Ghost Army Analysis
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Remember the talk about inflatable, fake planes during the Afghanistan withdrawal catastrophe?
Yes, that was a fake inflatable plane people were supposedly hanging on to. Bitter Maga Truth had a great breakdown of it
I have not heard almost any air traffic since the plandemic ( living near a private airport which the base of what is basically the ROTC of the Air Force- can't think of the name if anyone can help).
*The program is CAP Civilian Air patrol, very interesting history.
I have still not seen/heard hardly any traffic, but I have seen so many of the largest and fastest drones I have ever seen recently.
The night of the stolen election, right before sundown, around 5 or so at that time, I saw/heard line of 40 or more, single engine planes( Cessnas or Pipers likely) flying straight to Philadelphia. I was only able to see one, as the sun was almost completely set, but it had a drab matte grey/green paintjob, unexpected for a hobby plane. They came even minute for about hour. They did not show up on a flight tracker. That was the most traffic since the plandemic.
Prolly full of fake ballots.
Maybe the same plane doing touch and go practice laps
This is small and decommissioned, not even even for local flights to larger airports any more and have not even been many private flights that I've seen.There are other things going on there now, one has been the (main?) base of CAP Civilian Air Patrol, basically the ROTC of the Air Force, but it's been eerily quiet, very strange. These large drones I am seeing are so fast and so quiet, and I see them constantly.
CAP is the Civil Air Patrol. It’s not the ROTC of the AF. I’ve been in the organization since 1971. It’s 3 missions include a cadet program (training teens to be effective leaders and members of their communities—some do join the military; most do not; an aerospace education program to teach members and the surrounding communities about air flight (I earned my Private pilot’s license through CAP at 17 yo when I was a cadet);; and a search and rescue program—CAP has its own fleet of Cessnas operated by several squadrons within each state. It also runs ground search missions. I spent most of my cadet years as part of a ground search team and have been involved in volunteer SAR (now with a K9) for all of my adult life.
CAP is modeled on the AF for structure (flights, squadrons, groups, and wings), uses the AF grade structure with adults using the AF grade insignia and the cadet program a modified version of the enlisted grade and the ROTC grade system. CAP is the USAF’s auxiliary—but it’s a civilian organization. It’s HQ is located at Maxwells AFB (it uses one building on the base), and it receives a few million dollars a year through Congress to help defray some organizational costs. Most funds are generated locally through fund raising. No military or government service credit is accrued through CAP though cadets can earn a couple grades through the enlisted armed forces if they join having attained certain grades in CAP.
There may be some nefarious activities going on in CAP connected with the government, but of the more than 60K nationwide members, only a handful of members would be involved. It’s a non-profit service organization; tends toward conservative though all are allowed to join. It does have an anti child abuse part of the training for both cadet and senior members (though when I was a cadet in the 70s, hazing did exist and it attracted predators like any youth organization—screening and training and policies have eliminated most occurrences.