I respect that Mr. Albert has a personal inclination to impart a quick judgement based on loose definitions and probably basic common sense, as he says "call a spade a spade".
It's not a "quick judgment," and it's not "based on loose definitions."
The phrase, "call a spade a spade" does not mean "jump to a conclusion." It means to describe something honestly and straightforwardly without reservations.
However with respect to the bottom line of this thread, "Is Ufology a Pseudoscience?", we need to be more precise. Not anything merely promoted as being "consistent with objective reality" is applicable. The interpretation is unbalanced. The idea that the proper scientific method should be used is fine, so to be balanced, one would need to say, "promoted as using the proper scientific method, but isn't consistent with the proper scientific method."
NO, all that is necessary for pseudoscience is for its claims to be presented
as science; in other words, as an objective fact (or as you're fond of saying, as "the truth") along with some pretense of research, or explanation by way of a scientific-sounding mechanism. The lack of proper methodology is what differentiates the two.
For example, when a practitioner of TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) invokes the existence of undetectable, immeasurable
chi "energy fields" to explain his techniques, that is pseudoscience. When a bigfoot researcher presents a plaster casting of a footprint, that's another example of pseudoscience because it involves the promotion of spurious "evidence" as proof. Likewise, when a UFOlogist claims that UFOs make no noise because they employ anti-gravity propulsion mechanisms that hold the air molecules in stasis around them, that is
pseudoscience.
Merely expressing our informal opinions doesn't count.
You seem to be somewhat confused about the difference between opinion and fact. When you make a categorical statement about the state or function of the objective Universe, that statement is going to fall into
either one of two categories: proven fact, or unsupported opinion. The former is the realm of science; the latter is the realm of pseudoscience.
We experience things regularly that are objectively real and surely we are free to share our experiences with our fellow human beings without being grouped under some derogatory label, whether we can scientifically prove them or not. We are also encouraged to share and discuss our opinions in an open and friendly manner without similar persecution.
There you go again with that typical pseudoscientist's persecution complex. Nobody here argued that sharing your experiences is forbidden. It's when you make these jumps to the conclusion of ET (or other "paranormal" causes) with no evidence to back them up, that you start engaging in pseudoscience. If you don't like the so-called derogatory label of "pseudoscience," then all you have to do is simply avoid engaging in pseudoscience and you won't receive that label any more.
And we must be free to informally study the world around us and come to our own decisions without being accused of attempting to do science when we're not
Before you can even begin to study the world around you, you need to learn the proper methods of
study. If you mean to study the physical Universe, then you must employ science or else you're not conducting real study at all but merely
pretend study, ie. pseudoscience.
Of course, you're free to "informally study" anything you want. Nobody's stopping you. Just don't delude yourself into thinking that your "informal" studies constitute anything more than pseudoscience, or expect your work to ever gain the respect of real scientists.
otherwise what is happening is prejudice and a suppression of our right to personal inquiry, all in the name of science, and that would hurt the reputation of science.
There you go again with more of that persecution complex thing again, a well-recognized hallmark of pseudoscience.