Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Foo fighters

 What are foo fighters? Foo fighters were balls of light, sometimes with a metallic appearance. They moved at high speed and performed various maneuvers during World War II for as long as the pilots observed them. These objects were likened to ball lightning or will-o'-the wisps. Some foo fighter reports were collected by Allied intelligence agencies and sent to U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt shortly after Japanese air attacks on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii in December 1941.

There were other military sightings of the phenomenon during World War II. American fighter pilots in Europe and Japanese naval aviators in the Pacific both reported phenomena similar to foo fighters, which they called will-o'-the-wisps or "ghosts." Allied reports at the time attributed these sightings to mysterious meteorological phenomena such as St. Elmo's fire.

The term foo fighter was used by Allied aircraft pilots in World War II to describe various UFOs or mysterious aerial phenomena seen in the skies over both the European and Pacific theaters of operations. The first sightings occurred in November 1944, when pilots flying over Germany by night reported seeing fast-moving round glowing objects following their aircraft. The objects were described as fiery and glowing red, white, or orange. Some pilots described them as resembling Christmas tree lights and fireballs. They usually appeared singly, but sometimes in pairs or in larger groups: one report mentioned 50 to 100 foo fighters clustering around a single plane.

Foo fighters

Although the military took the sightings seriously enough to instruct crews how to report them (use code word "foo-fighter"), according to the U.S. Air Force, these sightings were generally disregarded as war nerves or allied propaganda. There are few documented cases of foo fighters. According to the U.S. Air Force, cases of UFO activity can be identified as foo fighter reports, but no official documentation has been recovered that uses the term foo fighter……….………

So, what were those foo fighters? No one really knows, but speculation has been made about them being some kind of extraterrestrial technology or a secret Nazi aerial defense system. Whatever they were, there is no doubt that foo fighters caused great concern to the pilots who encountered them.

The following is a description from an American aircraft gunner: "These balls would fool around and then they'd go right straight up in the air and disappear." They did not appear to be reflecting any light from the sun. They seemed to be made of shiny material with a metallic color and were sighted close to the plane, near enough so that some details could be seen. They were much faster than a fighter aircraft and much more maneuverable……….

What makes it difficult to identify foo fighters is that the sightings are made over a period of many months and in different parts of the world. Although there is no strong evidence that foo fighters were extraterrestrial or secret Nazi technology, there are many eyewitness accounts. Any opinions……

flying saucers

 What are flying saucers? Are unidentified flying objects (UFOs) alien spaceships? What proof exists that UFOs are real and the extraterrestrial hypothesis is valid? "Flying saucers" refer to sightings of strange flying objects. When these objects are observed in our skies, they are often reported as round or disc-shaped with glowing lights around them that appear to be rotating in circular patterns. Sometimes they zoom about in erratic motions, flat trajectory courses, or zigzag maneuvers at supersonic speeds before vanishing into the distant sky.

Some UFOs have been observed emitting beams of light towards earth, where the observed effects included shutting off car engine function, dimming headlights, extinguishing street lamps, interference with radios and TVs, paralysis of car occupants, and the temporary disappearance of house lights.

UFOs (or flying saucers) were observed and reported after World War 2 by military pilots, civilians, police officers, and other official sources: in the USA, in the UK, in Canada, in Australia, in New Zealand, in European countries, Africa, Asia, and Latin America. A small percentage of witnessed UFOs (about 5%) remain unidentified after an investigation by competent authorities such as the US Air Force's Project Blue Book, Britain's Ministry of Defense Flying Saucer Working Party Chile’s Committee for the Study of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena (CEFAA), or Brazilian National Institute of Aeronautics (INFA).

flying saucers

In 1962, a joint US Air Force and CIA declassified message estimated that by 1955 more than 1 in 20 Americans had seen a UFO. In a survey conducted in 2005, the figure was found to be about 1 in 10.

Another study, done in France in 2007 with over 17,000 participants from around the world, revealed similar results: 11% of people questioned had seen a UFO at least once, while 5% claimed to have been witnesses to alien abduction.

What are the chances flying saucers are alien ships? The answer depends on the reliability of reports made by thousands of people who claim to have witnessed extraterrestrial visitors. This in turn implies that a number of criteria must be met before UFOs can be considered factual. The evidence must be of a nature where it is beyond reasonable doubt that the witnesses had no reason to invent their story, and on its own merits, it should be sufficient to convince a reasonable person.

UFOs or extraterrestrial crafts

 UFOs or extraterrestrial crafts are a hot topic in the media these days. It's a phenomenon that has been featured in movies, television shows, and books for decades. In fact, extraterrestrials have been a subject of public discussion since when pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing nine unidentified flying objects over Washington State. Despite the fact that there is no concrete proof of extraterrestrial visitation to planet earth, it does not stop people from believing in such events.

But what could be the possible explanations for UFOs flying around Earth? There are several theories about their origins and nature including:

1) Secret military technology or experimental aircrafts built by a government or a private organization. Documented cases show that some sightings were indeed explained by aviation research projects at the time of the reported UFO sighting. For example, during World War II Nazi Germany was experimenting with anti-gravity propulsion devices called "Bellonzo Flying Disks" which were popularly known as V7 weapons. In 1947, US authorities discovered even more advanced German technology as they seized the craft called "The Bellonzo Disc" or "The Foo Fighter". These military experiments were later said to be the inspiration for Area 51 and other secret projects.


