Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 16, 2012 10:22:30 GMT -6
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Post by skywalker on Nov 16, 2012 14:14:46 GMT -6
It looks like the same type of thing that Shami has been filming for the past couple of months. I've been looking around the net and have seen a few other reports of other people who have done the same thing. I honestly don't know what these things are. I think some of the ones Shami filmed are bugs (those are pretty easy to identify) and some are birds (also easy to identify because you can see their wings flap) but some of them are like no living critter I have ever seen before. The way they move and turn corners is unnatural. Much faster than anything I've ever seen maneuver. I don't know what they are. Those orange thingies that Shami filmed have me stumped too. They are getting more and more numerous though. They are popping up all over the planet now. Perhaps the invasion has begun.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 16, 2012 15:36:08 GMT -6
maybe a tear in the fabric between worlds letting other beings in we haven't seen before. I'm still feeling strongly that there are visitors waiting for something that is going to be happening. Something we may not even notice but that they are waiting for.
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Post by swamprat on Nov 26, 2012 16:07:54 GMT -6
The Sarasota Herald Tribune
De Void
UFOs to the ratings rescue?Monday, November 26, 2012 by Billy Cox The newsroom at Fox31 in Denver was so stunned by the response its UFO coverage provoked on Nov. 8 that it actually did a followup (!) last week. “We’ve heard from hundreds of people from all over the world,” Ron Zappolo, the buoyed anchor, told viewers. But really? Seriously? Surprised at worldwide interest in UFOs when the acronym search dings 234 million hits on Google? Granted, that’s only a fraction of the 3 billion-plus returns tallied by punching “sex” into the search engine, but hey, “UFOs” beat “Jesus” by a whopping 83 million. De Void’s guessing the response was due to the fact that Fox31, aka KDVR, actually made an effort to apply a little journalism to the mystery. And KDVR was so stoked it shared the emails and voice messages and photos that came rolling in after Heidi Hemmat’s initial report. Clearly, the volume and intensity of the feedback threw her for a loop. “People have questioned my journalistic integrity,” she remarked during the followup. “People either believe it or they don’t or they think I’m just a jerk who’s out there, y’know, shooting flies and making it up and telling people it’s UFOs, but I’m not.” Welcome to The Great Taboo Club, man. In summary: Hemmat’s report sprang from footage provided by an anonymous source who pointed out oblique little blips zipping through mid-day skies when he slowed his otherwise unremarkable footage to a crawl. He argued the objects were flying so fast they couldn’t be seen in real time. Hemmat took Mr. X up on his challenge that the UFOs appeared at reliable intervals, and her photographer proceeded to capture UFO footage of his own. She also consulted an aviation authority who eliminated conventional aircraft, birds and bugs from the suspect list. A ton of viewers weren’t buying the no-bug theory and evidently hammered Hemmat with you’re-an-idiot critiques, so she enlisted a puzzled entomologist to review the images. The entomologist’s verdict: “I don’t believe it’s an insect.” “It’s unexplained, we’ve talked to all the experts,” Hemmat stated at the end of her second piece as she solicited viewer suggestions. “I don’t know what else to do.” Great instincts, but let’s be clear. No, you didn’t talk to all the experts. Please interview more than one. Also: Those platoons of amateur videographers you showed standing watch at Federal Heights, the prescribed vista for shooting UFOs — have they caught anything? Did you look at their footage? And sorry, you DO know what else to do, you even mentioned it on the show: conduct some triangulating camera work. The good news is, the story’s getting a toe-hold with the MSM; even an east coast NPR station found it compelling enough for a decent segment. Memo to Fox 31: If you’re serious about sliding down this sucking black rabbit hole, broaden your scope and check out journalist Leslie Kean’s report on the Chilean UFO footage first. Same buggie issues, no resolution. But maybe the Denver footage will contain something unique and quantifiable. Better yet: Four days remain before ratings month ends Friday. Just play it straight, keep pounding, and your competitors will be whiteboarding their own UFO coverage come February. devoid.blogs.heraldtribune.com/13421/ufos-to-the-ratings-rescue/
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Post by skywalker on Nov 26, 2012 23:45:47 GMT -6
I don't think those things are bugs. I don't know what they are but they aren't bugs. Maybe they really are UFOs and they just move really really fast now instead of just put-putting around like they did in the old days.
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