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Post by sammy on Nov 30, 2022 14:49:53 GMT 9.5
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Post by sammy on Nov 30, 2022 22:28:44 GMT 9.5
Sounds like a corporate gig fox. Either that or so illegal they couldnt show affiliation to the government. God only knows what they were doing down there.
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Post by stewartedwards on Dec 1, 2022 1:31:47 GMT 9.5
1. I would like to watch that, but don’t see any obvious listings for it in the U.K. yet, mind you I only spent a minute on it. First episode of second series was as far as I got. 2. The Devil’s Sea/Dragons Triangle in Asia, the deepest part of our oceans intrigues me. Would love to get in a submarine down there, only a few have, and the paperwork licensing issues are apparently not easy to get. Bermuda Triangle not so much. Hence my interest in your post Sammy. 3. “May be hiding” = “may not be” in marketing! 4. This triangle seems to cover half of Alaska, from a quick look at a map. Ok maybe a third or quarter, but a lot of the state. 5. Have other reasons for wildlife becoming more agressive to humans been explored? Eg more hunting, more contact with hunters, etc. Or climate changes resulting in competition with humans for food or territory? 6. “Strange forces” are only strange if you don’t understand them. Hopefully they will show it soon in the U.K. 7. Given that Alaska used to be part of Russia, (pre 18 Oct 1896), I wonder what they have on this.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 1:51:03 GMT 9.5
1. I would like to watch that, but don’t see any obvious listings for it in the U.K. yet, mind you I only spent a minute on it. First episode of second series was as far as I got. 2. The Devil’s Sea/Dragons Triangle in Asia, the deepest part of our oceans intrigues me. Would love to get in a submarine down there, only a few have, and the paperwork licensing issues are apparently not easy to get. Bermuda Triangle not so much. Hence my interest in your post Sammy. 3. “May be hiding” = “may not be” in marketing! 4. This triangle seems to cover half of Alaska, from a quick look at a map. Ok maybe a third or quarter, but a lot of the state. 5. Have other reasons for wildlife becoming more agressive to humans been explored? Eg more hunting, more contact with hunters, etc. Or climate changes resulting in competition with humans for food or territory? 6. “Strange forces” are only strange if you don’t understand them. Hopefully they will show it soon in the U.K. 7. Given that Alaska used to be part of Russia, (pre 18 Oct 1896), I wonder what they have on this. Here is a collection of public info referring to the Alaska Triangle. www.cracked.com/article_30936_the-alaska-triangle-the-bermuda-triangles-weird-cousin-up-north.htmlAccording to this site looking for it may be hazardous to your health. "Now, humans go missing all the time, as tragic as it is, but what sets the Alaska Triangle apart is just how frequent missing person cases are. Since 1988, there have been more than 16,000 people reported missing. To explain how such a strangely common occurrence happens, people have turned to theories involving monsters or paranormal occurrences." It also appears to be a hot spot for sasquatch sightings and UFO activity.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 1:54:53 GMT 9.5
Having a hard time finding anything on the aggressive animals...
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Post by stewartedwards on Dec 2, 2022 2:11:12 GMT 9.5
Thanks Sammy.
From a quick google, 500,000 go missing in the U.S. and about half that in the U.K. each year. In that context 16,000 isn’t that many, but it will be a higher relative percentage I would guess if the people in Alaska. A good number of them may be ‘expected’ eg get lost, the cold, bears, etc.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 2:24:23 GMT 9.5
It was estimated 2000 people a year go missing in the triangle. Considering this is all no man's land it does raise some eyebrows. Maybe rough to survive, maybe something else.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 2:36:37 GMT 9.5
For comparison in the entire state of Oregon pop. 4.2 million on average just over 4,000 go missing a year.
This is cities, national parks, wilderness, etc..
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 2:40:45 GMT 9.5
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 2:43:17 GMT 9.5
"The rate per 1,000 people is more than twice the national missing persons average, and the rate of people who are never found is even higher. The numbers do imply that something else is going on here other than merely “getting lost in the mountains.”"
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Post by stewartedwards on Dec 2, 2022 3:43:26 GMT 9.5
"The rate per 1,000 people is more than twice the national missing persons average, and the rate of people who are never found is even higher. The numbers do imply that something else is going on here other than merely “getting lost in the mountains.”" Not necessarily Sammy. Forgive me but I have a bit of background in stats. My thought process here… 1. Those numbers do not imply that something else is going on. Because.. 2. You are in a harsh, albeit beautiful, wilderness. 3. Most of that wildness is pretty remote from anything. 4. Snow, ice, storms coming in very fast, are common in Alaska (per TV documentaries anyway). 5. These can all lead to getting disoriented and lost, or 6. Physically hurt from falls, broken bones, hypothermia etc. 7. Then there is the wildlife, eg bears to consider. As the area is less trodden than other mountain areas you must ensure that you are comparing like with like, re rates per 1000. A mountain range amounts lots of settlements with good line of sight to them, is not the same as an isolated harsh wilderness. Don’t get me wrong Sammy, there may be dark forces at play, but you must exclude the explainable and compare apples with apples. The implications could be… 1. As your quote alluded to, something other than getting lost. Consider 6+7 above. 2. Something else. Twenty years ago I went with the flow of this sort of stuff as I wanted to understand that perspective (eg conspiracy v the different types of Freemasonry) so I largely kept sthum about the maths, the analysis, judgements etc. But I now know that conspiracy stuff is cyclical, for each generation I guess, and there comes a point where you really have to stand back, and try to be as objective as you can, looking at the underlying maths, and the quality of the evidence. Egs… Is a retired general, pilot or policeman in old age dottage when talking about eg conspiracies or aliens, or is it just that people can’t ‘believe’ that subject because it offends their comfort zones? Is the data from a source designed to provide independent facts or to sell something (a worldview, viewer ratings etc). There is an old (Russian I believe) saying, trust but verify.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 4:26:27 GMT 9.5
For the record my only quote for this was..
"Maybe rough to survive, maybe something else."
I don't think dark entities involved and if real I suspect it is called the dark pyramid because it is made from volcanic rock (black stone).
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Post by stewartedwards on Dec 2, 2022 4:36:40 GMT 9.5
For the record my only quote for this was.. "Maybe rough to survive, maybe something else." I don't think dark entities involved and if real I suspect it is called the dark pyramid because it is made from volcanic rock (black stone). noted, and sorry for the misquote. Being tired is my only explanation.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 4:47:22 GMT 9.5
Haha no worries. All good here.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 10:47:04 GMT 9.5
Watching the show right now. They talked about your heli in the vast wilderness fox with guys in black uniforms no insignia. There was a massive underground detonation of a nuke in China. It sent shockwaves across Alaska and with the sensors able to tell there was a void underground containing a pyramid bigger then the one in Giza.
They aired this knowledge on a show when it happened, then it was scrubbed and never shown again.
In the pyramid show a anonymous girl claims to have remote veiwed the pyramid. Described the base and pyramid almost in full. She said it was a power source that UFO's use as a recharge station.
More to come..
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 11:31:31 GMT 9.5
Animal time:
One day in Fairbanks (middle of triangle) a whole bunch of lamprey fell onto the city. Horrible ancient eel like creatures that feed like parasites.
Another time all the sea birds just started dying. At the same time 10 whales died off a single beachfront.
Again later with seals 60 found dead some missing hair.
On another beach the largest recorded walrus gathering a staggering 35k walrus on a single beach.
They suspect electromagnetism is effecting the animals even just from the north pole alone. Side effects of this can be very abstract including hallucinations.
They think this also accounts for the increased aggression with being confused, unbalanced, disoriented, etc..
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Post by paul on Dec 2, 2022 11:59:21 GMT 9.5
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 12:11:40 GMT 9.5
Haha! Sorry but I mean.. HAHAHA!
Lamprey double not cool tho.
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Post by sammy on Dec 2, 2022 22:21:00 GMT 9.5
Interesting fox thanks! Perhaps they didn't like the prayers coming out of Fairbanks.
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Post by foxfires on Dec 3, 2022 0:09:56 GMT 9.5
Thinking along lines as EARTH Is living breathing creature on it Sentient discussions Compared to us in meat suit average of 70 till point croak for most or some Such would Seriously explain Moses as an Top Throttle Earth energy operator Numbers 16:31 As soon as Moses had finished saying all this, the ground beneath them split open, 32 and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed them and their households— all Korah’s men and all their possessions. 33 They went down alive into Sheol with all they owned. The earth closed over them, and they vanished from the assembly.… Numbers 12:3 Now the man Moses was very humble, (very meek) more than all men who were on the face of the earth Hope A406 & company accepts this as Trying to read people into Published Stuff a few thousand years old Below seem living stones if im reading it correctly its source is from www.youtube.com/watch?v=kreIElqY4KY From like 8 to 11 min into utube vid
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