(02-19-2024, 01:20 AM)sailorsam Wrote: I think we've all noticed how many sightings are;
1) in the water
2) in the woods
3) in the mountains
4) in the sky, especially at night.
few people see, say, dinosaurs walking down the street mid afternoon.
(having said that, there are kangaroo sightings in some parts of the USA, presumably escaped pets)
a lot of us don't even hardly look up to the sky any more.
I think it would be interesting to set up a camera to take pictures every few minutes and review them. what might we be missing out there?
Around 2/3 of the Earth covered in water and I'm sure the US Navy intel groups know quite a bit.
TPTB started operation "Look Down" in 2008 with the advent of smartphones.
I can't remember the guy's name nor his youtube channel, but some desert dude down in Australia had some sophisticated night vision cameras/scopes he setup at night recording all the moving space objects from his vantage point. Some were obvious like satellites, shooting stars, space junk, but others were not so easy to explain such as acceleration then slowing down, changing direction on the fly, some appeared to be dancing around dodging other objects and then disappearing.
I think I posted a few of his vids in the UFO thread a long time ago.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell