Thread #42248426
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In 2007, a construction worker in Tarbaca filmed a craft (by appearances an exact copy of the 'Sport Model' as Lazar described it) on his Motorola RAZR V3, hovering 75 feet away from him. He screamed for his coworker to come see the craft, but the coworker couldn't hear him over his electric drill.
The craft was only present for a few seconds before speeding off in the bellywise fashion typical of the Sport Model as Lazar described it and as seen in the Navy's Gimbal video; namely, the craft tilted on its side and launched away bottom-first. In an interview, the man who filmed the video, Marvin Badilla, said the craft "se puso de medio lado", or "went half-sideways / turned on its side".
Since sharing this video with the press, Badilla has not had any more experiences of note and has not sought media attention, strengthening his credibility as a witness. I maintain that this video is the most underrated piece of evidence for the Sport Model, as few people seem to know it exists. What do you make of it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdZGhCi_7GY
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The general rule with advanced technologies developed in secret government programs is that they wait at least a few decades before wheeling out the old obsolete junk to the public as the “new and exciting thing.” It’s what they did with rockets, semiconductors, the internet, and clearly with AI. They’ll deliver some rinky dink hunk of junk they’ve had since the late 40s for you to gawk at while they’re busy funneling the $21+ trillion of missing pentagon funding off to their secret space bases they probably already have past the asteroid belt.
And no there’s no space aliens involved anywhere in any of this.
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>>42248426
It's interesting, but the shortness and jittery shake of the camera makes it frustrating to confirm or deboonk. Lazar said the sport model had some kind of antenna at the top, it would be a more compelling connection if that was visible, though I know plenty of sightings don't mention any antenna. The saucer photographed by the National Geographic Institute in 1971 seems to have one
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>>42250382
By the way, this was also photographed in Costa Rica, same as the video
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>>42250382
Lazar is a disinfo agent. It’s a (surprisingly simple) electrogravitic craft: just put a huge static charge difference between your leading edge and trailing edge and you’ll create a gravity wave you can surf on the crest of.
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>>42253116
It was photographed during a government mapping flight, apparently it only shows up in one of the frames and not the frames taken before or after. And it appears in the camera negative, which rules out the explanation of it being an artifact from the print/processing or something like that. Excuse the shilling, but there's an upcoming documentary that will feature the original photographer who's still alive, don't know if he's spoken out publicly until now. The one thing I like is they've recently uploaded and shared their high resolution scan of the photo:
https://next.frame.io/share/f626bc7c-ecd5-4944-b5bf-9d20e4e05366/61a64 ed6-af93-429d-af64-6665bb3c0753
https://cotethedocumentary.com/
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>>42250580
This is a real image, but all the test bullshit around it is not. It has zero to do with "anti-gravity" and everything to do with plasma sheathe generation for aerodynamics and broad spectrum radar absorption. I would bet my left nut the first attempts were on the Trapeze variants of the U-2 and when they added the the ability to ionize cesium in the exhaust of the SR-71. Allegedly the first retrofits for the B-2 were performed in 2004. You can supposedly see parts of the system in the Spirit of Mississippi, and indeed there is a weird obsidian looking line on the leading edges of the air frame that is not present on other B-2 photos. It is exceptionally hard to find now. This is supposedly the project patch.
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>>42248462
Yeah I agree. I think early saucers were drone/helicopter technology and these days they are playing around with new propulsion systems (or some kind of repulsion) while also toying with frictionless dynamics to really push craft maneuverability beyond anything we know. It wouldn't surprise me if they were using stuff that isn't even on the periodic table.
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>>42254418
No one said that...
I personally believe this isn't some made up bullshit. I also don't believe that anti-gravity is real, but inertial reduction and therefore a reduction in effective mass is real.
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>>42254418
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>>42254418
And now I have to get ready for work
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>>42254541
>>42254565
>>42254569
interesting