Those Black Triangle
Ships In Our Skies
By James Donahue
December 2004
The first time I was
made aware of the massive black triangle shaped UFOs was about 1997 when I was working as a reporter for the White Mountain
Independent in Show Low, Arizona.
It was a little bi-weekly
publication run by the most unconventional pack of journalists, editors and advertising salespeople I have ever known. A fellow
news writer, who packed a .45 caliber revolver, drove a four-wheel drive truck with camouflage covering, and probably belonged
to a militant group of survivalists, told me one day that his “sources” reported such a craft sighted off our
western coast.
This man said he heard
that our military scrambled a squadron of jets and went into a high state of readiness, just short of declaring war, because
of the sighting. The craft was then considered a threat to the United States.
He said the craft was
described as a very large triangular ship that was sighted just off the California coast and not responding to radio identification
requests.
The truth of the story
could not be confirmed. I saw nothing of it on the nightly news, or read of it in any of the many newspapers we received in
the office. Since then, however, the sightings of those black triangular ships have been frequently reported by the media.
That is because the ships are seen everywhere.
I personally saw one.
Or at least I saw the darkness in the night sky where our son, Aaron C. Donahue, said it was hovering over our heads.
That was one strange
summer night in Michigan, when my wife and I had gone to
visit Aaron, and were about to leave for our trip home. As we stood in the yard talking about various things, Aaron drew our
attention to the fact that there was an ominous darkness directly over our heads, yet all around us, at the horizons,
we saw stars.
He said it was a large ship
hovering right over our heads.
Just from the span of
the darkness . . . that part of the sky where there was absolutely no light . . . we had to surmise that it was a very large
craft. There was no way of calculating just how high in the sky it was. The other eerie thing about the ship was that it made
no sound. And it did not appear to be moving.
Other people claim to
have seen these same large ships moving over large populated areas, with bright lights showing. They say the ships seem to
drift slowly over them, making no attempt to keep their presence a secret.
And to this day, no one
has determined just what these ships are, or where they come from.
An now defunct organization
called The National Institute for Discovery Science, Las Vegas, was
cataloging the triangle sightings and keeping a computer database. The Institute was a privately funded organization
that did research on aerial phenomena. The website still exists. Click here to visit
Before shutting down,
the Institute issued a statement that the U.S.
has experienced a wave of triangle sightings that intensified in the 1990s, and are being “openly deployed over and
near population centers.” The study concluded that “neither the agenda nor the origin of the flying triangles
are currently known.”
Aaron, however, claims
they are alien craft, and that he has been aboard one of them. You can find his drawing of the interior of the ship on his
website at ummo.com.
This visit was not physical,
but mental. Donahue said he saw the ship overhead, this time displaying “pulsing lights of extreme quality and beauty.
The lights were in the shape of a large ‘U.’” Also he said there was an orange glow “near the object.”
“I decided to remote
view it that very morning after the incident. I wanted to know what was inside the object.”
A remote viewer gets
his information by using his full brain to bi-locate. That is, the viewer leaves the physical body and visits the object under
scrutiny, while still actively drawing pictures of whatever is observed.
Donahue said he felt
as if the entity operating the ship was visiting him, knowing that contact could be made through a remote viewing session.
He said the drawing produced what he felt was a “distorted outline of the craft” because a flash of orange light
obscured details of the interior. Also seen in the drawing is a vague image of the visiting “life form” or alien.
“There is shown
a moving black crystalline structure below the life form of which there is no context for me. I can not understand what that
black moving object is or what it does without a comparative perspective. I have been seeing a number of objects lately and
this one is very odd,” Donahue concludes.
The drawing suggests
that the design of the ship shows that it consists of some kind of forged metal simply bolted or riveted together almost in
a crude manner. Yet the complex crystalline pattern in front of the “alien” operator offers an image of an advanced
technology that we are incapable of understanding.
The questions his drawings
generate are numerous, and beyond what Aaron has written, there have been no answers. Other than observation, or announcement
that visitors from other worlds are among us, there have been no other logical reasons for these sightings.