Sunday, November 10, 2024

conspiracy resource

Conspiracy News & Views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored

UFOs

Arizonans: July is the best time for UFO sightings

A man in an alien costume stands in front of a man at a podium.A man in an alien costume stands in front of a man at a podium.
Former Arizona Gov. Fife Symington (left) dressed up his chief of staff, Jay Heiler, for a 1997 a press conference. Photo: Scott Troyanos/Associated Press

We come in peace to tell you that July is the best time to catch a glimpse of a UFO and that Arizona is one of the best states to see one.

Driving the news: The website ​​Im-a-puzzle.com analyzed all UFO sightings reported to NUFORC since 1998 and found that more people spotted them in July than any other month.

  • And it is not lost on us that Jordan Peele’s “Nope” — about an alien invasion — just hit theaters.

Zoom in: Arizonans have reported 4,686 sightings to NUFORC since 1998.

  • Only California, Florida, Washington, Texas and New York have more.

Yes, but: There could be more UFO — or UAP (unidentified aerial phenomena), as the Navy insists on calling them — sightings in Arizona not included in the report. The military has its own reporting system.

  • After a 2021 report by the U.S. intelligence community helped de-stigmatize UFO reporting by considering UFOs a national security threat, the number of sightings reported by the military more than doubled.
  • Arizona has several bases, including Luke Air Force Base in Glendale and Fort Huachuca in Cochise County.

Flashback: The Valley’s most famous UFO sighting — the Phoenix Lights — occurred on March 13, 1997.

  • Thousands of people reported seeing strange V-shaped lights above Arizona, Nevada and parts of Mexico that night.

1 funny thing: Gov. Fife Symington initially made a joke out of the whole thing by dressing up his chief of staff as an alien for a press conference.

  • A decade later, he did an about face, saying he’d witnessed the lights and believed them to be of extraterrestrial origin.

🌱

Support local journalism by becoming a member.

Learn more

More Phoenix stories

No stories could be found

Get a free daily digest of the most important news in your backyard with Axios Phoenix.

🌱

Support local journalism by becoming a member.

Learn more

***
This article has been archived for your research. The original version from Axios can be found here.