[extracted] New(?) 9-11 stuff
KSM got a plea deal. The guy who supposedly masterminded the 9/11 attacks is not getting the death penalty.
If you still
I CAN tie my own shoes, but I prefer shoes with velcro instead of laces.
When I was in college I had a friend who believed that NASA was a waste of taxpayer money and that they had made only contributions to society: Velcro and Tang.
I'm almost certain velcro was invented by a German inspired by burrs attaching to his dogs fur.
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I'm almost certain velcro was invented by a German inspired by burrs attaching to his dogs fur.
Yes just looked it up. Just leaves Tang, whatever that is.
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Tang is dehydrated orange juice. You add water to the powder and voila, you get juice. Or to put it in terms you might be more comfortable with, it's like dustified juice.
I loved Tang when I was a kid - Astronauts drank it! - but I haven't had any for decades. I won't try it again, though, too great a chance of ruining a pleasant childhood memory.
I'm almost certain velcro was invented by a German inspired by burrs attaching to his dogs fur.
Yes just looked it up. Just leaves Tang, whatever that is.
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George de Mestral was Swiss, but yes, the micro-hook idea came from burrs sticking to his dog. His wife at the time (Monique, second of three) was a former fiancΓ©e of Ian Fleming's.
I loved Tang when I was a kid - Astronauts drank it! - but I haven't had any for decades. I won't try it again, though, too great a chance of ruining a pleasant childhood memory.
Only time I've had it was in jail, it was available from the commissary. I invented a fire drink, mixing Tang with dehydrated iced tea (Nesquik or something) then warming it all up in the microwave. Was actually much better than it sounds, lived off that ****.
Only time I've had it was in jail, it was available from the commissary. I invented a fire drink, mixing Tang with dehydrated iced tea (Nesquik or something) then warming it all up in the microwave. Was actually much better than it sounds, lived off that ****.
No ****. What were you in there for?
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I loved Tang when I was a kid - Astronauts drank it! - but I haven't had any for decades. I won't try it again, though, too great a chance of ruining a pleasant childhood memory.
Only time I've had it was in jail, it was available from the commissary. I invented a fire drink, mixing Tang with dehydrated iced tea (Nesquik or something) then warming it all up in the microwave. Was
You deserved to be in jail just for that.
What's with this nested quoting kick you've gone on lately? New fetish?
You know, you'd get more attention from people if you weren't so deliberately annoying.
Ah yes the spinning ball religion. Fair cop.
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When are you going to tell us the shape of your planet, Billy? Your dustification theories are fascinating, but what we really need is for you to put a definitive end to the pancake vs. ice cream cone controversy.
When are you going to tell us the shape of your planet, Billy? Your dustification theories are fascinating, but what we really need is for you to put a definitive end to the pancake vs. ice cream cone controversy.
Planet? What the heck is that? Oh you mean plane.
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You mean this?
Plane - a flat, 2-dimensional surface that extends indefinitely.
It makes sense that the Earth is infinite, that's why no one has found the edge yet.
"Planet" is in fact a useful noun to categorise the wandering stars from the fixed stars. Planets being birthed from comets.
Max Born on the Ptolemaic system (from Einstein's Relativity):
"To the eye the heavens appear as a more or less flat dome to which the stars are attached. But in the course of a day the whole dome turns about an axis whose position in the heavens is denoted by the pole-star. So long as this visual appearance was regarded as reality an application of geometry from the earth to astronomic space was superfluous, and was, as a matter of fact, not carried out."
But but we need ball earth geometry to navigate the globe! - I hear you cry zealously. Not so. Max continues:
"To denote the positions of the stars only the apparent angle that the line of vision from the observer to the star formed with the horizon and with another appropriately chosen plane had to be known. At this stage of knowledge the earth's surface was considered at rest and was the eternal basis of the universe. The words "above" and "below" had an absolute meaning..."
Let that sink in. The ancients, who unequivocally did migrate the continents, required no such globe theory.
"it [world system] retained the notion that the earth is at rest and that the stars are revolving about it at immeasurable distances. Its orbits were determined as circles and epi-cycles according to the laws of earthly geometry, yet astronomic space was not actually through this subjected to geometry. For the orbits were fastened like rings to the crystal shells, which, arranged in strata, signified the heavens."
But but Ptolemy is debunked by Galileo! - goes the zealous cry. Yes but recall that mere refinement is enough to fix the geocentric conception. Why is one ad hoc hypothesis preferred to another?
One minor point to correct the great Max Born - he asserts the Greeks "knew" of the sphericity of Earth. They captured the idea from India, as with all their philosophy.
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Planet? What the heck is that? Oh you mean plane.
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Ah, so you realise it would have to be an infinite plane for your uniform gravitational theories to work. So, let's go with that. So we live on an infinite terrestrial plane, but the stars and other planets, they are spherical, have I got this right?
"Planet" is in fact a useful noun to categorise the wandering stars from the fixed stars. Planets being birthed from comets.Max Born on the Ptolemaic system (from Einstein's Relativity):"To the eye the heavens appear as a more or less flat dome to which the stars are attached. But in the course of a day the whole dome turns about an axis whose position in the heavens is denoted
So your entire world view is based on ignoring all scientific developments of the last 500 years or so? Interesting.
Ah, so you realise it would have to be an infinite plane for your uniform gravitational theories to work. So, let's go with that. So we live on an infinite terrestrial plane, but the stars and other planets, they are spherical, have I got this right?
There is no such thing as a sphere.
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