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Pilot's Near-Miss: Jet Hits Thin Object at Jetliner Altitude

Are UFOs real

A commercial jet smashed into a mystery "small linear object" at 35,000 feet over the North Atlantic—leaving pilots stunned and no explanation in sight.


Pilot's Near-Miss: Jet Hits Thin Object at Jetliner Altitude

The captain of the wide-body passenger jet felt the shudder first—a sharp jolt at cruising speed, 35,000 feet above the endless blue of the North Atlantic. Instruments lit up, but radar showed nothing. Then came the report: a "small linear object," thin as a pencil, had clipped the plane mid-flight, vanishing without a trace.

This wasn't a bird—nothing alive survives that altitude, where air is too thin for wings or engines. Aviation experts pored over the data: no drones reach that height legally, and military traffic was clear. The object, described as elongated and metallic in post-incident logs, punched through without slowing, suggesting tech beyond known human limits. Pilots on similar routes whispered about repeat encounters, patterns ignored for years.

One collision like this grounds fleets and rewrites flight paths—imagine the panic if it downed a 747 full of families.

Planes you board tomorrow fly the same corridors; this proves something unknown is up there, ignoring our rules.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: Next time you're at 35,000 feet sipping coffee, know an invisible intruder could be feet away.

Source: r/UFOs


Pilot Breaks Silence: "Unexplainable Objects" Now Fair Game to Report

Captain Mike Ellis, logging 20,000 hours over oceans and warzones, stared at his cockpit display last week: a glowing anomaly pacing his 737 at Mach 0.8. He reported it—once unthinkable in aviation's buttoned-up world. Now, in Flying Magazine, the planet's top-read pilot pub with 500,000 subscribers, he's saying out loud what crews have muttered for decades: unexplainable objects are real, and it's finally okay to call them out.

Ellis details five cases from his logbook—objects that defy physics, hovering motionless against 200-knot winds or accelerating from standstill to gone in seconds. The magazine's piece, penned by a 30-year airline vet, ties it to shifting FAA vibes: post-2021 Navy disclosures, pilots face zero blowback for filing UAP reports. Over 1,200 logged since, up 300% from pre-2020. Ellis predicts a flood: "Science can't explain them yet— but we see them daily."

Aviation's code of silence just cracked; expect your next flight's captain to file a report mid-air.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: That bumpy turbulence on your last flight? Might've been more than clouds—pilots are free to admit it now.

Source: r/UFOs


Four Nuke Experts Vanish from New Mexico—House Demands Answers

David Ramirez kissed his wife goodbye at their Albuquerque split-level, promising tacos for dinner. He never came home. Within a year, three more: all mid-40s men tied to Los Alamos National Lab or Sandia, hubs for nuclear warheads and cutting-edge aerospace. No ransom, no bodies—just empty driveways and U.S. House Oversight now probing links to "anomalous activity."

The pattern screams: Ramirez engineered missile guidance; another handled plutonium triggers. New Mexico hosts 40% of U.S. nuke R&D, ground zero for UAP hotspots—over 500 reports yearly near labs. Congressman calls it "statistically impossible coincidence," launching subpoenas for FBI files. Locals tie it to 80-year UAP watches over silos, as witnesses described in prior hearings.

Four lives erased near atomic heartlands isn't random—it's a signal something wants insiders quiet.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: If you're near a nuke site, vanishing isn't a movie plot—watch your back, because Congress is.

Sources: r/aliens · Oversight House


Purple Orb Hovers Over Arizona Suburbs—Witnesses Freeze

Sarah Jenkins stepped onto her Phoenix patio for a smoke at 2 a.m., phone in hand, when the purple glow lit her yard: a perfect orb, 10 feet wide, silent 50 feet up. It pulsed like a heartbeat, edges sharp against the stars—no drone whine, no balloon drift. Her shaky video captures it banking slowly, then shooting straight up at impossible speed.

Dozens in the thread pile on: same orb over Goodyear 20 miles west, same night, same unnatural violet hue. No heat signature on FLIR apps run post-sighting; it ignored 30 mph gusts. Arizona logs 200+ UAP yearly— this one's viral clip racks 50,000 views in hours, reigniting debates on orbs as probes, not craft.

One orb turns skeptics into believers overnight; Sarah's still checking her skies nightly.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: Arizona nights just got weirder—grab your phone before that glow visits your backyard.

Source: r/UFOs


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