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Originally posted by Shikamaru
I want to show the believers that even the greatest debunkers have had events that they couldnt explain.
Originally posted by Chamberf=6
reply to post by Shikamaru
What is your event?
Or maybe there isn't one, not trying to presume.
Originally posted by Immortalgemini527your waisting your time,debunkers as i have seen it dont creat post they destorye them,there not capable of creating a new thread..it is what it is.
Originally posted by Cataka
It is pretty ridiculous to claim that every single person who doesn't believe in UFO's is a paid debunker or disinfo agent...
Originally posted by Cataka
Just because they post a lot of "I don't believe and you are all morons" doesn't mean they are disinfo/paid debunkers
Originally posted by Cataka
just people who haven't done enough research, haven't read enough books, haven't watched enough videos, haven't done anything except listen to what they are told, "Swamp gas. Weather balloon. Venus."
Originally posted by Cataka
Keep in mind to all debunkers - UFO's have been recorded for centuries in different fashions, not just since the 1900's.
Originally posted by Cataka
Paintings, writings, newspapers, lawyers, doctors, astronauts, generals, even PRESIDENTS have reported UFO sightings.
Originally posted by Cataka
Something else that is annoying about debunkers is that regardless of how above suspicion a person is BEFORE they say they saw a UFO (Highly trained, intelligent astronauts or Presidents for example), as soon as they say they saw a UFO, they *immediately* regard them as, "Oh, they turned crazy!
Originally posted by Cataka
Jacques Vallee's top-ten list of pre-20th-century unexplained aerial objects
Originally posted by Cataka
March 1638: Puritan settler James Everell and two companions report seeing a bright object appearing in the sky above Massachusetts' Muddy River ... and experiencing the "missing time" phenomenon.
Originally posted by Cataka
Jan. 25, 1672: While serving as the director of the Paris Observatory, astronomer Giovanni Cassini spots an object he takes to be a moon of Venus. He announces the discovery after seeing the object again in 1686. But no such moon exists. (The hypothetical moon, which came to be known as Neith, was reported by other astronomers as well. Scientists have speculated that the object was actually an optical illusion or a nearby star.)
Originally posted by Cataka
June 18, 1845: Crewmates on the British brig Victoria report seeing "three luminous bodies" rise from the sea between Malta and Turkey
Originally posted by DoomsdayRex
Other times (and I suspect it may be organized) it is to intimidate skeptics into silence.
Originally posted by mcrom901
sorry mate but you're sounding equally paranoid..... [/quote
Perhaps. Though I don't mean on a government level or even a giant conspiracy of believers, just a few individuals and even then mostly bandwagon jumpers.
Originally posted by DoomsdayRex