I first got serious about photography and bought a single-lens
reflex camera (Minolta XG-M) 45 years ago in 1981. Back then to take a still photo
my camera first needed to be loaded with a roll of film. Then I had to manually
focus it. The camera had auto exposure, so once I set the aperture it would
select the correct exposure time. After taking each picture I had to advance
the film. And for video your camera needed film (or tape) and a battery.
The iPhone appeared on January 9, 2007 – almost two decades
ago. Now many of us (~93% of the global population) are carrying around
smartphones which only take a few seconds to prepare for recording either still
images or video. There should be zillions of high-resolution still images and
video of UFOs and other paranormal subjects. If not, then they just are tall
tales.
An article by Heslley Machado Silva in Skeptic magazine on February
26, 2026 asks Where Have All the UFOs, Yeti, Demons, and Ghosts Gone? She says
that:
“Over the past decades, we have witnessed a quiet yet
decisive transformation in the history of human beliefs: the apparent
disappearance of major paranormal phenomena that for millennia fueled
mythologies, religions, folklore, and countless reports of supposed
extraordinary manifestations. UFOs hovered over mountains and deserts; colossal
creatures such as Bigfoot, the Yeti, or the Sasquatch roamed remote forests;
spirits, apparitions, and ectoplasmic entities materialized in abandoned
mansions;
miracles occurred before the eyes of the devout; demonic possessions defied
rational explanation. Today, all these phenomena seem to have taken permanent
leave, an intriguing coincidence emerging precisely at the moment humanity
begins to carry in its pockets (or better yet, in its hands)
ultra-high-definition cameras capable of recording every detail of daily life,
or any anomaly, with unprecedented precision.
…. beliefs persist and remain widespread, but the supposed
phenomena that should generate clear and reproducible evidence seem
increasingly absent precisely at a moment when we possess technology capable of
recording them with great clarity. This shift invites a skeptical exercise: Why
have paranormal and supernatural apparitions disappeared exactly when it became
possible to document them unequivocally? For centuries, human testimony was the
primary source of such accounts. However, scientific literature consistently
demonstrates that testimony, even when sincere, constitutes extremely weak
evidence: It is susceptible to perceptual illusions, cognitive biases, cultural
expectations, and reconstructed (and often false) memories.
…. From a methodological standpoint, this persistent absence
of records is consistent with analyses in the philosophy of science applied to
paranormal claims: If a phenomenon supposedly interacts with the physical
world, it should be detectable by physical instruments; if it never is, despite
the exponential growth in instrument sensitivity, then its existence becomes an
increasingly implausible hypothesis.”
Look at Bigfoot as an example. An Instragram post by Adam
Thorn on October 20, 2022 says that:
“On this day 55 years ago, the famous
Patterson-Gimlin film was made. This was, and still is the best video footage
ever taken of a Bigfoot (nicknamed Patty).”
The Wikipedia page on Bigfoot refers to it as a one-minute film.
Why don’t we instead have something from the past two decades – both longer and
clearer?
A cartoon of a UFO was adapted from one at OpenClipArt.