Laser induced plasma, that's why they did the experiments in between 2 major bases (need of qualified well trained mil. observers), also this is part of the reason they agreed to compensate for one of the affected's treatment) You should research this topic, you will be surprised how much of the "unexplained" is .... explainable ☺ I hope you dig into the laser induced plasma and it's aplications and research, you will love it, I'm sure!
As a recently retired US Air Force member, I can definitely say that having the Base Commander send the Vice Commander out on the second night would be a HUGE deal. For that to happen, the A1C and SSgt would have to convince a long chain of skeptical individuals while under the threat of making "false official statements" punishable by the Uniform Code of Military Justice (Article 107 includes Dishonorable Discharge, total forfeiture of pay and allowances, and confinement in military prison for five years). To reach the base commander, at a minimum, they had to go through their flight commander, squadron commander, group commander, and possibly their wing commander (if it was a composite base). All of these individuals are college educated professionals that would definitely question the claims of the incident.
I can confirm as a current Air Force A1C that buddy definitely saw something worthwhile to run it up that far, considering it took us a year to convince the squadron commander to give us cold weather gear... I'm stationed in Alaska 😂
Nice man. This is great to hear because this is my favorite UFO incident of all time. By far the most credible and believable One. I am big into conspiracies and question everything in life.
@@GameTimeWhy Critical thinking and logic should have actually pointed you in the direction of "aliens are actually the most likely culprit." The reason being: nobody on Earth has this technology. If they did we'd all be royally fucked right now due to obvious reasons.
I got freaked out by the SpaceX satellites too once. I work ground crew at an international airport and one morning, one of my workers pointed up and just asked me “What’s that?” I looked up and immediately got chills, because I’m now looking at a weird string of lights flying slowly over the airport, and I have no idea what it is.
oh my god we lost it the first time we saw one of those lol, we had been drinking and went to go buy another bottle and we had no idea what it was for like 30 minutes
The aspect I find most interesting from the halt tape is the barnyard animals going quiet, animals going quiet usually is a sign of a predator or what they considered a predator.. Something to consider.
@@RoanokeTales I'm happy you're persistent in this. I can't come up with an answer of why a company based in ad revenue limits viewership that isn't nonsensical.
funny, I just check my notifications, you know that Bell icon on the RU-vid screen, top right corner, and I find the latest videos easily, or I just go to his channel directly, yes I am that much of an info nerd, he gives me all the science facts that I crave.
@@Nobody_Fn_Important Oddly, I'm not subbed at all (I know, I know, I'll do it now) and every upload by Roanoke turns up in my 'home' page almost as soon as it's uploaded, probably because I regularly watch and rewatch the Tales channel particularly. I'm not saying that youtube *doesn't* not notify subscribers or bury this channel etc, it's just the weird inconsistency that I don't get. At the end of the day it's all high level logic imlpemented through applied math, you'd think it'd 'just work'.
The spaceX satellites scared the absolute shit out of me the first time I saw them. I called my dad on the phone out of breath like "OUGH...DAD.....THE *SKY*" When I found out they were just the satellites, I was equal parts relieved, embarrassed, and a little disappointed
They scared me once too. I work ground crew at an international airport, and one morning as we’re working a plane, one of my workers just pointed to the sky and asked me “What’s that?” I looked up and my blood went cold, because I’m now looking at what appears to be a string of lights slowly flying over the airport and I had no idea what it was.
Fun fact: Hyper sonics can be easily tracked since they produce plasma when flying. which is why America "abandoned" them. Edit: they aren't tracked cause of the plasma, they are tracked by radar due to how they launch. They straight up then curve towards the target it's at this point they can be intercepted.
for some reason, talking about plasma gets my blood pumping. reality is like, "oh, you like solids AND liquids? we'll just stick them together when things really get hot."
@@teddnaing6851 from everything i've read yes and no. according to reports 5 out of the last seven shot at ukraine have been intercepted. is this propaganda? don't know.
Back in 1995, I talked to a security police officer, who was there at Rendlesham forest, guarding the perimeter. He told me about these fast, moving lights that was moving so swiftly through the forest that their impressions was, they were under some sort of attack. UFOs were not even considered at the time. This was before Rendlesham went main stream on this. A lot of the security police were young airman at the time and were shipped out shortly afterwards, and were brief never to talk about it. The reason why he brought it up to me was because the staff Sergeant that was in charge went to aviation weekly or some publication like that, and gave his account. It was only brought up to me because he was griping the fact that the staff Sergeant was talking about something that was supposed to be never be talked about to the public.
