Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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#46
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I think we can safely assume that the UFO's the Biden Administration "shoots down" every other day or so aren't Chinese submarines.
And I can guarantee that nobody -- Chinese, American, or Russian -- has the ability to fly a "VW-sized object" at 40,000 ft, in upper reaches of the stratosphere. The fuel alone to do that weighs more than a VW. And they aren't balloons, either. The amount of gas needed to float a gasbag large enough to make it to 40,000 without popping is larger than a VW. If anybody in the press had ever taken a physics class, or even bothered to peruse a copy of "Janes All The Worlds Aircraft", it might have occurred to SOMEONE by now to ask the regime to name a single object known to mankind that is the size of a VW and capable of flight at 40,000. Not counting, Jetson's cartoons, of course. So what are they shooting down? Shiny objects to distract you from the fact that they let a Chinese spy balloon fly across then entire nation before they decided to do anything about it. Oh look -- Shiny! |
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#47
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And in other big news, aluminum foil is flying off of the shelves as conspiracy nuts - are feverishly making tinfoil hats. LOL
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#48
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At 40,000 ft (and another object at 20,000 feet) couldn't we have used a 50cal to shoot it down. One of these "items" took two heat seeking (sidewinder) missiles at 400,000.00 each. A 50cal is as cheap as $3.00 a round.
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#49
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Not here to argue New Englander. All I was thinking was why send a 5 billion dollar jet fighter up there using probably using over a million dollars in fuel & using a $100,000. missle to pop it, why not use a ground to air Missle, surely it would be a lot cheaper. What do you think?
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#50
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#51
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#52
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Besides, when you're shooting imaginary VW's flying at 40,000 feet, a well-aimed rubber band will do just as good a job as a sidewinder missile! |
#53
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#54
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Why the U.S. used missiles, not cheap bullets, to shoot down Chinese balloon, 3 unidentified objects But "the military's ability to respond to balloons and similar craft is constrained by physics and the capabilities of current weapons," The Washington Post reports, and you can't really pop a giant balloon with gunfire at 40,000 feet. "You can fill a balloon full of bullet holes, and it's going to stay at altitude," David Deptula, a retired Air Force lieutenant general and fighter pilot, tells the Post. The air pressure that high up doesn't allow helium to freely escape through small holes, even if fighter jets flying by at hundreds of miles per hour can riddle the near-stationary balloon with bullets. |
#55
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What is being covered up by all the focus on balloons?
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#56
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#57
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1. These balloons are not like kids balloons, you can't pop them with a pin which is what a 50 cal. round would be like. A nearby explosion was needed to shred the balloon sufficiently. 2. Those rounds need to land somewhere. Even if they hit the balloon they would continue to travel outward. The last thing the military needs is a headline about the house/car/pet/person the rounds hit on the way down. 3. The planes would not need to be nearly as close to the object to hit it with a missile.
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Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works. Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so. Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough |
#58
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#59
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As already fully explained in Post #54. |
#60
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From WIKI High-altitude balloon - Wikipedia "High-altitude balloons or stratostats are crewed or uncrewed balloons, usually filled with helium or hydrogen, that are released into the stratosphere, generally attaining between 18 and 37 km (11 and 23 mi; 59,000 and 121,000 ft) above sea level. In 2002, a balloon named BU60-1 reached a record altitude of 53.0 km (32.9 mi; 173,900 ft)." Quote:
SR 71, U-2, F-35, F-22, F-25, F-15, F-4. SU 34, 27, 47. MIGs 29, 31, 25. And many long haul airliners that you may have been in at the time. They often hit 42,000. |
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