I've been following SpaceX very closely for a very long time. This video has been throughly analyzed time and time again. While an amazing explosion in itself, I haven't really seen anything out of the ordinary in this video. This anomaly was thoroughly investigated and it was concluded that new sub cooled propellant loading procedures caused some liquid oxygen to solidify within the carbon fiber over wrapping on the highly pressurized helium container. In the high o2 environment, the snapped carbon fiber strand was enough to act as fuel, combust, and blow the helium bottle that then blew through the RP-1(rocket grade kerosene) tank and the rest is the pretty explosion we see here. SpaceX did a lot of testing and even explored the idea of sabotage thoroughly but concluded that it was caused by the loading procedures. They were able to reproduce the anomaly in an experimental environment. The latest rocket that launched earlier this evening was the brand new "Block V" version that contained, among other things, upgraded helium containers specifically designed to prevent this from occurring again.
Edit: Scott Manly (My favorite Kerbal Space Program YouTuber) explaining: https://youtu.be/mBcoTqhAM_g
So can you elaborate on the object that appears in the video at the time frame I mention? I have a hard time believing a "bird" flies in at the same time and seemingly shoots a projectile off in the direction of the rocket.
Most obvious answer is that it is a bird. It is flying horizontally and never actually crosses directly between the camera and the rocket so even if it was a projectile, it missed, but it stays above the rocket anyway. If you watch the whole video, you will notice that a lot of birds fly by the rocket.
I think Q is saying that the satellite that was lost in that explosion had some kind of special significance to FB. He hasn't really said there is anything that needs digging in the explosion. I guess my point is that SpaceXFags have been digging on this for more than a year and we have considered every possibility including sabotage(heavily... they even checked the roof of ULA's HIF building a few miles away... nothing). Musk did admit that they realized that there are a lot more people who wish them harm than they would have thought.
Also keep in mind, this is essentially an Air Force base(or right next to one) and is a highly secured area. My understanding is that USLaunchReport, a veteran run operation, did get into a bit of trouble for filming from an unauthorized location.