13 Reasons To Believe Aliens Are Real
13 Reasons To Believe Aliens Are Real
13 Reasons To Believe Aliens Are Real
But a lot of people in the modern world will take that bargain,
which should probably not surprise us given how dizzying,
secular, and, um, alienating that world objectively is. Most
conspiracy theory (https://www.thecut.com/2016/10/its-easy-
to-get-people-to-sorta-believe-conspiracy-theories.html) is
fueled by a desire to see the universe as ultimately intelligible —
the bargain being that things can make sense, but only if you
believe (https://www.thecut.com/2017/12/why-believing-in-
ufos-is-more-fun-when-youre-the-only-one.html) in pervasive
totalitarian malice. Alien conspiracy theory keeps the malice
(cover-ups at Roswell, the Men in Black). But rather than benzo
comforts like order and intelligibility, it offers the psychedelic
drama of total unintelligibility — awe, wonder, a knee-wobblingly
deep, mystical experience of existential ignorance.
Floating Down (1990), by David Huggins, who makes oil paintings about his encounters
with aliens. As featured in Love & Saucers, a 2017 documentary about the artist. Photo:
David Huggins
A 2004 encounter near San Diego between two Navy F/A-18F fighter jets and an “unknown
object.”
The Pentagon has said funding for the program ran out in 2012
and wasn’t renewed. But Elizondo has claimed the project was
alive and well when he resigned in October. —James D. Walsh
Eric Benson: I’m curious about just where your interest in this
subject comes from.
There were people trying to figure out what all this aerial
phenomena was. Bob started sending me tons of stuff. Mainly
what interested me is that so many people had seen these
strange things in the air.
Bigelow had bought a great big ranch. All this crazy stuff goes
on up there — you know, things in the air. Indians used to talk
about it, part of their folklore.
So I called Bigelow back and said, “Hey, I’ll meet with the guy.”
The program grew out of that, to study aerial phenomena.
EB: I saw that you tweeted, “We don’t know the answers, but we
have plenty of evidence to support asking the questions.” To
you, what’s the most compelling evidence to support asking the
questions?
HR: Read the reports. We have hundreds of — Eric, two, three
weeks ago, maybe a month now, up in Montana, they had
another strange deal at a missile base up there. It goes on all
the time.
EB: Do you know things about this program that you can’t
discuss publicly?
HR: Yeah.
That doesn’t mean we’ll ever find an exact replica of Earth, but
maybe we don’t have to. Our study of other planets and moons
in the solar system shows us many worlds possess the
ingredients necessary for life — an atmosphere, organic
compounds, liquid water, and other necessities. (The moons
orbiting Jupiter
(http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/09/nasa-surprising-
activity-on-jupiters-biggest-moon.html) and Saturn, for example,
feature whole subsurface oceans.)
And even though these places are extremely harsh
environments, that doesn’t mean as much as we might once
have thought it did; recent discoveries on Earth itself
demonstrate that life is much tougher than we thought. We’ve
found organisms in blisteringly hot geysers in Yellowstone
National Park, in the darkest crevices under the most ungodly
pressures in the deep ocean, in dry hellscapes like the Atacama
Desert in Chile (an analogue for Mars). These “extremophiles”
don’t need a warm and fuzzy paradise to call home — in fact,
they have already evolved to live in environments as harsh as
those on other planets. Some, like tardigrades, can even survive
the bleak vacuum of space itself. If there’s life in most of those
places, “it’s going to be pond scum,” says Shostak. “But it’s alien
pond scum. It shows that biology is all over.”
And we’re now at the point where we could one day find those
messages and send a reply. New technology gives us a better
chance to actually make contact with extraterrestrials. Our radio
telescopes can scan more of the night sky for an intelligent
message than ever before. Our optical telescopes and
observatories can peer farther into space and look for new
planets, moons, and perhaps even signs of something
altogether artificial (see “Tabby’s Star”). Our ability to parse
volumes of data in mere seconds means we could conceivably
survey much of the galaxy in just a few decades. That’s why, in
the past few years, Shostak has continually bet a cup of coffee
with everyone he knows that humans will find aliens by around
2029. “We’d have to be dead above the neck if we weren’t
interested in this,” says Penelope Boston, the director of the
NASA Astrobiology Institute. —Neel Patel
Mars: Mars has water, as we’ve known since 2015. Although the
planet looks like a barren wasteland these days, there’s little
reason to write off any chance we might find aliens residing in
some cavern or crevice.
—N.P.
