Its under an electric station nearby. The city is distancing itself and says it does not own the property. The city claims it was used as an Army research facility and missile base.
I swear to you all that during the cover of thunderstorms, I have been hearing explosions going on nearby from my home.
I am a combat veteran and can tell the difference between thunder and explosions.
This is intense.
EDIT: OKAY I DIDNT CONFIRM THE DUMB BUT LOOK AT THIS LETTER AND DECIDE.. https://ibb.co/0yXrK9P
Located on the east side of the City, Western Electric is a 22-acre former US Army missile & communications systems manufacturing site with 760,000 square feet of space in 16 buildings. At its peak in the 1960’s, this plant employed almost 4,000 engineers, technicians and line workers. Entire neighborhoods, schools and shopping areas were built nearby to serve the plant.
Employment slowly declined at the plant as the Cold War ended. In 1991, the facility officially closed. The property was sold by the US Government in 2004; it has been predominantly vacant since. In 2016, the plant was added to the National Register of Historic Places to encourage tax credit investors and historic redevelopment.
This will likely get lost but let’s do some simple arithmetic. You know, numbers and shit…
For argument’s sake, let’s stipulate an access shaft 10 yards in diameter and six miles deep.
Thus: (6 * 1720) X (3.14 X 5**2) = 810,530.9 cubic yards of spoil just for the shaft. That’s approximately a half a square mile, three feet deep. That’s without any drift tunnels or spaces. That is an Imperial fuckton of fill to dispose of. And there are supposed to be tens of thousands of these in North America?
This says nothing of the pithead equipment needed to just dig the hole. Just swagging here but the gantry would be the size of a fifteen story building. I’m not certain but I think people driving by on US-64 in 1955 probably would have noticed.
Oh, wait. Giorgio Tsoukalos says it was alien technologies…
you dont think there are massive underground cave areas or just the ocean t to dump shit?
all that math though..
Lifting cubic miles of dirt and transporting it? Not bloody likely. The only possibility would have been by rail. I know the area around Burlington, NC and the road infrastructure couldn’t have supported it back then.
It’s “cloud cuckoo land”.