
Daily Drones: NYPD Finds A Massive Drone on a Sidewalk in Brooklyn, Radiation Theories, and Questions Nobody’s Answering
So now we’ve got five-foot drones turning up on sidewalks at the Brooklyn Naval Yard, left there like someone forgot their Amazon package after a company party.
This particular monstrosity came courtesy of Amogy, Inc., a “sustainable energy startup” working to use ammonia as fuel for aerial vehicles. Fine, sure—ammonia-powered drones sounds great if you’re writing sci-fi fan fiction, but maybe someone can explain why nobody knew this massive thing was even up there in the first place?
Are we supposed to believe that Amogy, Inc left this thing on the sidewalk after a company party? Give me a break…lol
Let’s just take a moment to be skeptical:
- Why is Amogy flying drones that size?
- Why are they parking them on sidewalks like someone dropped off a keg?
- Why does nobody know about these things until after the NYPD comes to clean up the mess?
This particular drone belonged to Amogy, Inc., a startup working on using ammonia as a sustainable energy source for aerial vehicles. Apparently, after a company party (because nothing says good times like leaving industrial tech on the sidewalk), they just… left it there. For a month. The NYPD got a tip, scooped it up, checked it out, and decided it wasn’t a threat.
That’s the story they are giving us. We’re not talking about toy drones you can swat out of the air with a broomstick. These things are huge—the size of a small dining table—and nobody seems concerned about what they’re doing, where they’re going, or who’s running them.
We’ve all seen the same headlines for weeks now. Drones swarming over New Jersey, drones buzzing the skies in Pennsylvania, drones everywhere.
NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner of Counterterrorism, Rebecca Weiner, assures us it’s all perfectly normal. Just “drone mania” fueled by a little paranoia and the power of suggestion.
Ah and this company Amogy, Inc? Yeah, they are funded by BlackRock. Anytime BlackRock is mentioned, regardless of whether it’s true, people start asking questions.
Because when you control everything—the markets, real estate, the government—it’s not exactly a stretch to think you’ve got a hand in the skies, too. And hey, maybe Amogy is just a plucky startup doing good work in the renewable energy sector. Or maybe they’re testing something else. Who’s to say? We certainly aren’t getting answers.
Mixed Messages and Mass Hysteria
Here’s where it gets truly chaotic:
- The White House: Most drones are just “hobbyists” having some fun. Nothing to see here.
- The Pentagon: Not so fast—military bases are shutting down and reporting drone incursions.
- The CIA and FBI: Holding classified meetings because, apparently, it’s serious enough to take behind closed doors.
- Local Law Enforcement: Completely freaking out, as small-town police departments try to make sense of why fleets of unmanned aircraft are buzzing their skies.
Meanwhile, the internet is doing what it does best: making everything infinitely worse. Fake videos. Out-of-focus photos of stars and planets. Someone posts a blurry shot of a helicopter, and suddenly, it’s a mothership hovering over a town in New Jersey.
It’s mass hysteria—and maybe that was the ultimate goal when all of this started.
First, you’ve got real UFOs—the government admits to it. That’s enough to plant the seed. Then, you flood the airwaves and internet with non-stop drone stories, grainy videos, and panicked speculation. The media, government, and public all start talking in circles. No one knows what’s real. People like me are writing blogs like this.
What happens then?
- You stop trusting the videos.
- You stop trusting the news.
- You stop trusting the government.
Suddenly, the truth—whatever it may be—gets buried under noise.
There’s something strange going on in the skies. The White House says it’s fine, the Pentagon isn’t so sure, and the FBI is having classified meetings. You’ve got military bases reporting confirmed drone activity and shutting down operations. Yet when a drone the size of a smart car is abandoned in Brooklyn, we’re supposed to believe it’s no big deal?
It’s all too convenient. And until someone can give us some actual answers—what Amogy is really doing, who’s running these drones, and what exactly they’re looking for—I’ll keep questioning everything. You should, too.
Because when five-foot drones start falling out of the sky, and the only explanation is “oh, that’s normal,” I’m not buying it.
Daily Drones:
- The skies over the East Coast have been swarming with drones, and somehow we still have little-to-no answers as to why
- Glowing orbs are now appearing over New Jersey as citizens scramble for answers on what the hell is going on
- Calling all Patriots: Someone please consider shooting down the New Jersey mystery drones so we can get some real answers because the government refuses to help




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