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Why the unexplained drones are the mystery we didn't know we needed

A crowd points to a "UFO" over the Chrysler Building in New York City in 1951
A crowd in New York City pointed to a "UFO" back in 1951. Now, we're entranced with flying objects β€” drones? β€” over New Jersey.

GraphicaArtis/Getty Images

  • Mysterious drones, first seen in New Jersey and now around the US, have everyone talking.
  • We're probably not all about to get sucked up by a spaceship β€” but it's fun to wonder!
  • The mystery is bringing people together from across the political spectrum in a true online moment.

Lots of people have one conspiracy theory they kind of believe in. Ideally, this is more on the mild end of things rather than something like the moon landing being faked. A little skepticism toward authority can be healthy.

Which is why the mysterious drones that have been flying over New Jersey and the Northeast β€” which the federal government tells us are nothing to worry about β€” are a perfect thread for our conspiratorial minds to pull on.

In this postelection time, the drones have united people across the political spectrum in a shared belief that something weird is going on, and these clowns in government aren't telling us the straight story.

(For the record, there is no evidence that the clowns in the government are, in fact, lying to us.)

Over on the Facebook Group "New Jersey Mystery Drones β€” let's solve it," which has more than 73,000 members, there's a sharp sense of disillusionment with the local and national government response. There's also a fair number of people who might not normally talk about believing in space aliens saying they think what we're seeing is space aliens.

And I think that's a beautiful thing. We needed this.

We may one day learn the Official Truth. Until then, the drones spotted over New Jersey and other places have become a perfect obsession: an unsolved mystery that has bonded communities and gotten people outside into the fresh December air.

(I would like to give a disclaimer here that I cannot say with 100% certainty that this is not a military attack from Australia as vengeance for our mockery of their Olympic breakdancer. Or that space aliens are not about to invade and harvest our organs.)

A green alien
Could this friendly fellow be flying those drones? Sure, why not?

cosmin4000/Getty Images

What we know about the apparent drones, so far, is that officials seem to agree that it's neither of those threats. The Pentagon has also said they're not drones from an "Iranian mothership." And other officials say what people are seeing is just regular airplanes, helicopters, or stars.

(If you want to get in on the action and check what's flying in the sky above you, flight-tracking apps can help.)

The drone mystery has been healing a wound in our divided nation. We needed something mildly silly but kind of wacky and slightly concerning to focus on collectively.

Unexplained drone activity ticks a lot of boxes of things humans love:

  • Small aircraft, a favorite interest of dads.
  • Being outside and staring at the night sky β€”Β activities that have bonded mankind since days of cave paintings.
  • The opportunity to become an armchair expert in a field you read about in two news articles and a Wikipedia page.
  • Talking to people in your medium-to-small town.
  • A vague conspiracy β€” but mostly friendly and nice.
  • Aliens????

Best of all, discussing drone sightings has been hyperlocal β€” and has thrived on Facebook. Outside the drone phenomenon, Facebook Groups already had become the nation's hub for suburban news. It's where people go to ask for a plumber recommendation, complain about schools, post activities β€”Β and now discuss potential extraterrestrial activity.

Getting in on the drone action

In my small town outside New York City, the local Facebook Group was buzzing about drone sightings β€” people were thrilled to finally get in on the action after hearing about it in New Jersey for weeks.

An offshoot group was started to discuss drone sightings in Connecticut. (It's much smaller than the New Jersey one.) A recent post showed the vibe: "No sightings yet in Norwalk." See, everyone wants in on the fun.

There's some history of silly panics in the headlines just before something big happens. A series of shark attacks β€” dubbed the "Summer of the Shark" β€” dominated the news in the late summer of 2001. Then there was theΒ summer of clown sightings in 2016,Β right before Trump was elected president for the first time.

Perhaps years from now, we'll all look back at this as the funny moment where we all focused on drones right before [whatever] happened. Or, hey, maybe we'll look back on this and think: "We should've fought off the alien brainsuckers sooner!"

There's so much for middle-aged suburbanites to argue about on the internet β€” property taxes, politics, Luigi. But for a brief moment, we've gotten to engage in extended Fox Mulder LARP.

I hope the drones stick around a little longer.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Major Health Insurance Companies Take Down Leadership Pages Following Murder of United Healthcare CEO

Major Health Insurance Companies Take Down Leadership Pages Following Murder of United Healthcare CEO

Following the murder of its CEO on Wednesday morning, United Healthcare removed a page from its website listing the rest of its executive leadership, and several other health insurance companies have done the same, hiding the names and photos of their executives from easy public access.Β 

As of Thursday, United Healthcare’s β€œabout us” page that listed leadership, including slain CEO Brian Thompson, redirects to the company’s homepage. An archive of the page shows that it was still up as of Wednesday morning, but is redirecting at the time of writing and isn’t directly accessible from Google search or the site’s navigation buttons.Β 

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Do you work for a major health insurance company and have intel to share about internal responses to Thompson's death? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at sam.404. Otherwise, send me an email at [email protected].

Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, which Thursday said it would walk back changes announced this week that would charge patients for anesthesia during procedures that went longer than estimated, now redirects its own leadership page to its β€œabout us” page. Originally that page showed leadership, including President and CEO Kim Keck, Executive Vice President and CFO Christina Fisher, and 23 more executives as of earlier this year according to archives of the page, but is now inaccessible.Β 

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