NASA's Metallic Spheres: The Unexpected Briefing That Went Under the Radar
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On July 1, 2023, a Pentagon official at NASA headquarters calmly stated, ‘We see these metallic spheres all over the world, making maneuvers we can’t explain…moving at Mach 2 against the wind, with no apparent propulsion.”
During a briefing where the Pentagon and NASA presented their findings after a year of research, a government scientist spoke about objects that challenge the fundamental principles of physics.
This should have dominated the headlines. Yet, it scarcely registered in the mainstream media.
NASA’s Briefing: Key Details & Quotes
You can watch the entire briefing here on Youtube. All of the quotes that I am using will be time-stamped, when possible.
Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, the head of the Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), was straightforward and direct in his approach.
Showing a video of a metallic sphere captured by military sensors, he stated matter-of-factly: “This is a typical example of the thing that we see most of…
Then came the kicker that should have sent shockwaves through the scientific community: “We see these all over the world, and we see these making very interesting apparent maneuvers.” [36:12–36:29]
Hold on...what did you just say?
Here is a top government official, speaking at NASA headquarters, describing something that defied our understanding of physics: metallic spheres — as he clearly said in an example — “moving at Mach 2 against the wind with no apparent propulsion.” [1:03:41–1:03:55]
- That’s twice the speed of sound.
- Into the wind.
- With no visible engines.
Dr. Kirkpatrick noted that they now have over 800 cases, [54:51–55:06] and that of these cases.- “The numbers I would say that we see are possibly really anomalous are less than single digit percentages… maybe two to five-ish percent.”
While it may seem like a limited figure, there are still approximately 20 to 40 unusual instances involving metallic spheres, many comparable in size to small cars, capable of moving at impressive speeds without any visible method of propulsion.
Investigating the Spheres
This image was included in a presentation that was shared during the public briefing.
- Size: About as big as a small car (3–13 feet across)
- Altitude: Flying in the same airspace as commercial planes (10,000–30,000 feet)
- Appearance: Metallic, spherical, solid
- Movement: Could hover motionless, then accelerate to incredible speeds
- Technology: No visible engines, no heat signature, no exhaust
Here’s what makes this truly strange. They are admitting that these objects, which by all laws of physics known to humans, shouldn’t be able to fly…are able to hover, and then accelerate to speeds up to Mach 2.
Picture a fighter jet from Top Gun, suspended quietly in the air, before it suddenly bursts into action, soaring to its maximum velocity.
Devoid of any engines.
Again — “We see these all over the world,” Kirkpatrick said. Notice his choice of words: “We see these.” Present tense. Not “We saw these once” or “Someone reported seeing these.” [36:16–36:29]
He’s talking about an occurrence that takes place regularly and consistently across the entire world.
The Rational Quandary
Are we possibly observing technology that is not of human origin?
Occam's Razor suggests that the most straightforward and elegant explanation is often the one that aligns most closely with reality.
When unusual phenomena show up in our skies, it's only logical to seek straightforward explanations. Let's take a cue from NASA's experts and analyze each potential cause with a balanced yet discerning perspective.
Could these be conventional aircraft? No. They need huge engines to fly.
Natural phenomena? No. NASA’s Dr. Fox emphasized, they’re dealing with solid objects showing “signatures that could be anomalous.” That’s scientist-speak for “things that shouldn’t be able to do what they’re doing.”
Secret military technology? Th
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