Friday, December 16, 2011

Bigfoot Eyeshine Video



Very interesting video from Kentucky taken at nighttime in the middle of the woods.

Released by the Bigfoot Research Organization, one of the best and most scientific groups working on the subject.

All we can say is:

The animal is not a deer.

The animal is apparently about 7 feet tall. There are a few to no animals in the woods that are 7 feet tall except a bear standing upright. They don't stand upright for very long, and they only do so if they have a good reason to.

For instance, in British Colombia, I watched, panicked, while a huge 7-8 ft tall Black bear piked up our ice chest over and over, lifting it over its head and then smashing it down to the ground. We eventually gave up on the ice chest, and the battered chest was found the next morning with all of the food gone. The bear had been heard by our camp throughout the night, presumably eating the food in the chest.

Point is, that bear is only going to stand up to pick up that chest and lift it over its head and smash it down to the ground. It's not going to stand up for many other reasons. And it won't stand up in the woods for a minute just to stare at you. A bear stands up to make some sort of a threatening gesture, then sits back down, quadruped that he is.

On the other hand, Sasquatches do exactly this in the nighttime. They stand there and stare at you, often for a very long time, often making little or no sound.

Is the creature a man? It's 7 feet tall! It's in the middle of the woods with no flashlight. And those eyes are way too big to be human, if you ask me.

Is this a hoax? Possibly, but BFRO is very good about weeding out hoaxes.

Hoaxes are the bane of Sasquatch research. They just ruin everything. The country is full of these damned hoaxers. I feel there is a lot of excellent evidence for Sasquatch, but to get to it, you have to wade through a damned tidal wave of crap, hoaxes, liars and con artists.

Why all the hoaxes? Some are just having a good time.

For for others, it's the money. After all, Bigfoot means big money. Not really big money, but big enough. A lot of folks in the US don't have a lot of cash. Hooking onto the Bigfoot bandwagon is a nice way to drum up a bit of moolah. Even Moneymaker of the BFRO sold a Bigfoot tape, which later turned out to be a probable hoax, to big bucks Bigfoot researcher Adrian Erickson for $20,000.

I would like to have $20,000. I don't even know what $20,000 looks like. If I wasn't scientifically minded, I'm not sure I would believe that $20,000 even exists. So this is the kind of money we are talking about.

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