United Kingdom’s UFO enthusiasts have stated that aliens may not be present after all, mentioning that the sightings of ‘flying saucer’ declined considerably and there is no “convincing evidence” to show the presence of this extraterrestrial life.
The enthusiasts said that a continuous failure to deliver proof and decrease in the sightings of ‘flying saucer’ suggests that the aliens are not present and this would mean within next decade the ‘Ufology’ – study of the UFOs (unidentified flying objects), could be closed.
“The subject is dead in that no one is seeing anything evidential,” said David Clark, a Sheffield Hallam University academic and the UFO adviser to the National Archives. “Look at all the people who now have personal cameras. If there was something flying around that was a structured object from somewhere else, you would have thought that someone would have come up with some convincing footage by now – but they haven’t.”
Dozens of groups interested in flying saucers have closed already because of the lack of interest. Next week, a UK’s foremost organisation involved in the research of UFO is holding a conference to argue whether this subject has future.
The chairman of the Association for the Scientific Study of Anomalous Phenomena (Assap), Dave Wood said next week’s meet had been arranged to address the disaster in this subject and discuss whether UFOs were the subject of the past. He certainly said, “There is a chance that the subject will be dead in a time of ten years.”
“We are seeing these things based on balance of chances and the study in this area has been going for several decades. Lack of convincing evidence beyond pure anecdotes says that based on balance of chances nothing is there,” said Wood.
“I think any researcher about UFO would tell that 98% sightings that occur are easily explainable. A conclusion says that there is not anything there about UFO. The days of convincing eyewitness sightings look to be ended,” Wood added.
Since 1988, UFO cases of Assap have fell down by 96%, while number of other groups doing UFO research fell down by 100 in 1990s to 30 now. The closed groups are the Northern UFO Network, the Northern Anomalies Research Organisation and the British Flying Saucer Bureau. Wood added that main focus on dwindling UFO enthusiasts was made-up by the UFO encounters which took place before few decades and the conspiracy theories which surround them.