The truth is out there.
And possibly literally right here in the Ohio, as Cincinnati is once again home to nonprofit UFO investigation organization Mutual UFO Network, or MUFON.Launched in 1969, MUFON has three goals, which its more than 600 trained
investigators and 4,200 members across the world enact:
- Investigate UFO sightings and collect the data in the MUFON Database for use by researchers worldwide.
- Promote research on UFOs to discover the true nature of the phenomenon, with an eye towards scientific breakthroughs, and improving life on our planet.
- Educate the public on the UFO phenomenon and its potential impact on society.
Although the organization has moved several times since its founding,
it left Cincinnati in 2012 to relocate to Irvine, California. Now, its
board of directors has declared MUFON is permanently returning to the
Queen City, setting up headquarters near Lunken Airport.
Historically, MUFON has moved to wherever its executive director is
located; current executive director David MacDonald is based out of
Cincinnati. (MacDonald also previously served as director, hence MUFON's
former stint in the city.)
"Cincinnati is within a six-hour drive to 80% of the nation. It is
also highly valued due to its many advantages to business," MacDonald
tells Scene. "Cincinnati is remarkably less expensive to live in as well
as do business in than Southern California. One of Cincinnati’s largest
corporate headquarters once said, 'We have two problems to being in
Cincinnati — one is to get people to move here, the second is getting
them to leave.'”
But besides the logistics, MacDonald says making the move to
Cincinnati permanent is valuable because the area has a special
connection to UFOs.
"Wright Patterson is 45 minutes away," he says. "There are quite a few
sightings in the Tri-State area, and it was the home of one of the most
famous UFO pioneers in the world, Len Stringfield."
MUFON is "actively recruiting" more UFO hunters and has a spot on its website where the public can report UFO sightings.
But to be a field investigator takes more than mild curiosity.
MacDonald says investigators are "the foundation of MUFON." Ideal
candidates are stable, dependable and objective with hours of volunteer
time available and have "an above-average interest in the UFO
phenomenon."
Each candidate has to pass a background check, attend MUFON University
training online and take an exam before becoming an official trainee.
After that, the trainee must shadow a professional investigator before
they're allowed out in the field alone.
The end goal is to "collect accurate data for entry into the MUFON
CMS, which will then be used in MUFON research," says MacDonald.
"This is one of the most exciting times for MUFON. For 52 years, we've
searched for the truth about UFOs and now it is breaking," he says.
"Around 2018, the now-famous 'Tic Tac' videos
were released. Recently, the United States government is being directed
to release their classified information where it has been confirmed
that a UFO (not a missile) flew over a commercial airliner near White Sands. An Israeli professor who was a high-ranking intelligence officer, publicly disclosed that UFOs are not only real,
but they are here. But the blockbuster came a few weeks ago when the
Pentagon acknowledged that they do in fact have crash debris from UFOs."
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