Hey everyone, Ryan “FOBS” Graves here with Michael Lembeck, from Americans for Safe Aerospace and AIAA UAPIOC. We’re live and ready to answer your questions.

ASA was founded by military aviators to enhance aerospace safety by advancing our understanding of UAP. Over the past year, that mission has gained real momentum:

What’s happening at ASA:

  • More than 1000+ firsthand UAP reports have now been collected from aircrew, veterans, and other credible witnesses.
  • Reports are being published on our website to give the public an open look at what witnesses are encountering, while protecting identities.
  • Key reports have been presented to members of Congress, partner agencies, and researchers to help inform policy, investigations, and public understanding.
  • Our team continues to grow, bringing in professionals from aerospace, defense, and academia to strengthen analysis and partnerships.
  • ASA supports the Safe Airspace for Americans Act (H.R.5231), which would create a national reporting system, protect pilots from retaliation, and ensure credible data reaches the right authorities.
  • Development is underway on a UAP Intelligence Platform that will provide ASA members with access to aggregated, de-identified data for research and analysis.
  • Early research has begun on potential sensor system deployments to capture verifiable data and expand our understanding of these encounters.

ASA’s goal is to create a trusted path for aviators and witnesses to report what they see and ensure those reports lead to real progress in policy, science, and airspace safety.

This work is supported by our members and donors, become a member today and join our mission. 

We’ll be here for the next couple of hours answering your questions about what we’ve learned and what’s ahead.

Ask us anything.

Verification: https://x.com/SafeAerospace/status/1987669003003744481?s=20

by ASA_Team

1 Comment

  1. Question from /u/Notlookingsohot

    Hi Ryan, love what you do to provide pilots a safe outlet to report this stuff. In the past you have mentioned that you get many photos and videos from pilots of the odd things they see in the sky, and have even released some of these. Has a pilot ever provided you with a video or photo of something blatantly anomalous (like for example showing instantaneous acceleration or just being close up enough that it’s clearly not something prosaic), and if so are you able to release it to the public, and if not, why not?