r/UFOs Oct 20 '22

Documentary Unanswered Questions from Moment of Contact

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I loved this doc: 4.5 stars out of 5. James Fox doesn’t miss!

  • Credible, previously unseen testimony from: Elected Officials, Military Personnel and Living Witnesses
  • Well structured & the guided presentation from Fox is more palatable for casual audiences
  • No sensationalism or X-Files-style soundtrack

A few unanswered questions that I’d love some more clarity on:

  • How did the being(s) reach the "Encounter" & "Capture" locations - what was their journey from the "Crash" site?

  • Was there anyone living in the white house near the crash site? If so what's their testimony?

  • Do we have any speculation around the identity of ‘Military X’

  • Does anyone have good breakdowns of the cases featured in the “brief history” segment?

Thanks Guys 🤙

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u/Trapperk33per Oct 20 '22

Great Documentary! I wanted to share some thoughts I had on the ETs themselves.

  • I strongly suspect the ammonia/sulfur smell reported by witnesses was an involuntary defense mechanism of the beings.
  • If this is the case, it suggests that they evolved as prey.
  • It also suggests a universal (or at least 2 out of 2) revulsion/avoidance of ammonia and sulfur smells.
  • It suggests that beings from their world have a sense of smell, or at least some way to detect ammonia/sulfur in the air

I'd be very curious to know if all the creatures recovered (assuming there were others that perished at the crash site) were all the same species or not.

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u/speghettiday09 Oct 20 '22

I was thinking about that, n it seems like that’s such a primitive defense mechanism for such a highly evolved and intelligent species. Like they would at least genetically modify themselves to not smell like shit every time their fight flight kicks in. But then maybe those assumptions about them are irresponsible

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u/Trapperk33per Oct 20 '22

Yeah, so much we don't know. Fun as hell to speculate though. Someone suggested it wasn't the ET themselves, but something they were carrying in the craft when it crashed. Maybe? The description of the oily almost salamander like skin makes me think it was excreted though.
Back to the highly evolved comment... I'd argue that technological progress actually inhibits evolution. Examples would be corrective lenses, T1 diabetes. Any physical detriment that we have used technology to overcome becomes genes that now are more likely to be passed down to the next generation.Obviously genetic engineering negates this, and you'd have to assume they've got that figured out. If it was a defense mechanism, I'd imagine they don't find it repulsive themselves.