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We always go with the assumption that 'they' look vaguely humanoid.
Chances are, they don't.
Whatever we are interacting(if you could call it that) with, might be so bizarre to us we couldn't handle it.
Reminds me of what Keyhoe wrote in his proposed contact scheme 40 years ago.
If they are here and have been for a long time then, they could be to "powerful" for any government to stop them. One question then would be did they or would they "allow" such an advancement by a species or would they have long ago stopped our advancement?
So, either they are not hostile or they are so strong that nothing we could ever do would be a threat to them.
Notice that the U.S. and other powers often decide they are not going to let certain nations have nukes and other weapons. Wars to maintain power and grab riches and control are and have been fought throughout human history. So, I just don't think that beings who can either travel through space or bend space and time are threatened by us. If they are then it seems like they would have already taken care of the threat.
Ummm......... Sometimes. But then, Dung beetles spring to mind.(mmcrunchy)when humans see something living we tend to kill it and eat it.
And forgive me for being the dumb foreigner in this equation, but why assume that aliens would be so interested in landing at the White House in particular?? Why not at Downing Street, or Mecca, or even Uluru? (Uluru might be more likely because it's far older and therefore geologically significant beyond our own homocentric viewpoint.)
can't escape from the feeling that to shoot randomly at something so obviously superior to anything we have here, for no other reason than that we don't know it, would end up being something we regret more than the "aliens" would.
How do you know they cause 'injury, disappearances and death'? Where are the cases of people injured by aliens? I'm pretty sure aliens are not in the list of lcauses of death and injury. Now maybe if you showed that aliens gave humans automoblies and cigarettes...But this has happened already, or so some claim, with good results and without serious consequences. And they don't just show themselves, they cause injury, disappearances and death.
And then, following that logic, shooting at everything we don't recognise in the sky would just as equally risk shooting at the wrong thing. A simplistic analogy I know, but it would be something like harpooning every dolphin that you see because they look a bit like the shark that ate your neighbour's granny.
wSince the phenomenon seems to be in complete control of our reality, I think the question is essentially moot.
Of course, if we did manage to "off" one of whatever these things are and cause suffering to its occupants, we might quickly find out if advanced technology and compassion are correlated. Sounds like a very high stakes bet. :frown: