#though some DO check out and most of these sites parrot one anothers' claims they just. never fucing mention WHERE it was mentioned
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I wish this site had the source for this bc this idea sounds so interesting 😭
#whenever i read development stuff or scrapped/deleted ideas for he movies online it allways feels like src:dude trust me#though some DO check out and most of these sites parrot one anothers' claims they just. never fucing mention WHERE it was mentioned#pleaseeeee mention them im nosy as hell need the confirmation from the direct soouce themselves#looking up stuff about miss guffin agaain and imagining what couldve been#<- (thought about how next to being queen poppys fav job is being a childrens teacher and how guffin was supposed to be her mentor)#🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯 ooga booga
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Poppies in the Graveyard (Byleth x Felix)
Summary: In an attempt to make sense of what has happened in the past five years, Byleth finds herself at her parents grave.
Characters/Pairing: Byleth x Felix
Word Count: 1.7K
Warnings: Lil bit o’ angst
A/N: I’m marrying Felix in my VW play-through and I didn’t think I would have that many feelings for him but man did I fall hard for this brooding boy.
It rained all weekend. Rainy days had a way of squirming their way into Byleth’s heart and hardening it. It reminded her of her father’s death. Reminding her that soon as he had passed, had smiled at her one last time, the heavens opened up. Symbolic: that’s what people called it. People that didn’t know the truth of who she was. It was like the Goddess wept with you, Mercedes had said a few days after it happened. Byleth wanted to correct her, to tell her that the Goddess wept whenever she wept because they were one in the same. But it didn’t matter much to her who understood and who didn’t.
That had been so many years ago that Byleth wondered if people even remembered her father’s death or if it had become just another nameless sacrifice in the sake of somebody’s “greater good”. It broke her heart to think that it was a possibility.
Now, on rainy days, Byleth would move without thinking. She would wake up, eat, grab some flowers from the greenhouse, and make her way to the cemetery.
Before her father told her the story of her mother, she would often find him standing by her gravestone. One day she had been walking back from training with Dimitri and noticed him hovering over the site with flowers. She had brushed it off at first. Surely he had known plenty of knights that were buried there. But the flowers made her wonder. And the frequency of his visits did too. She probably should have realized before he told her.
“Hi father. Hi mother.”
Byleth placed the flowers by the weathered stone. She sat down in the wet grass, ignoring the cold. Pulling her knees up to her chest, she smiled at the site of her father’s name resting beside her mothers. While she had never known much about her mother, Byleth could still feel the love he had for her. The few times he would mention her, the love on his face was rivaled only by the look he’d give her after she’d done particularly well in battle: a heart-swelling pride. It made her feel a connection she never realized she needed. She often told them that. On these visits, since the rain kept most people inside, Byleth often found herself talking to both of them.
“Whenever I was in a bad mood, father would always bring me whatever flowers he could find where we had set up camp that day.” Byleth smiled at the memory. “I always thought it was so out of character, as much as I loved them. But I see now that isn’t the case.”
She shuffled her feet into the dirt and watched the rain pool into the divots her heels made.
“The poppies were my favorites. I don’t know if I ever told you that, but they were. You must have known because you’d bring them often. Although, don’t think I didn’t notice you would bring them here, father. Does that mean they were my mother's favorite too?”
There was a low rumble of thunder in the distance. She hadn’t realized a storm was coming. It was still far off, and she hoped it wouldn’t blow away her flowers. It made her wonder about what Mercedes had said. Did the heavens open for her? Did storms manifest when she felt them start to stir within herself? Did she subconsciously make the rain when she needed an excuse to see them the most?
“Professor?”
Byleth was surprised to see Felix standing over her, his figure a silhouette in the dim light of the flickering oil lamps. His thick, fur coat hung loosely on his shoulders, like he was only wearing it because someone told him he had to. “Felix,” she said quickly, with a wrinkle in her brow.
He scoffed. “Don’t sound so surprised,” he said. “I might have hated the guy but he was still my father.” He nodded toward the freshly planted stone beside her.
Byleth had forgotten that Rodrigue was buried there. He had only been gone a few weeks, and Ingrid had tried so desperately to figure out a way to get him back home for a proper burial that Byleth assumed that she had had happened. But on the grave beside her parents, Duke Rodrigue Achille Fraldarius was etched in large letters. She felt guilty for not bringing him anything.
“Is that Captain Jeralt’s grave?” Felix asked, squatting down beside her.
She nodded.
“Is there another name there?” Felix squinted at the fading text.
“My mother.” Byleth felt a warmth in her chest at the mention of her. She liked the sound of it. She wasn’t much for sentimentality, and she had never known her to begin with, but the past few months had made her softer. She wanted to know more about her past, and to pass that on to others.
She had a mother.
“I didn’t realize your mother was buried here,” he admitted. “In fact. I’ve never really thought about your mother at all. I just kind of assumed it was always just you and the Captain.”
“It was,” she agreed. “I never knew her. I was told she died from illness when I was small, and I just assumed she was buried in some far off village somewhere.”
“Told?”
Felix was a lot more perceptive than people gave him credit for. It made sense with how good he was in battle. He picked up on small things to use them to his advantage. But he never seemed to turn it off. He could pinpoint things about people that they thought they could hide away. Or, in Byleth’s case, pick up on words that only heightened the mystery that was her past.
“I didn’t find out the truth until later. Until after my father died,” she admitted.
“And she’s buried here,” Felix pointed out. “But I thought you had never been to the Garreg Mach before you started the job here.”
“I was born here,” she told him, and glanced back down at her parents stone. “Apparently. But my mother didn’t make it. The reasons behind it were...complicated. My father had been skeptical about it, and once I was born the church had this weird fascination with me that made him nervous.” She hadn’t meant to tell him this but she was glad to. It felt nice to talk about her family, as foreign as it was. And a reassuring calm had washed over her, urging her on.
“There was a fire that year apparently,” she went on. “One that claimed a lot of the living quarters, ours included. Father had used the opportunity to steal me away. After the death of my mother he didn’t feel much of an attachment to the place, and he was worried about the church’s growing obsession with me. So he hid me in a bundle in the stables and went to deliver the news to Lady Rhea that the baby had perished in the fire.”
“Risky move,” Felix said. “Hiding a baby in the stables. What if you had cried? He would have been killed.”
“I never cried,” she told him.
Felix looked at her, an eyebrow raised. “All babies cry.”
“That’s why it was so weird that I didn’t,” she added. “When my father died, I found his journals. That’s how I found all of this out. In it, he said that I was a very stoic baby. I never laughed, never cried, never made a sound. I only spoke when I was older when I absolutely needed to.” She smiled to herself again. “As weird as it was, Father kind of loved it. He always said I was the perfect person to live with, not being one for idle conversation.”
There was a huff beside her that Byleth thought might have been a laugh.
“When the Captain died,” Felix said finally. “Everyone was so sad at the passing of a great knight that I feel like…” He paused, either to choose his words carefully or to recall himself. “Did anyone check on you?”
Byleth was quiet for a moment. She felt the sting of tears rising in her eyes and she wondered why such a simple question would incite such a reaction. The truth was, it wasn’t a straight forward answer. She didn’t have time to be checked on. She was thrust into the work of teaching, preparing her students for battle, and devising new tactics to fit the new enemies they were facing. She wasn’t quite sure she had time to be checked on.
Felix shifted uncomfortably beside her. “One of us should have...I mean...someone should have…”
“It was complicated,” Byleth tried.
“It always is. That isn’t an excuse.”
“You didn’t know,” she added.
“I did though.”
He looked down at his Rodrigue’s grave then. Byleth had almost forgotten that there had been a reason he was there in the first place. She felt a pang of guilt at having blubbered on about her own parents when Felix’s wound was still fresh. The grass hadn’t even begun to sprout on his father’s plot yet.
“How are you doing?” Byleth asked to break the tension. “After your father, I mean.”
Felix huffed again, a dark smile spreading across his face. “It’s complicated,” he parroted.
“I’ve been told that’s not an excuse.”
“Too true.” Felix pushed himself back up onto his feet and tore his gaze away from his father’s stone. “Maybe some other time. That storm is coming this way pretty quickly.”
Byleth looked over the cemetery walls toward the forest beyond. The clouds were darker now. Blades of lightning struck silently in the distance, hinting at the impending chaos. She wondered if they would affect her at all.
He nodded over toward the low glimmer of the dormitory windows. “Come on,” he said. “I’ll walk you back.”
She agreed, and pushed herself up onto her feet. “And you’ll tell me how you’re doing on the walk back?” she tried. “Complications and all?”
