UFO/UAP
Who Says There is No Evidence for Aliens?
LTC Wendell Stevenson (USAF-retired) died September 10, 2010. To say he was a prominent agent in the UFO field is likely an understatement. Anyone who says there is no evidence for UFOs, or that UFOs are likely driven by non-human intelligence simply hasn’t done their homework. There is overwhelming evidence. Per John E Mack, not verbatim, the reason why people can’t see the evidence, even when you put it right in front of their eyes, is because our paradigms blind us to the greater reality. We do not see with out eyes, but with our hearts and mind.
The above photo was taken in Mancuria, China, somewhere between 1940–42, during the Japanese occupation. To hear LTC Stevenson recount it, the entire street paused to observe it! You can hear Stevenson discuss this and other images. In his collection, he has over 4,000 thousand images of UFOs that he has obtained.
The longer disclosure is delayed, the more credible witnesses we lose. For those who served in the military, such as Stevenson, the longer the delay the more we dishonor their service. In the video, From Beyond UFO Sightings Part 1, found below, Steven describes his assignment in which the aircraft assigned to him would record their interactions with UFOs over the Artic, they would box the film up, handcuff it to an agent, and send that person to Washington where it was taken up.
If you accept the word of an officer in the air force, those in command actually have UFO evidence. They’ve had it for a very long time. They had evidence of craft emerging from and entering the oceans back in the 50s! Humanity certainly didn’t have that. Not then. One might argue, we don’t have that now! These craft flew circles around our fighters! Literally. Our jets are flying and their craft are orbiting our craft! You don’t have to take my word for it. Here is Lt Colonel Stevenson saying that!
The call for evidence.
In a recent Medium article, Thank You For Your Service to Blue Skies Science!, Doctor Avi Loeb pays tribute to our military. There’s thumbnail pic of Navy pilot, Lt. Cmdr. Alex Dietrich, who reported on UAP in 60 Minutes. She flew with ‘Skipper’ Retired Navy Commander David Fravor, who reported on prime time news, 2017, that he engaged a UFO. I love that! His conversation with Lex Fridman is likely the best 4 hours unpacking this story you will ever spend!
Yay them for coming forwards. God bless them for serving. That’s genuine. My father served 22 years in the Navy. His last tour was on the Enterprise. I did not serve, but there were years where the most I got from my dad was letters, while he was out at sea on the Saratoga. Families of those who serve give, too.
We should not forget the others that came forwards to tell their stories! Yes, most of what we have may be anecdotal. We need to collect those, too! Some of those stories come with evidence, like photos. In his article Loeb suggest the only worthy data is quantitative. Qualitative data is just as important to understand a thing as quantitative. Most of human data has a qualitative, narrative driven component to understanding. If this weren’t true, more people would have seen the hard UFO data and said, ‘yes, there is something to this.’
June 24, 1947, Kenneth Arnold described UFOs he saw while flying near Mount Rainer. He did not call them flying saucers. The media called them flying saucers and the term became cemented in the public mind. I submit to you, it would not have stuck if it were not for the fact people were seeing ‘saucer’ shaped craft everywhere, as evidence by the thumbnail pic attached to this essay, which you can find addressed by Stevenson in the video found below!
Many saucer shaped craft were photographed prior to Arnold’s public disclosure. He didn’t even have a photo! It was just his narrative. His qualitative experience quantitatively changed the world. That’s undeniable.
Richard Haines, PhD, and NASA scientist, From Beyond UFO Sightings Part 2, found below states very clearly how to approach photographic evidence:
You evaluate the photographer, the equipment, the lens, the developmental process, the enlarging process, THE NARATIVE STORY, and you have congruency, then you proceed to analysis. The story can’t be excised from this phenomena. Before Avi Loeb declared there is evidence for aliens, Doctor Haines was saying there is evidence.
He also said there is evidence that humans are in denial about this phenomena.
David Fravor engaged a UFO. Yes, they collected data, hard data. That doesn’t tell you how he felt when the object clearly engaged him. How did he know it engaged him? Well, listen to his story.
The loss of data
One of the things that happens as society evolves, we lose data. The closest we get to our past is found in the oldest person in your life. Honor them well, for when they’re gone- you are the only bridge to the past.
Society evolves, data gets lost! Yes, there are some people who still have record players and LPs. I donated my laser disk player and my movies to UNT. I no longer have any VHS tapes, or Betamax. CDs are still available, but since flash drives are much easier and hold more- that’s dying off. Even the bulk of my library is gone, in favor of digital, and a change in tech or service could mean the loss of data!
No one alive today can tell you how the pyramids were built. There are cultures and ways of being that have permanently left us.
Stevenson was reliable witness to a phenomena in an age where very few listened. Our ears are a little more attentive, and there is the ghost of Stevenson on VHS. Someone took the time to upload it to the internet. When the academics look for evidence, will they consider this? Are they turned off by the rough edges of a VHS that didn’t translate well through time and medium changes?
Sergeant Clifford Stone made it a little further, leaving this Earth February 10, 2021. Though he did not see the promise of a day where the world shared in the knowledge of non-human intelligence interacting openly with humans, per his own narrative- he had no doubt. He, too, had a story to tell.
We’re all going to leave this Earth. Many of us wonder, when we do leave, what will they say about us? Even scientists, when memorialized, are not quantitatively expounded on. We say goodbye by telling our narratives. This was my experience of this person. They influenced me. They inspired me to be better, in thought, in action, in love.
You can’t really measure love scientifically. You can measure it qualitatively, and there is science to qualitative measures. We don’t just make shit up. Suffering, for example, falls on a subjective scale. Sure, we agree to a 10 scale and most of can utilize that to communicate pain, grieving, hope…
Most the time, we don’t measure life, we experience life. We look up and we have experiences. We know what we saw! It was solid. It was metallic! It hovered. It was huge! It was silently hovering. It defied understanding. “I was afraid it might fall.” It had an aura. It accelerated away so fast that wasn’t even a blur, it was just gone, but you absolutely have a sense it moved. At that speed, you’d expect wind, or sonic boom, but it was gone as if movie magic cut it from the frame of existence we occupy.
Yeah, maybe it’s not measurable in its own existence, but is measurable in it’s impact on our lives. People don’t just relate to the measure of the physicality of a thing, but to the meaning that flavors our life in its wake.
recommended:
LTC Wendell Stevenson (USAF-retired), obituary