UFOs: skeptics, disclosure, and contact

Todd Feinman

Dogs are angels that poop in your yard.

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
I already read somewhere that the analysis didn't reveal anything extraterrestrial but it was some sort of exotic material. I'll see if I can find that.
 

Todd Feinman

Dogs are angels that poop in your yard.
I already read somewhere that the analysis didn't reveal anything extraterrestrial but it was some sort of exotic material. I'll see if I can find that.
Yeah, I think you are right. Might be interesting to see the documentation in case there are any Easter eggs, though.
 

nivek

As Above So Below

Pentagon chief reveals high res photo of a UFO mothership: 'A huge mini city floating in the sky'

An ex-Pentagon official, who gained fame for blowing the lid off a $22-million, secretive government UFO program, has revealed an image of a UFO 'mothership.'

Luis Elizondo, a career US Army counterintelligence specialist, previously ran the military's Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program.

Monday night in Philadelphia at a private UFO event, Elizondo dropped what he described as a craft 'looking like the mothership from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind,"' referring to the 1977 Steven Spielberg film.

'Guess what we caught in Romania in 2022? By the way, the US Embassy,' as Elizondo told attendees at the paid event, gesturing to the photo: 'That.'

He went on to describe it as a 'huge mini city floating in the sky.'

But the UFO, which resembles a gleaming disc-shaped craft, has already drawn withering critiques from skeptics, believers and even military UFO witnesses alike, who claim to have traced the photo to, not to the US Embassy, but a Facebook page.

One suggested to DailyMail.com that Elizondo has been lax in his vetting of such images in a bid to add sensational new material to his 'paid speaking engagements.'

Ex-Pentagon official Luis Elizondo (right), who gained fame for blowing the lid off a $22-million, secretive government UFO program, has revealed an image of a UFO 'mothership'


'Guess what we caught in Romania in 2022? By the way, the US Embassy,' as Elizondo told attendees at the paid event, gesturing to the photo (above): 'That'


Veteran US Air Force Staff Sergeant, Jeremy McGowan, who witnessed a dramatic UFO encounter himself in the Middle East decades ago, told DailyMail.com that Elizondo's dubious 'mothership' UFO fits a pattern with the man's past claims.

'This unfortunate situation with Lue follows my experiences with him nearly exactly,' McGowan said. 'I witnessed him exaggerate or outright fabricate information that simply wasn't true.'

Elizondo unveiled the 2022 Romanian UFO photo at an October 28, 2004 event held at The City Winery, a wine bar in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for $50-$30 per ticket.

'There's a whole lot more here folks,' Elizondo told the audience in a leaked clip. 'I just want to give you kind of a small taste of what's going on "behind the scenes."'

'We're having pilots, military pilots and civilian pilots in Eastern Europe and in the Middle East, report what unimaginably seems impossible,' as Elizondo began to explain his 'real photo' of a UFO.

'They described it literally 'the mothership,'' Elizondo said.

But despite credible federal reports of 'mothership' UFOs over domestic US military sites — investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), an FBI task force, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) and 16 local sheriff's offices — internet sleuths quickly managed to poke holes in Elizondo's 2022 Romanian UFO.

John Greenewald Jr, a longtime government transparency advocate who runs The Black Vault, quickly tracked the photo back to a September 13, 2023 post in a Facebook group titled 'Mysterious Ancient Discoveries.'


John Greenewald Jr, a longtime government transparency advocate who runs The Black Vault , quickly tracked the photo back to a September 13, 2023 post in a Facebook group titled ' Mysterious Ancient Discoveries' (above)


The higher resolution image of this apparent 'mothership,' which looks at first glance to be piercing clouds with its beatific shafts of light, appears more likely to have originated as the reflection of an indoor chandelier lamp reflected in window glass


'I reverse imaged searched it,' Greenewald posted on X. 'It got more than 182,000 likes and more than 23,700 comments.'

The higher resolution image of this apparent 'mothership,' which looks at first glance to be piercing clouds with its beatific shafts of light, appears more likely to have originated as the reflection of an indoor chandelier lamp reflected in window glass.

