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U.S. Military: UFO Investigations, Knowledge & Disclosure

There's clearer versions of the video out there showing that it was obviously just a small group of people walking together.
 
A scheduled House of Representatives classified meeting this Friday about UFOs had the committee coming out of this meeting very frustrated.

The members complained the Pentagon is not providing new information so the Pentagon is not ready to trust anyone when it comes to UFOs.
 
Looks like 3 people just walking and see other people on the opposite side of the police cars don't seem to be running also seen some feral youths gang jumping a bloke and some kids fighting but still don' have a clue but maybe with the so called firecrackers all the cars were a response to thinking it was a terror attack.
It was, in fact, 3 small aliens under a big alien coat trying to get into movie they shouldn’t have been allowed to see.
 
This is on one of the betting markets. I didn't know about this:

Screenshot_20240127-132453_Manifold.jpg

From here:
https://manifold.markets/strutheo/what-will-happen-in-january-2024-ad?r=dWFpcjAx
 
U.S. intelligence chairman, Mike Turner, went “ rogue “ last week proclaiming there is a serious national security threat to the world.

President Biden made a special TV talk saying that all is well and this was a reference to Russia putting nuclear weapons in space.

But this was enough to get people thinking about an UFO invasion.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68296879
 
Air Force Pilot's Bizarre Encounter With Capsule-Like Craft Off Florida Declassified


A U.S. Air Force pilot says they saw something they couldn't readily identify that was the "size and shape" of an "Apollo spacecraft" during a sortie from Eglin Air Force Base in Florida last year, according to recently declassified documents. Three other unidentified objects were also tracked on radar during the incident.


uap-drawing.jpg


The incident took place on January 26, 2023, over the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida.

"On 26 Jan 23, an [sic] USAF pilot gained radar lock on four separate UAP," according to the unclassified summary. "Upon approach, the pilot was able to make visual contact and employ sensors to obtain a screen capture of the first of these objects. The remaining three were only detected by radar."

"UAP-1 operated at an altitude of about 16,000 above ground level (AGL). The second and third UAPs were noted at altitudes of 17,000 and 18,000," the summary adds. "The fourth was lost from radar and no altitude was
noted. Moreover, no airspeeds were noted for any of the UAP in this report."

"Of note, upon closing to within 4,000 feet of UAP-1, the radar malfunctioned and remained disabled for the remainder of the event," it continues. "Post-mission investigation revealed that a circuit breaker had triggered, but that maintenance technicians were unable to conclusively diagnose the fault."

https://www.twz.com/air/air-force-p...h-capsule-like-craft-off-florida-declassified

maximus otter
 
Taking about wasting money, today the Pentagon released a two year study that took 40 people to write coming to the conclusion that according to these 40 people there are no UFOs, no off world material, and no strange technology.

So all you skeptics won !
 
Taking about wasting money, today the Pentagon released a two year study that took 40 people to write coming to the conclusion that according to these 40 people there are no UFOs, no off world material, and no strange technology.

So all you skeptics won !
No, nobody won or lost. They made a study, and didn't find anything.
 
Since this Pentagon report took in the past 40 years, it negates 40 years of eye witnesses made up of civilians, police, military, and pilots who have seen UFOs.

This is most unfortunate.
 

DOD developing ‘Gremlin’ capability to help personnel collect real-time UAP data


The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office is producing and refining a new deployable surveillance capability — the Gremlin System — to enable personnel to capture real-time data and more rapidly respond to unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) incidents as they occur, the acting chief of the office Tim Phillips [said].

“We’re working with some of the government labs, such as the Department of Energy labs, and we have a great partner with Georgia Tech. And what we’re doing is developing a deployable, configurable sensor suite that we can put in Pelican cases. We’re going to be able to pull it to the field to do a long-term [collection]. Since the UAP target — that signature is not clearly defined — we really have to do hyperspectral surveillance to try to capture these incidents,” explained Phillips.


The team is currently experimenting with Gremlin at “a very large range in Texas,” where officials have been testing the system against known drone-type targets, and some unknown targets as well, Phillips noted.

“It’s picking up a lot of bats and birds. We’re learning a lot about solar flaring. We’re really starting to understand what’s in orbit around our planet and how we can eliminate those as anomalous objects,” he said.

https://defensescoop.com/2024/03/08...to-help-personnel-collect-real-time-uap-data/

maximus otter
 
There are already three good, widespread surveillance systems in place, although these are not designed to look for UFOs. These are the various meteor watch cams located around the world, the innumerable doorbell and house cameras people have installed for security purposes, and the similarly innumerable dashcams that people install in their cars for security purposes.

These three systems catch a lot of meteors, but they do not catch UFOs, which suggests that AARO would be wasting its time with its Gremlin system. However I suppose it might be useful, especially if there really are incredibly rare, inexplicable events out there.
 
There are already three good, widespread surveillance systems in place, although these are not designed to look for UFOs. These are the various meteor watch cams located around the world, the innumerable doorbell and house cameras people have installed for security purposes, and the similarly innumerable dashcams that people install in their cars for security purposes.

These three systems catch a lot of meteors, but they do not catch UFOs, which suggests that AARO would be wasting its time with its Gremlin system. However I suppose it might be useful, especially if there really are incredibly rare, inexplicable events out there.
Isn't that why UFO's traditionally land in forgotten farming towns, and there visit primitive farmers, who have no telephones?
Hasn't it always been like this? :)
 
Isn't that why UFO's traditionally land in forgotten farming towns, and there visit primitive farmers, who have no telephones?
Hasn't it always been like this? :)

I think statistically speaking the areas most likely to experience UFO flaps are suburban fringes and recently suburbanised, or suburbanising, rural areas.
 
