Showing posts with label UFOs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UFOs. Show all posts

Mongolian UFO Wreckage?


Posted 2/25/2010 10:30 am by Ron Hogan

What weighs two tons and randomly falls out of the sky in Mongolia? That’s what MUFON researchers and some very concerned Mongolians would like to know! Recently, two objects, one a two-ton hunk and the other a lighter 22-pound hunk, plummeted to earth outside the Mongolian capital of Ulan Bator. Maybe it’s a jet engine; maybe it’s a big old piece of alien spacecraft. Whatever it might be, nobody’s coming forward to claim responsibility for the wreckage.

Odds are, this is just some random junk that fell off some rusted relic of the Soviet Union’s air force. Maybe smugglers? There’s no telling. Even though there is a UFO embassy in nearby Kazakhstan, it’s probably not some space-age technology. Maybe some enterprising Kazakh tried to make his own flying saucer?

It doesn’t look like a jet engine, and I doubt a jet engine weighs two tons, so… what is it really?

UFOs tracked across Pennsylvania on July 4 holiday

Author: Roger Marsh on Examiner.com


Pennsylvania map shows sighting sites. PA MUFON image.


The July 4 celebrations over Pennsylvania brought thousands of people outside looking skyward, and multiple cases of UFO sightings, according to witness testimony from the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) database.

State MUFON Director John Ventre is reporting that his teams are investigating five possibly related sightings, primarily on the eastern end of the state.

Celebration of July 4th is possibly the most popular holiday to draw people out of their homes to look skyward at the thousands of fireworks displays produced by professional groups and individuals or at family gatherings. Like the UFO reports from April Fool's Day, ufologists look more cautiously at sightings that occur on a night when the skies are filled with manmade lights designed to entertain.

Reports from nine additional states claim orange or red objects, or multiple objects, in the skies that moved in a controlled or intelligent manner.

Ventre said witnessses are being interviewed now in the following five cases.

Case # 1: At 10:30 p.m. on July 4, a witness in Hanover Township, Luzerne County, reported an orange glowing light coming toward him. The silent object made several turns in the sky before moving away. A second object was spotted followed the same path. Now armed with binoculars, a third object was seen rising in the east that quickly moved away and out of sight. A fourth object then came into view from the north. This case is under investigation by Pennsylvania MUFON's Mark Zmigrodski.

PA, July 4, 2009 - orange glowing brighter at bottom, not unlike illuminated hot air bal.

Looking notheast up valley at fireworks saw light coming orange. Thought to be an airplane. heard no sound. object continued south, turned east. Next object came a few min. later [ 10? ] same path. followed by another in distance. ran in house for binoculars. sited and focused on third object. it rose in altitude east, and accelerated in speed out of site. Fourth object came over mtn. in north, heading southeast. Got good look at this as it came closer. Than object increased in altitude, and traveled southwest i'm guessing. It went up and out of site. followed a satelite and could still see that, behind slight cloud. Surmised cloud did not block view of fourth object. It looked like the shape of a hot air balloon. wind was moving toward east. It did not follow wind, nor could balloon have that much speed. REALLY COOL! Better than any fireworks! the first 3 seemed a bit yellow at times with the naked eye. An exiting thing to see, but you can't share that!


Case #2: A Bethlehem, Northampton County, Pennsylvania, witness who was driving home from July 4 fireworks, saw between 15 and 20 lights moving across the sky "in a loose formation from north to south." Other witnesses were pulling over to watch these lights, including a woman in a nearby car who asked what they were. This case is under investigation by Pennsylvania MUFON's John Royer.

PA, July 4, 2009 - lights in sky flying in formation

We were driving home after our local fireworks display. I looked to the northeast of our vehicle and saw what looked like light rising into the air. After a little while it became obvious that they weren't rising, but moving. There were about 15-20 lights in the sky flying in a loose formation from north to south. There was a main group and a smaller group further behind of about 5 lights. Many people were pulling over to view the lights. One woman in the car next to us asked us what they were.

I kept thinking that they were most likely aircraft. But they were flying low in a very loose formation with bright lights on, which seemed odd to me. It is certainly something I've never seen before.

We lost sight of the lights when they continued south and were too far away to continue viewing.


Case #3: A Bucks County witness reports a sighting on July 5, at 3:40 a.m. where two craft made erratic maneuvers in the sky.
The witness said the two craft moved in formation. This case is under investigation by Pennsylvania MUFON's Greg Mazzotta.

