In the blink of an eye, movies like Independence Day, Mars Attacks! and Close Encounters of the Third Kind shifted from entertainment to instructional videos.
Following NASA’s first public meeting of its new committee tasked with studying UAPs (“unidentified aerial phenomena”) Wednesday, an organization called Americans for Safe Aerospace is asking for all Americans to keep their eyes peeled while flying the (hopefully) friendly skies.
Co-founded by former Navy fighter pilot Ryan Graves, the group is dedicated to “aerospace safety and national security with a focus on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP),” per its mission statement.
“Unidentified objects in our airspace present an urgent and critical safety and national security issue, but pilots are not getting the support they need and the respect they deserve,” Graves told NBC News. “When I served, my squadron was encountering UAP nearly every day, and nothing was being done.”
It’s official. ?
We are excited to announce ASA’s launch as the first military pilot-led nonprofit organization focused on UAP by naming our Aircrew Leadership Council and Advisory Board.
Aircrew Leadership Council
– Alex Dietrich
– David Fravor
– Sam Fletcher
– Lewis Harding…— Americans for Safe Aerospace (@SafeAerospace) June 1, 2023
Currently, airline passengers are encouraged by the FAA to report weird things they see outside the window for national security purposes, but pilots on those same planes face obstacles and professional scorn if they try to report UAPs, says Graves. And so the group is pushing for better reporting mechanisms for pilots, stating on its website that it supports “military and commercial pilots and aerospace workers impacted by UAP, scientists committed to investigating this mystery, and concerned citizens who believe in transparent disclosure from our government.”
Related: Space Stories Is a Startup Made of Artists, Scientists, and Ex-Government Officials
Not too long ago, UFO hunters conjured up images of people running around in tinfoil hats, but ASA’s Advisory Board includes many prominent figures, including Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb, former International Space Station commander Terry Virts, and former head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, retired Navy Rear Adm. Tim Gallaudet.
Graves told NBC that while most UAP sightings turn out to be nothing to worry about, 2% to 5% of reports are unexplainable and represent military threats from places like China and Russia — and maybe even further away.
If you want to get involved, signup for ASA’s newletter, which promises to include updates, briefings and “ways to make your voice heard’ on UAPs.
This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur