Allegedly, in the fall of 1943 a U.S. Navy destroyer was made invisible and teleported from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Norfolk, Virginia, in an incident known as the Philadelphia Experiment. Records in the Operational Archives Branch of the Naval Historical Center have been repeatedly searched, but no documents have been located which confirm the event, or any interest by the Navy in attempting such an achievement.
If they were able to even start the teletransport process and make the ship invisible in 1943, why did we see all the troops and equipment in IraQ on TV? Wouldn't it have been cheaper by now to just "drop them off" there and then beam them back at the end of war, or out of harms way during the war if necessary?
Assume teletransport was somehow possible back in 1943. Without modern computers and GPS how could they approximate where the ship and/or people would end up?
Thus NO, I don't.
Neither in UFOs but it would be fun if we had some. I would see them as a hopeful sign for the possibility of life to continue in the universe no matter how badly we mess up this planet.
My grandpa was in the navy, the story he told me was that it was a project to try and make the ship invisible, but when it was attempted the ship and whole crew disappeared for an instant. When it reappeared more than half the crew claimed to have blacked out for an instant, then there were others some had aged from 10 to 40 years visibly, and were wearing different period cloths, and some came back dead their bodies fused with parts of the ship, and a lot were simply missing, he said 2 or 3 were rumored to be found in Europe and Russia.
Iunno if he was pulling my leg but he seemed real serious about it, told me sometimes weird things happen and that people don't know everything. He told me this when I was about 10 so there might be some stuff i'm forgetting but thats how I remembered it