PA, July 5, 2009 - 2 ufo fling in aradic patterns

have been seeinga single object for last 10 months, directly overhead and would over time of each evening it would move, east to west, fling like someone was playing with a joystick and not making direct flight rather zig + zag, back + forth, tonite however it was joined by a 2nd craft about 10 degrees due north of original object, they together displayed the same arradic patterns, almost like signing someone on the ground. odd very odd


Case #4: A Palmyra, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, witness saw a bright orange object the size of a quarter at arm's length move across the sky. The witness said the object was "mushroom shaped" and pulsated. This case is under investigation by Pennsylvania MUFON's John Bainbridge.

PA, July 4, 2009 - bright orange object with a mushroom shaped glow coming off the top moving west to east.

I was outside cleaning up after a 4th of july party. I bright orange glow went by, above it was a glowing ring. My son (age 6) said it was a "flying mushroom". My neighbors kids (age 5-8, three of them) said it was a "ballon". The object was moving roughly east to west. It went directly across the sky. I knew it was too fast for a helicopter, Not too fast for a jet though. I knew it was not anything I had ever seen before. I called it in to the local police. I was curious to see if any one else had called it in. There were a lot of fireworks in the area, many people must have been looking up. This object traveled across the sky, not up or down. It looked the size of a US Quarter. I lost sight of the object when trees blocked my view.


Case #5: Three Ellwood City, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, witnesses reported an orange light. The object would at times speed up and then slow down, getting brighter and then dimmer. One of the witnesses captured the light on video (not made available at this time.) This case is under investigation by Pennsylvania MUFON's Tracey Roy, SSD.

PA, July 4, 2009 - Orange light in sky making direction change, speed changes and hovering above Ellwood City.

My wife, a family friend an I were outside of our house watching fireworks when we noticed a light in the sky and thought that it was a burning firework ember or low flying plane. We did not hear any engines so we ruled out a plane. We watched it move across the sky where it appeared to be rotating, and it would speed up and slow down. At one point it did an abrubt 45 degree turn and then continued on a rather straight line. It appeared to be getting brighter and then dimmer. It was very bright then it just dissapeard. We then noticed it coming from another direction doing the same thing. I used binoculars to view the object, and every time I got a stable view, it seemed to either change coarse or speed up and disappear. At that point my wife captured the light on video with our camcorder. In the video it went from bring close to us, to being extremely far away with in 10 seconds. It was also moving at a very steady speed, then faded in and out and was gone.

For more info: Visit MUFON on the web - the Center for UFO Studies - Pennsylvania MUFON - and InCahoots.TV.

A Map of UFO Sighting Hot Spots in America

Where do UFOs show their blinky lights most often in America? Now a handy map of UFO sightings since the 1940s offers a surprising answer.

As part of Popular Mechanics' special report on UFO sightings, the magazine has put together a map showing where people report UFOs most often. Los Angeles tops the list, which isn't terribly surprising given its proximity to an industry which has churned out hundreds of movies about alien invasion.

Other top cities, like San Diego, are in close proximity to "special use airspace," areas the military reserves for aircraft testing. That might mean residents are more likely to see unexplained things zooming across the skies and report them. In fact, several regions close to special use airspace have high UFO sighting rates.

Popular Mechanics speculates that other areas, like tiny Westmoreland County, PA, have (proportionally) such a huge number of sightings due to local history. An alleged UFO crash happened in that region in the 1950s, and so locals may be more likely to report UFOs to authorities.

via Popular Mechanics

8 most common UFO shapes

Posted on Monday, April 13th, 2009
By Erik Van Datiken


most_common_ufo_shapes

A mother ship resembling a giant football, a whirling coin-shaped disk that flashes across the sky, a diamond-shaped craft with a brilliant, mirror-like surface…

These are among the most common UFO shapes, according to veteran UFO researcher Brad Steiger, author of Mysteries of Time and Space.

Here are detailed descriptions based on Steiger’s analysis of several thousand sightings over the past 40 years:



8ufo

8. BLINDING LIGHT. Typically spotted at night, this UFO doesn’t have a definite shape - it’s simply a dazzling orange light. “But it moves methodically, as if guided by some form of alien intelligence.”



7ufo

7. DIAMOND-SHAPED. This craft resembles the top half of a diamond mounted on a flat surface. Its exterior is polished and as dazzling as a mirror in bright sunlight. The UFO usually is about 18 feet across and 8 to 10 feet high. It has no portholes or windows.



