Unless you have been hiding under a rock, you have no doubt noticed that news media have been filled with gushing, uncritical articles proclaiming the glorious new reality of UFOs. On the right, we have Tucker Carlson on Fox News and the New York Post; on the left, we have the Washington Post and The New York Times, joined by many others of all stripes. I have written in detail about the New Yorker’s absurdly credulous UFO story by Gideon Lewis-Kraus on April 30, with its hagiography of UFO and ghost promoter Leslie Kean.
What they all have in common is a congenital lack of journalistic skepticism or curiosity as well as a lust for sensationalism and ratings. Golly gee whiz, Mr. Elizondo, I saw you on 60 Minutes saying that UFOs really are real! Tell me more! (Do you have any proof of what you are saying, Mr. Elizondo? Oh, never mind.)
Finally, after a little while, a few publications dared to depart from the default path of journalistic laziness. Jason Colavito, whose blog contains a wealth of useful information and analysis, wrote in The New Republic (May 21):
But the real story isn’t disclosure, and it’s stranger than any UFO sighting. Behind the creamy pages of high-end magazines and the marble columns of the Capitol, the media elite and Congress are being played by a small, loosely connected group of people with bizarre ideas about science. It’s easy to dismiss UFOs as a fantasy or a fad, but the money, the connections, and the power wielded by a group of UFO believers—embedded in the defense industry and bent on supplanting material science with a pseudoscientific mysticism straight from the History Channel’s Ancient Aliens—poses a danger to America more real than a flying saucer. (emphasis added)
Colavito reviewed in some detail the decades-long history of the UFO controversy and the role of certain people, whom he calls the invisible college (using J. Allen Hynek and Jacques Vallee’s term), who promote and investigate weird things. He tells us about the mystical beliefs shared by Hynek and Vallee (both found value in Rosicrucianism). There is Hal Puthoff and Russ Targ, believers in the magic powers of Uri Geller. There’s investor Robert Bigelow, fabulist Bob Lazar, NIDS, and many others. Using rather colorful language (which I think is appropriate here, though others disagree), Colavito writes:
NIDS primarily researched—and failed to prove—the supposed paranormal mysteries of a patch of desert in Utah called Skinwalker Ranch. Puthoff and the NIDS team believed it to be a supernatural gateway to the space ghost dimension. (The ranch is now the set of a paranormal reality TV program.) Remarkably, they managed to convince a visiting Defense Intelligence Agency scientist, and the DIA partnered with Bigelow to investigate space ghosts. … The only public accounting of the program’s research was a list of its theoretical papers on stargates, wormholes, and other sci-fi topics that “invisible college” members like Puthoff obsessed over, as well as a proprietary 494-page 2009 “ten-month report” from Bigelow’s team in which Puthoff, Vallée, and others wrote about UFOs, “interdimensional phenomena” at Skinwalker Ranch, and alleged technology aliens implanted in a UFO abductee. Pentagon officials quickly concluded that releasing such an absurd report “would be a disaster,” as one unnamed official told The New Yorker. Eventually, Team Space Ghost developed a bizarre mythology, imagining that an organized cabal in the Pentagon actively suppressed UFO work because it feared UFOs were demons and that researching them might provoke Satan.
In conclusion, Colavito argued:
We shouldn’t let enthusiasts of space ghosts have the run of Washington to steer money and policy in the direction they want. If they insist UFOs are a national security threat, then the national media must take them at their word. No more chuckles. No more rhapsodies about mystery. We must hold Team Space Poltergeist to the levels of skepticism, seriousness, and scrutiny it pretends to demand. Quite literally, the future depends on it.
This is similar to the concluding summary I wrote at the end of my three-part article on the recent credulous New Yorker story (see previous article) minus the term Space Ghosts. This story is all being driven by a few well-connected UFO enthusiasts.
The Pentagon’s AATIP program came into existence not because “the Pentagon” or “the Navy” was concerned about UFOs (or “UAPs”, as they prefer). It happened because of Robert Bigelow and Senator Harry Reid (D-NV, who was then the Majority Leader in the U.S. Senate). Reid arranged a “sweetheart” $22 million government contract for his major campaign contributor Robert Bigelow. Leslie Kean found out about it, and co-authored several articles about Pentagon UFOs in the New York Times. The rest, as they say, is History. Drunk History, actually.
Over in the National Review, Andrew Follett wrote on May 21, “Calm Down, Everyone: The ‘UFOs’ Aren’t Aliens … The videos disclosed so far all have obvious potential terrestrial explanations.”
What much of the recent news coverage fails to mention is that “Unidentified Flying Object” does not mean either “alien spacecraft” or even “extremely advanced drone.” And the videos disclosed so far all have obvious potential terrestrial explanations. … Carlson’s coverage of the “GoFast” video expressly claims it shows “technologies that are far beyond our current understanding of aerodynamics” and reveals “things that are maneuvering in ways that no aircraft that we are currently aware of have the capability to.” He adds that the UFOs “have no flight surfaces, no wing or anything approaching a wing … and no propulsion, so infrared doesn’t pick up any jet trail or rocket exhaust.” The video shows a small object apparently moving low across the water. However, the UFO was almost certainly a seabird or balloon distorted by parallax. Parallax is an effect that makes an object close to an observer, but filmed against a more distant background, seem to speed up as the camera moves. Data from the Navy camera clearly indicates the unidentified object had a wingspan of about four to seven feet in diameter, roughly the wingspan of a Canadian Goose, and flew at an altitude of 8,000 feet, well below the 29,000 feet maximum altitude of the bird. Alternatively, the Department of Defense description of the object expressly mentions a balloon (perhaps a weather balloon) as a possible explanation in the paperwork that accompanied the release of the video. If it flies like a duck, is the size of a duck, and quacks like a duck … it probably isn’t an alien spaceship or ultra-advanced drone from a foreign power. But headlines such as “U.S. Navy Pilot Spots UFO” generate more clicks than “Pilot Sees Goose on Infrared Camera.”
On CNN, Chris Cuomo, after taking an irrelevant swipe at former president Donald Trump, got down to interviewing Mick West about the Pentagon UFO videos. West explained the arguments against the GoFast, the Gimbal, and the Triangle UFO videos. Afterward, when an internet UFO fan boy insisted “He debunked nothing. All these cases are still unexplained. Explaining bits of the videos is not equal to identifying what was filmed,” West replied, “What I debunked was specific claims people were making about the videos—like GoFast going fast, Triangle being a triangle, and Gimbal being a flying saucer (and not a glare + gimbal lock artifact).”
Which is exactly correct. If the object in the “Go Fast” video does not actually “go fast,” and if the objects in the “Triangle UFO” video are not in fact triangular, then why should we care about these videos at all?—except as a demonstration of the spectacular incompetence of the Pentagon’s “UAP task force.”
On May 13, 2021, on substack.com, Keith Kloor summed up the best explanation for what is happening: “Why UFOs Will Never, Ever Go Away. Hint: It’s Not Because of Hollywood, the History Channel or Sci-Fi Shows.” He writes:
As I have written elsewhere, it’s “the news media that keeps the specter of extraterrestrials alight in our skies and minds.” Yes, Hollywood movies like Independence Day and Men in Black tap into an ingrained pop culture motif, but it’s because of bad journalism that UFOs truly never, ever go away. (emphasis added)
This article originally appeared on Robert Sheaffer’s blog at BadUFOs.com.