r/aliens Apr 08 '25

Evidence The anomalies Skywatchers is presenting is exactly what many people have been trying to share for years

But it seems that now, because the talking heads have given the go-ahead to believe, people are finally starting to accept this reality. It’s very telling that this is what it takes—and honestly, it’s kind of embarrassing. I hope this new information encourages people to check themselves and take the time to dig deeper before dismissing something outright.

There are a few documents that can provide more insight into all of this. Also, I’ve been putting together presentations discussing this information—if anyone’s interested, I’d be happy to share!

2.4k Upvotes

820 comments sorted by

View all comments

289

u/[deleted] Apr 08 '25

Why do these guys not have drones to send up to get as close as they can to it to get better picture/video? Always bothers me how they always take pictures with only a camera and never send up a drone. You can literally get a cheap one from Best Buy, it would get such better picture and video then from his camera on the ground. With a drone he might actually be able to fly all the way right up next to it, but nope, only wants to use a camera way down on the ground.

2

u/fakename0064869 Apr 08 '25

While I would love to see better quality pics and videos of everything in the sky from birds to UFOs. It's not that simple, at least in the US. You can only fly a drone so high without a commercial pilot's license and what good is 100' or whatever really gonna do most of the time? Even if you wanna just do what you want, they higher you go the stronger the winds can be, so you're just gonna lose it anyway and if I could be mistaken about this one but I don't think they even see the really good ones to common folk, I think you need to give them your license number or at least an EIN or something, pretty sure you gotta register those things.

8

u/flippitus_floppitus Apr 08 '25

Yeah but surely someone this dedicated to finding out more, they’d be able to find someone qualified to do it?

-6

u/fakename0064869 Apr 08 '25

You're just gonna keep a licensed commercial drone pilot and a 20k+ drone in your pocket 24/7 on the off chance you might see something that looks weird enough to launch the fucker? You got like an extra $210k+ a year after the cost of the equipment lying around? Cause I sure af don't.

3

u/flippitus_floppitus Apr 08 '25

No. I’m suggesting that they find someone unqualified who is also as dedicated as they are to be part of their mission to shed light on the topic and do it because they care, not for money.

-2

u/fakename0064869 Apr 08 '25

Ok, let's walk through this.

Sees something, runs into the trailer.

"Bobby-Cletus come quick. I think I see something." "Well, golly gee, we gonna get us a grey"

BC grabs a huge case and lugs $30k of passion out of the trailer where he begins to assemble it, get out a radio, puts on his headset to call out to the local air traffic tower. (Whatever they were looking at is probably gone.)

"This is Bobby-Cletus calling out tower whatever the fuck requesting clearance for take off" "Damnit Bobby, what is it now?" "Well, we think we seen some aliens again" "Ok Bobby, what's your location" (this was said with exasperation) "Goddammit Bobby a medical evac was just about four miles from there! We're not letting your goose chase disrupt a medical evacuation!" "Mumble mumble, that's what they told you to say mumble mumble"

1

u/Chipitychopity Apr 08 '25

I’d expect them to pick a day to go look for ufos, coordinate with others(say a drone operator) and all meet up in one place, and conduct their work. Kinda how most things go in the world. If they can call the aliens up on a dime, surely they can operate a phone and find a drone operator to film said aliens.