Saturday, September 17, 2011
Griffin’s Embrace of CIT Critics a Setback for 9/11 Pentagon Research
Hey, Lucy!! I'm not getting a good felling about this...
National Reconnaissance Office Observes 50th Anniversary with Declassification of Edsel Sat [Yawn...]
Ed. Note - The NRO was a client back in the day. Nice they are bringing out this dinosaur relic for public oohing and aahing. If you're into ancient tech of the Cold War, you might enjoy this showing, especially if you're in the area visiting as a tourist or here for nefarious purposes, such as a Police State or Shadow Government employee. [If you just thought to yourself and asked if you're part of the shadow government, you just answered it for yourself - you're not, not in the club. You don't have an assigned bunk in the underground shelter for the continuity of government. You are being used and nothing but a throwaway for the controlling elite factor. There's a reason why they're Shadowy Multi-generational Serial Killer Blue-blood Families®™ .]
Air Force transport giving birth to dinosaur technology it seems. Shouldn't this have an NC-17 rating? |
SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
The National Reconnaissance Office, the agency that develops and operates U.S. intelligence satellites, is observing the 50th anniversary of its establishment in 1961 with a burst of declassification activity.
Tomorrow, September 17, the newly declassified KH-9 HEXAGON satellite will go on public display -- for one day only -- in the parking lot of the Udvar-Hazy Center of the National Air and Space Museum.
The KH-9 HEXAGON was a photographic reconnaissance satellite that was first launched in 1971 and ceased operation in the mid-1980s. At sixty feet long and ten feet in diameter, it is said to be the largest intelligence satellite ever launched by the U.S.
The GAMBIT satellite is also to be unveiled at a Saturday evening reception. In addition, "almost all" of the voluminous historical intelligence imagery captured by the KH-9 is expected to be released.
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