In the spring of 2024, I received my diploma in Ufology from the University of Excellence. Whenever I bring it up in conversations, the reactions are

How to Prepare for the UFO War of 2024

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2024-12-13 22:30:13

In the spring of 2024, I received my diploma in Ufology from the University of Excellence. Whenever I bring it up in conversations, the reactions are always one of two extremes. Either, people roll their eyes and step away, or they lean forward and want to hear more about it. For some people, UFOs are a fictional catch-all answer to the world's mysteries. To others, it's as real as it can be.

One thing I've learned since becoming a Ufologist and talking to people is that plenty more people have close encounters of the first kind than you might realize. I've spoken on the phone with people who've seen UFOs sitting in their fields, hovering over buildings, or following them down highways. Some of Canada's most famous UFO encounters happened in Saskatchewan, like the Langenberg incident of 1974. Other incidents include the Falcon Lake incident of 1967, the 1990 sighting in Montreal, the 2010 sighting in Kensington, Prince Edward Island, and the 2014 sighting in North York, Ontario.

It's important to remember that it's generally accepted that 95% of all UFO sightings can be debunked or explained. Sometimes it's an aircraft, sometimes it's a balloon, sometimes it's a strange cloud, or a reflection, or a radio tower, or sometimes even a star or a planet. However, others elude explanation, and this is a major concern for government security. Since World War II, several programs have been created to look into them, such as the United States' Project Bluebook and Canada's Project Magnet, which went from the 1950s to the 1960s, the Soviet Union's Institute 22 which went from the 1970s to 1980s, and the United Kingdom's Project Condign which went from the 1990s to the 2000s. Recently the US has doubled down on the UFO question by creating the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, and the NASA Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Independent Study Team, both in 2022. Both the AARO and UAPIST have provided video evidence of UFOs, now called Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon (UAP), with first-person witness testimony and videos of their existence. Video evidence isn't grainy or shaky from a backwater trailer park. This is concrete, visible, and unexplained proof of their existence, from multiple qualified witnesses. When people say we are entering a new age of UFO discovery, this is what they are talking about.

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