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It's not a bird, and it's certainly not a plane, so what is this object hovering over Lake Superior? While traveling through Paradise, Michigan, Erik Rintamaki noticed two golden orbs flying above a boat for over an hour. One of the lights mysteriously disappeared and reappeared shortly after he began filming, leaving him and his female companion wondering what exactly they were witnessing. "This is the craziest thing I've ever seen," he exclaimed. Watch the eerie moment and decide for yourself what the puzzling sighting could possibly be.
The Black Sea has been rising since the last ice age so several levels of the old shoreline contain remains of previous settlements and cultures. This documentary covers the new discoveries underwater.
The documentary Dark Secrets of the Black Sea journeys to the said region and explores recently-unearthed archaeological evidence of a technologically-advanced civilization that once lay there, now submerged beneath the Black Sea.
There are some videos of UFOs/UAPs in the news that can't be explained and have not been confirmed as real or fake by the Pentagon (compared to those that have been confirmed as real by the Pentagon). Here is one of them;
There are some eyewitnesses of UFOs/UAPs in the news that can't be explained and have not been confirmed as real or fake by the Pentagon (compared to those that have been confirmed as real by the Pentagon). Here is one of them;
A teacher who claimed to see UFOs hovering over a Melbourne school says military officials threatened to have him fired if he ever spoke about the incident. Andrew Greenwood is talking publicly about the famous Westall High sightings 55 years ago for the first time in tonight's 7NEWS 'Spotlight' program.
There are some videos of UFOs/UAPs in the news that can't be explained and have not been confirmed as real or fake by the Pentagon (unlike others confirmed as real by the Pentagon). Here is one of them;
With the confirmation of UFOs/UAPs by the Pentagon and stories told by Navy Pilots on 60 minutes, and the official report itself saying that UFOs/UAPs may be a National Security threat (and this topic was discussed in the media) other stories about UFOs and Military flying around each other take on more significance. This episode of UFO Hunters delves into UFO/UAP incidents going back to the 1950s. The official report only includes analysis of two decades of reports going back to the early 2000s, which means all these incidents are not included in the official US report on UFOs. Notice this takes back the time of military and UFO/UAP engagement by decades.
For decades, it has been believed that the United States military have had encounters with the UFO phenomena. Our team sets out to try and uncover the armed forces' "first response" to UFO encounters
There are some videos of UFOs/UAPs in the news that can't be explains and have not been confirmed as real or fake by the Pentagon (unlike others confirmed as real by the Pentagon). Here is one of them;
According to the NY Times the upcoming report from the Pentagon is inconclusive, i.e. the UFOs/UAPs could be Russian, Chinese or Alien. There is no evidence one way or another.
A highly anticipated intelligence report on UFO sightings and encounters is scheduled to be released by June 25. But according to senior administration officials briefed on the report’s findings, the inexplicable may remain just that – and there are concerns about Russian and China developing new weapons technology. NBC’s Stephanie Gosk reports for TODAY.
The report determines that a vast majority of more than 120 incidents over the past two decades did not originate from any American military or other advanced U.S. government technology, the officials said. That determination would appear to eliminate the possibility that Navy pilots who reported seeing unexplained aircraft might have encountered programs the government meant to keep secret.
But that is about the only conclusive finding in the classified intelligence report, the officials said. And while a forthcoming unclassified version, expected to be released to Congress by June 25, will present few other firm conclusions, senior officials briefed on the intelligence conceded that the very ambiguity of the findings meant the government could not definitively rule out theories that the phenomena observed by military pilots might be alien spacecraft.
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One senior official briefed on the intelligence said without hesitation that U.S. officials knew it was not American technology. He said there was worry among intelligence and military officials that China or Russia could be experimenting with hypersonic technology.
He and other officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the classified findings in the report.
Russia has been investing heavily in hypersonics, believing the technology offers it the ability to evade American missile-defense technology. China has also developed hypersonic weaponry, and included it in military parades. If the phenomena were Chinese or Russian aircraft, officials said, that would suggest the two powers’ hypersonic research had far outpaced American military development.
Navy pilots were often unsettled by the sightings. In one encounter, strange objects — one of them like a spinning top moving against the wind — appeared almost daily from the summer of 2014 to March 2015, high in the skies over the East Coast. Navy pilots reported to their superiors that the objects had no visible engine or infrared exhaust plumes, but that they could reach 30,000 feet and hypersonic speeds.
Lt. Ryan Graves, an F/A-18 Super Hornet pilot who was with the Navy for 10 years, told The New York Times in an interview, “These things would be out there all day.” With the speeds he and other pilots observed, he said, “12 hours in the air is 11 hours longer than we’d expect.”
A long-awaited government report on UFOs found no evidence that the objects came from outer space. But the objects remain unidentified. David Martin has the details.
