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I couldn't find anything in that link that said those 20 employees were working for DoD.
I couldn't find anything in that link that said those 20 employees were working for DoD.
Do you have a link that says they work for DoD?
He isn't just a number cruncher for his employer. He helped invent a radiation detector.
Another thing that is interesting .. is someone like me could look up his info from clear across the globe .. so, don't you think an intelligence officer would be quite capable of finding out that info before he boarded the flight?
That's all you got?He isn't just a number cruncher for his employer. He helped invent a radiation detector.
Doesn't it also occur to you that if it's that easy to find it's not that sensitive?Another thing that is interesting .. is someone like me could look up his info from clear across the globe .. so, don't you think an intelligence officer would be quite capable of finding out that info before he boarded the flight?
That's all you got?
Doesn't it also occur to you that if it's that easy to find it's not that sensitive?
I pay attention to the smaller details. The big story is to cover up - they are stalling for time. I suspect there was cargo that had something to do with this. It is a sad thing.
So, the fact he was an electronic warfare specialist escaped you? that he had enough technical knowledge to help create (at least) a radiation detector makes him somewhat different than a person who invents a laser printer?
RF Military Systems Engineer at Freescale Semiconductor in Tempe, US-AZ - Job | LinkedIn
P.S. He was the first one I looked up ... haven't done any further research on the other 19 engineers.
Asked whether the aircraft could have been hijacked, another official answered: “Where are the demands?”
enough technical knowledge? electronic warfare specialist? where did you get that info?
tell me which forum you're getting these incredibly wild ideas from.
you mean like the wild idea I had that the plane was hijacked?
yeah ... so "comical" <<<your words
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search expands amid focus on criminal act - The Washington Post
Just an update on info we all probably already know.
yeah well ... there were no demands from the 9/11 hijackers ....
Nope ... the CIA hasn't used Air America in quite a while ... but those runways are still there. No control towers either.
that's not what I asked. so let's focus on what I asked, shall we? so where did you get these info that he was an electronic warfare specialist? and that he had enough technical knowledge to produce whatever (not sure why bother since information was already posted publicly in patent record for anybody to reproduce it)?
and who said it was hijacked?
how you know CIA hasn't used Air America in quite a while?
The ubtube can't be seen in USA . I did see that someone made a remark about being able flip a switch and making a plane disappear . That is very disturbing to think is that easy to do.
Let me ask you this then... Since you're making it sounds like they're so important and valuable enough for terrorists/rogue government to hijack a plane for them... do these 20 people have kidnap & ransom policies?I don't. Maybe they still use the runways from time to time , but not like they did when Air America was operating during the Vietnam war. Which wasn't the point I was making at all to begin with.
The point was actually ... "where could flight MH 370 land without detection?"
The answer is quite simple .... didn't the flight disappear? Wasn't it confirmed that it flew for 7 hours after the transponders were deliberately turned off? If it flew for 7 hours, and no locator beacon went off, it means it had to have landed somewhere.
Where?
I made the suggestion that the runways used during the now defunct Air America were in range of those 7 hours of flight time. That was the point I was making.
now, I will leave you to decide whether or not I was actually talking about the CIA (which I wasn't) or where MH 370 could have landed.
Let me ask you this then... Since you're making it sounds like they're so important and valuable enough for terrorists/rogue government to hijack a plane for them... do these 20 people have kidnap & ransom policies?
EW's are a dime a dozen. They aren't as rare as you think.So, the fact he was an electronic warfare specialist escaped you? that he had enough technical knowledge to help create (at least) a radiation detector makes him somewhat different than a person who invents a laser printer?
RF Military Systems Engineer at Freescale Semiconductor in Tempe, US-AZ - Job | LinkedIn
P.S. He was the first one I looked up ... haven't done any further research on the other 19 engineers.