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Reason: None provided.

Who knows, certainly possible. I had to lookup who actually reported the ufo.

Let’s start closer to the beginning. On June 14, 1947, a rancher named W.W. “Mac” Brazel and his son Vernon were driving across their ranchland some 80 miles northwest of Roswell when they encountered something they’d never seen before. It was, in Brazel’s words, “a large area of bright wreckage made up of rubber strips, tinfoil, and rather tough paper, and sticks.”

The metallic-looking, lightweight fabric was scattered, shredded across the gravel and sagebrush of the New Mexico desert. Brazel didn’t know what to do with the newfound items, or how they had landed on the property, so on July 4 he collected all of the mysterious wreckage he could find. On July 7, he drove it all to Roswell, delivering the goods to Sheriff George Wilcox.

Wilcox, too, was confounded.

Seeking answers, he contacted Colonel “Butch” Blanchard, commander of the Roswell Army Airfield’s 509th Composite Group, located just outside of town. Blanchard was stymied. Working his way up the chain of command, he decided to contact his superior, General Roger W. Ramey, commander of the 8th Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas.

“Apparently, it was better from the Air Force’s perspective that there was a crashed ‘alien’ spacecraft out there than to tell the truth,” says Roger Launius, the recently-retired curator of space history at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

“A flying saucer was easier to admit than Project Mogul,” Launius adds, a chuckle in his voice. “And with that, we were off to the races.”

So it seems like you are right when you claim that the military published the headline. Like I said, its funny how the military for many many decades tried to convince people they were not seeing anything.

If the entire point was to fake aliens, why not just say, hey aliens exist lmao. Like the old radio show that people thought was real and aliens were invading, people want to believe, for some reason.

Ive said this a hundred times before, but I supposed I would be skeptic if I had never seen a ufo either. A stationary bright object hovering in the sky capable of accelerating to mach 20+ in a blink of an eye.

Now I tend to misremember things and embellish details, thats exactly what humans do. But I know what I saw, and ive seen it twice. Once in ohio, and once in nova scotia. The second time in nova scotia I kept asking people, what planet is that? Im in a group of a 100+ people and im the only one looking up when it zooms across the horizon and fades out of the atmosphere. I know what I saw. So when I hear others, especially commercial/military pilots and radar operators, say they seen something, I tend to believe them. But I can appreciate the skepticism, I am naive and to trusting for sure. I dont know if I believe my coworker from Arca the company that poisoned my ass. When I used to be on the truck with this guy picking up refrigerators and freezers across the province, he was super skeptical of conspiracy theories and did not like to talk about them, even aliens.

One day admits to me, tells me him and 7 other people seen a ufo rise out of a lake in the southern part of nova scotia. I assume he was yanking my chain, but he wasnt the type to just straight up lie to me like that without saying im just fucking with ya, he knew I was gullible. The look in his eye is the only reason I wonder if he was telling the truth.

Whether it was our technology, a living thing, or a visitor from outer space, another dimension, or even humans from the future. I dont know, but Im guessing the big boys at the top prolly do.

Watching smallville and season 6 seems to be about the Majestic 12. But thats what marvel has been doing lately hasnt it, they love playing up the secret organizations and alien/ancient alien angle. And people eat it up. I always come back around to that old mark twain moniker.

'Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't.'

Random, but theres a part where lex accuses his father of being in a secret organization. And he replys back by saying.

"We have secret organizations, that just we do, everyone else has poker nights."

Also you cant believe in nuclear power plants, and think nuclear bombs are fake. The math all works out lol. I still find it strange that southern ohio is going to once become the main provider of enriched uranium for america. Like I said maybe my dreams of nuclear explosions will happen.

The dreams about the giant spaceships fighting above earth was weird as hell too.

But just to add, there are some things to support something crashed out there. Sure you can argue that microtransistor is just concidence, but it was invented 6 months after this event.

The principle of a field-effect transistor was proposed by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925.[4] John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley invented the first working transistors at Bell Labs, the point-contact transistor in 1947. Shockley introduced the improved bipolar junction transistor in 1948, which entered production in the early 1950s and led to the first widespread use of transistors.

It was a couple decades later we got star wars, star trek, jetsons, etc. Coincidence, prolly, but I think its funny that Gene Roddenberry just happened to be a military pilot who invested crashes for a decade before writing his hit.

Something with a little more credibility.

Wright pat used to be the division for weapons research. After this event happened, they moved all their research to los alamos and never did publicly say what they replaced it with.

Just seems like an awful lot of work and mystery to further the plot for the NWO.

16 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Who knows, certainly possible. I had to lookup who actually reported the ufo.

Let’s start closer to the beginning. On June 14, 1947, a rancher named W.W. “Mac” Brazel and his son Vernon were driving across their ranchland some 80 miles northwest of Roswell when they encountered something they’d never seen before. It was, in Brazel’s words, “a large area of bright wreckage made up of rubber strips, tinfoil, and rather tough paper, and sticks.”

