WNU Editor: This response is a textbook example on how leaders and institutions lose the public trust.πΊπΈπ¨π³πReporter: "Does the public not have the right to know where the balloon is?"
— AZ π°πππ (@AZgeopolitics) February 3, 2023
Pentagon: "The public certainly has the ability to look up in the sky and see where the balloon is" pic.twitter.com/H7dxsweygF
That general needs to fired, immediately.
ReplyDeleteLol and we still somehow find it in ourselves to trash talk Russia whenever we can.
ReplyDeleteBut if we were to have shot this thing down, what info would have been Gained on our launch sites, missile speed and accuracy etc,playing devils advocate here
ReplyDeleteThe balloon apparently is under Chinese control. They can steer it in any direction & reading between the lines could possibly change altitude. It obviously has a propulsion system. If the propulsion system is a mini nuclear reactor on board the balloon, then that is a good enough reason not to shoot it down. I wonder if you could fit a weapon on such a contraption? Keep ducking....
ReplyDeletePlus the yanks can learn a bunch of signet intel from it as well.
DeleteMini nuclear reactor
ReplyDeletebuddy what
What an Arrogant S.O.B.
ReplyDeleteShoot it down after it crosses the coast line. The Chinese will whine. then show the wreckage and show that it was not a weather balloon. Make them eat crow.
ReplyDeleteThat is why they won't shoot it down. They wanted a little red scare to keep the sheep focused, but then they got embarrassed when it was question how a nuclear armed spy balloon defeated the air defenses above a NORAD missile field, and now they just want the thing to float away out to sea and be forgotten.
ReplyDeletewhee is the moon? it is noon and I only see the sun.I blame Wendell Wilkie
ReplyDeleteIt's got gay lasers on it that give off gay and make America not war ready.
ReplyDeleteMy wife left me for a lesbian.
Poke a hole with drone fired arrow let it drift down as it loses air
ReplyDeleteBallon - π₯±
ReplyDelete