@unitedspacepirates9075

Was supposed to request a meeting with your leaders, but we watched your news.

@valx7586

Instant subscribe

@CorvidLove

Thank you so much for sharing knowledge, ideas and explanations with the world.

@FMDD168

Thank you Dr. Frank, for the interesting exposition on the history of SETI and more. Even we hardly use Radio Waves anymore  in a span of less than a hundred years, so why should we think that intelligent Aliens would use this method of signaling?

@jfffjl

Picture a Dyson Sphere hanging in space with a speech balloon : "Is it hot in here, or is it just me?"

@PauldeSwardt

What a fantastic round-up of the subject from history to current research - I recommend people post this to their social media!

@ЮлияКаштанова-и3ь

Благодарю.

@keybutnolock

If, at first you don't succeed....
Thanks for re-re-uploading.

@creightonfreeman8059

The Navy pilots didn't just "see something". Their laser and infra red targeting systems locked onto the objects. Systems designed for targeting fast moving aircraft. That is not a shadow or a mirage or a figment of the pilots imagination. laser and infra red targeting systems don't have an imagination. If pilots trained to observe enemy aircraft and two independent targeting systems say something was there, that is pretty concrete evidence something was there. It doesn't tell you what it was though. But whatever it was, our best military fighter jets couldn't keep up with it.....and it wasn't a rocket or missile.

@TulseLuper92

2 pilots and two WSO’s witnessed the Tictac incident eyes on, there are also corroborating radar tracks recoded by nearby navy ships. Funny how Dr. Frank extends considerably more credibility to fellow academic Avi Loeb than he does top gun graduate fighter pilots and the people with the highest security clearances in the land. I’m going with the pilots on this one. Incidentally I have minimally contributed to Mick West’s debunking efforts on another sighting.

@politicallycorrectredskin796

Isn't defining it as a paradox slightly anthropocentric?

@caffeinestew2667

Our ancient history documents many visitations; and the settlers never left the planet.

@elijaguy

Space has a landscape.
Its geometry is not uniform. Some regions tend to draw paths toward themselves.

We call those regions masses.
The paths followed through this geometry, we call geodesics.
The phenomenon by which these paths converge, we call gravitation.

Most of the masses we know are located in what we call “matter”—protons, neutrons, electrons—and we know them because they interact with light and other forms of radiation.

But some masses—like those of black holes, or the invisible structures bending light and guiding galaxies—do not interact with radiation.

They are not necessarily “things” hidden from us. They are part of the shaped landscape itself.

These we should call transparent mass:
mass not tied to substance,
mass that reveals itself only in the geometry of space,
and which we’ve mistakenly called “dark matter.”

@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095

I think the "Great Silence" of Fermi's Paradox might just be due to interstellar distances and the fact that a Star Trek type of warp drive is just not possible.

{:-:-:}

@billchaffee535

Why does the search for extraterrestrial life depend so heavily on the United States? What international efforts are there to find life beyond earth.  Also if an exoplanet was like earth in terms of size and atmospheric chemistry then how far away could it be from earth and still have evidence of life detected with present day instruments?

@miker.2540

Well now I can understand the excitement for the Webb telescope which will seek out infrared (heat). Is it still scheduled for launch in Oct 2021?

@bobaldo2339

When I was young I thought contacting aliens would be a wonderful thing for humanity.  Now, I think it would not be worth the risk.

@dogcreek-customs5168

I call aliens in this video when they start using their software changing the backgrounds making their heads all funky looking. lol

@philipmcdonagh1094

There's to many people buying cameras shoving them in front of themselves in their study of bedroom. Recording hours of stuff they haven't a clue about and cluttering up YouTube with it.

@bimmjim

Humans invented radar stealth during WW 2. It was called "sumpf."