Pomidor Quixote
Daily Stormer
September 19, 2019
The recently sighted Imperial Star Destroyer UFO.
Someone has the technology behind these unidentified flying objects and is driving around letting us know.
We could try saying hi.
The U.S. Navy has confirmed that three online videos purportedly showing UFOs are genuine. The service says the videos, taken by Navy pilots, show “unexplained aerial phenomena,” but also states that the clips should have never been released to the public in the first place.
The three videos in question are titled “FLIR1,” “Gimbal,” and “GoFast.” They show two separate encounters between Navy aircraft and UFOs.
One video was taken in 2015 off the East Coast by a F/A-18F fighter jet using the aircraft’s onboard Raytheon AN/ASQ-228 Advanced Targeting Forward-Looking Infrared (ATFLIR) Pod. The other clip, also recorded with a Super Hornet ATFLIR pod, was taken off the coast of California in 2004 by pilots flying from the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz. In the videos, air crews loudly debate what the objects are and where they came from.
The videos were released for public viewing by The New York Times and To The Stars Academy of Arts & Sciences, a UFO research group from former Blink-182 member Tom DeLonge.
In each case, the objects in the videos undertook aerial maneuvers that aren’t possible with current aviation technology. In the 2004 incident, according to The New York Times, the objects “appeared suddenly at 80,000 feet, and then hurtled toward the sea, eventually stopping at 20,000 feet and hovering. Then they either dropped out of radar range or shot straight back up.”
Joseph Gradisher, official spokesperson for the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Information Warfare, told The Black Vault, an online repository of secret and otherwise classified documents, that the Navy “designates the objects contained in these videos as unidentified aerial phenomena.”
That terminology is important. “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” provides “the basic descriptor for the sightings/observations of unauthorized/unidentified aircraft/objects that have been observed entering/operating in the airspace of various military-controlled training ranges,” Gradisher told The Black Vault.
There’s another article taking a closer look at the incidents from the released videos.
The U.S. Navy has officially confirmed that three leaked videos indeed show what the service calls “unexplained aerial phenomena” (UAP). The clips, taken by Navy pilots between 2004 and 2015, show objects that pilots claim performed aerial maneuvers and moved at speeds impossible for known aircraft to accomplish. Here’s everything we know about the objects.
First, there were at least two different UFOs/UAPs involved in the Navy sightings. In a 2017 New York Times interview, retired U.S. Navy Commander David Fravnor said the flying object that he observed from the cockpit of his F/A-18F Super Hornet in 2004 was “around 40 feet long and oval in shape,” and described it as similar to a Tic Tac.
Lieutenant Ryan Graves, another Super Hornet pilot, told the Times that the objects he saw in 2014 and and 2015 looked like a “sphere encasing a cube.” These sightings could be of two separate objects or a single object viewed from different perspectives.
Fravor also reported seeing a second object during his encounter that was the size of a Boeing 737 sitting just below the wavetops, with waves breaking over the top. Fravor spotted the Tic Tac-like object hovering over the larger UAP.
Meanwhile, Lieutenant Colonel “Cheeks” Kurth, another Marine Corps Hornet pilot, described seeing “a round section of turbulent water about 50 [to] 100 meters in diameter.” Kurth called the area “whitewater,” and said it “looked as if there was something below the surface like a shoal, or what he’d heard a ship sinking rapidly would look like,” according to Fighter Sweep.
Are the UFOs coming out of Atlantis?
Are they coming from inside the Earth?
How long have they been here?
Who are they?
The objects were detected with a variety of means. Fravnor and other pilots saw the UAPs with their own eyes, while the radar operators aboard the nearby guided missile cruiser USS Princeton observed the objects for “several weeks” with their SPY-1 radar system.
Fravnor couldn’t detect the craft with his APG-73 radar, but Graves was able to do so in 2015 with his new APG-79 active electronically scanned array radar. The APG-79 has increased sensitivity and processing power over the older radar system.
The three publicly released videos, nicknamed “FLIR1,” “Gimbal,” and “GoFast,” were all taken using the AN/ASQ-228 Advanced Targeting Forward-Looking Infrared (ATFLIR) pod. In “Gimbal,” the infrared pod clearly sees a “hot,” whistle-shaped object that pilots say is going against a 120 knot wind. Graves told the Times that the infrared sensor on his CATM-9 training missile also picked up the missile.
All in all, the objects were observed by multiple sensors per sighting: the naked eye, radar, and infrared, ruling out a sensor malfunction as the cause of the sightings. Fravor saw the objects with his own eyes, and they were also seen by the Princeton and the ATFLIR pods.
It may be possible that the ATFLIR pods malfunctioned and depicted objects that weren’t really there, but that makes less sense considering the objects were only detected in these three instances (that we know of) and are otherwise used on a daily basis. If there was a malfunction, why was it only when objects had already been detected by the human eye, radar, and other infrared detection systems?
Because coincidence, of course.
There’s as much reason to believe that the beings behind these flying objects are from outside Earth than to believe they’re from inside Earth. There’s a lot of unexplained, mysterious and suspicious stuff on the surface of the planet that suggests that our history is not exactly what we were told it was.
What better way to get some answers than to ask for some answers?
Instead of speculating, let’s build some big-ass sign somewhere saying hi to these flying things.
Maybe also add a short bit like “please remove Jews,” because why not?
If you’re like most people, you don’t really care about ants. You may not even think about ants in your day-to-day life and you don’t think twice when an ant crosses your path.
But what if the ant starts looking at you and following you around waving weird signs reading “kill the jawnts pls”?
Would you be surprised that ants were able to communicate in that way?
Would you be interested in hearing what the ant has to say?