We're not allowed to see. Another NASA space telescope just shut down
I hear that SpaceX launched something unusual on October 7. I also hear that NASA is collaborating more with intelligence agencies looking for something in space - not the usual stuff our intelligence agencies look for. But they don't want anyone else looking. Several problems have occurred in space in the days since SPaceX's payload was launched:
On October 10 the Hubble Telescope went offline. Just one problem could be a meaningless coincidence.
The Russians couldn't launch properly on Thursday: "The Soyuz MS-10 with two astronauts on board made a successful emergency landing after the rocket's a booster failed midway after launch on October 11, 2018."
On October 12: "Another NASA space telescope has shut down and halted science observations.
Less than a week after the Hubble Space Telescope went offline, the Chandra X-ray Observatory did the same thing. NASA said Friday that Chandra's automatically went into so-called safe mode Wednesday, possibly because of a gyroscope problem.
Hubble went into hibernation last Friday due to a gyroscope failure.
Both orbiting observatories are old and in well-extended missions: Hubble is 28, while Chandra is 19. Flight controllers are working to resume operations with both.
NASA said it's coincidental both went "asleep" within a week of one another. An astronomer who works on Chandra, Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, tweeted Friday that "Chandra decided that if Hubble could have a little vacation, it wanted one, too."
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2018-10-nasa-space...orbit.html
Are alien ships visible nearby? Is there an incoming wavefront from the galactic center about to trigger a pole shift in the near future, as Dr. Paul LaViolette suggests? Or maybe it's all a coincidence. I mean three coincidences... Time will tell.