I think we are dealing more with the MIB aliens here.BenFiasco14 said:Redstone said:
It's also possible the aliens were in a liminal space: meaning, like the Nordics, they "appear human" but also quite otherworldly. Related, 7 feet (the edge of "normal") gets exaggerated via panic to 10 feet, ect.
If so, this could explain both the panic AND getting them from the scene quickly: you just go on through, like the end of The Town.
To expound on this. Let's ASSUME THERE WERE 10 FOOT ALIENS. A HUGE assumption but let's have some fun.
If we're dealing with something interdimensional or of another plane of existence, it's completely within the realm of possibility there wasn't anything TO photograph or video. Whether the creatures zip in and out of materiality so fast cameras can't pick it up, perhaps they are immune from being captured by video somehow … who knows.
But again with this assumption I highly doubt they just whisked the alien away. Now that I believe could not have been kept under wraps.
It's not like the ufo community gets to dictate what is the "face" of UFO talk. Yes, crazy stories get picked up by social media and show up on your feed, but it's not like the true face of the ufo community gets to dictate any of that. Most of the ufo community hates Ashton and the whole MH370 thing. I haven't really seen anything from the primary voices in the ufo community on this Miami Mall incident either.Joes said:
Holy moly..
Every story involving giant aliens hanging out at the Miami mall and being arrested by city cops, or giant aliens in someone's backyard in Las Vegas, or jetpack aliens attacking people in Peru, etc., does 10 thousand times more damage to this whole topic than any army of skeptics could ever do.
In any "normal" UFO sighting skeptics asking "where are all the good photos and videos of these events?" are mocked because "iPhones don't take good photos from miles away, you silly idiot!" But when 10-foot aliens are shopping at the mall in a crowd we're being asked to believe that every image from thousands of people was confiscated instantly before one person posted to social media. How can you guys blame people for their perception of this topic?
Even though many of you here are also laughing it off all you have to do is go look at YouTube or social media and see that this kind of stuff is the face of this UFO talk. Any normal person who hears about panic over 10-foot aliens at the mall in one clip and then hears Grusch talk about alien ships recovered by the Pope and interdimensional alien bodies being held in some government vault in another clip is going to laugh all of it off equally.
It's an extreme version of The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Every time this type of nonsense happens the burden of proof for anything real goes even higher.
Best alleged footage yet of the 8-10 Feet Tall Alien Creature in Miami she might be on to something what do you think ? 🧐 🫣 #MiamiAlien #MiamiMall #Alien pic.twitter.com/30G0oYpQ3d
— ZachVentures☯️ (@ZachVentures) January 7, 2024
Joes said:
Holy moly..
Every story involving giant aliens hanging out at the Miami mall and being arrested by city cops, or giant aliens in someone's backyard in Las Vegas, or jetpack aliens attacking people in Peru, etc., does 10 thousand times more damage to this whole topic than any army of skeptics could ever do.
In any "normal" UFO sighting skeptics asking "where are all the good photos and videos of these events?" are mocked because "iPhones don't take good photos from miles away, you silly idiot!" But when 10-foot aliens are shopping at the mall in a crowd we're being asked to believe that every image from thousands of people was confiscated instantly before one person posted to social media. How can you guys blame people for their perception of this topic?
Even though many of you here are also laughing it off all you have to do is go look at YouTube or social media and see that this kind of stuff is the face of this UFO talk. Any normal person who hears about panic over 10-foot aliens at the mall in one clip and then hears Grusch talk about alien ships recovered by the Pope and interdimensional alien bodies being held in some government vault in another clip is going to laugh all of it off equally.
It's an extreme version of The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Every time this type of nonsense happens the burden of proof for anything real goes even higher.
Juveniles with sticks at the mall generated this police response the other day at the Miami mall?
— Shadygrooove (@shadygrooove) January 5, 2024
pic.twitter.com/C6XplxtBH0
Anyone else up late tonight thinking about UAPs and how the federal government has been hiding the truth from Americans for decades?
— Rep. Eric Burlison (@RepEricBurlison) January 8, 2024
It's time for answers.
We should have known the alien invasion would begin at Margaritaville. https://t.co/BH0vXR4Spl
— Nick Gold (@DeclassifyUAP) January 8, 2024
TCTTS said:Joes said:
Holy moly..
Every story involving giant aliens hanging out at the Miami mall and being arrested by city cops, or giant aliens in someone's backyard in Las Vegas, or jetpack aliens attacking people in Peru, etc., does 10 thousand times more damage to this whole topic than any army of skeptics could ever do.
In any "normal" UFO sighting skeptics asking "where are all the good photos and videos of these events?" are mocked because "iPhones don't take good photos from miles away, you silly idiot!" But when 10-foot aliens are shopping at the mall in a crowd we're being asked to believe that every image from thousands of people was confiscated instantly before one person posted to social media. How can you guys blame people for their perception of this topic?
Even though many of you here are also laughing it off all you have to do is go look at YouTube or social media and see that this kind of stuff is the face of this UFO talk. Any normal person who hears about panic over 10-foot aliens at the mall in one clip and then hears Grusch talk about alien ships recovered by the Pope and interdimensional alien bodies being held in some government vault in another clip is going to laugh all of it off equally.
