UFO experts have locked horns over whether the impact of modern technology has killed off any means of proving the existence of extra-terrestrial life.

Dr David Clarke, a UFO expert from the National Archives, claims advanced machinery and equipment have more or less proven that aliens are little more than a myth.

Citing “lots of chatter but no meat”, he points out that radars, cameras and mobile phones have all been key to debunking the majority of sightings of modern times.

Writing in The Sun, he said: “Phone cameras are so advanced. There is footage of the July bombings in 2007 and major revolutions taking place around the world happening in real time. But where is the footage of aliens?”

He adds: “With the vast majority of sightings, there’s an explanation. And now the internet knocks myths on the head straight away.

“Rather than taking months and years to get to the bottom of a strange sighting, you can do it in a matter of days – and the mystery gets killed off.”

While Dr Clarke admits a “leap of faith” is needed when it comes to believing in UFOs, he points out “there’s no doubt people see UFOs, but UFOs do not mean aliens.”

There is a concerted effort underway to plant the meme that if UFOs and ETs were physically real, then our "advanced" technology would have definitively identified them.  This is pure nonsense.  A technology even a mere hundred years more advanced than ours, would be indisginguisbale from magic. A technology thousands or millions of years more advanced than terrestrial technology would seem God-like. There are thousands of videos and films that show unidentified aerial objects displaying remarkable behavior.  It's more difficult to believe that ALL of those videos, films, and photographs are either hoaxes or misidentified natural phenomena, than it is to believe that even a tiny fraction may depict otherworldly technology flying around in Erath's skies. To read more, click here.