In listening to the most recent show I was struck by the fixation on what I, perhaps wrongly, perceive as the outlier reports of BT size in the 5000+ ft range. I would ask the following:
1. Disregarding the downtown Phoenix lights of '97 that we've all seen photos of, what percentage of BT reports are ~5000+ ft?
2. Of those reports that are ~5000+ ft, how many are in the form of first hand interviews and how many are anonymous internet or phone reports?
Also, while I think it is safe to say that BTs are always low-noise, it wouldn't be accurate to characterize them as exclusively silent. There are many reports of a low hum, transfomer-like buzz, or, as in the 2000 Illinois case "a well-tuned v8 engine at 40 ft." (I think this was Melvern Noll's statement but I'd have to look it up.) Strictly in regards to the noise aspect, considering that many witnesses report distances of no less than several hundred feet, it is entirely possible to effectively silence large internal combustion generators at this distance with no magic technology whatsoever. I can barely hear a new Honda Accord at idle when I'm 2ft away from it not to mention a purely electrical system. If they are capable of dead-silent operation they don't always do so.
As always, I've never seen one so some or all may very well be ET/non-human but I'm restricting my speculation to the military thing. One of the reasons I ask about the percentage of the outliers is that if this was indeed some sort of military craft you can bet that there would also be a program to spike the ufo sightings databases with reports of wildly varying sizes, locations, performance characteristics, etc. One or two people with a handful of shell accounts and a bit of creativity could throw so much noise at the sightings databases that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to tell what was what.
I would weight sightings reports that come as firsthand interviews substantially higher than anonymous internet reports or even phone reports unless it is an extended phone interview and I would probably throw out any outliers that didn't come from interviews. The excellent Final Frontiers documentary on the 2000 Illinois case shows how much field work was actually done in that investigation.
I can buy a stealth blimp of maybe 600-1000 ft. 5000 ft pushes me off the cliff to a non-human source like Biedny's cigar. There are of course lots of problems with the military explanation but I'd hate to see the bulk of sightings reports morph into dead-silent, mile-long craft without justification.
1. Disregarding the downtown Phoenix lights of '97 that we've all seen photos of, what percentage of BT reports are ~5000+ ft?
2. Of those reports that are ~5000+ ft, how many are in the form of first hand interviews and how many are anonymous internet or phone reports?
Also, while I think it is safe to say that BTs are always low-noise, it wouldn't be accurate to characterize them as exclusively silent. There are many reports of a low hum, transfomer-like buzz, or, as in the 2000 Illinois case "a well-tuned v8 engine at 40 ft." (I think this was Melvern Noll's statement but I'd have to look it up.) Strictly in regards to the noise aspect, considering that many witnesses report distances of no less than several hundred feet, it is entirely possible to effectively silence large internal combustion generators at this distance with no magic technology whatsoever. I can barely hear a new Honda Accord at idle when I'm 2ft away from it not to mention a purely electrical system. If they are capable of dead-silent operation they don't always do so.
As always, I've never seen one so some or all may very well be ET/non-human but I'm restricting my speculation to the military thing. One of the reasons I ask about the percentage of the outliers is that if this was indeed some sort of military craft you can bet that there would also be a program to spike the ufo sightings databases with reports of wildly varying sizes, locations, performance characteristics, etc. One or two people with a handful of shell accounts and a bit of creativity could throw so much noise at the sightings databases that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to tell what was what.
I would weight sightings reports that come as firsthand interviews substantially higher than anonymous internet reports or even phone reports unless it is an extended phone interview and I would probably throw out any outliers that didn't come from interviews. The excellent Final Frontiers documentary on the 2000 Illinois case shows how much field work was actually done in that investigation.
I can buy a stealth blimp of maybe 600-1000 ft. 5000 ft pushes me off the cliff to a non-human source like Biedny's cigar. There are of course lots of problems with the military explanation but I'd hate to see the bulk of sightings reports morph into dead-silent, mile-long craft without justification.