If you look at the evidence we have so far, most of the UFO videos we see from the military are filmed near or over bodies of water. So why aren’t we paying more attention to Unidentified Underwater Objects, or OSNIs?
In light of what is happening with the subject of UFOs it is important to ask where these objects came from, assuming they are not technology of this earth. So suppose, for example, that these objects are in fact otherworldly technology. They are visitors from other places. As far as we can tell, they are not hostile. They explore. And although we assume they are aliens from another planet, what if the UFOs we see today are really from Earth? It’s still an alien technology, but it’s been around for a while.
Look up, but also down
You might say that doesn’t make sense. Listen to me carefully. Many of the UFO reports we have read in recent months and years are near or over bodies of water. Take, for example, the 2004 encounter in which U.S. Navy pilots were “chasing” unidentified flying objects whose nature they could not explain. The videos show flying vehicles that appear to lack traditional propulsion systems. They don’t have traditional wings or tails. It’s not planes, drones, or helicopters. These unidentified objects can outrun our most advanced fighter jets. It’s as if these objects aren’t limited by the laws of physics as we understand them. We call these objects transintermediate UFOs. The encounters described above took place well off the coast of the United States. Above the ocean.
But back to the pressing issues I want to address in this article. Where do we see most of these objects? Where do they seem to appear most often? The answer is: Bodies of water. They appear over oceans, lakes on land, or near such bodies. It makes us wonder why above or near bodies of water. What is the connection between so many UFO sightings and water on Earth? After all, the Earth’s surface is 71% covered by water. The oceans contain 97% of the Earth’s water. This water, untreated, is too salty for drinking, for cultivation, and for most industrial uses, with the exception of cooling.)
Unidentified Underwater Object
Remember the video of the UFO splitting in two near an airport in Costa Rica? The object filmed by a customs plane shows an object moving quickly and being followed by the pilots. They follow the object as it moves over land and finally reaches the sea, where something unexpected happens: the object plunges into the sea with no visible splash, and moments later, it reappears and separates into two separate UFOs.
However, that’s not the only footage we’ve seen. Now that more and more people are interested in the UFO phenomenon. Jeremy Corbell, for example, has posted several interesting UFO videos in which we see objects that seem to defy explanation.
One such video shows a military vehicle following a UFO over the water. At some point this object dives into the ocean without splashing and disappears, never to be seen again.
It is noteworthy that the military searched for wreckage but found nothing. These so-called unidentified submerged objects are just as important as UFOs.
Transmedia
These objects are what the Pentagon calls transintermediate UFOs. Transmedium UFOs are on the list of objects to be studied by the Pentagon’s UFO team. These UFOs apparently have the ability to manipulate the matter around them. They seem to disobey the conventional laws of physics that our technology must obey in order to function. This technology, as seen in several videos, allows them to do things that our planes can’t. This allows them to move through the air as if there is no air resistance. These UFOs are entering the ocean at high speed as if water doesn’t even exist. It’s almost as if these transmedium UFOs can manipulate matter.
It’s time to take a closer look
Now that we’ve eliminated all restrictions and preconceptions regarding UFOs, it’s time to start looking. But not only in heaven. Not just in space. In the air. It’s time to pay attention to why these objects are found near water. If some of these objects intentionally enter the Earth’s oceans and lakes, we should ask ourselves the question, “Why does this happen?” And these issues should not be ridiculed. This question needs to be seriously considered.