Question:

Do you believe these are underground alien bases?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

http://video.stumbleupon.com/#p=gxagr93lha

 Tags:

   Report

6 ANSWERS


  1. What a load of bunk!

    A lot of airports have underground transportation from one terminal to another. It saves space. Same with parking garages.

    And if the military does have underground tracks under the airport, it would only be utilized for safely transporting people or goods in an emergency situation.

    I think the creators of this little documentary are avid Star Trek and Star Wars convention groupies.


  2. Denver: It used to have an underground train system. I remember when they were building it. It was actually just a circle of tunnels and 4 loading/unloading platforms. Be very difficult to keep more than about 10 people down there at any given time. Additionally, there are *stairs* that lead from publicly-visible areas to these tracks. Pretty much guaranteed, nothing is down there. The "garage level" is one of the four loading platforms.

    Dulce: Nice drawing. Proof, please?

    Sign: I see "13 Below" as displayed by Hollywood in a movie I've seen. It was supposed to be alien, but I can't remember the title. Bugger! Wish I could, I'd debunk this one for certain!

    Programmable life forms: Actually, that's one of many scrapped designs in the US Army's "soldier of the future" series. The stuff on the face is essentially a glorified motorbike helmet with thermal imaging cameras. The wires are both power and cooling. Human being = programmable life form... sure, I'll give that one. Oh, and... bonus points for the shoe pocket.

    Back to Dulce: A much-circulated photo that has been neither sufficiently debunked nor validated, but which seems convincing in a Hollywood sort of way.

    Vats of goo: Not authentic. This photo's been debunked before by smarter people than me. If I remember the story right, it's a 1965 photo of a medical synthesis chamber, for making artificial penicillin. That's from memory, I didn't try to find it in my notes.

    Flooded Underground Facility: Nope. Pretty standard mineshaft. I've stood not far from there. It's Kennecott Copper Mine, though the colors are off a bit.

    Dulce Lab again: Aww, how cute! The regularity of the shading tells me it's plastic, not flesh. Contrast with the very irregular fingers holding it. Even the most exotic animal flesh has color variations due to microcellular decay, changes in blood flow, irregularities in the skin... lots of other reasons. Learned about that in art school.

    Pulse Weapon in Space: NASA artist's rendition of a first-stage separation. Sheez... don't these people ever try to find out the truth?

    Screens: Actually, This is a poster. If I remember right, it was in the background of one of the "Planet of the Apes" movies.

    Screenshot: Funny... still looks like a printed poster which anyone could have made. Someone should tell them Nibiru doesn't exist because every large object in orbit is actually accounted for... still nervous about the 2027 fly-by, though: that asteroid might make Tank Girl real! Wait, that would be cool, I'd love to meet those sentient kangaroos that sound like Ice T! Enough poking fun, I've looked all over the place and actually been to observatories where friends of mine work. There is no Nibiru.

    Photo of photo: Hard to read, uses publically-available fonts to look all futuristic and stuff, but what's interesting is the moire pattern. Having worked in publishing, that's a dead give-away for an inkjet printer, which actually wouldn't look anything like a photograph if you looked carefully.

    Underground Screenshot: Moire points to dye sublimation or inkjet... hard to say on that one, but definitely human-produced.

    ETV: Finally, something I can't debunk! I'd need a sharper original to do much with this.

    Masonic Symbols: Okay, knowing a Freemason who knows masonic symbols... no. These aren't masonic. In fact, that particular "3" is (if I remember correctly) part of the original "Logan's Run" movie set, and was auctioned in 1978. How it arrived to be part of a top-secret government base, I'll never know, but... you know... if they wanted to sell it, I know a collector.

    Mag-Lev: Another movie-set still... someone really likes the "Logan's Run" movie!

    Skeleton: Interestingly enough, never sufficiently debunked, though never examined enough to debunk it, either.

    Photo: Someone claimed this was a webcam shot. Personally, my gut screams "fake" but I don't know how it was done. I will say, it's easier to get away with in lower resolutions because my trained eye only catches tiny flaws, and pixelation makes that harder. Therefore, low-res images are typically suspect.

    That was the end of it.

    Kinda disappointed. I was hoping for something much cooler.

  3. That's 6 minutes too long for me.  There aren't any aliens living underground.  If there were, they'd have come up to say hello by now.

  4. I don't think I have ever seen anything less convincing.

  5. Deenie you're now going places you may regret. There are some things you would be better off not dwelling on, this is one of them.

  6. Please don't tell me you're actually taking this seriously. Really, anyone can take random photographs - even some from early science fiction magazines - and then claim them to be anything they want.

    Really if the producer of that video is serious, he is a seriously deranged lunatic. I don't even want to make fun of him, because he's so sick.

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 6 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.