It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Abadon
So he was gonna expose illuminati, new world domination and was poisoned cia/mossad style before he could.
And the info been scrubbed off the face of the internet?
It's like modern F454
originally posted by: awakendhybrid
That would be kinda weird because that is exactly what happened in Dan Brown's latest novel, Origins.
originally posted by: FlyingSquirrel
originally posted by: Abadon
So he was gonna expose illuminati, new world domination and was poisoned cia/mossad style before he could.
And the info been scrubbed off the face of the internet?
It's like modern F454
Affirmitive and they do it all the time.
It was a Flat Earth convention iirc
The bizarre tale of the flat-Earth convention that fell apart
Co-organizer Lee Maxwell Judd believes "dark negative forces" were behind its failure, but the convention was doomed from the start.
The gathering
The above image was my first introduction to "A FLAT EARTH GATHERING," an event for Australians who believe the Earth is flat. It appeared in a post to the "I #ing Love Science" Facebook page.
The event looked good on paper -- tragically ambitious on paper. Mark Sargent, a prominent flat-Earth YouTuber, was billed as a special guest. Rapper B.o.B., who famously argued with Neil deGrasse Tyson over flat-Earth "theory," was to provide live music.
The location: Darling Park in Sydney, Australaia [sic]. An afterparty was planned at Bondi Icebergs, an expensive and internationally renowned dining room. Concrete details were scarce.
www.cnet.com...
originally posted by: UpIsNowDown
a reply to: LSU2018
make sure you treat them with care, give them a jacuzzi
originally posted by: FlyingSquirrel
I found it
The bizarre tale of the flat-Earth convention that fell apart
Co-organizer Lee Maxwell Judd believes "dark negative forces" were behind its failure, but the convention was doomed from the start.
The gathering
The above image was my first introduction to "A FLAT EARTH GATHERING," an event for Australians who believe the Earth is flat. It appeared in a post to the "I #ing Love Science" Facebook page.
The event looked good on paper -- tragically ambitious on paper. Mark Sargent, a prominent flat-Earth YouTuber, was billed as a special guest. Rapper B.o.B., who famously argued with Neil deGrasse Tyson over flat-Earth "theory," was to provide live music.
The location: Darling Park in Sydney, Australaia [sic]. An afterparty was planned at Bondi Icebergs, an expensive and internationally renowned dining room. Concrete details were scarce.
www.cnet.com...