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originally posted by: Justshrug
Arken do you believe the BK Sat has an intelligence or consciousness? Did you try to send a mental image for help with the answer?
originally posted by: lovebeck
originally posted by: Arken
a reply to: pez1975
Thanks pez.
I do like your post Arken I also like ur unflappable belief in Aliens.
When in your personal experience you see the face and the embarrassed expression of competent and respected military pilots who, after a mission to intercept a strange object in the middle of the Tyrrhenian Sea, begin to stutter and to describe a Disk Shape Object, then begin to bring yourself some questions....
I wanna hear more about this story...
originally posted by: Arken
....
It is a personal experience happened 20 years ago. The Tornado Pilots were my friends.
I have no evidence of that event. Only their embarrassed story that came from military personnel who were very skeptical on the subject, before all this happens on their skin and in front of their eyes. ...
They observed visually a bright object with a diameter of about thirty meters, hovering above the sea surface. When they were near the object, their onboard radar not bought it more, but they could see the object surrounded by a strange mist, although it was a sunny day with no clouds. After 1 or 2 minutes the object vanished at an incredible speed climbing upwards.
originally posted by: Justshrug
Arken do you believe the BK Sat has an intelligence or consciousness? Did you try to send a mental image for help with the answer?
originally posted by: JimOberg
originally posted by: Justshrug
Arken do you believe the BK Sat has an intelligence or consciousness? Did you try to send a mental image for help with the answer?
Arken, clarify for us, please, your opinion of the claim the sts-88 photos only show a dropped thermal blanket, and that UFO investigators who have tied them to the earlier BK story were foolish.
originally posted by: JimOberg
originally posted by: Arken
....
It is a personal experience happened 20 years ago. The Tornado Pilots were my friends.
I have no evidence of that event. Only their embarrassed story that came from military personnel who were very skeptical on the subject, before all this happens on their skin and in front of their eyes. ...
They observed visually a bright object with a diameter of about thirty meters, hovering above the sea surface. When they were near the object, their onboard radar not bought it more, but they could see the object surrounded by a strange mist, although it was a sunny day with no clouds. After 1 or 2 minutes the object vanished at an incredible speed climbing upwards.
Did they see it against the ocean background or sky background?
Your remark on radar is incomprehensible to me.
How close did they get during the 1 or 2 minutes? If they estimated size, they must have known distance.
Was anyone actually watching when the object 'vanished' or was it just gone the next time they looked.
Could any followup be done based on their names?
PS: The STS-88 dropped thermal blanket -- the original theme of this thread....
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: Arken
This video is 14 minutes long. How did you see it all, after only... three minutes... that I posted?
Because I heard enough to know that there is nothing new in the video. The Black Knight tale has been discussed many times.
A recent go-round:
www.abovetopsecret.com...
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: freelance_zenarchist
The Grumman object was in retrograde orbit, inclination angle to the equator about 135 degrees.
nicap.org...
Huh? Inclination of 135º to the equator? How does that work?
originally posted by: mikegrouchy
That satellite would have to be pretty low for any Amateur Astronomer to see.
The sky is just that damn big, and the amateur telescopes that small.
Satellites are just out of reach of most things below 60 inches, their magnitudes are atrocious, and if they are not in a close earth orbit the problem just gets exponential.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: Arken
But I thought the Black Knight was on a polar orbit. What is being described is not a polar orbit. Except for the "inclination angle to the equator" part, it sounds like a retrograde 45º orbit. Except for the retrograde part, that's pretty typical. Retrograde is good for reconnaissance.An unknown satellite during the cold war. Imagine that.
See, take some unconnected things and wrap them up in the same story...
PS: The STS-88 dropped thermal blanket -- the original theme of this thread....