The Pentagon on Monday officially unclassified three videos taken by US Navy pilots showing "unidentified aerial phenomena," known as UFOs, and Twitter was here for it.
Pentagon declassifies three previously leaked videos taken by U.S. Navy pilots that show 'unidentified aerial phenomena,' which some claim are UFOs pic.twitter.com/Yb7NYulgJ0
The videos, released by a private company between Dec. 2017 and March 2018 , show what appear to be unidentified flying objects moving rapidly while being recorded by infrared cameras.
Quite a lot has been going on:
Here’s what NASA’s Mars helicopter will look like when it makes history with the
Ingenuity may look like a simple dual rotor drone, but it’s actually a groundbreaking piece of engineering that has to overcome significant technical challenges in order to complete its mission of performing short-altitude “hops” on Mars.
Even flying the softball-sized main body of Ingenuity is an achievement, because flying on Mars requires much more lift than it does here on Earth due to the nature of the planet’s atmosphere. Accordingly, the helicopter’s test flights will only last around 90 seconds each, and climb to a height of just 16.5 feet — easy here at home, but roughly equivalent to flying at around 100,000 feet on Earth — much higher than most commercial aircraft.
Navy UFO Videos Now Official | SETI Institute
They're baaaaaack. The perplexing gun-sight camera recordings made by U.S. Navy pilots in 2004 and 2015, possibly showing UFOs that might be extraterrestrial craft, have now been officially released.
Why now? Well, the Navy says it wants the public to know that the videos, at least, are real. It further wants to assure us that these short films don't compromise any sensitive military capabilities – in case you were worried about that.
Mind you, these videos were already public a long time ago. They were featured on the front page of the New York Times in December, 2017. Consequently you may be saying to yourself, "so what?" It's akin to when CERN leaked the discovery of a new particle (the Higgs boson) in advance of its official press conference. By the time of the public announcement, the story wasn't exactly stale. But it was a tad dry.
'Nanocardboard' flyers could serve as Martian atmospheric probes | Penn Today
This summer, NASA plans to launch its next Mars rover, Perseverance, which will carry with it the first aircraft to ever fly on another planet, the Mars Helicopter. As the first of its kind, the Mars Helicopter will carry no instruments and collect no data—NASA describes merely flying it all as " high-risk, high-reward " research.
With the risks of extraterrestrial flight in mind, Penn Engineers are suggesting a different approach to exploring the skies of other worlds: a fleet of tiny aircraft that each weigh about as much as a fruit fly and have no moving parts.
And here's another article:
Subscribe to read | Financial Times
Happening on Twitter
NEW: @JudicialWatch: Emails show extensive comms between Pentagon official James Baker and WPost's David Ignatius.… https://t.co/T7IiglJCUK TomFitton (from Washington, DC) Thu Apr 30 19:37:22 +0000 2020
Judicial Watch released 143 pages of new records from the DOD, showing extensive communications between the Pentago… https://t.co/nW9WVL1wiU JudicialWatch (from Washington, DC) Thu Apr 30 17:33:00 +0000 2020
BREAKING: Judicial Watch released 143 pages of new records today from the DOD, showing extensive communications bet… https://t.co/SvdlbMMiBu JudicialWatch (from Washington, DC) Wed Apr 29 13:56:21 +0000 2020
I pushed heavily on DoD to restore funding to @Fort_Huachuca for their construction project upon completion of the… https://t.co/EE1KQ4xbbN SenMcSallyAZ (from Arizona, USA) Thu Apr 30 14:19:36 +0000 2020
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