Note: If you're curious, you too can analyze UFO videos, frame by frame. For more information, please see Analyzing UFO videos through interpolated closeups and How to analyze UFO videos.
When investigators cannot identify UFOs, they categorize them as 'objects of unknown origin.' I attempt to analyze only videos of UFOs in this category. I'll add a new post to this blog soon after I complete each analysis.
For centuries, people have been reporting unusual aerial phenomena, such as 'flying saucers,' which we now call UFOs. Just as you might research other subjects online, so also can you study UFOs, provided you browse carefully. The web is filthy with deliberate misinformation; keep an open mind, but don't let your brain fall out.
Finding reliable UFO information is difficult. We are hampered by:
- Lack of verifiable evidence. - We have no scientific proof that objects of unknown origin actually exist.
- Fear of ridicule. - Though most UFO witnesses are sane and honest, many never report seeing anything. In our culture, you need not be crazy to see a UFO, but you are certifiably insane if you dare report it.
- Inconsistent reports. - Even among objects of unknown origin, there are multiple UFO sizes, shapes, and colors.
- Lies and hoaxes. - We have too many charlatans who lie for money, for amusement, or simply out of meanness.
- Conspiracy theories. - Rumors often seem true because too many people repeat them too frequently. Is Elvis really still alive and hiding with space aliens at Area 51? Ufology should be a science, not a religion.
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