Sean Kirkpatrick has faced threats for his work – and a new report concluding no evidence UAPs represented extraterrestrial tech has sent ufology into a tailspin
I’m not sure, I understand your question right, but yes, UAPs can originate from Earth. If someone sees a weather balloon and they send a pixelated photo to the government, because they think it’s aliens or a Russian drone strike or something, that will be filed as an aerial phenomenon, which couldn’t be identified.
That’s also the meaning of “UFO” – Unidentified Flying Object – but I guess, it doesn’t quite encompass all phenomenons, such as weird clouds or a comet burning up.
I’m not sure, I understand your question right, but yes, UAPs can originate from Earth. If someone sees a weather balloon and they send a pixelated photo to the government, because they think it’s aliens or a Russian drone strike or something, that will be filed as an aerial phenomenon, which couldn’t be identified.
That’s also the meaning of “UFO” – Unidentified Flying Object – but I guess, it doesn’t quite encompass all phenomenons, such as weird clouds or a comet burning up.