Quote:
Posted by
starchild111
Yes, I agree, and state parks, and wildlife reserves and other non-access rural areas. I live in one such area and I have seen many suspicious UFO-type anomalies, literally by the hundreds. And the beautiful crystal clear lakes that are public park areas, there is NO SWIMMING. NO SCUBA DIVING signs posted everywhere. I mean CMON. WTF is p with that. You can fish, and hunt,(yeah, lets kill all the wildlife, but don't cool off on a 105 degree day). I have ALWAYS suspected military involvement, and most likely alien activity.
I absolutely agree Starchild
I live next to the Superstition Mountains in AZ. I have always suspected this is the case here.
On a personal note,,,,I interviewed three people individually who attended an out door "rave" party in the superstitions back in the fall of 1996. All three people reported the same incident, and one was pretty shook up about it.
They stated that a large cylindrical cigar shaped craft hovered extremely close to the group of young dancing people, and that it was trying to obscure itself in a large dust cloud that was the result of six thousand kids dancing in the desert.
On another personal note, I have a friend who took a picture in the superstitions of a cigar shaped flying craft, but, she never saw the craft when she took the picture it just happend to be in the back ground later when she devoloped it.
It is also worth noting that the superstitions are reknowned for driving miners insane.
Seasoned and grizzled outdoorsman from the nineteenth and early twentieth century talk about a strange forboding and a feeling of impending doom if they didn't leave the place.
Many miners who ignored this warning, were found quite literally headless.
This same thing happened quite often in the Nahilli Valley of Canada.
It seems that if humans don't get the message in terms of leaving when spooked, they are made an example of in hopes that other prospecting miners will get the message.
Miners with their heads cut off would certainly send a message.
The superstitions get their name from the native americans having so many legends about them and being convinced that the gods of thunder lived on those mountains.
Unexplained sudden loud thunder would always be heard in the superstitions, so much so that the indians refered to the gods who lived there as thunder gods.
It was only later that the sound, which still occasionally occurs was found synonomous to a sonic boom.
I wonder what has been making those sonic booms for hundreds if not thousands of years?
On another note I found this story on the web about the superstition mountains. It really makes you think.
I'm not saying it's true, but it was worth contributing to the data to ponder.
REPTILIAN RAPE IN THE SUPERSTITION MOUNTAINS