In my opinion, it's because of one word: pareidolia.How this is not front page news I have no idea.
Think he's an engineer by trade. Technical types are often dial tone speakers.What they should do is find someone with a less dynamic form of speaking. Not sure that is possible. Would someone wake that dude up?
Well he definitely makes me want to push some buttons or just hang up.Think he's an engineer by trade. Technical types are often dial tone speakers.
UAP homer!I am well aware of pareidolia. But there are other scientific terms you could use at the other end of the spectrum, like confirmation bias for example, or perhaps willful ignorance, to describe looking past what is clearly not naturally occurring phenomenon on Mars, in its skies, or even here on Earth.
Just realized I missed this post.So if someone wants to chime in and explain how Ward's observations could be anything other than pareidolia, I'd be curious to hear. Was this supposed "farming complex"" hundreds of years ago, or millions of years ago? I'm trying to give Ward the benefit of the doubt, but to me, it carries about as much weight as if Ward had said, "hey that puffy cloud up in the sky kinda reminds me of a farming complex." Granted, I haven't watched or heard much of his stuff, so I don't even follow his logic on this one.
I mean look at this vid. This is an image from NASA's orbiter. It's not even close to naturally occurring.
View: https://youtu.be/dwfkrkswRM4