The placement of Romania's coal-fired Arad Power Station indicates the image was not taken from the US Embassy, but a building near the Mureș River a few miles away.

America's Embassy in Romania is roughly 400 miles to the southeast of Arad, in the capital city of Bucharest.

While dedicated UFO skeptics were eager to pounce on Elizondo's inaccurate claims, UFO enthusiasts also expressed frustration over the episode.

'Lue is 100 percent using us as pawns to line his pockets,' one contributor to the Reddit forum r/UFOs lamented. 'His most recent book was no.1 seller in the nation.'

'It's muddying the waters and detracting from the important convo,' another opined.

By midday Wednesday, Elizondo was publicly attributing the error to 'a friend in Government' who provided him with the photo 'a couple of years ago.'


(More on the link)

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Dejan Corovic

As above, so bellow
The higher resolution image of this apparent 'mothership,' which looks at first glance to be piercing clouds with its beatific shafts of light, appears more likely to have originated as the reflection of an indoor chandelier lamp reflected in window glass.
99.99% it doesn't look like reflection of indoor chandelier. Reflection of indoor lights on a window pane by definition have to have a degree of transparency, because part of light goes through the glass and only a part reflects back to camera. So this is definitelly anything, but not an reflection.

On other hand looks quite Photoshoped. But that's speculative. I don't see a reason for UFO to come out as a fuzzy dark blob, with all these lights underneath itself. At least in my mind, the edges of UFO should be very sharp, as they usually are in hundreds of legacy UFO photos. And these large light under the UFO should really light up clouds and even ground and completely change ambient light in vicinity. That is all missing. But its really hard to choose the side.

On other hand, if such a large UFO appeared right in a middle of a day over a bussy urban area one would expect at least dozen of other pictures and videos to turn up all over social media. Where is that?
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
99.99% it doesn't look like reflection of indoor chandelier. Reflection of indoor lights on a window pane by definition have to have a degree of transparency, because part of light goes through the glass and only a part reflects back to camera. So this is definitelly anything, but not an reflection.

On other hand looks quite Photoshoped. But that's speculative. I don't see a reason for UFO to come out as a fuzzy dark blob, with all these lights underneath itself. At least in my mind, the edges of UFO should be very sharp, as they usually are in hundreds of legacy UFO photos. And these large light under the UFO should really light up clouds and even ground and completely change ambient light in vicinity. That is all missing. But its really hard to choose the side.

On other hand, if such a large UFO appeared right in a middle of a day over a bussy urban area one would expect at least dozen of other pictures and videos to turn up all over social media. Where is that?
John Greenewald dissected the image. Not taken where he said it was. Lue has presented total BS pictures in the past as real. Why would anyone believe him?
 

Dejan Corovic

As above, so bellow
John Greenewald dissected the image. Not taken where he said it was. Lue has presented total BS pictures in the past as real. Why would anyone believe him?
I've worked a lot with 2D and 3D graphics. That image looks to me a lot as a very crude Photoshop job. If we use pre-Photoshop UFO images as a reference that image is definetely an outlier.

My problem with that image is that actually fits with testimonials coming from UFO witness in the pre-Photoshop era, and even worst it fits in with General Relativity IMHO. Obvisously, cultural polution had gone very far and that's making harder to distingquish real from fake UFO events.
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
When we are talking huge floating UFOs things like this have my attention: Japan Air Lines Cargo Flight 1628 incident

That's the sort of testimonial I'd not want to sully by connecting it to anything Lue has to say. I am disturbed that Ross Coulthart has, to one degree or another, fallen into that Knapp-Corbell-Elizondo orbit. Being connected to that mess does not enhance credibility.
 

Dejan Corovic

As above, so bellow
When we are talking huge floating UFOs things like this have my attention: Japan Air Lines Cargo Flight 1628 incident

That's the sort of testimonial I'd not want to sully by connecting it to anything Lue has to say. I am disturbed that Ross Coulthart has, to one degree or another, fallen into that Knapp-Corbell-Elizondo orbit. Being connected to that mess does not enhance credibility.
I agree, Coulthart is lawyer by profession and he brings in a way more caution and credibility into the whole UFO field.

