Pining4

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Pining4

Pining4

@Pining4daFjords

Professor, trader, small farmer, blacksmith, but mostly Dad and Husband.

Amish country Katılım Temmuz 2023
928 Takip Edilen137 Takipçiler
Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@I_D_Official Has to be multiple, 70 + years of eyewitness accounts make this pretty clear IMO
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Richard Dolan Intelligent Disclosure
In researching my book on Unidentified Submerged Objects, I documented over 170 historical cases spanning centuries. What strikes me is that the shapes of these objects, such as discs, cigars, triangles, and spheres, are exactly the same whether they are in the sky or under the water. ❓QUESTION❓ Do you believe we are dealing with a single non-human intelligence operating seamlessly in multiple environments, or are there different groups sharing our planet? Drop your thoughts in comments
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@28ducks1995 @jasonkredline I think his family has very little interest in sports and they inherit. He may leave some endowment but it won’t be the blank check of the last 20 years.
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@28ducks1995 @jasonkredline When uncle Phil dies and stops giving you free millions it’ll be very interesting to see what happens… I’ll be here for it!
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@ShipsSmall I always assumed it was because their NDAs of the event prevented them from mentioning an “Octagon UFO” so they used cutesy language (8-gone) to skirt it…. Just a guess.
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Small_Simple_Ships
Small_Simple_Ships@ShipsSmall·
Why did Michael Herrera always call the ship he saw an “eight-gon” instead of an octagon? What was that all about? All the interviewers used the term, too.
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@MvonRen @MickWest He has to earn his $ and play the roll they assigned him- if your paycheck requires denying the existence of pigeons, no form of evidence will ever be enough to ‘convince’ you that pigeons exist. Mick’s ritual humiliation is to be the Baghdad Bob of UFOs- and it’s hilarious!
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Marik vR
Marik vR@MvonRen·
@MickWest Pseudo-skeptic Mick West has officially lost his mind. He claims there’s no video from an incident, described in congressional testimony, involving “Tic Tac”-shaped UAP off the coast of San Diego. Here is the video of two Tic Tac UAP flying in formation:
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Mick West
Mick West@MickWest·
This case is a good example of the "Credible People" issue. Wiggins, a credible person, gives an account (to Congress) of something that sounds interesting. But there is no available corroborating video of this event as described, despite what Marik says.
Mick West tweet media
Marik vR@MvonRen

@MickWest More stupendously egregious nonsense from pseudo-skeptic Mick West: He claims “Navy Chief Wiggins gave no specific evidence.” Except there is a *real, actual video of Wiggins’ UAP incident.* The USS Jackson Tic Tac is so perplexing that West refuses to float an “explanation.”

