Expert Voices

Belief in alien visits to Earth is spiraling out of control – here's why that's so dangerous

a flying saucer ringed by lights is barely visible through dense trees
A rendering of a flying saucer. (Image credit: mik38/Getty Images)

This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Tony Milligan is a Research Fellow in the Philosophy of Ethics at King's College London.

The idea that aliens may have visited the Earth is becoming increasingly popular. Around a fifth of UK citizens believe Earth has been visited by extraterrestrials, and an estimated 7% believe that they have seen a UFO.

The figures are even higher in the US – and rising. The number of people who believe UFO sightings offer likely proof of alien life increased from 20% in 1996 to 34% in 2022. Some 24% of Americans say they’ve seen a UFO.

This belief is slightly paradoxical as we have zero evidence that aliens even exist. What's more, given the vast distances between star systems, it seems odd we'd only learn about them from a visit. Evidence for aliens is more likely to come from signals from faraway planets.

In a paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, I argue that the belief in alien visitors is no longer a quirk, but a widespread societal problem.

The belief is now rising to the extent that politicians, at least in the U.S., feel they have to respond. The disclosure of information about claimed Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs rather than UFOs) from the Pentagon has got a lot of bi-partisan attention in the country.

Much of it plays upon familiar anti-elite tropes that both parties have been ready to use, such as the idea that the military and a secretive cabal of private commercial interests are keeping the deep truth about alien visitation hidden. That truth is believed to involve sightings, abductions and reverse-engineered alien technology.

Belief in a cover-up is even higher than belief in alien visitation. In 2019, a Gallop poll found that a staggering 68% of Americans believed that "the U.S. government knows more about UFOs than it is telling."

This political trend has been decades in the making. Jimmy Carter promised document disclosure during his presidential campaign in 1976, several years after his own reported UFO sighting. Like so many other sightings, the simplest explanation is that he saw Venus. (That happens a lot.)

Hillary Clinton also suggested she wanted to "open [Pentagon] files as much as I can" during her presidential campaign against Donald Trump. As seen in the video below, Trump suggested he'd need to "think about" whether it was possible to declassify the so-called Roswell documentation (relating to the notorious claimed crash of a UFO and the recovery of alien bodies).

Trump Discusses Declassifying Roswell, Says He knows 'Very Interesting' Information | NBC News NOW - YouTube Trump Discusses Declassifying Roswell, Says He knows 'Very Interesting' Information | NBC News NOW - YouTube
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Former president Bill Clinton claimed to have sent his chief of staff, John Podesta, down to Area 51, a highly classified US Air Force facility, just in case any of the rumors about alien technology at the site were true. It is worth nothing that Podesta is a long-time enthusiast for all things to do with UFOs.

The most prominent current advocate of document disclosure is the Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer. His stripped back 2023 UAP disclosure bill for revealing some UAP records was co-sponsored by three Republican senators.

Pentagon disclosure finally began during the early stages of Joe Biden’s term of office, but so far there has been nothing to see. Nothing looks like an encounter. Nothing looks close.

Still, the background noise does not go away.

Problems for society

All this is ultimately encouraging conspiracy theories, which could undermine trust in democratic institutions. There have been humorous calls to storm Area 51. And after the storming of the Capitol in 2021, this now looks like an increasingly dangerous possibility.

Too much background noise about UFOs and UAPs can also get in the way of legitimate science communication about the possibility of finding microbial extraterrestrial life. Astrobiology, the science dealing with such matters, has a far less effective publicity machine than UFOlogy.

History, a YouTube channel part owned by Disney, regularly delivers shows about "ancient aliens." The show is now in its 20th season and the channel has 13.8 million subscribers. The NASA astrobiology channel has a hard won 20,000 subscribers. Actual science finds itself badly outnumbered by entertainment repackaged as factual.

Alien visitation narratives have also repeatedly tried to hijack and overwrite the history and mythology of indigenous people.

The first steps in this direction go back to Alexander Kazantsev's science fiction tale Explosion: The Story of a Hypothesis (1946). It presents the 1908 Tunguska meteorite impact event as a Nagasaki-like explosion of an alien spacecraft engine. In Kazantsev’s tale, a single giant black female survivor has been left stranded, equipped with special healing powers. This lead to her adoption as a shaman by the indigenous Evenki people.

