10-06-2024, 12:39 PM
Who knew? right?
How this has been flying under our radar boggles my mind. UAP Med has taken upon itself to be a sourse for first responders giving them a resource to fall back upon in case they've stumbled into a "incident" on duty.
This gives the whole "we have to do it ourselves" meme teeth.
It's also very much not about old, or discussed to death ufo/uap crap we've been stuck with in the ufology community. UAP Med has moved onto "what's next" an started tackling it. TBH I'm still exploring their blog but checked out their discussion of the incident experienced by the Tedesco brothers who've been doing citizen science monitoring of UAP's off Long Island NY.
The project:@tedesco4810 months ago
The two people interviewed in this video are Harvard University's Galileo Project research affiliates and the Scientific Coalition of UAP Studies members. In a mobile laboratory, this independent research study was conducted off Long Island's Southern coast at Robert Moses State Park. The researchers were John and Gerry Tedesco, both of whom have extensive engineering backgrounds. A lot of high-tech equipment was used to conduct this investigation. The names of the other field researchers are Donna Nardo and Sue Algor. A scientific paper was accepted by the SCU to be published soon.
The UAP Med discussion:
The Incident:
We don't usually get THIS quality of wrap-around information this quickly or this throughly. Had seen a video a day ago on the Tedesco's research where they did explain they'd been funding their research out of pocket from savings & retirement funds but had been looking for a sponsor. Guess Gallileo stepped up? Their current mobile lab is the second version kitted out with some gear most of us are never going to be able to afford. So they aren't dilettantes. IIRC they are also both Electrical Engineers by profession.
For what it's worth the UAP Med website has impressed me with it's polished look & ease of use. It's also very comprehensive. Everything we'd hoped a govt agency could put together but instead left us again, holding the fuzzy end of the lollipop.
It also shoves us WAY past bickering over the Elizondo/Mellon/Congressional Hearings/ARRO horse puckety.
How this has been flying under our radar boggles my mind. UAP Med has taken upon itself to be a sourse for first responders giving them a resource to fall back upon in case they've stumbled into a "incident" on duty.
This gives the whole "we have to do it ourselves" meme teeth.
It's also very much not about old, or discussed to death ufo/uap crap we've been stuck with in the ufology community. UAP Med has moved onto "what's next" an started tackling it. TBH I'm still exploring their blog but checked out their discussion of the incident experienced by the Tedesco brothers who've been doing citizen science monitoring of UAP's off Long Island NY.
The project:@tedesco4810 months ago
The two people interviewed in this video are Harvard University's Galileo Project research affiliates and the Scientific Coalition of UAP Studies members. In a mobile laboratory, this independent research study was conducted off Long Island's Southern coast at Robert Moses State Park. The researchers were John and Gerry Tedesco, both of whom have extensive engineering backgrounds. A lot of high-tech equipment was used to conduct this investigation. The names of the other field researchers are Donna Nardo and Sue Algor. A scientific paper was accepted by the SCU to be published soon.
The UAP Med discussion:
The Incident:
We don't usually get THIS quality of wrap-around information this quickly or this throughly. Had seen a video a day ago on the Tedesco's research where they did explain they'd been funding their research out of pocket from savings & retirement funds but had been looking for a sponsor. Guess Gallileo stepped up? Their current mobile lab is the second version kitted out with some gear most of us are never going to be able to afford. So they aren't dilettantes. IIRC they are also both Electrical Engineers by profession.
For what it's worth the UAP Med website has impressed me with it's polished look & ease of use. It's also very comprehensive. Everything we'd hoped a govt agency could put together but instead left us again, holding the fuzzy end of the lollipop.
It also shoves us WAY past bickering over the Elizondo/Mellon/Congressional Hearings/ARRO horse puckety.