Sky High
Is it a bird, a plane, or something else entirely? NASA is going to find out. The space agency just announced it is launching a study of UFOs. There will be no classified information, and everything will be available to the public. The “modern era” of unidentified flying objects — or unidentified aerial phenomenon, if you prefer the current official term — stretches back 80 years. It’s a period punctuated with hoaxes and explainable incidents, but also many, many sightings that continue to perplex believers and skeptics alike. After decades of denial, the U.S. military now acknowledges there are things in the skies it can’t always explain. It won’t go so far as to suggest we’re being visited by beings from another world and it also won’t rule out the idea that UFOs are terrestrial technology from a foreign power.
With more than 7,200 sightings nationwide in 2020, according to data compiled by the National UFO Reporting Center, and the Pentagon revealing to Congress this year that there have been almost 400 UFO sightings by military personnel, the topic still may not be mainstream, but it certainly isn’t in the realm of conspiracy theory any longer.
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