by Frank » Fri Jun 24, 2011 3:53 pm
I am not saying we have evidence of ET visitation, webplodder.
The only thing you can conclude from the data is that we have a phenomenon that is unexplained and that has some characteristics that could point to ET visitation.
Your statement that all cases can be explained in mundane terms is simply untrue. Like I said earlier, every research effort so far has found a considerable amount of cases for which there was no mundane explanation that fits the data, and these were cases with sufficient data to draw such a conclusion.
Look at the conclusion of the Belgian Air Force in my previous post for example. Or look at these statistics from project blue book published in Ruppelt’s book:
Since June 1947, when the first UAP report had been made, ATIC had analyzed 1,593 UAP reports. About 4,400 had actually been received, but all except 1,593 had been immediately rejected for analysis. From our studies, we estimated that ATIC received reports of only 10 per cent of the UAP sightings that were made in the United States, therefore in five and a half years something like 44,000 UAP sightings had been made.
Of the 1,593 reports that had been analyzed by Project Blue Book, and we had studied and evaluated every report in the Air Force files, we had been able to explain a great many. The actual breakdown was like this:
Balloons
- Known 1.57%
- Probable 4.99%
- Possible 11.95%
- Total 18.51%
Aircraft
- Known 0.98%
- Probable 7.74%
- Possible 3.04%
- Total 11.76%
Astronomical Bodies
- Known 2.79%
- Probable 4.01%
- Possible 7.40%
- Total 14.2%
Other: 4.21%
(i.e. Searchlights on clouds, birds, blowing paper, inversions, reflections, etc.)
Hoaxes: 1.66%
Reports with insufficient data to evaluate: 22.72%
(In addition to those initially eliminated)
Unknowns: 26.94%
So 1 in every 4 reports investigated was an unknown, and these were all reports with sufficient data to evaluate.
The idea that all cases can be explained is an illusion. This can only be done by ignoring important data, but that has nothing to do with science.
Many scientists have a distorted image of the UFO data (which is not surprising given the rubbish you get if you google the subject) and do not spend any effort in studying the (few) scientific reports that are available. But like David pointed out, those that do take the phenomenon very seriously.