UFO Flies over Jerusalem

Anyone ever heard of the Hopkinsville Encounter??
It's what got me interested in this kind of thing back when I was in middle school.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w...93Hopkinsville_encounter

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Read up, it's wild
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^ i saw a special on it on tv

gov't was sayin it was some monkeys in space suits
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Im upset on how this isnt a big deal the way it should be. I have never seen anything like this ever,ive always been skeptical about Ufo's,but this last video was just insane. Id love to hear what  the government response is on this. Hell id like to hear what Obama has to say about it. Anyone for that matter.
 
Originally Posted by GRyPR33

Floating, bulletproof monkeys??
......sounds reasonable
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gotta think big
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seriously tho even it wasn't, who's to say there aren't any bulletproof space monkeys? We send enough out there I think and seem to be infatuated with the thought (Planet of Apes). Dont limit anything to anything because everything is possible, impossible is nothing.

Next time someone askes you, "what is nothing?". Tell them "impossible."
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when it flew the beam of light wasnt pixelated so that threw me off but i still believe theres other life forms among us
 
i def believe this video.. different camera angles and all?? i dont think they faked it..
 
[h2]Holy UFO hoax![/h2]
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I have received approximately an infinite number of emails about a video purporting to show a UFO hovering over the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem. The video went viral last week, with several others being released not long after. When I first saw it, I knew instantly it was a hoax. How? Watch for yourself.



It’s pretty cool, but an obvious hoax. Imagine you’re standing late at night videotaping the scene with a friend because it’s so pretty. Out of nowhere a bright light comes down out of the sky, hovers over one of the most famous temples on the planet, then flashes brilliantly and shoots straight up at fantastic speed.

Would you just stand there like a lump without showing any reaction at all, like the guy in the video?

Also, it seems a little weird that such an incredibly bright object could hang over this heavily visited site, even in the middle of the night, and there were no reports of any eyewitnesses. Just one video that turns up, and a few days later a couple more. Seriously?

And now this videohas been conclusively shown to be faked.Whoever made it used commercial software to mimic the "handheld camera" effect, as can be clearly shown in this debunking video (you only need to watch the first minute to see how it was done):



I compared this to the original video, and the mirrored lights at the border are clearly there. In the immortal words ofElaine Benes: "fake, fake, fake fake."

When I was a kid, a video like this would’ve been a sensation, but today the availability of good video editing software makes it clear that any video of a UFO should be treated with an even more-than-usual degree of skepticism. And now that Hollywood has discovered viral video campaigns there’s almost no reason at all to trustanyUFO videos (though I doubt this one is for a movie; a professional visual effect company wouldn’t have made that border mistake). As the technology improves, so too must our demands of solid evidence.

Call me when a spaceship lands on the White House lawn and an alien with clearly non-terrestrial evolutionary adaptations hands us a piece of material with non-tellurian isotope ratios. And even then, keep asking questions.
 
Originally Posted by HankMoody

[h2]Holy UFO hoax![/h2]
[font=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
[/font]

I have received approximately an infinite number of emails about a video purporting to show a UFO hovering over the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem. The video went viral last week, with several others being released not long after. When I first saw it, I knew instantly it was a hoax. How?�Watch for yourself.



It’s pretty cool, but an obvious hoax. Imagine you’re standing late at night videotaping the scene with a friend because it’s so pretty. Out of nowhere a bright light comes down out of the sky, hovers over one of the most famous temples on the planet, then flashes brilliantly and shoots straight up at fantastic speed.

Would you just stand there like a lump without showing any reaction at all, like the guy in the video?

Also, it seems a little weird that such an incredibly bright object could hang over this heavily visited site, even in the middle of the night, and there were no reports of any eyewitnesses. Just one video that turns up, and a few days later a couple more. Seriously?

And now this video�has been conclusively shown to be faked.�Whoever made it used commercial software to mimic the "handheld camera" effect, as can be clearly shown in this debunking video (you only need to watch the first minute to see how it was done):



I compared this to the original video, and the mirrored lights at the border are clearly there. In the immortal words of�Elaine Benes: "fake, fake, fake fake."

When I was a kid, a video like this would’ve been a sensation, but today the availability of good video editing software makes it clear that any video of a UFO should be treated with an even more-than-usual degree of skepticism. And now that Hollywood has discovered viral video campaigns there’s almost no reason at all to trust�any�UFO videos (though I doubt this one is for a movie; a professional visual effect company wouldn’t have made that border mistake). As the technology improves, so too must our demands of solid evidence.

Call me when a spaceship lands on the White House lawn and an alien with clearly non-terrestrial evolutionary adaptations hands us a piece of material with non-tellurian isotope ratios. And even then, keep asking questions.
Tan Tan! its done. 
 
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