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Ignore the skeptic above. ABCs are real and well documented. The authorities have been covering this up for years because it would cause panic.
costs a couple quid more but worth it This. Quality matters when you're trying to document evidence. False economy to cheap out on equipment and then wonder why your footage looks like garbage.
The thing nobody talks about enough: what's the BEST case for extraterrestrial visitation if Rendlesham isn't it?
what if the media narrative itself is part of the simulation? This is actually interesting though. If we accept that consciousness shapes reality (quantum observer effect, etc.), then doesn't a...
Lily Y. in Simulation Theory & Reality Glitches 3 years ago thumb_up 1
This is why I love independent researchers and local news sometimes. When the BBC won't touch something, the Cornish Guardian or Scottish local radio will actually let people talk.
Edward A. in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 5
Montague Summers was basically the Victorian version of a paranormal enthusiast, so you always have to discount his sensationalism.
BrandiRelic in Haunted Locations 3 years ago thumb_up 2
This could be several things: allergic reaction triggered by something in your environment (even on a delayed cycle), self-harm during sleep (real phenomenon), or something more unusual.
This is exactly the kind of bollocks that gets picked up by the tabloids. You lot realize there's a reason we can't find any carcasses, faeces, or clear kill sites?
Rendlesham's credibility is actually its weakness in some ways. The fact that nothing has been confirmed in 40+ years suggests either nothing extraordinary happened (most likely explanation) or if...
The electronics thing is wild. Keep a log of it - dates, times, what devices are affected, how they fail.
Dozy Falcon in Personal Encounters 3 years ago thumb_up 4
it's still around If we accept that something like this could exist, location-based persistence makes sense. Entities might be geographically anchored to specific areas.
George E. in Personal Encounters 3 years ago thumb_up 1
The Guardian's recent piece on Rendlesham Forest (awful, dismissive coverage by the way) Completely agree.
WraithlikeCumbria in Personal Encounters 3 years ago thumb_up 2
Your dad should contact the researchers at the Anomalous Phenomena Research Society. They have ex-military contacts who might actually listen to his story, and more they have protocols for...
Margaret M. in Personal Encounters 3 years ago thumb_up 4
I'm wondering if cryptozoological phenomena are actually more common during dark months More likely we're just more prone to misidentifying things in the dark.
MoonlitLake479 in Cryptozoology General 3 years ago thumb_up 2
The museum is actually really good for skeptic friends because it presents evidence fairly. You can see where Price's methodology was questionable without denying that something unusual happened.
Cheeky Phoenix in Haunted Locations 3 years ago thumb_up 2
The question I'd ask: what was the bipedal movement you observed? Could you describe it? Bigfoot sightings usually describe a specific kind of locomotion - knees bent, arms swinging in a...
TheTeacher in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 3 years ago thumb_up 3
The template thing is real though. It's like there's an actual playbook: mysterious phenomenon → find rational explanation → interview local official who agrees with explanation → 2-minute segment...
AlmostNexus in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 5
Why is it relegated to conspiracy forums and paranormal communities? Because mainstream academia and government has decided UFOs are essentially not a serious topic.
I've read the documents. What strikes me most is that military personnel trained to identify aircraft couldn't identify what they were seeing. That's significant.
Paul G. in Government Disclosure & Documents 3 years ago thumb_up 2
You want good paranormal coverage, you have to look outside traditional media. Podcasts, independent researchers, blogs run by actual experts.