QuoteReplyTopic: UFOs exist! Posted: 21-Dec-2011 at 13:28
Originally posted by Nick1986
Could it have been some sort of remote control craft or experimental missile?
Sure! but not ours.
Nick, my dad was with me the first time we spotted it. He was a trained AAA gunnery director in WW2. He was the one that figured out that it was a small object close, and not vice versa. Aside from that, he was also involved in several top secret research projects that gave him a very good idea as to what we were capable of at that time. Two other things, If it was something of ours, why would McGuire Air Base scramble fighters? 2nd, once over the orchard it had no place to go, except for the river. I'm pretty sure we don't have a submersible aircraft, then or now.
"Arguing with someone who hates you or your ideas, is like playing chess with a pigeon. No matter what move you make, your opponent will walk all over the board and scramble the pieces".
Unknown.
The first "flying saucer" was actualy invented in early 30' s, and the first small scale prototype already fly in 1932
It was invented by Henri Coanda, and the large one (1 on 1 scale) was supposed to use a type of jet engine (he also invented since 1910). He even get a patent for it in 1935, in France. It is said that Nazis get their hands on those papers, in 1940, and try to make some "flying saucers" too. Dates about this are usualy little, it is not mentioned too often. Ofcourse, there are other conspiracy theories about even more exotic models, fact is that the flying saucers start to be more visible (more apparitions) after WW 2.
If some of them are alien, that might be true as well, i have little doubts that there arent others in the Universe
If that link doesn't open go find Shootin' for the Moon by Jeffery T. Richelson, in the archives of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. http://www.thebulletin.org/
Yep just amazing what yer ole Unkie Centrix peruses eh......
Edited by Centrix Vigilis - 17-Feb-2012 at 11:54
"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence"
S. T. Friedman
Pilger's law: 'If it's been officially denied, then it's probably true'
One of the weirdest jets I've seen: McDonnel XF-85 Goblin. This was a parasite fighter: carried in the bomb bay to defend long-range bombers from enemy fighters
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