Quote:Really? You can't clearly see how small that child is, especially in comparison to the headstone it goes behind? Go watch it again.
I've watched it about twenty times. Noone is throwing a huge branch into the tree, least of a little toddler.They're just not that strong. And as I said, the blob that drops down isn't the color of a branch. It is whitish. Hence your branch canard is totally debunked.
Quote:You've repeatedly proven your observation skills are sorely lacking.
I'm seeing what everybody else in the world is seeing. Nobody claims it is a branch thrown by a toddler into a tree who is hiding behind a tombstone because that is a ridiculous claim. Toddlers don't do that because they can't and wouldn't do that.
Quote: Really? Explain quantum entanglement then. Or consciousness. Or the measurement problem. Or dark energy. Or the placebo effect. Ofcourse there's a vast difference between believing everything can be explained and actually explaining everything isn't there? The former is a sort of religious faith while the later is just science. The former requires no knowledge whatsoever while the latter would require immense knowledge. Guess which category you fit into.
Really? You believe humanity is at the peak of their evolving intelligence? Obviously if your UAP aliens can do what you say they can then they’ve attained a level we haven’t. You saying not all things are explainable is the beginning of kindergarten(woo) science. What you see is what you get Magic Man, take it or leave it. There’s no magic, everything has an explanation whether we know what it is or not. You’re so phony.
Quote:There’s no magic, everything has an explanation whether we know what it is or not.
Well if nobody knows what the explanation is then how does it have an explanation? How do you know everything has a natural mundane explanation? What's the natural mundane explanation for the birth of the universe? Must be that special you in the blase you have, a privileged skill reserved only for the entirely ignorant. lol
Quote:Really? You can't clearly see how small that child is, especially in comparison to the headstone it goes behind? Go watch it again.
I've watched it about twenty times. Noone is throwing a huge branch into the tree, least of a little toddler.They're just not that strong. And as I said, the blob that drops down isn't the color of a branch. It is whitish. Hence your branch canard is totally debunked.
Quote:You've repeatedly proven your observation skills are sorely lacking.
I'm seeing what everybody else in the world is seeing. Nobody claims it is a branch thrown by a toddler into a tree who is hiding behind a tombstone because that is a ridiculous claim. Toddlers don't do that because they can't.
Again, straw man. No one ever said it was "thrown... into the tree." LEARN TO READ ALREADY.
Small children can't carry and throw palm leaves?
The video shows the cemetery is also full of people, so a small child running along is not that unusual. I’ve visited the park myself a few times and have noted the many palm trees. To me, the falling object at the end of the video appears to be a palm branch.
- https://www.southernspiritguide.org/a-li...-savannah/
LOL Now frantically searching the web for new theories. A palm branch now! Have you ever tried to throw a palm branch? They don't go very far because of wind resistance. It's like trying to throw a piece of paper. And then imagine a wandering toddler doing that very thing. Up into a tree no less! The absurdity at this point boils over.
Interestingly your own cited article description additional paranormal encounters in that same cemetery:
"In addition to the somewhat questionable 2008 ghost video, there are other reports of paranormal phenomena here. James Caskey of the Savannah Haunted History Tour in his book, Haunted Savannah, does provide one personal story. While conducting a tour in November of 2001, Caskey noticed that some of the people in his group had odd expressions on their faces while he talked just outside the cemetery. Turning around, he saw an odd mist near the grave of Edward Malbone which is located just off the main entry path into the cemetery and is perhaps 50-60 feet inside, if I remember correctly. This grave is particularly identifiable as it has a historical marker (one of many in the cemetery) next to it. This mist rose about five and a half feet off the ground and then dissipated.
Another tour guide and paranormal investigator, Tobias McGriff, writes in his 2012 Savannah Shadows: Tales from the Midnight Zombie Tour of the “Red Girl,” a red-hued young girl’s image that has been captured in photographs taken by ghost tour participants. She is often captured as she kneels at a grave though one intrepid boy saw and communicated with the red waif. As the tour group began to leave, the child inquired why the little girl was in the cemetery and said that the girl had asked him to remain moving the guide and others in the group to tears."
Here's a civil war soldier ghost photographed at the same cemetery:
(Jul 23, 2025 02:03 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: LOL Now frantically searching the web for new theories. A palm branch now! Have you ever tried to throw a palm branch? They don't go very far because of wind resistance. It's like trying to throw a piece of paper. And then imagine a wandering toddler doing that very thing. Up into a tree no less! The absurdity at this point boils over.
You're the one who said:
(Jul 23, 2025 12:59 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: Nobody claims it is a branch...
So I proved you wrong.
I didn't really care what kind of branch it was, but when you go making up straw men about "a huge branch," I thought it looked like a palm leaf. Then Googled if palms grow in that cemetery: https://www.google.com/search?q=Colonial...nnah+palms
And then I found a concurring opinion, from someone who's actually been there. That's what objective people do.
I've lived in Florida. I know all about palm leaves, Mr. Oregon. @_@
The leaf in the video behaves exactly as I'd expect, but we all know you are physics handicapped.
Whether the tree limbs are very low or it's just the forced perspective of a tree further back, the scale of the palm leaf tells us it didn't go very high in the air.
Again, not "Up into a tree"... another desperate straw man... or you just can't comprehend simple English repeatedly explained to you. 9_9
Quote:Interestingly your own cited article description additional paranormal encounters in that same cemetery:
Yes, we know you're prone to changing the subject when you get desperate. 9_9
Quote:Here's a civil war soldier ghost photographed at the same cemetery:
Uh no dumbass. There is no tree limb near there for "moss" to be dangling from. Notice the color and shape and definition of the figure. She even said they went back to the exact location and they saw nothing there. This is definitely a civil war ghost.
Here's a blow up of the photo. Notice he is translucent and has a civil war cap.
(Jul 23, 2025 03:08 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: Uh no dumbass. There is no tree limb near there for "moss" to be dangling from. Notice the color and shape and definition of the figure. She even said they went back to the exact location and they saw nothing there. This is definitely a civil war ghost.
Here's a blow up of the photo. Notice he is translucent and has a civil war cap.
You can literally see the Spanish moss hanging from most the trees. It's even in the foreground. Yes, you can see through Spanish moss, it's not that dense. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia
She went back "a couple of days later".. after it had fallen free. 9_9
Apparently no one can be bothered to simply go check it out closer when they see it.
Just gullible people falling for stupid paredolia.
Quote:You can literally see the Spanish moss hanging from most the trees.
No you can't. Only from the trees off camera in the foreground. There are no other branch hanging mosses in the picture. A quick look at the blown up photo I posted shows nothing above the figure that would suggest it is hanging from anything. And then there is the dark color of the figure which none of the moss matches. And then there is the translucent property of the figure which moss isn't. And then there are the straight dark lines making up the figure's legs and his musket, which no moss exhibits. Any other spurious debunks for this? Or are you sticking to some moss that coincidentally fell down a few days later. Hey maybe it was someone throwing moss up into the air from behind a tombstone! lol