But real problem is that there are no physicists amongst UFO influencers.
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
OK it's November. Only a little over three weeks remain before The Truth About Flying Saucers is revealed.

Right? That's what we were told or has it been overshadowed by politics?
 

nivek

As Above So Below

Shocking UFO footage shows craft going underwater as investigation reveals bombshell evidence of maritime activity

Footage from a new docuseries that seeks to prove the existence of aliens appears to show an unidentified aircraft descending into the English Channel. Netflix's Investigation Alien follows journalist and ufologist George Knapp as he assembles a crack-team to prove their existence - and it has yielded evidence such as this. An expedition commissioned for the Knapp docuseries captured the clip - their second sighting that night. First, as they operated an ROV off the French coast of Normandy, they saw an illuminated object roughly 200 yards in the distance, first stationary, then speeding away. It returned hours later, however, when everyone except the night crew was asleep - before plummeting into the waters below. An eagle-eyed mariner was able to capture it on film - seemingly leaving the minds behind the new series at a loss.

'[This was] with everybody sleeping, with the exception of our night watch guy,' underwater archaeologist Rory Kremer tells Knapp of the clip, which appears to an unidentified 'flying' object transforming into an unidentified 'submerged' object in real-time. 'Don't tell me it's going to go in the water,' Knapp says in response, as the orb descends. 'I'll be damned,' he adds after it happens, showing real confusion.

The series' main investigator and narrator, Knapp proceeds to ask for Kremer's professional opinion. The archaeologist with over 20 years of experience admits he is equally stumped, despite his crew being the ones to capture the clip. 'So this is what it does when it thinks that nobody is watching?' Knapp asks before turning to Kremer. 'Have you ever seen anything like this?' 'A willy peter flare is the only thing I know like that that will hang up in the air, but that's not a flare, because there's no smoke going off of it,' the archaeologist says, admitting he has no real answers - at least ones that involve human technology. 'Look at that. It's under the water,' he goes on to exclaim, conceding to Knapp he does not know the craft's nature.


(More on the link)

Shocking UFO footage from new Netflix series shows craft eerily going underwater

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pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
Episode #139 involves Luis Elizondo peddling yet another easily disproven picture as authentic 'from a friend in government'.

All I can say is that if he really was the director of a program investigating UFOs he demonstrates incredibly poor judgement. Or, as I think more likely, he doesn't care because the people who pay to see him will simply believe whatever he says anyway. We've heard that many times before, eh ?

Pentagon chief reveals high-res photo of a UFO 'mothership': 'A huge mini city floating in the sky'

Monday [October 2024] night in Philadelphia at a private UFO event, Elizondo dropped what he described as a craft 'looking like the mothership from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind,"' referring to the 1977 Steven Spielberg film.

'Guess what we caught in Romania in 2022? By the way, the US Embassy,' as Elizondo told attendees at the paid event, gesturing to the photo: 'That.'

He went on to describe it as a 'huge mini city floating in the sky.'


1731514685788.png

It's not the US Embassy and it's not a mothership, it's a chandelier. :rolleyes:
 
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pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
JG mentions Immaculate Constellation and Schellenberger favorably in #140. He also goes on to say - which actually stopped me from what I was doing to listen - that Ross Coulthart made a surprising claim I had never heard of.

Coulthart claims a craft of some sort was found and it was much too large to move so they constructed a building around it. He says he knows where it is and it's still there.

Well, now what ?
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
https://www.npr.org/2024/11/13/nx-s1-5189426/ufo-uap-hearing-congress-2024

1731670572948.png
Experts testify before lawmakers that the U.S. is running secret UAP programs
Updated November 13, 20244:40 PM ET
Heard on All Things Considered
By
Bill Chappell

Journalist Michael Shellenberger, founder of the Public news outlet, displays redacted reports during a hearing on Capitol Hill Wednesday.