The metallic-looking, lightweight fabric was scattered, shredded across the gravel and sagebrush of the New Mexico desert. Brazel didn’t know what to do with the newfound items, or how they had landed on the property, so on July 4 he collected all of the mysterious wreckage he could find. On July 7, he drove it all to Roswell, delivering the goods to Sheriff George Wilcox.

Wilcox, too, was confounded.

Seeking answers, he contacted Colonel “Butch” Blanchard, commander of the Roswell Army Airfield’s 509th Composite Group, located just outside of town. Blanchard was stymied. Working his way up the chain of command, he decided to contact his superior, General Roger W. Ramey, commander of the 8th Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas.

“Apparently, it was better from the Air Force’s perspective that there was a crashed ‘alien’ spacecraft out there than to tell the truth,” says Roger Launius, the recently-retired curator of space history at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

“A flying saucer was easier to admit than Project Mogul,” Launius adds, a chuckle in his voice. “And with that, we were off to the races.”

So it seems like you are right when you claim that the military published the headline. Like I said, its funny how the military for many many decades tried to convince people they were not seeing anything.

If the entire point was to fake aliens, why not just say, hey aliens exist lmao. Like the old radio show that people thought was real and aliens were invading, people want to believe, for some reason.

Ive said this a hundred times before, but I supposed I would be skeptic if I had never seen a ufo either. A stationary bright object hovering in the sky capable of accelerating to mach 20+ in a blink of an eye.

Now I tend to misremember things and embellish details, thats exactly what humans do. But I know what I saw, and ive seen it twice. Once in ohio, and once in nova scotia. The second time in nova scotia I kept asking people, what planet is that? Im in a group of a 100+ people and im the only one looking up when it zooms across the horizon and fades out of the atmosphere. I know what I saw. So when I hear others, especially commercial/military pilots and radar operators, I tend to believe them. But I can appreciate the skepticism, I am naive and to trusting for sure.

Whether its a was our technology, a living thing, or a visitor from outer space, another dimension, or even humans from the future. I dont know, but Im guessing the big boys at the top prolly do.

Watching smallville and season 6 seems to be about the Majestic 12. But thats what marvel has been doing lately hasnt it, they love playing up the secret organizations and alien/ancient alien angle. And people eat it up. I always come back around to that old mark twain moniker.

'Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't.'

Random, but theres a part where lex accuses his father of being in a secret organization. And he replys back by saying.

"We have secret organizations, that just we do, everyone else has poker nights."

Also you cant believe in nuclear power plants, and think nuclear bombs are fake. The math all works out lol. I still find it strange that southern ohio is going to once become the main provider of enriched uranium for america. Like I said maybe my dreams of nuclear explosions will happen.

The dreams about the giant spaceships fighting above earth was weird as hell too.

But just to add, there are some things to support something crashed out there. Sure you can argue that microtransistor is just concidence, but it was invented 6 months after this event.

The principle of a field-effect transistor was proposed by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925.[4] John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley invented the first working transistors at Bell Labs, the point-contact transistor in 1947. Shockley introduced the improved bipolar junction transistor in 1948, which entered production in the early 1950s and led to the first widespread use of transistors.

It was a couple decades later we got star wars, star trek, jetsons, etc. Coincidence, prolly, but I think its funny that Gene Roddenberry just happened to be a military pilot who invested crashes for a decade before writing his hit.

Something with a little more credibility.

Wright pat used to be the division for weapons research. After this event happened, they moved all their research to los alamos and never did publicly say what they replaced it with.

Just seems like an awful lot of work and mystery to further the plot for the NWO.

16 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Who knows, certainly possible. I had to lookup who actually reported the ufo.

Let’s start closer to the beginning. On June 14, 1947, a rancher named W.W. “Mac” Brazel and his son Vernon were driving across their ranchland some 80 miles northwest of Roswell when they encountered something they’d never seen before. It was, in Brazel’s words, “a large area of bright wreckage made up of rubber strips, tinfoil, and rather tough paper, and sticks.”

The metallic-looking, lightweight fabric was scattered, shredded across the gravel and sagebrush of the New Mexico desert. Brazel didn’t know what to do with the newfound items, or how they had landed on the property, so on July 4 he collected all of the mysterious wreckage he could find. On July 7, he drove it all to Roswell, delivering the goods to Sheriff George Wilcox.

Wilcox, too, was confounded.

Seeking answers, he contacted Colonel “Butch” Blanchard, commander of the Roswell Army Airfield’s 509th Composite Group, located just outside of town. Blanchard was stymied. Working his way up the chain of command, he decided to contact his superior, General Roger W. Ramey, commander of the 8th Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas.

“Apparently, it was better from the Air Force’s perspective that there was a crashed ‘alien’ spacecraft out there than to tell the truth,” says Roger Launius, the recently-retired curator of space history at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

“A flying saucer was easier to admit than Project Mogul,” Launius adds, a chuckle in his voice. “And with that, we were off to the races.”

So it seems like you are right when you claim that the military published the headline. Like I said, its funny how the military for many many decades tried to convince people they were not seeing anything.