Felix huffed another amused breath and gestured toward the stairs. “Another time, perhaps,” he told her. “I don’t think the walk is quite long enough.”
#fe3h#fire emblem three houses#fire emblem#felix fraldarius#felix hugo fraldarius#byleth eisner#byleth#Byleth x Felix#felix x byleth#fe3h fanfic
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Parrot Anafi review | TechRadar
New Post has been published on https://www.etechwire.com/parrot-anafi-review-techradar/
Parrot Anafi review | TechRadar
When we decided to compare the DJI Mavic Air and Parrot Anafi to see which drone won out in raw specs, we were impressed to see how well Anafi stacked up to the best drone available on paper.
So, we were excited to finally test the Anafi’s mettle ourselves and see whether the drone would soar to meet expectations or fold under the pressure.
After a few tests in the field, we’re not certain about Parrot Anafi as a choice for drone newcomers. But, long-time flyers may find a lot to like about the French model, which beats the Mavic Air in raw camera power, but can be a bit more rough around the edges.
We’ve laid out all of the details you’ll ever need to decide whether the Parrot Anafi is the right fit for your next drone purchase.
Price and availability
Available now
$699 / £649 (about AU$940) for the drone and accessories
$99 / £89 (about AU$130) for spare battery
When the Parrot Anafi launched on July 1 for $699 / £649, it sent a message to DJI drone owners: we’ll match or trump the specs you’re used to, for a lower price.
For reference, Anafi’s closest foldable competitor, the Mavic Air, retails for $799 / £769 / AU$1,299.
For that price, you get the drone, a Skycontroller 3 RC, one battery, a carrying case, one 16GB microSD card and a microSD adapter, eight spare propeller blades, a USB-A to USB-C charging cable, and a mounting tool.
The gear you’ll need for your Anafi outings
The Parrot Anafi should be available from most major retailers, along with Parrot’s site.
On Parrot’s site, you can also order spare batteries at $99 / £89 apiece or another eight backup propellers at $20 / £18 per box. As you’ll read below, we think investing in both is a near necessity, which makes it unfortunate that Parrot doesn’t offer some kind of discounted bundle with more accessories.
Parrot also nickel-and-dimes you somewhat with its premium app features. Almost every flight and camera feature is unlocked by default, but two flight modes – Follow Me and Flight Plan – cost $17.99 each in the Freeflight 6 app in the US.
Design and build
Long, foldable frame for easy carrying
Monochromatic, cheap appearance
Lightweight and durable
180º vertical camera and 2.8x lossless zoom lens feel like must-haves
If any drone needs flaming decals or a paint job to give it personality, it’s probably the Anafi, which you can best describe with the word “functional”.
Unlike Parrot’s tiny killer-robot look with the Mambo FPV drone, or the Bebop 2’s more traditional look with a curved frame and black/white contrast, the Anafi’s one-color, plasticy look arguably doesn’t have as much personality or polish.
What saves it in our eyes is the arthropod-inspired frame and maneuverable eyeball camera at its head, which could be a game-changer for drone photography and videography. Unattached from the drone’s frame, it has 180 degrees of vertical range: it can take shots directly upwards, which no other drone can do.
The camera also has a 2.8x zoomable lens with no image quality reduction, another exciting innovation that we’re certain other dronemakers will copy for future models.
Because Anafi has no obstacle avoidance sensors except for a landing sensor on the bottom, it’s a relief that you can take photos without having to get too close to your subject.
Now that we have these perks, we don’t want to go back to the rigid, static cameras of our other drones.
Back to the design. While most foldable drone arms fold inward on top of one another, Anafi folds outward, making it taller but narrower than most competitors. Specifically, it measures at 9.6 x 2.6 x 2.5 in (244 x 66 x 63.5 mm) – about the size and shape of a tall smart speaker or water bottle.
While it definitely won’t fit in your pocket, it won’t weigh down your backpack or purse overly at 320g (0.7 lbs / 11.3 oz). Its lightweight frame makes Anafi more susceptible to winds and random drifting than most other drones, but it also helps it to survive crashes that more densely-packed DJI drones might not (see the Performance and control section for more).
Just underneath the “Parrot” logo on the back is the removable 2,700mAh lithium-ion battery. Very easy to remove or clip back on, it helps for a quick swap with a backup.