Camille: A beam of solid blue light came through her ceiling and transported her onto a
table where she was surrounded by beings in white robes with high collars. Photo:
Courtesy of Steven Hirsch
Bruce: An alien woke him from his bed to show him the moons of Saturn. Photo: Courtesy
of Steven Hirsch
Lisa: A gray alien knocked at her door and handed her two babies, leaving her with a hole
in her head. Photo: Courtesy of Steven Hirsch
Steve: He saw a beeping, bright white light; it zapped his friend up. Photo: Courtesy of
Steven Hirsch
Nancy: Her body responded to the “low hum” of the UFO spacecraft, a memory she
accessed in regression therapy. Photo: Courtesy of Steven Hirsch
Rita: She has been visited by a golden reptilian alien throughout her life. Photo: Courtesy
of Steven Hirsch
‘Oumuamua.
—N.P.
Elon Musk
Musk is hell-bent on using his $21 billion to colonize Mars
(http://nymag.com/selectall/2016/09/elon-musk-if-you-want-to-
move-to-mars-be-prepared-to-die.html). His company SpaceX
has been trying desperately to reduce the cost of space travel in
the hopes of beginning a million-person colonization of Mars. “If
[we’re not in] a simulation, then maybe we’re in a lab and there’s
some advanced alien civilization that’s just watching how we
develop, out of curiosity, like mold in a petri dish,” says Musk.
Paul Allen
When Congress cut off funding for NASA’s hunt for aliens in
1993, Allen gave millions to the SETI Institute; in 2009, the Allen
Telescope Array started searching the cosmos. Allen has given
an additional $30 million to the project, a sum that bought him a
guarantee that if the array detects an extraterrestrial
communiqué, Allen will be the first nonscientist to know.
Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Breaktrough Prize Foundation
Yuri Milner
Last year, Milner — named after a Russian cosmonaut —
announced a plan to send spaceships to Saturn’s moon
Enceladus in search of alien life. Milner is also funding
Breakthrough Listen, a ten-year project to use a telescope in
West Virginia to search for messages from intelligent life, and
Breakthrough Starshot, in conjunction with Mark Zuckerberg and
the late Stephen Hawking
(http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/03/pioneering-
physicist-stephen-hawking-dies-at-76.html).
Jeff Bezos
His company Blue Origin is competing with Elon Musk’s SpaceX
to launch reusable rockets (and comically rich tourists) into
space. While Musk played himself in a cameo in Iron Man 2,
Bezos appeared as an alien Starfleet official in 2016’s Star Trek
Beyond. (It was not a speaking role.)
Franklin Antonio
Antonio cofounded Qualcomm, a mobile tech company, in the
mid-’80s. He’s also the company’s chief scientist and has given
millions to SETI research. Last year Antonio gave $30 million to
the University of California San Diego’s school of engineering
and followed that donation up with a contribution to Roy
Moore’s failed senate campaign.
Paul Hellyer
Canada’s Defense minister during the Cold War, now 94, believes
that at least 80 species of aliens have been visiting Earth for
millennia. One group is called the Tall Whites (because they can
reach basketball-goal height) or Nordic Blondes (because they
look like they’re “from Denmark or somewhere”). Unfortunately,
the others may include ecoterrorists: “We’re doing all sorts of
things which are not what good stewards of their homes should
be doing,” he told media in 2014. “They don’t like that, and
they’ve made it very clear.” Hellyer adds that many technological
“breakthroughs” were aped from these extraterrestrials.
Microchips and fiber optics, for instance, were taken off crashed
alien vehicles and reverse-engineered. The aliens have a special
technology that would solve climate change as well, he claims,
but the Illuminati are hiding it because it would devastate oil
interests.
Philip Corso
Corso’s military career was long and illustrious, from rebuilding
Rome’s government after World War II as an Army Intelligence
captain to having worked the Pentagon’s foreign-technology
desk in the ’60s. He doesn’t appear to have said a word publicly
about aliens until 1997, when Simon & Schuster published The
Day After Roswell — with a foreword by Strom Thurmond — just
13 months before Corso died. It was his tell-all outlining a
decades-long Roswell cover-up while plugging his own
clandestine exploits, which he claimed involved reverse-
engineering technology found on alien spacecrafts. This is how
the world got lasers, particle beams, microchips, even Kevlar,
Corso said. Skeptics argue that regular Earth people’s R&D
behind technology like lasers is impossibly well documented.
