U.S. official says Pentagon committed to understanding UFO origins

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Manhattan-sized comet 3I/ATLAS allegedly executed an unusual maneuver while approaching the Sun earlier this week, fueling theories that it could be an extraterrestrial spacecraft.

In a recent blog post, Harvard scientist Avi Loeb cited a report from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which he claimed provided the “first evidence” of a “non-gravitational acceleration” by the celestial body.

It reportedly displayed said behavior while approaching its closet point to our solar star in a phenomenon known as a perihelion.

ATLAS had reportedly been growing much brighter — and bluer — than typical as it reached perihelion.

Harvard scientist accuses NASA of ‘hiding’ critical evidence about Manhattan-sized comet 3I/ATLAS

This stands in stark contrast to most comets, which turn red during their solar visits because their surface is so cold that they absorb blue light and bounce back mostly red light — much like how cold metal glows red when heated.

Loeb speculated that the blue hue “could be a signature of ionized carbon monoxide or a hot engine,” although he noted that it could also be an indication that 3I/ATLAS is burning off a large amount of ice during its approach, the Daily Mail reported.

“The non-gravitational acceleration could be a result of cometary evaporation or technological propulsion,” the professor told the outlet.

Loeb has called these latest readings the ninth anomaly showcased by 3I/ATLAS, which is the third known interstellar object to enter our solar system.

Other characteristics that seem to defy comet behavior include an anti-tail — a jet of particles that points toward the Sun instead of away from it as is typical — and the fact that the entity was flying suspiciously close to Jupiter, Venus and Mars.

According to Loeb, this seemed to suggest that ATLAS could be a potentially hostile alien probe that was sent to conduct reconnaissance on Earth😳…or not.
 

Ron in Regina

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Whom do we hate more here? The government or Harvard?
Why would we have to hate either (?) or one more than the other? Anyway, lots of weird coincidences (or not) with this comet that’s from outside of our solar system, so potentially so weird and different but it’s a big learning curve for comet behaviour compared to solar comets (or not).

It’ll be interesting when this thing pops out back into our line of site (I believe about December 19th, two days before the winter solstice, but that’s neither here or there), to see what it has done, trajectory and speed wise while we haven’t been able to observe it.

Will its behaviour confirm the theories of Loeb (?) or will it just travel on remaining a large question mark in our understanding of interstellar travellers through our solar system?
 

spaminator

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Extensive UFO collection lands in Vancouver to be auctioned off
Jeff Schwarz will be auctioning off a large UFO collection from a California film producer. Here's what's included.

Author of the article:John Mackie
Published Nov 16, 2025 • Last updated 14 hours ago • 4 minute read

Mike McCune with a 1947 Roswell Air Force base yearbook. The yearbook is from the year an alien spaceship UFO enthusiasts believe crashed near Roswell. It is among the UFO memorabilia that will be auctioned by Direct Liquidation in Vancouver.
Mike McCune with a 1947 Roswell Air Force base yearbook. The yearbook is from the year an alien spaceship UFO enthusiasts believe crashed near Roswell. It is among the UFO memorabilia that will be auctioned by Direct Liquidation in Vancouver. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
If the truth is out there about UFOs, it’s probably at Jeff Schwarz’s Direct Liquidation warehouse in East Vancouver.


Schwarz is auctioning off the extensive collection of Chris Wyatt, a Californian who produced documentaries such as “UFOs: Above and Beyond” in 1997 and “Close Encounters: Proof of Alien Contact” in 2000.


There are filmed interviews for documentaries, a binder full of UFO photos from around the world, and all sorts of photocopies of documents from U.S. government bodies such as the FBI and the National Security Agency about unidentified flying objects.

The highlight of the collection is a 1947 yearbook for Roswell Air Force Base in New Mexico, where the remains of a UFO and its alien crew were allegedly taken after it crashed nearby.

“It’s extremely historically important,” said Wyatt over the phone from southern California.


Why? Because the yearbook shows everyone who was at the base at the time of the UFO incident — and Wyatt said the air force rounded up copies and destroyed them.

Wyatt said he went to Roswell in 1997 as a guest of former U.S. government physicist Bob Lazar and film director Roland Emmerich, who had made the blockbuster UFO film “Independence Day.”

