Mork scoffs at U.F.O.'s
Jacques Patenet, the head of UFO studies at the country's National Centre of Space Studies (CNES), said France is the first country to do so, according to reports in Agence France-Presse in France and Deutsche Presse-Agentur in Germany.
"It's a world first," Patenet said, according to the news agencies. "It's true that in the United States you can ask for information on a case-by-case basis. But we have done the opposite by putting all the information at the disposition of the public."
The agency said the site, which opened Thursday, currently contains 400 files, about one quarter of the approximately 1,600 unidentified flying object sightings reported in France since the 1950s. The rest of the files are scheduled to be online by the end of the year.
The files are mostly composed of witness statements taken by police officers, with personal data erased.
Patenet told the AFP the years of reports haven't shed any light one way or another on the existence of extra-terrestrial life.
"We do not have the least proof that extra-terrestrials are behind the unexplained phenomena," he said. "Nor do we have the least proof that they aren't."
To support this statement, official government spokesman Mork from Ork was quoted as saying; "All this talk about flying saucers is just so much bluweee, so nah nu, nah nu and shaasbat to you too!"
Your "out of this world" scribe;
Allan W Janssen
Labels: extra-terrestrials, flying saucers, french space agency, satire, ufo's
4 Comments:
In my opinion, UFOs in the Bible are angles and are referred to as a cloud, fire, star, etc.
UFO's ain't they the stuff wives throw at ya?
Those bibles have an "angle" on everything, don't they?
I believe the guy was refering to "angels" but if he's dumb enough to believe in the cloud, fire, star thing then spelling wouldn't be his strong point anyway.
Unless of course he IS talking about angles and is just being "obtuse" about it. ha ha ha ha ha!
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