Not necessarily, jimmer. Simon Parkes has been going for at least 4 years already now, and he's still got quite a fanatic cult following. And so do certain other phenomena in the alternative community. Or even in the mainstream, for that matter. Look at the presidential elections — and the race for official party endorsement before it — in the USA. Or any other kind of elections anywhere else in the world. And what about Christianity? Going strong on 2'000+ years. Islam? Going on 1'600 years. And let's not even throw in Judaism, with already well over five millenia and counting.
People see what they want to see, and that is not necessarily the same thing as seeing what is actually there. A number of years ago, I posted a cautioning comment — not even any actual debunking — on a video on YouTube regarding an alleged message about 2012 from a chap called Vrillion of the Ashtar Command. Within hours my comment received 7 negative votes, and when I posted another comment (in a similar vein to my first one), that one received 4 negative votes again. For many people, the phrase "I want to believe" actually becomes "I believe." As I've already written elsewhere on the forum a couple of times, mankind is its own worst deceiver. That's why it's so easy for The Powers That Be™ to fool everyone.
Either way and to return to the topic, the more I think about it — and I have carefully watched the end of this video again a couple of times — the more I think that scibuster is correct and that it is a flat but dark building behind which the airplane lands. And so probably there is, indeed, an airfield there.
= DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR =
aragorn, you're talking about human gullibility.
I'm talking about a technical debunking the video.
I took a screen capture, clarified the 'plane' image and inverted it.
I saw no telltale signs of masking artifacts.
To me, and until someone finds tampering, the video event remains legitimate.
Aragorn (13th March 2016)