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    Basement #008: Avi Loeb | 3I Atlas, Oumuamua, and What NASA Won't Say

    3/23/2026The WHY Files
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    In the eighth episode of the "Basement" interview series, the podcast hosts Professor Avi Loeb, head of Harvard University’s "Galileo Project" and the astrophysicist who has sent shockwaves through the global scientific community. Loeb, the former chair of Harvard’s Astronomy Department, has emerged in recent years as the most prominent and daring voice calling for rigorous scientific examination of extraterrestrial phenomena, directly confronting the research taboos surrounding intelligent life in the universe. The conversation dives deep into the physical evidence suggesting that we may be witnessing visits from alien technology within our own solar system. The discussion focuses on two seminal events: the first is the appearance of ‘Oumuamua, the first interstellar object ever identified passing through our solar system in 2017. Loeb details the object’s anomalies—from its extreme elongated shape to its unexplained acceleration without a cometary tail—leading him to the conclusion that it may have been a lightsail or a technological remnant from an advanced civilization. Simultaneously, he reveals new details regarding "IM1," the interstellar meteor that crashed into the Pacific Ocean. Loeb describes the extraordinary maritime expedition he led to recover metallic spherules from the ocean floor, explaining why their chemical composition suggests an origin that is not natural to our solar system. Beyond the raw data analysis, Loeb offers a sharp critique of the scientific establishment and space agencies—most notably NASA—for what he defines as excessive conservatism and a lack of transparency. He argues that the traditional approach, which dismisses any extraterrestrial explanation as "pseudoscience," hinders human progress and prevents us from understanding our true place in the cosmos. In this fascinating conversation, the gaps between information held by government bodies and what is released to the public are laid bare, presenting a new vision where science is unafraid to ask the ultimate questions: Are we alone, and if not—what is the significance of encountering the "Other"?

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