MYSTERY WIRE — One of the most successful singer-songwriters of all time is in coronavirus lockdown, like the rest of us. But a year ago this week, he was in Las Vegas to perform a series of concerts, unaware that the concert industry was about to be shut down.
In 2019 John Fogerty performed sold out shows all over the country, unveiled a new concert film, and was slated to headline a show marking the 50th anniversary of Woodstock, which didn’t happen.
This may worth something:
Toy safety group releases annual list of top 10 'worst' toys | News | fox10tv.com
(Associated Press, W.A.T.C.H) - Cute plastic animals with tiny accessories that pose a choking hazard, Black Panther-inspired claws with the potential to cause facial or eye injuries, and green slime that could be harmful if swallowed: These are just some of the items on an annual list of potentially dangerous toys released Monday by a consumer advocacy group.
With parents looking for ways to keep children occupied during the coronavirus pandemic, and with the 2020 Christmas shopping season approaching, toy safety awareness is critical, the group said.
Pentagon Releases Video of Possible UFO – NBC4 Washington
The Year of UFOs | Space | Air & Space Magazine
For most of a generation—from 1987 to 2015—media coverage of unidentified flying objects measurably declined. In the past couple of years, though, television, newspapers, and social media have made mysterious aerial sightings and the possibility of visitors from outer space big news again. Why the sudden resurgence?
A handful of events helped drive the new interest. Although unrelated, these events have been mutually reinforcing; that is, stories written about any one of them typically mention the others, leaving the impression that they add up to a single, developing narrative.
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Will The New York Times Ever Stop Reporting on UFOs? | WIRED
The latest installment documents other "close encounters" between Navy pilots and "unidentified aerial vehicles" that date back to 2013 and 2014. The takeaway from this story and the others has been unmistakable: Some kind of unknown, super-advanced form of aviation technology is encroaching on US military air space and outmaneuvering top-gun pilots. If true, this would appear to expose an alarming national defense vulnerability.
The new Times report does not contain a whiff of this important background. Rather, it once again refers to "a little-known Pentagon program that for years looked into reports of unidentified flying objects, the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program;" noting also that "the existence of the office was reported by The Times in 2017."
Thinking It Through: ‘We were all skeptics’ regarding UFOs - Opinion -
In recent months, the Department of Defense has released videos of “paranormal” (aka UFO) sightings on airplane pilots’ radar, most recently last month.
This is a remarkable turnaround as such phenomena have for years been written off by officialdom as questionable and unverifiable, to say the least. Put me down as one has always taken such reports with far less than a grain of salt.
Trump says he's heard 'very interesting' things about Roswell, site of an alleged
President Donald Trump says he's heard some interesting things about Roswell , but he's not sharing even with his eldest child.
Trump made the comments Thursday in a Father's Day-themed interview with his son Don Trump Jr., hosted by the president's reelection campaign. Don Jr. wound down his interview by jokingly asking his Dad/President if he would ever divulge more information about Roswell, the New Mexico city known for its proximity to arguably most famous UFO event — "and let us know what's really going on."
No longer in the shadows, Pentagon's UFO unit will make some findings public - The
Despite Pentagon statements that it disbanded a once-covert program to investigate unidentified flying objects, the effort remains underway — renamed and tucked inside the Office of Naval Intelligence, where officials continue to study mystifying encounters between military pilots and unidentified aerial vehicles.
Pentagon officials will not discuss the program, which is not classified but deals with classified matters. Yet it appeared last month in a Senate committee report outlining spending on the nation's intelligence agencies for the coming year. The report said the program, the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force, was "to standardize collection and reporting" on sightings of unexplained aerial vehicles, and was to report at least some of its findings to the public every six months.
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