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#1
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
You have 200 billion stars in the Milky Way where planets are now known to be the
rule rather than the exception. Lots of water comets splashed into many rocky planets in the goldilocks zone. |
#2
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many,
space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. |
#3
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
too, not to
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#4
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7:28:10 AM UTC-5, casagi... wrote:
No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many, space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. Kind of pointless isn't it--all these potential friends that cannot get together to trade their technology have a little fun. You dismissed some of science. Dismiss a little more. |
#5
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 5:45:22 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote:
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7:28:10 AM UTC-5, casagi... wrote: No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many, space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. Kind of pointless isn't it--all these potential friends that cannot get together to trade their technology have a little fun. You dismissed some of science. Dismiss a little more. You think you could "have a little fun" with an alien woman that looks like a three-headed Rhinoceros? Double-A |
#6
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 2:49:41 PM UTC-7, Double-A wrote:
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 5:45:22 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote: On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7:28:10 AM UTC-5, casagi... wrote: No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many, space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. Kind of pointless isn't it--all these potential friends that cannot get together to trade their technology have a little fun. You dismissed some of science. Dismiss a little more. You think you could "have a little fun" with an alien woman that looks like a three-headed Rhinoceros? Double-A Hanson would love three heads,and ass holes.Read his posts and get the picture.Keep in mind the thinoceros is in the pig family,and that fits.Bert |
#8
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 2:49:41 PM UTC-7, Double-A wrote:
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 5:45:22 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote: On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7:28:10 AM UTC-5, casagi... wrote: No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many, space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. Kind of pointless isn't it--all these potential friends that cannot get together to trade their technology have a little fun. You dismissed some of science. Dismiss a little more. You think you could "have a little fun" with an alien woman that looks like a three-headed Rhinoceros? Double-A I have 285 million alein races,and most are in the IQ range of humankind.That means no have ventured out into deep space. There could be a billion but universe is short on H2O.Bert |
#9
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
On Tuesday, July 31, 2018 at 12:38:36 PM UTC-7, Herbert Glazier wrote:
On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 2:49:41 PM UTC-7, Double-A wrote: On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 5:45:22 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote: On Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7:28:10 AM UTC-5, casagi... wrote: No, we are not alone. Likely, there are many, if not infinitely many, space faring beings, YET, we've not been visited by a single one. Why ? Quite simply, Distance = Speed x Time , and distances are simply far to great. Speeds would have to be multiples of light speed for practical travel between the stars, and this is clearly impossible. And worm holes, a breach in the space-time continuum, are not possible. Kind of pointless isn't it--all these potential friends that cannot get together to trade their technology have a little fun. You dismissed some of science. Dismiss a little more. You think you could "have a little fun" with an alien woman that looks like a three-headed Rhinoceros? Double-A I have 285 million alein races,and most are in the IQ range of humankind.That means no have ventured out into deep space. There could be a billion but universe is short on H2O.Bert The universe has plenty of H2O, Bert. Double-A |
#10
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We Are Not Alone in the Universe
"Herbert Glazier" wrote: "The universe is short on H2O" since the rest of it condensed in Bert's Hydrocephalus.That is a given. Get the picture. O ya. Bert |
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