Current:Home > MarketsWorld UFO Day 2024: What it is and how UFOs became mainstream in America-InfoLens
World UFO Day 2024: What it is and how UFOs became mainstream in America
View Date:2025-01-09 22:10:39
July 2 is World UFO Day, a day where "the UFO community comes together to celebrate their beliefs," according to WorldUFODay.com.
The website encourages people to join in on the celebration by watching UFO movies or engaging in conversations with friends about UFOs and alien life. Additionally, the website tells readers to "open your mind, embrace a different perspective and explore the wonders of the UFO phenomenon."
In August of 2023, the Pentagon's office to investigate UFOs revealed a new website where the public can access declassified information about reported sightings. The site will be operated by the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO,) a relatively new Pentagon program established to analyze reports of what the government officially refers to as unidentified anomalous (or aerial) phenomena.
The Department of Defense announced the website in a press release, hailing it as a "one-stop shop" for photos and video of UAP approved for public release.
How UFOs became mainstream in America:From conspiracy theories to congressional hearings
How UFOs have recently become mainstream in America
In 2017, veteran New York Times staff reporter Ralph Blumenthal connected with investigative journalist Leslie Kean, who had come across an extraordinary tip.
Kean, who has long reported on UFOs, was able to attend a confidential meeting that October where she learned of a top-secret Pentagon program that had for years operated in the shadows. Its mission? To investigate reported sighting of mysterious objects in the skies.
The discovery was monumental, not least because it directly undermined the government's public position of more than 50 years that unidentified flying objects were not worth studying.
Naturally, Blumenthal was intrigued.
“The government always took the position that there’s nothing to this, that these are all hoaxes or hallucinations, but nothing real," Blumenthal previously told USA TODAY in a phone interview. “This was a pretty good story, I thought – a great story.”
Blumenthal's hunch was right.
Published two months later, the now-famous article uncovering the top secret program headlined "Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’" marked a turning point in the ever-evolving public discourse surrounding UFOs.
Reported UFO sightings have long attracted as many skeptics as they do fanatics. But for those with doubts, there it was in black and white on the front page of one of the nation's preeminent newspapers: The Pentagon had for years thought that reports of craft flying in strange ways were so serious as to merit millions of dollars in funding to study.
What the Times' reporters exposed spread like wildfire, helping to set in motion a series of additional revelations, government hearings and even UFO documentaries that recently culminated in July in some jaw-dropping testimony before Congress about a spaceship crash retrieval program.
'Long overdue':Witnesses call for increased military transparency on UFOs during hearing
Intelligence officials go public
The notion that the U.S. government not only has knowledge of extraterrestrials but has directly encountered them, long confined to the realm of conspiracy theory, is now a matter of congressional public record.
Three former military members, Ryan Graves, Rt. Commander David Fravor and David Grusch, all of whom have previously spoken publicly about their firsthand knowledge of reported encounters with strange and mysterious flying objects, appeared before Congress in July 2023 for a hearing on the national security threats such phenomena could pose.
Their testimony before the U.S. House came at a time of mounting bipartisan pressure on the executive branch of government and the military to release more information about so-called unidentified anomalous phenomena, more commonly referred to as unidentified flying objects.
Across more than two hours of testimony, the three witnesses also provided accounts before the House Oversight Committee's national security subcommittee of their understanding for how the federal government has handled or suppressed reports of strange encounters documented by pilots.
For years, reports and videos have surfaced documenting sightings of craft moving in ways beyond the capabilities of any known human technology. During the hearing last July, the witnesses went so far to suggest that the phenomena observed could be indicative of technology so advanced that it would take decades for humanity to equal it.
"The American people deserve to know what is happening in our skies," Graves said in prepared remarks during the hearing. "It is long overdue."
Recommended documentaries for World UFO Day
WorldUFODay.com lists a "small collection of top rated alien and UFO documentaries" for people to watch on World UFO Day.
The list includes the James Fox-directed "Out of the Blue," as well as a BBC documentary that follows actor and presenter Danny Dyer as he investigates the possibilities of UFOs being a real phenomena.
For the full list of documentaries, you can visit WorldUFODay.com.
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @EricLagatta.
Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at [email protected].
veryGood! (24623)
Related
- Princess Kate to host annual Christmas carol service following cancer treatment
- 2024 NWSL schedule includes expanded playoffs, break for Paris Olympics
- Israel urges Gaza civilians to flee to ‘safe zone,’ where arrivals find little but muddy roads
- Recording Academy, ex CEO Mike Greene sued for sexual assault of former employee Terri McIntyre
- Jennifer Hudson, Kylie Minogue and Billy Porter to perform at Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade
- Pantone reveals Peach Fuzz as its 2024 Color of the Year
- How Selena Gomez Found Rare Beauty Fans in Steve Martin and Martin Short
- Investment banks to put $10 billion into projects aimed at interconnecting South America
- Sister Wives’ Meri Brown Shares Hysterical Farmers Only Dating Profile Video After Kody Split
- Houston has a population that’s young. Its next mayor, set to be elected in a runoff, won’t be
Ranking
- New wildfires burn in US Northeast while bigger blazes rage out West
- Six Palestinians are killed in the Israeli military’s latest West Bank raid, health officials say
- Palestinians crowd into ever-shrinking areas in Gaza as Israel’s war against Hamas enters 3rd month
- Best movies of 2023: ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Fallen Leaves,’ ‘May December’
- John Krasinski Details Moment He Knew Wife Emily Blunt Was “the One”
- Six French teens await a verdict over their alleged roles in Islamic extremist killing of a teacher
- Ex-Philadelphia labor leader convicted of embezzling from union to pay for home renovations, meals
- AP Week in Pictures: Europe and Africa
Recommendation
-
In an AP interview, the next Los Angeles DA says he’ll go after low-level nonviolent crimes
-
McDonald's is opening a new chain called CosMc's. Here are the locations and menu.
-
'He never made it': Search continues for Iowa truck driver who went missing hauling pigs
-
The Bachelor's Joey Graziadei Breaks Down in Tears During Dramatic Teaser
-
A Pipeline Runs Through It
-
CosMc's lands in Illinois, as McDonald's tests its new coffee-centered concept
-
Songwriter Tiffany Red pens letter to Diddy, backing Cassie's abuse allegations: 'I fear for my safety'
-
Palestinians crowd into ever-shrinking areas in Gaza as Israel’s war against Hamas enters 3rd month