Underneath the battery lies the microSD card, which you can also swap out quickly; regrettably, there’s no built-in SD storage.
On the whole, Anafi underwhelms a bit in exterior appearance, but we’re impressed by the tricks up its foldable sleeves. And, if you won’t impress your friends with the drone itself, you will impress them with the high-quality shots you get during your long flights.
Performance and control
Lack of obstacle avoidance will lead to crashes
Handles well, but tiny lag and tons of drift
Speedy enough (33mph / 55kph) for everyone except for racers
Extremely quiet (for a drone)
Drone veterans sometimes brag on DJI message boards about turning off their drones’ OAS (Obstacle Avoidance System) for true drone freedom. But, for drone novices or younger flyers, the lack of automated avoidance options on the Anafi may be a deal-breaker.
Put bluntly, Anafi is blind as a bat. It won’t notice anything around it until you crash into it. Even its bottom sensor, which has no trouble registering the ground during landings, didn’t react to my hand when I waved it underneath the hovering drone for five seconds.
The comparison to the Mavic Air’s seven-camera vision system and three-direction environmental sensing isn’t flattering.
Getting up, close and personal with Parrot Anafi
Anafi also tends to drift in different directions for no apparent reason. I conducted a hover test in the middle of my apartment living room to check the battery life; while I was distracted, it would drift upwards or sideways one or two feet without any controller input or wind, coming close to crashing into the ceiling light and my bookcase a couple of times before I stopped it.
Most people won’t be silly enough to fly a drone in an enclosed space. But, the drone’s penchant for seeking trouble continued once I got outdoors.
When I tried to get a close-up photo of the drone in flight, it would arbitrarily start to drift towards me, so that I had to back up. While testing to see how close I could get my Anafi to a fence, it drifted forward, sans controller input, and crashed into it.
Anafi flew fine after the crash, but we’ll probably need to use the backup propellers soon
Plus, Parrot’s automated cinematic modes, which make your drone sweep dramatically upwards or circle around you, for example, can easily make your drone crash into a wall or tree if you’re not careful.
But, once we stopped flirting with danger and took to the open skies, the Anafi flew fast and true. There’s a tiny bit of lag between moving the joystick on the controller and the drone actually moving, but you get used to the gap after just a few minutes of flying.
You have full control over the settings of your drone, including how fast Anafi turns on each axis, how quickly the camera tilts or zooms, and max speed.
Anafi can hit 33 mph / 55 kph at full power, which is comparable to most non-competitive drones. We had a blast just flitting around obstacles and having Anafi spin around at tight angles.
One thing we couldn’t test was max transmission range – New York City has very strict rules about where you can fly your drone and how high it can go.
Parrot claims you can hit up to 2.5 miles, but all we can guarantee is that we had no connectivity problems while it was in line of sight.
But, we can guarantee that Anafi is much less likely to infuriate your neighbors than your DJI drone. The rotor fan noise, which ironically sounds a bit like a small swarm of insects, doesn’t seem to carry more than a hundred yards away or so.
After the flight test, we asked picnickers around the model airfield how noisy they would say the drone was on a 1-10 scale; all of them said they hadn’t heard anything at all, though it’s possible they were just being polite.
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Are we redundant?
Ohh, PBS – you are such a slut! Flashing that UFO booty in De Void’s face like Sally Rand’s ostrich feathers on the front end, as if you really liked me. Then you go and make me sit through an entire hour-long performance of what turned out to be an update of the same old G-rated middle-aged where’s-ET? ho-hum I’ve been enduring for 20 years now. And you never give me another jiggle of that UFO money-maker. Ohh, you are so lowdown.