6. EGG-SHAPED. This massive vehicle, thought to be a “mother ship” - has been reported to be up to 200 feet in length. It has an oval shape like an egg, with no visible portholes or windows, and glows slightly in the dark.



5ufo

5. TOP-SHAPED. Reminiscent of a child’s toy top, this craft is fat in the middle and tapered above and below. It’s covered in multicolored lights. Powerful jets around its midsection move the UFO in any direction. “Round portholes often ring the vehicle. The body is often said to be grayish, like a shark’s skin.”



4ufo

4. COIN-LIKE DISK. Shaped like a giant 50-cent piece, this UFO is the type most often reported by military and airline pilots flying at 20,000 to 40,000 feet. Eyewitnesses say the flat edger of the disk often is ringed with red or green lights. The spaceship is incredibly fast, zipping along at speeds of more than 2,500 MPH. “The craft has been estimated at 15 to 20 feet in diameter and 2 to 3 feet high.”



3ufo

3. FOOTBALL-SHAPED. This craft has a thick black body that tapers off at either end. Smaller UFOs have reportedly been seen entering and leaving a bay on its lower surface - so it’s also often called a “mother ship.” Reports have placed the craft’s size at up to 80 feet long and 20 feet high.



2ufo

2. CONICAL DISK. This UFO resembles a Chinese peasant’s large straw hat. It has a flat bottom. The craft is generally reported as being about 20 feet in diameter and 10 to 12 feet high at the peak, with no exterior lights.



1ufo

1. THE CLASSIC FLYING SAUCER. This is the most common UFO of all; it’s been reported around the world for more than four decades, according to Steiger. “The craft has a metallic saucer-like body ranging in diameter from 10 to 15 feet. An exhaust port on the bottom emits a yellow light that dances like a flame upon takeoff. Bright lights rim the saucer and a clear circular dome is often seen on the saucer portion.”


AZDOP Campaign meeting on the Phoenix Lights and peace, Tuesday, March 3

February 28, 11:31 PM

First, a disclaimer: I’m a peace person and my husband, Jim, is a UFO enthusiast. You might call that a mixed marriage, but you’d be wrong. In fact, the topic at the next meeting of the Arizona Department of Peace Campaign will be The Phoenix Lights and Peace.


Surprised? Most people think UFO hunters are looking for little green men to capture and study, like zoo animals or lab specimens. But if intelligent beings have conquered long-distance space flight, don’t they deserve respect, as well as the kindness even the least creatures on our planet deserve? The nascent discipline of exopolitics involves not only how much the government knows about this issue, but how to establish peaceful relations with an alien race when contact is made.

I jumped into the discussion a couple of years ago when I wrote that we have no business leaving this planet when we don’t yet know how to behave right here at home. This column became the last section of my book, The World I Imagine: A creative manual for ending poverty and building peace.

Obviously, any discussion of the Phoenix Lights should be very interesting. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., and the AZ DOP Campaign meeting begins at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 3, in the Tekakwitha room, in the back of the campus at The CASA, Franciscan Renewal Center, 5802 East Lincoln Drive, Scottsdale, AZ 85253.

The speaker will be Dr. Lynne Kitei, M.D., a medical doctor, author, and director of the award-winning documentary "The Phoenix Lights."

On March 13, 1997, thousands of witnesses in Arizona saw an enormous craft in the night sky. What was it? Where did it come from? What did former Governor Fife Symington see? What does former astronaut and moon walker Dr. Edgar Mitchell believe? Dr. Lynne has been investigating this incident with top experts in research, academia, government, military.

If you miss this meeting, you can catch "The Phoenix Lights" on March 15 at Harkins Shea Theatre, 7354 East Shea Boulevard (east of Scottsdale Road), Scottsdale. There will be three showings of the documentary at 1:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m., and 7:00 p.m. Dr. Lynne will speak at each showing.

You might also want to watch the short video on this page of John Podesta, President Obama's Transition Team Co-Chair and President Clinton's Chief of Staff, speaking about the need for more openness on data the government has on UFOs. Jim and I couldn’t agree more.

For more info:

Arizona Department of Peace Campaign

Email Terri Mansfield at: terri@azdopcampaign.org

Aliens and UFOS, as far back as 6000 years ago

“An Oasis For Aliens”

“An Oasis For Aliens” © Mark McAndrew

Aliens - you either believe in them or you don’t. Now, in all fairness, most people are quite content to accept ET exists ‘out there somewhere’, but until the little buggers land on the White House lawn (or the White House itself, with any luck) far less are prepared to say they are here. Fair point?

