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Published on Jun 12, 2015
This happened in Greenwood, Indiana USA
I was out riding my bicycle and a storm was approaching, then this strange light caught my eye so I pulled out my phone and shot this video.
I had no idea what it was until I did some research when I got home and found out that it's called haarp, a government research program (They Say)!! Take a closer look at the beginning of the video right when the beam disappears for a second it moves part of the cloud upwards then comes back.
originally posted by: Rezlooper
a reply to: eisegesis
I await the experts. should be interesting. If this is real then that would have been pretty intense to see. My reaction would have been the same exact response of the guy capturing the video. WTF!
originally posted by: Skywatcher2011
a reply to: eisegesis
If I saw this in action in real life I would totally be tripping out not knowing what to believe.
If this is HAARP or Project Blue Beam at work, then who knows what could be the expectant result from government experimentation.
Hopefully it is not CGI because if it was, then it was really well done.
originally posted by: AK907ICECOLD
a reply to: eisegesis
I think CGI, if that was anything close to being real I am sure more people will pop up videos and it will become a big media attention otherwise it's just another video that doesn't mean anything
Hopefully ATS can do what it does best and get to the bottom of it.
originally posted by: AK907ICECOLD
a reply to: eisegesis
I think CGI, if that was anything close to being real I was sure more people will pop up videos and it will become a big media attention otherwise it's just another video that doesn't mean anything
However, scientists who have viewed the video and similar videos being uploaded to YouTube (see video below) by amateur photographers said the phenomenon of “dancing storm clouds” and other similar shifting light effects in the clouds are is not linked with HAARP or UFOs. The phenomenon, according to meteorologists, is linked to storm clouds known as cumulonimbus clouds.
“These dancing patches of brightness appear to be caused by the cloud’s charged water particles moving around in response to shifting electric fields as lightning strikes within the cloud below.” However, scientists admit that more research remains to be done to elucidate the physics of the electrical activity causing the effect.
According to the Cloud Appreciation Society website, an expert, Les Cowley, said, “We do not really know what is happening. We need more hard evidence, more measurements and cloud-physics modeling before we can hope to come up with a clear explanation. At the moment, we are nowhere near that position.” But for as long as scientists are unable to provide a definite natural explanation of the “dancing storm clouds” phenomenon many will continue to resort to popular HAARP and “cloaked” UFO conspiracy theories.