To: LibWhacker
Fool! It's not on Mars if it's not showing the American flag that Armstrong put on there! ---
Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee LOL

2 posted on
04/20/2022 2:19:30 PM PDT by
Tell It Right
(1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
To: LibWhacker
Not so much an eclipse as a transit, isn’t it?
4 posted on
04/20/2022 2:28:34 PM PDT by
decal
(They won't stop, so they'll have to be stopped)
To: LibWhacker
More properly, a transit.
5 posted on
04/20/2022 2:33:55 PM PDT by
ApplegateRanch
(Love me, love my guns!)
To: LibWhacker
cool pick and a waste on taxpayer $
To: LibWhacker
A bit different than what we experience on Earth with a total solar eclipse ... not just the awesome sight itself ... but also that we’re here to see astronomical perfection in that the relative size of the moon and sun matches precisely their relative distance from us. Ever since childhood this truly amazing set if truly amazing “coincidences” (both the perfect mathematical syzygy and the fact we’re here to witness it) is definitive proof of a Creator.
7 posted on
04/20/2022 2:41:51 PM PDT by
glennaro
(Live life unbullied and unafraid. Choose to ignore or fight the irrationality that surrounds you.)
To: LibWhacker
Looks more asteroid shape than moon shape.
I’m probably wrong thinking that moons are all spherical.
I guess that if a giant rock is captured by a planet it could be considered a moon!?
9 posted on
04/20/2022 2:46:30 PM PDT by
justme4now
(Falsehood flies, and the Truth comes limping after it)
To: LibWhacker
As several commentors on Youtube said, it’s a transit, not an eclipse.
Still kind of neat to watch, though.
To: LibWhacker
That’s a bad floater— need to see an optometrist.
13 posted on
04/20/2022 4:22:21 PM PDT by
Irenic
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