Recently
the New York Times reported that the US government had a secret program to investigate UFO
sightings, one that was funded with 22 million dollars from 2007 to
2012. The Times story reported that the government study “produced
documents that describe sightings of aircraft that seemed to move at
very high velocities with no visible signs of propulsion, or that
hovered with no apparent means of lift.” The
New York Times also published on the same day a detailed account
of a UFO sighting. They interviewed Navy pilot David Fravor, who was
asked to use his Navy jet fighter to investigate an unidentified
object in the sky. Fravor reported that the object “accelerated
like nothing I've ever seen.” One of the Times stories included a
video link showing a cockpit video of a UFO being chased by a fighter
jet – an object with no apparent wings that had a strange aura.
The object was speeding very high in the atmosphere.
These
revelations have provoked responses from the mainstream
establishment, responses that have often been either misleading or empty-headed. An example is this article at livescience.com by Benjamin Radford. Radford presents an extremely biased account of UFO sightings, and claims that "UFO sightings so far provide no real evidence." This is pretty much the "total denial" tactic so beloved by skeptics, which simply involves claiming that there is no evidence no matter how high a mountain of evidence has piled up. Rather absurdly, Radford tries to discredit the recent government UFO research program by citing the Stargate government program into remote viewing (a program that produced dramatic evidence for this paranormal effect, as described here). He contradicts himself by claiming in one sentence that the Stargate program was "soon shut down," while stating in another sentence that it ran from "the 1970s through the mid-1990s." But you don't discredit one multi-year government program of paranormal investigation by citing another multi-year government program of paranormal investigation. One plus one equals two, not zero.
SETI expert Andrew Siemion
went on record arguing against UFOs on the basis that astronomers
haven't seen them with their telescopes. That's a pretty dumb
argument. The fact that some people have never observed something
never discredits observations by reliable witnesses who have seen
that thing. For example, I've never seen a bat in New York City, but
that does nothing to discredit people who have seen bats in New York
City.
Another intellectually unimpressive response to the UFO revelations was one given by
astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson, who expressed a total lack of
curiosity about the topic, saying, “Call me when you have a dinner
invite from an alien.” Inconsistently, he states about some UFO,
“"It's a flying object and we don't know what it is,” but
also states, “The evidence is so paltry for aliens to visit Earth,
I have no further interest.” But if we see flying objects in our
skies we cannot identify, how could this be evidence “so paltry”
for extraterrestrial visits? The evidence for UFOs is not at all
paltry, consisting of decades of observations by a vast number of
reliable witnesses.
Tyson's
statement of “no further interest” exemplifies a flaw in the
attitude of modern scientists: they seem to have no interest in
anything that is on their long list of taboo topics. The typical
modern science PhD is a man of a hundred taboos, a man determined to
suppress any intellectual curiosity he may have about a hundred
anomalous phenomena he cannot explain. When such figures speak about
the paranormal, they typically show no signs of having researched the
topic they are speaking about.
Perhaps the most clueless response to the UFO investigation appeared in a
LiveScience story entitled, “The Truth About Those 'Alien Alloys'
in the New York Times' UFO Story.” This
story was published as the lead article on the Scientific American
web site.
The
LiveScience story responded to these intriguing claims in the New
York Times story:
Under
Mr. Bigelow’s direction, the company modified buildings in Las
Vegas for the storage of metal alloys and other materials that Mr.
Elizondo and program contractors said had been recovered from
unidentified aerial phenomena. Researchers also studied people who
said they had experienced physical effects from encounters with the
objects and examined them for any physiological changes.
The
LiveScience story is also responding to a statement that it quotes
as follows:
One
of the authors of the Times report, Ralph Blumenthal, had this to say
on MSNBC about the alloys: "They have, as we reported in the
paper, some material from these objects that is being studied so that
scientists can find what accounts for their amazing properties, this
technology of these objects, whatever they are." When asked what
the materials were, Blumenthal responded, "They don't know.
They're studying it, but it's some kind of compound that they don't
recognize."
The
LiveScience story then quotes a scientist making an absurd claim on
the topic:
"I
don't think it's plausible that there's any alloys that we can't
identify," Richard Sachleben, a retired chemist and member of
the American Chemical Society's panel of experts, told Live Science.
"My opinion? That's quite impossible."
This
claim is nonsensical. Given the age of the universe, some 13 billion
years, astronomers assume that extraterrestrial civilizations might
be very many thousands or millions of years older than our
civilization. So such a civilization that might have godlike powers
could not create some compound that humans could not identify? That's
hilarious. You might as well argue that scientists in ancient Greece
could have identified any material or compound that we manufacture
today.
Below are some more inane comments from Sachleben and someone named Nyman:
Oh,
really? So if there was an extraterrestrial civilization with science
2,000,000 years more advanced than ours, capable of using
nano-technology to combine elements and rearrange matter in a
trillion different ways we cannot imagine, using technologies we will
not develop for eons, then anything they might produce could be
quickly figured out by a grad student? I need not explain how
stupid that claim is.
What
we see here is just a glaring example of the runaway egotism and
knowledge over-estimation that is sadly not rare among modern
scientists. Placing themselves and their colleagues on pedestals, many scientists portray themselves as great Lords of Knowledge who have mastered
the universe's secrets. But the truth is they know very much less
than they think they do, and that they have learned merely the tiniest fraction of the universe's secrets.
An
intelligent expert response to a report of mysterious substances obtained
from UFOs would be something like this: “I would be very much
interested in studying these supposedly anomalous materials, so I would like to
offer my services to anyone who may have access to such materials.”
Unidentified object I recently photographed near a building in New York
Postscript: We have additional ignorant misinformation from the mainstream media in this article on Salon.com, which states the utter falsehood that "Historically, paranormal research has been done merely to keep pace with one’s enemies." Statements like this simply suggest that the author hasn't bothered to spend even a single afternoon researching the history of paranormal research.
Then there's this backlash piece by astronomer Seth Shostak, who tries to suggest that witness testimony isn't useful for science, and that it "isn't terribly reliable in criminal court cases." But we all the time send people to prison for decades based on witness testimony. So if courts take witness testimony so seriously, why shouldn't science?
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