We already have the means to travel among the stars. We have things out in the desert that are 50 years beyond what you could possibly comprehend. If you have seen it on Star Wars or Star Trek, we’ve been there done that, or decided it was not worth the effort. We now have the technology to take ET home.--Ben Rich Former Head of Lockheed Skunkworks
If you look to the East on any clear night when the stars come out you will notice the twinkling of the stars. Here in Colorado at about 7:00 pm in the evening the sky starts to get dark enough to see both faint as well as some of the brighter stars. All the stars shine at their rated magnitudes.
Yet there is one little star that I don't believe is a star at all. It sits about 20 degree's off the eastern horizon. I call it a Blinker. With a pair of Binoculars you will notice that it blinks Red, Blue, Yellow, White, Red, Blue, Yellow, White over and over and over. At first, I thought it was a Jet coming in. Except this thing isn't a Jet, it just sits there.
We usually see stars twinkle and we chalk it up to temperature disturbances or dust in our atmosphere and how it refracts the light from the star. Not this object, it strobes over and over repeatedly. It appears artificial and not of a natural nature.
Normally, the sky going through it's normal precession, the stars move from the horizon and gradually move up and over. If you see the constellation Orion, it slowly makes it's way up over in a few hours as well as the other constellations and individual stars, but the Blinker doesn't move. It just sits there.
The other night, I went out on my deck to check on it at 2:00 am in the morning. It had moved but it had moved to slightly to the right. It didn't gain altitude and it didn't fade. So the big question is....What is it???
We cannot get a straight answer about what Chemtrails are from our government, so I'm not even going to attempt to ask what this object is.
If we look around and occasionally glance up in our busy lives, we may discover little treasures that we never knew were there.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
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