Barry Goldwater
Had he won election in 1964, one of his White House’s first acts
might have been releasing top-secret UFO files. He harbored a
lifelong fascination with the truth about extraterrestrial contact,
much of it stemming from his desire to “find out what was in”
the mysterious Hangar 18 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base,
home to the Air Force’s Project Blue Book
(http://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-
Sheets/Display/Article/104590/unidentified-flying-objects-and-
air-force-project-blue-book/). In the ’80s, it surfaced he’d spent
decades corresponding with UFO investigators and harassing
the military for access to the hangar’s so-called Blue Room,
where conspiracy theorists believe
(https://www.amazon.com/Inside-Real-Area-51-
Patterson/dp/1601632363?ascsubtag=
[]in[p]cjeyj063k00zsn5y6go8uknx8[i]YNVQLR[t]w) alien bodies
from Roswell are preserved. (“Not only can’t you get into it,” his
friend General Curtis LeMay supposedly snapped
(https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1988/04/25/auh2o) in
1975, “but don’t you ever mention it to me again.” Goldwater
claims he didn’t.) After retiring in 1987, the senator told
(http://www.ufocasebook.com/blueroom.html) Larry King the
Earth is “one of several billion planets in this universe. I can’t
believe that God or whoever is in charge would put thinking
bodies on only one planet.”
Roscoe Hillenkoetter
After he’d served as the first CIA director (he’d been appointed
by President Truman), Hillenkoetter retired from a distinguished
Navy career in 1957 and took a gig at a brand-new private
research group called the National Investigations Committee on
Aerial Phenomena. Its chief purpose was pressuring the
government to disclose what it knew about UFOs, via
investigations like Project Blue Book. Hillenkoetter went after
the intelligence community, writing angry open letters that said
things like (http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?
res=F50A12F9345D1A728DDDA10A94DA405B808AF1D3): “It is
time for the truth to be brought out in open congressional
hearings.” When he pointed out in 1960 that the Air Force had
investigated 6,312 UFO reports to date, but was seemingly
trying “to hide the facts,” the military reminded Americans that
“no physical evidence, not even a minute fragment of a so-called
flying saucer, has ever been found.”
Of course, another theory popped up in the ’80s — that
Hillenkoetter had helped run a secret committee all along of
politicians, military officers, and scientists called the Majestic
12. Ufologists claimed this cabal was formed in 1947, once
Truman started panicking over what to do with all the alien
spacecrafts the government kept finding. The group’s existence
is based on government files that allegedly materialized in
1984. The FBI denied their authenticity entirely, but they and the
Majestic 12 remain popular grist for conspiracy theories, having
figured in Blink-182’s song “Aliens Exist” and even one of Twin
Peaks’s side plots (http://twinpeaks.wikia.com/wiki/MJ12).
Dennis Kucinich
Kucinich’s 2008 presidential campaign didn’t suffer from his
admission, made during a live TV debate, that, back in 1982,
he’d seen a UFO at friend Shirley MacLaine’s Washington State
home. (He was polling around 4 percent at the time.) But the
current candidate for Ohio governor got mocked plenty; one joke
among Beltway insiders was he wanted the “little green vote.”
John Podesta
(http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/03/john-podesta-
wants-ufo-files-declassified.html)
When WikiLeaks published the Hillary Clinton emails, a weird
number of Podesta’s mentioned aliens and involved contact
with believers like Tom DeLonge
(http://www.vulture.com/2017/02/blink-182s-tom-delonge-
named-ufo-researcher-of-the-year.html) and astronaut Edgar
Mitchell. As Bill Clinton’s deputy chief of staff, he was known as
an X-Files fanatic who’d “call the Air Force and ask them what’s
going on in Area 51.” In 2014, he spent 13 months advising
President Obama — and what was his “biggest failure”?
According to him, failing to get government files declassified on
the 1965 Kecksburg, Pennsylvania, UFO incident.
Then during Bush’s term, he began publicly crusading
(https://www.huffingtonpost.com/leslie-kean/john-podesta-
pulling-back_b_6717872.html) for NASA to release UFO
documents to journalist Leslie Kean, the person ultimately
behind the Times’ Pentagon exposé.
Podesta has kept his personal ET beliefs under wraps, but in
Kean’s best seller UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government
Officials Go on the Record, he gamely wrote a foreword
(https://www.amazon.com/UFOs-Generals-Pilots-Government-
Officials/dp/0307717089/ref=sr_1_1?
s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1519104523&sr=1-
1&keywords=ufos+generals+pilots+and+government+officials+
go+on+the+record&ascsubtag=
[]in[p]cjeyj063k00zsn5y6go8uknx8[i]ClQK3T[t]w) that argues:
“It’s time to find out what the truth really is … The American
people — and people around the world — want to know, and they
can handle the truth.”
