You do realize your scoffing is but mere distraction?
Although certainly allowed, and not altogether unreasonable (for all those doomed to eventual doomage, anyhows) there are times the pressing-est issues simply will not be put off.
Solar System Intruder Alerts are one of those times (every time).
If that were not true, there would be no such thing as Area 51.
On second thought, I've just been told -- there ~is no~ so-called "Area 51". It's all internet hoax/conspiracy (complete with a few Black Helicopters).
The helicopters are not real helicopters, and they're not black either...
Just look at the pretty flowers. The not for real helicopters are here to help. But they won't stand a chance against Solar System Intruder crash landings...
(Just look at the pretty flowers) It will all be over soon. After a few more tens of thousands of jibbering-jabbering internet comments. Won't it be a relief when it finally is?
So your political posture is the third way, hoping for a smashing meteor of doom?
Much good may it do you.
My scoffing comes from the astronomical science needed to spot items large or small out in the Kuiper belt. That takes very advanced and capable telescopes and patient analysis.
Those doing that kind of research are not likely to be u-tube fanboys eager to make a video score. So u-tube as an evidence source seems a little lame.
I don’t deny that Kuiper belt objects have the capability of falling inward, they are after all the source area for comets. Such an object could achieve incredible velocities and wreak tremendous damage, should the worst combinations of circumstances come into alignment.
But movement of that nature is precisely what is being watched for, and the most recent discoveries would be by definition the least likely to be dangerous. If it takes so much effort to even find them, how imminently obvious could be the danger that they pose?
Note also that our thread (the one we have most recently high-jacked, that is), is about a possible dwarf planet called 2015 RR245. Naming rules procedures indicate that it was first spotted in 2015, and subsequent observations seem to suggest that its orbit is in the seven hundred year range.
It’s not only not going anywhere, it is most certainly not coming here.