No, it isn’t. By the time you finish this article you will have evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that aliens really have discovered the Earth. How’s that for a promise? There are no photographs, bits of UFO or secret documents for you to believe or disbelieve - it’s just some simple logic and a couple of sums. All you have to do is follow the numbers. Numbers don’t lie.

“Don’t Believe The Truth”

The basic problem with space travel is the ridiculous distances involved. Astronomers don’t talk in miles, they talk in ‘light-years’. One light-year is the distance light travels in a year, and it is absolutely gigantic. We shine lasers at the Moon to measure how far away it is, the green beams bouncing back from reflectors left by the Apollo astronauts. The light gets to the Moon and back in less than three seconds. Tick… Leave the Earth, tock…hit the Moon, tick… back on Earth. How far light can go in a whole year is beyond comprehension, but that’s a light-year - almost six trillion miles. (Six trillion of anything is huge. If you imagine a clock ticking, one million seconds takes about 12 days. One billion seconds takes about 30 years. Six trillion seconds would take until the year 190,000 AD…)

A light-year may be an enormous distance to us, but to the Universe it is nothing. We can see galaxies that are billions of light-years away, unbelievable journeys even at light-speed itself. Of course, nothing we can make gets even close to light-speed. The fastest - and furthest - space probe we have out there is Voyager 1, which whipped past the planets of our solar system and was flung out into space at almost 40,000 mph (that’s 30 times faster than Concorde). At that speed a mushy pea can destroy a tank, yet it is still 18,000 times slower than light - it’s like comparing a snail to a rifle bullet. Voyager is now headed for a star ‘just’ nine light-years away and it will take 160,000 years to get there. No wonder astronomers don’t talk in miles.

When it comes to talk of aliens, such brain-squeezing figures certainly seem to ruin the chance of meaningful contact with the Cosmos. But they are not the only numbers we have to work with. As mentioned previously, the numbers suggest that not only should there be plenty of alien civilisations for us to find, some will have already found us first. How is this possible?

“Definitely Maybe”

In 1961, a certain Professor Frank Drake came up with a method for estimating how many alien civilisations the soon-to-be-formed SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) project might detect in our galaxy; the famous Drake Equation. It starts with an obvious truth: if you have a Sun-type star with an Earth-like planet around it, a civilisation can exist. After all, we do.

It is also true that before we discovered complete little ecosystems in boiling springs and under polar icecaps, we used to think life needed sunlight, oxygen and reasonable temperatures. Now we know bacteria can even survive the vacuum and radiation of outer space itself, munching asteroids until they hit somewhere more hospitable and get busy evolving.

Even so, we are not talking about bacteria; we are talking about intelligent civilisations. The only example we know of - us - lives on a pleasant, watery world orbiting a stable little star, so Drake’s equation usually assumes those conditions are required. Even if they aren’t, we know they work.

Drake only considered our own galaxy, the Milky Way, worthy of searching. There is a very good reason for this. Every star you can see with the naked eye is part of the Milky Way, a colossal spiral disc some 100,000 light-years across, an oasis of 100 billion stars. Fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool with sand and you have roughly that number of grains. There is plenty to look at on our cosmic doorstep.

Which is just as well, because even our closest galactic neighbour (Andromeda) is far beyond communication range - over two million light-years away. Send a signal, wait two million years, they get the signal and send a reply, wait another two million years… it just doesn’t work. The gap is 20 times the width of the Milky Way, with practically nothing in-between. To all intents and purposes humans will never reach another galaxy because, by then, we will be several stages of evolution past ‘human’. Unlike meandering from planet to planet and star to star, leaping from one galaxy to another really will require something like warp drive because there aren’t any pit stops for a long, long time. If there are intergalactic civilisations out there, we are ants in comparison.

“The Masterplan”

We are fortunate indeed to be part of a galaxy. These 100 billion stars are practically next-door compared to the rest of the Universe and roughly 10% of them are like the Sun. That’s ten billion (10,000,000,000) Suns. We also know that planets are pretty common around stars. If only one Sun in a thousand has an Earth-like planet (it could easily be more), that’s ten million Earths in the Milky Way.

Ten million Earths is a good start, but we are only interested in the number of civilisations. Alien plants, dinosaurs and cavemen might be fascinating, but they won’t be contacting us any time soon. Although astronomers’ estimations vary wildly, none think the answer to this part of Drake’s equation is zero - who could with those numbers? Even for just our own galaxy, those estimates vary from single figures to a nice, round million (the latter figure being Drake and Carl Sagan’s first answer). More recently, Prof Drake has revised his figure to 10,000.

