Unidentified flying objects (UFOs), now known as unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAPs), could be linked to China. A former NASA UFO head claimed that the flying objects may be due to China's technological advances.
UAPs Linked to China?
After going through multiple papers and talking to witnesses, Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA's longest-serving associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate, said he is still confident that something is out there.
However, he argued that it is crucial to consider the possibility that China is behind the UAP sightings. Chinese spy balloons are allegedly to blame. It follows the downing of one by a US fighter pilot in February as it flew over the Atlantic.
He stressed that we cannot disregard the balloon phenomenon because we will be rudely surprised if we do. The UFO expert just departed NASA for his native Switzerland's ETH Zurich. Before he left, he carefully reviewed UFO sighting data, including a 1952 photo of a sighting over Passaic, New Jersey.
Zurbuchen claimed to have spoken with people who had sightings in addition to pilots, and they were firmly convinced of it. He believed they were telling him what they saw and weren't fabricating information or lying.
He wasn't bothered by the existence of inexplicable phenomena. More research is required to understand what they are, what they mean, and how we might demonstrate their existence. There could be several justifications. He added that we should be aware that technology may not be friendly if we are looking at it. It's also reportedly possible that it uses technology from outside of Earth, and that would be pretty terrifying.
It might be a unique natural occurrence, like glowing clouds or something we've never seen before, which would be pretty interesting. Alternatively, it might be a camera issue.
UFO and Technology
The team of researchers discovered that 18 items had illogical propulsion systems, and they promised to look deeper to see if there was any sophisticated technology.
A US Congressional hearing in July heard testimony from former service members who said the US government was hiding a long-running program that recovers and decodes UFOs.
Even that the government had biological material that was "non-human" was asserted. The Pentagon has refuted every accusation.
Prof. Greg Eghigian of Penn State University, an authority on the cultural phenomena of UFO sightings, thinks that the recent spike in interest in "flying saucers" results from favorable circumstances. Like most historical occurrences, the solution is likely found in a combination of events, according to him.
Since the 1990s, astronomers have found thousands of exoplanets, increasing the likelihood that life exists on other worlds. Drone technology has also led to an increase in UFO encounters.
Introducing new sensors and sophisticated eavesdropping technology has improved the military's ability to identify anomalies, but it has also raised concerns about malicious parties monitoring military operations. Additionally, UFO rumors have flourished in settings where people hesitate to trust authorities and specialists.
In Peru, villagers claimed they were attacked by armored 7-foot aliens resembling Green Goblin. However, some claimed the culprits were illegal gold miners on jetpacks, who took advantage of an "alien" intimidation campaign to keep the locals inside their houses and away from their illegal mining trenches.
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