It was, in fact, 3 small aliens under a big alien coat trying to get into movie they shouldn’t have been allowed to see.Looks like 3 people just walking and see other people on the opposite side of the police cars don't seem to be running also seen some feral youths gang jumping a bloke and some kids fighting but still don' have a clue but maybe with the so called firecrackers all the cars were a response to thinking it was a terror attack.
What was the movie ?It was, in fact, 3 small aliens under a big alien coat trying to get into movie they shouldn’t have been allowed to see.
Why is it always the fucking USA nad not Russia, Japan or even Malta.Robert P. Storch, Inspector General, released a classified report to the public that the U.S. has no means or plans to respond to an off world invasion.
https://www.wionews.com/trending/it...efend-itself-against-an-alien-invasion-684284
No, nobody won or lost. They made a study, and didn't find anything.Taking about wasting money, today the Pentagon released a two year study that took 40 people to write coming to the conclusion that according to these 40 people there are no UFOs, no off world material, and no strange technology.
So all you skeptics won !
Isn't that why UFO's traditionally land in forgotten farming towns, and there visit primitive farmers, who have no telephones?There are already three good, widespread surveillance systems in place, although these are not designed to look for UFOs. These are the various meteor watch cams located around the world, the innumerable doorbell and house cameras people have installed for security purposes, and the similarly innumerable dashcams that people install in their cars for security purposes.
These three systems catch a lot of meteors, but they do not catch UFOs, which suggests that AARO would be wasting its time with its Gremlin system. However I suppose it might be useful, especially if there really are incredibly rare, inexplicable events out there.
Isn't that why UFO's traditionally land in forgotten farming towns, and there visit primitive farmers, who have no telephones?
Hasn't it always been like this?
Of course, this will skew the statistics, because larger populations will generate more reports.I think statistically speaking the areas most likely to experience UFO flaps are suburban fringes and recently suburbanised, or suburbanising, rural areas.
If you see a UFO, flip it the bird!Maybe a UFO will get insulted and just land somewhere populated.
Jacques Vallée has been heard from again defending the nonsensical story of a UFO crash near San Antonio, New Mexico in 1945...Douglas Johnson, at his website, published a series of articles exposing the contradictions and outright lies being told about this alleged event. I believe that anyone who reads those articles dispassionately will realize that there had been no crash near San Antonio...I’m worried that those conducting the government investigations will accept what Dr. Vallée says without critical comment.
J. Allen Hynek, the astronomer who pioneered the scientific study of UFOs for the Air Force’s Project Blue Book, told his friend, French UFO researcher Jacques Vallée, his deep dark secret: In terms of his scientific outlook, he wasn’t a strict materialist; instead, he was guided by his fascination with mysticism and the occult. Over the next decade, the two men toyed with the notion that UFOs weren’t alien spaceships at all but, rather, space poltergeists from another dimension. The two men’s discussions had a profound impact on a friend with an office near Vallée’s in the 1970s, an ex-Scientologist and physicist named Harold E. “Hal” Puthoff. Puthoff, who studied psychic phenomena at the Stanford Research Institute, where he championed debunked spoon-bender Uri Geller, was also a defense contractor, and the intelligence community recruited him for a bonkers effort to use psychics to spy telepathically on the Soviets, later known as “Project Stargate.” In 1984, one Stargate “psychic” claimed to travel back in time one million years to commune with Martians.