Well, let me ask you this... how many photos came out of the Phoenix sightings a few years back? (I think it was Phoenix...).
If that’s the right place, it created such a furor over the sightings, that the city had a press conference about it, as I recall. How many pictures resulted from that one?
a LOT more than have been published.
I met the fellow who’s researched it for 10 years.
An MD happened to have a 35mm motion picture camera set up and got some interesting shots.
That’s a very interesting flyover—from up near Utah down to Tucson. It was not just in Phoenix.
And an airline pilot who was flying his small personal plane above the UFO—not directly above it but near enough and higher than . . . noted that
HE COULD HAVE LANDED HIS AIRLINER ON TOP OF THE UFO—IT WAS THAT BIG.
It was a bunch of typical undefined blobs, (”they only come out at night”) and it turned out to be a hoax. Balloons and flares.
“Well, let me ask you this... how many photos came out of the Phoenix sightings a few years back? (I think it was Phoenix...).
If thats the right place, it created such a furor over the sightings, that the city had a press conference about it, as I recall. How many pictures resulted from that one?”
What I find fascinating about believers in Flying saucers is the way the argument is always framed. It’s a lot like people who believe in the conspiracy to kill John Kennedy. It’s never done by providing proof of their argument, it’s always about posing questions that are impossible to answer. And, since their questions can’t be answered, it must be proof of their theory. People who believe these UFOs are from outer space are obligated to provide proof these are extra terrestrials. Those of us who don’t believe, are under no obligation to provide any explanation other than “we don’t know what it is, and neither does anyone else.”