NASA opens access to new UFO documents
Miscellaneous / / July 21, 2022
The space agency does not stop searching for extraterrestrial life and makes sure that employees do not say too much.
Black Vault journalists got access to previously classified NASA data on contacts with unidentified flying objects (UFOs).
Thanks to the documents received, it became known that in March 2021, NASA administrator Bill Nelson was convening a meeting about "unidentified air phenomena" - as potential UFOs are now called. In May of the same year, Office staff received instructions to answer questions about the search for extraterrestrial life, technosignaturesAny measurable property or effect that provides scientific evidence for past or present technology., as well as about the observed unidentified flying objects.
According to documents, NASA was concerned about a new wave of interest in UFOs in 2020, when the US Department of Defense published three videos with potential extraterrestrial objects. The security inspectors of the Office had about six months to figure out the reasons for what exactly is depicted on these videos.
Journalists also cite NASA's official position on UFOs, according to which the Office is actively engaged in searching for signs of life outside the Earth, but still cannot unequivocally answer whether a person is alone in Universe.
In October 2020, an online meeting was held dedicated to intensifying the search for extraterrestrial life. Robert Powell, board member of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Coalition, moderated the conference during which it was about the scaling of operations to search for life outside the Earth, as well as the incidents with UFOs in Stevenville and Puerto Rico. One of the goals of this meeting was the distribution of tasks that will help to scientifically prove or disprove the existence of aliens.
Despite the fact that this news is shrouded in mystery and the spirit of conspiracy theories, it is not surprising that NASA continues to study life beyond our planet. First of all, it is important not only for science, but also for general security.
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Cover: frame from video U.S. Navy