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Sunday, September 23, 2012
UFO Filmed Above Power Station Over East London
Monday, August 13, 2012
London Olympics 2012 : False Flag Alien Invasion Imminent ?
Back in 2010 Classic UFO shape blimp was displayed at opening ceremony of 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, India
CWG 2010 Jawahar Lal Nehru Stadium, New Delhi, IndiaIn June, UFO expert Nick Pope said massive summer events like the Olympics would be a prime time for an alien encounter.
The former insider of British MoD, warns people to "keep an eye in the sky" during the games, expecting a mass sighting of extraterrestrial spaceships and he had also stated that the British government is expecting a worst case scenario concerning an alien invasion.
Source : http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2155885/Keep-eye-skies-saucers-Olympics-Games-warns-MoD-UFO-expert.html#ixzz1x7aR1AOE
US Media and False Flag Staged Alien Invasion Propaganda :
August 16, 2011
August 17, 2011
June 8, 2012
July 6, 2012
July 19, 2012
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Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Olympic Attack : London Olympics 2012 False Flag Operation Clues Deciphered
Coming back to the latest development, before 9/11 and 7/7 there were clues in card games, comics, film and TV programmes, of the events that had later taken place. Similarly, the BBC has broadcasted a series imagining a nuclear explosion at the London Olympics.
The series includes several clues that suggest that the 'Illuminati' are behind the making of the series and that therefore the events that the series imagines, are being planned to take place in the real world.
There are also clues that suggest the 'Illuminati' are plotting an attack on the London Underground.
Both of these plots can be stopped if enough people become aware of this information. The "Illuminati" will then be forced to cancel their plans.
Note: On the 27 July in 1996 Eric Rudolph carried out an bomb attempt on the Olympic games in Atlanta. This year (2012) the Olympic games start on the 27th July too.
London 2012 Olympics Conspiracy
Big question is media predicting a 'terrorist' attack at the London 2012 Olympic Games?
Answer is yes, because the 9/11 false flag event was 'predicted' in the media too. There seems to be sufficient evidence that another false flag event is being predicted / planned at the Olympic Games. Decide for yourself once you have watched this presentation.Main Stream Media False Flag Op. Conditioning News:
London 2012 Olympic - Missiles Found UnattendedIn East London Missiles, supposedly intended to be used for defence during the London Olympics, have been found unattended in gated housing community.The Bow Quarter in East London. Found by journalist and resident, Brian Whelan, the missiles are shown in footage from ITN to have been left unattended at the side of a building within the community. A spokesperson for the Ministry of Defence has said that the missiles are dummies.
Sonic device deployed in London during Olympics
The Ministry of Defence has confirmed a sonic device will be deployed in London during the Olympics. The American-made Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) can be used to send verbal warnings over a long distance or emit a beam of pain-inducing tones. The equipment was spotted fixed to a landing craft on the Thames at Westminster this week.Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-18042528
Olympic Armageddon: How terrorists could send nuclear bomb up the Thames to target London 2012 Games
This week, Security Minister Lord West warned there was a real danger that Al Qaeda terrorists could use a boat to transport a 'dirty' nuclear bomb up the Thames and detonate it in the heart of London.
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1262668/Olympic-Armageddon-Top-thriller-writer-imagines-terrorist-attack-London-2012-Games.html
Raw Reports, Nuclear Threat from Germany I will keep this short as possible. A single nuclear weapon has “gone missing” as of last week, one of four missing but this one “more missing” than the others.
The Thames Valley Police, famous for their fictional representations in the Colin Dexter detective novels, detained a high ranking government security officer, department to remain unnamed, at the behest of what we are told is the Home Secretary.
Source: http://www.veteranstoday.com/2012/04/30/raw-reports-nuclear-threat-from-germany/
Big Update 2:
Olympic Games - 13,000 People Will Be Killed At The 2012 Games : Rockefeller Foundation Prediction
What we find interesting is that on page 34 of the Scenario Planning Document of the Rockefeller Foundation, they state specifically that 13,000 people will be killed at the 2012 Olympics.They state this in the Past Tense as if it has already happened or is planned. They also name other disasters following this one by year.
Source: http://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/uploads/files/bba493f7-cc97-4da3-add6-3deb007cc719.pdf
Note: Above article is published for further research purpose only and we don't have any intention to spread rummer or fear.Monday, July 25, 2011
UFO's;Mothership And Its Fleet's; Seen In London Skies - HULIQ.com

Have we finally acquired incontrovertible proof of extraterrestrial visitation? Or has someone well-versed in special effects gimmickry simply posted another in a long line of UFO video hoaxes on YouTube? Perhaps it is even an example of guerilla marketing, a precursor to more videos -- or movie trailers -- to come? All these explanations have been suggested in the past few days as millions have accessed the video (said to be one of three) of a UFO "mothership" and its attendant "fleet" of smaller UFOs caught skimming the cloud-fille skies above London. The video has, of course, gone viral.
First uploaded by alymc01 on June 24, the setting is London on a cloudy day. The viewer enters with the videographer running down a sidewalk near the BBC Building to a corner where several people on both sides of the street are already looking up at the sky. The viewer is then presented with several bright lights -- and several fainter lit images -- moving across the sky from the videographer's left to right. Bout one minute into the slightly more than two-minute video, a larger, brighter white disc appears and slowly performs a few rotating maneuvers before moving off.
