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 CasiusIgnoranze
This is number 117 just recently:
The director of the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory and head of the planetary sciences department has died.
The university says 65-year-old Professor Michael Drake died Wednesday at the University of Arizona Medical Center in Tucson.
Drake joined the UA planetary sciences faculty in 1973 and headed the planetary sciences department since 1994.
He was the principal investigator of the most ambitious UA project to date -- an $800 million mission designed to retrieve a sample of an asteroid and return it to Earth.
Drake played a key role in a succession of ever more high-profile space projects including the Cassini mission to explore Saturn, the Gamma-Ray Spectrometer onboard NASA's Mars Odyssey Orbiter, the HiRISE camera onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and the Phoenix Mars Lander.
Source
I guess this makes it the 117th "mysterious death" on the list of scientists dead so far (or should I say assassinated?) - Coincidentally right after they made ground breaking discoveries in their respective fields (which never got followed on after they died).
If you connect the dots to Mars (relating to all the anomalous structures NASA has continuously tried to debunk) and a certain Asteroid/Comet possibly heading our way, you can begin to see why this particular top scientist from the University of Arizona "suddenly died".
And before any debunker or sceptic says theirs "no evidence of foul play involved", then tell me:
If there was ANY evidence in the first place, the Assassin wouldn't be doing their job very well then, don't you think?
And another thing to sceptics and debunkers who are quick to bring out the "death by natural causes" card:
Even Assassinations can sometimes be made to look like NATURAL CAUSESedit on 23-9-2011 by CasiusIgnoranze because: .
Originally posted by 2PLUS2IS22
how about the Airmen involved with teh n88kuluhr accident in t3h fariforce based in sloth derkato, ? se3vent33n or 18 othem deadered might seriously too
Originally posted by Heyyo_yoyo
reply to post by CasiusIgnoranze
Um... your link lists dead scientists, and a brief bio about them, which reveals that alot of these scientists had NOTHING to do with what you insinuate. Point in case:
#104 Bradley C. Livezey, 56, died in a car crash Feb. 8. Livezey knew nearly everything about the songs of birds and was considered the top anatomist. Livezey, curator of The Carnegie Museum of Natural History, never gave up researching unsolved mysteries of the world's 20,000 or so avian species. Carnegie curator since 1993, Livezey oversaw a collection of nearly 195,000 specimens of birds, the country's ninth largest. Livezey died in a two-car crash on Route 910, authorities said. An autopsy revealed he died from injuries to the head and trunk, the Allegheny County Medical Examiner's Office said. Northern Regional Police are investigating.
What does bird songs have to do with highly classified NASA Mars projects?
Granted, this list of deceased scientists shows that most of these deaths can be questioned, it certainly doesn't provide a conspiracy for a Mars/ Elenin relationship that the governments of the world are trying desparately to hide...
www.thealmightyguru.com...
Originally posted by CasiusIgnoranze
This is number 117 just recently:
The director of the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory and head of the planetary sciences department has died.
The university says 65-year-old Professor Michael Drake died Wednesday at the University of Arizona Medical Center in Tucson.
Drake joined the UA planetary sciences faculty in 1973 and headed the planetary sciences department since 1994.
He was the principal investigator of the most ambitious UA project to date -- an $800 million mission designed to retrieve a sample of an asteroid and return it to Earth.
Drake played a key role in a succession of ever more high-profile space projects including the Cassini mission to explore Saturn, the Gamma-Ray Spectrometer onboard NASA's Mars Odyssey Orbiter, the HiRISE camera onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and the Phoenix Mars Lander.
Source
I guess this makes it the 117th "mysterious death" on the list of scientists dead so far (or should I say assassinated?) - Coincidentally right after they made ground breaking discoveries in their respective fields (which never got followed on after they died).
If you connect the dots to Mars (relating to all the anomalous structures NASA has continuously tried to debunk) and a certain Asteroid/Comet possibly heading our way, you can begin to see why this particular top scientist from the University of Arizona "suddenly died".
And before any debunker or sceptic says theirs "no evidence of foul play involved", then tell me:
If there was ANY evidence in the first place, the Assassin wouldn't be doing their job very well then, don't you think?
And another thing to sceptics and debunkers who are quick to bring out the "death by natural causes" card:
Even Assassinations can sometimes be made to look like NATURAL CAUSESedit on 23-9-2011 by CasiusIgnoranze because: .