NASA and the space science community do support efforts such as the Native Skywatchers initiative set up by the indigenous Ojibwe and Lakota communities to ensure the survival of storytelling about the stars. There is a real and extensive network of indigenous scholarship about these matters.

But UFOlogists promise a far higher profile for indigenous history in return for the mashing together of genuine indigenous stories about life arriving from the skies with fictional tales about UFOs, repackaged as suppressed history.

The modern alien visitation narrative has not, after all, emerged out of indigenous communities. Quite the opposite. It emerged in part as a way for conspiracy-minded thinkers in a Europe torn apart by racism to “explain” how complex urban civilizations in places like South America could have existed prior to European settlement.

Squeezed through a new age filter of 1960s counterculture, the narrative was flipped to value indigenous people as having once possessed advanced technology. Once upon a time, according to this view, every indigenous civilization was Wakanda, a fictional country appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

If all of this stayed in its own box, as entertaining fiction, then matters would be fine. But it doesn't, and they aren't. Visitation narratives tend to overwrite indigenous storytelling about sky and ground.

This is a problem for everyone, not just indigenous peoples struggling to continue authentic traditions. It threatens our grasp of the past. When it comes to insight into our remote ancestors, the remnants of prehistoric storytelling are few and precious, such as within indigenous storytelling about the stars.

Who Are The Pleiadians? - YouTube Who Are The Pleiadians? - YouTube
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Take the tales of the Pleiades, which date back in standard forms to at least 50,000 years ago.

This may be why these tales in particular are heavily targeted by alien visitation enthusiasts, some of whom even claim to be "Pleiadeans." No surprises, Pleiadeans do not look like the Lakota or Ojibwe, but are strikingly blond, blue-eyed and Nordic.

It is increasingly clear that belief in alien visitation is no longer just a fun speculation, but something that has real and damaging consequences.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher.

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  • Questioner
    "Evidence for aliens is more likely to come from signals from faraway planets."

    Based on what dataset?

    An assignation of probability from a sample size of ZERO?!?

    But it's 'OK' to believe in psycho-barbarian magical tyrants from some (i guess) other dimension?

    The self-anointed 'information priesthood' who haven't figured out mass fields have less space evidenced by the Sun's faster interior rotation than at the exterior?

    The 'information priesthood' that hasn't figured out gravity is a function of vibratory constructs spanning a tidal time-dilation field?

    The same exclusionist crowd dismissing 50s &100s of people's shared observations based on the nonsense term 'mass hallucination'?

    'Zika causes microcephally."? What data contradicting nonsense.

    Conspiracy is a scientific fact based on science reports from 2017.
    https://www.informs.org/News-Room/Media-Coverage/All-Categories/O.R.-and-Analytics-in-the-News/Groups-tend-to-lie-more-than-individuals
    Pardon me if I'm not terrified by the 'information priesthood' clown crowd, OK?
    Reply
  • COLGeek
    TV shows and personalities push the notion of the possibility of something and many latch on to that as fact. It is not and no amount of discussion will change those minds. That is, in deed, dangerous.

    "Popular" science isn't science. There is far too much of that nonsense floating about. Even some of the cited sources put forth innuendo, not fact, not evidence. Intended on grabbing uninformed minds and opinions.

    It would be laughable, if not so sad.

    I believe life does exist elsewhere. Even intelligent life. The Universe is simply too vast to assume we are it, and only it.

    However, they haven't visited us nor are likely to given that vastness of the Universe.

    Evidence of such could never be kept from the public and it would spread far and wide.
    Reply
  • Questioner
    COLGeek said:
    they haven't visited us
    Based on what absolute 'knowledge'?

    There are lots of baseless statements and intellectual garbage that get published in so-called peer reviewed journals.

    Put up or shut up.
    Reply
  • COLGeek
    Questioner said:
    Based on what absolute 'knowledge'?

    There are lots of baseless statements and intellectual garbage that get published in so-called peer reviewed journals.

    Put up or shut up.
    True, I don't know that for a fact. Nor does anyone.

