The future of military tech is supposedly hypersonic missiles, stealth drones and suicide drones. I'm going with large-scale air force experiments with a new line of drones, possibly with a 'psy-op' angle. While the Democrats sabotage everything possible for the upcoming Orange-Man-Bad presidency (such as selling off portions of the border wall), they want to distract people with 'mysterious' unidentified aerial phenomena.
There be aliens/Iranian motherships launching drone squadrons/Chinese stealth balloons afoot.
(I haven't really spent much thought on this. In case you haven't noticed. ;) )
Govt op to help push more laws and regulations against civilian drones among other ways to steal freedoms from citizens.
Drones are already geofenced, according to what drone hobbyists have been saying. They stop working if they get too close to restricted airspace, and cops of one sort or another are on the operator's ass in minutes.
What is suspicious to me is that the narrative keeps changing. And base incursions started in England as well as the US east coast back in November.
What's up there now is undoubtedly a lot of civilian and police etc drones looking for the og "drones" that started this flap, but the real "drones' seem to be coming off the ocean, and while they might have "lights", they're not necessarily FAA compliant lights.
Best case scenario: US government/industrial fuckery and gaslighting.
Worst case scenario: Sino-Russian fuckery and US gaslighting.
Outlier scenario: NHI (not necessarily "from space") fuckery and US gaslighting.
No matter what, trust in Washington is going to tank even more than it already has done, at home and internationally.
The Army has been testing new drones for 3D mapping and surveillance at the research facility in Jersey since 2018. This is journalists being lazy, and the government trying to keep secrets that aren't even secret anymore. There's a publicily available contract for a drone company to provide the tech and the FAA restricted the airspace for the test back in November.
This is a fat load of nothing that journos have propped up to get clicks.
Oh, really? Sounds interesting.