The sky is full of potential UFOs—here’s why0
- From Around the Web, UFO News
- July 3, 2021
The technology that surveys our skies isn’t designed to spot and identify everything that flies.
The technology that surveys our skies isn’t designed to spot and identify everything that flies.
This Friday is World UFO Day, a date promoted by those who believe that “a world watches over us.”
THE question ‘are we alone in the universe?’ has been debated for centuries – but some Oswestry residents are almost certain we are not living on the only planet to host life.
Bill Nelson, NASA administrator and former senator of Florida, said he doesn’t think we “are alone” in the immense universe in an interview with CNN amid the release of a report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Friday.
The Preliminary Assessment: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena posted at the website of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on June 25, 2021 is NOT the UAP report.
The Pentagon has a long history of misleading reports on UFOs. The new paper on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) may be another example, according to the British scientist Roger Shawyer. Looking at their accounts, Shawyer has an explanation which is hinted at, but also concealed by the report.
A highly anticipated government report on unidentified aerial phenomena in American airspace was released Friday afternoon – and it’s not as illuminating as some may have hoped.
On Friday evening the US intelligence community released something remarkable: An unclassified report to Congress of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) aka UFOs.
A government report on unidentified flying objects is coming soon. Texas A&M astronomer Nick Suntzeff weighs in.
A subject often dismissed as fantasy has found new legitimacy in an upcoming U.S. report into UFOs. Those who have spent their lives studying the subject say it will be a game-changer.