UFOnauts: What they look like...?

Creepy Green Light

Don't mistake lack of talent for genius
For some reason Robert Vaughn always struck me as an actor who would find it beneath him to appear in any corny sci-fi flicks. He was the star of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. of course. For years he appeared in commercials for one of the biggest ambulance chasers in Kentucky.

"You better call Becker!"
And remember he was also in the 80's movie "Hangar 18" which I probably watched 100 times as a kid.
 

Dejan Corovic

As above, so bellow
If you read any of my posts you probably know that I like studying physics of UFOs. Unfortunately, that kind of study can't tell us anything about intentions of aliens.

Luckily, Dr. Karla Turner studied just that and IMHO she did an excellent job. Not to spoil it for you, but she portrays aliens as nasty and manipulative as they could be:


View: https://youtu.be/lk2AK0T7BzM
 

nix

Honorable
I watched pretty much all her lectures, read her book partially. She speaks of false memories, one example she remembered giving a lecture to group of ETs and abductees if i remember correctly but deeper regression revealed it was a screen memory for invasive medical procedure.

But we must be careful not to judge all ETs based on this minority behind abductions. I'd say less than 10% of races lack any compassion and deception is their main tool.

Even these guys from Zanfretta case said they wanted to be friends with humans and Italian guy told them they could not cause they look like monsters, isn't that unjust toward these guys.

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The Pier Fortunato Zanfretta's hypnosis made by Dr. Mauro Moretti on Jan 7, 1979 (English subtitles)​


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLUp-oE_Qnk
 

max

Adept
Alor 1959 ufo strange they look like humans interesting they came on island police shoot them.and
they were alive
 

nix

Honorable
Rare know that nazis were not only the first (outside the secret brotherhoods who ALWAYS had 'em) to develop field propelled spacescraft, but basically everything else, from atomic bomb of which american one is a copy, to jets, modern submarines, magnetic tape recorders, binary computers, night vision/infrared, sonic cannon etc.

nazi.jpg
 

nix

Honorable

In short quoting another guy from


Well, you see man, Nazi Germany had the scientists and the necessary equipment to develop nuclear weapons. The test at Rügen Island was the pinacle of their research, you may find interesting evidence on the net and on many books, for example: Zinsser's report, the only photograph of the explosion, radioactivity underground at Wittow, etc. I can assure you that this is not a conspiracy theory, many details point that Germany did test an A-bomb there. Obviously if you need more solid evidence, it is very difficult if not impossible to get it, because it remains as classified information. This is not surprising for me, because it'll be very embarrassing to recognize that Germany with just a few scientists and a few millions of Reichmarks, did obtain the bomb before the Americans, which spent 2.000.000.000 dollars and needed 130.000 people between staff and many exiled jewish scientists. And lastly, the most obvious reason amongst all: Germany lost the war, this means that every scientifical achievement they obtained, was automatically property of the Allies, millions of patents and prototypes.
 
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nix

Honorable
The secret is that there is no secret, spin a cone shaped magnet fast enough and it will generate a gravitational field. Once the field is established how much mass is within it matters not, even million tons of lead is lighter than a feather and inertialess. Hamel granite cone below.

hamel.jpg
 

nix

Honorable
And how inventive germans were shows even this, a rifle shooting at 90° around the corners.


1024px-G3_and_StG44.jpg


And a pressurized suit

 

nix

Honorable
I think i read somewhere and it may well be true that reason Hitler with his tiny Germany dared to attack many times larger Russia and US, is cause he knew well about the advantage gravitational saucers they had since 1922 gave him, and i may add the almost finished A-bomb they indeed completed, tested and BEGAN A SERIES PRODUCTION of by 1944.

Hitler supposedly died in Argentina in 1962., broke and demented.

->>> Hitler of The Andes documentary <<<<​

And a movie based on his escape

 
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pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
a rifle shooting at 90° around the corners

Speaking strictly about German small arms they were quite inventive with some things like the StG44 and MG42. We incorporated some of their design features into our own weapons and used them for decades. But that shoot-around-the-corner rifle didn't last long and isn't something to come home and tell Mom about. Just a weird novelty.

The primary German small arm of the entire war was a K98 bolt action rifle. While they were building beautifully crafted and finished rifles that had hosts of serial numbers and small details to match we churned out millions upon millions of semi-automatic rifles designed to be modular with interchangeable parts and literally swamped them. They were markedly superior and lasted a full generation before the design moved on. The Germans also had no real answer for the M2 other than to be afraid of it. Point is, they didn't have the market of cool weapon technology all to themselves.
 
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