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Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
reply to post by BrokenAngelWings33
To be honest, I have a terrible sense of direction and couldn't tell you which way I was looking. I know it was around 9:30, and I'm in Sarasota.
Originally posted by gavron
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
reply to post by BrokenAngelWings33
To be honest, I have a terrible sense of direction and couldn't tell you which way I was looking. I know it was around 9:30, and I'm in Sarasota.
Maybe you should ask your wife what direction you were facing. Seriously.
Or, you could use Google Maps, find your hotel, and based on that info determine which direction you were facing. DON'T USE APPLE MAPS....you will end up in Antarctica or some place.edit on 13-12-2012 by gavron because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
reply to post by BrokenAngelWings33
To be honest, I have a terrible sense of direction and couldn't tell you which way I was looking. I know it was around 9:30, and I'm in Sarasota.
Originally posted by DenyObfuscation
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
reply to post by BrokenAngelWings33
To be honest, I have a terrible sense of direction and couldn't tell you which way I was looking. I know it was around 9:30, and I'm in Sarasota.
Which way did it move?
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
Originally posted by Druscilla
Originally posted by robwebbjr
reply to post by Druscilla
Hmmm...
I thought one of the virtues of 'the cloud' was that everything could be tied in together.
If TPTB don't want us knowing what they're doing right under our noses (or over our heads), I'm pretty sure they would find a way to make the obvious disappear.
And yes, I am insinuating that these objects are possibly to do as much with military/industrial as with strictly alien.
Uh-huh.
Tell you what; YOU download one of those apps, and also download a program like Stellarium to your desktop system.
find something in the sky that identifies as a specifically named star that you think is a UFO, then, making sure your desktop system is unplugged from the internet, open up stellarium and look at the star map displayed by stellarium without any internet connection.
Yup, you've get the same results.
No internet connection + verification across 2 or more different applications on phone and desktop = NO PTB.
I never said that this was aliens or UFOs, I said that I thought it was strange so I posted it here..
Anyway, will do.
Originally posted by kingster129
OP did you see this on 12/12/12? This appears to be similar to a supernova explosion.
According to the ET channels on 12/12/12 the explosion of the PAT supernova signified the beginning of the Ascension process.
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
Originally posted by DenyObfuscation
Originally posted by SpaceBoyPluto
reply to post by BrokenAngelWings33
To be honest, I have a terrible sense of direction and couldn't tell you which way I was looking. I know it was around 9:30, and I'm in Sarasota.
Which way did it move?
Each time to go check on it, it seemed to be moving UP.
Although white to blue white in color, Sirius might be called a rainbow star, as it often flickers with many colors.
The brightness, twinkling and color changes sometimes prompt first-time observers to report Sirius as a UFO. But these changes have nothing to do with Sirius. Rather, they are what happens when such a bright star as Sirius shines through the blanket of Earth’s atmosphere. The light from Sirius, which often appears fairly low in the sky from the mid-north latitudes, passes through a long column of air before it reaches our eyes. Changes in density and temperature of this air affect the light and cause the flickering and shimmering we see when we gaze at this star. This happens for other stars, too, but it is more noticeable for Sirius because it is so bright, and because it appears low in the sky.
From the mid-northern latitudes such as most of the U.S., Sirius rises in the southeast, arcs across the southern sky, and sets in the southwest. In December, you’ll find Sirius rising in mid-evening. By mid-April, Sirius is setting in the southwest in mid-evening.
Earthsky.org
Originally posted by fiftyfifty
reply to post by NotAnAspie
I can't help but reply to this. I seriously think I'm getting too old for this site now and should consider leaving. The video is quite clearly a star. Whether it is Sirius or not, I can't say for certain as I don't know where Sirius was in relation to you on that night. I can say with some certainty however that it is consistent with Sirius or any other bright star.
For those who say stars don't pulsate or change colour like that, you either live in a city with too much light pollution to make it obvious or you are purely in favour of a more ET explanation. I live in a city with relatively good night time visibility and can tell you that on a clear night, MOST of the stars in the sky 'twinkle' (ever heard of a child's song relating to the twinkling of a star?) except for some of the fainter ones and the 'stars' that are actually planets although Venus also sometimes looks to be twinkling.
to the OP, 40-60 minutes is sufficient time for a star to move across the sky significantly. Whether it disappeared or not or simply moved out of your line of sight, we will just have to take your word for but I am guessing it was still there somewhere, maybe behind a tree or a building. I know you aren't claiming that it is a UFO so I'm not having a go but you are suggesting it and many misguided members are jumping on the rather tiresome "it's definitely not a star" band-wagon with no evidence to suggest otherwise. THEY are debunking the truth, the so-called 'debunkers' such as myself are the people with knowledge of what is going on around us with the means to back up our suggestions. Knowledge is power, education is priceless.
Originally posted by fiftyfifty
reply to post by NotAnAspie
Sorry, I don't know why I replied to you. Removed the 'reply to' banner. Apologies.
edit on 14-12-2012 by fiftyfifty because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by NotAnAspie
Originally posted by fiftyfifty
reply to post by NotAnAspie
Sorry, I don't know why I replied to you. Removed the 'reply to' banner. Apologies.
edit on 14-12-2012 by fiftyfifty because: (no reason given)
Oh... damn.
Now I feel bad.
Situations like this is why the world needs telepathy. Well, one of the reasons.