What usually comes to mind when someone mentions the word “UFOs?” It is usually the case to associate “UFOs” with the existence of aliens. Even if this phenomenon dates back as far as the 1940’s, the fascination and curiosity of people haven't diminished or deteriorated because the media frenzy continuously feeds on the already over-imaginative minds of these people. Tabloids, magazines, comic books, television and the movies have embraced the idea of alien existence and offered this not-so-quite novel idea in so many forms to appeal to the taste of the public.

The term isn't always connected with aliens; it also stands for “unidentified flying object,” which refers to other objects such as meteors, aircraft and other moving objects traveling within the range of the perceptible band of electromagnetism.

The general excitement connected with UFO sightings stems from man’s fascination with the possibility of another race from a different world, which is similar to the belief in supernatural life forms. This is further combined with the over-commercialization of various evidences that some people have gathered, credible or not, which supports the growing belief in alien existence. Photographs and testimonies of UFO sightings have become prevalent as more and more people become interested in this kind of stuff without being equipped with the ability to correctly distinguish facts from hoaxes. It is even more surprising to know that the alleged remains of alien landings and crashes have become tourist attractions themselves. The mania over aliens has reached a certain point where people have even entertained conspiracy theories against the government, which only further strengthens the general belief in the truth of alien existence for certain people.

One of the most well-known and most enduring of all alien theories is the “Roswell Incident” which dates back to the summer of 1947. Two press releases were announced to the public. The first referred to the Air Force possessing an alien spacecraft. The subsequent press release offered an entirely different explanation for the phenomenon saying that it was only a weather balloon which landed on one of the meadows of a sheep rancher. These conflicting press releases roused the suspicion of the public as the said weather balloon was carried off to be examined in one of the most covert bases and that it shouldn’t concern the Air Force if it was indeed only a weather balloon.

What is believed to be the strongest form of support to the belief is that there seems to be no conclusive rational explanation for such an incident as what happened in Roswell. The absence of rationality gives way to enormous possibilities, even the likelihood of alien existence.
 

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