Yet still the sky is silent. A decade before SETI began, the noted physicist Enrico Fermi made the point which became known as Fermi’s Paradox; the galaxy should be stuffed with aliens, so where is everyone? Drake’s equation makes allowances for that; it’s not a question of how many are out there, it’s how many we can detect.

Detecting them basically means picking up a radio signal. Okay, so ET has to be at least that advanced - that’s obvious. But what if they are too advanced? Aliens might use something more efficient than radio waves, something that we just don’t know about. Maybe civilisations tend to blow themselves up within a few years of discovering radio, a fate we cannot exclude for ourselves yet. Or maybe, just maybe, ET doesn’t want to be detected.

Even if thousands of ET civilisations are sending out signals, the odds are still stacked against SETI anyway. For a start, we can only detect a deliberate attempt to make contact. Picking up alien TV, for example, is far beyond our capabilities - ET must carefully aim a very big dish and direct a hugely-powerful radio beam right at us. Assuming they’ve done that, then at the exact time their signal hits the Earth many years later, our big dishes have to be pointing exactly at theirs - or we miss it. It will be a long time yet before SETI has ‘looked properly’.

Earth has been broadcasting for about 100 years, but fibre-optic cables are already reducing our reliance on radio and TV transmitters. We may stop using radio far sooner than we expect. Professor Freeman Dyson has calculated that by about the year 4000AD humanity could be constructing a sphere around the Sun (!) to capture all its energy, so one way or another the Earth won’t be wastefully blasting out radio waves in all directions for much longer. Let’s be ultra-conservative and say we will take a million years to find something more efficient - assuming we don’t self-destruct.

So, for the SETI project to discover an ET civilisation it has to be just the right age, transmitting radio - or something else we can pick up - right about now. Too young or too old, ET may as well be invisible. Even assuming a civilisation uses radio for a million years, the chances of ET being in that window of opportunity are tiny. The odds say ET will be either too young or too old to detect. You may as well hear it now; the odds say they’re too old - much too old.

“Heathen Chemistry”

Let us assume the answer to Drake’s equation is not tens or thousands, but just one; a single advanced civilisation in the Milky Way that we might conceivably contact. They must be at our level or better, but we grant them no favours and assume they took just as long to evolve as we did. So how old could they be? How old is Humanity anyway?

As a civilisation - especially using Drake’s restrictions - we are barely a cosmic embryo. People are still alive today who were born before the first radio signals were sent from our planet. Our species is fairly young, but seeing as Life on Earth actually dates back four billion years - and we are the result - you could argue that Humanity is ‘four billion years old, from scratch’. Not bad. Can ET be much older than that?

Yes, they can. The Milky Way is an astonishing 13 billion (13,000,000,000) years old. Knocking off a billion years (because the heavy elements needed for life are only made by dying stars) still leaves an enormous 12 billion years to play with. If we are saying ET evolved just like we did, they could still be eight billion years ahead of us, right now. Maybe it’s only four billion. Maybe it’s half a billion. Any way you look at it, such a civilisation would be unimaginably advanced.

“What’s the Story, Morning Glory?”

This is where things get really interesting. Remember, just because an advanced civilisation is no more detectable than a Stone Age one, it doesn’t mean they can’t detect us. In fact, for nearly four billion years anyone who has cared to look will have noticed that Earth’s blue-white colour shows the presence of water, oxygen and chlorophyll - the green chemical all plants use to absorb sunlight. Water means life might be there, but oxygen or chlorophyll mean life is definitely there. Only microbes and plants can make oxygen or chlorophyll, which is why we ourselves are looking for that tell-tale glow on other planets.

ET wouldn’t even need to ‘see’ the Earth to detect signs of life. Lightning storms give off a billion watts of radio clicks and whistles per second, all the time. Those radio clicks are ‘tuned’ by our oxygen-rich atmosphere, advertising to all and sundry that not only does the Earth have electrical storms, but they are in an atmosphere only life could have made. The detectable range isn’t massive, but it’s been merrily whistling away like that for - again - nearly four billion years. That’s a very long time to be noticed.

