Good post.
I quote from what you wrote:
“Leyvas maintains that the object itself that created the contrail only remained in view for two to three minutes. For 30 to 45 seconds, the object glowed brightly and then seemed to disappear from view. “
And:
“Solid fuel engines such as those used in an SLBM create an uninterrupted exhaust plume for two to three minutes, after which time the solid fuel is spent, and the missile is usually out of view.”
Hmmmmmmmmmmmm
These two seem to correlate strongly. Very strongly. You might say unmistakably.
And left out of the only 100% we-are-certain-he-was witness’ statement: “The object was spiraling, spinning. It was spectacular”
and then several have noted: Lit up the sky.
Didn’t the LAX webcam people call it “Stunning. Amazing. Disappeared in 30 to 45 seconds.”
And the posters to FR and to other blogs who ACTUALLY have worked at White Sands Proving Grounds and another who also worked at Cape Canaveral for 15 to 30 years and who both / all told us “It was absolutely a missile. No doubt”.
These too have been, oddly, left out.
So. let me get this straight:
the ex Director of NORAD tells us “It was a missile. no doubt.” He is a three star Lieutenant General.
Yet
Contrail science and a guy on the 10th floor have solved it?
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Your government is lying to you.
“At this point, I was thoroughly convinced that the contrail was nothing more than UPS flight 902, back-lit by the setting sun.”
Spiralling backlight? I guess the earth’s orbit was a bit screwy that day, or we had freepers lying about the corkscrew pattern? I definitely want to see the video now. Just imagine — a corkscrew orbit proven by a plane’s reflection.
"The time stamps on Warrens photos were used to establish that the object creating the contrail remained in view for 4 minutes 43 seconds in Warrens photos. Based on altitude and position, the object first appeared in Leyvas video at least five minutes prior to Warrens photos."An actively produced trail was observed over a period of 9 minutes 43 seconds. Too long to possibly be any kind of missile, except for the jet-powered kind.