Well, for instance, why did you think you should post them? Just saying why you think you should post them would be good. Along with what mrtn said.@Nienna Sorry, didnt know, but I dont know what to say about those short vids as well :D
Next they will call for people to stop calling Sasquatch “Big Foot” because they might be offended. Unbelievable.This is all over the news internationally
So now the liberals are making sure we welcome extra terrestrials with open arms:
“ I think that we have to stop calling them aliens because 'aliens' is a derogatory term for anything," they said in the interview. “
“Lovato also hit back at "misconceptions" about UFOs, such as the idea that "they're harmful or that they'll come and take over the planet".
“"I really think that if there was anything out there that would want to do that to us, it would have happened by now," they said. “
"I think that if there were beings that could harm us, we would have been gone a long time ago.”
Good grief! Get ready for the SJW brigade defending the “Lizzies”.!
I don’t know whether to laugh or cry
Next they will call for people to stop calling Sasquatch “Big Foot”
This is just someone's subjective opinion. So what is the media's reason for covering it? A psychological ploy to discourage use of the word "aliens" in general. Promotion of Newspeak. Very common now."...we have to stop calling them aliens because 'aliens' is a derogatory term for anything..."
@c.a. ,
The Sarfatti interview is interesting I think. Jack Sarfatti is was in several of the Cs sessions. Trump's uncle had access to all the Tesla papers he says in the interview. Strangely very pro Trump. He has already voted for Trump. He does not mince words. Is he on the right track? I don't know.
Some session references:
Session 26 December 1998:
Session 20 August 2001:
Session 11 August 2018:
There was another mathematical physicist who is probably more credible by the name of (Roger) Ruggero Santilli (kind of thought of him by mistake) He was at one of the Cs sessions and asked very interesting questions at the Cs urging. He in now 85 years old.
There is a lot to reference in other sessions too so I will just use this first session as an example:
Session 27 May 1995:
Q: (T) Why are they coming out with this story? Besides disinformation...
A: Slow revelation to effect gauge of public response.
Q: (L) Should V____ stand behind Terry and put her hands on his shoulders for energy?
A: Not necessary because Terry has adequate energy of his own. George Bush was involved with Philadelphia experiment.
Q: (L) Is Al Bielek really who he claims to be?
A: No. Was technician but not aboard vessel.
Q: (L) So he did not go back and forth in time?
A: Correct.
Q: (T) So he's trying to make himself out to be more than he actually is?
A: Yes.
Q: (J) He is a wannabe?
A: No. He is an agent of the government.
Q: (T) Is Preston also a government agent?
A: Yes.
Q: (T) Why are they coming out with this story? Besides disinformation...
A: Slow revelation to effect gauge of public response.
In the wake of a UFO report last summer, the Pentagon has announced the formation of a new group that will investigate reports of UFOs close to sensitive military areas.
The new Airborne Object Identification and Management Synchronization Group will specifically look at reports of Unexplained Aerial Phenomena (UAP) near U.S. military facilities. UAP is the military term to describe what is known as UFOs or Unexplained Flying Objects.
"Incursions by any airborne object into our SUA (Special Use Airspace) pose safety of flight and operations security concerns, and may pose national security challenges," said a Pentagon press release using the term that includes restricted military airspace, military operations areas, firing ranges and places restricted for national security and other uses.
MORE: Few answers in unclassified UFO report
In a memo outlining the group's formation, Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks wrote that unidentified aerial phenomena in special-use areas "represents a safety of flight risk to aircrews and raises potential national security concerns."
U.S. Dept. of Defense This video grab image obtained April 28, 2020, courtesy of the U.S. Department of Defense
The new group will synchronize the Pentagon's efforts with other federal agencies "to detect, identify and attribute objects of interest in Special Use Airspace (SUA), and to assess and mitigate any associated threats to safety of flight and national security."
MORE: Upcoming UFO report to Congress creating lots of buzz
It will be overseen by the under secretary of defense for intelligence, who will head an executive council including the director of the Joint Staff and senior officials from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Last June, the U.S. intelligence community released a report requested by Congress that provided the first unclassified assessment of Unexplained Aerial Phenomena.
MORE: Pentagon declassifies Navy videos that purportedly show UFOs
Compiled by the Navy's Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force, that report could not explain 143 incidents and said 18 of them appeared "to demonstrate advanced technology." The UAP Task Force will now be absorbed into the newly formed group announced by the Pentagon.
The UAP report also identified the need to make improvements in the Pentagon's processes, policies, technologies and training to improve its ability to understand UAP.
