As the Congressional investigation on 911 nears completion, secret information has begun to leak out. Before 911, Niaz Khan, a Pakistani living in the U.K., told the FBI he’d been trained by al Qaeda to hijack airplanes and was in the U.S. to carry out an attack. The FBI questioned him, then let him go. Khan says, “I told them before the 9/11, about more than year before, [about the] hijacking in America or on American airline.”
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Tommy Woodard, of the Utah Film Commission, was taking a video of the Utah countryside, when he captured a UFO on video. He says, “When I was shooting the picture, I didn’t see the object?In all my pictures, I’ve never seen anything like this.

“I didn’t get out of the car when I took the specific shot. I just leaned up to the car window, took the shot and kept driving.”
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UFO researcher Richard Dolan writes: Since the news was released in early May 2004 that a Mexican Air Force interceptor encountered several invisible objects that registered clearly on radar and infrared systems, a number of articles appeared that attempted to explain the event as either weather phenomena or new stealth technology. Such conclusions are very premature.
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Susumu Tachi, who invented a cloak that makes its wearer “invisible,” now plans to develop technology that will allow people to see through walls. He says, “My short term goal would be?to make a room that has no outside windows appear to have a view to the outside, then the wall would appear to be invisible.”

The cloak works by projecting an image onto itself of what is behind the wearer, making him seem invisible. It’s made of a new fabric called retro-reflectum. “This material allows you to see a three-dimensional image,” says Tachi. Aside from startling other pedestrians, the cloak can be used by spies. The invisible walls could be used by pilots to see through the floor of the cockpit to the runway below.
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