U.S. Shoots Down a Fourth Flying Object - The latest object was taken down over Lake Huron.

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WASHINGTON — The United States shot down a fourth flying object over North America on Sunday, this one over Lake Huron in Michigan, U.S. officials said.

The Pentagon used an F-16 fighter jet that shot the object with a Sidewinder air-to-air missile. This object was unidentified, as was an object shot down over the Yukon Territory in Canada on Saturday and another shot down over the Arctic Ocean near Alaska on Friday.

The episodes began on Feb. 4, when the U.S. military shot down a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina.

The latest turn in the aerial show taking place in the skies above North America comes after a helter-skelter weekend involving what at times seemed like an invasion of unidentified flying objects.

The incursions seemed to become so common that Biden administration officials have found themselves issuing private assurances that there is no evidence that they involve extraterrestrial activity. But officials also acknowledge privately that the longer they are unable to provide a public explanation for the provenance of the objects, the more speculation grows.

On Friday, after tracking an unidentified object 40,000 feet in the air across Alaska and into a fairly congested air traffic route for commercial flights between the United States and Asia, the United States shot down the object. It used the same type of airplane (an F-22) and weaponry (a Sidewinder air-to-air missile) that was used to shoot down a Chinese spy balloon a week earlier.

But soon after recovery teams began the effort to locate and identify the debris in the Prudhoe Bay area, NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which is operated by the United States and Canada, began tracking a second unidentified object. This one moved across Alaska on Friday night and crossed into Canada on Saturday before it was shot down by an American fighter jet over the Yukon Territory.

The second object, Canadian authorities said, was cylindrical. The first object, American officials said, was the size of a small car, though one official said it was also cylindrical.

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That pesky ol' Rothschild debt economy keeps dying a predictably fiat death, they gotta distract the plebs with something... especially when many of them are starting to learn the CPI doesn't take into account food or gas inflation (and hasn't for a long while now). Oy vey!
The modern inflation figure / RPI has been propaganda for the low info for years now. If it was calculated as it was during the Carter era, it'd be probably higher now. The ayylmaos should send us better than Biden and Kamala.
 
Eh no one really cares about ohio, I think people cared more about flint at this point.
Ohio is under control, that's why. There was a disaster, but because the government isn't California-tier it already had a contingency plan in place to deal with it, and enacted it in time to prevent things from escalating to where they couldn't be contained. Its bad, but compared to California being perpetually on fire its a nothingburger.
 
If this were actually aliens, the government wouldnt keep parading that shit. They REALLY want you to know about this but NOT about the Nord Pipestream fiasco that should get a good chunk of people in politics and military tried of treason.

Nothing the government does is random. There is a patern and a plan. What at most can happen is that they change their minds about it for something else but they always have a plan.

If they say its aliens, its not fucking aliens.
 
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They're probably PRC, but implying they're UFOs / ayylmaos might divert people away from hatethinking about corrupt ties between Beijing Biden('s handlers) and the PRC and how these could be broken with a few political decisions. Dunno, it's not as if the little people will be told. Perhaps the ayylmaos are replacing the unsatisfactory Biden and Kamala in which case I support our new ant overlords.
 
They're probably PRC, but implying they're UFOs / ayylmaos might divert people away from hatethinking about corrupt ties between Beijing Biden('s handlers) and the PRC and how these could be broken with a few political decisions. Dunno, it's not as if the little people will be told. Perhaps the ayylmaos are replacing the unsatisfactory Biden and Kamala in which case I support our new ant overlords.
It tracks better saying high altitude object.

That way china wont yell, and local people who scream about china
 
It tracks better saying high altitude object.

That way china wont yell, and local people who scream about china
also keep in mind "UFO" doesn't mean "ayyys"
it just means "object that isn't identified and is flying" but everybody leaps to ayyyyy because of pop culture
 
Ohio is under control, that's why. There was a disaster, but because the government isn't California-tier it already had a contingency plan in place to deal with it, and enacted it in time to prevent things from escalating to where they couldn't be contained. Its bad, but compared to California being perpetually on fire its a nothingburger.
Admittedly I’m pretty in the dark about the Ohio situation because ultimately it doesn’t affect me and I don’t care, but in what way is it contained? What plan beyond sending emergency notifications to area cell phones did the government enact in this contingency? I feel like even hundreds of thousands of acres of uninhabited land burning up along with some homes is still less of a disaster than chemical fallout contaminating a multi-state area.
 
It's aliens, they're all over the place, especially in places like Vancouver. They have weird squinty eyes and their language is made up of weird sounds similar to something like a malfunctioning microwave oven. Thankfully they seem pretty dumb and incapable of using simple technology such as forks or spoons and instead pick up food using two small sticks. They also seem to not understand things like how to properly use a car.
 
