In a new article entitled "A Memoir Offers an Insider’s Perspective Into the Pentagon’s U.F.O. Hunt," the New York Times reports that Luis Elizondo, who " ran highly classified programs for both the White House and the National Security Council," says that he saw mysterious green orbs flying around in his house. We read this:
"Elizondo also wrote in the memoir of personal encounters with U.A.P., describing green-glowing orbs about the size of a basketball that invaded his home on and off for over seven years. The objects were able to pass through walls, and behaved as if they were under intelligent control, he wrote.
The orbs were also witnessed by his wife, two daughters and their neighbors, he wrote."
For most of the past 70 years the New York Times has done a very poor job of reporting on the paranormal, as I discuss in my post here. But in recent years the New York Times seems to have had some good reporting on UFO sightings. It seems rather as if the policy of the paper is that its writers are allowed to talk about something that might be paranormal, as long as the observations can be explained in some way compatible with materialism. So we have the quote above, which got through the "nothing spooky allowed" filter bubble of the New York Times, because the story is connected to UFO reporting and claims of metal spaceships from other planets.
But I'm rather sure the New York Times will not be following up on the "mysterious green orbs in the house" claim quoted above. I won't get an email from the paper asking me about the 264 photos I've taken of mysterious green orbs (mostly taken indoors), or the 800 photos I've taken of mysterious striped orbs, or the 114 posts I've published on this site documenting cases of people who saw mysterious orbs with the naked eye. When investigating the paranormal or UFOs or UAP, the New York Times seems to follow a "round up the usual talking heads" approach in which we hear the same old people being quoted over and over again.
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