Spielberg's "Disclosure Day" pre-release Speculation

Well, hang in there. Honestly, I'm amazed and pleasantly surprised at the dedication / obsession many of you have with getting to the bottom of the situation without ever having an experience with it yourselves --just as other dedicated folks have in the past. Growing up, I always found the subject interesting, as many young folks do. I'd enjoy checking out a book of UFO stories and titillating my imagination. I thought that if UFOs were real, chances of encountering one would be far less than being struck by lightning --if UFOs were real. I was far more interested in art, the occult and music, and ancient civilizations.
In retrospect when I look back at my two experiences, they shock me now and don't seem possible when I look up at the blue sky, but I know they happened, and they were shocking, and still are. Now, I wonder if I will see them again before I die. I wish others could have the experiences I have had, and I actually feel a sense of tragedy for the many intelligent people I have met, who deserve to experience them, but will die, having never known them. I really do. I understand the frustration with the influencers, the nonsense empty burgers, glued together alien bodies, and nutters. Everyone gets tired of it, not just skeptics.
I've had some years to think about what I've experienced, and reflect on the old articles I have read about other people who have had very similar UFO experiences. I haven't heard a theory that I haven't considered in the past to explain the phenomenon, some of those being quite far out. I have concluded (and these are just my personal thoughts), that many of the real experiences are engineered ahead of time by the phenomenon in the same way we would set up scenarios for rats or insects in a lab. The phenomenon comprehends cause and effect and future scenarios far ahead of humans and our current AI. It may be able to act backward and forward in time. It has been here for a long time and knows far more about individuals than one might think; some individuals for reasons unknown are marked for contact, sometimes ongoing, inn a pattern that provides contact but no tipping point. Many of the experiences with orbs etc., are from a sentient technology that persists in our environment and was perhaps delivered long ago.
I think the abduction experience is sleep paralysis, but we must ultimately be open to all possibilities if evidence is presented.
Which gets me to the "prove it" attitude, here at Metabunk, which I think is a good way to move forward. Folks here are the real UFO investigators, and I hope you get to the bottom of it! I think, if some videos come out eventually, that you will see orbs in formations, and Tic-tacs, too. I'm hoping.
I've just offered my thoughts with no proof. But it is good to have the input from an "experiencer" (sounds stupid).
I think if it was an adversary's technology, they would know by now that we can detect it.
Grusch was on Weaponized the other day. I'd sure like to have lunch with the guy.

Source: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4hvb8uz2hpo&pp=ygUaV2hhdCBkYXZpZCBncnVzY2ggcmV2ZWFsZWQ%3D&ra=m&t=7m11s
 
Dolan is presenting ideas that I've considered for some time (years). A type of controlled contact from a persistent technology.
What do you mean by considered? Do you mean as a thought experiment (ie testing logical possibility/internal consistency)?

Or do you mean considered as in genuine plausibility of that being true in reality?

And if it's the latter, what is the evidence you find most convincing to push you from possibility to plausibility?
 
What do you mean by considered? Do you mean as a thought experiment (ie testing logical possibility/internal consistency)?

Or do you mean considered as in genuine plausibility of that being true in reality?

And if it's the latter, what is the evidence you find most convincing to push you from possibility to plausibility?
I've offered very similar ideas online before. It's just my speculation based on what I've experienced and the many stories of supposed contact over the decades. I'm not presenting it as something that could be tested or proven, at least currently. So, that is why it is in this thread which concerns believer speculation, originally Spielberg's idea of it. Ideas are free, so I certainly don't care if others find some of them interesting.
It's also okay with me if debunkers here can prove all proffered evidence in the future to be balloons and debris; that's fine as well.
Gives one some pretty good movie ideas, though, eh?
Start off with an ancient magician in a trance.. Go to kids finding diary of great great grandma describing airship encounter. Then kids are approached by objects… then you go to military stuff and tie it all together. Everything accelerates. Tipping point reached. Mick is beamed up.. ;)I'd go to that movie, if done in an indie style or something.
 
