The truth is being leaked drop by drop until one day we look around and find ourselves neck high in it. They have a trickle down theory in hopes of slowly getting citizens use to the idea that we are not alone in universe and never have been. More and more each day the governments of the world leak bits and pieces of UFO information to the public. I wanted to support those eyewitnesses who have tried to tell others about what they have seen, yet were laughed at by even closest of friends. I noticed that there was a lot of chaos when searching for UFO sighting reports, so I hope this site helps. I created this site to help the UFO community get a little bit organized. You witnessed it, your perceptual field changes, so now you need to share it. I have had my own UFO sighting up close and personal, but that's how it works right? A non believer becomes a believer when they experience their first sighting. Waring and I wrote a few books and am currently a ESL School Owner in Taiwan. To that publication's credit though, they raised the much more likely possibility that the dark spot on the screen was "a thermal blanket accidentally dropped from a space shuttle."īut why all the hype? While there is a deeply human impulse to imagine and seek out life outside of what we know, as the almost spiritual nature of the true efforts to search for extraterrestrial life attest to, these articles are more likely tapping into market demands rather than any deeper psychological need.Hi, my name is Scott C. According to Vice, the myth dates back over 100 years to Nikola Tesla's early experimentation with radios in 1899. Something of a Loch Ness Monster of outer space, the Black Knight Satellite has been purportedly "spotted" many times over the years with little if anything to back it up. The video goes on to make the claim that the photographs of a small dent in the surface of the moon could be "providing cover for existing bases" for extraterrestrial creatures.Īnd on the same day, another outlet published a story raising the possibility that the Black Knight Satellite had been spotted in images taken by NASA Apollo 16. Yesterday, a U.K.-based site reported directly on an online video observing that a perfectly triangular dent had been found on the surface of the moon. But, alas, the Northern lights were predicted to be especially bright that night so photographers by coincidence had their lenses trained on the sight. At the time, some sources interviewed for The Siberian Times expressed concern that the impressive display was rooted in alien activity or "a gap in the space-time continuum" rather than a military exercise. The source, perhaps less romantically, turned out to be ICB missile tests. Just last month, there were since deleted reports of a " giant glowing ball" of light near the Arctic in Siberia possibly believed to be a UFO. While so far all these stories have been, of course, proven false, Newsweek has chosen to highlight a few stories that may have gotten your hopes up. That's part of why stories of UFO sightings, like this week's tabloid reporting of a reemergence of the Black Knight Satellite can be so compelling. From Roswell to War of the Worlds, the prospect of making first contact is thrilling, terrifying, and a surefire way to grab public attention.
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