Much later in the day, February 8th, on the outward bound leg, heading back out to the coast.
So I have to go inland to do any kind of interaction with humans and their infrastructure.
And when I'm done, I head back out to the coast and the interaction with the rest of the planet without very many humans.
Anyway, so let's talk about spaceships and the Ukraine war.
So I don't get into the Ukraine war.
That's the coordinated destruction of the Khazarian Empire in its hidden form.
And so they're going to, you know, it's not Russia.
Russia is coordinating with other groups and they're taking down the Khazarians.
Anyway, so wherever we have wars, we get all through history.
I mean, we've got paintings all the way back into 8-900 AD where people painted UFOs up in the sky while on the ground they're painting the battles that attracted the UFOs.
So they came here as like spectators to see us do all of our nasty shit and hack at each other with swords and stuff.
And they've always found a higher concentration of UFO evidence, hints, etc., wherever we have wars.
So it's understandable that we're going to get some more UFO activity over Ukraine.
What's interesting though is this, there's this Ukrainian scientist who had been, I think it was NATO.
I think he's doing it for NATO, but he's doing some work with tracking comets and meteors that would ultimately, if you actually look at how he's doing it and stuff, is going to be able to track even very fast-moving micrometeors, you know, little tiny guys.
Because what it's doing is not depending on the mass for us to see it, but rather is using two cameras separated by 120 miles or 120 kilometers, excuse me.
Separating two cameras, very high-speed cameras, very wide aperture, very great depth of field.
Cameras that are pixelated, they rely on pixels in order to get the image.
But the cameras are very interesting because the angle of light is ascertainable as it strikes the chip.
So you can get an angle, so to speak, of the pixels involved.
Anyway, so two cameras separated by a known distance, both aimed at the same spot in the sky.
And they're basically able to see meteors, etc., etc., in space, comets, and get a ranging effect.
So you can really understand how far away these things are and how fast they're moving because you have these two points of reference separated by a pretty sizable difference in space, these 120 kilometers, and they're very high speed.
So they can be activated at essentially the same instant remotely.
Taking the same picture, the same instant, same areas of the sky from 120 degree or 120 kilometer separation, which gives them a known fractional part of a degree of the Earth in order to do the calculations to provide all of this really cool information.
And so they've been doing this for some while, going in every night and checking out all the meteors and the micrometeors and this kind of thing that happen to be captured by these cameras.
Ukraine is a good place for this.
Both of the places where the cameras are located are without light loom from nearby residences because there just aren't any.
So it's really a nice setup.
And anyway, so the guy that's in charge of it all, he was sort of like playing around, messing around with stuff, and decided to try doing some of this stuff during the day.
He had a different, or okay, so he was trying to work out a little bit of math when he first got into this aspect of it.
But so they started running this stuff during the daytime.
Now, the two cameras taking pictures of the daylight sky is entirely different than trying to capture you know movement of lights in the night sky um what they discovered though when they were trying to do these um arranging mathematic issues was that they discovered that there's something going on there all right and so it took them a while to figure out what it was but they were getting discrete images simultaneous on both
cameras separated by distance in the image itself of very very very fast moving objects but they weren't getting the picture of the objects per se what they were getting was basically the disturbance in the sunlight that these objects leave as they pass the cameras field of view so so it basically here's the idea you're taking a picture of the you got a camera he was pointing it up to the sky and
you're taking a picture of the empty sky there's nothing up there well I mean you know birds insects that kind of thing but these are not birds and insects won't trigger this particular process at all I mean they're easily easily eliminated from these these two camera approaches right basically anything that shows up on one camera that doesn't show up on another is closer etc etc you can just throw it out of your your calculations for
potential range and field of view anyway so he takes a picture of the empty sky and they were as I say they were doing calculations for calibration issues not and so basic functionality kind of stuff if when they discovered this new and interesting phenomena and the new and interesting phenomena is that there was something in the sky that was disturbing the light so so
your eye takes about a tenth of a second for light to go into the eye and register on the cones the light moves into your eye and then there's this giant delay of a tenth of a second as those cones react and give you the sensation of the light in the visual cortex of your brain which is at the back part of your brain so that whole process takes a tenth of a second these cameras are snapping photos
where the camera and the pixels can react in fractional bits of a tenth of a second so they're operating it at thousands of a second thousands of parts of a second so they're very very very very fast and what they discovered was that if they took these two pictures they would find within the pictures the same phenomena happening based on the angle and stuff in the same area of the sky and they're sure it's actually occurring that it's not
a an artifact of their process or anything and what this thing is it is occurring is that there is something that is moving through the field of vision fast enough that the human eye could not detect it so it's invisible to us further it appears to be basically invisible to light okay so light it's moving so fast that light won't reflect off of it so
this is this is why I keep calling it the Klingon bird of prey right because their light disruption technology was what prevented them from being seen because light would come on up and it would get disrupted and never actually reflect off of the surface so you wouldn't see it and so that's sort of what we got going on here these things are moving so fast that we don't get any reflected light off of it that would come down to our eyes but we know they're there because they are actually shielding light from the Sun hitting the camera
so so for you know if the camera happens to snap at the a picture at the appropriate time you will see in that image a lack of light from the Sun where this thing is So it's literally blocking out the light that would otherwise go into the chip in the camera.
