescos claimed.

In both cases we were lucky enough to have images or video to verify the reports. If that hadn't been the case, the reports might well have remained unexplained, even though the sighted objects were perfectly mundane airliners. "Unexplained" does not mean "it's aliens", especially without strong data.
 
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such an under-complex statement is now coming from Harvard professor Avi Loeb. Given his entanglement with the UFO scene, he certainly knows what he is triggering with this.

Indeed. I'd argue he's well aware of what he's triggering, that's the intent. Besides the hustling, the political maneuvering, the grifting, the search for clicks, views and relevance, at the core is a group of people that seem to hold a steadfast belief that aliens are real, are here and the government knows it.

They are desperate for disclosure as it's seen as the ultimate validation of their position. It's the final "I told you so!" To that end, they keep digging, unproductively it turns out, for that final bit of unambiguous evidence. Donald Keyhoe was calling for disclosure 70 years ago and Loeb, Mellon, Luna and others are still calling for disclosure now. They can't fathom the idea that there may be nothing to disclose. So, they keep looking under every rock they can.

After all the hearings, whistleblowers, and SCIF sessions of the last few years they have nothing. After getting congressional committees, AARO, a conspiracy friendly president (twice) and the involvement of big name academics like Loeb and Nolan, they have nothing. After having media and "journalists" spreading the alien story from Coulthart on News Nation to Kean at the NYT, they have nothing.

Now Luna has list of supposed secret videos and Loeb is claiming maybe the "real evidence" is held by the FBI. The evidence they believe exists has to be somewhere, it's just a matter of finding it. To that end, Loeb publicly claiming the FBI has UFO files that AARO can't explain is indeed a triggering statement. The insinuation is that AARO is keeping these files from people like Luna and Burlison, thus blocking disclosure.

Here's the actual quote from Loeb from a long winded talk on a News Nation podcast. Note he also puts himself forward as a possible member of a Presidential board that releases UAP data, or something like that:

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least, I'm aware that Representative Anna Paulina Luna has a a a set of documents that she knows about but were
27:53
never brought to the uh preview of the of the Congress and and perhaps that kind of a data, you know, the part of it

is uh associated with the FBI. Perhaps as a result of President Trump's um uh

request to share information, she will get access to to that and she's leading the task force uh on the UAP.

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28:18

Do you have any idea what those documents might contain? Well, um, at the end of April 2025, I visited the all

domain anomaly resolution office, uh, in the Pentagon, and I asked them, you know, um, do you have you seen, I mean,

you looked into all the reports from the past, and did you see anything unusual?

And they said, uh, not really, except for a few FBI reports.

um and um uh I you know I I I I don't know the details of those reports but

they may be quite uh significant in the sense that you cannot easily explain away what these FBI

agents saw and um so it would be really wonderful to to hear more details about

that. Um and then there is the question of what does Arrow the All domain anomaly resolution office have access to? So I asked them and they said well

we have access to everything and maybe they are not fully aware of some other parts of government or corporations
29:19

where data is withheld. Uh so um there is a lot to explore in this context and the question is how far will uh the
29:28

release go. Um and um I would obviously be happy to take part in a board and

that overviews this material and decides what should be uh declassified recommends it to uh President Trump if

such a board is established. that was part of the amendment, the UAP uh disclosure act that was not actually

brought to legislation but was recommended uh by a bipartisan group of people. So, so this is one of

these subjects that both parties agree on and I think it would be a victory to

all the curious people in the world if if such a board is established and we have access to some interesting information there.
One can watch the full interview, starting at 6:21, and hear Loeb lament all the time and money being wasted by all the other astronomers looking for microbe signatures, instead of aliens. But then says we can't see these aliens techno-signatures because they're too small or fast or advanced for us to detect, if only there were more funding for something like..oh say...the Galileo Project. Then he contradicts himself and prattles on about how 3I/Atlas, a slow moving easily detected object, was a lost opportunity to study an alien gizmo, and the Juno spacecraft could have intercepted it if had enough fuel, which it should have had because then it could have intercepted alien probes and Representative Luna wrote a polite letter admonishing NASA of this Juno failure and on and on...


Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcdhmhFgZNo
 
...

One can watch the full interview, starting at 6:21, and hear Loeb lament all the time and money being wasted by all the other astronomers looking for microbe signatures, instead of aliens. But then says we can't see these aliens techno-signatures because they're too small or fast or advanced for us to detect, if only there were more funding for something like..oh say...the Galileo Project. Then he contradicts himself and prattles on about how 3I/Atlas, a slow moving easily detected object, was a lost opportunity to study an alien gizmo, and the Juno spacecraft could have intercepted it if had enough fuel, which it should have had because then it could have intercepted alien probes and Representative Luna wrote a polite letter admonishing NASA of this Juno failure and on and on...


Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcdhmhFgZNo


Your periodic reminder that Loeb's Galileo Project involves putting him in charge of a billion-dollar budget and giving him the authority to commandeer any or all of the world's telescopes on a whim if he thinks something alien might be passing by.
 
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Then he contradicts himself and prattles on about how 3I/Atlas, a slow moving easily detected object, was a lost opportunity to study an alien gizmo, and the Juno spacecraft could have intercepted it if had enough fuel, which it should have had because then it could have intercepted alien probes
this makes him look incompetent
he should know the cost of taking "extra fuel" and why we don't do that on a whim
 

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