I'm starting to watch the second season of "Unidentified: Inside America's UFO Investigation"
https://www.history.com/shows/unidentified-inside-americas-ufo-investigation on the History Channel.
I'm already a little tired of watching glimpses of white dots in the sky turning corners at breakneck speeds. At least they are trying to categorize these white dots into shapes (tictacs, saucers, and triangles).
What is a worthwhile, logical next step in identification of UFOs?
My first thought is there may have been a missed opportunity by Elon Musk's Starlite(1) program to plant high speed, infrared, high zoom cameras on each of the low altitude satellites' they have launched to track UFOs as they enter earth and track their paths around the earth as they occur. Maybe Bigelow Aerospace(2) will come up with some sort of "monitoring" satellite network. High resolution, closeup pictures/videos of all these UFOs around the world and transfer of those pictures/videos down to earth to a central server would be extremely helpful in nailing down some specific data we can work with and categorize into similar buckets of attributes. Then we could try to pinpoint the direction they were coming from in space and start looking for alien worlds within the envelope of paths the UFOs are coming from.
Why are we looking at deep space and trying to figure out what dark matter is when we can't even handle understanding all these UFOs flying around the world and possibly mapping the whole world for future resource use? Maybe the intelligent beings inside the UFOs could tell us all about dark matter.
Isn't it weird I spotted this fuzzy alien from one of Nasa's Rover pictures on Mars? It really looks like what I learned a "Grey" alien looks like! (Ref. https://relofone.blogspot.com/2015/01/01262015-man-from-mars-picture.html)
References:
https://www.history.com/shows/unidentified-inside-americas-ufo-investigation on the History Channel.
I'm already a little tired of watching glimpses of white dots in the sky turning corners at breakneck speeds. At least they are trying to categorize these white dots into shapes (tictacs, saucers, and triangles).
What is a worthwhile, logical next step in identification of UFOs?
My first thought is there may have been a missed opportunity by Elon Musk's Starlite(1) program to plant high speed, infrared, high zoom cameras on each of the low altitude satellites' they have launched to track UFOs as they enter earth and track their paths around the earth as they occur. Maybe Bigelow Aerospace(2) will come up with some sort of "monitoring" satellite network. High resolution, closeup pictures/videos of all these UFOs around the world and transfer of those pictures/videos down to earth to a central server would be extremely helpful in nailing down some specific data we can work with and categorize into similar buckets of attributes. Then we could try to pinpoint the direction they were coming from in space and start looking for alien worlds within the envelope of paths the UFOs are coming from.
Why are we looking at deep space and trying to figure out what dark matter is when we can't even handle understanding all these UFOs flying around the world and possibly mapping the whole world for future resource use? Maybe the intelligent beings inside the UFOs could tell us all about dark matter.
Isn't it weird I spotted this fuzzy alien from one of Nasa's Rover pictures on Mars? It really looks like what I learned a "Grey" alien looks like! (Ref. https://relofone.blogspot.com/2015/01/01262015-man-from-mars-picture.html)
References:
1) These lights are actually satellites, launched into space by the U.S. company SpaceX, run by South African entrepreneur Elon Musk. And they're a bit controversial. The satellites are part of something called Starlink. This is a project by SpaceX to launch thousands of satellites into orbit, and beam the internet to Earth from space.
www.forbes.com/sites/jonathanocallaghan/2020/04/21/what-are-those-strange-…
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