When I set out to create a blog that would capture minds as curious as mine, I made a promise to stay as true to be beliefs as possible, be it cynical, naive or just plain striving to learn a thing or two. We can drop the spectacle for a moment and look at what actually happened without feeling bad. I have made the mistake of coming on too strong at times, drawing some ire from my peers. Somehow, my "heroes" of the journalistic world of the strange did/do it so much more diplomatically. I'd like to think that the hard work pays off, and some of the talents in the field are ace researchers.
But today I found out the fastest-moving UAP discussion didn’t involve a crashed saucer, a congressional confession, or another retired official promising humanity-shattering evidence after returning from the commercial break.
It involved scientists admitting that the UFO field has an evidence problem.
On July 14, the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies conducted a public Reddit AMA featuring researchers with backgrounds in astronautical engineering, physics, machine learning, defense systems and marine geophysics. The organization describes itself as an interdisciplinary nonprofit committed to evidence-based UAP investigation.
That may sound less thrilling than “ALIEN MOTHERSHIP ABOVE ARIZONA,” but stay with me. [Hint: Do you need another reason to reddit?]
When asked what unrestricted government radar, infrared, telemetry and satellite data might accomplish, SCU representatives said researchers could eliminate conventional objects, correlate multiple forms of observation and isolate a smaller number of genuinely anomalous cases. They emphasized that reliable conclusions require corroborating data from more than one sensor type.
Then came the important part.
Asked about building a public archive of original UAP evidence, SCU acknowledged that the field suffers from a shortage of primary videos, missing metadata, uncertain provenance, repeated compression and absent chains of custody. Creating a scientifically useful repository would require qualified leadership and substantial funding. More money? Any of you having trouble finding a decent job out there?
Meanwhile, the federal government’s current UAP archive openly states that its published cases remain unresolved partly because available information is insufficient. AARO’s own case descriptions repeatedly caution that a moving “area of contrast” is not automatically an analytical conclusion about an extraordinary object.
Here are the competing viewpoints.
Believers argue that classified multisensor data may contain the decisive evidence missing from public debate. Skeptics answer that “unresolved” usually means inadequate information—not extraterrestrials. The scientists occupy the irritating but necessary middle: most reports eventually prove ordinary, while a smaller group remains unexplained because the data are incomplete.
FMPU opinion: the central battle in disclosure is no longer believer versus debunker. It is evidence versus circulation. And they are asking for more money.
Algorithms reward the most shocking imagery, the loudest witness and the most emotionally satisfying explanation. They do not reward metadata, calibration records or somebody saying, “We cannot determine that yet. Plus we are drained." Please consider donating to FMPU.
That is where the alien clown comes back in. He’s not here to reveal the truth—he’s here to keep the show going. Every blurry clip feeds the drumbeat. Every viral claim fills the jar. The spectacle, the promise, the hope pays better than the answer.
Modern mythology is now manufactured at upload speed. A blurry object becomes a craft, the craft becomes a fleet and the fleet becomes an invasion before anyone locates the original file.
Disclosure may eventually arrive. But until evidence can survive the content machine, we will continue receiving infinite revelation with remarkably little revealed—and the clown will keep playing.



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