Aliens? Lack of US info on shootdowns breeds wild ideas
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Zeke Miller, Colleen Long, and Aamer Madhani
2023-02-14 01:11:02GMT

WASHINGTON (AP) — With few confirmed details from President Joe Biden’s White House, the downing of three unknown aerial objects in as many days by U.S. fighter jets has prompted wild speculation about what they were and where they came from. It even fell to his press secretary on Monday to announce earnestly there was no indication of “aliens or extraterrestrial activity.”

The president had no public events Monday and has offered little reassurance or explanation of what to make of it all, following the discovery of a Chinese spy balloon crossing the country and the unprecedented peacetime shootdowns that have followed.

U.S. officials said they still know little about the three objects downed Friday off the coast of Alaska, Saturday over Canada and Sunday over Lake Huron. But those shootdowns have been part of a more assertive response to aerial phenomena following the balloon episode blamed on an ongoing Beijing espionage program.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre did have at least one definitive statement to try to tamp down unrestrained theories: “I know there’s been questions and concerns about this, but there is no — again, no — indication of aliens or extraterrestrial activity.”

The U.S. government insists the three objects did not pose a threat to American security and that even the massive spy balloon provided “limited additive capabilities” to China’s other surveillance programs. Still, they were shot out of the sky “out of an abundance of caution,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said.

Biden’s unparalleled decision to shoot down four objects over North America in eight days — when combined with U.S. officials’ efforts to publicly downplay the foreign threat — has furthered the dissonant messages being sent about sensitive efforts to protect the homeland.

U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, acknowledge the confusion, saying the administration wants to keep the American public from becoming unnecessarily worried while also trying to maintain a tough posture toward China.

Kirby said that while the U.S. has no specific reasons to suspect the aerial objects were spying, “we couldn’t rule that out.” He added that the most recent objects, flying between 20,000 and 40,000 feet, could have posed a remote risk to civilian planes.

That legal justification for the downings — that the objects might imperil civilian flight — is viewed by some officials as such a remote possibility that it raises questions about whether it was a mere pretext for acting tough.

Biden “wants to appear tough on China, and this is a good example of where actions speak louder than words,” said Brian Ott, co-author of “The Twitter Presidency: Donald J. Trump and the Politics of White Rage.”

“If we find ourselves next year in a presidential debate between the two of them, Trump will try to cast Biden as weak on national security, and Biden will be able turn to Trump and say, ‘How many of these Chinese balloons and unidentified objects did you shoot out of the sky?’”

Ott, a professor of communications at Missouri State University, said Biden’s relative silence on the takedown of the Chinese balloon and other objects could be guided, at least in part, by his 2024 reelection considerations. Republicans, from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell to right-wing firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, criticized Biden in the days after the Chinese balloon was spotted in U.S. airspace for being slow to act.

When pressed on whether the decision to shoot the objects down came in response to such criticism, Kirby insisted, “These were decisions based purely and simply on what was in the best interests of the American people.”

With little information to go on, senators in both parties demanded answers as they returned to Washington on Monday.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced that senators would receive a classified briefing Tuesday morning and that Congress would work in coming weeks to get the “full story of what happened.” Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat behind Schumer, said Biden “owes the country some answers.”

Republican McConnell said Biden “needs to communicate and level with the American people.” He questioned what the administration knew about China’s surveillance efforts before the first balloon crossed the country.

After the balloon was shot down, the White House revealed that such balloons had traversed U.S. territory at least three times during Trump’s administration unbeknownst to the former president or his aides — and that others have flown over dozens of nations across five continents. Kirby emphasized Monday that they were only detected by the Biden administration.

Jim Ludes, a former national defense analyst who now leads the Pell Center for International Affairs and Public Policy at Salve Regina University, said political parrying is inevitable.

“It doesn’t matter what the administration says. People are going to play politics with it and try to score points,” he said. “Either they acted too slowly, or too hastily.”

There’s good reason for the Biden administration to be cautious, Ludes added, noting that the blow-up over the aerial devices comes amid heightened tensions between China and Taiwan. The wrong statement from Biden could destabilize an already fraught situation.

“Next time we fly a B-52 down the straits, what does China do?” Ludes said. “There are opportunities for this to become very complex very quickly.”

Kirby on Monday sought to draw a distinction between the latest objects and the confirmed surveillance balloon, emphasizing their far smaller size, lack of maneuverability and the lack of any indication they were communicating before they were shot down. They were only detected, he said, because the U.S. had adjusted the sensitivity on air defense radars to detect high-flying, slow-moving objects like the surveillance balloon.

Officials have yet to retrieve any parts of the three unidentified objects, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said, citing the treacherous terrain, water and weather where they were brought down. U.S. officials could not even say whether they were balloons or some other type of aerial vehicle, and have thus far declined to share imagery taken before they were shot down.

All that is clear, it seems, is that it wasn’t ET.

Kirby echoed Jean-Pierre on that: “I don’t think the American people need to be worried about aliens with respect to these craft.”
 
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