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Originally posted by lee anoma
Originally posted by _BoneZ_
Sorry, but Sugarcookie called it, and it looks the same to me:
That looks pretty irrefutable.
To you. You forgot to add that part.
It isn't to me.
I'm not trying to win a 'I called it' award here either.
Sugarcookie could be correct. It is possible. Also possible to be incorrect.
What we're all "calling" though, are our own theories and opinions.
It's still open for debate unless you known specifically because you filmed it.
To me it looks like a squid. Especially the upper smaller fins flapping.
They don't look long enough nor in the right position to be the legs of a water bug.
Water bugs swimming under the water swim with their legs more to the back not the front.
I could be wrong, but still, it's not a water-bug just because you say it is.
It isn't irrefutable until we know exactly what it is, sorry.
- Lee
This video segment was taken from the live ISS stream as seen on USTREAM, Wednesday March 13, 2013 at 12:46 am. The exact moment of the video is 37:39 and as suspected, no such anomaly exists on the original video. Further more, the video does not shut off as claimed. Sorry, but this is faked.
Originally posted by MarkJS
Originally posted by JimOberg
The ISS pushes against nothing in space, it stays in orbit by virtue of its own horizontal speed that throws it over the horizon so the ground recedes even as the ISS -- or any satellite -- continuously falls toward Earth. Isaac Newton realized this four hundred years ago, so you have some remedal catch-up to do.
I didn't say anything about staying in orbit. Maybe before you decide to go on the attack, you read the post first.
It looks like some sort of insect. It even has arms/legs that you can see moving on both sides. Its movement suggests insect walking around.
Originally posted by ImpactoR
...my suggestion is - some part of the ISS got loose, space junk. That's likley, ...