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  • John J.
    So it's something said by Tom DeLonge, not the US Army. It's possible DeLonge hoped he could monetize or exploit the item in some way, but that doesn't mean that his assessment of it was accurate- it was not- or that TTSA had any serious...
  • Gary C
    Gary C reacted to John J.'s post in the thread Russia and Ukraine Current Events with Agree Agree.
    This appears to be connected to the well-known conspiracy theory, arguably given added credibility by Tulsi Gabbard in the past, that the US has been funding laboratories in Ukraine that are (it is implied) connected to biological warfare...
  • NorCal Dave
    The whole "transients correlate with nuclear tests and UAP sightings" debacle leaves me less inclined to interpret her other claims charitably.
  • NorCal Dave
    Presumably they think that any civilisation that has the ability to put objects in geosynchronous orbit around Earth would have such advanced technology that they can monitor us from a distance. But then that poses the question as to why they...
  • NorCal Dave
    Yeah, it makes little sense. But the beauty of it is that it doesn't have to make sense, since extraterrestrial probes or satellites are hypothetical objects, and there's no reason to assume they would function like human technology. That's why I...
  • NorCal Dave
    Perhaps you're right, but when reading the whole article, one becomes a bit more concerned. Her conclusion is: "Maybe it was the most brilliant manipulation in history to stigmatize the term "flying saucer" and reshape the problem into a dumping...
  • MonkeeSage
    Viability does not seem to me to be the problem. An extraordinary hypothesis supported by the very weak evidence of an anecdote may or may not be correct, but it can never be proven (or even strongly supported) using just anecdotes. It does not...
  • MonkeeSage
    "Proof" of what? The piece of junk TTSA had was alien? The piece of junk TTSA had could facilitate "mass reduction without losing mass"? The piece showed up in Art's mailbox in '96, so presumably it was around before that. Whoever mailed it, had...
  • Fritzkquzerk
    Viability does not seem to me to be the problem. An extraordinary hypothesis supported by the very weak evidence of an anecdote may or may not be correct, but it can never be proven (or even strongly supported) using just anecdotes. It does not...
  • JMartJr
    Viability does not seem to me to be the problem. An extraordinary hypothesis supported by the very weak evidence of an anecdote may or may not be correct, but it can never be proven (or even strongly supported) using just anecdotes. It does not...
  • MonkeeSage
    To think that these people can shine their laser onto a pilot’s eyes and possibly cause an accident while thinking they’re communicating with alien orbs is really frightening.
  • MonkeeSage
    The problem is Grusch using the term in a seemingly ambiguous way, why choose that word, numerous times? He clearly does not mean pharmacological products. It starts to become another UFO lore word, like orb. It has a real meaning and now...
  • purpleivan
    purpleivan reacted to Mauro's post in the thread Russia and Ukraine Current Events with Agree Agree.
    Yeah, biolabs are old Russian propaganda from the start of the war.
  • MonkeeSage
    I recently again tried get some understanding of what people think Grusch is referring to with this term on Reddit and I ran into this Reddit user who says they were a Navy submariner for 10yrs and also claims that it was common for sonar...
  • MonkeeSage
    Luna's list of 46 ↔ Release 2 (PR050–PR099) — verified against AARO's CSV + DVIDS metadata, 2026-06-13 The in-order PR050→PR099 mapping holds. Flags below: L = error in Luna's list, A = error in AARO's data, ? = positional guess only (callsign...
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