But I really don't see the rude and angry part.
Lance can get a little gruff. I haven't been here long, so I don't know if it's customary or reactionary on his part.
I really try to fight saying something, in this forum, that is overtly skeptical. I often lose that fight.
When I do say things that follow that bent, it's because I would like to see more reputable figures in science take an honest look at some of the phenomena that the field might have ignored in modern times. I view that as a case by case scenario, as scientists have looked at many paranormal phenomena in a general sense. I think looking at things in a general light, though, is nonsensical when dealing with things that can't be immediately identified, quantified or, thus, classified. However, since so many cases in the case by case record contain nonscientific evaluations and the accepted practice of the suspension of disbelief, most scientists doing real work just don't care to look at these cases. I try to point things out that I feel are hurtful to that idea.
I hate the term "UFO," as it has lot of implications behind its use in the colloquial sense. I think unidentified phenomenon is a less muddled, all purpose label folks can apply to all paranormal instances. Calling things UFOs, spacecraft, ghosts, ape men, aliens, portals, gods, afterlives, etc is naive from a scientific standpoint. It implies knowledge beyond the possible, when given solely to hard, cold empirical data. These words and ideas are psychological projections placed on phenomena, both real and imagined, by people who have an emotional preconceived notion of the classification of these phenomena before they ever even make an observation. These words and ideas are unscientific, undeserved, and unhelpful.
This type of opinion/speculation based investigation is what keeps most real scientists away from the field. You can't take it seriously, in an academic arena, when most of the data that exists pertaining to it can be boiled down to speculative fiction.
I am aware that that is almost certainly never going to change. Given that, I revere the paranormal as a form of performance mythology. I really dig the paranormal, and I'm here to discuss lore (for the most part).
I can't speak for the other skeptics.