🛰️ Northern Watch: Canada Pushes for National UAP Tracking Hub
📍 Ottawa, Canada | 🗓️ July 17, 2025 | 🧾 Category: UFO / Policy Development
Is Canada finally ready to take the unknown seriously?
On July 15, Canada’s chief science advisor, Dr. Mona Nemer, released a striking report urging the federal government to formally establish a national UAP monitoring system. The document, plainspoken yet quietly seismic, recommends protocols for collecting and analyzing unexplained aerial encounters, what she calls “an important frontier in observational science.”
The announcement comes as reports of unidentified flying objects across Canadian airspace have steadily increased, particularly in the Yukon and Atlantic provinces. According to Nemer, it’s not just sci-fi speculation, it’s airspace accountability.
“There’s a clear gap in how we document and evaluate aerial anomalies,” the report reads. “We owe it to pilots, radar operators, and the public to treat these reports with rigor, not ridicule.”
🛩️ Multiple commercial pilots have come forward in the past year with tales of glowing orbs, sharp-angled turns, and dark crafts that “outmaneuver anything we’re aware of.” While many are still skeptical, Nemer’s stance marks one of the first official Canadian acknowledgments that some of these phenomena might deserve more than a shrug.
The call is for collaboration, not just between civilian and military agencies, but across borders. With NASA, the Pentagon, and European space agencies all dipping toes into UAP research, Canada may be setting the stage for a global skywatching alliance.
🌐 Northern Lights or Interstellar Beacons?
From auroras to anomalies, the skies over Canada have always danced with the strange. But now, it seems, even the government is starting to wonder who – or what – might be watching back. 🛸🇨🇦
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