The UFO video, entitled "UFOs Over London BBC Radio 1 Building," is accompanied by the caption: "Right - took over a week to get it....but finally managed to get these critters on camera on a clear day, and even get a close-up. It seems to be attracting quite a crowd now when they appear. Can anyone explain what on earth these lights are please?"
A quick glance below each of the uploaded videos (EllasVirgo currently has the most views, pulling in over 2 million views to date) and the answer to alymc01's question seems to have been in the affirmative. Many believe the video to be a hoax. Some are saying it is proof that the aliens have come. Some are saying it could be a marketing campaign for an upcoming science fiction movie, possibly "Iron Sky."
In fact, Benjamin Radford at Life's Little Mysteries, a sister website to LiveScience, posted a somewhat detailed debunking of the video, noting that the video's "crudeness" may be the best evidence of its "fakery."
Radford offers: "The mothership and its UFO siblings videotaped over London are among the absolute easiest images to fake: glowing ovals and dots. There's no detail, no flying saucer windows or aliens waving hello from high above. Just white moving dots that anyone with some video-editing chops could create with little effort."
Radford also points out the inordinate amount of time the videographer takes getting the reaction of the people looking up at the sky. Although this could presumably be explained by noting that the videographer could have been confused by what was causing the disturbance, but, as Radford points out, the videographer pulls the focus of the video from the skies above about halfway through the video to again pan the passersby. Radford believes this to be the strongest evidence of a hoax: Wouldn't someone recording an event like the appearance of UFOs be more interested in the UFOs than in getting the reactions of those observing the mysterious flying objects?
Radford is joined in his skepticism by Steve Mostyn at The Tech Herald, who notes that it is "worth noting that the footage was captured in close proximity to The Mill and Framestore, two of the world’s leading special effects houses for the movie industry."
Another possible indicator that the video is a hoax is its appearance on YouTube instead of on some media outlet website or television channel. An authentic video capturing the first images of possible extraterrestrial visitation would be of inestimable value. Of course, the videographer could be of a non-capitalist bent, a more free-share type of individual.
So... is it another hoax or is it an authentic video of a grouping of UFOs? Or, like the Phoenix Lights formation captured by several videographers in 1997, could it have a rational explanation as a sensational incident caused by more mundane events (like a string of slow-burning flares dropped by passing planes on military maneuvers)?
Regardless, videos and images like the London UFO "mothership and its fleet" will continue to draw interest, fake or not. It is part of human nature to question, to wonder, to quest, to discover, to solve. And even if all such images could eventually be explained, they are testament to the very human need to imagine and dream -- if only of what might be possible.
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Is the 'UFO mothership over London' video real?
A new viral video making the rounds on the Internet purports to show what’s been dubbed a "mothership" and at least three separate smaller alien spacecraft filmed in the skies over London.
The most famous video (which was taken anonymously and is one of two or three versions in circulation) shows a large glowing white oval moving in and out from behind clouds over the course of about 20 seconds, and then zooming off, with three white dots also making an appearance.
So what are they? The pattern of movement does not resemble any known aircraft, and some are already proclaiming the sighting as proof of aliens. While not exactly the same as landing on the proverbial White House lawn (or above 10 Downing Street), some say an appearance over London is a pretty high-profile statement that aliens are here. [Read: Astronomers: We Will Find Extraterrestrial Life in 20 Years]
Share your stories about UFOs Cosmic Log: The UFO debate usually focuses on reports that are many years old — but strange things are still being seen in the sky, by folks just like you. The case against UFOs: Are sightings reliable? The case for UFOs: More investigation needed British UFO files trace sightings (and hoaxes) WWII secret study cited in UFO files What to do if you see a UFOOthers aren't so sure. Some believe that the videos are merely a viral marketing tool to publicize the upcoming alien sci-fi film "Iron Sky." One argument against that explanation is that the film is not slated to be released until April 2012, though studios often begin early promotion, and these amateur UFO videos would take little time or effort for special effects professionals.
In fact, the crudeness of the London UFOs may be a sign of fakery. The spacecraft in the video resemble those in an alleged UFO video taken over Jerusalem earlier this year, and which many experts (including myself and those at MUFON, the largest pro-UFO organization in the world) concluded were faked.
The mothership and its UFO siblings videotaped over London are among the absolute easiest images to fake: glowing ovals and dots. There's no detail, no flying saucer windows or aliens waving hello from high above. Just white moving dots that anyone with some video-editing chops could create with little effort.
Another sign that this is a fake is the way the video begins. The cameraman is apparently randomly videotaping a mundane sidewalk, and then moves quickly to a street corner, where he takes careful note of the reactions from passerby before aiming the camera up into the sky to see what, exactly, it is that has so captivated their attention. He videotapes the skies for about a minute, then once again brings the camera down to show us a small crowd of people who are also staring into the sky and getting photos. [Read: Flying Saucers Turn 64! A Look Back at the Origin of UFOs]
This is highly suspicious behavior for someone who truly believes that there are alien spacecraft in the skies above that could reappear at any moment. If you spotted what you believed to be a UFO that could zip away at any moment, wouldn't training your camera on the spaceship be the first thing you would do? Whoever created, edited, and posted the video clearly wanted to make sure that viewers knew that others had seen, and were reacting to, the lights.
Aliens may in fact be out there, but the evidence so far suggests that the London UFO video is another hoax.
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Benjamin Radford is deputy editor of Skeptical Inquirer science magazine and author of "Scientific Paranormal Investigation: How to Solve Unexplained Mysteries." His website is www.RadfordBooks.com.
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