...associating my name and what I do with slights against me that imply dishonesty, even if they are indirectly stated, are not something I appreciate and I kindly ask you not to do it. I am here for constructive friendly debate, not to be slandered.
First of all, I didn't
imply anything. I stated it outright.
The reason I used your name is because you repeatedly refuse to address me directly when answering my posts. As I have mentioned several times before, I consider that approach arrogant and insulting.
Therefore, whenever you address my arguments in the third person, I will go out of my way to identify you specifically by your own name and the name of your organization, so you won't be able to hide your own identity from any readers of this thread.
You show me the respect I deserve, and I'll gladly show you the respect you deserve. That's how it works, like a two-way street.
There is nothing dishonest about my tactics.
On the contrary, you regularly use a variety of blatantly dishonest debating tactics, including flat-out lies. You still persist with these dishonest tactics despite having been corrected about them numerous times. Because you have failed to learn and self-correct after being corrected in friendly terms, I am hoping I can get through to you by directly calling you out and shaming you for your dishonesty.
So first of all, when it was pointed out to you that the acronym "UFO" means "unidentified flying objects" and therefore does not in any way specify the existence of "aliens," you dishonestly countered with a redefinition of the word "unidentified."
To wit:
"Unidentified" in the context of UFOs has a very specific meaning, as has been discussed in previous posts that reference the official USAF definition AFR 200-2 Feb 05 1958, and other Air Force discussions of the subject that show we are dealing with craft that have appeared to be metallic and posess performance characteristics beyond any known manmade or natural phenomena.
This is a blatant attempt to distort the definition of the word "unidentified" to semantically justify your own belief that UFOs are some form of alien craft and not the result of mundane causes.
These objects are by their very definition alien to our civilization.
See?
I've traced the origin of the word UFO back the people who created it and I've traced the official definitions back to those same people.
Let's look at that definition again, shall we?
2. Definitions. To insure proper and uniform usage in UFO screenings, investigations, and reportings, the objects are defined as follows:
a. Familiar or Known Objects - Aircraft, birds, balloons, kites, searchlights, and astronomical bodies (meteors, planets, stars).
b. Unknown Aircraft:
(1) Flying objects determined to be aircraft. These generally appear as a result of ADIZ violations and often prompt the UFO reports submitted by the general public. They are readily identifiable as, or known to be, aircraft, but their type, purpose, origin, and destination are unknown. Air Defense Command is responsible for reports of "unknown" aircraft and they should not be reported as UFO's under this regulation.
(2) Aircraft flares, jet exhausts, condensation trails, blinking or steady lights observed at night, lights circling or near airports and airways, and other similar phenomena resulting from, or indications of aircraft. These should not be reported under this regulation as they do not fall within the definition of a UFO.
(3) Pilotless aircraft and missiles.
c. Unidentified Flying Objects - Any airborne object which, by performance, aerodynamic characteristics, or unusual features, does not conform to known aircraft or missiles, or which does not correspond to definitions in a. and b. above.
That definition describes something that is unprovable by its very nature. There's no way the USAF could possibly prove that they have ruled out any and all mundane causes for all UFO sightings, short of providing physical, verifiable evidence.
The fact that the studies conducted under the USAF did not reveal any mundane cause, that does not mean no mundane cause exists. The fact that they did not detect or believe a hoax, confabulation, or human error does not mean that a hoax, confabulation or human error was not the cause.
In other words, if this is indeed the position the USAF researchers adopted regarding UFOs, then those researchers were engaged in the practice of pseudoscience.
I can also prove by your own admission that this USAF definition was cherry-picked specifically for the purpose of your own argument.
In another post, you also stated:
The word evolved through several official definitions, the Feb 05, 1958 being the most precise for reporting purposes.
See?
By your own admission in the quote above, the USAF "official designation," as you say, "evolved through several official definitions." Yet you choose to cherry-pick that one out of all the others, make the claim that its language reinterprets the word "unidentified" to mean something other than the plain English definition, and then assert that definition (and therefore your preferred interpretation of the word "unidentified") as the only valid one for the acronym "UFO."
Once again, you're trying to obtain an unfair advantage by using semantic distortions to skew the English language in your favor. That is a dishonest debating tactic, whether you're willing to admit it or not.
That is a fallacy of redefinition, with a garnish of appeal to authority, a special pleading on the side, and a nice cherry-picking on top. (I have to admit, I rather like your technique of nesting logical fallacies. It makes the debunking that much more fun.)
Of course, despite all your dishonest semantic gymnastics we all know and understand exactly what the acronym "UFO" actually means.
How do we know this?
Simple.
We all speak the English *********** language. "UFO" is a common term in popular usage, therefore it has a universally-accepted definition. There's no need to revert back to some arcane 60-year-old USAF document to redefine a word we already know.
So considering this ... I again point out that we are dealing with incidents, as have been described earlier, where objects that are not aircraft, missiles or other manmade objects or natural phenomena are seen doing things can't be explained.
It's the same old
argument from ignorance you've been corrected on countless times. Not knowing what something is does not constitute proof that you know what it is.
Those sightings might have resulted from some completely mundane cause (or even lies, hoaxes, hallucinations, dreams or other confabulations), but the USAF researchers simply failed to detect them as such.
We just don't know what they are other than some have been clearly observed to be structured metallic craft of alien origin.
No, we don't know that. Yet again, you restate the same old
argument from ignorance. All we can say for certain is that "some have been
reported to be structured metallic craft of alien origin." And as we've pointed out to you innumerable times already, reports, stories, anecdotes, claims, etc.
do not constitute evidence for themselves.
Arguments from ignorance are not necessarily dishonest. They might be just poorly-reasoned.
By the way, you forgot to respond to this half of my last post:
[the poster above]
- Denies there is any value of anecdotal evidence without providing any reasonable foundation for doing so, as if it were somehow self-evident ( which it's not ), when in fact anecdotal evidence can be very valuable.
Others and I have provided significant, overwhelming evidence to prove that anecdotes (stories) are not reliable evidence. You, on the other hand, have provided nothing at all to prove that anecdotes are reliable as evidence.
The evidence we have presented has taken the form of numerous scholarly reports, articles in journals of psychology and law.
We have also demonstrated practical evidence right here on this forum, whereby
your own anecdotes have been shown to exhibit significant errors in memory, vague estimations, unsupported assumptions, details that are physically impossible, a mutating story with new details contrived at will specially to refute any mundane explanations proposed by the skeptics. You have also forwarded wholly imaginary, pseudoscientific explanations to account for obvious physical discrepancies of your story.
So I think we've pretty well demonstrated and documented the fact that mere stories (a.k.a. "claims") in and of themselves do not constitute valid evidence, your weasel-words ("when in fact..." and "can be very valuable") notwithstanding.