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On a side note, the only time I watched Close Encounters was when it hit the big screen in my country, my Dad took me to the cinema to watch it. I don't remember if in Brasil that movie also premiered in 1977, I was thirteen years old back then. On the other hand, around those same times I watched George Lucas' Star Wars in the cinema too and soon afterwards read almost its entire book (never good at reading entire books ha ha!), and watched it various times in the TV. The irony is that I found Spielberg's Close Encounters storyline a bit more captivating, and quite frankly, the scene that most grabbed me -- and also got me intrigued for a long time -- was that of the missing WWII airplanes found in the Mexican desert.

No wonder Steven Spielberg is actually a mastermind as movie director, brilliantly dumbfounding an early teen with a clever mix of real historical mystery and complete fiction. According to what I founded out today, the airplanes depicted in that scene are five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers known as Flight 19. On December 5, 1945, this real squadron took off from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on a routine U.S. Navy training flight and vanished without a trace over the Atlantic Ocean. This tragedy became the foundational mystery that popularized the legend of the Bermuda Triangle. But Spielberg made up the idea of the planes being found intact in the desert.

To this day, no trace of the actual Flight 19 planes or their 14 crewmen has ever been found in real life. Spielberg simply used the famous unsolved mystery as a perfect plot device to suggest that highly advanced aliens had abducted the squadron in 1945 and returned their pristine planes to Earth decades later. Awesome! :cool:

https://www.usni.org/magazines/nava...21/october/mysterious-disappearance-flight-19
https://vintageaviationnews.com/warbirds-news/close-encounters-of-the-tbm-kind.html

Anyway, I bave to admit, Star Wars was much but MUCH more commercially successfull, at least here in Brasil.
 
On a side note, the only time I watched Close Encounters was when it hit the big screen in my country, my Dad took me to the cinema to watch it. I don't remember if in Brasil that movie also premiered in 1977, I was thirteen years old back then. On the other hand, around those same times I watched George Lucas' Star Wars in the cinema too and soon afterwards read almost its entire book (never good at reading entire books ha ha!), and watched it various times in the TV. The irony is that I found Spielberg's Close Encounters storyline a bit more captivating, and quite frankly, the scene that most grabbed me -- and also got me intrigued for a long time -- was that of the missing WWII airplanes found in the Mexican desert.

No wonder Steven Spielberg is actually a mastermind as movie director, brilliantly dumbfounding an early teen with a clever mix of real historical mystery and complete fiction. According to what I founded out today, the airplanes depicted in that scene are five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers known as Flight 19. On December 5, 1945, this real squadron took off from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on a routine U.S. Navy training flight and vanished without a trace over the Atlantic Ocean. This tragedy became the foundational mystery that popularized the legend of the Bermuda Triangle. But Spielberg made up the idea of the planes being found intact in the desert.

To this day, no trace of the actual Flight 19 planes or their 14 crewmen has ever been found in real life. Spielberg simply used the famous unsolved mystery as a perfect plot device to suggest that highly advanced aliens had abducted the squadron in 1945 and returned their pristine planes to Earth decades later. Awesome! :cool:

https://www.usni.org/magazines/nava...21/october/mysterious-disappearance-flight-19
https://vintageaviationnews.com/warbirds-news/close-encounters-of-the-tbm-kind.html

Anyway, I bave to admit, Star Wars was much but MUCH more commercially successfull, at least here in Brasil.
Wow! You are still in Brazil? That looks like a very interesting place to live.
 
Wow! You are still in Brazil? That looks like a very interesting place to live.

Well, that's like a no-brainer when it comes to most continental countries.
But here, if you're American you won't find your Country music anywhere, only some Bossa Nova venues still taking place, albeit having to really look for good ones these days. You won't find either your MLB or your NBA official league games. If you like surfing though, there are quite a few great options. But yeah, our tropical beaches are among the greatest ones indeed.
 
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