Almost 10,000 users have watched the footage since it was posted on YouTube on January 1. The short video, filmed in a car driving along a snowy road in foggy conditions, shows two bright lights moving quickly across the sky. The YouTube user says that the video was shot on a dashboard-mounted camera by a Scottish mountain rescue team. There are no details as to where or when the video was actually shot, or which mountain rescue team was involved. The video sparked a debate among users to the site as to whether it was a genuine sighting of something unexplained or if it had a more mundane explanation. Many suggested that the recording just shows the lights of a passing car reflected on the windscreen Freezing the footage and expanding the picture suggests that there are in fact four points of light, corresponding to the four front lights of the passing car. But the theory was disputed by others, with comments from users including: "None of the lights are moving at the same speeds as any of the cars."
Welcome to "A Light In The Darkness" - a realm that explores the mysterious and the occult; the paranormal and the supernatural; the unexplained and the controversial; and, not forgetting, of course, the conspiracy theories; including Artificial Intelligence; Chemtrails and Geo-engineering; 5G and EMR Hazards; The Global Warming Debate; Trans-Humanism and Trans-Genderism; The Covid-19 and mRNA vaccine issues; The Ukraine Deception ... and a whole lot more.
Search A Light In The Darkness
Sunday, 8 January 2012
Scotland: 'UFO' video sparks online debate
Footage on YouTube shows what is claimed to be two UFOs filmed by mountain rescue team. A video claiming to show two UFOs flying across a wintery Scottish sky has provoked an online debate.
Almost 10,000 users have watched the footage since it was posted on YouTube on January 1. The short video, filmed in a car driving along a snowy road in foggy conditions, shows two bright lights moving quickly across the sky. The YouTube user says that the video was shot on a dashboard-mounted camera by a Scottish mountain rescue team. There are no details as to where or when the video was actually shot, or which mountain rescue team was involved. The video sparked a debate among users to the site as to whether it was a genuine sighting of something unexplained or if it had a more mundane explanation. Many suggested that the recording just shows the lights of a passing car reflected on the windscreen Freezing the footage and expanding the picture suggests that there are in fact four points of light, corresponding to the four front lights of the passing car. But the theory was disputed by others, with comments from users including: "None of the lights are moving at the same speeds as any of the cars."
Almost 10,000 users have watched the footage since it was posted on YouTube on January 1. The short video, filmed in a car driving along a snowy road in foggy conditions, shows two bright lights moving quickly across the sky. The YouTube user says that the video was shot on a dashboard-mounted camera by a Scottish mountain rescue team. There are no details as to where or when the video was actually shot, or which mountain rescue team was involved. The video sparked a debate among users to the site as to whether it was a genuine sighting of something unexplained or if it had a more mundane explanation. Many suggested that the recording just shows the lights of a passing car reflected on the windscreen Freezing the footage and expanding the picture suggests that there are in fact four points of light, corresponding to the four front lights of the passing car. But the theory was disputed by others, with comments from users including: "None of the lights are moving at the same speeds as any of the cars."