
Most mainstream scientists argue that the possible existence of spacecraft from a non-human origin is an “extraordinary claim” that is not worth a serious study until “extraordinary evidence” falls to their lap. The reason this evidence has to fall into their lap is because they are not engaged in the search for such evidence, and so its non-existence is a self-fulfilling prophecy. The simple answer to Enrico Fermi’s paradox: “Where is everybody?” is “To find out whether you have neighbors, you better use a telescope or check your backyard for objects that came from the street.” Over the past two years, the Galileo Project that I lead at Harvard University, engaged in these activities — as summarized in 8 peer-reviewed papers.
But we must also keep in mind that the intelligence and defense agencies of the US Government are tasked with identifying objects falling from the sky for decades, since some of these objects may represent drones, spy balloons or ballistic missiles sent by adversarial nations. Given this day job, it is clear that Government agencies will be the first to notice extraordinary evidence for Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) associated with objects sent by extraterrestrial technological civilizations to our cosmic backyard.
Presenting without comment.https://t.co/EuhVpDRFqI pic.twitter.com/W6BsdMOriP
— MarikvR (@MvonRen) June 3, 2023
Pentagon UFO whistleblower David Grusch says the United States is in possession of vehicles of non-human origin and bodies of the pilots.
Full interview by Ross Coulthart & reaction by Ryan Graves.#ufotwitter #ufo #uap pic.twitter.com/oehU0iSTWT
— UAP James (@UAPJames) June 5, 2023
