Aliens anyone??

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@angie_nrs Maybe you should have a binge on sci fi alien movies.
Signs (Mel Gibson)
War of the Worlds (Tom Cruise)
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Richard Dreyfuss)
The Day the Earth Stood Still (newer one with Keanu Reeves)
Them https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047573/ the 1954 movie, not the one rated R from 2006
Contact (Jodie Foster, Matthew McConaughey)
These are the ones I tolerate. (Of course not to mention all the Star Wars and Star Trek movies).

You've got me confused...... I haven't even posted in this thread before now.......believe it or not!:confused: Ha, remember that show???

I saw some of those above. My favorite was Contact.....that was a goodie. The ones I haven't seen, I'll have to check out. Thanks for the suggestions!
I was a huge Star Wars nut back in the day! OK, maybe still am. Kinda like that kid in the Goldbergs.......yeah, that was me, with the Darth Vader jersey shirt and all. Oh how I loved the 80's!!
I'm not really a Trekkie devote', but I watched the originals and also liked the Next Generation TV series.

Colony. You have to watch Colony.

I watch that one.....mostly b/c I think the lead character is a hottie.:p I watched him on Lost too.

Back when they made us read in school, I almost always chose a Sci Fi book. Some of the books I read would have made great movies. I don't even remember the names of many of the books I read, but the library shelves are filled with awesome Sci Fi books!!
 
We live in a galaxy that has 400 billion stars and at least half of those stars have planetary bodies. Say an average of 4 planets for each star with planets and that is 800 billion planets. If just 1% of those have life that is 80 billion planets with life. Let's say that intelligence is rare so only 1/10 of 1% of the planets that support life have intelligent life that is still 800 million planets with intelligent life.
That is only in one of 400 billion galaxies.
Yes, there are intelligent aliens out there. It is possible that some are close enough to visit the earth. The simple preponderance of evidence says they are here and have been visiting for a long time.
Is it possible that they have shared technology with us? All things are possible and we have samples of the technology to "reverse engineer" if we are smart enough to do so.
I think it is possible that we have duplicated a type of gravity drive but it is hidden deep in compartmentalized military industrial corporations. if it were ever exposed it would present us with a whole new set of problems while taking us away from fossil, nuclear, and other alternative power sources. Power, as we think of it now would be meaningless. Money would be unnecessary.

The "space" between the nucleus and the electrons is filled with electromagnetic energy. It can cause the electron to jump between orbits which absorbs and releases energy constantly. It can capture other atoms that are in resonance with it and repel others that are not. Forget about matter, it doesn't exist. All that exists is energy in one form or another.

I learned some about this in horticulture in college 'Plant Science' which I took in 1995 and was the oldest in my class. I did very well in all 5 classes. Only got a 79 though in Pesticide class, was into organics and couldn't get into it and it was the class that kept me off the honor roll.

I don't think the oil we mine has anything to do with ' fossil's ' at all. Don't think it is decaying flesh.
I also don't think matter is he same thing as energy. There are positive and negative ion's in the soil and all other solids in the universe. Of course all is theory so I am just using what I learned to base my theory on.
Gravity aka energy is what keeps the cosmos from chaos. And when a star aka planet dies it is not longer held in its position because it is no longer connected to the power source, it is loosed and turns into a falling star. Only theorizing, don't really know anything for sure.
 
Colony is surprisingly an outstanding show, better than Corporate and Aftermath.

People of Earth, an honest commentary as satire of the U.F.O. phenomena and conspiracy fictions.

We watched it and the ending was dumb,imo. I didn't find it interesting and kept waiting for the kicker and for me it never happened. But that is only my opinion and maybe I missed something? AI seemed to be the main theme.
 
@angie_nrs
Because there was talk in another thread about alien movies and it was totally off topic for a political thread. Lol

Wasn't it the Q thread? Is there anything that is "off topic" in that thread? LOL!

Gravity aka energy is what keeps the cosmos from chaos. And when a star aka planet dies it is not longer held in its position because it is no longer connected to the power source, it is loosed and turns into a falling star. Only theorizing, don't really know anything for sure.

Falling stars are really just meteors that get burned up in our atmosphere, so they're not really stars. Actually our sun is destined to become a red giant.....when that happens we won't like the "global warming" effect as it will strip away our atmosphere and turn our planet to a giant rock as our air and water get sucked into outer space.....but that will be waaaaaay after our life expectancy. Eventually that red giant will burn itself out and become a white dwarf. And, it's estimated that black matter might be the glue responsible for some structure in the universe. There IS chaos in the universe.....we're just lucky that it's relatively quiet in our neck of the woods, although that does not mean we are safe since we could get zapped at any second. I'm no astronomy expert but I do watch "How the Universe Works" that Mike Rowe narrates. It is an absolutely mesmerising show that really makes me feel small in the whole scheme of the universe. Truth is sometimes more fascinating than fiction. So even though I love me some good Sci-Fi, I absolutely love astronomy reality TV.
 
