Humanity has always been observing inexplicable luminous phenomena. For the Babylonians these were considered zodiacal omens, for the Greeks they were emanations of Phaeton, for the Romans they were lemurs (spirits of the ancestors), for the Mayans they were fire serpents, for the unfortunate Europeans of the Middle Ages they were angels, during the modern age they were described as fairies, in the nineteenth century they were called mirages, during World War II, Foo Fighters, during the Cold War they were Flying Saucers and UFOs during the sixties.
I saw an orange fireball ascending in complete silence at an angle of thirty degrees during the summer of 1970.
We will continue to see strange things even if science manages to reveal their nature.
We shot them, photographed them and filmed them but we never managed to detect them on the radar.
They move at great speed without leaving behind trails or disturbances in the air that we can see, or shock waves that we can hear, they are not material objects.
These things are like the laser light point that I usually play with my cat... it will never catch you.
Maybe someone is playing with us in the same way.
“There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”
Act 1 Scene of Shakespeare´s play Hamlet