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Intelligence official say U.S. has retrieved craft of non-human origin

Uri Geller says it's all true. He was taken to a secret NASA storage facility by Werner Von Brown and Edgar Mitchel. CIA scientists were also with them. He was shown the bodies of aliens in cold storage.

It was 3 floors down and they had to wear arctic coats and
"When I saw the bodies I almost fainted"

https://twitter.com/theurigeller/status/1691087460401397760?t=JwqErk6AH2ND7o2swbUuMQ&s=19

The best part of this is the Twitter subtext at the bottom where they point out the image is from an X-Files episode. And the X-Files hated Geller so much they based a hack, scumbag, publicity-loving "psychic" named, The Stupendous Yappi on him.
 
Curious. I assume that you are aware of such phenomena as Q-Anon and the belief that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump by people like Mike Pence and Bill Barr, Brian Kemp and Brad Raffensperger?

I hang out on the conspiracy board. Well aware.

My problem is the GOP is playing with fire by tacking advantage of people who obviously have emotional problems to raise money off of them. This is how you get January 6th, Pizza-Gate, and health department officials lives threatened.

And, as a one-time UFO believer, these are the same people who once ridiculed the UFO/New Age community. Guess they found out how profitable this crap can be.
 
Can anybody explain why it is not possible to ask one of these prevaricators under oath, "Who told you that?" And then go and subpoena that individual and ask him, "Whats' up?"

Rise and repeat as necessary.

Maybe the trail would eventually lead to the guy who told the original joke? :boggled:

Here's how the real thing works:

In my research for the 7thID(L) and the invasion of Panama, I came across a variety of ugly stories. But because I cannot substantiate any of them, and or a few were told to me off-the-record, these stories will not end up in any book or article I write. And I've never shared them publicly.

On the other hand, if I had some kind of agenda hoping to smear the US Army, and the US Government, these stories would be told every chance I'd get, no matter how many bridges I'd burn in the process.

Grusch has a pension he want's to keep. This story is supposedly important, but not so important that he'd risk throwing it away, and perhaps spending years in prison to get it public. Which means he's not blowing any whistles, just yanking the right chains.
 
Here's how the real thing works:

In my research for the 7thID(L) and the invasion of Panama, I came across a variety of ugly stories. But because I cannot substantiate any of them, and or a few were told to me off-the-record, these stories will not end up in any book or article I write. And I've never shared them publicly.

On the other hand, if I had some kind of agenda hoping to smear the US Army, and the US Government, these stories would be told every chance I'd get, no matter how many bridges I'd burn in the process.

Grusch has a pension he want's to keep. This story is supposedly important, but not so important that he'd risk throwing it away, and perhaps spending years in prison to get it public. Which means he's not blowing any whistles, just yanking the right chains.

That's some tightrope to walk. Let's hope he does not fall off. (But maybe I do.) :eek:
 
The best part of this is the Twitter subtext at the bottom where they point out the image is from an X-Files episode. And the X-Files hated Geller so much they based a hack, scumbag, publicity-loving "psychic" named, The Stupendous Yappi on him.

More of a Peter Hurkos, the Dutch clairvoyant, I would have said. Even the name sounds almost Dutch.
 
Uri Geller says it's all true. He was taken to a secret NASA storage facility by Werner Von Brown and Edgar Mitchel. CIA scientists were also with them. He was shown the bodies of aliens in cold storage.

It was 3 floors down and they had to wear arctic coats and
"When I saw the bodies I almost fainted"

https://twitter.com/theurigeller/status/1691087460401397760?t=JwqErk6AH2ND7o2swbUuMQ&s=19

Which is an unlikely story because a) Geller didn't become famous until after von Braun left NASA, and b) why would an Israeli pal around with a prominent nazi whose career was dependent on the KZ system?
 
Which is an unlikely story because a) Geller didn't become famous until after von Braun left NASA, and b) why would an Israeli pal around with a prominent nazi whose career was dependent on the KZ system?

An because, you know, there were no aliens to be seen.

Your reason b) assumes that Geller has some sort of moral compass.
 
Here's another aspect of this whole thing that makes no sense if you pause and think about it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_B1WdWhFrQ&t=295s

I've (hopefully) queued this video to the right spot. Congressman Tim Burchett is being interviewed regarding David Grusch, and the interviewer asks him how credible he thinks Grusch is, and he answers that he's "very credible" because he's a decorated military veteran. Because he served his country and so on.