Journalist Michael Shellenberger, founder of the Public news outlet, displays redacted reports during a hearing on Capitol Hill Wednesday as he stresses the need for more transparency over UAP investigations.
House Oversight Committee/Screenshot by NPR

Is intelligent alien life darting around in space — and even in the skies above us here on Earth? Has the U.S. government been covering up unexplained phenomena, and using secret extraterrestrial discoveries to boost its own technology?
Those are among the questions members of Congress discussed Wednesday in a joint hearing by subcommittees of the House Oversight Committee. Its title: "Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena: Exposing the Truth."
Pentagon finds 'no evidence' of alien technology in new UFO report

The Pentagon issued a report in March saying that it has found no evidence of extraterrestrial spacecraft.
Four experts testified in Wednesday's public hearing. You can watch the proceeding here.

Extraordinary moments unfolded in a similar hearing last year, most notably when retired Maj. David Grusch, formerly part of the Pentagon's UAP Task Force, alleged that the U.S. government has recovered nonhuman "biologics" from crash sites and has long operated a secret reverse-engineering program to glean advances from recovered vessels.
U.S. recovered non-human 'biologics' from UFO crash sites, former intel official says

U.S. recovered non-human 'biologics' from UFO crash sites, former intel official says

Grusch isn't among the witnesses for the 2024 hearing. Instead, those testifying include:
Tim Gallaudet, retired rear admiral, U.S. Navy; CEO of Ocean STL Consulting, LLC
"Confirmation that UAPs are interacting with humanity came for me in January 2015," Gallaudet said in his written testimony.
He describes being part of a pre-deployment naval exercise off the U.S. East Coast that culminated in the famous "Go Fast" video, in which a Navy F/A-18 jet's sensors recorded "an unidentified object exhibiting flight and structural characteristics unlike anything in our arsenal."
He was among a group of commanders involved in the exercise who received an email containing the video, which was sent by the operations officer of Fleet Forces Command, Gallaudet said.
"The very next day, the email disappeared from my account and those of the other recipients without explanation," he said.
Luis Elizondo, author and former Department of Defense official
Elizondo's written testimony was brief and alleged that a secretive arms race is playing out on the global stage.
"Let me be clear: UAP are real," he wrote. "Advanced technologies not made by our Government — or any other government — are monitoring sensitive military installations around the globe. Furthermore, the U.S. is in possession of UAP technologies, as are some of our adversaries."
Elizondo is a former intelligence officer who later "managed a highly sensitive Special Access Program on behalf of the White House and the National Security Council," according to his official bio.
"By 2012, [Elizondo] was the senior ranking person of the DOD's Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, a secretive Pentagon unit that studied unidentified anomalous phenomena," his bio states, adding that he resigned in 2017.
Michael Gold, former NASA associate administrator of space policy and partnerships; member of NASA UAP Independent Study Team
Gold's written testimony stressed the need for government agencies and academics to "overcome the pernicious stigma that continues to impede scientific dialogue and open discussions" about unexplained phenomena.
"As the saying goes, the truth is out there," Gold said, "we just need to be bold enough and brave enough to face it."
Michael Shellenberger, founder of Public, a news outlet on the Substack platform
Shellenberger's testimony ran to some 214 pages, including a lengthy timeline of UAP reports from 1947 to 2023.
Shellenberger pressed the White House and Congress to act, calling for the adoption of UAP transparency legislation and cutting funds for any related programs that aren't disclosed to lawmakers.
"UAP transparency is bi-partisan and critical to our national security," his written testimony stated.
Here are some key moments from the hearing:

