"To a person with a hammer, every problem looks like a nail."
If someone is convinced that aliens are visiting us, every light in the sky evokes that suspicion. In much the same way, I've been in the woods without watching the time, and as dusk...
Perhaps the teachers were hoping some cheesy old sci-fi movies would convince the children that aliens are just ordinary people in funny costumes.
This title must have been inspired by the "I want to believe" slogan of the iconic X-Files prop...
Perhaps the teachers were hoping some cheesy old sci-fi movies would convince the children that aliens are just ordinary people in funny costumes.
This title must have been inspired by the "I want to believe" slogan of the iconic X-Files prop...
There needn't have been any intention behind the lack of identification. We study these things and might come to a conclusion that "it's probably a balloon" or it's probably a camera artifact", but of course that's not absolute proof of...
Just speculating, but maybe even a purposeful non-effort at identification? In another thread (linked below) there is an hour+ presentation by Kirkpatrick, in which he makes comments about pilots seeing things they think are anomalous, but when...
The evidence is not living up to the promises, blurry pictures and footage doesn't do it for everyone. At best it will be alongside something like Raelism.
"Things", as far as I can see, are NOT developing, concerning UFOs. There is no more compelling evidence of their existence now than there was back when Jules Verne was writing science fiction. The major difference is the rise of skepticism, and...
On the other hand, one could argue that the belief system around UFOs is developing in a coupe of ways. The "respectabillity" may be increasing as members of Congress help promote it and Internet algorithms make people who Want To Believe see...
There are currently thirty thousand people working at Wright-Pat, and many, many fields of investigation are carried out there that have nothing at all to do with UFOs. (My husband worked there, but that was in his youth, as a co-op student of...
via @Andreas
I just noticed this claim. It's inaccurate at best. Digitised astronomical images and software to deal with them existed already in late 1970s and more were developed in the 1980s and 1990s e.g. FOCAS (Jarvis & Tyson 1981), or the...
To address that point without being too flip, many of the U.S. nuclear tests (which were most of them) were not conducted on a precise schedule. Planned tests in Nevada or the Pacific would be postponed day by day for days or weeks when the...
Q: Have any of the relevant LEOs in the McClasland case confirmed that the video/interview actually took place with one of their investigators?
There are no faces visible in the video
The company that makes the body cams sells them across the...