Statistiche

Saturday, June 19, 2021

UFOs: The federal government thinks they might be real, and they’ve visited the Lehigh Valley before

 Pennsylvania Map Immagini e Fotos Stock - Alamy

All the talk lately is of UFOs, so it’s heartening to learn that Pennsylvania is one of the hotspots of that unnerving phenomenon. 

 

Butch Witkowski, a UFO investigator in Berks County, goes so far as to call his home state “just weird,” which in context is far more complimentary than it sounds.

“I’ve been at this over 30 years, and Pennsylvania has demonstrated some of the weirdest things I’ve ever encountered,” Witkowski said, speaking not only of unidentified flying objects but strange, forest-dwelling earthbound creatures — cryptids, in the parlance of his profession — that haunt the imagination.

         ALIENI – LE MUTILAZIONI UMANE

The Lehigh Valley can boast plenty of sightings over the years, including an encounter between a pilot and a UFO in 1952 (more on that later) and lots of mystery lights that defy assumptions about aerodynamics. And while 2021 has been quiet here so far, sighting databases offer some tantalizing descriptions of incidents not far afield

A forthcoming federal intelligence agency report on UFOs — a phenomenon that dates to the post-World War II era in its modern incarnation, but really stretches back to antiquity — is expected to say the unidentifiable objects spied by pilots and caught on radar and witnessed by regular folks over the years are of unknown origin. They could be human technology, but they could be non-human technology, too, which is the more unlikely but far more thrilling conclusion.

Most sightings, of course, are explainable as natural phenomena — meteors, aircraft, weather balloons, oddball cloud formations. Witkowski, who lives in Centre Township outside Reading and is founder and director of the UFO Research Center of Pennsylvania, has looked into plenty of those.

Many sightings, though, are far harder to pin on Mother Nature or Delta Airlines. Witkowski’s files include an incident in Macungie six or seven years ago, when a man reached out to the center to report a bizarre light show that began with a bright white ball moving erratically in the sky over his housing development.

“The thing climbs up in the sky and disappears,” Witkowski said. “A few minutes later it starts to descend. It turns bright, cherry red and goes behind the tree line. After a few minutes a red ball comes up, splits into five pieces that go up, zig-zag and disappear.”

What made it an especially good sighting is that the resident wasn’t the only one to see it. Witkowski collected identical reports from seven neighbors in the development.

The most famous Pennsylvania sighting is the 1965 Kecksburg incident. People across six states and Canada saw a fireball streak across the sky before crashing into woods in Mount Pleasant Township, Westmoreland County. The area was sealed off for investigation by state and federal agents, giving rise to speculation that the fireball was a crashed alien craft. More likely it was a meteor or satellite, but legends die hard.

From UFO to UAP

The Pentagon has a different name for UFOs. They are called UAPs, for Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon. And it’s increasingly clear the government has taken them more and more seriously over the years. Assuming they aren’t of alien origin, UAPs could represent extraordinary technological leaps by a foreign adversary. Either way, they pose a national security concern.

The best sighting in the Valley — not only because of the level of detail but the solid credentials of the witness — is recounted in surprisingly vivid government prose:

7:40 p.m. Sept. 13, 1952, Allentown: Witness, a civilian pilot who was an inactive Air Force Reserve captain, sighted a flaming orange-red, football-shaped object traveling on a collision course with his light aircraft. The object pulled up and shot over his windshield moving in opposite direction from course of plane. It was traveling at about 700 mph. Witness was flying alone at 10,000 feet in a Beechcraft Bonanza and was approximately 15-20 miles northeast of Allentown when suddenly the object, three feet in diameter, flaming orange-red in color, appeared at a distance of 150 to 200 yards ahead of him at 11 o’clock high.

He pulled up into a steep climb to avoid hitting it, but the object, instead of continuing on its course, very suddenly pulled up into about a 65-degree climb and went directly over his windshield. He commented on the object’s movement: “If what I saw was a physical object, the rapidity with which it altered its course was astonishing.” Duration of sighting — two seconds.

The pace of sightings is picking up. More than 1,400 have been reported in Pennsylvania in the past five years. Witkowski isn’t the only investigator to surmise that extraterrestrials, if they are the source of the phenomena, are preparing to introduce themselves more formally.

Witkowski and his nine investigators go after these reports like storm chasers pursue tornadoes.

“I can be anywhere in Pennsylvania in five hours or less,” said Witkowski, who had his first sighting in Tuscon in 1989 and has had 18 others since — all in the presence of other witnesses, including law enforcement officers.

Extraordinary claims

The late John Royer, who was probably the busiest UFO investigator the Valley has ever had, experienced two unnerving sightings of his own, which he recounted to The Morning Call in a 2011 story.

The first object he spied was a big, dark triangle with lights at each corner that passed over his Bethlehem house one night in 1977. He had a similar sighting after moving to Emmaus in 2003. The incidents prompted him to become a volunteer investigator for the Mutual UFO Network, a nonprofit group known as MUFON.

Royer was no wild-eyed conspiracy theorist. He was a level-headed engineer who balanced scientific skepticism with a sense of the universe’s mystery and grandeur and didn’t discount anything out of hand.

He surmised UFOS could be the craft of aliens conducting a long-term study of humanity. Sightings date back thousands of years. Some speculate that odd stone figures carved by Incas and other ancient civilizations don’t represent deities but alien astronauts.

“I think some of it is manmade technology,” Royer told the newspaper. “I also believe there is something flying around out there that we don’t know anything about.”

 

Daniel Patrick Sheenan 

 

Source News 



.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.