U.S. accused of having UAP crash retrieval programs​

An early exchange between Elizondo and Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., who led the hearing as chairwoman of the subcommittee on cybersecurity, IT and innovation, suggested that whatever UAPs are, the U.S. is intent on learning more about them — including efforts to recover any objects that might crash.
"Has the government conducted secret UAP crash retrieval programs? Yes or no?" Mace asked.
"Yes," Elizondo said.
"Ok. Were they designed to identify and reverse-engineer alien craft? Yes or no?" the lawmaker asked.
"Yes," Elizondo replied.
"Are you read into secret UAP crash retrieval programs?" Mace later asked.
"We would have to have a conversation in a closed session, ma'am," Elizondo said. "I signed documentation three years ago that restricts my ability to discuss specifically crash retrievals."
Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., asked Elizondo about the document he signed with the Defense Department.
"You specifically said the document said you can't talk about crash retrieval," Moskowitz said. "Well, you know, you can't talk about fight club if there's no fight club."
"Correct," Elizondo replied.
Mace noted that in his testimony, Elizondo stated that advanced technologies "not made by our government or any other government are monitoring sensitive military installations around the globe."
"If these technologies are not made by any government, who's making them?" Mace asked, adding later, "Are these private companies you're implying, or is this nonhuman intelligence?"
"It may be both," Elizondo replied.

Immaculate Constellation​

Shellenberger's Public news site recently published a story alleging that the U.S. government is operating "an active and highly secretive 'Unacknowledged Special Access Program'" intelligence operation through the Department of Defense called Immaculate Constellation.
Shellenberger shared a document with lawmakers that he described as a whistleblower report about the program.
Shellenberger said the program uses high-quality imagery and other sophisticated tools to capture data about UAPs. Quoting from the report, he said that an F-22 plane encountered several orbital objects while on patrol in an unnamed place and at an unnamed date.
"The F-22 broke trajectory and attempted to evade but was intercepted and boxed in by approximately 3-6 UAPs," Shellenberger said in his testimony. He added that a source had warned him of tight secrecy controls around the program — a point also raised by Mace.
"Rep. [Anna Paulina] Luna [of Florida] just told me, if I say, 'Immaculate Constellation,' I'll be on some list, maybe [get] a FISA warrant," she said. "So come at me, bro, I guess."

Experts push for more transparency​

Over the years, a number of unusual encounters have been found to have a reasonable explanation after they were reported, from weather balloons and atmospheric phenomena to drones, airborne trash and birds.
"I think probably the vast majority of UAP are drones, experimental aircraft, weather conditions," Gold, the former NASA administrator, said. "But there is a percentage that isn't."
Gold said agencies such as NASA should get funds to develop instruments to study UAP anomalies for potential new discoveries. As things stand, he said, researchers are relying on cellphones and fighter jets' cockpit gun cameras.
Repeatedly, Wednesday's witness panel stressed that the U.S. government — specifically, presidential administrations and the Pentagon — should be more transparent about UAP reports. And they called for ensuring that no one risks being stigmatized or intimidated for trying to report or study UAPs.
Elizondo said he believes many classified materials can be shared with Congress and the public.
When Elizondo was asked how he would characterize UAPs, he replied:
"An enigma, sir, and a frustration. We are talking about technologies that can outperform anything we have in our inventory. And if this was an adversarial technology, this would be an intelligence failure eclipsing that of 9/11 by an order of magnitude."

Reports of UFOs and UAPs are now more centralized​

In 1977, President Carter asked NASA to look into resuming UFO investigations, but the agency and the Air Force believed "nothing would be gained by further investigation."
But in recent years, there have been increased efforts to compile and centralize the reporting of unexplained phenomena.
In July 2022, the U.S. government established the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, to standardize reporting methods and data collection. It collects UAP reports from the military and from the Federal Aviation Administration including sightings reported by civilian pilots to air traffic control. The agency doesn't offer a way for the general public to file a UAP report. It does accept "reports from current or former U.S. Government employees, service members, or contractor personnel with direct knowledge of U.S. Government programs or activities related to UAP dating back to 1945."
The agency adds that potential filers should not submit "any information that is potentially CLASSIFIED, or unclassified information that is not publicly releasable (e.g. subject to export control regulations)."