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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@canedeeman P-38 in the Pacific: long legs for distances and missions others simply couldn’t do, two engines = greater survivability, and devastating firepower with the 20mm cannon + four .50 cals in a tight cluster in the nose. A dancer, a puncher, and a distance runner all in one!
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Preston Brooks
Preston Brooks@canedeeman·
In your opinion, what was the best and #2 fighter of WWII? I'll start: P-51 Mustang. Laminar flow wings, range, Merlin engine. Max speed ~437mph ALF. Firepower was standard 6 Browning .50 cal. Fighter/escort/ground attack. Kill ratio of ~10:1. F6F Hellcat. Designed in 1943 speficially to kill Zeros. P&W Double Wasp engine producing 2,000+ hp. Heavy armor held speed to 388mph ALF. 19:1 kill ratio. Perfect platform for carrier operations. Fighter/escort/ground and ship attack Photos taken at Fagan's Fighters Museum, Yellow Medicine County, MN.
Preston Brooks tweet mediaPreston Brooks tweet media
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@BeavsOfSoCal @BullSheetAlumni And now, we have the next 3 years to make waves and build a reputation prior to the next round of realignment in 2030. Where we hopefully move up, or old pac teams return.
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@nothingbutgood @ABC Absolutely! When I learned this guy got caught afterwards it just grated on me…. We all know when you pull off a jump like this, you get away clean.
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Nothing But Good
Nothing But Good@nothingbutgood·
@ABC Every Gen X dude just said “Hell Yeah” and in their mind a certain series of tones played in horn form 🤣
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ABC News
ABC News@ABC·
Footage released by authorities in Wisconsin shows a suspect's car go flying over another vehicle as they attempted to flee. The suspect, who is being held on multiple charges, was eventually arrested after a short foot chase, officials said. abcnews.link/RmGHld5
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@XVanFleet I’m loving your Virginia tour- keep up the good work! And yes, having lived in Virginia, history does seem remarkably close and very real.
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Xi Van Fleet
Xi Van Fleet@XVanFleet·
Visiting Berkeley Plantation — home of Benjamin Harrison V, one of seven signers of the Declaration of Independence in Virginia. A place where American history feels remarkably close. 🇺🇸 #America250
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@briankeating @neiltyson Tyson has been smirkingly dismissive of the UFO / UAP topic…. Why interview someone whose only link to the subject is that he’s been embarrassingly wrong about it for decades?
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Rizwan Virk
Rizwan Virk@Rizstanford·
WTF? Neil deGrasse Tyson, who has ridiculed UFO believers for years, is now cashing in on his alien book, appearing on every major network talking about UFOs? 'We should be prepared': Tyson on newly released UFO Files youtu.be/B5JUf69R7ME
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@MazeToMetanoia @neiltyson OMG…. “Officer, I’d like to report a murder…” 🤣 Nobody deserves this absolute thrashing more than Tyson, a mid-wit who thinks sneering at anything outside a safe consensus makes him smart. As Disclosure reveals how wrong he’s been, I’m here for the pointing and laughing.
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Meredith from Maze To Metanoia 🛸
@neiltyson "You had everything John Mack had. The institution. The platform. The kind of name that makes people lean in before you have said a word. The borrowed credibility that, pointed in a different direction, could have opened doors instead of closing them. You also had Sagan’s example, and Sagan’s specific inheritance. The man who imagined Ellie Arroway understood something you apparently do not: that “because I can’t” is not weakness. It is the only honest thing left to say when the experience changes you and the room is offering you the exit. You inherited that vision. You could have extended it. You could have sat with experiencers the way Mack sat with them, listened the way he listened, and used the weight of your name to tell the world that these people deserved to be taken seriously. You chose the audience instead. Let that sit for a moment. Because there were real people on the other side of that choice. People who calculated the professional risk of speaking and spoke anyway. People who lost jobs and relationships and their own sense of what was real, and kept carrying it, because the truth of what happened to them would not stop being true just because no one was ready to hear it. They were doing, in their lives, exactly what Ellie does in that committee room. Staying in the room with an impossible thing. Refusing the exit. And you, with every platform and credential they did not have, were part of the culture that made that choice cost them so much. John Mack is not a household name. His legacy faded, his colleagues distanced themselves, and Harvard investigated him for the crime of believing the people he sat with. He died without seeing the congressional hearings, without seeing the cultural shift that made this subject safe enough to be entertaining. You are here because of people like him. And because of the experiencers he fought for, the ones whose era of testimony you declared expired, the ones who kept speaking anyway. The least you could do is say so." mazetometanoia.substack.com/p/borrowed-cre…
Meredith from Maze To Metanoia 🛸 tweet media