By Billy Cox De Void 5-15-18
In case you missed it: “Are We Alone?” – the latest installment of PBS’ new “NOVA Wonders” series – really grabbed De Void by the eyeballs last week when it opened near the top with a clip of the now-famous F-18 “gimbal” video, the one that left experienced Navy fighter pilots so jazzed and openly baffled. Unfortunately, the sequence wasn’t the subject, just a segue. There was a but coming. There is always a but coming. “But,” wonders the narrator, “what’s the reality?” The reality is a formula, a formula we’ve seen more times than we can count. The “Are We Alone?” playbook goes something like this: Discuss ongoing and future NASA projects for detecting ET life elsewhere — check. A bit about how microscopic extremophiles thriving in acidic heat vents might mimic alien life on planetary moons — check. Celebrate SETI visionaries Jill Tarter and Seth Shostak — check. Blow off the UFO stuff with maybe a line or two — got it. The most unique thing about “Are We Alone?” was the timing. It aired last Wednesday, just hours after The Atlantic broke a story about a congressional committee attempting (in April) to funnel $10 million in NASA funds into the quote “search for technosignatures, such as radio transmissions.” It’s a big deal only in the sense that Congress hasn’t seen fit to toss SETI any bones in more than 20 years. $10 million isn’t a lot of money, barely enough to cover three (3) Bradley Fighting Vehicles. But “technosignatures” – that’s a pretty broad category, right? And what have the MSM been covering, albeit erratically, for the past five months or so: Navy pilot testimony, the F-18 footage, and real-time recordings among commercial pilots, air traffic controllers and the FAA concerning UFO incursions into American skyways. Why wouldn’t these qualify as technosignatures? Well, if you read The Atlantic piece – “Congress Is Quietly Nudging NASA to Look for Aliens” – you’d never know any of that stuff ever happened. The article focused exclusively on the “such as radio transmissions” clause, which set the tone for every last syllable of subsequent media parroting, from Fox News (“Alien Shocker”) to Fleet Street. Between the Atlantic spread and the publicity bounce from its prime-time PBS platform, SETI might’ve gotten more coverage in one news cycle than it has over the last couple of years combined. And that’s a pretty nifty trick, given how ostensibly enamored the media was of last December’s reveal about the Pentagon’s deeply buried UFO research program. What gave the news about the Defense Department’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program a special zing was its bipartisan initiation by three powerful senior U.S. Senators. Considering how AATIP commanded a $22 million expense account, or more than twice the proposed SETI funding, why wouldn’t a reporter with national resources leverage that precedent by asking House sponsors something like, “Hey, shouldn’t some of the focus be conducted in our own atmosphere, especially since the DoD’s Threat ID Program made it a priority?” Too bad The Atlantic didn’t go there. At least they found time to mention how one SETI enthusiast, GOP Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, is a climate change denier. Anyhow, for whatever reason, it looks like Capitol Hill may be ready once again to invest in combing deep space for technosignatures. Even though, thanks to a paper published in February by scientists at the Sonneberg Observatory and the University of Hawaii’s physics and astronomy department, there may be a little less incentive to follow through now. They warned that ET radio messages could pose an “existential threat” to Earthlings. Conceding the odds are minimal, the authors nevertheless argue Earth can’t discount the possibility that ET’s first message to us could involve extortion. Earth mortals: Do XYZ or we’ll ABC. Or maybe the act of downloading ET’s promised recipe for curing cancer will unleash a worldwide computer virus. “Our main argument,” they write, “is that a message from ETI cannot be decontaminated with certainty … The technical risks are impossible to assess beforehand. We may only choose to destroy such a message, or take the risk. The risk for humanity may be small, but not zero.” “Hey, check this out. It’s been 1.2 million years but it looks like we finally got the callback signal from ET we’ve been waiting for.” “Too bad. Guess we oughtta go ahead and delete …” The last time astronomers went to Congress hat in hand, back in 2014, Shostak and SETI colleague Dan Werthimer ran into a bunch of committee fishheads who barely knew what SETI was. But the guests were challenged by at least one pol who was all too familiar with the pitch. “What’s intriguing about this conversation,” Rep. Donna Edwards, (D-MD), former Lockheed-Martin contractor for Goddard Space Flight Center, told them, “is the idea that – and it’s a lot of hubris, right? – somehow we’re waiting to find them as opposed to them finding us.” Science has never addressed Edwards’ skepticism in a meaningful, systematic way. Too bad she’s not in office anymore. She might ask for hearings. Meanwhile, thanks to a $100 million gift from Russian billionaire Yuri Milner, the SETI Institute forges ahead in its search for ET intelligence at a safe and manageable distance. With the recent assist from PBS, and the media’s corroding attention span, maybe SETI will find a way to keep searching forever and ever and ever. But. Who knows — maybe they received ET’s message awhile back and destroyed it for our own good.
