Sorry Birdpics. I just read that entire link. It talks about evidence a lot but provides none whatsoever.
Eyewitness testimony may not be the most reliable form of evidence but it’s still evidence :2thumbsup: Hotwater
I think something I saw qualifies as such....the only way to describe them(there were 4) is balls of orange light/energy that had tails when moving around in the sky. They looked kind of like comets but where flying around all slow in different directions. At one point they stopped moving and just sat in the sky, two of them dissapeared and reappeared...then they flew off out of view. It was if I recall on November 14th, so last month...can't say I have ever seen anything like that before. My dad and his friend both saw them to.
That's true but it doesn't qualify as something that can be proven on it's own merit. I got the impression from the link that it would follow though with evidence (that can be proven) and there was none. Even the pic they provided means nothing at all. I could say it was me and tell the same story and there would be no evidence to support that or contradict it. Personally, I think it would be cool to have something like time travel exist but....
Well I was listening to Art Bell one night on coast to coast am (back in 1997) when a listener called up who claimed he was a time traveler from the year 2037 - he sounded quite credible Hotwater
Back then he sounded much more credible https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3wepukIhmw"]Time Traveler from 2037 - Part 1 of 2 - YouTube hotwater
Fascinating but there simply isn't anything there. Towards the end the guy says "If you have any other questions, let me know." The host says "My mind is...wobbling (or something) and I'll get in touch (or whatever he said exactly.) That would have been a great time to say "Hey...how about you prove yourself by telling us something significant that will happen in the next two weeks?" That would have been a perfect chance to convince the skeptics. But they didn't say that and didn't even hint at it. As much as I hope this kind of thing could be true...that's the first question I would have asked. Prove it to us.
let me start by saying that i didn't listen to the video, or even read this whole thread. i'm purely replying to this specific post. art bell's whole career was pretty much based on getting crazy people and hoax artists to call in to his show, while he pretends to believe everything they say. if he made a point of disproving everyone that called in, he wouldn't have had a show. that said, if today you traveled back to this day in 1973 and someone asked for something significant that was to happen in the next two weeks, would you have an answer? i know i wouldn't.
The next two years would even be convincing. I mean...you can travel time but can't just toss out some random event in detail that would prove your point? I don't even watch the news and even I could tell you a few simple things that you can expect to happen if I went back in time.
And on top of that...even if someone would have a problem recalling events and even if most people would have that problem...it in no way validates this kind of a radio show. Like I said...I'm as fascinated as the next person by this but someone who travels time should be able to prove it pretty easily.
two years would be more doable. but then, that's a long time to wait for validation. by then, people will have forgotten that you even existed. simple things won't convince people. for a claim of that magnitude, you need to be pretty specific in your predictions.
Even simple things are better than nothing and that's my point. Who is going to win the NCAA basketball championship next year? Who will be the next president? Who will be the person that loses in that presidential race? These are easy questions for someone from the future. I could think of dozens more. If someone made ten predictions under these circumstances, there may be plenty of people waiting to see if they were right. If they were, well...now we have something to discuss.
easy questions if they took the time to prepare for them. i don't know the answers to any of them for 40 years ago (besides next president). and yes, simple things are better than nothing, but they won't come close to convincing skeptics. all of the things you listed are relatively easily predictable anyway, so someone getting them right ahead of time is better than nothing like you said, but won't likely change a whole lot of minds.
DARPA time travel? Modern sunglasses in 1800s photos, people appearing/disappearing, etc. http://t.co/Y2BP3BRC0o How absurd is this idea of time travel? Well, few scientists would lend support to the idea of macroscopic objects such as people time traveling. But how unlikely is it for particles to time travel? According to some, not very. Particle physicists Tom Weiler and Chui Man Ho say that recent experiments at the Large Hadron Collider, known as the LHC, suggest the possibility of revolutionary and, some say dangerous, new particles. The Higgs singlets, as they are called, may be able to send messages between the future and the past. The theory of sending messages through time is supported by the M-theory, audaciously known as the “theory of everything,” and is subscribed to by prominent physicist Masao Ninomiya, who has publicly stated he believes the frequent failures and setbacks of LHC are the result of interferences from the future. “It is as if something is going back in time to keep the universe from being hit by a bus.” This is not the first mainstream mention of time travel in recent years. Indeed, the Hadron Collider itself was part of a bizarre news story in 2010 when a man by the name of Eloi Cole was arrested at CERN facilities in Switzerland claiming to have traveled from the future in order to prevent the LHC from destroying the world. Eloi, who asserted that countries did not exist where he was from, later disappeared from his cell at a mental ward in Geneva and has not been seen or heard from since. This is not the only potentially wackadoodle public claim of time travel. Indeed, over the years photos and videos have surfaced which purport to depict real-life time travelers. Some have been debunked, others persist. Skeptics say the entire premise is contradicted by a universal constant, the speed of light. Even Stephen Hawking has gone on record saying time travel to the past is impossible because the universe would not allow for paradoxes that entail the destruction of something that predicates the future. But what if the time traveler is returning not to destroy but to facilitate? That is, to ensure that things happen the way they are supposed to, that established power structures do not get dismantled by others who might possess the same technology. After all, if information can be sent forward and backward in time, could this technology not be used to ignite an information war the likes of which we’ve never imagined? This tightly guarded technology is supposedly capable of not only yielding a truly revolutionary 21st century transportation, it has resulted in bases on Mars, and government “jump rooms,” where ‘chrononauts’ (often children, because of their ability to withstand the wear and tear of time travel) leap through Stargate-like tunnels using advanced holographic technology http://theghostdiaries.com/project-blue-beam-imminent-false-flag-alien-invasion/. Basiago says that the time travelers were sent back to alternate timelines of the past, which helped avoid paradoxes. Basiago even claims to have photographic evidence of himself as a child a few days before the Lincoln assassination.
but this other time I was sitting in the state park huffing on some ethyl chloride towels, when I seen this alien craft with blue and red lights crash.. out walks this Rastafarian alien like mofo, walks over and pissed on me..... realizing it was park ranger taking a wizz, but that how my mind made it out...
Its interesting that often people who have seen UFOs, say they haven't actually "seen" them. What do I mean by that? Well, they don't recall seeing them. Until they are regressed by hypnosis. A relative of mine claims he saw a UFO just 50yds or so away. Its quite common for those who've experienced UFOs at close hand to develop some new perspective on something. For instance, my relative developed a passion for environmentalism after his UFO sighting. They were very keen to pass this onto me, when I was a kid. I don't recall ever seeing a UFO (but who knows what I would say if I was regressed!). However, I do have this really weird feeling when I look up at the stars. When I say weird, I don't mean bad. But one of extreme wonder and fascination.
Have you ever seen a Harrier Jump Jet in the dark? .. no, of course you havent.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TmzW05Qe3A"]VERTICAL TAKEOFF, Harrier Jump Jet - HD video. VSTOL - YouTube