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naste.de.lumina
28th February 2014, 01:14
My dear friends.

The video description says it all.

They do not want the planet destroyed.

They want the planet enjoys working well for them.

Or we have that kind of technology in the hands of someone here on Earth.

Anyway it's a testament and demonstration that it comes to high technological power and we have to deal with it.

Hugs.

Naste.

LQXlobA-mvE

PS: I've never seen a video with these bright UFOs dropping gas jets.
Interesting!!!

Atlas
28th February 2014, 07:18
PcgO3hceGNk

jackovesk
28th February 2014, 07:31
If I were a betting man, I'd say the Ship that blew up the Meteor is one of ((OURS)) from the Solar Wardon Space Fleet...:yes4:

http://files.abovetopsecret.com/uploads/ats34290_Image1.jpg

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_-DW_gBiPy7Y/SVI7_s88JQI/AAAAAAAAABo/3EQPaTZ-cmc/s400/Carter+concept+2.jpg

naste.de.lumina
28th February 2014, 08:52
I found this

NASA Team Captures Hayabusa Spacecraft Reentry (http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=398_1380773364)

A group of astronomers from NASA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and other organizations had a front row seat to observe the Hayabusa spacecraft's fiery plunge into Earth's atmosphere. The team flew aboard NASA's DC-8 airborne laboratory, packed with cameras and other imaging instruments, to capture the high-speed re-entry over an unpopulated area of central Australia on June 13, 2010. The Japanese spacecraft completed its seven-year, 1.25 billion mile journey to return a sample of the asteroid Itokawa.

Matt P
28th February 2014, 12:25
Is it just me or has this video been permanently removed?
Thanks
Matt

Atlas
28th February 2014, 13:12
I found this

NASA Team Captures Hayabusa Spacecraft Reentry (http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=398_1380773364)

A group of astronomers from NASA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and other organizations had a front row seat to observe the Hayabusa spacecraft's fiery plunge into Earth's atmosphere. The team flew aboard NASA's DC-8 airborne laboratory, packed with cameras and other imaging instruments, to capture the high-speed re-entry over an unpopulated area of central Australia on June 13, 2010. The Japanese spacecraft completed its seven-year, 1.25 billion mile journey to return a sample of the asteroid Itokawa.

Here is another video:

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Hayabusa re-entry filmed by a camera onboard NASA's DC-8 Airborne Laboratory. The glowing return capsule is seen forward of and below the main Hayabusa probe bus as the latter breaks up. The heat-shielded capsule continues leaving a wake after the main bus fragments have faded.

This happened on 13 June 2010.

Source: wikipedia.org/Hayabusa#Reentry_and_capsule_retrieval (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayabusa#Reentry_and_capsule_retrieval)

Hervé
28th February 2014, 14:22
My thought when first viewing the OP video: "Man! That amateur videographer is damn good at keeping that thing on screen!"

... no wonder... 'em professional guys to be able to do a complete study of the disaggregating entry (how could there be a RE-entry when there hasn't been a prior "entry"... only an outing...).