Originally posted by spacevisitor
Originally posted by flightsuit
Oh good Lord, people. There is nothing unusual going on in that video, other than a low-tech, low-resolution video camera not being able to accurately
record and depict fast movement and rapid changes.
Don’t you find it a bit strange then why that guy wear such a strange suit in an obvious dangerous warzone, because his mates seems fully armed and
protected?
I do not even see him wearing his army boots.
It also looks to me as if he gives some information to the tank crew which looks important because his mates and the tank are immediately seem to
going to the place from where he did come from.
First of all, watch what happens at about the 3:25 mark, when a soldier appears to materialize out of thin air next to the truck. Obviously, this
isn't what actually happens. He opens the truck door, which is the same color as the terrain and background, and then the camera skips a beat or two
as he's getting out, so he goes from being mostly hidden by the door (which, if you aren't looking closely, you won't even notice, 'cause it blends so
well with the background) to being fully revealed. It's as if he's not there in one moment and then he's magically stepping into our reality in the
next.
My point is that besides the alleged invisible guy, elsewhere in the video, at that 3:25 mark, in plain sight, we see a soldier who is clearly not
wearing a Predator/Harry Potter invisibility shield, seeming to phase in and out of invisibility, simply by virtue of the fact that the camera filming
him had a very low resolution and couldn't process the pixels as fast as the action was happening.
Think back to your first camera phone, from the pre-iPhone era, and remember how awful its video capture ability was, and how pixelated everything
looked, and how awful it was at capturing any kind of sudden movement. This is the same deal here.
As to your question about how that one soldier is attired, I can't help you there, because this picture is way too grainy and low rez for me or
anybody else to say conclusively what he's wearing and what he isn't wearing. I would expect, though, that there may be a few Irag and Afghanistan
active duty or veteran soldiers here on ATS, and they could probably shed further light on exactly what's going on in this situation and what role
that particular guy may have been playing.
Speaking of our service people, don't you think that if the rank and file, the guys and girls who are actually out there stepping on IEDs and piloting
tanks, had people working in the field with them who were using Predator/Harry Potter technology, word of this would have filtered out into the
general public's awareness by now?
Science fiction technology in the hands of ultra-secret black ops is one thing, but if it's declassified enough that the grunts on the ground are
allowed to see it in use, it's not likely to stay secret for long.
Still not convinced? Let's have a look at just how much invisibility can be achieved without resorting to top-secret stealth technology. I think this
guy's a marine, but I could be mistaken. Maybe he's Army:
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/5eff52d46ef3.jpg[/atsimg]
And now let's have a look at what the Navy guys are wearing these days:
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/bc8f8117a95e.jpg[/atsimg]
Now then, think about the crappy camera which captured the video we've been discussing, and imagine that poor thing struggling to accurately record
either of these guys running through identically colored and patterned surroundings.
One last thing: The uploader of that YouTube video uses up a ton of our time bragging about how he'd uploaded it previously, only to have YouTube
delete it, due to a copyright complaint. Naturally, the first conclusion he jumps to is that the US military told YouTube to delete it and they did,
because they're cooperating with the massive cover-up.
Speaking as somebody who's had numerous YouTube videos taken down due to copyright complaints, I can tell you with absolute certainty that any time
this happens, you as the video's uploader will receive an e-mail notification from YouTube explaining why the video is being deleted and
specifically naming the rights holder who requested the deletion.
If this guy wants us to entertain his conspiracy cover-up theories, and/or if he really cares about having actual information regarding who's
responsible for his video getting deleted, he can start by digging up the e-mail he received when his original upload of the clip was yanked, and he
can tell us who was listed as the complainant and rights holder.
Regardless of the answer to that question, I have a feeling he'd just tell us that whatever law office or television company or individual was listed,
they were really just shills for the US government.
edit on 2-11-2010 by flightsuit because: edited to make some of my wording clearer
edit on 2-11-2010 by flightsuit because:
further clarification of my wording
edit on 2-11-2010 by flightsuit because: edited for grammar
edit on 2-11-2010 by
flightsuit because: edited for grammar