24 theologians to assess, how they could pull off a fake Alien Invasion, before the real one begins. I voiced multiple times on RT already, that I think the invasion is simply New Tenants moving into the Apartment Planet and the earlier tenants = poor lost humanity living on the surface is being evicted. Since like real bums, we can't go anywhere, we must be pest controlled. Like when a new buyer orders a chemical cleansing of the house, so the workers can sweep up the stunned or dead roaches. The new owner wants a clean house, so he clearly wouldn't like us scatter to the winds to try our luck as Cavemen..Studies and surveys have shown that US Christians are less likely to believe life exists on other planets, but Davison is not the only 'believer' who does not think the idea of extraterrestrials is impossible.
I am of the opinion that if the announcement were made evidence of life on other worlds was found, no one would run screaming into the streets in panic.NASA 'looks to the heavens' for help: Agency enlists 24 theologians to assess how the world would react to the discovery of alien life on distant planets and how it might change our perception of gods and creation
- NASA is hiring 24 theologians to take part in its program the Center for Theological Inquiry (CTI) at Princeton University
- The group will asses how humans will react if alien life is found on other planets and how the discovery will impact our ideas of gods and creation
- Dr Andrew Davison, a priest and theologian at the University of Cambridge with a doctorate in biochemistry from Oxford, is among 24 theologians
- Davison believes we are getting closer to finding life on other planets
NASA is looking to the heavens for help with assessing how humans will react if alien life is found on other planets and how the discovery could impact our ideas of gods and creation.
The agency is hiring 24 theologians to take part in its program at the Center for Theological Inquiry (CTI) at Princeton University in New Jersey, which NASA gave a $1.1 million grant to in 2014.
CTI is described as building 'bridges of under understanding by convening theologians, scientists, scholars, and policymakers to think together - and inform public thinking - on global concerns.'
The program aims to answer questions that have baffled us since the begging of time such as what is life? What does it mean to be alive? Where do we draw the line between the human and the alien? What are the possibilities for sentient life in other places?
Now that NASA has two rovers on Mars, several probes orbiting Jupiter and Saturn and is set to launch the James Web Telescope tomorrow that study galaxy, star and planet formation in the universe, it seems that the agency is hopeful it is on the right path to discovering life outside of Earth.
And it needs a little help from above to help those of us living below to understand if that happens.
The Rev Dr Andrew Davison, a priest and theologian at the University of Cambridge with a doctorate in biochemistry from Oxford, is among 24 theologians, The Times reports.
'Religious traditions would be an important feature in how humanity would work through any such confirmation of life elsewhere,' Davidson shared in a blog post on the University of Cambridge site.
'Because of that, it features as part of NASA's ongoing aim to support work on 'the societal implications of astrobiology', working with various partner organizations, including the Center of Theological Inquiry at Princeton.'
Davison is set to publish a book next year, titled Astrobiology and Christian Doctrine, which notes he believes we are getting closer to finding life on other planets.
Davison's book notes: 'The headline findings are that adherents of a range of religious traditions report that they can take the idea in their stride.
'Non-religious people also seem to overestimate the challenges that religious people . . . would experience if faced with evidence of alien life.'
Studies and surveys have shown that US Christians are less likely to believe life exists on other planets, but Davison is not the only 'believer' who does not think the idea of extraterrestrials is impossible.
Duilia de Mello, an astronomer and physics professor at Catholic University, said she has several seminarians in her classes who often bring up theoretical questions about intelligent life in the universe.
'If we are the products of creation, why couldn't we have life evolving in other planets as well? There's nothing that says otherwise,' de Mello told The Washington Post in August.
In 2008, the Vatican's chief astronomer says there is no conflict between believing in God and in the possibility of 'extraterrestrial brothers' perhaps more evolved than humans.
'In my opinion this possibility (of life on other planets) exists,' said Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, a 45-year-old Jesuit priest who is head of the Vatican Observatory and a scientific adviser to Pope Benedict.
'How can we exclude that life has developed elsewhere,' he told the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano in an interview in its Tuesday-Wednesday edition, explaining that the large number of galaxies with their own planets made this possible.
Asked if he was referring to beings similar to humans or even more evolved than humans, he said: 'Certainly, in a universe this big you can't exclude this hypothesis'.
However, not all theologians are on board with the idea of life on other planets.
Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said in a 2008 interview when asked if there are such thing as aliens: 'The answer is no; that’s speculative.
'We have no reason to believe there is any other story out there. There is nothing in Scripture that says there can’t be some form of life somewhere. But what we are told is that the cosmos was created in order that on this planet Jesus Christ, in space and time and history, would come to save sinful humanity.'
The James Web Telescope, which is set to launch Christmas Day, could however change the way we look at the universe and maybe what is written in scriptures of all religions.
It has been described as a 'time machine' that could help unravel the secrets of our universe, with distant objects emitting light from further back in time.
The telescope will be used to look back to the first galaxies born in the early universe more than 13.5 billion years ago.
The goal of this powerful device is to unravel the mysteries of supermassive black holes, distant alien worlds, stellar explosions, dark matter, and more.