
Professor Avi Loeb has been keeping a close eye on a foreign object hurtling through space toward our planet. Scientists, unsure exactly what this interstellar visitor might be, have dubbed it 3I/ATLAS. Since its discovery, theories have been flying faster than the object itself.
On one side, you’ve got people like Richard C. Hoagland popping up on Ground Zero with Clyde Lewis, confidently declaring it’s indeed an interstellar object. Others worry it’s a reconnaissance mission—some kind of alien “drive-by” to check whether Earth is ripe for easy conquest. And then there are the skeptics, who think this is all a bit much. Let’s face it, the idea that an alien “interloper” is cruising in for a potential invasion is… well… pretty far-fetched.
Of course, if it is aliens, they’re probably not coming to just say “hi.” Bigger plans might be in the works. Still, the media has run with this in ways no one had on their 2025 bingo card. Across the internet, people are now claiming Harvard itself is communicating with the alien ship—a complete misreading of Loeb’s theoretical hypothesis. Somehow, a scientific discussion about possibilities has morphed into “Harvard held a meeting with the hostile invading alien army to discuss their plans.”

Is it an alien ship? I guess it could be. I mean, heck, I don’t own a telescope, and I’m not exactly equipped to tell the difference between space debris and a Death Star. What we do know is that scientists are saying this thing isn’t necessarily behaving like a comet—and that’s the part that’s making eyebrows go up.
It might be a comet. It might be something else. But the media? Oh, the media… They seem less interested in digging for real answers and more interested in hitting copy-and-paste on the same breathless story, over and over, like a galactic game of telephone.
And we laugh.. but some strange new news has been revealed about Atlas:
It has been observed that the ‘comet’ is now generating its own light..
In a blog post over the weekend, Loeb pointed to observations by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, which showed a “glow of light, likely from a coma, ahead of the motion of 3I/ATLAS towards the Sun.”
A coma is the hazy and luminous cloud that surrounds the nucleus of a comet.
However, there’s “no evidence for a bright cometary tail in the opposite direction,” he wrote, with scientists suggesting it was evidence that dust was evaporating from the object’s Sun-facing side.
The observations led Loeb and his colleagues to an intriguing, albeit far-fetched possibility: is the mysterious space object generating “its own light?”
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Time will tell. If we’re invaded, I guess the Harvard scientist’s theory was right. If we’re not invaded… well, maybe they just decided to come back later—with a bigger army.
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