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Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth



 
 
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  #401  
Old May 23rd 08, 07:56 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
Timberwoof[_2_]
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

In article
,
BradGuth wrote:

On May 22, 10:35 pm, David Johnston wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008 12:51:29 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On May 20, 12:30 pm, David Johnston wrote:


How would it survive the collision and why would it would end up in
such a circular orbit? - Hide quoted text -


Obviously, humans couldn't.


I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. Is
it made out of rubber?


Don't know about moon rubber, but Earth was certainly a soft touch.

That icy proto-moon was also somewhat physically protected by the
thick layer of salty ice.


For which you have no evidence whatsoever.

--
Timberwoof me at timberwoof dot com http://www.timberwoof.com
"When you post sewage, don't blame others for
emptying chamber pots in your direction." ‹Chris L.
  #402  
Old May 23rd 08, 07:59 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
[email protected]
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 22, 10:30*pm, BradGuth wrote:

I agree that Einstein was individually smart and subsequently became a
whole lot smarter as others managed to focus and cultivate his talents
to levels much higher than most.


Yeah the over publicized Einstein is very smart, but the private
(real) Einstein was anything but smart. Aside from a wicked
imagination, what's left? Less than 10% of his quotations are correct
and very few of his predictions ever came true. You can read all about
the real AE online, however bring a shovel, because you have to dig
deep through all the hype to get to the actual truth. And don't take
my word for it, half the dirt on this whacko was from his own family
including his parents! No he wasn't that smart later in life either.
He failed several college entrance exams. The hype obviously blinded a
lot of sheeple, much like you find online.


Of course, if Einstein wasn't Jewish, then what? *Would a Muslim or
most any other faith-based puppet have *done nearly as good? (I don't
think so, especially if continually ignored or otherwise banished by
those in charge)


True. When is the last time you heard Arabs, Palestinians or Muslims
praised in the media? What no good Muslims exist out of tens or
hundreds of millions?




  #403  
Old May 23rd 08, 08:02 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 22, 10:35*pm, David Johnston wrote:

I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. *Is


Easily, a glancing blow for one. You mean a dead center collision.

it made out of rubber?


Close; cheese.

  #404  
Old May 23rd 08, 09:06 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 22, 11:59 pm, wrote:
On May 22, 10:30 pm, BradGuth wrote:

I agree that Einstein was individually smart and subsequently became a
whole lot smarter as others managed to focus and cultivate his talents
to levels much higher than most.


Yeah the over publicized Einstein is very smart, but the private
(real) Einstein was anything but smart. Aside from a wicked
imagination, what's left? Less than 10% of his quotations are correct
and very few of his predictions ever came true. You can read all about
the real AE online, however bring a shovel, because you have to dig
deep through all the hype to get to the actual truth. And don't take
my word for it, half the dirt on this whacko was from his own family
including his parents! No he wasn't that smart later in life either.
He failed several college entrance exams. The hype obviously blinded a
lot of sheeple, much like you find online.


I should retract my thoughts of Einstein being sufficiently smart to
start off with, but even half smart was perhaps good enough for such
an intellectual cartel puppet, that was being cultivated and
orchestrated along by those in charge of whatever the mainstream gets
to read about.


Of course, if Einstein wasn't Jewish, then what? Would a Muslim or
most any other faith-based puppet have done nearly as good? (I don't
think so, especially if continually ignored or otherwise banished by
those in charge)


True. When is the last time you heard Arabs, Palestinians or Muslims
praised in the media? What no good Muslims exist out of tens or
hundreds of millions?


If it wasn't for the mostly Zionist/Jewish petrochemical, physics and
science expertise, as well as for their global banking cartel of that
era, the likes of their puppet warlord Hitler wouldn't have gotten 10%
as far as that ******* did.

