When a well-placed intelligence official admits to studying "aerial threats" for 10 years, talks about findings of substances not clearly from Earth, says "We found a lot" but 99% of it is classified, and sums up by saying, "We may not be alone," are we in a new period of taking UFO nut stuff as less nutty? More worthy of sober review? I and fellow Nut Grant Cameron think so, saying the December revelations amount to blood dripping in the water for all to see. Horse out of the barn--it's now a live topic at a new level. Maybe so, but I noticed the White House press corps was giggling at it and press secretary Sanders dodged answer the Alien question. Has Trump had sex with any aliens--errr, before he was president, I mean? There are claims of human-looking aliens who--I swear I heard the claim--"look a lot better than we do." Prettier 'cause they don't face rigor of lovely life on Earth. Beauties right up Trump's alley, then, and mine for that matter. Oh, I forgot. He hasn't had sex with any of those 29 women who say he did it. It's fake sex.
Let's try a back-and-forth on UFOs and recent news.
Cautious Thinker/Skeptic: Those two films from F-18s aren't that clear, aren't that big of a deal.
UFO nut/student/raa-raa enthusiast: NY Times sources said there were many more such films. Journalist G Knapp (Vegas TV station guy) says his sources have confirmed 24 films in this particular cache or study. The sober-headed pilot leading the planes who took the San Diego film is sure what his group chased did not come from Earth.
Thinker: The perceived acceleration on camera can be misleading due to movement of the F-18.
Nut: We're relying on the description of acceleration by the pilots, which did not rely on the camera but their own views.
Thinker (astronomer on Boston TV station) Spent $22 a year for five years. Got 2 films for $110 million? Are you crazy you want to spend more?
Harry Reid: It was $22 million over the five years.
Nut Grant Cameron: Not unusual that the "reserved scientific critics" haven't studied the details of these topics and make uninformed statements.
Thinker: This is a fringe wacko zealot topic.
Nut Alan: Except when the NY Times puts it as the headline and writes a long involved article confirming years of gov study including warehouses with alleged esoteric materials. And Politico and Wash Post run similar stories.
Cautious: There's no hard data to suppose nonterrestrial anything. People want to believe. That keeps it alive.
Nut: The Times said, along with odd physical materials under study, there was a 400-page report. Vegas reporter Knapp's source says there are 37 more reports and 36 other "technical" reports. Maybe I want to believe, but what I really want to do is read.
Cautious: These are just rumors, a dime a dozen.
Nut: The rumor says the reports and materials are held by Bigelow Aerospace in properties outside Vegas. Reid confirms Bigelow won the contract to do these studies. That's a decently specific "rumor."
When, say, 100 separate military and civilian witnesses all describe craft either accelerating at "impossible" speed or basically disappearing, a pattern occurs. Yes, there is the tendency to see what you've heard others say they saw, but I don't think Pilot Fravor did that here. No matter how implausible the stories, the accumulation of them warrants sustained study and much more public release of current government holdings.
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