The Phoenix Lights - Unmasking the Unmaskers

On March 13, 1997, an extraordinary event occurred throughout Arizona that has been the subject of much debate in the UFO community. Hundreds and perhaps thousands of witnesses from all walks of life reported seeing a large V-shaped craft, over a mile in diameter with unusual light, travel slowly and calmly at a very low altitude. Some witnesses who reported being directly below him as he passed by said he slid across the roofs of houses so close that it looked like "they could almost touch him." Eyewitness accounts suggest that at least one unknown vessel and possibly others passed directly over Phoenix and penetrated the Sky Harbor airspace before heading south toward Tucson. At least one air traffic controller at Sky Harbor Airport admitted in a television news interview that he saw the tower lights using binoculars but saw nothing on the radar.

Skeptics and debunkers dismiss the event as a torch or a series of other natural or artificial explanations, while thousands of witnesses insist that what they saw cannot be explained in any known expression. There are many remarkable facts, photos, eyewitness accounts and circumstances attached to the event and similar events that have happened all over the world that are largely ignored by the media and completely ignored by some fierce skeptics and debunkers who get much more media . . the attention they deserve. First of all, to avoid confusion, we need to classify the Sushi in Phoenix Lights Phenomenon into two categories:

LIGHTS ON MOVING SHIPS: These are lights associated with the March 13 (shortly after 8 p.m.) that appeared to be attached to a large V-shaped or triangular ship. There are different eyewitness accounts of different light groups, patterns, and number of lights that could indicate the possibility of multiple ships or a singular craft changing as they fly through the Arizona sky. All witnesses unanimously agree that the craft, or several vessels, were completely silent and flew very close to the ground. A ship was more than a mile wide, according to hundreds of documented testimonies.

ORBS: They are luminescent amber balls that appear randomly individually, in pairs or in groups. They can appear together in rigid formation or separated by miles. These orbs defy the explanation and are the variety I personally observed on November 21, 2005 (read about my vision). They do not flicker or emit traces of smoke and remain perfectly attached in position with each other and with the ground. Dr. Lynne Kitei, a respected Phoenix physician and important witness to the Phoenix Lights, personally observed these divergent lights very close to her mountain home in 1995. She had the unique opportunity to observe a trio of orbs very closely (less than 200 feet apart) and described them as spheres of amber light about three to six feet wide. They did not dazzle, emit no ray of light or illuminate their adjacent surroundings. He could not identify what they were, but he managed to capture them on a photograph. He said they dimmed one by one "like on a dimmer switch."

The bullets are a separate phenomenon from what happened on March 13, 1997, which in any case was a massive UFO flyby. The bullets are harshly claimed to be torch launched by the military because of their similar appearance. Skeptics have thrown many explanations, none of which are confirmed by facts or eyewitness accounts.

FLARE THEORY: By far the most common theory and the official theory given by the local Phoenix Army. Let me first point out that I am fully aware of Barry Goldwater's test area. I know where Phoenix is ​​near and I have excellent knowledge of the activity that takes place there based on many sources including military personnel. I know what torches look like, both from personal observation and from the analysis of video and photo images, and have personally spoken with military personnel who work with torches on a daily basis, including a highly qualified pyrotechnic expert. I do not deny that the military traps torches on the Barry Goldwater Range and that pilots often dispose of the remaining torches before returning to base. I also agree that some, not all, of the reported sightings of strange lights and a number of photos and videos that have circulated were actually torch.

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