Most of us probably see 2019 as a banner year for weirdness.
We’ve had a string of Florida man stories, a $120,000 banana, and the third
year of the Trump presidency. As if that weren’t enough, it turns out that 2019
also yielded a bumper crop of UFO sightings and news.
If you’re like me, you probably figured that UFOs became an
endangered species when cellphone cameras became ubiquitous. “Pics or didn’t
happen” is enough to kill many tall tales, but UFO sightings seem to be
persisting even though photographic evidence is often lacking.
As the New
York Post reported this week, credible UFO sightings represented a
veritable bumper crop in 2019. Among the credible UFO stories this year were:
·
The claim
by naval officers that “unknown individuals” confiscated videos and data of
a 2004 UFO sighting involving the USS Nimitz
·
A Sept. 21 Ohio sighting
by former law enforcement officer and his scientist wife who came within 50
feet of a mysterious light that was estimated to be 20 feet in size. The
husband experienced paralysis when he tried to grab his gun.
·
A Sept. 1 sighting in New Mexico
in which elk hunters saw 7-foot tall “figures” and an apparent spacecraft that
resembled a circus tent
·
An August 12 sighting on
the Garden State Parkway near Atlantic City, N.J. in which a married couple
reported seeing a “40-foot triangle craft”
You might be tempted to think that the surge in UFO
sightings is par for the course in a country where large numbers of people
think the moon landing was fake, that vaccines cause autism, and reject the evidence
on the lack of Russian collusion and Deep State conspiracies. However, simply
writing off all sightings as fantasies ignores the fact that there is
compelling data, such as pictures from naval targeting systems, in a number of the
cases.
I’ve always had a curiosity about UFOs and aliens, going back
to the 1970s television series based on the air force’s Project Blue Book, a
show that really creeped me out, if I’m to be totally honest. However, I’m also
a UFO skeptic. The small likelihood of life arising elsewhere in the universe
combined with the even smaller likelihood of an extraterrestrial species
developing interstellar travel present long odds against alien visitors. The
vast majority UFO sightings – probably 99.9 percent -can be explained away as misidentified
aircraft, natural phenomena, or hoaxes.
But that still leaves the difficult tenth of a percent that
aren’t easily explained away. After the revelations of 2019, however, one thing
is certain: The US government is taking UFO sightings seriously. If naval
aviators can lock onto “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP),” the navy’s preferred
term for UFOs with advanced targeting systems such as the F/A-18 Hornet’s forward-looking
infrared radar (FLIR), it is strong evidence that some sort of physical object
is out there.
These flying objects that are unidentified aren’t
necessarily flying saucers or alien spacecraft. We don’t know what they are and
alien technology is simply one explanation. Another interesting theory is that
UFOs are spiritual. Hugh Ross, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
proposed in his book, “Lights
In The Sky And Little Green Men,” that UFOs could come from other
dimensions and may be connected with angelic and demonic beings. As evidence,
Ross notes a link between UFO sightings and the occult.
You can use an online
map of UFO sightings by state to see how plausible you think this and other
theories are as well as to judge your own likelihood of a close encounter. Interestingly,
the South has few UFO sightings compared with the rest of the country,
challenging the stereotype
of backwoods, Southern rednecks as the typical UFO witnesses.
You may wonder if I’ve ever seen any strange aerial phenomena
in my primary occupation as a pilot. The only example that I can think of in my
thousands of hours was a little over 15 years ago as I operated an airline flight
over the northeastern US. It was a clear winter night and I think that we were
over upstate New York when the other pilot and I both witnessed a vivid red streak
in the sky above us. The streak lasted only for a second or so before it disappeared.
What was it? We weren’t sure, but our best guess was that it
was a meteor, although it didn’t look like any meteor that I’ve seen before or
since. It was both larger and more colorful. This may have been because of our
altitude and the atmospheric conditions that night, although I’ve seen shooting
stars from aloft since then and none resembled what we saw that night. Neither
of us jumped to the conclusion that it was an alien spacecraft.
No one knows what the truth is behind UFOs but the new
evidence that emerged in 2019 makes the phenomena a little more real. And while
the government is cracking down on illegal immigration, a wall and ICE raids
won’t deter these particular illegal aliens in their saucer, triangular, or
circus tent craft.
Originally published on The
Resurgent
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