UAP Sentinel

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UAP Sentinel

UAP Sentinel

@UAPSentinel

Former US Intel Commo Officer 03-08 🇺🇸, For Government Accountability, Independent UAP/UFO researcher, IT professional since 09, Strict Constitutionalist

PA Katılım Kasım 2018
964 Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
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UAP Sentinel
UAP Sentinel@UAPSentinel·
Last I’m going to say this believe what you want to believe but the US is not going to fly an unknown UAS or any known UAS (besides tactical drones like the Raven and Black Hornet ) at a low level over one of the most populated places in the world to “Pen Test” it’s not going to happen. It is a safety issue and is not very good operational security. Testing is done in remote areas (like Area 51) where if something happens the danger to the public is minimal. And anyone that’s ever been on one of these UAS programs will tell you shit happens all the time. Flying at 1k to 5k ft only gives you a few seconds to correct before your millions of dollar airframe is taking a dirtnap. Like everything with the government Murphy’s Law wins everytime so you try and do what you can to mitigate catastrophic consequences. Another reason a lot of new stealth RAM (radar absorbent Materials) design are that off-white color because it makes the plane almost Invisible to the naked eye at an intermediate altitude. The US government spends Billions of dollars not to be seen when doing ISR. This is the holy grail to any military flying at a low level above a metropolitan area is not realistic when it comes to intelligence collection.
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UAP Sentinel
UAP Sentinel@UAPSentinel·
@TomcatJunkie Definitely have to check it out pretty sure my son’s Travel baseball team has a couple games in Akron in the next few months.
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TomcatJunkie🏴‍☠️
TomcatJunkie🏴‍☠️@TomcatJunkie·
The top-secret F-14D-yson. This F-14 was a testbed for the UAP Program and used two of the revolutionary Dyson-69420 oscillating turbofan engines. You saw it here first. Now on display at the MAPS Air Museum in Akron Ohio.
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UAP Sentinel
UAP Sentinel@UAPSentinel·
@AirAssets Plus their knockoffs they made were shit. To say they are Temu knock offs would be a compliment
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Chris Bartel
Chris Bartel@ChrisBartelSWR·
Moonbase model's #BigelowAerospace the real OG.
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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman@NASAAdmin

To build a sustained human presence on the Moon, we are building @NASAMoonBase, prioritizing surface operations and scalable infrastructure.  - Frequent robotic landings and mobility testing including MoonFall drones  - Starting in 2027 nearly monthly cadence of equipment and rovers with scientific payloads landing on the Moon.  - Investments in power, communications, and surface mobility  - Scalable infrastructure to support long-term human presence The objective is clear: build the foundation for an enduring lunar base and take the next step toward Mars.

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Lue Elizondo
Lue Elizondo@LueElizondo·
I want to share a quick update with all of you. Recently, I was involved in a motorcycle accident while avoiding a family of deer. I’m grateful to say that I’m okay and taking the necessary time to recover. It’s been a sobering reminder of how quickly things can change—and how important it is to stay grounded, present, and appreciative of the people around us. I’ve always believed that resilience isn’t just about enduring challenges, but learning from them and moving forward with purpose. This is no different. To everyone who has reached out—thank you. Your support means more than I can adequately express. And to those planning to join me on the upcoming podcast tour: I’m still very much looking forward to seeing you all. We’ve got important conversations ahead, and I intend to be there for them. Stay safe, stay curious, and I’ll see you soon
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Christopher Wipper
Christopher Wipper@SGTWipper1Each·
Did you know? A Humvee can climb walls.
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SickTanicK Official
SickTanicK Official@sicktanick·
There’s an astroid that’s gonna hit us and we’re all gonna die. That’s why there is all these meteors. That is all. 🤷 lol
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UAP Reporting Center
UAP Reporting Center@UAPReportingCnt·
I still can’t wrap my head around Michael Shellenberger going all-in defending Jeffrey Epstein. That tells you everything about character. When someone will sell out like that, it’s no surprise they’re tapped to handle “disclosure” docs. Follow the incentives.
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Air Power
Air Power@RealAirPower1·
Is history repeating itself? On March 2nd, two Iranian Su-24s attempted a high-stakes "suicide run" aimed directly at Al Udeid AB, the nerve center and largest US military installation in the Middle East. Interestingly, it's a haunting echo of 1991, when two Iraqi Mirage F1s launched a similar low-level sneak attack on the Saudi oil fields at Ras Tanura. Same play, different era: use distraction and chaos to mask a precision strike by manned fighter-bombers. 1/3
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Drew Doss
Drew Doss@drew4worldruler·
This is the first time I’ve seen NASA state that an event is unrelated to the other recent meteor sightings. Did they just accidentally imply that the other sightings were connected?
NASA Space Alerts@NASASpaceAlerts

#MeteorSighting: A fireball was observed by witnesses in the western U.S. on Sunday night, March 22. The meteor was first spotted above the California town of Chowchilla. It traveled south at 35,000 mph before disintegrating above Calflax. This fireball does not appear to be related to other recent bright meteors. 🔗 go.nasa.gov/4btbPd1 Eyewitness accounts supplied by the American Meteor Society

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UAP Sentinel
UAP Sentinel@UAPSentinel·
Another 1
NASA Space Alerts@NASASpaceAlerts

#MeteorSighting: A fireball was observed by witnesses in the western U.S. on Sunday night, March 22. The meteor was first spotted above the California town of Chowchilla. It traveled south at 35,000 mph before disintegrating above Calflax. This fireball does not appear to be related to other recent bright meteors. 🔗 go.nasa.gov/4btbPd1 Eyewitness accounts supplied by the American Meteor Society

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rob jones
rob jones@burningrob·
excited to announce that i've accepted a position as research producer for reality check with ross coulthart at newsnation. moving to dc shortly and getting to work. unfortunately, chasing my dream is not without insane costs which will not be fronted by the company, if you are willing, please take a look at the link below, as friends and family are helping my wife and i uproot our lives and move to the nation's capitol and your support would be appreciated. ko-fi.com/muckshoveler
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4nt1p4tt3rn 🏴‍☠ Appalachistan Wolf Lodge #47
I've never known quite what to think about accounts of lost time. I still don't. But last year, it happened to me. I was driving back home on the highway after running a quick errand. About 15 miles. Straight shot down the highway. I've driven it hundreds of times. I know each landmark by heart. This one day last year was different. Same road, same landmarks...until they weren't. The last thing I remember, I was passing a landmark about 7 miles before my exit. The next thing I know, I was two towns past my exit, and 30 minutes had passed. I had no recollection of driving it at all, and the distance included passing through two congested construction zones, in heavy traffic. I do not recall seeing any of the remaining landmarks or my exit. Thing is, I'm also intimately familiar with the route I drove past my exit, so I know all those landmarks as well. This isn't a case of "you've just forgotten. After all, it's been a year!". Because once I doubled back and came home, I immediately came upstairs and told my wife. Told her about not having any conscious recollection of that stretch of drive I covered while missing my turn-off. Told her the town I ended up in. Told her I had no explanation for it whatsoever, or how I managed to do it. For me, no time had passed at all. It's like that 30 minutes of my life never happened to me. Now, I'm not going to attribute it to anything supernatural or otherworldly, but I will say it was damned unnerving. It's one of the eeriest experiences I've had in the past 20 or so years.
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