I'm more interested in the motivations of the U.S. military for releasing footage that appears to be so easily debunked. If the reason is truly that they're fishing for higher budgets, that's taking a pretty cynical view of those responsible for making those decisions... Like, tossing a pie plate in the air, and showing that video to halfwit politicians and asking for more money for defense. It's a bummer, if that's what's going on.
Interestingly most video accounts I see are of gently floating ufo’s. The thing I saw was zipping around and treated the sky like an air hockey table.
I did a lot of digging to reconcile what I saw and came down to the conclusion that these are probably projected masses. (Not real objects)
Recently however I think I’m adapting the thought that these may in fact be real craft.
Definitely ours.
If they're from other systems, they're likely uncrewed and fully autonomous. The same thing we may one day attempt, if we make it that long.
Interesting question: What if the goals of their civilization have completely changed since launch? It's likely been a long time.
Will we account for that when we launch?
I am not closed minded or dismissive to the possibility of alien flying saucers. Gyros or whatever it may be to propel something that almost seems like perpetual motion. I just need some harder evidence.
It could be pure propaganda entirely focused on getting the Navy in control of the nacesnt "space force"; that'd be a bit more cynical and farsighted than I expect from large parts of government.
Most probably some new tech been tested by Air force. They deliberately creating noise to suppress accidental discovery of tests.
I believe these to be early trisolaran probes; their aim is to intimidate Earth's leadership into stunting the technological progress of the planet by investing resources in Blue Origin and ULA. This will prevent humans from bringing up effective orbital defences in time.