Many historical records are also available​

Because of intense public interest, a number of records related to UFO studies are available online, including a "case files" folder related to UAPs on the U.S. Navy's website. The FBI also has an online "vault" of records, covering the period from 1947 to 1954.
As for the famous Project Blue Book run by the U.S. Air Force from 1947 through 1969, documents related to the project are now kept by the National Archives, which holds 37 cubic feet of case files, along with at least 5 other cubic feet of records.
The bulk of the Blue Book investigations into 12,618 reported sightings were resolved, or explained, — but 701 remained "Unidentified," the Air Force has said. The service said that none of the incidents constituted a security threat or indicated abilities beyond modern science. It added, "There was no evidence indicating that sightings categorized as 'unidentified' were extraterrestrial vehicles."
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
Pentagon says nearly two dozen UFO sightings can’t be explained: ‘True anomalies’

Pentagon says nearly two dozen UFO sightings can’t be explained: ‘True anomalies’​

By
Caitlin Doornbos
Published Nov. 14, 2024, 3:37 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON — The truth is out there. Or is it?
More than 20 reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) — “UFOs,” in layman’s terms — made over the past year have stumped the Defense Department and “merit further analysis,” according to the UAP program’s annual report released Thursday.
Pentagon 6
Between May 1, 2023, and June 1, the Pentagon’s “all-domain anomaly resolution office” received 757 reports of UAP sightings.AFP via Getty Images
AARO report
The 2024 AARO report illustrated where reports of UAP sightings were occurring most often over the past year.DOD
UFO
The Pentagon says nearly two dozen UFO sightings can not be explained.AARO/DOD

Between May 1, 2023, and June 1, the Pentagon’s “all-domain anomaly resolution office” (AARO) received 757 reports of sightings — 485 of which referenced new sightings over that period while the remainder occurred between 2021 and 2022.
Among those are 21 reports that AARO director Jon Kosloski said warrant additional investigation — and some which he described as “true anomalies.”


While most of the sightings happened in the air, 49 were alleged to have occurred in space. No other sightings were reported underwater or in other environments.
“AARO notes that none of the space domain reports originated from space-based sensors or assets; rather, all of these reports originated from military or commercial pilots or ground observers who reported UAP located at altitudes estimated at 100 kilometers [about 62 miles] or higher, consistent with U.S. [sic] Space Command’s astrographic area of responsibility,” the report said.
In a blow to those hopeful that we are not alone in the universe, the report confirms, as Kosloski told reporters Thursday, that “AARO has discovered no verifiable evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology.”
A still from a previously released unclassified U.S. government video appearing to show unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), as featured on the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) website. 6
A still from a previously released unclassified U.S. government video appearing to show unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), as featured on the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) website.AARO / SWNS

Almost as notably, the reports analyzed so far have not “substantiated advanced foreign adversarial capabilities or breakthrough aerospace technologies,” as some in the defense sector have suspected.
Reports of UFO sightings significantly outpaced the relatively new DoD office’s ability to clear the cases. Of the 757 reported over the past year, according to the report, AARO “resolved” — or determined the cause — of just 118, finding the objects to be “various types of balloons, birds” and drones.

Another 174 cases pending closure following a final review are suspected to be related to the mundane.
However, “[m]any other cases remain unresolved and AARO continues collection and analysis on that body of cases,” according to the report.
AARO report. 6
Between May 1, 2023, and June 1, the DoD’s “all-domain anomaly resolution office” received 757 reports of UAP sightings.DOD
Specifically, AARO has 444 reports to comb through — as well as further investigation into the the mysterious 21 — with more bound to pour in.
“AARO’s ability to resolve cases remains constrained by a lack of timely and actionable sensor data,” the report said. “AARO continues to address this challenge by working with military and technical
partners to optimize sensor requirements, information-sharing processes, and the content of UAP
reporting.”
AARO report 6
This chart from the 2024 AARO report shows the most common objects investigators have found to be the source of UAP reports.DOD
To help get to the bottom of some of the cases, AARO is turning to US allies, “expanding engagement with foreign partners to share information and collaborate on best practices for resolving UAP cases,” the report said.
“AARO is working closely with its [intelligence community] and [science and technology] partners to understand and attribute the 21 cases received this reporting period that merit further analysis based on reported anomalous characteristics and/or behaviors.”
“AARO will provide immediate notification to Congress should AARO identify that any cases indicate or involve a breakthrough foreign adversarial aerospace capability.”
 
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