Posted on 04/21/2006 7:54:42 PM PDT by george76
Eric Julien, a former French military air traffic controller and senior airport manager, has completed a study of the comet 73P Schwassmann- Wachmann and declared that a fragment is highly likely to impact the Earth on or around May 25, 2006.
Comet Schwassman-Wachmann follows a five-year orbit that crosses the solar system's ecliptic plane. It has followed its five year orbit intact for centuries; but, in 1995, mysteriously fragmented.
According to Julien, this is the same year that a crop circle appeared showing the inner solar system with the Earth missing from its orbit.
He argues the "Missing Earth" crop circle was a message from higher intelligences warning humanity of the consequences of its destructive nuclear policies.
He concludes the May 25 event is tied in to the Bush administration's policy of preemptive use of nuclear weapons against Iran, and the effect of nuclear weapons on the realms of higher intelligences.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
"Um, your neighbor wouldn't happen to be Charlie Sheen?'
Richards's declaration, filed in support of her request for a restraining order against Sheen, contends that Sheen "belonged" to "disturbing" sites "which promoted very young girls, who looked underage to me with pigtails, braces, and no pubic hair performing oral sex with each other." Other sites visited by Sheen, Richards alleges, involved "gay pornography also involving very young men who also did not look like adults." Richards claims that she also discovered that Sheen "belonged to several sex search type sites" on which he "looked for women to have sex with." His online profile, Richards adds, included a photo of "his erect penis."
I live in a trailer park, we would never let his likes in here.
Ooh! Aah!
Probably 200 meters long...
But from their--superior--point of view, they'd be doing us a favor.
Sometimes, mine too.
Real threats show up in these feeds and distribution lists long before the media pays attention. If anything genuinely dangerous shows up (like the big one from last year), you can find out days before the rest of the world does simply by trawling the appropriate scientific channels on the internet.
And yes, the guy in question here is a twit (he's French, can't help it). There are no impact trajectories for this object that I've seen.
I was referring to his appearance on Alex Jones last month or so.
That picture PROVES that not all aliens are "higher intelligences".
OTOH, I think he was smart enough (barely) to talk Doh & crew into beaming up to the mothership behind the comet.
You've folded the psychotronic radiation deflector wrong! The shiny part needs to be on the outer surface of the deflector (so that the governments signals can't get into your head and also so that your thoughts can't be read by the government).
Here is more information on how to *safely* build your psychotronic radiation deflector beanie.
Sorry, I forgot all about his conspiracy stuff last month.
sacre blue!
.... due out may 26. :)
This is the bad boy to watch: 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4)
...due for a close encounter in April of 2036.
Is there a chance there are fragments from this comet we haven't detected yet?
Be ironic if the comet in-fact hit Iran
Possible, but pretty unlikely for any significant fragments. These days, it seems that anything larger than about 10 meters gets picked up by the surveys.
Even if there were some as yet unmapped fragments, it is highly unlikely that they would deviate significantly from the average trajectory of the current group thanks to the conservation of momentum. And the current trajectory is nowhere near an impact course.
On the purely anecdotal level, I have seen zero chatter on the channels for the people that actually compute impact probabilities that anything is going to have even a remote probability of impact over the next several months, including the chatter regarding the object in question. Since these guys do it for a living, and aggressively compete with each other for discoveries of potential impactors (in spats that sometimes get quite ugly), I would have expected to have heard about it by now. People discover funny trajectories and strange objects all the time that never make the MSM. Most funny trajectories are resolved through rigorous study as are the strange objects. The recent discovery of a Kuiper belt object larger than Pluto orbiting the sun, for example, was discussed at length on the back channels almost a week before the media got wind of it, and that was a big deal.
As I said, interesting potential impactor data shows up on the scientific back channels and gets argued about days before anyone else picks it up, assuming that there is some substance to it. I mine a very diverse set of data sources for interesting bits as they happen, including astronomical and geological data streams. I consider the odds of a known impactor escaping these channels to be slim. Establishing that an impact will occur requires the cooperation of several different observatories around the globe, and that kind of thing does not stay secret since the word gets thoroughly distributed before the impact probability is established in order to ascertain the impact probability in the first place.
Hey, you just knew the aliens would side with the meteorite worshiping moon rock set, didn't you?
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