He griped about it being discussed in public. . . . . .while discussing it in public. Sadly, I can kinda believe that part. Humans do stuff like that all the time. Hypocrisy is kind of our biggest jam.
Anytime I hear a black triangular craft I think of the NightHawk and how the government was pretty much rushed into admitting it’s existence cause too many ppl saw it. Maybe that’s all this was? Maybe they were working on the Night Hawk or something like it much earlier than we thought?
The BBC did a lovecraftian radio play trilogy. the second series called "whisperer in darkness" they updated the original and set it in Rendlesham, it's pretty well done and definitely worth a listen.
Correct me if I am wrong but I could've sworn the roswell incident was declassified and revealed to be HALO(high altitude low opening) testing. Which is why they had parachute type material and alien looking 'bodies' (dummies used to test conditions).
This is hogwash since that project didn’t actually start until after the Roswell incident. Seriously. First tests for HALO was in the 1950’s not 1947z The “declassified” nature of Roswell is so much bull shit it is a hack job of a cover up. Literally ever been to the Roswell museum? They have the original clippings of the news articles. They all saw saucers. Not a bloody parachute or weather balloon. All hogwash
@@llamadeus11 It's strange and awesome! Also too many coincidences here, I happened to be at a place called St. George when I saw this for the first time. 🤣
Yes to more of this subject matter please Roanoke! Especially the Roswell and Phoenix lights from '97, as I remember those (albeit I live across the pond in Wales!) But heck yeah to more ufology videos, it's such an interest of mine and clearly many others!
I'd love to hear your take on the Phoenix lights as a Phoenecian myself. :) At the time we lived in Paradise Valley, a suburb the lights would have been observable from, but we didn't know anything was going on to make us go take a look that evening - I still live in the Phoenix Area (in Mesa) and that case has always fascinated me just because it was something that happened in my 'home town'.
Funny you mentioned about space x satellites, about a month ago we were having a pool party at my house and we saw a particularly bright star flying to us but crossing over the sky. The wildest thing about it was that it shot out some kind of shield and later our local Facebook weather was asking if anyone saw a flying object in the sky and to share pictures and videos but someone posted that space x rocket had a next day delay launch and took off that evening.
I choose to remain sceptical on all things "unexplained". The principle of Ocham's Razor can often equate to "magic" on such subjects. However, what gives credence to any story in my opinion, is how much the person / people telling it have to lose by actually telling it. I tend to put must trust in people who risk losing their entire career by speaking out, as the guys in this story did.
The principle is do not multiply assumptions beyond necessity. The question is: Isn't it unnecessary to assume that dozens of witnesses all had the same misperceptions from multiple vantage points, at the same time?
Nope, they cut into the snow to make their camp which triggered an avalanche, the radiation was from the lamps they used then and the missing tongue was from scavengers.
there was this abandoned house in my neighbourhood when i was a kid and everyone said it was haunted and that the owner killed himself inside. we always felt like we were being watched and just had a really uneasy feeling when we walked past it. turns out the owner just went abroad for work and just sort of abandoned the place for years, he came back eventually and turned it into a little corner shop. moral of the story is that we often psych ourselves up with stories and shit.
Josh Gates made a very interesting Expedition Unknown episode about this, that included tertimony from the military witnesses, who said exactly what you note: why risk their careers over a hoax. One thing to keep in mind is that it happened during the Cold War, about Christmas, so the military staff was actually on sort of high alert, cause you know, tricky ruskies, right? That's why they went into the forest to see wtf was going on with those lights. Some debunkers claimed they were confused by the beam of a lighthouse on the coast near by, and Josh Gates has it light up while he's filming from the base, and shows there's no way that white light from the coast could be mistaken as color lights in the woods.
What about the alien abduction case of travis walton? It does had many evidences that related to travis's memory during his abduction by the amount of eye-witnesses that had similar descriptions of the ufo sighting, the details about the beings through his experience, and the tree sample core from the area of sighting that burned from the craft.
Made up story for a newspaper reward, addmited by one of Walton's friends, that were there with him, when he got "abducted". He admited it when a couple of years ago Walton stopped paying him money from his book royalties, he even got recorded by a journalist explaining the whole thing. There are even videos on the topic on youtube, you should look those up.....sorry to bring it to you, Walton was the guy I believed the most, but....Truth comes out, sooner or later
@@kinoko5566 they didn't even won the whole prize, 10k instead of 50k or something like that....because they failed the lie detector, twice....imagine that hahaha
There are maybe three things I've seen in my life that I absolutely can't explain. Two could maybe be unique planes or drones but one experience is so unbelievable that I simply cannot know what it was I saw. Pretty cool stuff all in all
I'm confident it was 'our' craft. This would have likely been be the UK constructing an early design based on something the US had been working out. Again, it's a UFO sighting near an airbase and I feel like we don't point that out enough. The eye witnesses, of course, were American military. We Americans have decades of experience in covering up test aircraft, making them seem 'otherworldly'. It's important to remember we've been producing 'unnatural' elements since at least the 40's and these elements start to make physics wonky. They have a super-short half-life (because they are an abomination to nature) and that would probably account for the radiation. Anyone wanting to dig into this, should probably look for former military who have the signs of radiation exposure despite their having worked in areas that shouldn't have allowed for such exposure.