The truth is out there — somewhere. NBC's Courtney Kube reports on the national security implications of the government's UFO report, where they said there was no evidence of extraterrestrial activity, but did not rule it out.
A U.S. intelligence report on the uptick of UFO sightings is expected to neither confirm evidence of extraterrestrials or rule out the possibility. The findings are expected to be inconclusive when the final report is released.
New details have been leaked from the Pentagon's UFO investigation, including whether the sightings could be a sign of alien life. Plus, Joe Exotic's life is being turned into a television series. Richard Southern and Melissa Nakhavoly discuss.
Desi Lydic binge-watched Fox News for a week straight (no bathroom breaks) to get the lowdown on Georgia’s new voting laws and the subsequent calls for boycotts.
270 Fox News segments -- 78% of its entire coverage -- were dedicated to spinning away Georgia’s attack on the right to vote, and the network is now doing the same for Texas and Florida
A Media Matters analysis shows that in the month and a half after Georgia’s voter suppression law was signed into effect on March 25, Fox News proceeded to defend or advocate for the newly codified restrictions on the right to vote in 270 segments. In fact, while a wide coalition of business leaders, democracy advocates, and local officials condemned the provisions of the Georgia law that were blatantly aimed at restricting the franchise in the wake of Republicans’ narrow 2020 losses in the state, Fox News aggressively took the opposite approach -- framing 78% of all its segments on the law with the aforementioned support.
Fox News' overwhelming push to justify the Georgia law stands in stark contrast to the analyses of independent experts and fact-checkers, who confirmed that crucial parts of the legislation were partisan power grabs and voter suppression, plain and simple. Dozens of companies have also come out publicly against voter suppression bills and restrictions on the right to vote across the country, including in Georgia. But some of these companies -- such as General Motors and Dell Technologies -- are heavy advertisers on Fox News. They should note that Fox is already well underway in its support of voter suppression efforts in Texas, Florida, and other states, just as it did with Georgia.
Previously known as Senate Bill 202, the Georgia law makes receiving and casting absentee votes more difficult, targets early voting in populous counties that tend to vote Democratic, increases the likelihood that legal provisional ballots will be discarded, bars additional funding for voter access from third parties, and shamelessly manipulates the composition of the state election board, as it empowers the Republican legislature to suspend local -- and Democratic -- election officials.
Nevertheless, Fox News went all in on defending Georgia’s voter suppression law, a programming strategy that was not confined to the network’s “opinion” shows. From March 25 to May 9, Fox News had 344 segments about Georgia’s law and 270 of those segments, 78%, advocated for or defended the legislation. Fox & Friends, which aired 38 segments that defended the voter suppression law, led the charge, and America’s Newsroom (24 segments), Hannity (22 segments), and America Reports (19 segments), followed closely behind.
The network also hosted Republican Gov. Brian Kemp at least 11 times during that period, and he at times used the platform to attack companies that had spoken out against the law. In one interview with prime-time host Tucker Carlson, Kemp called corporations that had penned a letter against the law “hypocritical,” while Carlson asked of Delta Air Lines and The Coca-Cola Company, “Why doesn’t someone say, make your little diabetes-causing soft drinks, fly your little airplanes, why don’t you stay out of democracy?”
In the course of defending the law, Fox figures lied that it would actually make voting easier, lied that Georgia’s voting laws are similar to Colorado’s (where Major League Baseball moved the All-Star game), aired misleading graphics, and misled viewers about the Republican power grab over the process of overseeing the election.
Fox News has also not been shy about pushing Trump’s lie that the 2020 presidential election results were supposedly fraudulent in Georgia and nationwide, a falsehood that has now been incorporated into the network’s defense of voter suppression on the spurious grounds of “election integrity.”
And it’s not just in Georgia that Fox News is defending restrictions on the right to vote. The network has started to defend the new voter suppression laws coming from other Republican-led states as well. On May 6, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis even signed Florida’s law live on Fox & Friends. As of May 9, 5 out of 8 Fox News segments (63%) on Florida’s new voter restrictions have advocated for them, while 10 out of 12 segments (83%) on Texas’ proposed voter suppression legislation -- expected to be signed into law shortly -- have also been supportive. Republican leaders from these states have also made multiple appearances on the network to defend various voter suppression laws, including the ones in Florida and Texas. DeSantis has made 3 appearances on the subject while Texas' Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick have both made two appearances each.
If those companies who have recently proclaimed their commitment to the right to vote are genuine, they would do well to remember that Fox News obviously doesn’t share their principles. As shown by the network’s coverage of Georgia’s voter suppression, advertising on Fox News is only adding fuel to a fire that is threatening to burn our democracy down.
Despite what Fox News says, Delaware’s voting laws are nothing like Texas
After Democratic state lawmakers in Texas staged a walkout at a legislative session in order to stop passage of the newest voter suppression bill, Fox News is mounting a public relations push in support of continued Republican efforts to pass that bill and others like it.