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I was walking down Dearborn Street in Chicago and said "I haven't smelt marijuana for like ten minutes now.  Oh, there it is".  Then somebody stuffed a quinoa burger in my face and whacked me with a sheleighly 27 times.

Grave Digger posted:
Pakrz posted:

Which one of you triangle schmoes didn't pay the light bill?

We had to take a temporary break to unclog the pipes from all the dumps you take on threads. 

Fair enough.

Do UFOs cause the mysterious disappearance of people, airplanes, and ships in the Bermuda Triangle?

 

Bermuda Triangle? Recent research into the Bermuda Triangle shows there have been no more disappearances there (taking into account the large amount of air and sea traffic in the area) than in any other part of the world's oceans. In general, most disappearances have conventional explanations unrelated to UFOs or other paranormal phenomena. Although there are some disappearances of aircraft that some researchers believe may be connected to UFOs, such as the disappearance in 1945 of five Avenger bombers off the east coast of Florida while on a routine training mission, no UFO connection has ever been proven. The Bermuda Triangle theory is based more on imagination than on concrete evidence.

There is at least one case, however, involving the disappearance of a pilot and his airplane, that does involve a UFO. In 1978, off the coast of Australia half a world away from the Bermuda Triangle, a young pilot, Fred Valentich, reported that a UFO was following his small plane. Suddenly, radio contact with Valentich ceased, and the young pilot was never heard from again. Neither Valentich nor his plane were ever found, despite an intensive air and sea search. Although there is no positive evidence to prove that a UFO caused Valentich's disappearance, the theory persists.

http://www.cufos.org/related.html

 

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