AARO's Historical UAP Report: My Take and Why Phenom Matters
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Alright, so the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office – AARO – dropped their historical review on what the U.S. government’s been up to with UAP. Caused a bit of a stir, as you’d expect. I’ve had a good look at it, and it’s got me thinking.
If you caught me on Joe Rogan’s show (JRE #2264), you know where I stand: we need good, hard data. This report, well, it is what it is – a look back at official files. They say no evidence of ET tech, no cover-ups. Fine. But what it really highlights is the challenge of understanding stuff that doesn’t fit the mold. And that’s where we, the people, come in.
That’s the whole point of the Phenom App. We’re building it so anyone can document what they see – properly. Not just a shaky photo, but geolocated, timestamped, detailed observations. Because let’s be honest, the official channels, as this AARO report shows, have their own way of doing things, their own limitations.
Remember when the Pentagon officially released those UAP videos back in 2020? That got people talking. It showed that there’s something there that pilots, trained observers, are encountering. Even going way back to things like Project Blue Book – flawed as it was, it was an attempt.
The AARO report is another piece of the puzzle. But the real picture, the full understanding, isn’t going to come from just one report. It’s going to come from countless observations, from people on the ground, using tools that help them capture what they see accurately and share it effectively. That’s what we’re building with Phenom. We need to raise the bar on data quality.
Keep your eyes open. Keep logging.
Logan