Apparently, some legislators are upset that the military isn't taking it more seriously.
According to a new report in Politico, Senator Gillibrand of New York State publicly voiced her disappointment at how the US government handles reports of unexplained flying objects, and said lawmakers need to learn more about the context behind what the government has done.
The Department of Defense needs to take this issue much more seriously and get in motion, according to an aide.
Gillibrand isn't the only one who doesn't know that a rock thrown up high enough is a UAP. Florida's very thirsty Senator Marco Rubio wants more UAP data.
Most of the time, you can see unidentified shit in the skies, but it was long a domain of crackpots. The New York Times published a bombshell report detailing Pentagon funding for the investigation of some difficult-to-explain videos taken by fighter jet pilots.
That eventually led to a report by the US military that turned out to be very boring.
Lawmakers are still interested. And you know what? Good for them.
It's still important to better understand aliens even if they aren't aliens.
Scientists are worried about a military facility storing NASA space rocks.