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Originally posted by seabhac-rua
reply to post by Tollon
I'd be very interested, but the link doesn't work....yet?
Originally posted by Logman
LOL, suckers. If you believe anyone that phones up a radio station then you need your head checked. Coast to Coast is rammed with bullsh#t and George Noory is complete buffoon who has been caught lying on air many times.
Originally posted by Logman
LOL, suckers.
post by stirling
Are we sure this wasnt a Stanley Fullham interview?
Originally posted by roughycannon
Faulty cloaking device...
Originally posted by Logman
LOL, suckers.
If you believe anyone that phones up a radio station then you need your head checked.
Coast to Coast is rammed with ******* and George Noory is complete buffoon who has been caught lying on air many times.
I think this is authentic, the guy seems to know what he's talking about. What do you think?
Television news and documentaries about the Phoenix Lights repeatedly feature a video taken around 10 p.m. by an amateur photographer, as if it represented actual footage of the UFO. But there is a discrepancy between the time the video was taken and the earlier sighting of the UFO.
The now-infamous video has been subjected to detailed analysis by at least two qualified professionals, and both determined that the brilliant lights shown hanging in a row over a mountain ridge and then dropping out of sight were, in fact, flares.
The time of the flare drops is extremely important. The most widely viewed sightings of unidentified objects across Arizona that evening began at approximately 8:15, although some objects were viewed earlier in daylight.
Clearly, the UFO flyovers were a separate event occurring independently of the later flares.
'UFOs' excerpt: A look at the Phoenix Lights by Leslie Kean
Originally posted by Tollon
I think this is authentic, the guy seems to know what he's talking about.
What do you think?
When the Idaho Air National Guard 124th Fighter Wing retired its last eight F-4 Phantom II aircraft, it ended an era. An F-4G Wild Weasel had flown its last combat mission on Jan. 2, 1996, over Southern Iraq. A few weeks later, the U.S. Air Force had retired its last F-4 aircraft. Then, on April 20, 1996, in ceremonies at Gowen Field in Boise, Idaho, the 124th Fighter Wing flew the last operational flight of the F-4 Phantom II in an F-4G aircraft. With the line already retired by the Navy and Marine Corps in January 1992, the Phantom II reign over the skies had ended.
"The last USAF Phantoms, F-4G Wild Weasel Vs from 561st Fighter Squadron, were retired on 26 March 1996. The last operational flight of the F-4G Wild Weasel was from the 190th Fighter Squadron, Idaho Air National Guard, in April 1996.[65] The last operational USAF/ANG F-4 to land was flown by Maj Mike Webb and Maj Gary Leeder, Idaho ANG."