But it's moving so fast that reflected light can't bounce off of it and then get into the camera to show us a picture of it.
So what we end up with is this like absence, so sort of a hole in the data coming into the camera.
And if you take that data hole, you can look at it in a software sense and you can see how big the hole is, where it comes in on the image, what angle it comes in at, what angle it leaves at, all of the various different parameters that are used to judge these meteors and micrometeors and stuff at nighttime when you're not dealing with sunlight trying to get into the camera lens.
And in fact, are looking at, you know, only reflected light coming back to you.
So it's a very interesting new kind of a UFO sensing device here.
Okay, this is basically a serendipitous, fortuitous discovery by these Ukrainian scientists of this new way of looking for and at these unidentified aerial phenomena, the UFO, the UAP.
And so they're doing that.
And so the guy gets intrigued.
He starts doing this stuff during the day.
You can't do it at night.
Their system doesn't work at night because it's not working on reflected light.
It's working on blocking light.
And so for our perspective, it's very much like someone standing behind you and moving their hand extremely rapidly, or maybe even like a whip or a fishing pole, extremely rapidly in your peripheral vision.
And you don't see the object.
You just know from the impact of the light on the back of your eye that there is a disturbance between you and the light source.
And that's basically what we're looking at here, right?
Only it's really fucking fast.
Okay, now, so here's the thing: these micrometeorite analyses software or software programs to analyze the data coming in from these cameras are the software is really cool.
Okay, I mean, these guys really thought about it.
I like the way it was written and the information it brings back.
So these guys, because of the way that they set out with the parameters that they had for the micrometeors, ended up with, like, in my opinion, almost a perfect UFO detection system because this not only tells us where they are in the sky, how fast they're moving, and the angles they're coming into the sky.
And by the way, a lot of these things zip around, do U-turns, all different kinds of shit, right?
But when they're captured in the daytime on this, we're also getting sensations of, or information of mass.
So the Ukrainian fellow has gotten images and data showing 100 meter long, so 300 feet, more than 300 feet long, UFOs that are moving at like incredible speeds.
Speeds so fast that you don't calculate them in miles per hour.
You calculate them in degrees of arc crossed in the sky per second.
It's not possible for me to give you any meaningful understanding of how fast these things are moving.
I know how they're moving.
I know why they're moving this fast.
There's a whole lot of stuff we don't know, and there's a whole lot of stuff I don't know about them.
But my understanding of the magnetics and that I believe these things are magnetically propelled.
Okay, it makes sense for because of the kind of disturbance that we're getting within the atmosphere as they pass and the residuals of that disturbance have convinced me that indeed they are working off of a magnetically or working off of a magnetic propulsion system.
And I won't go into it, I won't take your time with it.
Most people aren't interested in the details.
I find it fascinating because hopefully I could build one.
But in any event, though, so these things are moving so fast and they are so huge that it's how do I want to say this?
Okay, so these things are so big and moving so fast that we have uh issues even trying we would have issues even trying to stop them so let me put it this way they're moving so fast that if we were to like put up a brick wall say that we made a a giant building and put a uh a brick roof over the top of it and it was really really really big these things are moving so fast that they are very
to, I don't want to say go, okay, so they would go through the building, smash it to absolute bazillions of particles in passing through,
but the way we're looking at the information coming out of this guy's system, these are invisible, and they may actually also be affected materially in the sense that it might not be possible for this thing moving that fast to actually smash into a
building, all right, because of the nature of the magnetics that we're looking at.
So as an instance here, when we have a jet airplane and we go really, really, really, really fast, we develop a bow wave of air.
