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UFOs/Drones Buzz Jorzey!


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2024 Dec 11, 3:32pm   775 views  74 comments

by DOGEWontAmountToShit   ➕follow (3)   💰tip   ignore  




...Eat your heart out, Orsen Welles!

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47   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 17, 5:00pm  

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.
48   Misc   2024 Dec 17, 11:56pm  

RWSGFY says

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.


So, all these drones are flying legally, the government knows exactly who is doing it or the government would be out enforcing its laws, AMIRIGHT ?????
49   Ceffer   2024 Dec 18, 1:57am  

Another day, another psyops. When UFO fanatics say they aren't UFOs, then what's the caper? Greer seems to know.

https://youtu.be/vhRKKgIdSAc?si=TTd9-W1yuhBVLHY3
51   Robert Sproul   2024 Dec 18, 7:51am  

Trump seems impatient or irritated at this Blob-psyop or Trump-trap:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7E9uMZYTMU8
52   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 7:54am  

(The quoting is broken so I won't bother with it).

Even if some of what hysterical observers perceive as illegally flown drones really are that, the gubmint for sure doesn't need additional regulations. All it needs is to start enforcing existing ones.
53   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 8:07am  

What kind of "space weapons" are we talking about here?
54   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 8:38am  

Misc says

If flown for hire they must have a transponder


Yes, commercial drones. But the majority are amateur, right?
55   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 8:38am  

RWSGFY says

(The quoting is broken so I won't bother with it).


Works for me.
56   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 8:39am  

Ceffer says

Greer seems to know.


Greer is s UFO huckster.
57   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 8:47am  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says


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. Everything between 0.55lbs and 55 lbs is like that. Dual-use, if you will. Above 55 lbs is a whole 'nother game with way tighter regulations (but I'm not exactly well-versed in these). Below 0.55 lbs - it's a free-for-all as in "no licensing". (Still can't fly into restricted airspace, of course).
58   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 8:53am  

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.
59   Ceffer   2024 Dec 18, 9:06am  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says

Greer is s UFO huckster.

Part ufo hustler, part legit. A mixed bag, as are most of the various pundits. I guess they have to make a living. Many of the alternative pundits get involved in merchandising and financial advisements from dubious sources and schemes to stay afloat. Anonymous, voiceless saint or survival thrive-al with a platform seems to be their mantra.

Caveat Emptor, but oddly Greer has the ear of somebody because he has held Congressional symposiums.
60   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 9:11am  

Ceffer says

Part ufo hustler, part legit


No. 100% huckster. He lost all credibility when he did this bullshit:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/tiny-alien-humanoid-among_n_3017854


61   Ceffer   2024 Dec 18, 9:22am  

UFOology is rife with fraud and hucksters and hustlers and fake sightings. There are a core in individuals who are quite rigorous, but it seems the various secret agencies want the noise to drown out the signal, so the hucksterism is widely promoted.

Greer's noise to signal ratio is hard to estimate, because there is ALWAYS noise. He has done some good work, though, particularly with his various disclosure interview series.
62   WookieMan   2024 Dec 18, 9:45am  

RWSGFY says

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.

This is mostly right. Newer drones have ASD-B and can be tracked. I actually think it's required. FAA part 107 is a breeze. It's mini ground school for flying real planes. I did self study and got my license while studying at night having a beer. I just paid for a book and paid for the test and fees. I think I paid $120 at the time.

I think it was 75% to pass the test. I answered the questions I 100% knew and guessed on the rest. I think it was around 90% final. I'm an aviation junkie that likely can never get a real pilots license due to health reasons, but enjoy learning about it.

Either way, most modern drones for consumers or prosumers are trackable. Licensed or not. Have a semi big general aviation (no commercial/major airlines) airport nearby and my drone won't take off if I'm too close. It's more regulated than people think, which is why you never update your drone. I'm 3-4 years from my last update. They can't brick my drone. Might be missing out on features, but I want to fly it when/where I want.

TL:DR - This drone story is stupid. No conspiracy.
63   WookieMan   2024 Dec 18, 9:56am  

RWSGFY says


Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder.

I quoted it and commented already... but missed this. The FAA is not going to do anything unless you blatantly did something stupid. Like hit a plane. And even then the pilot would consider it a bird strike or just say something hit the plane. I had a deer strike on my car the other week.

It would mess with a jet engine if sucked in, but hitting the body/airframe is a nothing burger. A prop would tear that fucker up.

My record AGL is 1,900ft in MT. If a plane was flying at that level it was hitting a mountain, so it was safe to go that high even though illegal.
64   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 11:12am  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says


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.



Like anything else - guns, taxes, traffic, business licensing - it will be enforced if you bring enough attention to yourself. Or tacked onto some other shit. No difference.
65   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 1:54pm  

This guy did attract attention to himself:


66   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 18, 1:57pm  

RWSGFY says

This guy did attract attention to himself:





New Jersey isn't a military base. 99.9% of America's landmass isn't.
67   RWSGFY   2024 Dec 18, 2:25pm  

DOGEWontAmountToShit says


RWSGFY says


This guy did attract attention to himself:





New Jersey isn't a military base. 99.9% of America's landmass isn't.



If drones are under 55lbs and not flying in the restricted airspace, what's the problem? If they are over 55lbs and/or fly in the restricted aispace, then you don't need a military base - even something like a hospital helipad would suffice. I honestly don't undrestand the whole covfefe: if drones violate FAA regs - enforce, if not - don't. 🤷‍♂️

Above is an example of such enforcement for such a violation.
68   Patrick   2024 Dec 18, 10:16pm  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed-energy_weapon


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
69   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Dec 19, 8:25am  

Wonder what would happen if you shot someone with a pacemaker in the chest.
71   Ceffer   2024 Dec 19, 11:05am  

Patrick says

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed-energy_weapon



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


How come they can't make something really useful like a remote thong dissolver?

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