Een ander voorbeeld van de wijze waarop de mainstream media berichten: de betreffende piloot in dit artikel had tot eind 2019, volgens de journalist Phelan, 'mostly wanted to avoid having his name “attached to the ‘little green men’ crazies that are out there.”' Hij wilde dus niet voor maf versleten worden. Maar nadat de militaire top in het Pentagon 15 jaar later had besloten dat ufo's wel degelijk bestonden, voelde hij zich vrij genoeg om de werkelijkheid te vertellen. Met andere woorden: de piloot leefde 15 jaar in de veronderstelling dat wat hij met zijn eigen ogen gezien had niet echt genoeg was geweest om dit de Amerikaanse bevolking te vertellen. Zo werkt de macht in het vrije westen, hetgeen de vraag oproept welke complotten worden nog meer verzwegen? Of is dit complotdenken, volgens de mainstream-media?
DEC. 19, 2019
Navy Pilot Who Filmed the ‘Tic Tac’ UFO Speaks:
‘It It Wasn’t Behaving by the Normal Laws of Physics’
In the 15 years since Chad Underwood recorded a bizarre and erratic UFO — now called “the Tic Tac,” a name Underwood himself came up with — from the infrared camera on the left wing of his F/A-18 Super Hornet, he’s become a flight instructor, a civilian employee in the aerospace industry, and a father. But he has not yet spoken publicly about what he saw that day, even now, two years after his video made the front page of the New YorkTimes. As he explained before speaking with Intelligencer, Underwood has mostly wanted to avoid having his name “attached to the ‘little green men’ crazies that are out there.”
The story of the Tic Tac begins around November 10, 2004, when radar operator Kevin Day first reported seeing odd and slow-moving objects flying in groups of five to ten off of San Clemente Island, west of the San Diego coast. At an elevation of 28,000 feet, moving at a speed of approximately 120 knots (about 138 miles per hour), the clusters were too high to be birds, too slow to be conventional aircraft, and were not traveling on any established flight path, at least according to Day.
In a military report made public by KLAS-TV in Las Vegas, another crew member with 17 years of experience on similar cruisers would later observe that the objects “exhibited ballistic-missile characteristics” as they zoomed from 60,000 feet to 50 feet above the Pacific Ocean, alarmingly without producing sonic booms. All told, radar operators with the Princeton spent about two weeks attempting to figure out what the objects were, a process that included having the ship’s radar system shut down and recalibrated to make sure that the mysterious radar returns were not not false positives, or “ghost tracks.”
Further Reading: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2019/12/tic-tac-ufo-video-q-and-a-with-navy-pilot-chad-underwood.html
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