01-26-2025, 11:11 PM
(01-26-2025, 10:07 PM)pianopraze Wrote:
oh good lord, now he says we are psionically hijacking them, making them appear in 3d space then shooting them down.
i’ll appalogize if he ever can prove any of this nonsense but it feels like he’s gone off the deep end in my opinion…
maybe believing too many liars for too long spin fictional stories?
Here’s the video on Twitter
oh so now these Non-Human Intelligences are also Trans Dimensional? Great so the ETs are DEI hires.
Look if Greer can actually put something forward, other than cake-aliens, he should do so. At this point I'm beginning to think that Trumps demand to make public those Drones everyone has been seeing, is why these UFO "Whistleblowers" are getting paid to come forward before evidence of a new "Operation Sea-Spray" comes out.
just as a reminder as to what these people will do to the public.
In 1950, the U.S. Released a Bioweapon in San Francisco | Smart News| Smithsonian Magazine
Quote:Beginning on September 26, 1950, the crew of a U.S. Navy minesweeper ship spent six days spraying Serratia marcescens into the air about two miles off the northern California coast. The project was called “Operation Sea Spray,” and its aim was to determine the susceptibility of a big city like San Francisco to a bioweapon attack by terrorists.
In the following days, the military took samples at 43 sites to track the bacteria's spread, and found that it had quickly infested not only the city but surrounding suburbs as well. During the test, residents of these areas would have inhaled millions of bacterial spores. Clearly, their test showed, San Francisco and cities with similar size and topography could face germ warfare threats. “In this regard, the experiment was a success,” writes Kreston.
But there was a catch. At the time, the US military thought that Serratia couldn’t harm humans. The bug was mostly known for the red spots it produced on infested foods and had not been widely linked to clinical conditions. That changed when one week after the test, 11 local residents checked into a Stanford University Hospital complaining of urinary tract infections.
Upon testing their pee, doctors noticed that the pathogen had a red hue. “Infection with Serratia was so rare that the outbreak was extensively investigated by the University to identify the origins of this scarlet letter bug,” writes Kreston. After scientists identified the microbe, the cases collectively became the first recorded outbreak of Serratia marcescens. One patient, a man named Edward Nevin who was recovering from prostate surgery, died, and some have suggested that the release forever changed the area's microbial ecology, as Bernadette Tansey pointed out for the San Francisco Chronicle in 2004.
The military had performed similar tests in other cities across the country over the next two decades, until Richard Nixon halted all germ warfare research in 1969. The San Francisco experiment didn’t become public knowledge until 1976.