Milk and Cookies
Distinguished Member
- Messages
- 417
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
While population is a requirement to report a sighting, it does not explain the frequency of reports. If it did India, eastern China, Japan, parts of Mexico, most of Western Europe, etc etc would be white hot.That graphic seems to suggest a correlation between population density and frequency of UFO sightings. Hardly any over the Amazon, Greenland, and the Antarctic.
It's almost like the areas you list are filled with people who have better things to do with their time than stare up into the sky and think, "I wonder what that is?"While population is a requirement to report a sighting, it does not explain the frequency of reports. If it did India, eastern China, Japan, parts of Mexico, most of Western Europe, etc etc would be white hot.
‘Murica!While population is a requirement to report a sighting, it does not explain the frequency of reports. If it did India, eastern China, Japan, parts of Mexico, most of Western Europe, etc etc would be white hot.
We have bee hives and it is always kind of amusingly sad when you see all these drones hanging around the entrance to the hive in the fall wondering what to do. They try to walk back in and the guard workers will chase them out again."Drones are male bees and their sole purpose is to mate with the queen: they don't work, don't make honey and can't sting. Since a queen only needs to mate once, most of the drones won't even get the chance to fulfil their role. But worker bees keep them around, just in case a new queen needs mating.
Drones usually live for about eight weeks and, in that time, have all their needs met by worker bees. In the fall, the worker bees kick the drones out of the hive because keeping them through the winter demands too much work and food.
You can recognize drones because they are stouter and a little bit longer than worker bees. Their eyes are twice the size of worker bees' eyes because a drone needs good eyesight when he follows the queen high up in the air to mate."
Just saying.....
Many are called, but only one is chosen.We have bee hives and it is always kind of amusingly sad when you see all these drones hanging around the entrance to the hive in the fall wondering what to do. They try to walk back in and the guard workers will chase them out again.
As we gotten warmer in these parts, I've noticed the kicked out drones don't even bother with the small hive beetles any more either. They seem to know their fate. I have had a tougher time dealing with beetles the past few years versus dealing with mites. Always something.We have bee hives and it is always kind of amusingly sad when you see all these drones hanging around the entrance to the hive in the fall wondering what to do. They try to walk back in and the guard workers will chase them out again.
I posted this earlier, but this "drone hysteria" fits perfectly with UFO history. Skeptics have pointed out for decades that UFO sightings tend to come in waves, or "flaps" as they were called a long time ago. 1947-1948, the spring and summer of 1952 (culminating in the great wave of sightings over Washington, DC in July 1952), the fall of 1957, and so on. In each case the Air Force's Project Blue Book was flooded with public sightings, but nearly all of them were eventually solved as normal phenomena, hoaxes, and so on.Because it was always a non-story. I can't vouch for the credibility of this site, but it seems like a pretty good summary of what has been reported elsewhere. Drones are a nuisance in some circumstances, but there is no evidence whatsoever that what's happening is a national security threat.
![]()
What Is The Real Story About The Drones Flying Over US Military Bases?
More and more drones are flying over US military bases around the world, although they haven't posed a direct threat yet.simpleflying.com
"It's important to bear in mind that the issue may not be as big as it may seem. Many of the reported drone sightings across the nation are believed to have been normal aircraft operating. There may have been something of a drone mass hysteria in December about drones flying around airports (although there have been multiple confirmed cases of drones being flown at airports and bases)."
Drones (the bees) are kind of nature's version of incels. One in a few hundred may get lucky, but the rest will die a cold and lonely death blaming women for their plight in life.Many are called, but only one is chosen.
We haven't seen the beetles (or at least haven't noticed them), but we lost both hives in 2022-2023 to mites. The previous year it was a bear. It was like a missile hit the hives. They are now behind electric fences.As we gotten warmer in these parts, I've noticed the kicked out drones don't even bother with the small hive beetles any more either. They seem to know their fate. I have had a tougher time dealing with beetles the past few years versus dealing with mites. Always something.
I'll never forget driving up to the foothills on a Saturday morning before dawn to get the hives, hoping for a great sourwood haul, only to find the hives torn apart. Honey was still dripping from the frames, so it couldn't have happened long before. Several of the frames had well-defined claw marks in the wax. That was, simultaneously, one of the most amazing, disappointing and frightening mornings of my life.We haven't seen the beetles, but we lost both hives in 2022-2023 to mites. The previous year it was a bear. It was like a missile hit the hives. They are now behind electric fences.
I assure you the Japanese do notIt's almost like the areas you list are filled with people who have better things to do with their time than stare up into the sky and think, "I wonder what that is?"
Truly shocking.LOLOLOLOLOL . . .
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt just said in her first briefing from the White House press room that the reported drone sightings that sparked panic in New Jersey last month were drones authorized to fly by the Federal Aviation Administration and “not the enemy.”
Leavitt made the announcement — the most significant since drone paranoia took off in December — after Trump said on December 16 “something strange is going on and for some reason they don’t want to tell the people.”
“After research and study, the drones that were flying over New Jersey in large numbers were authorized to be flown by the FAA for research and various other reasons,” Leavitt said, saying she was reciting a statement from the president.
In response to the public concern, the FAA put in place dozens of drone bans over critical infrastructure, which have since expired. The new explanation is in line with what Biden administration officials said at the time — that the drone sightings were not nefarious.
“Many of these drones were also hobbyists, recreational and private individuals that enjoy flying drones,” Leavitt said. “In time, it got worse due to curiosity. This was not the enemy.”
________________________
American right wingers may be the dumbest people in the world right now.
I’m going with Jill Stein, Kennedy Lite, and their far left supporters.LOLOLOLOLOL . . .
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt just said in her first briefing from the White House press room that the reported drone sightings that sparked panic in New Jersey last month were drones authorized to fly by the Federal Aviation Administration and “not the enemy.”
Leavitt made the announcement — the most significant since drone paranoia took off in December — after Trump said on December 16 “something strange is going on and for some reason they don’t want to tell the people.”
“After research and study, the drones that were flying over New Jersey in large numbers were authorized to be flown by the FAA for research and various other reasons,” Leavitt said, saying she was reciting a statement from the president.
In response to the public concern, the FAA put in place dozens of drone bans over critical infrastructure, which have since expired. The new explanation is in line with what Biden administration officials said at the time — that the drone sightings were not nefarious.
“Many of these drones were also hobbyists, recreational and private individuals that enjoy flying drones,” Leavitt said. “In time, it got worse due to curiosity. This was not the enemy.”
________________________
American right wingers may be the dumbest people in the world right now.