2) Atmospheric phenomena such as light refraction, mirages, ice crystals in the atmosphere, ball lightning, etc. Mirages are optical illusions that can create the appearance of a distant object with inverted features but can also make things seem larger and closer than what they really are. This is a common phenomenon observed during hot days over a large body of water especially when there is a temperature difference between the lower and upper layers of air. Hot surfaces from desert sand or pavement produce light refraction from light passing through the hot surface which appears to come from above causing people to think it's a UFO. The heat makes the focal point of light very far away from the hot surface causing it to change size and shape, but in fact, it's just an effect caused by light passing through a hot area.


3) Celestial objects such as planets, comets, fireballs, meteors, etc. Astronomer Carl Sagan did some work on this idea explaining that Jupiter was behind most UFO sightings in 1965. He also said Venus and Mars might be other possible explanations for UFOs due to their ability to produce bright lights in the sky when they closely align with the earth or the sun. Comets can also appear like flying saucers or brightly lit orbs in space leaving a trail of reflection behind them which could be mistaken for extraterrestrial craft when observed from Earth.


4) Atmospheric optical phenomena are also related to other explanations for UFOs such as the idea that objects in higher altitudes can be distorted due to atmospheric refraction, reflection, and scattering of light rays. This makes them appear larger, distorted, or even invisible which will give an impression that something odd is flying in the sky when in fact it doesn't exist.


5) People who report seeing UFOs sometimes end up being hoaxed by others who want to trick people into believing they've seen unidentified flying objects or extraterrestrials. Hoaxes may seem like a long shot, but there have been documented cases where people have confessed about faking UFO photos and videos just for fun or attention. The image below shows how easy it is to fabricate an image of a UFO over the ocean.


6) Some people have been reporting encounters with extraterrestrials who have taken them on board their spacecraft for experiments or abduction purposes. According to John E. Mack, a Harvard professor, and psychiatrist at the time, there is enough documented evidence proving that such cases had happened which cannot be simply dismissed as hoaxes or mental illness cases.

7) Alien abductions could also be explained by vivid dreams and false memories caused by psychedelic drugs and sleep paralysis (temporary paralysis upon waking up). It can happen due to natural causes such as attacks or epilepsy where the person wakes up in the middle of his sleep or during naps.

It can also be caused by supernatural forces which sometimes manifest as nightmares, demonic attacks, night terrors, etc. These paranormal incidents cause people to see things that aren't real and believe they're aliens who abducted them. There've been cases where false memories are planted into the minds of people with the intent to trick them into believing they were abducted by non-human beings. False memory research shows how easy it is for a person's mind to play tricks on them causing loss of time spent looking for nonexistent clues, abductors or physical injuries after being convinced of having an encounter with extraterrestrials.

8) It has been argued that UFOs have always existed but have only gained recognition recently due to technological advances such as cameras and media. It's possible that people may have seen odd-looking objects in the sky before, but didn't report it because they either thought it was a hallucination or simply a mundane phenomenon.

9) Some researchers also argue that UFO sightings exist only in our minds and do not actually correspond with any real object in space. They usually say that if we were visited by aliens, we would've seen more than just lights moving around in the sky since human technology can be easily detected even from light-years away. This is why some people claim the government is concealing important information about UFOs, extraterrestrials, or alien abductions to avoid widespread panic which could result from propagating knowledge of their existence on Earth:

10) One of the most powerful arguments against UFOs and extraterrestrial visitation is the Fermi Paradox which essentially states that it's strange how we haven't seen evidence of advanced civilizations if there are many in existence. It's possible that their visibility may be limited to a certain area in the universe or they don't exist at all (just like ours). A widely accepted explanation for this mystery is called the zoo hypothesis where alien civilizations avoid making contact with us due to some kind of intergalactic law prohibiting them from doing so. According to this theory, Earth lies within a protected area of space where no one is allowed in:

11) Many experts argue that UFO sightings can be explained in terms of top-secret military aircraft being tested or flown by pilots of allied countries. According to this theory, governments deliberately conceal information about these types of secret aircraft and generate fake UFO reports in order to confuse the public and distract them from what's actually going on:

12) The US Air Force has been researching UFOs for decades with Project Sign (1947-1949), Project Grudge (1949-1952), and finally Project Blue Book which was active between 1952-1969. It included a number of studies providing scientific explanations for UFOs such as psychological delusions, radar kites, meteors, light reflections, etc. In 1969 when they published their final report, they said they'd found no evidence that any UFO sightings were due to extraterrestrial visitation or advanced military technology developed by foreign governments. However, Blue Book's methodology has been criticized for being biased towards providing negative explanations for UFO sightings instead of truly investigating the phenomenon:

13) According to astrophysicist Carl Sagan, UFOs are nothing more than misidentifications of ordinary phenomena due to a lack of scientific expertise by witnesses.

However, one thing that's often overlooked is the thousands of UFO sightings reported worldwide every year, and how such an extraordinary phenomenon could be happening without any practical or definitive explanation. Even we at MUFON have had incidents where we were able to obtain impressive evidence but no way to explain the phenomenon.

But there are other groups who actively investigate and attempt to explain UFOs by applying theories and research, and doing so with a high degree of professionalism and data analysis. There are many theories for what UFOs may be with some examples being drones, secret military aircraft, or more evidence of extraterrestrial life. However, there is also another explanation that would require a rewrite of some major aspects of modern history. This theory claims the "UFOs" are actually time travel machines that are piloted by members of secret societies with access to future technology.

in conclusion, there is no end to the number of theories and evidence available in relation to UFOs. There are many that believe humanity is not alone in the universe, while others will go on believing they are figments of overactive imaginations. The truth of the matter is, there are bizarre things occurring in our world that serve no benefit other than to confuse us. Perhaps what's most confusing of all is that, after thousands of years of researching the phenomenon, we still have no better grasp of what UFOs actually are.