Would Our Governments Be Up-Front With Us About Real UFOs?

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Wagerallsports

Wagerallsports

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I don't think they would

If they knew for sure we are being monitored and/or visited by actual extraterrestrial life, I don't believe they would reveal all details publicly for fear of panic or changes people would take in every day life
 

Wagerallsports

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Ex-Navy pilot who's seen UFOs in flight calls for investigations of aerial phenomena: 'We need to be curious'​

Former Navy pilot Ryan Graves says others are reluctant to come forward with similar stories​

Fox News
3/24/23

Ryan Graves is a former Navy pilot who has called on Congress to investigate unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), also known as UFOs, in the skies above the United States.

He spoke out on his first-hand experiences with UAPs in an interview with Fox News Digital.

Graves spent about 11 years in the Navy flying F-18s, an advanced fighter plane, and was also a flight instructor. However, throughout his career, he has yet to receive a definitive answer on a phenomenon that he and other members of his squadron have dealt with for years.

"While I was in the Navy, myself and others in my squadron had an experience that continues to this day and at first was something that we didn’t have a name for," Graves said.


At first, objects showed up as "contacts on our radar, contacts on our camera system" until eventually, Graves said, "we were seeing these with our eyeballs."

"Two aircraft from my squadron were flying side by side and one of these objects went right between their aircraft," he added.

Graves said that his squad member described the object as a "dark gray or black cube inside of a clear sphere."

Graves called on Americans with preconceived notions about UAPs to come at the issue from a "first principles" approach.

"I think they need to separate the idea of something that's unknown" from preconceived ideas like a "UFO or ET hypothesis."

"We need to be able to agnostically, as a media, accept that there is uncertainty and look at it from a first principles approach. Because if we wrap it into all that context about little green men, we’re going to be barking up the wrong tree," he said.

Graves, now an advocate and founder of the organization Americans for Safe Aerospace, emphasized that these objects were, at times, strangely stationary but did not behave like "tethered balloons."

That was because, Graves said, these objects could also move at extremely high speeds.

"Eventually we would see these objects proceeding about 0.6 to 0.8 Mach on average, which is about 250 to 350 knots at those altitudes. And they would be either in some type of holding pattern or seemingly just proceeding in a single direction."

Graves said that there were two basic explanations for what these objects could be.

"It's either going to be some type of adversarial platform, and it's a matter for national security, or we don't know what it is," he said. "And it's a matter for scientific inquiry and curiosity. We've been stymied to not have that scientific curiosity as of late, but that's the biggest thing that needs to change and is changing right now."

If it is a national security matter, Graves said, then the course of action is clear.

"For our military and our national security, our ability to know what's over our heads is of critical importance. And if we don't know what it is, we need to be curious about it. Because we may have national security issues fall out of that anomalous bucket," Graves said. "Once we start looking a little bit more closely into our airspace some things are going to pop out that [we] weren't expecting to see."

Graves said that the media coverage of UAP and UFO incidents — the existence of which Sen. Marco Rubio and others members of the government have acknowledged — still leaves a lot to be desired.

Rubio, R-Fla., has said that UAPs are a risk to national security.

"Advanced objects demonstrating advanced technology are routinely flying over our restricted or sensitive airspace posing a risk to both flight safety & national security," he tweeted in February.

However, the media still does not provide a safe environment for pilots and others to speak about their experiences with UAPs, Graves said.

"I’ve talked to a lot of pilots who have had some pretty powerful experiences that have really shaken them. They don’t want to go and share that on what you would loosely consider your talking head media set up. They just don’t feel safe still doing it," he said.

Graves called on government agencies to break down their separate silos and begin "sharing their information and offering it forward" for the good of the public.

Graves made waves in February after he wrote an article detailing his experiences with UAPs in the military.

"These were no mere balloons. The unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) accelerated at speeds up to Mach 1, the speed of sound. They could hold their position, appearing motionless, despite Category 4 hurricane-force winds of 120 knots. They did not have any visible means of lift, control surfaces or propulsion — in other words nothing that resembled normal aircraft with wings, flaps or engines."

"I am a formally trained engineer, but the technology they demonstrated defied my understanding," Graves wrote.
 

