Fascinating book about people around the world disappearing in mysterious ways in parks...

Dzali OG

Dz Ali OG...Pay me like you owe me!
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You can post a podcast and as a native I cam still say you'd be wrong

Here's where I got you:

Do you speak for all tribes (can you)? And what tribe are you from? Have you even spoke to your tribe elders...or are you a hip hop native?

Are you a "concrete native american"?
 

Dzali OG

Dz Ali OG...Pay me like you owe me!
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Uh, White people and everyone else say that the oldest pyramids are 4000+ years old, and they always have said that. fukk Alexander the Great was talking about the pyramids like 2300 years ago, so pretty much no European EVER was going to imagine that they were "no older than 2000 years". NO ONE thinks that the Egyptians were just building those things when Caesar was running around Egypt consorting with Cleopatra. Where do you get your misinformation from? :dahell:

You're legit just making shyt up out of thin air. :heh:






Chlorophyll is only in plants, not animals, and it has to react with sunlight to work so it would be useless in your blood. :deadmanny:






How the hell would DNA show that Bigfoot were "Nephilim"? You have some Nephilim DNA samples to compare them to? :umad:


I'm starting to be 70% convinced you just a troll making Missing 411 look bad. :smugdraper:

As someone else said...you missed the point.

I wasn't trying to be accurate with the numbers. Look at the forest not just a tree breh...
 

Professor Emeritus

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Not the article I read years ago, but it looks like it deals with it. The report was from Ft. Lewis where soldiers training supposedly bagged a squatch.

http://m.beforeitsnews.com/paranorm...lorophyll-in-the-blood-continued-2476070.html


Okay, you HAVE to be either trolling or just incapable of logical deduction, so I'm breaking this last one down for the good of the community den I out.


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That's the chick whose blog you're posting from. She probably does seances and talks abut the healing power of astrology for her day job.



It is a story recounted from 1978 told by a soldier named Godoy, a marksman, who was at Ft. Lewis in Washington.

What is the evidence that such a guy even exists? It should be easy to prove whether an Edwin Godoy was stationed at Fort Lewis in 1978. Online, it appears that no one can verify this.



Impossible to make it start, the acting commander decided to return to the base by foot with the soldiers and ordered Godoy — as he was the one who had signed for taking out the truck — to stay and guard it until morning, when a tow unit from the base would be sent to pick up him and the vehicle. To Godoy this was somewhat irregular, as normally, two men would be ordered to do this.

Why only one person guarding? Especially when the army supposedly knows there are Bigfoot in the area? And why is he guarding it with a sniper rifle - anyone on guard duty would have a pistol, not a rifle. He's on a fukking US military base, not in the middle of a war.



At about 12:15 A.M. he noticed a figure some 300 meters away from him, standing next to some pine trees in the forest. What shocked Godoy was the size of the figure — it was very tall — and its body was completely covered with hair. “It was something very big, huge, a giant, ” he said, “and it was all covered by a dark long grayish hair all over its body.

Wait - it's the goddamn middle of the night, the thing is in the trees, it's a good 300 meters away from him, and he can not only see the hair but tell what kind of hair it is? :lolbron:

How the hell is he seeing GRAY hair in the middle of the night at 300 meters. :mjlol:

You couldn't even accurately tell how tall someone is at 300 meters away. You use their height to gauge the distance, not the other way around. :skip:



It was standing next to a pine tree and swinging his body sideways while looking straight at me. It looked somewhat like a man, but it wasn’t a man. Very strongly built, with a broad chest — and his eyes glowed red in the dark. The moon was to the back of it and there were no lights in the area. It was totally dark so this red glow was not due to light reflection. It was something… those eyes had a red glow to them… they seemed to be self-luminous….

So besides the stupid comic-book detail with the "glowing red eyes", now he made his story worse by claiming "the moon was to the back of it and there were no lights in the area, it was totally dark."

Okay, moon to the back, no lights, totally dark, 300 meters away....SO HOW THE HELL DID YOU SEE ANY DETAIL AT ALL, ESPECIALLY THE COLOR OF ITS HAIR?



That thing started running towards me, so I shouted a halt three times, asking that thing to stop and identify itself.

