first page on this threadQuartzGooner wrote:Who did you take that quote from?Henry Norris 1913 wrote:did you actually say this quartz? I thought you were the most rational person on this forumThe cover up of UFOs and Aliens is the biggest conspiracy on the planet.
what a thread this is btw. what happened to percy?
I did not think I would have written that, because I do not know if UFOs are aliens.
They could be secret military flights.
I have an open mind.
It's possible they are aliens, but not proven.
UFOs - yes or no?
- Henry Norris 1913
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
- QuartzGooner
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Page 3, yes I wrote it, four years ago.Henry Norris 1913 wrote:first page on this threadQuartzGooner wrote:Who did you take that quote from?Henry Norris 1913 wrote:did you actually say this quartz? I thought you were the most rational person on this forumThe cover up of UFOs and Aliens is the biggest conspiracy on the planet.
what a thread this is btw. what happened to percy?
I did not think I would have written that, because I do not know if UFOs are aliens.
They could be secret military flights.
I have an open mind.
It's possible they are aliens, but not proven.
But my view now is really an open mind.
I have never knowingly met an alien, but the universe is so big that they might exist.
Or aliens are other humanoid but not human creatures from earth who live in caves or under the ground, or time travellers.
Certainly something going on with UFOs though, I do not believe they are all people mistaking clouds.
- Henry Norris 1913
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
I'm not saying that alien lifedoesn't exist, but the confidence of your statement on page 3 (my mistake) had me laughing out loud
- QuartzGooner
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
I must have believed it then!Henry Norris 1913 wrote:I'm not saying that alien lifedoesn't exist, but the confidence of your statement on page 3 (my mistake) had me laughing out loud
I am surprised at myself for writing that.
I always thought I had an "Unproven Verdict" view of it.
I certainly believe though that we are not being told the whole truth by the authorities, not whilst there are secret military flights going on, there will be something to cover up.
And as I have written, there could be many physical/metaphysical answers to the question.
My regret is that film footage is now very unreliable because CGI is so advanced, so fake films flood the internet.
- QuartzGooner
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
The late Boyd Bushman says aliens exist.
He was a scientist at Area 51, allegedly.......
http://www.express.co.uk/news/weird/528 ... ws+Feed%29
He was a scientist at Area 51, allegedly.......
http://www.express.co.uk/news/weird/528 ... ws+Feed%29
- flash gunner
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Still . . . . . . . No
- DB10GOONER
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Yeah... but no, but yeah, but no.
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
300 billion stars in the Milky Way, around 200 billion galaxies in the observable universe so the opportunity for life is certainly there, even taking into account the ridiculous number of criteria that need to be fulfilled for life (as we know it) to start, such as:
Correct type of star (usually a moderate size & age yellow star).
Correct size of planet in the habitable zone (too small and you end up with Mars, too small to hold on to its atmosphere - poor old Mars). Right size but too near the star and the result is like Venus.
Liquid water, moon big enough to exert tidal forces (RNA molecules can form), volcanic activity....
In fact there's far too much to list for a cretin like me but one can use the Drake formula (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equa ... e_equation) as a decent guide to the probability. Although given just how astronomically hard it is for life to get started I think the formula is way over-optimistic, but useful nonetheless.
I'm sure that however small the probability is it is mathematically unlikely we are alone in the galaxy, let alone the universe, but that probability does exist.
If we are alone, then what a bunch of selfish *word censored* we really are for bollocksing up such a unique and marvellous planet we call home.
Correct type of star (usually a moderate size & age yellow star).
Correct size of planet in the habitable zone (too small and you end up with Mars, too small to hold on to its atmosphere - poor old Mars). Right size but too near the star and the result is like Venus.
Liquid water, moon big enough to exert tidal forces (RNA molecules can form), volcanic activity....
In fact there's far too much to list for a cretin like me but one can use the Drake formula (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equa ... e_equation) as a decent guide to the probability. Although given just how astronomically hard it is for life to get started I think the formula is way over-optimistic, but useful nonetheless.
I'm sure that however small the probability is it is mathematically unlikely we are alone in the galaxy, let alone the universe, but that probability does exist.
If we are alone, then what a bunch of selfish *word censored* we really are for bollocksing up such a unique and marvellous planet we call home.
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
We really are fucking it up!officepest wrote:300 billion stars in the Milky Way, around 200 billion galaxies in the observable universe so the opportunity for life is certainly there, even taking into account the ridiculous number of criteria that need to be fulfilled for life (as we know it) to start, such as:
Correct type of star (usually a moderate size & age yellow star).
Correct size of planet in the habitable zone (too small and you end up with Mars, too small to hold on to its atmosphere - poor old Mars). Right size but too near the star and the result is like Venus.
Liquid water, moon big enough to exert tidal forces (RNA molecules can form), volcanic activity....
In fact there's far too much to list for a cretin like me but one can use the Drake formula (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equa ... e_equation) as a decent guide to the probability. Although given just how astronomically hard it is for life to get started I think the formula is way over-optimistic, but useful nonetheless.
I'm sure that however small the probability is it is mathematically unlikely we are alone in the galaxy, let alone the universe, but that probability does exist.
If we are alone, then what a bunch of selfish *word censored* we really are for bollocksing up such a unique and marvellous planet we call home.
Unfortunately, some of our best and brightest have allowed us to land on and stick a fucking flag on the moon which clearly makes us superior to (people) who fucking well hover over the arizona dessert.
Just come in to Heathrow, go through immigration and boom, we're there.
Or maybe they're too intelligent for us.
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Wenger out.
Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Wenger us an fn alien 4 sure...
- QuartzGooner
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Re: UFOs - yes or no?
Possibly? Could it be? Getting closer?
NASA are not ruling it out.....Dexter Wansell had an inkling....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science ... -live.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... Hpk9krUJBI
NASA are not ruling it out.....Dexter Wansell had an inkling....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science ... -live.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... Hpk9krUJBI