
On the evening of October 4, 1967, a group of teens near Canada’s Shag Harbour noticed strange orange lights in the sky plummeting toward the Atlantic ocean, hovering just above the water’s surface. They reported the incident to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, thinking it a devastating plane crash. When the Coast Guard arrived at the scene, the only evidence of the unidentified anomalous phenomenon was yellow foam in the water. Some witnesses thought the lights sinking into the sea caused the strange material to appear.
The next day, divers investigated the scene without any proof of aliens—or even a pedestrian plane crash, for that matter—which would make it seem like the case was cold. But when Chris Styles, a longtime ufologist, began poking around 33 years later, eyewitnesses kept asking him the same question: “You know about Shelburne, don’t you?”
Shag Harbour is famous for the number of eye-witness accounts and the government’s usual denials.
Myself, I think the recent drone activity in Denmark and earlier in the USA are in fact examples of US Tech being field tested or they’re running a damn good disinfo campaign. Are they the result of a scientific breakthrough, reverse engineered Alien tech? Occam’s Razor may not apply.
Oh Oh!
Latest – Drones seen over Danish military bases in latest air disruption
