Entrepreneur, Author, International Expertise

Are UFOs Real or Just a Myth?

“Perhaps you need to know.”   

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For an entrepreneur, knowing whether UFOs are real isn’t just about curiosity – it’s about opportunity. Verified proof of advanced non-human technology could upend entire industries, from energy and transportation to communications and materials. Like the internet or AI before it, such a breakthrough would open doors for innovation, early investment, and market disruption.

If UFO’s are real, the smart move is to get ahead of the curve, adapt your strategy, and be ready to seize the advantage before everyone else catches on.  Perhaps some already have.

Before you write this idea off, there’s a mountain of credible evidence to consider.

Here are three well-documented U.S. military and naval UFO incidents:

  • USS Nimitz “Tic Tac” Encounter (2004) – Navy pilots off the coast of California reported tracking and visually observing a fast-moving, oval-shaped object with no visible propulsion, capable of extraordinary maneuvers.   Joe Rogan Interview Commander David Fravor
  • USS Princeton Radar Tracking (2004) – During the same Nimitz carrier group operations, the USS Princeton’s radar operators tracked multiple unidentified objects dropping from 80,000 feet to sea level in seconds before vanishing. Click Here for Video
  • USS Omaha “Spherical Object” Incident (2019) – Navy personnel near San Diego recorded a spherical UFO on radar and thermal imaging before it descended into the ocean, with no debris or recovery possible.  Click Here for Video

The Pentagon’s hunt for UFOs:

In his New York Times #1 bestseller Imminent: Inside the Pentagon’s Hunt for UFOs, published in August 2024, Luis Elizondo dives deep into this concept, backing it up with detailed cross-references to dates and names.

Who is Luis Elizondo?

Luis Elizondo is a former U.S. Army counterintelligence special agent and former director of the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a secretive Department of Defense initiative that investigated reports of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs).

He served more than 20 years in government intelligence roles, focusing on national security threats, espionage, and unconventional technology. Elizondo came into the public spotlight in 2017 when he resigned from the Department of Defense, citing excessive secrecy around UAP research. Since then, he has been a leading public advocate for UAP transparency, appearing in congressional briefings, media interviews, and as a central figure in documentaries and books.

What are UAPs

A UAP, or Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon, is the term now commonly used by the U.S. military and government in place of “UFO.” It refers to any airborne object or phenomenon that can’t be immediately identified or explained through conventional means. The term is meant to be broader and less culturally loaded than “UFO.”

Interview with Luis Elizondo

Technology Advancements

Decades of military sightings, whispered crash-retrieval stories, and sudden leaps in tech make you wonder if something has quietly been reverse-engineered and put to use. The skeptics say “no way,” the believers say “absolutely,” and the truth probably lives somewhere in between.

In any case, I just finished his book last week and found it a fascinating read – highly recommend it.  As I mentioned before, it’s packed with facts, names, dates, and incidents, all now unclassified, which naturally makes you wonder… what’s still classified?  Maybe, as the old X-Files signoff put it, “the truth is out there.”

Hope you enjoy this week’s issue.