If the entire point was to fake aliens, why not just say, hey aliens exist lmao. Like the old radio show that people thought was real and aliens were invading, people want to believe, for some reason.

Ive said this a hundred times before, but I supposed I would be skeptic if I had never seen a ufo either. A stationary bright object hovering in the sky capable of accelerating to mach 20+ in a blink of an eye.

Now I tend to misremember things and embellish details, thats exactly what humans do. But I know what I saw, and ive seen it twice. Once in ohio, and once in nova scotia. The second time in nova scotia I kept asking people, what planet is that? Im in a group of a 100+ people and im the only one looking up when it zooms across the horizon and fades out of the atmosphere. I know what I saw.

Whether its a was our technology, a living thing, or a visitor from outer space, another dimension, or even humans from the future. I dont know, but Im guessing the big boys at the top prolly do.

Watching smallville and season 6 seems to be about the Majestic 12. But thats what marvel has been doing lately hasnt it, they love playing up the secret organizations and alien/ancient alien angle. And people eat it up. I always come back around to that old mark twain moniker.

'Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't.'

Random, but theres a part where lex accuses his father of being in a secret organization. And he replys back by saying.

"We have secret organizations, that just we do, everyone else has poker nights."

Also you cant believe in nuclear power plants, and think nuclear bombs are fake. The math all works out lol. I still find it strange that southern ohio is going to once become the main provider of enriched uranium for america. Like I said maybe my dreams of nuclear explosions will happen.

The dreams about the giant spaceships fighting above earth was weird as hell too.

But just to add, there are some things to support something crashed out there. Sure you can argue that microtransistor is just concidence, but it was invented 6 months after this event.

The principle of a field-effect transistor was proposed by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925.[4] John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley invented the first working transistors at Bell Labs, the point-contact transistor in 1947. Shockley introduced the improved bipolar junction transistor in 1948, which entered production in the early 1950s and led to the first widespread use of transistors.

It was a couple decades later we got star wars, star trek, jetsons, etc. Coincidence, prolly, but I think its funny that Gene Roddenberry just happened to be a military pilot who invested crashes for a decade before writing his hit.

Something with a little more credibility.

Wright pat used to be the division for weapons research. After this event happened, they moved all their research to los alamos and never did publicly say what they replaced it with.

Just seems like an awful lot of work and mystery to further the plot for the NWO.

16 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Who knows, certainly possible. I had to lookup who actually reported the ufo.

Let’s start closer to the beginning. On June 14, 1947, a rancher named W.W. “Mac” Brazel and his son Vernon were driving across their ranchland some 80 miles northwest of Roswell when they encountered something they’d never seen before. It was, in Brazel’s words, “a large area of bright wreckage made up of rubber strips, tinfoil, and rather tough paper, and sticks.”

The metallic-looking, lightweight fabric was scattered, shredded across the gravel and sagebrush of the New Mexico desert. Brazel didn’t know what to do with the newfound items, or how they had landed on the property, so on July 4 he collected all of the mysterious wreckage he could find. On July 7, he drove it all to Roswell, delivering the goods to Sheriff George Wilcox.

Wilcox, too, was confounded.

Seeking answers, he contacted Colonel “Butch” Blanchard, commander of the Roswell Army Airfield’s 509th Composite Group, located just outside of town. Blanchard was stymied. Working his way up the chain of command, he decided to contact his superior, General Roger W. Ramey, commander of the 8th Air Force in Fort Worth, Texas.

So it seems like you are right when you claim that the military published the headline. Like I said, its funny how the military for many many decades tried to convince people they were not seeing anything.

If the entire point was to fake aliens, why not just say, hey aliens exist lmao. Like the old radio show that people thought was real and aliens were invading, people want to believe, for some reason.

Ive said this a hundred times before, but I supposed I would be skeptic if I had never seen a ufo either. A stationary bright object hovering in the sky capable of accelerating to mach 20+ in a blink of an eye.

Now I tend to misremember things and embellish details, thats exactly what humans do. But I know what I saw, and ive seen it twice. Once in ohio, and once in nova scotia. The second time in nova scotia I kept asking people, what planet is that? Im in a group of a 100+ people and im the only one looking up when it zooms across the horizon and fades out of the atmosphere. I know what I saw.

Whether its a was our technology, a living thing, or a visitor from outer space, another dimension, or even humans from the future. I dont know, but Im guessing the big boys at the top prolly do.

Watching smallville and season 6 seems to be about the Majestic 12. But thats what marvel has been doing lately hasnt it, they love playing up the secret organizations and alien/ancient alien angle. And people eat it up. I always come back around to that old mark twain moniker.

'Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't.'

Random, but theres a part where lex accuses his father of being in a secret organization. And he replys back by saying.

"We have secret organizations, that just we do, everyone else has poker nights."

Also you cant believe in nuclear power plants, and think nuclear bombs are fake. The math all works out lol. I still find it strange that southern ohio is going to once become the main provider of enriched uranium for america. Like I said maybe my dreams of nuclear explosions will happen.

The dreams about the giant spaceships fighting above earth was weird as hell too.

16 days ago
1 score