Monday, February 2, 2026

UFO Skeptic Michael Shermer Tries to Apply 'Belief in Skygods' To Secular Folks' Accepting UAP And Fails Miserably.

 

                                           Really? Seriously?  Nope, get over it already.


Skeptic magazine contributor Michael Shermer covers wide swaths of fantastic beliefs in his book  2011 The Believing Brain, but he's at his level best when he takes on religious belief. As he notes:

"As a back-of-the envelope calculation, with an order of magnitude accuracy, we can safely say that over the past ten thousand years of history humans have created about ten thousand different religions and about one thousand gods."


Shermer's point is that not all of these can be true or valid. The very fact so many religions exist, and so many gods, means they are all relative only, not absolutes.  Which comports with my own take in my book, Beyond Atheism, Beyond God', p. 12:

When people use the word G-o-d they’re not talking or writing about an actual entity but a limited construct or ideation configured as a noun, which we call a God concept. Further, because it’s limited by content and comprehension, i.e. by finite minds with finite intelligence which can’t grasp all aspects, then all such concepts must be relative and subjective. This means that the Jewish concept of Yahweh, the Muslim concept of Allah, the Hindu concept of Brahmin and the Christian concept of the Trinity all stand in the same epistemological relation. From an informational point of view, none can be selected as “true” to the exclusion of the others. All are relative deities only.”

 Sadly, however, Shermer in his recent Washington Post piece:

Opinion | I’ve reported on UFOs for decades. Here’s what I think. - Washington Post

Veers off from acceptable logical argument by invoking pseudo-psychological twaddle. He applies a 'homemade' quasi religious belief  template to the recent exposure of serious UAP-UFO incidents such as revealed in the documentary, The Age of Disclosure, i.e.

The Age of Disclosure - Official Trailer | IMDb

And comes up bupkiss, in my opinion.

While looking carefully for a bona fide, serious analysis and criticism, all I really detected was a kind of half-baked  dime store skeptic psychology misapplied to the UAP phenomenon, i.e.

"I have come to the conclusion that aliens are sky gods for skeptics, deities for atheists and a secular alternative to replace the rapidly declining religiosity in the West — particularly the United States and the United Kingdom, where, not coincidentally, most UAP sightings are made."

A 'secular alternative' to standard religiosity? I hardly think so. Confirming further that Shermer simply ignored the testimony and evidence presented by David Fravor and the other Navy pilots.  So it isn't really clear what he's trying to do apart from simple dismissal, a la the late Über skeptic Philip Klass.  This is confirmed when he delivers his three possible categories to account for UAP:

"In my own classification system, I put reported UFO and UAP sightings in three categories: 1. ordinary terrestrial (balloons, camera/lens effects, visual illusions, etc.), 2. extraordinary terrestrial (Russian or Chinese spy planes or drones capable of feats unheard of in the U.S.) and 3. extraordinary extraterrestrial (alien presence).

I strongly suspect that all UAP sightings fall into the first category, but other commentators suggest the second, noting that they could represent Russian or Chinese assets using technology as yet unknown to American scientists, capable of speeds and turns that seemingly defy all their physics and aerodynamics."

Wherein he gives short shrift to choice 3 (alien presence), clearly because he skipped over the Nimitz pilots' congressional testimony and the evidence presented from radar and other instruments. (Category 2 was summarily dismissed as unrealistic by Fravor and the other Nimitz pilots), because he avoids tackling or discussing the specifics, i.e. of the congressional UAP testimony of  those like Ret. Navy Cmdr. David Fravor.

To try to support his opinion that UAP aren't real, he offers this astronaut (Scott Kelly) example:

"What about the reports of unexplained phenomena by pilots and astronauts? According to Scott Kelly, who has logged more than 15,000 hours over 30 years in planes and in space, “the environment that we fly in is very conducive to optical illusions.” At a NASA news conference on UAPs, he recalled his co-pilot seeing a mysterious object that turned out to be “a Bart Simpson balloon.” 

Nicely cherry-picked, Maestro!  Entirely omitted, is any attempt to sensibly account for the UAP Navy Cmdr. David Fravor confronted in the Nimitz (2004) incident. As Fravor noted in his House testimony, the object  was estimated at forty-six feet in diameter and easily paced his own aircraft in velocity and exceeded it. It was no optical illusion as it was independently reported and observed by other pilots and separate instruments. Fravor emphasized how the object "shifted its longitudinal axis and paced his fighter which was at 15,000 ft. altitude, while the object was at 12,000 ft. before it rapidly accelerated in front of us and disappeared, adding (in his testimony):

"We started to turn back and then the controller interrupted and said 'Sir, you're not going to believe this but that thing turned around is at your cap point, roughly 60 miles in less than a minute.':

Fravor goes on to reference radar evidence that was never released:

"What you don't see is the radar tape which was never released and we don't know where it is right now.   But there was active jamming the object put on our AG373 radar. I can get into modes later if you want. What was shocking to us is the incident was never investigated, tapes were never taken, leaving it just a great story with friends. It wasn't until 2009 Jay Stratton contacted me to investigate, he was part of the AATIP program with Lou Alizondo."

Elizondo, former director of The Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), splattered similar bunkum to Shermer's in his superb monograph, Imminent
(Noting the AATIP was an unclassified but unpublicized investigatory effort funded by the United States Government to study unidentified flying objects (UFOs) or unexplained aerial phenomena (UAP). It originated with the Defense Intelligence Agency.)

Specifically, as Elizondo notes, what places the Nimitz 2004 sighting in the realm of the "UAP gold standard" are the facts that:

- It was made not merely by distant sightings or videos of but a close up encounter of TWO pilots (Lt. Cmdr. David Fravor, Lt. Jr. Grade Alex Dietrich) in their U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornets.  Further, occupying the rear seat of Fravor's Hornet was Jim Sleight (the WSO) responsible for weapons targeting.

- It was supported by state of the art technology including Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared Radar (ATFLIR) used by a 3rd pilot (Lt. Chad Underwood).

- The incident was noteworthy given the convergence of high caliber intelligence gathering from multiple radar systems (and ATFLIR)  and the unanimous testimony of experienced military pilots in an encounter at close quarters.

As Elizondo details the encounter (pp. 74-75):

"The object was about 46 feet long - about the length of a semi-truck and shaped like an elongated oval. The pilots would later recall the object's gleaming whiteness as if the exterior were covered with a white, candy- coated shell."

Then there were the more recent UAP hearings ('Inside Capitol Hill's Latest UFO Hearings', TIME,  Dec. 9, p. 16) Shermer appears to have missed, wherein we learned of another blatant coverup.  This based on the testimony of Ret. Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet who 

"was on deployment in January, 2015 when one of the cockpit videos that were declassified in 2020 was first captured. According to his testimony, he and a handful of other Navy officers received an email with the video attached. However, the email vanished from their inboxes 'without explanation'. "

Gallaudet, indeed, went on to warn these sort of dodges are:

"not only a disservice to public knowledge but a risk to public safety as well.

Adding:

"There is a national security need for more UAP transparency.  In 2025, the U.S. will spend over $900 billion on national defense, yet we still have an incomplete understanding of what is in our airspace,"

This is indeed serious, as it indicates a pattern of deliberate withholding of material evidence at ATTIP coordinator Elizondo also referenced in his book, Imminent.

But Shermer in his yen to dismiss, simply avoids these hardball examples in favor of a cherry-picked optical illusion.  Which then allows him to reduce all UAP sightings to a quasi religious belief in 'sky gods'.  Heck, he even cites an academic paper to try to get us to buy his own dime store skeptic psychology:

"What I think is actually going on is a deep, religious-like impulse to believe that there is a godlike, omnipotent intelligence out there who 1. knows we’re here, 2. is monitoring us and is concerned for our well-being and 3. will save us if we’re good. Researchers have found, for example, an inverse relationship between religiosity, meaning and belief in aliens."

 Shermer's major fault in his WaPo piece is applying similar religious belief "logic" as in his earlier book, though with a more secular twist. Again, revealing that neither he nor the researchers whose paper he cites ever did a deep dive into the actual physical evidence for UAP as disclosed in the UAP hearings.

But this also harkens back to similar flaws in his book, The Believing Brain, such as injecting too many irrelevancies. I noted examples in a 2011 blog postwherein he specifically attempts to negate conspiracy in the JFK assassination using this weird "test": 

"Any expression of strong suspicions of either governments or companies, or attributing too much power to individuals"


So, any such expressions immediately disqualify the person's claim for a serious conspiracy in any given event. Iran-Contra? Pure coincidence, nothing to see there. Please forget that
 Iran –Contra Report.
Forget the U.S. shipping Israeli Hawk and TOW missiles to Iran from 1985-86 to obtain the release of American hostages held in the Middle East, despite an embargo on such sales. Ignore that the money from the sales of these arms was to be funneled into Nicaragua to support the Rightist “Contras’, a violation of the then Boland Amendment, and basically exposing the Reagan administration’s covert support for paramilitary activities conducted against the Sandinista government.

 Hell, by Shermer's criterion, The Washington Post's Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein ought to never have been suspicious of the Watergate break-in and the role of Nixon's government in it. Had that been the case, the Watergate conspiracy would never have been exposed, and Nixon would never have been forced from office! So much for that one!

What about companies? Can't be suspicious of them? Is Shermer's memory so short he can't recall a certain Houston company called ENRON in 2001, which set up hundreds of dummy accounts in the Caribbean and used them to funnel money to, and at the same time kept other liabilities off its U.S. books to fool shareholders? More than 21,000 Enron employees who'd been duped into buying its shares- while Kenny Lay and his cohort profited- paid the price.

It appears then - certainly to me - Shermer has a pattern of using convoluted and balmy excuses, rationales and objections when it serves his purpose: mainly as a dismissive shortcut.  He does it again in his WaPo piece on UAP - using an astronaut's optical illusion to dismiss all the UAP incidents as 'balloons' or some other phantasm.

  A number of the comments after the article are revelatory and show at least some readers saw through Shermer's attempt to dismiss the phenomenon:


I'm a professional astrophysicist. I thought the same way you did....until I started seeing the radar and FLIR evidence...Until I started hearing from high end government officials and CIA members...Then I realized it was not Bart Simpson balloons, advanced Russian and Chinese spy planes.....it's something else...and it is real.

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What a wasted column. For those of us that have seen these things it's obvious Shermer doesn't know what he's talking about.

His bias is evident. Don't believe some of the Navy's best pilots, the word of former astronauts, or the many brave scientists willing to buck establishment science, not to mention the hundreds of thousands or millions of people that have seen something mainstream science cowardly avoids.

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This doesn't really explain the numerous sightings by military experts- documented with radar and video. These aren't religious zealots. Fearing that anything currently unexplainable must be false and part of a religious impulse isn't logical or skeptical, its just aversion.

Why not comment on the gimbal videos released? No logical explanation for those - but maybe that is why it was left out.

I don't buy this article or its premise at all.

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I watched the documentary entitled Age of Disclosure with the videos of Navy fighter pilots encountering UFO objects! I worked for the Department of Defense for 22 years and believe the pilots.

Condescending, and he really doesn't discuss those incidents where it is unexplainable. To put it another way, his skepticism is too absolute and a default position that is eristic, almost beyond rationality. He lacks curiosity. I don't think that existential folks look at UFOs as some god-like thing. It's more of a curiosity to understand. Shermer just likes to say "You're wrong" just to be mean, for lack of a better word, that will pass the filter here, or get some sort of satisfaction from being oppositional defiant.

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Nobody disputes that most sightings can ultimately be explained, but there are many accounts that are supported by radar, high tech imaging, and very experienced military pilots, who often speak out reluctantly to protect their careers from others unwilling to be open minded. I listen with curiosity and my own scientific engineering background. If you want to raise the topic, do so seriously and give the scientific credibility it deserves. I dont discount skepticism, but i don't discount credible witnesses and data, and will remain open and interested. I want to hear more from experienced pilots and I want Congress to continue to hold hearings and push hard on the Pentagon to open up about what it may have. I appreciate their courage to look into this and hold the government to account, which is something dearly needed today. And I ask the Post to have the courage to be open about this and present the other side to Mr Shermer's skepticism. 60 Minutes did this a while back. You should too. Don't hide behind a magazine publisher.

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