—Clint Rainey
SW: I’m particularly amused by Elon Musk’s car going into space
(http://nymag.com/selectall/2018/02/falcon-heavy-rocket-
launches-elon-musks-tesla-to-jupiter.html). That is so extremely
aligned with the notion of grave goods from ancient Egypt,
where you’re taking things from your everyday life to be buried
with you. It’s charming.
Foo Fighters
In the middle of World War II, things took a mysterious turn for
Air Force pilots flying overnight missions. They reported seeing
lights chasing their aircraft. The number varied (sometimes it
was one; other times ten), and so did the colors (red, orange,
and green). But the unidentified objects shared in common that
they moved very fast, up to 200 miles per hour, yet could dart on
a dime. These pilots — among the world’s best — admitted the
objects generally flew circles around them. Their lore grew
among the squadrons. In 1944, a crew flying along the Rhine in
Germany described seeing “eight to ten bright orange lights”
whiz by “at high speed.” Neither ground control nor their own
planes caught anything on radar, and when one pilot turned
toward the lights, they reportedly “disappeared.”
Phoenix Lights
On March 13, 1997, thousands of people in southern Arizona
say they saw weird lights move across the night sky in a flying
V. Most of their reports came in between 7 and 10:30 p.m. along
a 300-mile stretch from Phoenix, through Tucson, and to the
Mexico border. A majority of people spied the pattern passing
overhead (it was supposedly several football fields long), but
the Air Force also sent a team of A-10 Warthogs from nearby
Barry Goldwater Range on a training exercise that same night,
and, as luck would have it, those planes dropped some
stationary flares just outside Phoenix, considerably
complicating any UFO conspiracies with a second set of strange
bright lights.
—C.R.
—N.P.
Joseph O. Baker
(http://nymag.com/selectall/2018/03/sociologist-joseph-o-
baker-on-americas-alien-fixation.html) is a sociologist and the
co-author of the 2010 book Paranormal America
(https://www.amazon.com/Paranormal-America-Encounters-
Sightings-Curiosities/dp/0814791352?ascsubtag=
[]in[p]cjeyj063k00zsn5y6go8uknx8[i]avKz90[t]w).
Katie Heaney: Why, when we think of aliens, do they all look the
same — three feet tall, gray or green, big black eyes?
KH: Even those guys look pretty human — why do we have such
a hard time imagining radically different forms of life?
JB: We’re the people doing the projecting here. Much the same
way people do with God — really, what sense does it make for a
supernatural entity to have a gender or be humanoid
Anthropomorphized supernatural entities tend to be more
compelling.
JB: The probe part of the abduction narrative took over in some
sense because it tends to be the most salacious aspect of these
stories. It’s almost become shorthand for alien abduction. But
the stories of abduction among believers are really diverse, and
usually probing is only one small part of it. Men will report
having sperm extraction, and women will report having eggs
extracted. Positive encounters tend to be akin to religion in
some ways, in which beings of higher enlightenment show
people the errors of humanity, or help them reach a higher plane
of consciousness.
JB: Men, and people with lower levels of income, are more likely
to believe. We don’t really find strong patterns by education, and
if we do, there’s usually a slight positive effect. But one of the
strongest predictors you can find for believers is their extreme
distrust of the government. That’s part of the reason it got so
big in the ’70s, when trust in institutions was low. Trump might
actually increase belief in UFOs.
(https://www.thecut.com/2017/12/sarah-huckabee-sanders-is-
checking-if-trump-believes-in-ufos.html)
KH: I’ve heard that sightings are way down in the smartphone
era, when people presumably don’t take a story as proof enough.
JB: Well, it’s easier to hoax things now than it used to be. I
would think that with an increased availability of videos, if it was
going to do anything, it might lead to more belief, but from most
of what I’ve seen, it looks more like stasis. Rates of reported
sightings and rate of belief have been pretty stable. The 2005
Baylor Religion Survey found that 25 percent of respondents
agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “Some UFOs are
probably spaceships from other worlds.”
1960: The modern search for ETs begins when Frank Drake uses
an 85-foot radio telescope in the hills of West Virginia to scan
stars for signs of intelligent life; he later develops an equation to
estimate the number of advanced civilizations.