Here's a topic off the current events. But I think it proposes a broader conversation. Just finished watching the second season, and based on events in the show as well as the ambient temperatures in the episodes where they use thermal imaging, all evidence points to the show being shot in Summer of 2020. No masks, no distancing, no available vaccine, not even a single mention of the coof. Remember what the rest of the country was like in Summer of 2020? Conveniently, unlike the first season, they do not show the dates the episodes and incidents were recorded on. The 2nd season started airing in May of 2021. I'm already suspicious when I see networks like History Channel covering Aliens and the related topics, but the fact that no one on this production was concerned about the coof in Summer of 2020 all but solidifies my suspicions. The main question is, why would the Intelligence Community want to publicize things like Skinwalker Ranch and what is their overall goal related to the show and the coming Aliens and UFO/UAP disclosures? Tom Delong seems to have been dropped like a hot potato when he refused to leave out any resemblance of ETs being a threat. It's pretty clear to me that Project Bluebeam will be used to get humans to accept them as our saviors and likely even as our creators. Anyone here who has seen the show or even if you just have something to add to the conversation, please do.
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I saved this thread as I was finishing the season up. I really loved watching this show and surprisingly my wife really loves it as well even though she doesn’t usually care for shows like this.
Anyway, I noticed the fact that they didn’t seem to care about covid and just assumed it was because they are in the middle of nowhere. I mapped it and they are 2 hours from Salt Lake City and a lot farther from anything else. Salt lake has a lot of Mormons and such so I think that factors into the lax covid behavior.
As far as the shows evidence is concerned I don’t think it’s super compelling at this time concerning aliens/other dimensional beings. My takeaway from the first two seasons is that the ground there has unique elemental or other properties possibly related to a meteor impact and other possible reasons that is causing the different phenomena.
I’m hoping they have another season and we can learn more. Now I’m not saying some of the more wild theories are definitely untrue but there’s not enough evidence to back it up well enough yet. There’s a lot we don’t know about our world still and these could things could turn out to be something pretty mundane or something that’ll change the world. Hopefully we find out which one it is.
Search Bob Bigelow.
Oh yeah, I know about Bigelow, and a lot of the history behind the ranch. More curious about Fugal, the new owner. And the timing of him buying the ranch coincides with this shift in narrative, which I believe did initially involve Delong around the same time. Fugal is much more secretive and does not have a known history like Bigelow. He's def an IC asset at the least, if not more.
Fugal is a morman. Do you know anything about them? Their whole shtick is very connected to aliens so it makes sense from that angle. Maybe you've seen The Expanse? Mormans & aliens/space go together like peas and carrots. UFO cults are valuable to Big Brother for lots of reasons. https://st2.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1270554974?profile=original
How many times have you actually worn a mask in the past two years? I've probably worn one 40 times. It really depends on where you live and what you do. Why would people in such an isolated, sparsely populated area who spend most of their time outdoors mask up for a TV show?
Edit: I wouldn't be surprised if it's at least partially sponsored by the IC, but I don't think masking really factors into it
In reference to where you live, this is probably true. Definitely not true for me, BEFORE I left my job in early 2021. But in reference to any major tv production from back then, it is not true either. This is not the image that was portrayed on TV or major media anywhere. How would they know what the culture around covid would be like when they aired it later? Not just about masks, I also mentioned they weren't distanced AT ALL, whether indoors or outdoors. Even tv shows that tested everyone before taping were still distanced. I should also note that many people came in from outside the ranch and were not subject to any of these measures either. Again, this was summer of 2020. Height of the hysteria. If you have other reasons to disagree I'm open to hear them however.
I live in a small town. There was never much social distancing aside from grocery stores, schools, and doctors offices, even at the height of the hysteria. Masks were "required" in some businesses, but never enforced, and compliance was, at best 50%. Never at any point was outdoor social distancing a thing, though.
I will admit, I didn't really watch much current television in 2020 because the television that was airing was so god awful, but I did watch this show, along with a few other documentary style shows and some socially distanced sports. My perception of the the shows that required masks and distancing at the time was that the networks were doing so only for the purpose of virtue signaling and reinforcing covid messaging, especially if they were filmed in California, Chicago, or New York.
Covid guidelines were more like suggestions in red states. I can't imagine there were strict guidelines on a private ranch in the middle of no where. More than likely all the people involved were required to sign some kind of health waiver prior to being on camera.
Now that being said, I do think that that show came across as unusually staged. I don't think it was necessarily done so by the IC for the purpose of social manipulation (but it's certainly possible given that shows like "Ice Road Truckers" were in fact produced in part by spook agencies), but rather because it made for interesting television. But if it was staged you'd think they'd have at least cast the role of "nuclear physicist" with someone that sounds credible and intelligent, instead of someone that sounds like deputy dog (I say this as a southerner, mind you). Worst casting of a nuclear physicist since Denise Richards in "The World is Not Enough".
Generally I subscribe to:
For skinwalker there's a few things to consider: