Drones, Drones, Everywhere A Drone
This has been an occurrence that has been happening more often than most know
I’m not saying it’s aliens…
And since it’s finally come ashore in Houston maybe I should take this thing a little bit more seriously. So what’s going on?
It’s an invasion from Iran! Or China! Or Russia! Or, quite possibly Canada! Especially after Trump lowered the boom on that ninny from the north.
It could be an invasion of Walmart drones, just ask the Florida retiree who shot one during an attempted package delivery.
Or, it’s a test of our own military capabilities, or…
…it’s a Chris Christie food run. That might actually be closest to the truth.
Whatever it is and whoever is behind it remains a mystery. New Jersey has been the recent epicenter. I’ve only been to Jersey to catch a flight, one in which I sat on the tarmac for three hours and forty-eight minutes before we finally took off. I swore no more incursions into New Jersey. Obviously someone didn’t get the memo.
The White House and military mouthpieces are busy shooting down rumors (but not drones) and offering alternative explanations such as normal airline traffic, tricks of the eye, or invasion crafts from Trump and the J6 Raiders. Yet even Trump has no desire to go to Jersey right now, especially with those things flying around.
However, the White House, the DHS, and the military have been more than aware of this situation going back years.
In December 2023, drones invaded the airspace of Langley Air Force Base for seventeen consecutive nights. These incursions supposedly kicked off a series of meetings inside the White House.
Reports of the drones reached President Biden and set off two weeks of White House meetings after the drones first appeared in December last year. Officials from agencies including the Defense Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Pentagon’s UFO office joined outside experts to throw out possible explanations as well as ideas about how to respond.
Drone incursions into restricted airspace was already worrying national-security officials. Two months earlier, in October 2023, five drones flew over a government site used for nuclear-weapons experiments. The Energy Department’s Nevada Nuclear Security Site outside Las Vegas detected four of the drones over three days. Employees spotted a fifth.
U.S. officials said they didn’t know who operated the drones in Nevada, a previously unreported incursion, or for what reason. A spokeswoman said the facility has since upgraded a system to detect and counter drones.
The incursion into Langley airspace caused the Air Force to move F-22 fighter jets to another location for their protection. In what world does the military allow such incursions to degrade operational control of our homeland? Oh, sorry, they’ve done that on the border.
The Langley drones were not off-the-shelf Radio Shack specials. Just as the recent sightings, these drones were described as being at least twenty feet long and flew at 100 miles per hour. Just as in the northeast and, apparently in Galveston, these drones flew in from the ocean. Because drones run on batteries, regardless the advancement of battery technology, they still have to land to get re-juiced which does lend credence to a “mothership” somewhere off the coast.
But just this past week, drones were spotted over Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Lake Michigan and Lake Erie are close by but how would an Iranian mothership get into the Great Lakes? Via the Erie Canal?
On December 3rd and 4th, drones of varying size flew over the U.S. Ramstein Air Base in Germany as well as German arms manufacturer Rheinmetall and the chemicals group BASF.
In November, drones over U.S. and British military installations were sighted. “The USAF confirmed ‘small unmanned aerial systems’ (UASs) were spotted flying above and in the vicinity of Royal Air Force bases in Lakenheath, Mildenhall, and Feltwell in eastern England between November 20 and 22,” according to various reports. Again, like at Ramstein, the drones were described as different in size, configuration, and ability.
Could it all be a military exercise?
In September of 2022, an exercise over the skies of Fort Irwin in California was held to test readiness and expose troops to what a drone assault would look and feel like.
Brig. Gen. Curtis Taylor posted the video on Twitter under his official account, with the caption stating:
“At sunrise this morning a swarm of 40 quadcopters all equipped with cameras, MILES, and lethal munition capable launched in advance of 11th ACR’s [11th Armored Cavalry Regiment] attack on a prepared defense by 1AD [1st Armored Division]. Drones will be as important in the first battle of the next war as artillery is today.”
These drones, however, were K-Mart specials that were modified, just as a terrorist group would do, in order to attack military installations.
Military drills, such as this one, have been documented and so any theory that suggests U.S. military involvement in some sort of readiness drill cannot be ruled out.
If so, the crafts used could very well be manufactured by defense contractor Pterodynamics. The company has been at the forefront of unique drone designs to meet military needs. The Transwing X-P4 is designed much like a Harrier jet with both vertical and horizontal flight capabilities and is designed for ocean-based operations. While being six feet long with a wingspan of twenty-two feet, it could certainly appear to be as large as an SUV, to which many described as the size of these drones. Scaled up to a thirty foot wingspan, the craft can fly almost a thousand miles with a nearly 300 pound payload. It eventually could even take on larger dimensions so as to transfer personnel ship-to-ship or ship-to-land.
It would make sense for this to be some sort of training exercise, especially when considering the aircraft is built for coming in off the sea. The thing is, the X-P4 is not classified so why would the military feel inclined to hide this from the public? While the company received the go-ahead with production after it completed its testing capabilities in 2022, could they have built thousands by now? That’s how many witnesses have claimed to have seen.
One ominous theory is that these are U.S. military drones being used as nuclear “sniffers”. According to sources, up to 60 nuclear warheads surrendered by Ukraine at the end of the Cold War have gone missing. That doesn’t necessarily mean that they are in nefarious hands, just that they are unaccountable by non-classified sources. However, these sources have stated that one such warhead could be, in fact, on its way here in order to further the drumbeat for a war with Russia. That could explain the frantic flight patterns appearing over the eastern seaboard. But if that were the case, wouldn’t they be operating during the day as well? And, as James Kunstler pointed out, it doesn’t take a nuclear scientist to know that hiding a nuke in a lead container makes it a hell of a lot less likely to be detected.
The bottom line, only those who are flying the drones know what’s happening. We can only hope that some expert will stand up and tell us exactly what the hell is going on.
It has to be aliens!
More on the Navy’s drone system: