“I want to know: is anyone there? We asked pilots, space psychologists and government officials the big question: are there aliens among us?”
William Shatner, who played Captain Kirk in the iconic series Star Trek, now seeks answers to these questions in his new program “Aliens Among Us”, available on the Fox Nation streaming platform.
Shatner’s new show challenges UFO skepticism, incorporates bombshell testimonials and analyzes interesting studies that argue for the existence of intelligence beyond the world we know.
“We don’t say, ‘Look, here’s a piece of a spacecraft, but there are rumors that the American government reverse-engineered things. They found debris that they think came from spacecraft, but the mystery is, why did they they didn’t land in the White House and say, ‘Here we are, and we have to stop the wars and the bickering, and there are bigger things out there than that.’ Why didn’t they reveal themselves? I don’t know,” Shatner said.
Recently, airline pilots reported supposed UFOs “dancing in the sky” during a flight from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, to Abuja, Nigeria, and captured images of three bright spots in the sky.
Van Pangeman, responsible for capturing the images, said he saw up to four dots lined up in a way that resembled the Phoenix Lights phenomenon that happened in Arizona in 1997 and was witnessed by thousands of people, including actor Kurt Russell.
“They’re seeing something, right? But what are they seeing? Why are they there? What are they doing? We don’t know. It’s a part of the mysteries of life that we’re trying to understand,” Shatner said about the phenomenon.
UFO mysteries have reached the federal level in the United States, where historic congressional hearings have been held into military sightings of unidentified objects.
Harvard academics also drew attention after releasing a paper, coined a “thought experiment”, theorizing that aliens could already be here.
“These strange things are happening and in addition to what they’re seeing in the sky, we’ve also been finding evidence of debris on the ground,” Shatner added.