« First « Previous Comments 29 - 68 of 74 Next » Last » Search these comments
Because they can't? It takes special equipment to sniff out where the operators sit. If they are on the US soil, that is. The authorities need to contact Ukies and ask for knowledge/tech transfer. They now have anti-drone FPV drones. This is perfect for situations like that.
The theory I lean toward is the notion that “Joe Biden” (meaning the DC blob) is desperately seeking some way to obstruct or fend-off the January 20th inauguration of Mr. Trump. Because, well, to put it bluntly, a whole lot of blobistas are worried about going to jail when the likes of Kash Patel, John Ratcliffe, Tulsi-G, and Pam Bondi get their mitts on the levers of power and start opening up the files. They’ve got thirty-five days to. . . to do something! (Somebody, please do something!!!)
A reporter asked Trump what he thought about the New Jersey mystery drones. Trump said he thinks the government is lying:
"The government knows what is happening. Look, our military knows where
they took off from; if it's garage, they can go right into that garage. They
know where it came from and where it went," Trump told reporters in his
most extensive comments to date on the topic.
"And for some reason, they don't want to comment. I think they'd be better
off saying what it is," he continued. "Our military knows, and our president
knows, and for some reason they want to keep people in suspense."
... The much more interesting development is the clear consensus that nobody believes the government. Over and over, federal officials have downplayed the drones, trotting out the tired old UFO playbook and claiming people are just seeing commercial aircraft flying out of normal traffic routes, weather balloons decorated for Christmas, flocks of birds carrying landing lights, and other perfectly innocent explanations.
It’s you, not us.
But nobody, not the local police, the state officials, or even corporate media reporters, seems to believe the federal explanation. That signals a massive loss of trust in general, which is a big problem for government. Governments not trusted by the majority of their citizens don’t last.
We wondered what their false flag Trump delaying tactic was going to be, so now we know? Will they zap some gas stations with DEWs to get the martial law party going?
Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder. If flown as a hobby, no transponder required (but most of newish ones already have it anyway). The hobby pilots are required to pass so-called TRUST cert exam (easy and costs something like $5), commercial must pass FAA Part 107 cert (kinda hard and almost $200). Both are required to post their lic# on the aircraft.
Can't go higher than 400 ft AGL (with few exceptions), can't go beyond line of sight and farther than 3 miles.
I don't see this angle, honestly: the shit is already regulated AF.
If flown for hire they must have a transponder
Misc says
If flown for hire they must have a transponder
Yes, commercial drones. But the majority are amateur, right?
The same Mavic can be either commercial or amateur depending on how it's used. If you film your sister's wedding for free with it - it's amateur, if you film some house for a Realtard and being paid for it - it becomes commercial.
Greer is s UFO huckster.
Part ufo hustler, part legit
Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder. If flown as a hobby, no transponder required (but most of newish ones already have it anyway). The hobby pilots are required to pass so-called TRUST cert exam (easy and costs something like $5), commercial must pass FAA Part 107 cert (kinda hard and almost $200). Both are required to post their lic# on the aircraft.
Can't go higher than 400 ft AGL (with few exceptions), can't go beyond line of sight and farther than 3 miles.
I don't see this angle, honestly: the shit is already regulated AF.
Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder.
RWSGFY says
The same Mavic can be either commercial or amateur depending on how it's used. If you film your sister's wedding for free with it - it's amateur, if you film some house for a Realtard and being paid for it - it becomes commercial.
Right. Like that can be enforced as things are now. Not.
This guy did attract attention to himself:
RWSGFY says
This guy did attract attention to himself:
New Jersey isn't a military base. 99.9% of America's landmass isn't.
A weapon often described as an "anti-drone rifle" or "anti-drone gun" is a battery-powered electromagnetic pulse weapon held to an operator's shoulder, pointed at a flying target in a way similar to a rifle, and operated. While not a rifle or gun, it is so nicknamed as it is handled in the same way as a personal rifle. The device emits separate electromagnetic pulses to suppress navigation and transmission channels used to operate an aerial drone, terminating the drone's contact with its operator; the out-of-control drone then crashes.
A Pischal-Pro anti-drone rifle, featured at the Dubai Airshow, 2019
« First « Previous Comments 29 - 68 of 74 Next » Last » Search these comments
...Eat your heart out, Orsen Welles!