The reporter describes how she first came about the story. Apparently the guy running the program in the Pentagon felt that they had reached a critical mass of evidence and witnesses but the department wasn't being taking seriously and couldn't be talked about.
https://www.space.com/39100-interstellar-object-oumuamua-ali...
Is this leading up to some big news story to deflect news from something else?
https://harvardgazette.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/jeff-koon...
No. The only way it could deflect from a really big story is if aliens actually came down and said "hi" publicly. It's got to be more subtle.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/11/us/politics/hillary-clint...
Somehow ends up in the limelight over and over! His callsign is most certainly NSFW.
About 7am I was travelling in a ferry on Sydney Harbour about 400m east of the bridge. I saw a giant (50m diameter?) golden glowing ball hover on the other (west) side of the bridge. It was definitely not on the bridge. It maintained its position for over 30 seconds.
Then it changed and the actuality was revealed.
Maybe ball lightning, apart from that I got nothing.
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me brdge giantball
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v ||It was the reflection of the sun in an airplane's cockpit window. The airplane was actually maybe five kilometres away but the extreme brightness played with my sense of distance. The window must have been flat for the reflection to be so bright.
It didn't appear to move because its speed north relative to the bridge matched my speed south -- i.e. the line between me and the airplane crossed (just west of) the bridge at the same point for a long time. The point of reflection must've been tiny. But it was right on me. I suspect no-one else in the ferry saw what I saw. And it must be extraordinarily rare for the circumstances to be maintained for so long. The illusion disappeared after the ferry and airplane made their turns.
So all this stuff about UFO sightings means about zero.