I recall once being absolutely certain I was watching a UFO. We were at our cabin in the UP of Michigan, and there was a light just a bit brighter than a star that was sort of bobbing around, as stars typically don't do. I couldn't see any tell-tale aircraft night id lights and it wasn't moving like a satellite. Fortunately, we had a 60x power spotting scope. Got it focused on the light and... it was a plane landing at night. Our cabin's about 30 miles as the crow flies from Delta Co Airport. From 30 miles, the landing light was so powerful it look like a particularly bright, moving star with the naked eye, and the bouncing around was the plane being buffeted and maneuvering around for coming in to land. At that distance, without the scope, the other lights on the plane weren't visible (and being drown out a bit by the landing light). When I looked away from the scope, I saw as the plane turned to begin its landing run. From that distance, not actually watching through the scope, it looked as though the plane began moving "way too fast for any craft on Earth!" like one hears about in many "strange lights in the sky" stories. And of course the sound didn't travel that far. Was pretty much the moment little tween me went from die-hard believer to optimistic skeptic. I say "optimistic skeptic" because while I believe there is life outside Earth (mathematically it's just impossible there isn't more: "space too big!"), and even that it's *possible* it's visited Earth (ironically, "space too big!" is also the reason I'm doubtful it has visited Earth), I'm also fairly certain that most UFO sightings are mis-identifications of one kind or another. Most people aren't wandering around with very powerful spotting scopes or telescopes and such to look at the night sky, and until I actually got the scope out to look, I was 100% certain I was finally seeing a UFO. (I guess if one wants to be very literal with the term... I was seeing a UFO... until I identified it, hah!)
You must not live in cougar territory. I’m constantly in fear that a wealthy 50 year old brunette with wine stained teeth is going to pounce on me from a tree branch.
@@tastymonkey "bobcats-" Damn bruh, you out here living it rough. You're not worried about getting mauled? The worst we have to deal with are coyotes and the occasional black bear. Maybe a snake or two. Really not that bad.
3 words - Laser Induced Plasma. @RoanokeTales, look into this topic, you will find a lot of answers for the mysteries in some of your own videos. I'm sure you will find this very, very interesting! Cheers from Bulgaria! 🍻
"If we fail to anticipate the unforeseen or expect the unexpected in a universe of infinite possibilities, we may find ourselves at the mercy of anyone or anything that cannot be programmed, categorized or easily referenced." "If coincidences are coincidences, why do they seem so contrived?" - Fox Mulder -
I hate the english language sometimes, just because to people on the outside, we have words with essentially "Silent letters". I love your content, you always make digs at us brits and they make me laugh. Hearing you pronounce Suffolk while including the L was a thing of beauty.
I know very little about these tales but hearing about them is very interesting indeed. Thank you for your efforts in documenting these happenings in such great detail.
If I remember properly, UFO only applies for if the unknown has a physical body like a ship or animal. UAP is used for things with more ambiguity like lights, sounds, mists, etc. ETA: I could be wrong. I'm old and too lazy to dig through old journals. And my dad is in his 80s, so I try to let him sleep through my wild midnight questions. 😅
What you said at 13:00 I can back up. First time me and my parents saw a Starlink chain we were kind of freaking out, like we couldn't discount something otherworldly, but later we found out it was just a Starlink which is pretty cool in and of itself.
Rendlesham was not Britains Roswell. It was US service men manning a US airbase (called RAF but not manned by UK personnel) on UK soil. The original story has both grown and been embellished over the years. At the time investigators in the UK were not allowed in the US base nor could they interview US personnel, and their findings were a local light house which illuminated the forest and farm vehicles operating at night with lights on, ploughing fields. The story we have today was reported back in the US by the US service men. One intersting point that cast doubt on the honest of certain indiviuals, was the claim that at the time one of the personnel claimed to have touched a UFO and it downloaded binary data to him. This wasn't reported in the beginning. He didn't know what it was until years later when he recited the code to a computer programmer who claimed it contained hidden message - e.g. take me to your leader. The problem with this is binary code is zero's and ones and means nothing else, unless you put them through a processor designed to use them. In other words if you put a single 8 bit string through a Mac processor verses an Intel processor they will do different things with the same code. Giving the same code to a human and they will have no idea what it means unless you present them with say ASCII to compare the string against. So unless the Aliens are using Macs, Intel or other machines designed on planet Earth then the code is useless and meaningless. The whole story is yet another pile of steaming hogwash.
