I understand your point and somehow agree but it's becoming exhausting to drag this issue for decades. If there's some alien tech in the ocean or in another dimension, be clear about it, explain it to everyone and move on. Discussing this the way those three men are doing (the "doctor" smiling like a psycho) doesn't give any credibility.
We know next to nothing about the universe so none is in a position to proclaim what is possible and not possible. The only truth is that nothing of this really impacts our lives so that's why most people don't give a damn. If that strange object was a spaceship, we would still have to work and pay taxes.
They can't be clear about it or explain what it is. They don't know.
Because no species that could travel the cosmos or have that level of tech would give a flying fuck about what we think or what to have any communication. Ever. That would be like us traveling out to some remote villagers and setting up some big conversation. For what? So they can tell us about the stick in the mud that they made a fulcrum with? We don't care outside of research or a curiosity. And that's within our own species. Its almost guaranteed whatever the phenomena is hundreds of times beyond that disparity. Maybe they wouldn't see us as "ants" but closer to that than peers.
The defense contractors like Eric Davis that have testified before congress that are working on reverse engineering the tech have no idea what they're working with, even almost a hundred years later.
These people are so big names in government and defense contracting. Not some redneck off the farm that skeptics want you to believe they are. it's muti faceted up and down back and forth through time and a lot of money is being poured into trying to figure out how to utilize the technology. Even Eric Davis is in this documentary. Not sure when it aries but it goes into the money and compartmentation side of it.
The biggest problem is humans have trouble proving basic things as it is. So coming to tell the world "we don't really know what it is" makes no sense. At least they're that smart.
But the foundation and basic fabric of what we think we understand about the universe it very likely wrong. It just so happens to usually work in a small bubble that we're in called Earth and this universe, but scientists recently said they can't say if we're inside a giant black hole or not lmao. And that would change everything.
Our perceptive is skewed because "but but our science has come so far!" Yeah, only because we were essentially animals not long ago living in the dirt. That was like yesterday in terms of human history. We're sitting on a mountain of arrogance for this reason. We have no idea what makes up the majority of the universe(dark matter). As it is now, every time a new cutting edge tech comes out like the James Webb telescope it just throws half or our theories into a talespin.
We're monkeys with cellphones being hurled around a ball of plasma at tens of thousands of miles an hour and no idea how or why it happened when you ask the big questions. In fact, basically every field of science falls on its face after a few tough questions.. But when we look out into the cosmos, we see what? Billions of plasma heaters that are part of system(gravity) the traps planets at varying distances, some perfectly in the middle. Why? No idea, but it all seems a bit too convenient.