King of the Americas
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2001
- Messages
- 6,513
The LA Times never claimed that the picture showed enemy aircraft, weather balloons, or UFOs.
The caption under the photograph clearly identifies the blobs of light pictured to be bursting AA rounds.
Having never seen the original, I don't know what is or isn't in the picture.
At my first glance, it look like a saucer, with a nipple at the top, with smaller blob/lights surrounding it.
I didn't say what the LA Times claimed.
I asked questions.
What was 'tracked', and what were we shooting at?
Was it a balloon, aircraft, or something else/intelligent non-human U.F.O.?
My point in asking is that ALL the evidence points toward there being 'something' that caused the alarm, rather than nothing.
Something, as of yet unknown, caused our military to open fire over civilians, leading to several deaths.
What were the search lights pointing toward?
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ETA:
http://www.theairraid.com/
Here's an excerpt from an article written for the Daily News by reporter Matt Weinstock. After the war he was talking to man who had served in one of those Army batteries and the gentleman recounted the following story.
"Early in the war things were pretty scary and the Army was setting up coastal defenses. At one of the new radar stations near Santa Monica, the crew tried in vain to arrange for some planes to fly by so that they could test the system. As no one could spare the planes at the time, they hit upon a novel way to test the radar. One of the guys bought a bag of nickel balloons and then filled them with hydrogen, attached metal wires, and let them go. Catching the offshore breeze, the balloons had the desired effect of showing up on the screens, proving the equipment was working. But after traveling a good distance offshore and to the south, the nightly onshore breeze started to push the balloons back towards the coastal cities. The coastal radar's picked up the metal wires and the searchlights swung automatically on the targets, looking on the screens as aircraft heading for the city. The ACK-ACK started firing and the rest was history."
Personally, I think claiming 'wires' being picked up on radar is bullbutter.
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