Continue Reading ► See Also: UFOs May Have Attempted Rendezvous With Giant Undersea Object | VIDEO Executive Summary Report: UFO Encounter with the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group Confidential Military Report on 'Tic Tac UFO Event' | VIDEO Long-Awaited Government-Funded UFO Reports Now In The Public Domain Documents Prove Secret UFO Study | VIDEO AATIP or AAWSAP? Dr. Eric W. Davis, of NASA's Breakthrough Physics Propulsion Project, Discussed UFOs During Lecture | VIDEO UFO Research By NASA Affiliated Physicist Dr. Eric W. Davis is Confirmed By Colleague Dr Eric Davis, Physicist, Explains Why Scientists Won't Discuss Their UFO Interests Deciphering The Pentagon UFO Program and Release of The UFO Videos BREAKING: Formerly Secret UFO Program NOT Called, 'Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program' (AATIP)? 'Getting the Mainstream Media to Approach the UFO Puzzle as Legitimate News OREGON UFO EVENT: Air Traffic Control Audio Tapes Released via FOIA Request What the Government Knows About UFOs | Interview with Harry Reid 3rd AATIP Video & the Pentagon UFO Study – Interview with Luis Elizondo | VIDEO Third Government UFO Video Released | VIDEO The Military Keeps Encountering UFOs – Why Doesn’t the Pentagon Care? | VIDEO UFO Research Gets New Life By Way of The Pentagon's Mysterious Project BREAKING NEWS: The Pentagon’s Mysterious UFO Program Revealed | VIDEO Ex-Military Official Details Pentagon's Secret UFO Hunt | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Billionaire Robert Bigelow's Decades-Long Obsession With UFOs Navy F-18 'Gimbal UFO' Video Explained? Post Pentagon’s UFO Research Program Revelations – Skeptics Regroup Understanding the Science of UFOs and Space Time Metric Engineering | VIDEO Secret UFO Program Recorded Encounters with Unknown Objects | INTERVIEW – VIDEO UFO-Pentagon FOIA Request Delayed BREAKING NEWS: The Pentagon’s Mysterious UFO Program Revealed | VIDEO Ex-CIA Chief - Keep Studying UFOs Herald Tribune Reporter, Billy Cox Queries CIA On Chase Brandon's Roswell UFO Claims Luis Elizando Former Head of Secret Pentagon UFO Program Describes Five Categories of UFOs | INTERVIEW While Waiting for the Next New York Times UFO Bomb to Drop Navy Pilot, Who Chased A UFO, Says ‘We Should Take Them Seriously’ UFO Legacy: What Impact Will Revelation of Secret Government Program Have? UFO Reports at Nuclear Missile Sites and The Pentagon UFO Program Astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson Discusses The Pentagon UFO Program on Colbert | VIDEO Ex-Military Official Details Pentagon's Secret UFO Hunt | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Pentagon's Secret UFO Search, Stanton Friedman Weighs In | INTERVIEW – VIDEO What the New York Times UFO Report Actually Reveals 'Second' Navy Pilot Comes Forward Re UFO Encounter | INTERVIEW – VIDEO 'The Pentagon’s Newly Revealed UFO Research Program' – What a Week! On the Trail of a Secret Pentagon U.F.O. Program UFO-Pentagon Story Reflects Fundamental Problems Pentagon UFO Study Examined UFO Activity at Nuclear Missile Sites Says Former U.S. Senator Harry Reid UFO Study Focused on U.S. Military Encounters PENTAGON UFO PROGRAM: 'Recovered Material' From UFOs Discussed By Leslie Kean | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Senator Reid Discusses Secret UFO Program | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Navy Pilot Recounts UFO Encounter | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Aliens, UFOs, Flying Discs and Sightings -- Oh My! Secret Programs, U.S. Senators and Money, Who Wants to Talk UFOs Now? Navy Pilot Talks: The UFO Jammed Their Radar — ‘It Accelerated Beyond Any Airplane We Have’ BREAKING NEWS: The Pentagon’s Mysterious UFO Program Revealed | VIDEO Navy UFO Encounter: 'It Accelerated Like Nothing I’ve Ever Seen’ – F/A-18F Pilot | VIDEO Secret UFO Pentagon Program Explained By Leslie Kean | INTERVIEW – VIDEO Secret Pentagon UFO Program Spent Millions
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"And You Never Give Me Another Jiggle of That UFO Money-Maker" http://www.theufochronicles.com/2018/05/another-jiggle-of-ufo-money-maker.html
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