Anonymous ID: 0291a0 Aug. 3, 2018, 12:57 a.m. No.2427209   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7252 >>7255 >>7701 >>7852

>>2427159

>er account handle is 1st5d. On 23 April she posted (pic attached) an account with the handle 7th5d being suspended. So I thought, why the hell not. Here you go:

 

>2nd: https://twitter.com/2nd5D

 

>3rd: https://twitter.com/3rd5d

 

>4th: https://twitter.com/4th5D (her picture used)

 

>5th: SUSPENDED

 

>6th: https://twitter.com/6th5d

 

Do you Autists see it???

 

5D

Up is Down

Left is right

D-5 Incoming

BOOM

Anonymous ID: 0291a0 Aug. 3, 2018, 1:11 a.m. No.2427352   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>2427259

SPACE X had Rockets that were Carrying shit to the space station in November 2017. Does anyone remember the dates? I dug on this and it ties Space X with the Denver Airport Mural, [This?] through the Q team…???

Anonymous ID: 0291a0 Aug. 3, 2018, 1:22 a.m. No.2427478   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>2427418

There is still this, which crashed on August 2, 1947. IJS==

 

and this one

 

STENDEC Solved (Mystery message from 1947 Andes plane crash)

On August 2, 1947, the “Stardust,” a Lancastrian III passenger plane with eleven people on board, was almost four hours into its flight from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Santiago, Chile. At 17.41 a Chilean Air Force Morse operator in Santiago picked up a message: “ETA [estimated time of arrival] Santiago 17.45 hrs. STENDEC.” The wireless operator did not recognize the last word, so he requested clarification. The message was repeated-STENDEC, then transmitted a third time. Then nothing. The “Stardust” could not be raised and no wreckage could be found.

 

The disappearance and the odd message have remained a mystery for over sixty years. The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable even has an entry for “STENDEC.” Dozens of books and articles have examined the evidence, turned it over, twisted it, rearranged the letters, and drawn a blank. Its meaning, however, is astonishingly simple.

 

People all over the world had reported hundreds of “flying saucer” sightings during the last two weeks of June 1947. On July 3, a rancher at Roswell, New Mexico, claimed to have found a UFO crash site with four alien bodies. Imaginative souls speculated that aliens had snatched the large Lancastrian along with its passengers and crew. A Spanish magazine about UFOs appropriated STENDEK as its title, and at least one U.S. comic book illustrated the disappearance of the “Stardust,” pondering the meaning of STENDEC for its fascinated readers.

 

Adding to the mystery, two Avro 691 Lancastrian aircraft had crashed during the previous seventeen months. British Overseas Airways G-AGLX (the registration number) went down on March 23, 1946, and British Overseas Airways G-AGMF crashed on August 20. The “Stardust” incident involved British South American Airways G-AGWH. Was there a connection?

 

Pieces of the puzzle started to fall into place in 1998, when mountain climbers in the Andes found the plane’s Rolls-Royce engine. In January 2000, a 100-man search party from the Argentine Army clambered 5,000 meters (16,400 feet) up Tupungato Mountain, a 6,552-meter (21,490-foot) volcano, where it located parts of the plane, as well as human bones, at the base of a glacier. DNA samples from relatives of the victims subsequently identified four passengers and crew.

 

 

https://littlegreenfootballs.com/page/233842_STENDEC_Solved_(Mystery_messa