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 Slih_09
People never look at the sky, and when they finally do things appear strange to them. Someone once said that something weird was going on because the moon was visible during the day.
Originally posted by Blaine91555
reply to post by Mythkiller
One bad news source that draws on other bad news sources is a lousy place to get facts. Not a single link to any facts, only anecdotal stuff.
Do you have an evidence that this is factual. I can't find any and if this were true, every Astronomer and amateur Astronomer would be all over it. The programs that find things for them when aiming their telescopes would have all failed and no way would they not notice. So are all these people keeping a huge dark secret or is that just a bad news story from a bad news source?
Originally posted by 11I11
Originally posted by Slih_09
People never look at the sky, and when they finally do things appear strange to them. Someone once said that something weird was going on because the moon was visible during the day.
I totally agree, we spend most of our time watching TV or staring at the computer screen in our safe little houses. The moon could change colour and 99.9% of the earths population wouldnt even notice.
Originally posted by Kennit
Since you ignored the link in the previous thread, here it is again:
New documentary recounts bizarre climate changes seen by Inuit elders
Just to clarify, are you referring to beforeitsnews as the bad source, or the Inuits? This is not the first news story I've seen about this in Canada. This appears to be a follow-up story to the documentary that was done addressing it and other changes observed in Canada's Arctic for some time now.
"Even stranger is the fact that the sun now appears to set many kilometres off its usual point on the horizon ...
The scientific explanation is that the warming Arctic air is causing temperature inversions, which in turn cause the light of the sunset to refract so that the sun appears to be setting a few kilometres off-kilter."