    But, I do know how the world works and what many have claimed, yet without a single shred of verifiable evidence.

    There is no purpose in going over poor pictures/videos, testimony, eye witness accounts, or political grandstanding. The end result will be the same.

    Your advice goes for you as well.
    Reply
  • RevPhilip
    Since I was a young child, I have always been intrigued by the night sky. I have watched and studied it all my life, I helped start an astronomy club in High School. I studied Astronomy in college. I served many years in and I retired from the military. Those years have included developing space communications systems at the Naval Electronics Laboratory. I also worked for NASA at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) as an original team member for the Voyager Project. I also worked on the Viking and Helios projects. I was the first "Telescope Operations Specialist" hired when the "Multiple MirrorObservatory was being built on Mt Hopkins in Arizona. I am a NASA Solar System Ambassador, and I still hold star parties and give lectures to various public groups and schools as requested.

    Over most of my life, I can say honestly that not much has surprised me! I have seen many strange things and witnessed many odd events! Even though I have long since retired, I still love the night sky and will never get tired of studying it!
    Reply
  • mikeash
    RevPhilip said:
    Since I was a young child, I have always been intrigued by the night sky. I have watched and studied it all my life, I helped start an astronomy club in High School. I studied Astronomy in college. I served many years in and I retired from the military. Those years have included developing space communications systems at the Naval Electronics Laboratory. I also worked for NASA at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) as an original team member for the Voyager Project. I also worked on the Viking and Helios projects. I was the first "Telescope Operations Specialist" hired when the "Multiple MirrorObservatory was being built on Mt Hopkins in Arizona. I am a NASA Solar System Ambassador, and I still hold star parties and give lectures to various public groups and schools as requested.

    Over most of my life, I can say honestly that not much has surprised me! I have seen many strange things and witnessed many odd events! Even though I have long since retired, I still love the night sky and will never get tired of studying it!
    Ok, tell about some strange and odd events that someone with your background can't readily explain.
    Reply
  • mikeash
    Admin said:
    Belief in alien visitors is no longer a quirk, but a widespread societal problem. This belief is slightly paradoxical as we have zero evidence that aliens even exist.

    Belief in alien visits to Earth is spiraling out of control – here's why that's so dangerous : Read more
    It is dangerous with an ever increasing distrust in science and government. And ever increasing terror of accepting that we are alone and beg for explanation of this existence. I must admit I watch Ancient Aliens , not because of those clowns and what they want you to believe, but they sure have nice coverage of places they cover. Like a travel log.
    Reply
  • orsobubu
    mikeash said:
    Ok, tell about some strange and odd events that someone with your background can't readily explain.
    maybe he could silently suggest he is on something but he cannot deliver
    Reply
  • Unclear Engineer
    I think the cause and effect are being reversed in the article.

    I think it is the misbehaviors of our politicians and media moguls with political agendas that have undermined our faith in "science", because we so often see it misused in their efforts to persuade us to help them advance their agendas. That naturally allows for undermining "official" statements that they are not hiding information about aliens.

    I do agree that the trend in disbelief of official statements is dangerous. And, I suspect that the enemies of Western European and North American democracies are busy at their work of spreading misinformation and distrust to further their own political agendas by destabilizing the societies that oppose them.

    So, when I see posts, here and elsewhere, making what I know are scientifically unsupported statements and sewing conspiracy theories, I usually wonder who those posters really are, and whether they even themselves believe some of the statements they make for public consumption.

    SO, we need to remember that it is not just the entertainment industry that is encouraging and benefitting from this aliens conspiracy fad. Some of the posts we are reading are probably not intended to be benign with respect to our own wellbeing.

    And, I am sure I will be attacked for this thought, on the basis that I am promoting a conspiracy theory. Ironic that it will be the proponents of conspiracy theories who attack for doing what they are doing, themselves.
    Reply
  • Questioner
    Solid well evidenced & reasoned science is not the problem,
    It is half-baked conclusions that don't fit & sometimes diametrically contradict their own data & sound reasoning,
    And still get published that taint the 'science' label.

    One can't assume the universe is a closed system because the blue bird told you One must provide evidence for that hypothesis which Lavoisier did with his experiments.
    Reply