One other possible clue for ET is the planet Jupiter. Our civilisation owes as much to Jupiter as it does to Earth, because without it, dinosaur-style asteroid impacts would be so common that we would simply not be here. A giant planet at roughly that distance from the Sun takes all the hits and protects the inner solar system. Maybe every civilisation needs a Jupiter - ours certainly did - so you could look for them first. Gas giants are much easier to spot than an Earth and our Jupiter has been there for nearly five billion years. That’s an even longer time to be noticed.

From the first ships navigating the globe to sending Voyagers around our solar system has taken only a few centuries. How long before we’ve surveyed some local star systems? Another thousand years? What about a sizeable chunk of our galaxy - or the whole thing? Bear in mind that we are not talking about actually colonising it, rather just knowing what’s there - probably using unmanned space probes. Fortunately for us, other people have already done the maths.

“Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants”

John von Neumann was a genius mathematician and physicist, partly responsible for the H-bomb and the principles behind all computers. Amongst these stunning insights and discoveries, he also determined that self-replicating robotic machines would be the most efficient way to mine asteroids or other worlds. It didn’t matter if they were slow because their numbers would grow exponentially, spreading out like mould on a Petri dish. Before long they’d be everywhere.

Von Neumann himself didn’t take his work to the logical conclusion, but others soon did. How long it would take these machines to spread throughout the entire galaxy if they were tasked with exploration instead of mining? Limited to travelling at just one-tenth the speed of light (no big deal at all), the calculations led to a shocking answer. It could be done in just half a million years.

Let’s be ultra-conservative once again and say it will take us a hundred times longer than that, that’s fifty million years to fully explore the Milky Way. Now we have all the numbers in place. What do they tell us?

“Familiar To Millions”

Remember, this is assuming only one advanced ET civilisation that evolved no quicker than us. Everyone reckons there’s at least one out there - and one is all you need:

1. Maximum length of time a civilisation uses radio, in millions of years: 1.
2. Maximum length of time a civilisation needs to explore the galaxy, in millions of years: 50.
3. Maximum length of time a civilisation could be ahead of Humanity, in millions of years: 8,000.

By now you should see the conclusions - if ET is older than us by a paltry one million years, they’re not in the ‘detectable’ window. No wonder SETI is having trouble - the odds are 8,000/1 that ET’s civilisation is so young. The other 7,999 chances say they’re too advanced. But then the question is: just how advanced can they be?

Well, ET could be eight billion years ahead of us, right now. Maybe it’s four billion. Maybe it’s only half a billion. The thing is, with a possible head-start of up to 8000 million years, 50 million is chickenfeed - less than one percent. ET is 99% likely to be more than 50 million years in front of us and that’s ample time to completely explore this galaxy. So it’s 99% likely they know we are here.

That 99% chance we are on ET’s star-charts assumes just one advanced civilisation somewhere in the Milky Way, with all its millions of copycat Earths. If there are two, the odds we have been found are 99.997%. If there are three, it’s 99.999999998%. If there are 10,000…

With more realistic numbers plugged into Drake’s equation (say, 10,000 civilisations and galaxy-spanning by their equivalent of 500,000 AD, like we should be) the chance we haven’t been found is less than winning the National Lottery, every week, for your whole life. The scientific term for that is ‘not a hope in Hell’.

“Be Here Now”

There will be races in the Milky Way that really are billions of years older than the Earth itself - and that’s without even considering the other 100 billion galaxies out there with 100 billion stars in each of them. There are layers of cosmic civilisation we cannot possibly imagine. Despite its incredible size, our galaxy (let alone the Universe) is far, far too old to be able to think, ‘Just because aliens are out there doesn’t mean they’ve been here.’ Yes, it does. That’s exactly what it means. They’ve been everywhere.

Some civilisations could have mapped this galaxy hundreds of times over and Earth has glowed with life signs since before we were apes. They cannot have missed it. Numbers don’t lie: either we are the only civilisation that exists or somebody else found Earth a long time ago. The only question is whether or not they care.

If the Universe is teeming with life then maybe we are not interesting enough for study just yet. (By definition, that would mean there are aliens aplenty.) But if life is rare then Earth is a paradise planet, a Garden of Eden - and will have been watched continuously from the moment they found it.

We are alone or we are known. Take your pick.

Jung, McKenna and The End of the Childhood - why are 'they' watching us?

This question has bombarded the minds of, if not all, many of us. Why are they here? Why are they watching us? For what purpose? And most importantly, until WHEN?

See McKenna's opinions about it. What is YOUR opinion? Share it with us.

UFOs - Finally!

This video was aired on Larry King, could someone tell me when exactly?