Richard Weaver, who wrote one of the official reports on the Roswell rumors, tried to assure the public that the government isn’t competent enough to cover up a genuine alien sighting. In 1997, the Air Force said the Roswell “bodies″ were dummies used in parachute tests, recent ancestors of the car-crash dummies of today. It took 50 years for the government to offer what it hoped was a full debunking of claims that alien bodies were recovered at a crash site in New Mexico in 1947. They note that the government has a history of stonewalling and lying about the unexplained. Some people who study the topic argue investigations have been limited by the stigma of being linked to conspiracy theories or talk of little green men storming Earth. Reports of UFOs have, of course, persisted since then. The Air Force concluded there was no evidence those sightings were “inimical or hostile” or related to “interplanetary space ships,” the CIA said. In 1960, the CIA said 6,500 objects had been reported to the U.S. In most cases, those mysteries evaporate under examination. airspace, seemingly at unusual speeds or trajectories. Pilots and sky-watchers have long reported sporadic sightings of UFOs in U.S. “But the videos, even though they’re showing unidentified objects, they’re not showing amazing unidentified objects.” “There’s all sorts of hypotheses that suggest that the three dimensional universe which we live in isn’t quite so easy to explain.” “We live in an incredible universe,” Elizondo said. Elizondo has accused the Defense Department of trying to discredit him and says there’s much more information that the U.S. Luis Elizondo, former head of the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, said he didn’t believe that the sightings were of a foreign power’s technology in part because it would have been nearly impossible to keep that secret. If there’s some explanation other than that, we want to learn that, too.” “If other nations have capabilities that we don’t know of, we want to find out. Adam Schiff of California told NBC this week. “Right now there are a lot of unanswered questions,” Democratic Rep. But when lawmakers talk about it, they tend to leave themselves a little wiggle room in case it’s something else - whether more prosaic than a military rival or, you know, more cosmic. The chief concern is whether hostile countries are fielding aerial technology so advanced and weird that it befuddles and threatens the world’s largest military power. ![]() The bill passed by Congress asks the intelligence director for “any incidents or patterns that indicate a potential adversary may have achieved breakthrough aerospace capabilities that could put United States strategic or conventional forces at risk.”
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |