All we want from the eyewitnesses are their accounts of size, shape, flight path, lights etc. Then we corroborate this with radar data and see if we can find a plausible earthly explanation. Also your scenario simply does not explain all the cases that involve radar trackings, videos and photos. The latter can be faked but it is rare that we hear about military personnel faking radar data before handing it over to their superiors, just for fun.
There’s a huge difference between “we can’t think of a plausible earthly explanation” and “alien visitation is more likely than an explanation we haven’t thought of yet.”
In the case of the “ghost” experience, if we were hearing a secondhand account from the original witness, we would have “no earthly explanation,” because they wouldn’t convey the information that would actually make it explainable.
Sometimes reports might be due to things that are kept secret for good reason, like the test flights of the B-2 “Spirit” bomber, which looks for all the world like a flying saucer, and was classified by the military. Others might be due to physical phenomena that are not yet understood, and some may be due to priming and erroneous pattern recognition causing people to exaggerate observations that are not particularly out of the ordinary. These are all events that we should expect to happen in the absence of any sort of extraterrestrial activity. But attributing the sorts of events described in these reports to intelligent life forms from different star systems travelling all the way to the vicinity of Earth and making such vague and dubious appearances is a profound case of privileging the hypothesis.
There’s a huge difference between “we can’t think of a plausible earthly explanation” and “alien visitation is more likely than an explanation we haven’t thought of yet.”
In the case of the “ghost” experience, if we were hearing a secondhand account from the original witness, we would have “no earthly explanation,” because they wouldn’t convey the information that would actually make it explainable.
Sometimes reports might be due to things that are kept secret for good reason, like the test flights of the B-2 “Spirit” bomber, which looks for all the world like a flying saucer, and was classified by the military. Others might be due to physical phenomena that are not yet understood, and some may be due to priming and erroneous pattern recognition causing people to exaggerate observations that are not particularly out of the ordinary. These are all events that we should expect to happen in the absence of any sort of extraterrestrial activity. But attributing the sorts of events described in these reports to intelligent life forms from different star systems travelling all the way to the vicinity of Earth and making such vague and dubious appearances is a profound case of privileging the hypothesis.