You saw lights in the sky.
You assumed "craft".
Given craft, you assumed "they" as pilots.
You aren't the first and you won't be the last, but it really is an argument from ignorance. This is not an insult, merely an observation of a logical fallacy.
That may well be.
However, I think it is just as ignorant to dismiss my report, out of hand.
I didn't JUST see 'lights'.
I saw a set of star-like objects move in concert with one another, perform maneuvers that broke with what was familiar aeronautical movement, and then do something impossible by modern human technological standards.
I may well be wrong to conclude 'craft', so I'll stick with object.
While my knowledge of human piloted aircraft is not infinite, to refer to my experience as "limited" is not accurate. If a student gets 98% of the questions correct, we wouldn't say he has "limited" knowledge of the test material. That'd be intellectual dishonesty, even if it was an accurate statement.
Thusly, I have seen 'most' American made airplanes in action. These 'objects' were vastly dis-similar to EVERYTHING I've encountered.
To suggest that my senses failed me is ignoring my experience in this field.
To suggest that I imagined or hallucinated the whole event is ignoring the fact that I have a clean mental health record, with no history of head trauma or inability to discern what is 'real' in my environment.
I understand fully that my recollections aren't 'proof' of anything, 'to you'.