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So...you made your hypothesis based on what you saw/experienced when you took a huge amount of drugs. Well done.
originally posted by: Toolman18
I don't know why but I just feel complete disclosure is coming soon regarding extraterrestrial life.
originally posted by: SecretKnowledge
Microbial alien life.....
We already had disclosure. The White House said a couple of years ago that they had no good evidence of alien life anywhere, and also no evidence that it was visiting Earth. End of story.
originally posted by: ZetaRediculian
No, no, no... That's "disinformation", disclosure is the part where they confirm what everyone already knows. So when we talk about disclosure, we are really saying "just admit it".
So basically "disclosure" only counts if they say what you want them to say.
originally posted by: ZetaRediculian
a reply to: Blue Shift
So basically "disclosure" only counts if they say what you want them to say.
Yes.
It is also the way science works. When a scientist looks at UFO data and concludes that there is nothing confirming aliens, they are either lying or not doing science. If they confirm aliens, bingo! Because that's what I want to hear. Even if they don't really say it, I hear it anyway.
originally posted by: MrNeo
200 years ago the thought of sending a craft to the moon, Mars or Pluto was inconceivable at best. If you were here in 1815 and started talking about cell phones and computers people would have thought you were crazy.
Somnium (1541) by Juan Maldonado.
The Dream (Somnium) (1634) by Johannes Kepler (written before 1610, but not published during Kepler's life). An Icelandic voyager is transported to the Moon by aërial demons; an occasion for Kepler to offer some of his astronomical theories in the guise of fiction.
The Man in the Moone (1638) by Francis Godwin. A Spaniard flies to the Moon using a contraption pulled by geese.
The Discovery of a World in the Moone, or a discourse tending to prove that 'tis probable there may be another habitable world in that planet. (1638) by John Wilkins.
Voyage dans la Lune (1657) by Cyrano de Bergerac, inspired by Godwin.[4] Cyrano is launched toward the moon by fireworks.
The Consolidator (1705) by Daniel Defoe. Travels between China and the Moon on an engine called The Consolidator (a satire on the Parliament of England).
A Voyage to Cacklogallinia (1727) by Samuel Brunt
Syzygies and Lunar Quadratures Aligned to the Meridian of Mérida of the Yucatán by an Anctitone or Inhabitant of the Moon (1775), by Franciscan friar Manuel Antonio de Rivas
Newest Voyage (1784) by Vasily Levshin. A protagonist flies in a self-constructed winged apparatus.
The improbable adventures of Baron Munchausen (1786) included two voyages to the Moon, and a description of its flora and fauna.
A Voyage to the Moon (1793) by Aratus (the penname of an anonymous British author, not the original Greek scientist)
The Conquest by the Moon (1809) by Washington Irving. An invasion story meant as an allegory about treatment of Native Americans by European settlers in America.
A Flight to the Moon (1813) by George Fowler.
Land of Acephals (1824) by Wilhelm Küchelbecker. Flight in a balloon.
A Voyage to the Moon (1827) by George Tucker.
"The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall" (1835) by Edgar Allan Poe features a repairer of bellows in Rotterdam who creates a giant balloon and an 'air compressor' to allow him to travel to the Moon.
"Recollections of Six Days' Journey in the Moon. By An Aerio-Nautical Man" (1844). Published in the July and August issues of the Southern Literary Messenger.