On Tuesday, December 7,
the House of Representatives passed the National Defense Authorization Act by a
vote of 363 to 70. The law contains
statutory mandates, and places accountability for dealing with UFOs out
squarely on the shoulders of the Secretary of Defense with some of the
responsibility shared with the Director of National Intelligence.
The bill contains some of the same sort of vague language
that plagues so much in the government. They are required to “develop procedures to synchronize and standardize the collection,
reporting, and analysis of incidents, including adverse physiological effects,
regarding unidentified aerial phenomena across the Department of Defense and
intelligence community.... Evaluating links between unidentified aerial
phenomena and adversarial foreign governments, and other nonstate actors ....
Coordinating with other departments and agencies of the Federal Government, as
appropriate, including the FAA, NASA, the Department of Homeland Security, NOAA,
and the Department of Energy.”
What all
this means is that there is now the first push to create another UFO, well, UAP,
investigation but much of the required activity seems to be focused on how to
coordinate with other agencies rather than gather meaningful data. It seems to
be just another government bureaucracy that will not provide the research
capabilities necessary to find the answers. I will note here that all this has
been going on for about four years and the best they had come up with is a high
school level report on 144 incidents.
Here is
something they might want to check out. On December 3 of this year, a woman in
Green Bay, Wisconsin, said that while driving on a foggy night with poor
visibility, spotted five lights moving in different directions. The light
eventually merged into a single light and then she saw three oval, blue-purple
lights that seemed to be flying through the clouds. She then saw green lights
that were moving very fast. The sighting lasted about forty-five minutes and
she took several photographs. You can see the pictures here:
https://www.ufosnw.com/newsite/groups-of-multicolored-lights-move-rapidly-on-foggy-night/
The next
day, in an incident that might be relevant, she said she lost her Internet
connection. She called the cable provider. Her phone, cable and her modem were
all out. Nothing she tried, or the cable company tried could get anything to
work. The technician then looked at the equipment and said that something had
fried it. All had been plugged into a surge protector. Electrical magnetic
effects are a well-known symptom of the close approach of a UFO.
On
November 6, the witness in Marietta, Georgia, reported that a strange,
cigar-shape was flying overhead. The witness took several pictures of the white
object that looks like an elongated tic-tac, which seems to be the new name for
cigar-shaped craft. It was moving in a westerly direction and there were no
signs of a contrail. The witness lives near the Atlanta airport and has seen
many aircraft over head. You can see the picture here:
https://www.ufosnw.com/newsite/strange-cigar-shaped-object-seen-photographed/
Finally, last week I reported on a
sighting and a photograph at an airshow in Houston, Texas. In that report, I
noted that on October 9 of this year, at Ellington Air Force
Base, there was a multiple witness sighting. According to the investigation by
Texas MUFON the witness reported that while his father was photographing
airplanes at the Wings Over Houston Air Show he noticed a small, metallic
object at a much higher altitude than the performing aircraft.
The witness wasn’t sure about the altitude of the
UFO but believed it to be around 12,000 feet. The witness said that his father
pointed the object out to him and two others in the crowd. They watched the UFO
for about five minutes. The object seemed to hover, then drifted to another
point in the sky and again hovered.
The object was metallic and rounded. It left no
trail as it moved and there was no evidence of engines or engine exhaust. They
lost sight of the UFO when it moved behind some clouds.
About a week later, as they were reviewing the
pictures from the air show, they examined the picture of the UFO. They were
able to zoom in and saw that the object was disk or oval shaped and was bright
silver.
The MUFON report noted, “This field investigator
finds it intriguingly coincidental that the object happened to comply with the
temporary flight restrictions by flying above 15,000 feet.”
I have reached out to a
couple of people to see if we can’t find additional witnesses and photographs.
It struck me that if we could, it would allow us to do some additional
investigation. I did receive a reply that might provide an explanation for the
sighting. Although the sighting was closed out as an “Unknown,” the
investigator wrote that he believed the true answer might be some sort of a
balloon. He suggested that the object looked like to a U.S. Army “LEMV” (Long
Endurance Multi Intelligence Vehicle) hybrid blimp. He noted that the program
had been cancelled by the Army but that the aircraft was still in production in
the United Kingdom, it might have made an appearance at the Houston Air Show.
The "Tic Tac" Blimp |
The Army's Blimp |
3 comments:
Is this another example of the "hitch hiker syndrome" regarding the Green Bay witness who captured photos and successfully uploaded the same to post on social media??...I don't see any other correlation
I'm sorry the video is just crap. Is this the best there is after I became a UFO enthusiast in the mid 60s? UFOlogy really has no future does it? Modern UFO videos look worse than old 60s photos ala Heflin. This is why UFOlogy has no future, just and endless retread of hucksters and charlatons and wishful thinkers. But enjoy.
Brian Wagner -- I must protest. UFO cases are much more than photos and videos. Kecksburg, Delphos, Pascagoula, Rendlesham Forest, and Ariel School to name but a few that come to mind ... all post-Heflin.
UFOlogy not only has an important future ahead, but a proud past (at least in notable part) as well.
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