UFO hearing key takeaways: What a whistleblower told Congress about UAP - eviltoast

A former military intelligence officer-turned-whistleblower told House lawmakers that Congress is being kept in the dark about unidentified anomalous phenomena.

  • QHC@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    As a general space nerd you might benefit from entertaining the idea these accounts have veracity without accepting them as true.

    Why should I spend any of my time or energy on an unproven claim? Should I also entertain the idea that an invisible pink teapot is orbiting earth until it’s proven false? What if there is someone with “credibility” claiming they have (classified) photos of the teapot, is it worth considering then?

    • DarkGamer@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Why should I spend any of my time or energy on an unproven claim?

      Probably for the same reason we dedicate energy and time to world matters of import. It’s interesting, it’s potentially very important, and even if we personally may not have a hand in the verification or outcome, this matter ultimately affects us all. It could literally change the way all humans think about intelligent life and the possibilities for humanity in the future.

      Should I also entertain the idea that an invisible pink teapot is orbiting earth until it’s proven false?

      Your Russel’s teapot is pink? Neat.

      What if there is someone with “credibility” claiming they have (classified) photos of the teapot, is it worth considering then?

      Yes! I mean the analogy is rather breaking down here because the implications of a pink teapot in orbit around the earth today would probably point to someone launching it into orbit, and not something as consequential as the verification of non-human intelligent life, but yeah, we should investigate credible claims of things that matter in general.