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@planethunter56 Agreed- this would be the difference maker with the ordinary non-ufo public. Especially if the beings were clearly and visibly not ordinary humans. A paradigm shifting cultural moment, for sure. I really hope it happens….
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UAP Juan
UAP Juan@planethunter56·
Once/if this video is officially released by the US government, this will definitely be a holy shit moment- and it has to be high quality. Has to. Via Ross Coulthart: "2. A video from a B-52 in which a disc approaches, slows down to keep pace, then zips off at the end, all the while with NHI looking out of the windows/forcefields/whatever they call windows..”
UAP Juan tweet media
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@A10TheHog Never. They’re all precious in their own way.
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@MikeyDiMercurio @AncientHistorry “Why did I march into Russia and never come out? I’ll tell you why I marched into Russia and never came out…”
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Ancient History Hub
Ancient History Hub@AncientHistorry·
205 years ago today, Napoleon Bonaparte died on a tiny British prison island in the middle of the South Atlantic. He was 51. He had ruled most of Europe. And he changed the world so thoroughly that you are still living inside the systems he built. Start with the obvious one. The Napoleonic Code. He commissioned it in 1800, sat in on the drafting sessions personally, argued with the lawyers, and pushed it through in four years. Equality before the law. Property rights. Religious freedom. The end of feudal privilege. It is still the basis of civil law in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal, most of Latin America, Quebec, Louisiana, and chunks of the Middle East and Africa. About a third of the planet writes contracts using rules a Corsican artillery officer wrote between battles. He sold Louisiana to Thomas Jefferson in 1803 for 15 million dollars. Roughly four cents an acre. It doubled the size of the United States overnight. Without that deal there is no St. Louis, no New Orleans as an American city, no Lewis and Clark, no Manifest Destiny. The American century starts with Napoleon needing cash for a war. He invaded Egypt in 1798 with an army and, weirdly, 167 scientists, mathematicians, and artists. They found the Rosetta Stone. That single slab is the reason we can read hieroglyphs at all. Egyptology as a field exists because Napoleon brought scholars to a war. He built the Bank of France, which still runs French monetary policy. He created the lycée system that still educates French teenagers. He shoved the metric system across Europe at sword-point until it stuck. He emancipated the Jews of every territory he conquered, tearing down ghetto walls in Rome, Venice, Frankfurt. He abolished serfdom in Poland. He standardized road networks, civil registries, and tax codes that European governments still operate from. And then there's the soldiering. He fought around 60 major battles and won most of them. Austerlitz, in 1805, against the combined Russian and Austrian empires, is still taught at West Point as one of the closest things to a tactically perfect battle ever fought. He was outnumbered, baited the enemy onto ground he had pre-selected, and broke them in a single afternoon. Three emperors took the field that morning. Only one walked off it on his own terms. He slept four hours a night. He read constantly, dictated letters to four secretaries at the same time, and personally signed off on everything from cavalry boot specs to the seating chart at the Comédie-Française. Wellington, the man who finally beat him at Waterloo, was asked decades later who the greatest general in history was. He answered without hesitating. "In this age, in past ages, in any age, Napoleon." He lost, in the end, because he could not stop. Russia in 1812 swallowed his army whole. Six hundred thousand men marched in. Maybe a tenth came back. He abdicated in 1814, escaped from Elba, ruled France again for 100 days, and lost it all for good in a wheat field in Belgium in June 1815. The British shipped him to St. Helena, a volcanic dot 1,200 miles off the African coast, and waited. He spent six years there dictating his memoirs, gardening, complaining about the dampness, and quietly rewriting his own legend so effectively that Europe spent the next century arguing about him. He died on May 5, 1821, during a storm so violent it ripped up the willow tree he liked to read under. His last words trailed off into fever. France. The army. Joséphine. Nineteen years later France brought him home. Two million people stood in the snow to watch the coffin go by. He was a tyrant. He was a reformer. He started wars that killed somewhere between three and six million people. He also wrote the rulebook that a third of humanity still lives under. Most people who try to conquer the world are forgotten inside a generation. Napoleon has been dead for 205 years and we are still arguing about him because we are still using his furniture.
Ancient History Hub tweet media
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Pining4
Pining4@Pining4daFjords·
@TheDylanBorland @Neil__Goodman @disclosureorg Kirkpatrick always says “no ALIENS” very specifically, it’s a threadbare dodge at this point. Us: “Did some animal get into the garden?” Sean: “There are absolutely no Badgers in the garden. There’s never been any Badgers. You people are nuts”.
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Dylan Borland
Dylan Borland@TheDylanBorland·
@disclosureorg Always with the "aliens." Can someone please directly ask any of them if there is a very of unknown origin in government/contractor possession?
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