Acouple set out to record a thunderstorm in slow-motion in hopes of catching a lightning strike, but instead they caught a mysterious dark object moving impossibly fast just under the clouds and they think it could be a UFO.
Related video: UFOs could pose a threat to national security (The Washington Post (Video))
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UFOs could pose a threat to national security
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The stay at home mom has clearly read some criticisms of other potential UFO footage and goes out of her way to drop the recording stats, saying the footage was recorded in super slow motion at 960 frames per second. If that’s the case then the object was whizzing by ridiculously fast, possibly not even noticeable to the naked eye.
There is no way to be certain what is seen in the footage, although it doesn’t seem likely to be a plane if it was really recorded in super slow-mo. Part of the problem with civilian reports and sightings is that average citizens do not have the equipment to adequately capture evidence of weird things seen in the sky, unlike the military who is expected to be watching for any flying crafts in the skies. There’s an assumption that if there really were UFOs in the skies then the people who monitor the skies professionally for their jobs would notice.
It’s now coming to light that many pilots and military members have been seeing things they can’t explain in the skies, but nobody is formally collecting those reports and there wasn’t actually an official channel to report UFOs to if one was so inclined to risk the stigma.
This may be changing as United States elected officials are holding hearings and passing legislature that indicates they also think there is a chance that the government, of which they are part, is withholding information about secret programs studying aliens and their technology.
