Photo date: February 18, 2016. Photographer: Mark Mahin.
The photo below is a composite photo showing two consecutive photos taken a few seconds apart in midtown Manhattan. In both photos we see a pink orb that seems to be moving incredibly fast.
Neither photo shows a camera strap, as my camera strap was around my wrist when the photos were taken (and we can see the top photo does not show any line connected to the edge of the photo). We are also not seeing one of my hairs (my hair is very short, and the camera was at arm's length).
The bottom image shows a type of motion quite impossible for dust, insects, or birds to be making -- a motion involving an extremely sharp and drastic change of direction. I may note that I have quite short hair, so we are not at all seeing one of my hairs blowing in the wind.
Below is a color-adjusted closeup of part of the top image. We can clearly see an orb within the line of motion.
The failure of mainstream science to acknowledge the reality of moving orbs is an intellectual scandal within our culture. Photographers all over the world have been taking photos like this for 20 years, as you can see by doing a Google image search for "moving orb" or "speeding orb." This site has 292 photos of speeding orbs, 44 of which show them making weird, twisty paths of motion. But our academics refuse to acknowledge this abundantly observed observational reality, simply because they cannot explain it.
There was no rain, fog, mist or precipitation on this night. The air
quality listed on airnow.gov was "good," with a rating of 35 (anything
below 50 is considered good). The pollen count listed on pollen.com was
low, with a level of 0.9.
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