Wyatt had a late-night rendezvous with several military officers who were in Roswell at the time of the alleged UFO incident.

“One of the gentlemen was on his deathbed,” he recounts. “He pulled me aside and said, ‘Listen, when the crash happened, one of the first things they did at Roswell Air Force Base was to confiscate all the yearbooks.

“They were afraid that if the press got ahold of them, they would find out (the truth). The military officers would be hounded by the press. They didn’t want the media to know who was there, and they wanted to cover it up.”


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A page from the 1947 Roswell Air Force base yearbook. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
But the man kept a duplicate copy he had received.

“The gentleman kept it for a number of years and gave it to me. He said, ‘Listen, you’re the guy to take this public.’”

It’s not like a regular high school yearbook — near the front is a full-page photo of a nuclear detonation and the resulting mushroom crowd. Underneath are the words “A Bombs Away.”

There appears to be another copy of the yearbook at the Walker Aviation Museum in Roswell. But to people who believe in the Roswell UFO story, Wyatt’s copy is gold.

So is a binder full of photos collected by Lt.-Col. Wendelle Stevens, an air force officer who dedicated his life to studying UFOs after he retired.

The photos are largely snapshots from the public. There is even a photo of a cylindrical UFO flying in the sky around Vancouver on Oct. 17, 1992. It’s identified as being taken by “anon(ymous) teens.”


Looking through the collection is like taking a crash course in UFO-ology. There are dozens of books and magazines about UFOs, from a 1950 paperback called “The Flying Saucers Are Real” by Donald Keyhoe to the 1998 book “The Aliens and the Scalpel: Scientific Proof of Extraterrestrial Implants in Humans” by Dr. Roger K. Leir.

There are interviews with and books by physicist Bob Lazar, who said he worked at a secret U.S. government site that UFO enthusiasts call Area 51.

Lazar claims his job was to “reverse engineer” UFO technology. The collection includes a screenplay for “The Bob Lazar Story”, a proposed movie.

Non-believers dismiss Lazar as a conspiracy theorist, though. By selling the collection, Schwarz may be accused of the same thing, but it doesn’t bother him.


“I think people are going to think I’m completely crazy,” said Schwarz, known for the reality TV series The Liquidator. “(But) it needs to be seen. And once people see it, they’re going to understand it.”

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A selection of original videotape interviews are among UFO memorabilia to be sold by Direct Liquidation. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
How did it wind up in Vancouver? Schwarz’s associate Mike McCune knew Wyatt and thought Direct Liquidation would be a good place to handle the auction, because the company sells almost anything.

At a recent auction of Olympic memorabilia, for example, Schwarz sold a local collection of over 30 Olympic torches, some from Vancouver, others from places such as Salt Lake City and Los Angeles. Some brought $300, others up to $1,500.

Schwarz and McCune are still dividing all the UFO material into lots, but hope to have the sale in a month or two.

But who will buy it?

“One of the things that they specialize in is Hollywood auctions,” says Wyatt. “So they have a large database (of potential buyers). There’s going to be enthusiasts, people wanting to round out their classic UFO magazines or archives.”

If you believe in UFOs, or government conspiracies, it does seem to be the kind of collection the government doesn’t want you to have.

Asked if he has ever had a visit from government officials, Wyatt replies, “Multiple times. But that’s not something I’m talking about in the press.”

jmackie@postmedia.com

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A rare 1947 Roswell Air Force base yearbook is among a UFO collection being auctioned off in Vancouver. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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Two pages from inside the 1947 Roswell yearbook. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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One of the photos from a binder of UFO pix collected by Lt.-Col. Wendelle Stevens. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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More of the photos from a binder of UFO pix collected by Lt.-Col. Wendelle Stevens, including a 1992 Vancouver photo at bottom. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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The collection includes many vintage UFO books and magazines. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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The Wyatt collection includes many photocopies of UFO documents from U.S. government agencies. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
30,508
11,211
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Now, curious viewers will soon be able to tune in to witness detailed telescopic views of this interstellar object moving away from the Sun.

Beginning tonight at 11:15 p.m. ET, the Virtual Telescope Project’s YouTube livestream will feature a real-time view of the massive comet that will be above the eastern horizon, travelling through the stars of the constellation Virgo, according to Space.com.