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11 answers

Yes, I do believe that an extraterrestrial craft[s] crashed on the Corn ranch and the Plains of St. Augustine. In all likelihood there were at least 2 crashes according to eyewitness and whistle-blower testimonies. As for the argument that the crashes were from weather balloons under Project Mogul, think again. Since when are weather balloons shipped to Carswell AFB in Texas, then onto Wright Air Field in Dayton, Ohio?! Why was the mortician Glenn Dennis (Roswell) asked to provide 3 to 4 foot caskets, and his opinion about dry ice to preserve bodies? There are hundreds of eye witnesses who have since corroborated many aspects of a "flying saucer" crash as reported by the Roswell Daily Newspaper. There are many books on this topic. I recommend you get the Majestic Documents by Dr. Robert Wood which details declassified military and government documents concerning the Roswell crash. Incidentally, Dr. Wood is a physicist who knew Dr. Robert Oppenheimer of the Manhattan Project.

2007-06-18 05:04:31 · answer #1 · answered by ? 3 · 1 1

"So in case you suspect in worldwide warming, do you apart from would have faith in Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, or that OFU's have crashed in Roswell, NM?" An the two correct question could be "So in case you have not got faith in worldwide warming, do you suspect in Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, or that OFU's have crashed in Roswell, NM?" at the same time as i will admit Roswell is a sprint sketchy, I won't pass to date as to proclaim it particularly is a huge governmental conspiracy. I won't call out those that do, although, be they AGW-proponents or not. there's a superb line between technological know-how and lore, and that i think of maximum human beings comprehend it. And no, AGW isn't in step with blind faith. On a tangential word, the Drake equation, it is designed to predict the variety of sensible species living interior the universe, shows there ARE different existence types available. The complicated section is bobbing up for the the main suitable option values for the equation. of course they're all tough estimates, yet even the main conservative of such yield >a million estimates.

2016-11-25 20:54:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This universe is too large and diverse to rule out possible alien life and UFOs. I will NOT say it is impossible, but it is very unlikely.
We can't judge the motivations of alien societies but it is a likely assumption that, if they are visiting us, they would either let us know, or would remain undetected.
If detected, cover-ups wouldn't work, at least not for long.
My assumption is NO.

2007-06-18 04:50:07 · answer #3 · answered by Philip H 7 · 0 1

It's very unlikely.

It takes a lot of power and ability to cross intersteller space. That means that if aliens came here, they were incredibly advanced, technologically speaking. And then, once they travel at least 4 lightyears, they crash in the desert? That doesn't sound too likely to me.

2007-06-18 05:00:58 · answer #4 · answered by Ralfcoder 7 · 1 1

No. It was a large, high-altitude balloon that was undergoing tests for the purposes of spying on the USSR. Do a search on "Project Mogul" for the real information. There was nothing sinister about it.

2007-06-18 04:20:02 · answer #5 · answered by JLynes 5 · 0 2

Something may have crashed there but it was not from an alien planet.

2007-06-18 04:35:01 · answer #6 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 1 1

Yes, I do. I know for a fact we have a large underground facility there as well.

2007-06-18 04:17:37 · answer #7 · answered by SALSA 6 · 1 2

Yes, Do you think they'll ever let me have my space ship back?

2007-06-18 05:48:27 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Nope I don´t!

2007-06-18 05:21:13 · answer #9 · answered by Don Eppes 4 · 0 1

No.

2007-06-18 04:30:20 · answer #10 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 1 1

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