At 300 meters away? A football field is 100 yards, so this is more than three football fields. This soldier's voice must carry like a motherfukker. :pachaha:



They all went to where the hairy thing was shot and the men were surprised to see huge humanlike footprints imprinted in the soft ground and several small pools of blood that looked red, but strangely oily and fresh looking.

Red? I thought there was chlorophyll in the blood. Chlorophyll is green. :beli:



At about 7:30 A.M. some unknown personnel arrived to the site —: several men dressed in white lab coats, wearing thick gray 'rubber' (leaded?) gloves and boots took samples from the tracks impression on the ground, the alleged 'blood' which was handled with extreme care. The mechanics talked with these men, but Godoy was not allowed to do the same. Later, they all were ordered by radio to return at once to Ft. Lewis. Godoy was to report himself to the base hospital immediately at his arrival.

To his surprise, an Air Force medical officer, a colonel, was waiting for him there. Fort Lewis is a U.S. Army military base with no ties with the Air Force, so why the presence of this full-bird Air Force colonel there? He couldn't say. The usual thing would have been for the regular medical staff in the base hospital to attend him. This man was not from the hospital's medical staff. The officer debriefed thoroughly him on the incident and made a complete medical and physical exam to him. While examining him he kept asking at what distance he was from the creature when he shot at it, on the creature's description, if he felt a tingling sensation or had a sore throat, headaches, if a rash had developed on his skin — and other things. The Air Force medical officer apparently knew what to ask. It was obvious to Godoy that he was looking for specific symptoms — and answers — but symptoms and answers to what?

Several samples of his blood, skin scrapings, urine, saliva and other types of samples were taken from Godoy. The soldier knew something odd was going on, he kept asking the officer where he had come from but he wouldn't answer. After being examined, he was ordered to go to his barracks, then he took a shower and rested.

Later, he was ordered to go to the base commander's office. The base commander, (a lieutenant general — name not remembered by Ed Godoy), was there together with his company commander, Captain Underwood, and a colonel whose last name was, to his best recall, Kropsie. They debriefed him again on what had happened out in the woods and then the base commander ordered Godoy not to talk ever to anyone on what had happened. He was warned that if he ever talked about it he'd be court martial and would have to face the consequences. Godoy responded he would obey.

Later, heading to his room, he was approached by L. Robles, a Puerto Rican soldier who was commissioned in the hospital's lab. Robles asked Godoy what was it he had shot. Godoy said he was not allowed to discuss the matter and Robles insisted on asking. He asked Robles why was it so important for him to know. Robles answered: "I, together with two other guys, had to analyze the blood samples taken from the ground, and we know you are the soldier involved because it was stated as such in the report... And you know? It's crazy, but... what the hell was it you shot out there? When we examined the blood samples we found out three weird things in it... That blood contained human blood cells, animal blood cells...and chlorophyll. Man, that's incredible! What the hell was it?

Okay, so it builds up forever that it's this giant secret operation with all these secret people who won't say a word....and then the blood analysis is done by some regular fukking army grunt who has no clue what he's looking and and doesn't even keep his mouth shut? :pachaha:

All that top-secret shyt, and then you don't take the blood to be analyzed by your top-secret scientists, you have it analyzed by a regular friendly army grunt. :snoop:

And no one analyzing blood would say "human blood cells, animal blood cells, and chlorophyll." Were they red blood cells? White blood cells? Which animal? It's a silly nonsensical statement.



So, can we assumed the government knows about the chlorophyll if such a condition is truly a feature of Sasquatch? Oh yes, there is no doubt at all that they would know. No one would want to study such a subject more and likely bodies have been studied for decades.

So bodies have been studied for decades, but the blood analysis is given to a grunt who doesn't even know what he's looking at. :upsetfavre:



They exist for many protective reasons, but when looking at ones like these above – one can’t help but recall the potential of Sasquatch hairs to help them in cloaking.

Sasquatch are experts at "cloaking" now? :skip: Sure a lot of good it did that one if it's eyes glow in the dark and you can see the color of its hair at midnight at 300 meters. :beli:



There's a whole bunch of other bullshyt in there about chlorophyll, but I've done enough. The "eyewitness report" is nonsensical. You just need to apply half a brain to figure it out.
 
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