On Sunday afternoon, it was revealed that a lost F-35 fighter plane, estimated to be worth $100 million, had gone missing.
A $100 million aircraft is missing; help us locate it! The pilot safely evacuated, but we still need your help finding the F-35.
A video of the crash’s site was released by Trending Politics’ Collin Rugg. He also included a video and wrote:
“The debris field of the F-35 jet has been released after it was located in a field in Williamsburg County, South Carolina.
The crash site was about 80 miles from Joint Base Charleston, South Carolina.
The F-35 fighter jet appeared to run through a group of trees before crashing down in the field.
In 2019, concerns were raised by the Pentagon of the possibility that the F-35 could be hacked.
It’s still unclear what caused the crash…”
The heroic pilot responsible for the F-35 fighter’s crash in South Carolina remains a mystery. The man’s name is unknown, but his compelling account of why he chose to jump out of the $100 million US Marine plane seconds before it crashed has been made public.
Before it crashes, a South Carolina couple spots a “Inverted” F-35 fighter jet.
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“Our kids always give a little salute, so we said, ‘Look at the plane. Oh my gosh, it’s so low,’” Adrian Truluck said. “And it was kind of probably 100 feet above the tree tops and almost going inverted.”
According to sources and experts, according to the New York Post, the pilot is said to have lost the plane in poor weather and likely abandoned it before turning on the monitoring device.
“He’s unsure of where his plane crashed, said he just lost it in the weather,” On a Charleston County Emergency Medical Services call that was shared by a meteorologist on Tuesday, a voice can be heard referring to the pilot.
Unidentified pilot lands in a North Charleston area and is taken immediately to the hospital for treatment.
,Since then, he has been released.
Americans frequently express a lack of faith in his account.
Check out this compilation of comments on Collin Rugg’s tweet to see some of the fascinating reactions to the pilot’s plot.
According to Michael Wilson @sirmichaelwill, the pilot of the $100 million aircraft had to evacuate due to severe weather.
Yes, the entire thing doesn’t make sense. What are they withholding from us?
Pedro @ElCapitanTweets is harsh in his response to the pilot’s account:
He had a higher chance of getting hit my lightning when ejecting.. poor decision making. Doesn’t pass the smell test. He doesn’t need to be back in the cockpit and needs to be behind a desk if a little thunderstorm scares him.
Unreal.
GCapital_LLC’s Hank wrote:
An F-35, pinnacle of aviation tech, outsmarted by… weather?
Either Mother Nature just upgraded, or they truly believe we’ll buy any story they sell.
And that pilot’s sense of direction? Probably uses a sun dial in the cockpit.
Astonishing!
Mark Sullivan @Sullie870125 wrote:
Keep in mind we are in the era of woke quotas, so unfortunately there is no guarantee the pilot was actually qualified to even fly the aircraft so there’s that
The absurdity of the US Marines requesting for assistance in locating their $100 million fighter plane was brought to everyone’s attention by Paul Hookem, who published the following funny image:

The last comment came from Lior Sela @liorsela, who claims to only reside two hours distant from the purported accident site:
I don’t buy it. I live 2 hrs away from Charleston, SC and the weather was perfect.
Clear skies and sunny
Robert J. Kingsbury tweeted to @RobertJKingsbu1:
The thing was hacked that is why the military grounded all of their planes for a couple of days.
They would of never grounded planes because one plane went through bad weather.
How do you feel? Do you think the pilot was forced to leave due to terrible weather, or is there another explanation?