But then, the Pentagon (the D.O.D.) comes out and says that they have no knowledge of the things he's talking about, why aren't all those military people over at the Pentagon, most of whom are also very decorated (anyone with a few years of military service will have some "decorations", and the longer you serve the more you will accumulate). Why is that all these decorated military people who are currently "serving their country" aren't also credible to Tim Burchett when they say that there's no such thing?
 
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I call upon the Earth expeditionary force of Ashtar Star Command:

The peoples of earth will not undergo the Dimensional Shift based on furtive appearances. You must make the maximum public appearance.
Please do a landing on the DC Mall and hold a press conference.

Assure us that you're here for our spiritual evolution and not to colonize, harvest spleens, or for the LOLz. :wackylaugh:
 
Gord_in_Toronto said:
Here's how the real thing works:

In my research for the 7thID(L) and the invasion of Panama, I came across a variety of ugly stories. But because I cannot substantiate any of them, and or a few were told to me off-the-record, these stories will not end up in any book or article I write. And I've never shared them publicly.

On the other hand, if I had some kind of agenda hoping to smear the US Army, and the US Government, these stories would be told every chance I'd get, no matter how many bridges I'd burn in the process.

Grusch has a pension he want's to keep. This story is supposedly important, but not so important that he'd risk throwing it away, and perhaps spending years in prison to get it public. Which means he's not blowing any whistles, just yanking the right chains.

That's some tightrope to walk. Let's hope he does not fall off. (But maybe I do.) :eek:


He's making stuff up. Therefore he has no worry about losing his pension for revealing secrets.

If, for the sake of argument, it were real, he would do it to be a national hero on the biggest story of all time. For that matter, if the government wanted to keep a lid on it, the last thing they'd do is admit valid secret documents of aliens such that he needed to be prosecuted.
 
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This would he hilarious if they weren't spending real money on it.

The National UFO Reporting Center has been around since the mid-1990s, and is a quality resource for reporting sightings, and as a reference and data source for tracking patterns in various locations. The guy who runs it doesn't spend a lot of money on it. For those unfamiliar with how the Pentagon goes out of its way to step on its own genitals, this should be exhibit A: Something the DoD didn't want, something that could be done cheaply, but probably overpriced for the return, and now there's a new team of bureaucrats that will keep this office running in perpetuity. :rolleyes:
 
This would he hilarious if they weren't spending real money on it.

The National UFO Reporting Center has been around since the mid-1990s, and is a quality resource for reporting sightings, and as a reference and data source for tracking patterns in various locations. The guy who runs it doesn't spend a lot of money on it. For those unfamiliar with how the Pentagon goes out of its way to step on its own genitals, this should be exhibit A: Something the DoD didn't want, something that could be done cheaply, but probably overpriced for the return, and now there's a new team of bureaucrats that will keep this office running in perpetuity. :rolleyes:

And the there is the Aviation Safety Reporting SystemWP that has been collecting UFO information since 1976!

Some considerable info here: Pilot UFO Sightings Collected by NASA Reveal Serious Safety Concerns Over Objects in U.S. Airspace

Several incident reports describing recent U.S. pilot UFO sightings in controlled airspace convey the serious concerns aviators have about potential collisions with unknown objects, The Debrief has learned.

The unresolved aerial encounters with what the Pentagon now calls unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAP, were filed as incident reports with NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) and describe events in U.S. airspace that highlight ongoing safety concerns associated with appearances of aerial objects of unknown origin.

Still no aliens though. :rolleyes:

Submit your reports here: https://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/
 
Didn't think this was worth starting a new thread for.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/aliens-in-mexico-congress-ufo-b2410477.html

“Non-human” alien corpses have been displayed to Mexican politicians at the country’s Congress.

The two small alleged alien corpses, retrieved from Cusco, Peru, were presented in windowed boxes in Mexico City on Wednesday, stirring excitement within the UFO conspiracy theorist community.

The event was spearheaded by journalist and ufologist Jaime Maussan, who testified under oath that the mummified specimens are not part of “our terrestrial evolution”, with almost a third of their DNA remaining “unknown”, reported Mexican media.

Scratching my head over the highlighted:

Mr Maussan told attendees the specimens had been studied by scientists at the Autonomous National University of Mexico (UNAM) who were able to draw DNA evidence using radiocarbon dating. After comparisons were made to other DNA samples, it was found that over 30% of the specimens’ DNA was “unknown”, he said.
 

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