Creative Speculation
Related: About this forumMost convincing ufo encounters?
To me, it would be..
1. Rendlesham incident
2. Battle over Los Angeles
3. Roswell (of course)
zappaman
(20,617 posts)clarice
(5,504 posts)William Seger
(11,047 posts)1. The Abyss
2. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
3. Communion
clarice
(5,504 posts)I was referring not to movies, but to actual authenticated UFO incidents.
Sorry for the confusion. C
William Seger
(11,047 posts)... I thought those movies qualified as documentaries on this board.
clarice
(5,504 posts)fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Rendlesham is especially convincing since England released all its files. I've seen the head of the Base, all top officers, etc., go to the site, all giving their names and telling what they saw. They didn't show this much about it before..History2 has a lot of new stuff.
clarice
(5,504 posts)In listening to the enlisted men/officers, I tend to give them a
+ in the credibility dept. Denver and DC are good examples. Also,
have you ever seen the one photograph of the "Battle over Los Angeles?"
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)But the DC one I saw in the papers the day after it happened. I was 13 or so, and was very absorbed in ufos. I saw the original statement made by the CO about the Roswell crash that the craft was of something not earthly, and it was retracted the next day. I saw the original newspapers that they now show on tv all the time.
I remember Mantel, some people who were abducted, all kinds of stuff. The Denver one - I was in MIRC in the "ufo" or something chat-room in '95 or '96, and a fellow there posted that his parents lived in Denver and were watching a gigantic thing pass slowly over their house and they were so excited. The next day it was all over the news and tv..
Was at the doctor's on Monday, and to be there I had to leave home and a UFO program on History2, and since they have a tv in the waiting room, and everyone was staring into space trying to avoid some Fox program, I said that the secretary should put on History2 because it was more interesting. Pointed out that I am not a real believer, but enjoy following the coverage. Then, the other 3 people waiting spoke up. One had a brother who was a cop and had seen them in the sky from a rooftop, another had seen one, and a lady who didn't look like the ufo type (whatever that is) spoke up and said that she earnestly believes the ufo stories.
I had to leave, so I don't know whether they changed the tv or not. People won't speak up because they are afraid of being laughed at.
clarice
(5,504 posts)Did you ever read anything about the JFK assassination and his request
to have all UFO files released? Far fetched but not as crazy as SOME theories.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)on this planet, are often damn fools. Perhaps it's because those that often spout the most negatively really know little and that is their defense mechanism for their stunning lack of knowledge. If one is exposed to much high energy physics, for example, it's difficult to walk away and say we know it all. We haven't even scratched the surface. And other life forms could be a few billion years beyond us ... we are the only inhabitants of the universe. That, is so preposterous.
truebrit71
(20,805 posts)....possibly two....
One in the UK and one in the US...the one in the UK freaked me out the most...
frogmarch
(12,226 posts)Excerpt:
Science writer Ian Ridpath investigated the incident in 1983, initially for BBC TV's Breakfast Time news programme,[41] and on 5 January 1985 wrote an article for the Guardian which did much to discredit the accounts of the UFO sightings at Rendlesham.[42] Ridpath asked local forester Vince Thurkettle about the flashing light, and he indicated that it originated from the lighthouse at Orford Ness, which as seen from the forest edge appears to hover slightly above the ground and would appear to move as the witnesses moved between the trees. At that time, the Orford Ness lighthouse was the second-brightest in Britain with an intensity of 5 million candelas.[43] In the Halt tape (mentioned above), one can hear an unidentified airman call out "There it is again ... there it is" with an interval of 5 seconds, the same frequency at which the Orford Ness lighthouse flashes.[16] Had a UFO been present, the airmen should have reported a second source of light (the lighthouse) in the same line of sight. Video footage of the lighthouse as seen from Colonel Halt's vantage point at the edge of the forest shows it flashing at this rate.[44]
Thurkettle saw the alleged "landing marks", as did the local police, and believed them simply to be old "rabbit diggings" covered with pine needles.[45] USAF photographs of the marks discovered by researcher Georgina Bruni were sent to the MoD by Lord Hill-Norton in 2001 and released under the Freedom of Information Act in 2007.[46] Moreover, the supposed burn marks in the trees were actually axe cuts made by foresters that indicated the trees were ready to be felled. To give further pause to accepting the alleged UFO sighting, a meteor "almost as bright as the full Moon" was spotted over Southern England at exactly the time of the initial reports of a bright object "landing" in the forest, according to Dr John Mason, who collects reports of meteor sightings for the British Astronomical Association. "Nothing came down in Rendlesham Forest," concludes Ridpath.[47]
Crucial amongst the evidence is the interpretation of the levels of radiation in the area (clearly heard on the "Halt tape" . Experts at the UKs National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB) have pointed out that the equipment used for this measurement was not intended to measure background radiation and therefore the readings at the low end of the measurement scale are meaningless.[13][14]
People who want with all their hearts for it to be true that ETs are visiting Earth are going to keep on believing it is true, regardless. The Rendlesham Forest incident is just one of many supposed UFO incidents (including Roswell and The Battle Over LA) that have been debunked but wont go away.
clarice
(5,504 posts)Ghost in the Machine
(14,912 posts)The FAA stance concludes that the sighting was caused by a weather phenomenon and that the agency would not be investigating the incident. UFO investigators have pointed out that this stance is a direct contradiction to the FAA's mandate to investigate possible security breaches at American airports such as in this case; an object witnessed by numerous airport employees and officially reported by at least one of them, hovering in plain sight, over one of the busiest airports in the world.[5][6] Many witnesses interviewed by the Tribune were apparently "upset" that federal officials declined to further investigate the matter.[7]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_O'Hare_International_Airport_UFO_sighting
Just more "weather phenomenon folks, nothing to see here!"
Peace,
Ghost
clarice
(5,504 posts)shanemcg
(80 posts)MO_Moderate
(377 posts)aint_no_life_nowhere
(21,925 posts)A military helicopter piloted by Col. Coyne in 1973 was supposedly nearly struck by a flying object heading towards him at a great velocity. He put the helicopter into a dive but then said the interior of the copter was bathed in a green light and the helicopter was lifted thousands of feet into the sky by this object. The incident was corroborated by all four Army crew members. The incident was also seen from the ground by a family of five in their car from the ground, two of whom were later interviewed. I remember seeing Col. Coyne on the Dick Cavett show in the early 70s. I think I had been smoking weed at the time and wasn't sure whether I'd dreamed the TV interview all these years. I found a short description on youtube. Wish I could find the full interview from the Cavett show as it was pretty strange. What struck me was the credibility of four U.S. Army helicopter crew members (they also appeared on Cavett) including a U.S.Army Lieutenant Colonel.
ZX86
(1,428 posts)I would say:
1. Phoenix Lights 1997
2. Stephenville, Texas 2008
Multiple unrelated witnesses from different locations reporting the same phenomena.