Saudi Energy Minister Tells Oil Speculators to ‘Watch Out’
Saudi Arabia’s top energy official issued another warning to oil short-sellers, just over a week before the OPEC+
2023-05-23 16:55
'Comfort women': Last known Taiwanese survivor dies at 92
Activists estimate 200,000 people were forced into sexual slavery by Japan's forces in World War Two.
2023-05-23 16:45
Russia Says Forces Still Clearing Out Incursion From Ukraine
Russia said its security forces are continuing what it described as an “anti-terrorist” operation for a second day
2023-05-23 16:21
Political row over India's new parliament opening
Opposition leaders have criticised the government for not asking the president to open the building.
2023-05-23 15:22
Nearly one in five American academics say they have seen a UFO – or know someone who has
About 20 per cent of US academic respondents in a survey have reported that they, or someone they know, have seen unidentified flying objects (UFOs). Over a third of the nearly 1,500 respondents are interested in conducting research into such unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), suggested the results of the survey, published in the journal Humanities and Social Science Communications. The US government has undertaken new hearings, reports and investigations into UAP, with a report by the Pentagon suggesting there were over 500 reports about UFOs with the agency as of August 2022. In the current research, scientists, including those from the University of Louisville, surveyed 39,984 academics, including professors, associate professors and assistant professors from 144 US universities across 14 different disciplines. Despite the stigma associated with the topic, researchers said these developments merit asking university faculty about their perceptions on the sightings of UFOs. Researchers asked the 4 per cent of individuals who responded to the survey about their perceptions of, experiences with and opinions of UAP. Nearly a tenth of the participants worked in political science, another tenth in physics, 10 per cent in psychology and 6 per cent in engineering. About 276 of the respondents – or 19 per cent of participants – reported that they or someone they knew had witnessed UAP. A further 9 per cent said they or someone they knew “may have witnessed” UAP, according to the study. Thirty-nine percent of all the participants said they did not know what the most likely explanations for UAP were, but a fifth of them attributed the sightings to natural events and 13 per cent to devices of unknown intelligence. About 4 per cent of participants said they had conducted academic research related to UAP, and over a third said they had some degree of interest in conducting research in this area. Among the respondents, 37 per cent ranked the importance of further research into UAP as either “very important” or “absolutely essential”, while nearly two-thirds of them considered academia’s involvement in UAP-related research to be “very important or absolutely essential”. The findings hinted that many American academics across disciplines consider academia’s involvement in research into UAP to be important. “Results demonstrated that faculty think the academic evaluation of UAP information and more academic research on this topic is important,” scientists wrote in the study, adding that curiosity on the topic “outweighed scepticism or indifference”. Researchers also suggested many may be cautiously willing to engage with UFO research if others they consider to be reputable within their field also do so. However, they said more surveys among larger and diverse cohorts are needed to understand attitudes of academics towards UAP. Read More Some strange ‘highly manoeuvrable’ UFOs seem to defy laws of physics, scientists say UFOs, UAPs and ETs: Why some people believe aliens are visiting us right now Nearly 200 recent UFO sightings in US remain unexplained, Pentagon says Ancient galaxy discovered 25 million light years away Watch: Axiom Mission 2 arrives at the International Space Station Nearly 350 licences issued to UK space companies
2023-05-23 15:16
Singapore’s Faster-Than-Expected Inflation Signals Sticky Prices
Singapore inflation, both core and headline measures, came in faster-than-expected in April, as higher business costs continue to
2023-05-23 13:15
Russia Pushes India for Help to Avert Global Financial Isolation
The Kremlin is pressuring governments including India behind the scenes, threatening to upend defense and energy deals unless
2023-05-23 12:54
Japan PMIs Signal Stronger Recovery, Aided by Return of Tourists
Japan’s slow post-pandemic recovery is showing signs of growing momentum, according to the latest gauges of strength in
2023-05-23 11:27
Biden-McCarthy Debt Talk Ends With Optimism, But Without a Deal
President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy remained without a deal on the debt limit Monday night
2023-05-23 10:29
Soccer-Spanish football admits racism problem after Vinicius incident
MADRID (Reuters) -Spanish soccer has a racism problem, its football federation chief Luis Rubiales said on Monday, echoing criticism by
2023-05-23 09:20
Ron DeSantis thinks his feud with Disney will pay off. Here's why
The Florida governor is making a high-stakes gamble about what really matters to Republican voters.
2023-05-23 08:28
Pita Sets Aside Royal Insult Law in Bid to Become Thai PM
Thailand’s pro-democracy parties omitted an amendment to a law forbidding royal insults in a common policy platform as
2023-05-23 07:47