It’s Still Not Aliens0
- From Around the Web, UFO News
- July 30, 2020
The latest report on military study of UFOs is just as tantalizing—and unilluminating—as all the ones before.
The latest report on military study of UFOs is just as tantalizing—and unilluminating—as all the ones before.
UFO sightings in Canada hit a 10-year low in 2019, but the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and exciting new celestial phenomena lead experts to suspect numbers will take off.
A UFO filmed flying over a Co Down village was not a weather balloon, the Met Office has said.
Residents of Pennsylvania have more than 358 reports of UFOs to the National UFO Reporting Center so far in the first half of 2020.
Congress wants to see what the U.S. government knows about UFOs.
Congress wants to see what the U.S. government knows about UFOs.
The Pentagon should release a public report on UFOs, argues the U.S. Senate intelligence committee. In addition to requiring a public report, the committee plans to impose new rules on how the Department of Defense (DOD) shares information about UFOs.
Phil Tindale got in touch to explain how as 10-year-olds in the South Australian town of Aldgate just over 40 years ago, he and his twin brother Rob witnessed a “hostile chase between two highly advanced craft resulting in one of those craft crashing into a tree”.
U.S. Navy pilots and sailors won’t be considered crazy for reporting unidentified flying objects, under new rules meant to encourage them to keep track of what they see. Yet just a few years ago, the Pentagon reportedly shut down another official program that investigated UFO sightings. What has changed? Is the U.S. military finally coming around to the idea that alien spacecraft are visiting our planet?
When the US Department of Defense released three declassified videos of “unexplained aerial phenomena” at the end of April, the Pentagon said it wanted to “clear up any misconceptions by the public on whether or not the footage that has been circulating was real”.