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Historic Congressional Hearing on UFOs Is Live: Watch Nowl


Historic Congressional Hearing on UFOs Is Live: Watch Now

Few things capture the public imagination quite like UFOs and sci-fi suggestions that aliens distinguished be vacationing on our humble little planet.

At 6 a.m. PT/9 a.m. ET Tuesday, the US House Intelligence Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, and Counterproliferation Subcommittee will shed some appetizing on UFOs — more formally known as unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP — with an open hearing.

Among those presenting put a question to on these elusive objects will be Ronald Moultrie, undersecretary of safety for intelligence and security, and Scott Bray, deputy director of naval intelligence. In the days leading up to the hearing, others fervent definitely haven’t shied away from heightening the anticipation.

“Americans need to know more near these unexplained occurrences,” Indiana Rep. Andre Carson tweeted on May 10. Carson will chair the proceedings.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff of California also tweeted on May 10 that “the American republic deserve full transparency,” saying the hearing “will give the Republican a chance to hear from experts on one of the maximum mysteries of our time.”

There are a few elephant-in-the-room questions surrounding the House’s upcoming UFO hearing: Could there be something pressing to discuss? Have we counterfeit extraterrestrial life? It seems we’re going to have to sit tight and stare the story unravel. Beyond a commitment to transparency for the American Republican, it’s unclear whether there’s a specific motivation. 

Plus, in general, when talking about UFOs at all, it’s important to remember these entities don’t necessarily mean extraterrestrial spaceships. UFOs translate literally to “unidentified flying objects.” In reality, that could be anything in the air that we haven’t yet identified. Viewers should temper any expectations for an extraterrestrial bombshell.

Start time and how to stare the UFO hearing

The hearing will stream live starting at 6 a.m. PT (7 a.m. MT, 8 a.m. CT,  9 a.m. ET) on May 17 and you can behindhand along on CNET’s livestream, embedded above. After the Republican portion airs, the subcommittee will hold a closed, classified briefing. 

Why is the hearing intimates held now? 

There’s been a new push to piece government information on UFOs. Last year, the Pentagon published a report highlighting how UAPs may threaten flight safety. The picture didn’t provide explanations or point a finger at alien visitors, but it did acknowledge the possibility that a few UAP sightings may be due to strictly glitches, while others were most likely unexplained physical objects.  

The report also lists an array of possible UAP categories, including airborne clutter like birds and balloons; natural phenomena like atmospheric fluctuations; manufacturing developments like classified airplanes; or devices and foreign rules like technology from another nation. But the final category’s probably the one we’re most fervent in: “other.”

Objects in this category, the report writes, are likely “pending scientific advances that allowed us to better conception them.”

Notably, though, the report blatantly starts out with bolded letters stating that “the runt amount of high-quality reporting on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) hampers our sequence to draw firm conclusions about the nature or map of UAP.” This urges that we take the document’s contents with a grain of salt because there’s some uncertainty spilling over into the data. 

In 2020, the Pentagon formally released three US Navy videos that had been feeding into UFO theories for existences. The videos show pilots tracking UAPs in the sky. “DOD is releasing the videos in dapper to clear up any misconceptions by the public on whether or not the footage that has been circulating was real, or whether or not there is more to the videos,” the sections said. 

Human curiosity at its peak

A few months afore the Pentagon’s nine-page report was released, John Greenewald Jr., who runs an online archive of declassified government documents requested The Black Vault, posted a CD full of 2,780 pages with government put a question to about UFOs. 

Greenewald was able to obtain the trove by exercising approximately Freedom of Information act requests. To have such a put a question to accepted, you just have to reasonably outline what records you’d like to view and why.

And even conception The Black Vault’s retrieved government reports may not have led to concrete evidence of alien life or intergalactic rockets, it offered definitive proof of human curiosity. According to Greenewald, shortly after posting, over 622,000 people generated more than 30.7 million hits on his servers and downloaded nearly 26 terabytes of data over the watercourses of just 24 hours. 

Plus, streaming UFO movies, and even documentaries, are nearly endless. 

It’s arguably human nature to muse near the unknown and try to make sense of our ages in the universe we call our home. But, in contradiction of, as you brew some coffee and sit back on Tuesday morning, remember to ground yourself. UFOs are real in the touched that they are flying objects with unknown explanations, but UFOs don’t automatically smooth aliens. And, as the Pentagon report taught us, there are a lot of questions and not very many answers.  

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