Wagerallsports

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Steven Spielberg thinks the US government is hiding information about UFOs​

NY Post
3/3/23

Steven Spielberg thinks the 1982 classic was onto something — and believes the US government is hiding information about UFOs from the general public.

“I think the secrecy that is shrouding all of these sightings and the lack of transparency until the Freedom of Information Act compels certain materials to be released publicly, I think that there is something going on that simply needs extraordinary due diligence,” he argued on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” Thursday.

“I think what has been coming out recently is fascinating — just absolutely fascinating,” he added. “I would like to hear more about it. I don’t know what they are.”

The Academy Award-winning filmmaker said clearly there is “something going on … that’s not being disclosed to us.”

He also revealed that he doesn’t believe Earth is the only planet with life on it.

“I think it’s mathematically impossible,” he said.
 

Wagerallsports

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Video of fighter jets shooting down UFOs over Alaska is classified, won't be released: Pentagon​

Yahoo
3/28/23

The Pentagon said that footage of U.S. military aircraft shooting down two unidentified flying objects over Alaska is currently considered classified and will not be publicly released.

"The footage of the high altitude objects and the takedown of those objects exists," a Defense Department spokesman told Fox News Digital Wednesday, adding that "none of that footage has been cleared for release" and that "the footage remained classified."

The comments come after the Defense Department said last month that multiple "high-altitude objects" were shot down over Alaska at the direction of President Biden.

The Pentagon said that footage of U.S. military aircraft shooting down two unidentified flying objects over Alaska is currently considered classified and will not be publicly released.
"The footage of the high altitude objects and the takedown of those objects exists," a Defense Department spokesman told Fox News Digital Wednesday, adding that "none of that footage has been cleared for release" and that "the footage remained classified."
The comments come after the Defense Department said last month that multiple "high-altitude objects" were shot down over Alaska at the direction of President Biden.

"The object was flying at an altitude of 40,000 feet and posed a reasonable threat to the safety of civilian flight," Pentagon press secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said after one of the objects was downed.

The incidents came just weeks after an alleged "Chinese spy balloon" was detected drifting above the continental United States, which was allowed to traverse the country from west to east before being shot down off the coast of South Carolina.

While the DOD did release one still image of the Chinese balloon, the agency has so far declined to release any footage or photos of the objects shot down over Alaska.

"No official video footage of the objects or their take-down have been cleared for release, and I would not have any information about a timeline for any future potential release," the DOD spokesperson said.

The lack of transparency from the Pentagon has fueled speculation about exactly what the military shot down, with one balloon hobbyist club speculating that at least one of the objects may have been one of their weather monitoring balloons.

"When I heard that [it was a] silver object with a payload attached to it, that could be one of our balloons," a member of the Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade, who last tracked their balloon to Yukon area and said it stopped transmitting around the same time the U.S. military shot down a UFO there, told Politico earlier this month.

"The object was flying at an altitude of 40,000 feet and posed a reasonable threat to the safety of civilian flight," Pentagon press secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said after one of the objects was downed.

The incidents came just weeks after an alleged "Chinese spy balloon" was detected drifting above the continental United States, which was allowed to traverse the country from west to east before being shot down off the coast of South Carolina.

While the DOD did release one still image of the Chinese balloon, the agency has so far declined to release any footage or photos of the objects shot down over Alaska.

"No official video footage of the objects or their take-down have been cleared for release, and I would not have any information about a timeline for any future potential release," the DOD spokesperson said.

The lack of transparency from the Pentagon has fueled speculation about exactly what the military shot down, with one balloon hobbyist club speculating that at least one of the objects may have been one of their weather monitoring balloons.

"When I heard that [it was a] silver object with a payload attached to it, that could be one of our balloons," a member of the Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade, who last tracked their balloon to Yukon area and said it stopped transmitting around the same time the U.S. military shot down a UFO there, told Politico earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Republicans have taken aim at Biden's handling of UFOs in American airspace.

President Biden speaks at a DNC rally.

"Joe Biden let a Chinese spy balloon cross the entire U.S. Now he's shooting down everything that flies," Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. quipped on Twitter last month. "Why? Who knows. He apparently doesn't. Either the Biden administration is lying to us or they're totally and completely incompetent. Or both."
 

