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Real-time Mind Control Zombie Zot
http://www.MindControlUSA.com ^
| 12/23/06
| BibleBabe1
Posted on 12/23/2006 11:31:23 AM PST by BibleBabe1
Remote detection satellites are used by the intelligence branch of the military to conduct mind control exercises in the theater of war. All this technology is dependent upon the higher branches of particle physics and quantum mechanics. The array of satellites safe in deep space cover the entire earth making the mind control intelligence program widely successful. Be amazed as you view this military program break out of the box. Go to the following web site that shows a real-time mind control zombie being manipulated by satellite and the military. www.MindControlUSA.com
TOPICS: Conspiracy; UFO's; Weird Stuff
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To: Professional Engineer
"Right angles are 153.627 degrees as well..." An interesting place to work is the Thrust Ring. When we were on-planet, the floor was the washer-shaped flat wall of the cylindrical tube.
After we got into space and began rotating, the curved outer wall became the floor. The stairs and doorways tend to look odd, and I guess they always will.
801
posted on
01/04/2007 7:17:08 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: rottndog
"Sex isn't funny." Are you kidding? You freaking monkeys are hilarious!
No wonder Jane Goodall has that permanent Mona Lisa smile.
802
posted on
01/04/2007 7:20:25 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: NicknamedBob
Some of the map and level editors for modern games could easily recreate our beloved castle in the hands of a moderately competent designer.
I've been trying to get the hang of it since the original Doom game and still can't even get a single box room right...
803
posted on
01/04/2007 7:22:00 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn't deserve to be.)
To: NicknamedBob
I thought her smile was because she really got along well with the monkeys...
804
posted on
01/04/2007 7:25:46 PM PST
by
rottndog
(While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
To: NicknamedBob
You've been to Rama I see.
805
posted on
01/04/2007 7:27:16 PM PST
by
Professional Engineer
(Why bifocals? Font inflation. Today's 14 point is the same as 2 point was in 1957.)
To: NicknamedBob
The Thrust Ring (approximately)?
806
posted on
01/04/2007 7:28:39 PM PST
by
rottndog
(While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
To: NicknamedBob
After we got into space and began rotating, the curved outer wall became the floor.Sounds a bit like the ship in Out of the Silent Planet...
To: Dead Corpse
I think it would be necessary to design everything in flat space, and ignore the rotating and other aspects for the game.
With the preferred mode of travel being enclosed elevator cars, the other spaces visible out the canopies would simply be views.
An obvious aspect of a game for the Flying Castle would be "Hide and Seek." What a nightmare it would be to have to find someone in this vast space. Even worse if they didn't want to be found.
Another good game would be Prospector. Fit out your ship, and head for the asteroids. Find your treasure -- then figure out how to spend the money, and on what!
808
posted on
01/04/2007 7:31:08 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: NicknamedBob
Sim Flying Castle? Have to figure out how to keep the ecosystem running and the castle's denizens happy and peaceful...
To: rottndog
Good rendition.
It may be a bit thinner, but that's the shape.
810
posted on
01/04/2007 7:33:40 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: RosieCotton; Dead Corpse
"Sim Flying Castle? Have to figure out how to keep the ecosystem running and the castle's denizens happy and peaceful..." What keeps me puzzled is how the economics works. I've just been assuming we're all volunteers. Immensely wealthy volunteers, of course.
You see, while we were filtering Uranium out of the ocean water, and we needed a lot of it -- our filters kept gettting clogged up with all that useless gold ...
811
posted on
01/04/2007 7:38:21 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: NicknamedBob
812
posted on
01/04/2007 7:40:21 PM PST
by
rottndog
(While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
To: NicknamedBob
Refresh my memory, how many shuttles did we have? On liftoff?
813
posted on
01/04/2007 7:44:52 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn't deserve to be.)
To: NicknamedBob; rottndog
Didn't we used to have a rough graphic of the thrust ring and all three habs at one point?
814
posted on
01/04/2007 7:47:26 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn't deserve to be.)
To: rottndog
That looks pretty.
One of our problems is that our scale is so ridiculous, the sizes so unbelievable, that our eyes won't accept an accurate rendition.
I've been working with even smaller numbers that this, but just try it to see what I mean. You don't have to post the results.
Diameter of outer circumference, 11110 feet.
Diameter of inner circumference, 10410 feet.
Width of inner and outer bands, 500 feet.
It will look impossibly thin and delicate.
815
posted on
01/04/2007 7:48:35 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: NicknamedBob
Looks are often very deceiving. With carbon nanotubes, the dimensions you provided would be plenty strong.
816
posted on
01/04/2007 7:52:27 PM PST
by
rottndog
(While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
To: Dead Corpse
The best we had wasn't too satisfactory. We needed to spend a lot more time describing it between renditions than we did.
The rendition of the Flying Castle Habitat by itself came close. It looked rather like a sleek flying saucer, with a gridded, transparent dome.
The Thrust Ring hosted over six hundred Shuttle/Thrusters, each with two Gas-Cooled Nuclear Reactor/Rocket Engines. Thrust from each shuttle was well over a million pounds.
817
posted on
01/04/2007 7:54:27 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: rottndog; Dead Corpse
"With carbon nanotubes, the dimensions you provided would be plenty strong." Except that it's not a solid structure. It's hollow, with pipes and elevator tubes and laboratories and fuel tanks and observatories, and all kinds of other things.
And initially, it was built in a hurry in Norwegian shipyards out of our specified steel.
We've been strengthening it since, with our carbon nanotube factories, but at first, it was just brute force engineering.
818
posted on
01/04/2007 8:00:42 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
To: NicknamedBob
600 million pounds of thrust....isn't that a little under powered for towing asteroids?
819
posted on
01/04/2007 8:02:08 PM PST
by
rottndog
(While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
To: rottndog
It's a little under-powered for lifting
us out of a one gee field, to tell the truth.
The mass figure, and the volume described, would indicate we would not have floated in the ocean -- we would have floated on the ocean, like a ping-pong ball.
820
posted on
01/04/2007 8:06:48 PM PST
by
NicknamedBob
(My tuner doesn't have good taste the way it used to!)
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