Thursday, January 31, 2013

NASA image of triangular UFO?

Someone digging around NASA's Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth website found a few interesting photo's last week that show a very clear (and very large) triangular black object floating above Earth. The photo was taken in 1986 from the Space Shuttle Columbia mission STS-61C. The story quickly spread online.

But as researcher and author Michael Salla has pointed out in his recent article posted on the Examiner.com "Giant triangular UFO's found on NASA website":
"The two photos, however, were known and circulated much earlier. A retired USAF and Department of Defense employee, Edgar Fouche, for example, cited one of the photos as early September 2011. He wrote regarding the first photo in the sequence: “An interesting Flying Triangle photo by NASA. They called it space junk. Ha… Such BS! Ed.”

Friday, January 25, 2013

Disclosure and the proverbial carrot on the stick

Image from Sciencemuseum.org
Written By: M. Archuleta / Sapere Aude Media

I didn’t get around to posting much this past year due to the birth of my daughter in late August, but I’ve been excited to jump back into things for 2013. Recently I’ve been paying a lot of attention to what is out there in the form of news and information. It’s not that I didn’t stay informed in 2012, I continued to connect the dots but I didn’t have this insatiable hunger driving me to consume endless information from outer sources. In fact, my pregnant disposition literally forced me to tune out of what was going on outside me, and tune into what was going on inside.

Just a few days ago I was excited to see an article posted by conspiracy friendly sites stating that Russian Prime Minster Medvedev had proclaimed ”the time has come” for Obama to tell the world the truth about UFO’s. “Russia Orders Obama: Tell World About Aliens, Or We Will”

Wow really? Could it be for realsies this time?

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Reddit Co-founder and digital activist Aaron Swartz commits suicide

Article shared from Gawker:v
Written by: Taylor Berman 

Aaron Swartz, a programmer and Internet activist who co-founded a company that would eventually grow into Reddit, committed suicide Friday in New York City, according to The Tech and Boing Boing. Swartz's attorney confirmed the news to The Tech early Saturday morning.
"The tragic and heartbreaking information you received is, regrettably, true," confirmed Swartz' attorney, Elliot R. Peters of Kecker and Van Nest, in an email to The Tech.