We're pushing air in front of our jet airplane, no matter how pointy we make that plane, no matter how sleek we make it, even with the stealth fighters and those kinds of things that have this very thin leading edge, even with those
structures, we still are pushing air ahead of our vehicles as we go along, and these UAPs do not, all right, so they are not interacting with matter the way that our physical structures interact with matter when they travel.
So this, again, is another reason for me to think that this is done at this magnetic level, and I'm not going to go into a bunch of that at the moment.
But it's, anyway, this UFO scanning process is a very important discovery.
We could set this up all over the planet and look at them.
We can't interact with them.
We can't slow them down.
Maybe we could talk to them.
Maybe they care to talk to us.
I just don't know.
We don't know what the objects themselves are, nor could we anticipate their purpose, other than if we had them, we'd be out, you know, tourists, that kind of thing.
But nonetheless, we know they're there.
We know they're solid.
We know they're built in the sense that we can determine their shapes.
The shapes vary.
The sizes vary.
There are certain consistencies within the shapes and sizes of these UFOs that they see.
So, for instance, we've got 40-foot tic-tac kind of guys, and we have these 100-meter-long kind of guys, and they all appear to share the same proportionality.
So, the 100-meter-long guy is as wide proportionally as is the tic-tac, and these proportions may be critical, may be required.
I just don't know.
There's so much we don't know about this.
Nonetheless, though, the technology is really cool.
It promises to give us a, if we get through this social hump that we're going through here with all of the breakdown, the Woconians, all of that, the communism rising, the central banks freaking out, all of that kind of shit.
If we get through that, at least we now have a technology that could be spread around the planet, and we could watch these guys, right?
We could see what they're doing and where they're going and stuff.
And so, this fellow's mechanism for watching them during the day doesn't work at night, so we'll have to come up with something for that.
There are some hints there as to what we might be able to use to accomplish that, but nonetheless, so here we are with these things during the day, and we're seeing these visitors come on down, and they don't come in a straight line necessarily.
They might swoop in and do a little spiral thing and take off somewhere.
We don't know where they're going or what they're doing.
They're obviously inbound into the planet.
Thereafter, we lose track of them.
So there's obviously some shit going on here on this planet that humanity is not participating in, other than as freaked-out casual observers.
It's my opinion that as part of this waking process, and I think we'll get into this part of the waking process in this summer, but it is my opinion that humans are going to get a lot more aware of themselves and time and such things as these UFO visitors.
And we're going to be discussing that in a much more open fashion and actually doing things to find some and find some more data out about this and also figure this stuff out to kind of come up with an idea of okay, you know, what really is going on here.
And, you know, who are these people?
What are they doing here?
And how are they going to be interacting with this?
And do we need to be concerned, etc., etc., right?
I'm paranoid.
You know, I don't like all these space aliens showing up and I'm not aware of it.
So that's, as I say, you know, I'm paranoid.
Take all this stuff with a grain of salt.
But nonetheless, it is factual that this guy has discovered that in Ukraine, we're seeing massive amounts of UFO activity through his scanning device.
And it makes sense because of the Ukrainian war.
And these UFOs are coming down and looping around in circles and stuff as though they're observers, as though they're just hanging out checking out what's happening.
Anyway, coming up to my next stop, I've had problems locating tractor parts.
Everything out here corrodes.
I've got a bunch of literally never been used before connectors exposed to the air out here that have totally corroded themselves into non-use, just sitting there.
All right, what's that?
Yahoo doing okay.
Anyway, so just an interesting noodle, right?
Lots of UFO activity.
I'm not going to be particularly surprised.
I'll be jumping up and down and happy as a clam at high tide this summer.
If in June, July, or August, we start getting this big pop of UFO discussion, especially if we're talking about discussion of hidden documents and, you know, government actually ponying up some of the stuff that they know.
All this stuff's coming out.
Government is not going to survive the way that you understand it.
All of the mountains of classified information are going to go away.
We're going to have tons of this stuff revealed, and our whole social order is in the process of changing.
It must, as a necessity, it must change in order that we survive because we're so close to this like 1177 BC kind of an event, you know, the collapse of the Bronze Age, which, according to what I'm looking at, that all occurred in like less than a year.
Anyway, so I'm at the construction site here, so I got to get some shit done.
I'll make another one of these in a bit.
There's just so much to talk about, guys.
Everybody should go and listen to Max Egan too when he pops up from an Acapulco.