The level of speculation and disinformation on this subject is absolutely amazing. It is essentially the same as the area 51 discussions. An original "witness," with questionable moral grounds and psychological stability proposes a situation that most people want to believe in, and have no ability to ever prove or disprove. Somehow, after reading a bit of "information" on the subject, people throw out their own crackpot theories and opinions as fact(by the way, this is all my opinion, not fact ).
The one single fact that I have been able to find on this subject is that the USS Eldridge exists/existed. Everything else is wild speculation about government interference and black helicopter conspiracy theories. I am by no means a scientist, and therefore I cannot comment on the accuracy of the theories, but for there to be so little actual evidence of these events is pretty telling.
What I would accept is that theories about the scientific possibility of invisibility were certainly generated and discussed within the armed forces. However, do we believe that the Navy would actually conduct these experiments with people aboard the ship rather than testing on inanimate objects first? That would seem to be the most logical course of action, just from a cost perspective. Soldiers cost money, why waste them?
Overall, I would guess that this is an issue that has been magnified and embellished for many years, and has probably as much truth to it as does H.G Wells' "The Time Machine," Or one I found even more interesting: The device used created by Nikolas Tesla in "The Majestic." Part cloning device, part teleportation device. Hmm, crackpot theories are fun!!
2007-01-10 03:00:47
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answer #1
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answered by Andy Jones 2
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sure, it concerns plenty... there's a distinction between mythology and historic reality. Mythology has been billed as a "training device"... and yet for the most section it isn't useful.... Zeus commited rape on 26 events... what style of helpful celebration does that set ? it type of feels to me that maximum mythology isn't some thing more effective than an historic type of leisure... and in that recognize, it really is pleasing, yet of no actual religious value. It does no longer belong in a faith, it belongs contained in the fiction dept. i personally don't like mythology, as i wager you are able to tell. My faith had in consumer-friendly words a very few myths, and contained in the well-known revival, they have been properly disguarded... lengthy gone to the dumpster, with the benefits of the Goddess. on the different hand, my faith has a lengthy and honorable custom of real historic service to the community. it really is extremely worth keeping... and that i do emphasize that, in my teachings. Many advantages, Jeanie
2016-12-28 14:57:01
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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I believe experiments in visual stealth technology took place but all the other crazy stuff is pure fiction.
2007-01-10 02:51:46
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answer #3
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answered by crazyhorse19682003 3
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It made a good movie, and there really might have been a project done like this. Did it work? Of course not.
2007-01-10 02:51:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Its all true. And it is also true that many men dies from that experiment. Just as some of those pictures show.......................
2007-01-10 09:10:12
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answer #5
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answered by kilroymaster 7
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