I think statistically speaking the areas most likely to experience UFO flaps are suburban fringes and recently suburbanised, or suburbanising, rural areas.
Of course, this will skew the statistics, because larger populations will generate more reports.
 
The U.S. Reporting Center for UFO just released study that most UFO sightings are in the wide open spaces of the states New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and Oregon which is no surprise.

But their study claims people have reported UFOs from all places.
 
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From Jason Colavito's e-Newsletter • Vol. 24 • Issue 11 • March 10, 2024 •

On Friday, the government’s UFO office, AARO, released the unclassified version of the first volume of its historical survey of UFOs.

Unsurprisingly, AARO concluded that there is no evidence of aliens, has never been any evidence of aliens, and the rumors and conspiracies attributing to the U.S. government a massive cover-up of space aliens are nothing more than fantasies born of science fiction, misunderstandings, and paranoia. “The proliferation of television programs, books, movies, and the vast amount of internet and social media content centered on UAP-related topics most likely has influenced the public conversation on this topic, and reinforced these beliefs within some sections of the population,” AARO wrote. The report went on to report what I have long told you in these pages, that nearly all of the claims made since 2017 about “off-world technology” and “beings” originate with “the same group of individuals” with ties to AAWSAP and To the Stars, i.e. the various phases of the Skinwalker Ranch spook crew. Overall, the report is a massive win for reason, history, and science, and in a sane world it would crush demand for UFO content for a generation.
 
UFO occupants seem to have some sort of long-range 'camera detector' which prevents witnesses from taking clear pictures of them. They always know when and where to appear, so that no-one can get near them with a working camera.

I remember that International Rescue had a similar device in their Thunderbirds™ aircraft. If anyone tried to film them or take pictures, a little light would come on in the Thunderbird cockpit:

phot-alert.png

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and the IR pilot would fly out of range, or otherwise destroy the evidence, either by wiping the tape at long range

itsfd.png

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or by physically attacking the photographer, making exposed film fall out of his hat.

hood.png



In order for the UFO occupants to successfully ensure that no convincing photographs are ever taken of their craft, they must have similar equipment, so take extreme care when taking pictures of aliens - you don't want to end up like The Hood.
 
Not sure where this video belongs in the UFO section but Dr Vallee's input is always interesting.
A 30 min presentation from him at the SOL group who are scientists studying the UAP/UFO area.
Both the govt/military and Raytheon are mentioned in the video but it seems to be Dr Vallee's attempt to show some data and why the phenomenon needs to be taken seriously by science and govts in general and perhaps we need to amend our approach to how we look at it.
 
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Vallée is part of the problem, not the solution. He is one of the sources from whence the nonsense flows.

His recent work on the Trinity 'crash' is complete nonsense, according to many commentators, including seasoned UFO proponent Kevin Randle;
https://douglasjohnson.ghost.io/cra...arris-book-and-the-trinity-ufo-crash-story-p/
Jacques Vallée has been heard from again defending the nonsensical story of a UFO crash near San Antonio, New Mexico in 1945...Douglas Johnson, at his website, published a series of articles exposing the contradictions and outright lies being told about this alleged event. I believe that anyone who reads those articles dispassionately will realize that there had been no crash near San Antonio...I’m worried that those conducting the government investigations will accept what Dr. Vallée says without critical comment.

----------------
and his ideas about hairdryer burns are bizarre.
Slide by Jacques Vallée
FZQnp0MVsAA-3KN

Hair Dryer Burn;
FZQnuNDVsAAYGGX


---------------
But, much worse, he has also inspired a significant number of UFO believers in the US Government, particularly the so-called Invisible College who believe that the UFO phenomenon is too weird to be aliens, so it is caused by interdimensional goblins.

See Jason Colavito's article on the subject here
https://newrepublic.com/article/162457/government-embrace-ufos-bad-science
J. Allen Hynek, the astronomer who pioneered the scientific study of UFOs for the Air Force’s Project Blue Book, told his friend, French UFO researcher Jacques Vallée, his deep dark secret: In terms of his scientific outlook, he wasn’t a strict materialist; instead, he was guided by his fascination with mysticism and the occult. Over the next decade, the two men toyed with the notion that UFOs weren’t alien spaceships at all but, rather, space poltergeists from another dimension. The two men’s discussions had a profound impact on a friend with an office near Vallée’s in the 1970s, an ex-Scientologist and physicist named Harold E. “Hal” Puthoff. Puthoff, who studied psychic phenomena at the Stanford Research Institute, where he championed debunked spoon-bender Uri Geller, was also a defense contractor, and the intelligence community recruited him for a bonkers effort to use psychics to spy telepathically on the Soviets, later known as “Project Stargate.” In 1984, one Stargate “psychic” claimed to travel back in time one million years to commune with Martians.
 
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The thing is that interpreting UFOs as "space poltergeists from another dimension" might be quite a useful way of looking at it, if we remove the "space" and "another dimension" bits. Eric Ouellet has fairly convincingly argued that UFO flaps structurally mirror poltergeist outbreaks, and I reckon this holds true even if we delete the "para-" from "parapsychological" as an explanation. They could be expressions of psychological stress at a larger, community, level rather than on a family level.

John Keel actually got quite close to this in The Mothman Prophecies: clever bloke, Keel. The problem with reading his work is that as the late Peter Rogerson pointed out, you're not supposed to think of the 'boggarts' as physical, discrete entities for the most part, but as metaphorical. Similarly I think Vallee a lot of the time has just been playing with ideas which other people have perhaps taken more literally than he did, although in recent years he seems to have jumped the shark a bit (the Trinity stuff was a low point).
 
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