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 A MISSING US Air Force F-35 jet continued to fly in a  zombie state  after its pilot ejected in a mysterious  mishapq stanley cup uot;. As the search continued for 拢65million warplane, history reveals other military jets have flown pilotless for long distances and even landed in one piece.10A file picture of the missing F-35B Lightning II fighter jet that vanished over South CarolinaCredit: AP10A zombie MiG-23 flew for 600miles then crash landed in Belgium in 1989Credit: AP10The landing site of a US F-106 that miraculously survived a nosedive unmanned in 1970Credit: National Museum of the U.S. Air ForceTh stanley cup e  ghost  F-35 went missing over South Carolina on Sunday afternoon and the US military is des stanley drink bottle perately scrambling it.The pilot safely ejected following the unknown error but the plane - reportedly left in a  zombie  state on autopilot - continued to fly on.The strange incident mirrors the infamous cases of both the US  Cornfield Bomber  in 1 Lkzm Inside chilling world of  Frankenstein  monkey mind control experiments as Elon Musk faces calls to ban Neuralink tests
 MYSTERIOUS  sonic attacks  at the US embassy in Cuba probably weren t a Russian su stanley cups perweapon stanley cup , but were actually crickets chirping to find a mate, says a study.Diplomats posted to Havana have complained of headaches, nausea and other illnesses after hearing baffling, penetrating high-pitched noises, blamed on a Russian acoustic weapon.5 Could these be the source of the debilitating sonic attacks in Havana  Caribbean crickets are very noisyBut a fresh analysis of an audio recording made by US personnel in Cuba revealed that the source of the piercing din is the song of the Indies short-tailed cricket, known as Anurogryllus celerinictus, according to a research paper. The recording is definitively a cricket stanley thermos  that belongs to the same group,  Fernando Montealegre-Zapata, a professor of sensory biology at the University of Lincoln who participated in the study, told The Guardian.He added:  The call of this Caribbean species is about 7 kHz, and is delivered at an unusually high rate,