I watch it on the Science channel, but I think Discovery channel might air it as well. I think you'll like it. A bit of a confession though, I absolutely LOVE Mike Rowe, especially as a narrator. So, I'll watch anything that has anything to do with him. There was one season that had a different narrator and it was still good.....just not AS good.:p I wouldn't be surprised if it was on Netflix, but I don't have that so I really don't know.

According to "How the Universe Works", many of the theories that have been presented in SciFi movies are actually real working theories. Black holes, Super Massive Black Holes, Wormholes, Pulsars, etc. are all real. So, those things that are in SciFi movies could potentially be used by intelligent life to navigate the universe. The more I learn about the galaxy and the universe, the more I believe that we are (very likely) not alone. I am not 100% convinced, since I have not had contact, nor do I know anyone who has.....but the likelihood is definitely there so I'll keep an open mind.
 
Wasn't it the Q thread? Is there anything that is "off topic" in that thread? LOL!



Falling stars are really just meteors that get burned up in our atmosphere, so they're not really stars. Actually our sun is destined to become a red giant.....when that happens we won't like the "global warming" effect as it will strip away our atmosphere and turn our planet to a giant rock as our air and water get sucked into outer space.....but that will be waaaaaay after our life expectancy. Eventually that red giant will burn itself out and become a white dwarf. And, it's estimated that black matter might be the glue responsible for some structure in the universe. There IS chaos in the universe.....we're just lucky that it's relatively quiet in our neck of the woods, although that does not mean we are safe since we could get zapped at any second. I'm no astronomy expert but I do watch "How the Universe Works" that Mike Rowe narrates. It is an absolutely mesmerising show that really makes me feel small in the whole scheme of the universe. Truth is sometimes more fascinating than fiction. So even though I love me some good Sci-Fi, I absolutely love astronomy reality TV.

Are meteors stars that blew up into pieces? Space junk.

I'm not that good with astronomy.
 
Are meteors stars that blew up into pieces? Space junk.

I'm not that good with astronomy.
A meteor is a a piece of rock or other space debris that enters the atmosphere. A meteorite is a piece of meteor that survived the passage through the atmosphere and struck Earth.
 
I can understand that. Sometimes we are not very nice at all.:devil:
There are numerous sources of meteors. The asteroid belt, between Jupiter and Mars, where there are untold numbers of asteroids ranging in size from dust to 600 miles across. These rocks are in orbit as are we. The occasionally bump into each other and some of those end up hitting us. These asteroids are termed meteors when they enter our atmosphere. Comets may cast off meteors and there are lone wandering asteroids that decide to drop by.

Where they come from I'm not really sure. Some say that when enough of these come together you have a planet. We get hit by these all the time and our planet gains mass with each strike.

We have found rocks that we believe are from Mars. Evidently a meteorite of significant size hit Mars with enough force to eject rock into space where we picked it up.
 
@Caribou Don't tell that to California, they will try and fine Mars for littering and pollution and what ever else the socialist can think of, that might get them another dollar.

Let them try, I want to see them go to try to collect it.
 
Comets and asteroids were stuff in the celestial disk that didn't become planets or moons. They hide in the space around us, in the asteroid belt in the Kuiper belt, where Pluto hangs out, and in the Oort cloud where most of the long term comets come from. The Kuiper belt is a band of stuff that surrounds the "equator of our solar system and the Oort cloud is a rough sphere of stuff out beyond the Kuiper belt. The Oort cloud is all around us and keeps us hidden from all the bad aliens... :ghostly::great::green man::popcorn:
 
I'm surprised that Roswell hasn't been mentioned in this thread yet. As I said, I'm neutral on this whole subject, but I did watch a show once that was on History channel (I believe) that was really intriguing. They had interviews with many of the people who were around during that time and even some former military folks. Some of their stories were fascinating. I think something did happen at Roswell.....just don't know what. I'm inclined to believe it was a military experiment gone wrong........mostly due to the location. If the military wanted to experiment with something, it would be the perfect place, no?

It kinda makes you think, why would a UFO crash happen in the middle of a desert? If it had happened in a small city, town, or populated area, there would be no conspiracy. So if it DID happen, was it just dumb luck that it happened where it happened? Seems like too much of a coincidence.
 
"Roswell! Roswell! They people have a right to know!" (X-Files)

It was a misfortunate turn of events that the space ship launched from a mother ship happened to crash in New Mexico, no where near Roswell, but that is the official narrative.
 
Roswell was aliens!




beer aliens.jpg

images.jpg
 
Anunaki. Original space men who came to Earth to harvest gold for their atmosphere, to protect it from their sun's radiation. It became valuable on Earth and the rest is history. The Anunaki genetically modified primordial apes and created homo sapiens and homo sapiens sapien. It's in the Samarian tablets and the books of secret knowledge hidden by an unnamed group of people.

And there, you have it. All of human history in ten seconds!
 

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