Three New Studies Show UFOs are Targeting Our Nuclear Arsenals and High Speed Aircraft

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It's long since been established that, call them UFOs or UAPs, whatever unidentified things are buzzing around our skies using propulsion systems far beyond the capability of our most advanced technology, they've always shown a keen interest in our nuclear weapons. Or at the very least, they hang around them quite a bit for someone who's not interested:

I mean, it's not hard to connect the dots to the atomic testing at Los Alamos in the mid-1940s and the crash in Roswell shortly after we started actually dropping the bombs to end WWII. 

Well a series of recent studies claim that interest has changed slightly:

Source - The internet is awash with videos appearing to show UFOs flying near high-speed planes, warheads and even nuclear reactors - and experts have an alarming theory for why these locations are being targeted. 

In 1976, British Airways aired an ad for their Concorde flight in which an orb-like UFO darts toward the aircraft at an incredibly high speed, seemingly analyzes the plane and then accelerates away.

The unconfirmed UFO appearance … is one of many that shows the odd, almost inquisitive behavior of these unknown objects. 

….

In June 2022, at the Queen's Jubilee, the longest-serving royal monarch was honored by a cadre of nine fighter jets spewing streams of smoke in the Union Jack's red, white and blue colors — and one unidentified disc.

Despite it making the rounds on media, no clear answer has ever been provided as to what it was. …

Even more curious is the nearly dozen UFOs that appeared above Japan's Fukushima lab after its nuclear disaster in 2011. Witnesses told the Netflix docuseries, Encounters, that the UFOs saved them by lowering radioactivity levels.

Local outlets caught several glimmering white orbs above the plant — extremely similar to the previous instances — dipping into the lab before emerging again, in a sort of assembly line. …

The question emerges: are UFOs approaching high-speed aircraft because they are concerned they contain nuclear capability?

Now, new research — in the form of three studies helmed by a retired US Air Force staff sergeant, Larry Hancock, and a data analyst affiliate with Harvard's UFO-hunting Galileo Project, Ian Porritt — shows that not only has there been unusual activity around nuclear weapons and facilities, it's shifted over the years.

At first seemingly interested in the production of nuclear weapons, UFOs later sprouted up around silos and bomber bases.

'You would see this interest' at silos when they were being installed before 'the activity would drop off,' Porritt previously told the DailyMail.com.

Even if you're the most hardened, obdurate UFO skeptic, you have to concede that on some level, it's plausible that whatever these things are, there here for our nukes. I mean, you often hear these people asking why, if these beings are so powerful they can traverse space and/or time to come check us out, why don't they simply show up on the South Lawn of the White House or in the middle of the World Cup Final and declare themselves? 

The short answer is that they've got a sort of Star Trek-like Prime Directive to not interfere. Secondarily, that they have no about our politics or our soccer. (I second both emotions.) 

But that Directive and that disinterest end where nuclear weapons begin. They're here to study us, occasionally kidnap us, and sometimes rectal probe us, for scientific research purposes. The same with our cattle and why they mutate them. All of which is hard to do once we've turned the surface of the Earth into a radioactive parking lot. 

Our species is a toddler that found dad's gun, and we're clomping around the house playing Cowboy with the thing. And whoever is piloting the UAPs has a vested interest in putting the safety on whenever the situation arises. Which might go a long way toward explaining how we've had the bloody things for close to 80 years and only used them those two times in 1945. 

OR … 

Here's an alternative theory. Courtesy of Carl Jung, which I'm only just hearing thanks to a conversation between Joe Rogan and comic/political podcaster Jimmy Dore. The hypothesis being that these things are archetypes, brought on by the challenges, threats, and technology of our times:

Princeton University Press - “In the threatening situation of the world today, when people are beginning to see that everything is at stake, the projection-creating fantasy soars beyond the realm of earthly organizations and powers into the heavens, into interstellar space, where the rulers of human fate, the gods, once had their abode in the planets…. Even people who would never have thought that a religious problem could be a serious matter that concerned them personally are beginning to ask themselves fundamental questions. Under these circumstances it would not be at all surprising if those sections of the community who ask themselves nothing were visited by `visions,’ by a widespread myth seriously believed in by some and rejected as absurd by others.”—C. G. Jung, in Flying Saucers

Jung’s primary concern in Flying Saucers is not with the reality or unreality of UFOs but with their psychic aspect. Rather than speculate about their possible nature and extraterrestrial origin as alleged spacecraft, he asks what it may signify that these phenomena, whether real or imagined, are seen in such numbers just at a time when humankind is menaced as never before in history. The UFOs represent, in Jung’s phrase, “a modern myth.”

As with so many other common Jungian archetypes, UFOs many not exist in the physical world, but that doesn't make them any less true. Archetypes are a meta-truth. As seen, heard and felt by experiencers as any other tangible object in our reality. And therefore, just as real. If so, it would seem logical that our military personnel would see them most, and around our most advanced weapons systems. Because the threat of a nuclear holocaust is something they deal with all day, every day, while the rest of us are writing and reading dorky blog posts about flying saucers. And Flying Saucers

It's a hell of an intriguing theory. And comes from one of the most brilliant minds of modern times. All we know for sure is that, whatever these things are, they are not nothing.