If you're going to faith-base dominate Earth according to the Old
Testament worth of that Zionist mindset, you'll need a good global
dominating warlord in charge of most everything else. Good thing them
tough USSR/Russian folks came along and kicked serious Zionist/Nazi
butt on our behalf, so that it didn't quite go according to their
collaborative plan of crimes against humanity.
.. - Brad Guth
  #405  
Old May 23rd 08, 09:17 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 22, 11:56 pm, Timberwoof
wrote:
In article
,



BradGuth wrote:
On May 22, 10:35 pm, David Johnston wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008 12:51:29 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On May 20, 12:30 pm, David Johnston wrote:


How would it survive the collision and why would it would end up in
such a circular orbit? - Hide quoted text -


Obviously, humans couldn't.


I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. Is
it made out of rubber?


Don't know about moon rubber, but Earth was certainly a soft touch.


That icy proto-moon was also somewhat physically protected by the
thick layer of salty ice.


For which you have no evidence whatsoever.


Extremely large but unusually shallow craters on the moon, especially
of that impressive polar situated crater that would match up with a
certain terrestrial ocean basin.

Either that, or the crust of that surface mascon populated moon is
made primarily of fused titanium layers, along with a packed core of
mostly sodium. (just kidding)
.. - Brad Guth
  #406  
Old May 23rd 08, 09:29 AM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Posts: 21,544
Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 23, 12:02 am, wrote:
On May 22, 10:35 pm, David Johnston wrote:

I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. Is


Easily, a glancing blow for one. You mean a dead center collision.

it made out of rubber?


Close; cheese.


Try thinking sodium as contained within an outer sphere of titanium
would make a nifty ball to bounce, although 262 km worth of salty ice
on a mostly basalt deck would be even better, partly because the
lithobraking encounter would likely need to quickly lose mass so as to
minimize the collateral damage, and to better establish orbit as the
rest of its ice vaporizes away...
.. - Brad Guth
  #407  
Old May 23rd 08, 12:10 PM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
Pat Flannery
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth



David Johnston wrote:

I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. Is
it made out of rubber?


This certainly rules out the harder cheeses, like Parmesan and
Asiago...and surprisingly, even Green Cheese like Sapsago...given all
the craters, I'd say Swiss Cheese is the most likely candidate, as it
has a somewhat rubbery texture also. ;-)

Pat
  #408  
Old May 23rd 08, 02:10 PM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
Rand Simberg[_1_]
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Posts: 8,311
Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On Thu, 22 May 2008 22:29:25 -0700, in a place far, far away,
Timberwoof made the phosphor
on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that:

In article
,
BradGuth wrote:


[nothing worth reading]

It's interesting that most of your responses of late have contained
funny little references to DARPA, Zionists, and Nazis while accusing us
of being narrow-minded.


"Of late"? This has been going on for years. Please stop feeding the
troll.
  #409  
Old May 23rd 08, 02:39 PM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 23, 6:10 am, (Rand Simberg)
wrote:
On Thu, 22 May 2008 22:29:25 -0700, in a place far, far away,
Timberwoof made the phosphor
on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that:

In article
,
BradGuth wrote:


[nothing worth reading]

It's interesting that most of your responses of late have contained
funny little references to DARPA, Zionists, and Nazis while accusing us
of being narrow-minded.


"Of late"? This has been going on for years. Please stop feeding the
troll.


I only return the warm and fuzzy favor when those intent upon topic/
author stalking and bashings can't manage to stay on-topic focused, or
much less informative and constructive. What is it about "Earth w/o
Moon" that's so over your head.
.. - Brad Guth
  #410  
Old May 23rd 08, 02:53 PM posted to sci.geo.geology,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,soc.history.what-if,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Posts: 21,544
Default Earth w/o Moon / by Brad Guth

On May 23, 4:10 am, Pat Flannery wrote:
David Johnston wrote:

I'm asking how the moon could survive a collision with the Earth. Is
it made out of rubber?


This certainly rules out the harder cheeses, like Parmesan and
Asiago...and surprisingly, even Green Cheese like Sapsago...given all
the craters, I'd say Swiss Cheese is the most likely candidate, as it
has a somewhat rubbery texture also. ;-)

Pat


Add lots of ice as a protective shell to most anything and it'll
survive an encounter with Earth. Give such an icy proto-moon a low
density core or possibly that of being semi-hollow within a tough
crust, and you've got that big ball that's worthy of creating an ocean
basin plus loads of antipodes.
.. - Brad Guth
 




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