Wagerallsports

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Pentagon officials suggest alien mothership in our solar system could send mini probes to Earth​

MSN
3/15/23


Pentagon officials said in a draft document last week that aliens could be visiting our solar system and releasing smaller probes like missions conducted by NASA when studying other planets.

A draft research report authored by Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of the Pentagon’s All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) and Abraham Loeb, chairman of Harvard University’s astronomy department was released on March 7 and focuses on the physical constraints of unidentified aerial phenomena.

“…An artificial interstellar object could potentially be a parent craft that releases many small probes during its close passage to Earth, an operational construct not too dissimilar from NASA missions,” the report read. “These ‘dandelion seeds’ could be separated from the parent craft by the tidal gravitational force of the Sun or by a maneuvering capability.”

The AARO was established in July 2022 and is responsible for tracking objects in the sky, underwater and in space – or possibly an object that has the ability to move from one domain to the next.

Congress tasked NASA to find 90% of all objects near Earth that are larger than 140 meters in 2005, which resulted in Pan-STARRS telescopes, according to the report.

On October 19, 2017, the Pan-STARRS detected an unusual interstellar object that was later named ‘Oumuamua, or scout in Hawaiian.

The object was cigar-shaped, appeared flat, and was propelled away from the sun without showing a cometary tail, leading scientists to believe it was artificial.

Three years later, another object was discovered, the report noted, namely NASA’s rocket booster 2020 SO, which had no cometary trail. The report also said six months before ‘Oumuamua made its closest approach to Earth, a meter-sized interstellar meteor, IM2, crashed on earth and exhibited an identical speed relative to the Sun at large distances and an identical shape to ‘Oumuamua.

"With proper design, these tiny probes would reach the Earth or other solar system planets for exploration, as the parent craft passes by within a fraction of the Earth-Sun separation — just like ‘Oumuamua’ did," the authors wrote. "Astronomers would not be able to notice the spray of mini probes because they do not reflect enough sunlight for existing survey telescopes to notice them."

The research paper comes after a month of scrutiny over unidentified flying objects over the U.S. Most notably, a Chinese spy balloon was shot down, only after traversing across the skies over the U.S.
 

Wagerallsports

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Nearly 2,000 reports of UFO sightings surface ranging from orbs, disks and fireballs​

USA Today
10/4/23

Almost two thousand people have spotted unidentifiable flying objects in Maryland skies, according to reports shared by the National UFO Reporting Center.

The 1,923 reports statethe UFOs, also known as UAPs or unidentified aerial phenomenon, resembled many different shapes ranging from circles, ovals, triangles and diamonds. Other reports described the shape of the UAP as a light, orb, flash, disk and fireball.

"I could not make out what was on top but there was 4 spinning disks underneath, and each disk was a different color," one report in Pasadena, Maryland said.


Another report described spotting a "chevron-like craft" in Cockeysville, Maryland that appeared to be close to the ground with 2 faint circular lights on both wings but without a visible light bulb.

A separate report with a photo from Rockville, Maryland also said someone saw a UAP in the evening sky that appeared to be relatively low to the sky.

"Saw this weird flying saucer looking thing, took some photos. It seemed to disappear after I filmed and photographed it for 30 seconds," the Rockville report said. "It looks like a classic flying saucer, with a black marking in the 'front.'"

National UFO Reporting Center Director Peter Davenport said he finds it heartening to see people come forward to report what they have seen in the sky, according to CBS News.

"I don't know what the future has in store for us, but I am encouraged that more people are coming forward and the government recognizes the UFO phenomenon that's something worthy of their attention," Davenport shared.

Last month, NASA's Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Independent Study Team called for deeper data analysis on research on these sightings. The investigative group said that even though most sightings are identified as planes, balloons, drones and weather events, more sophisticated scientific research is needed to fully understand them.

"The independent study team did not find any evidence that UAP have an extraterrestrial origin," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson shared. "But we don't know what these UAP are."

A team published a 36-page report on Sept. 14 showing that the most common form of UAPs reported are orbs or spheres.

On July 26, Congress held a hearing where three former military members, who have spoken about their firsthand knowledge of reported UAP encounters, discussed the security threats the phenomena could pose. The executive branch of government and the military continues to face bipartisan pressure to be more transparent about information relating to UAPs.
 
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