It's an extreme version of The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Every time this type of nonsense happens the burden of proof for anything real goes even higher.
One or two people in a rural area, either not being able to get their phones out in time, or the object being so far off in the night sky that it ends up being blurry, is perfectly believable. Hundreds of people in a mall, with multiple, ten-foot-tall aliens apparently walking among them, and yet not a single decent pic or video, is not. There is a vast difference between the two instances, and you know this.
The same goes for mall aliens and Grusch. Have a number of people already written off Grusch as crazy? Sure. But any person with half a brain, who spends just five minutes looking into either topic, realizes the credibility chasm between the two.
For a non-believer, it remains so incredibly weird how "concerned" you are about all of this, especially in how the subject is perceived by the public.
Quote:
David Grusch in New York City
Grusch appears to have given a private presentation to 60 people organized by a "Wall Street bigwig". He says:
An adversary country is considering UFO disclosure to get ahead of the U.S.
The non-human intelligence related to UAP look like the typical "grey" alien.
The U.S. has a UFO craft with a diameter of ~40 feet, however once a person goes inside, it appears to be the size of a football field. The craft is able to produce 1 terawatt (1,000,000,000,000 watts) of energy.
Only about 50 people know the full extent of the nature of the UFO phenomenon.
Grusch remains hopeful for UFO Disclosure.
David Grusch in New York City
— UAP James (@UAPJames) January 8, 2024
Grusch appears to have given a private presentation to 60 people organized by a “Wall Street bigwig”. He says:
• An adversary country is considering UFO disclosure to get ahead of the U.S.
• The non-human intelligence related to UAP look like… https://t.co/QhsgpwspCd pic.twitter.com/WkdvSFJhcW
Sounds to me like the "club" at the DoD along with Bill Nelson has succeeded in pissing Grusch off. Bring on catastrophic Disclosure. Money talks. #playtheirgame https://t.co/iIEl1MbEpZ
— scienceisreligion - Carl Anderson (@carlanderson333) January 8, 2024
Chaos is a ladder. If there is something earth-shaking to be disclosed, wouldn't our government prefer to control the means and message? For example, consider the point that Coulthart made recently about lawsuits being filed for a variety of reasons if it becomes clear that the government and private companies like Lockheed Martin have deliberately lied for years. All the whistleblower cases suddenly become proven and compensation for damages would be owed. Lockheed Martin and other owners of literally priceless UAP artifacts could be sued by shareholders for not disclosing company assets that would surely have affected stock values. And all of it coming out in an election year, to boot. "Chaos" would indeed be an appropriate term.redline248 said:
I wonder what a country gains by beating the US to "disclosure?"
redline248 said:
I wonder what a country gains by beating the US to "disclosure?"
I can't wait to find out more about the science of the extra dimensional space in the 40 ft craft.
A terawatt. According to the internet the entire human population on the planet uses 17 to 18 terawatts in 1 year. Why isn't this thing plugged into the grid? Just wait until the clean energy folks hear about this!
Are #UAPs perhaps "remnants of industrial, technological NHIs that evolved on Earth up to 350 million years ago"? A terrific analysis of that possibility from philosopher Bernardo Kastrup @BernardoKastrup https://t.co/LhQCmOpd5J
— Ross Coulthart (@rosscoulthart) January 8, 2024
🚨 New UFO Footage: “The Jellyfish”
— UAP James (@UAPJames) January 9, 2024
In 2018, the U.S. military captured footage in Iraq over a sensitive facility. The object was designated as “UAP” by U.S. Intelligence.
Jeremy Corbell obtained & released this video. He identified direct eyewitnesses that corroborated that… pic.twitter.com/Dv8tvm4fKq
The Jellyfish UFO Videos 🪼
— Mike Colangelo (@MikeColangelo) January 9, 2024
Recorded in 2018 over Iraq. Allegedly this thing went into the water, stayed underwater for 17 minutes then came out of the water and shot off at a 45 degree angle.
TMZ Presents: UFO Revolution
Episode 1:https://t.co/b8to4g3Hj3#ufoX #ufos #uap… pic.twitter.com/8fPBltULUN
For starters it looks like it belongs in a transformers movieTCTTS said:
Care to expand on why you believe so? I'm not saying it's real, but it at least comes from a somewhat trusted source + military officials who have apparently corroborated it.
TCTTS said:🚨 New UFO Footage: “The Jellyfish”
— UAP James (@UAPJames) January 9, 2024
In 2018, the U.S. military captured footage in Iraq over a sensitive facility. The object was designated as “UAP” by U.S. Intelligence.
Jeremy Corbell obtained & released this video. He identified direct eyewitnesses that corroborated that… pic.twitter.com/Dv8tvm4fKq
This is it for me. "I'm told it did this, I corroborated it with a witness..." He seems very easy to convince because he wants it to be real. This thing was allegedly tracked by this weapons platform all the way over the water, but all we see is 8 secs repeating over and over.TCTTS said:
For the record, I'm not the biggest Corbel fan, but I at least believe that HE believes the things he purports are real/true. He might very well be misled from time to time, and definitely gets off on the "fame" aspect, but I don't think he's ever actively attempting to mislead anyone himself.