Air Force pilots have already been trained and tested and the invetigators have already interrogated them and evaluated the facts.
None of this has any bearing on the truthfulness or accuracy of the accounts. The only fact we know for certain is that somebody wrote down a story.
Just because skeptics don't accept that doesn't mean there is no value to it.
Skeptics don't accept extraordinary claims at face value, because claims do not constitute evidence for themselves. That's just elementary logic.
The probability that the USAF jet pilot who chased a UFO for several minutes during the day in plain view and closed with 500 yards, close enough to determine it to be a disk shaped craft travelling at the speed of sound ... was actually hallucinating the entire event or mistook it as a canopy reflection or some other mundane thing is almost zero.
Weasel words. In the absence of evidence, probability is a totally subjective matter of opinion.
For all we know, the entire story might have been the result of an optical illusion, an hallucination, or a made-up lie.
[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 in this thread, 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 proposed mundane explanations. 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.