There are so may wrong assumptions and rushed-at conclusions in your comment above based on your biases, it is painful to read. You, like others, are simply misinforming the public with your ignorance in parrot fashion ad-nauseum. Like most who acknowledge the Rendlesham incident, you know nothing about the binary code message and its findings and are just spouting other's misguided and misinformed views/opinions that you have read over the years - NOT the facts. I have personally studied and worked on the code these past 12+ years, as was asked of me by Jim Penniston who received it, and the seven sets of coordinates that were contained in the text message encapsulate a great deal of additional information - a code within a code. For your information and for those who have made this video, which falls far short of the facts that have been gathered and compiled so far, the code has authenticated itself mathematically by predicting a 12-digit number that was determined in 2018 by physicists working on the Fine-Structure Constant. The way in which the code authenticates itself is also a demonstration of retrocausality, as it would have been impossible for anyone to have known or predicted this 12-digit number that came up 38 years after the Rendlesham Incident, but again was predicted by what emerged from the code. Quoting Dr. Manu Seyfzadeh, who collaborated with me on the code. March 16, 2023. 1. The Penniston Code is a bona fide, Hynek Scale, Close Encounter of the Third Kind; Bloecher subtype F. Its one of the rarest, if not THE communication candidate from an intelligent source that is not from our own time. Therefore, if authenticated, it ranks at the top of all UFO/UAP-related encounters reported in the history of the phenomenon and deserves a thorough appraisal. 2. Provenance: The source is credible by virtue of its credentials. The various critiques that have been launched against it have to do with perceived a) delay in reporting, b) note book irregularities, c) some of the coordinates mentioned in the code, and d) the overall implausibility of a message from the future and a message from Earth, as opposed to an extra-terrestrial location. However, all these critiques miss one of the chief take-aways of the code: It authenticates itself without relying on Jim Penniston or any other human being. 3. The Penniston Code, if it comes from the future, cannot by definition be explicit in its instructions and message because of the causality paradox. Example: 'Back to the Future:' Marty’s image disappears on the photo when he goes back in time and finds out that he must succeed in helping his mother to fall in love with his father George. When this threatens to not happen, Marty’s past begins to dim. What Gary Osborn has discovered is that the code’s method is implicit, probabilistic, and heuristic, as opposed to explicit. In other words, the code makes it more probable that an observer will discover its own authentication and ultimate purpose. By not changing the past, but only the probability distribution of how the past proceeds into the future, the code overcomes the causality paradox. 4. The first task of the Penniston Code is to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that it is an authentic message from the future. It does so by predicting a value of the 'Fine Structure Constant,' not known in 1980 when Jim Penniston received the message. Comments about the Rendlesham binary code by Dr. Manu Seyfzadeh, July 4, 2023: "Until governments of the world release what they know, if anything, the Penniston Code remains the best evidence to date of a communication attempt by intelligent beings outside of our biosphere." "A message that claims it is from the future and proves it using Giza. Even if someone wanted to hoax it, they couldn't predict the future like that. This is what Penniston-Code skeptics don't understand. Their arrows pale in comparison to what Gary has found here." "It is rather mind-boggling how this is encoded. It challenges our plausibility bias to the extreme, and that is what a message allegedly from the future must do to wake us up to a dimension we cannot easily imagine nor accept to be real."
I'm born and raised in Suffolk. It's a very mysterious and strange part of the UK with a rich history going back centuries. Lots of paranormal and high strangeness here. Disrespect or fuck with it and you will get burnt.
I think it’s interesting how similar looking the the craft has been described as being to one that was in an older cartoon called “Jonny quest”. The episode is called “the robot spy” and this makes me think to the theory that the Betty and Barney hill incident was influenced by the previously released episode of “outer limits”.
There is still a lot of activity going on in the forest to this day lights and other things are still seen and filmed in the trees is not and never was the Orford Ness lighthouse it has now been demolished, and it has also been reported that strange activity had been going on for many years prior to 1980. Considering the secrecy of weapons storage at Bentwaters and Woodbridge and if you factor in the nearby Atomic Weapons Research Establishment, Bawsdsey Manor, the cobra mist, the black Beacon sites etc on Orford Ness. It is possible that an experiment was carried out to draw something like light beings from another dimension.
Considering it always seems to be the military in some manner in most UFO cases, if it really is aliens, I can just imagine they're scoping out what those silly little monkeys are doing and getting greatly concerned with ever actually revealing that there is life out there to them. I mean, would you approach an unpredictable chimp that has a nuclear warhead on a stick?
We tend to assume futuristic "people" will be evolved but assuming they're anything like humans (even if it's just 'smart animal that lives long time') they're likely not have changed that much. A human from today vs a human from the neolithic age aren't that different biologically. Unless the aliens evolved in some utopian culture that never fights among its own species and isn't an apex predator they're likely to have had the same sort of tendencies, even wild animals will often fight with each other more and more the more of them you cram into a tight space even if they aren't normally violent with eacother so it's likely another species would develope fighting eachother at some point. That means they're likely to recognize that humans can change and can civilize, even fairly modern humans have met uncontacted tribes and realized they can be "civilized" if approached correctly. I'd contend they're not likely to just write us off at first, it's likely they'd at least monitor and study us Prime Directive style, but not just call us violent apes and move on especially since life appears extremely rare in the galaxy and any planet with life is likely to be full of stuff to study even outside of intelligent life, which also appears uncommon even on planets with life (it did take billions of years for life to form into us)
It's the Vrillion, they tried to warn us on Nov, 25th 1977. Lol jk, honestly i think we are an attraction exhibit on a Galactic Zoo tour. It would make sense that we see them but no communication from them. Twilight Zone style!
When u mentioned this being aliens losing something n trying to find it, it reminded me of that episode of Futurama called The Game of Tones. Where the nibblonians are using a planet breaking key fob to find a lost space ship. Lol
How funny you talk about your experience with SpaceX satellites. I had the exact same encounter in rural Washington. But I thought it was some military training. I wanted it to stay on terra firma.
27:47 Phoenix lights have been pretty much debunked if you cross-reference the military explanation of them being illumination flares. The lights drop over time and disappear when they fall behind the mountains.
thank you for mentioning space x satellite grouping. i saw something a few months ago that i thought was weird. i also pulled over to the side of a rural road to look at it. this is exactly what i saw. just a string of lights. at the time, i kinda thought it was a drone pulling lights or group of drones with lights in a line. it's been bugging the crap outta me for a while rofl.
I’ve seen a “ufo” once it was just a black circular object floating there with nothing to attach too… I still don’t know what it was exactly hense calling it a “ufo” but my best guess are some kind of recreational drone or maybe a balloon with a string I couldn’t see from that distance.
I just found this channel, I've been subbed to your Roanoke Gaming channel for a year or so now. I love this sort of stuff too, I only really got it from the Chilluminati Podcast group before.
If you enjoy learning, i highly suggest the youtuber Habitual Line Crosser. He's an air defender who talks about hypersonics and the absurd exaggerations surrounding them. Hypersonics dont fly straight past radar and are quite detectable early in their flight path, because theyre deployed and fly straight up quite the distance, before using gravity to help them gain a bit of speed as they then reach cruise speed. They're really cool, but they're not undetectable. Also not sure personally, but I believe they're a lot older than a decade, but i havent fact checked that part
Don't know whether it's truly an extraterrestrial incident...but I do know that there is a strong push for people to believe that it is. Which really peaks my ears....I mean, what's the point?
You said something about it, but you should delve into the modern-day voodoo/hoodoo cause I swear people act like it's the end all be all. Makes it interesting with such devotion.
Had the same experience with the star-link satellites in Columbus Ohio, literally looks like a tear in the sky 😂 couldn’t pull over and almost caused a wreck from staring at them but yeah certainly a strange sight the first time you see them lol.
Saw a UFO in the days of the flip phone as a kid. Never have I had someone describe what I saw in any 'reports' I've read even this one. There was no definitive shape, no ability to judge the distance, no physical evidence. My stepbrother, who I was catching fireflies with at the time, also saw it. SpaceX didn't even exist at the time and as I said flip phones so no photographic evidence. The most uncommon thing about what I saw was the flash of orange light and the lights were gone. Like a warp drive out of star trek. The lights arrangement was a crescent like a Cheshire cat smile. It was dark and rural where I was. I'm very skeptical of anyone who has overly detailed encounters.
First time I saw the Space-X Starlink, I was in CO and thought missiles were heading right at us… i was at peace with things for a solid 15 seconds lolol.
12:43 so Roanoke was on a dark country road....did you play a sick guitar battle with a severely sunburned individual with extra skull growths that resembled horns?