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Originally posted by tpg65
reply to post by Gorman91
So, you see a modern toy and it convinces you that all the ufo sightings from the last 60 years are attributed to it ?
I hope your face is as big as my palmedit on 29/05/2011 by tpg65 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Gorman91
reply to post by tpg65
No. But it certainly convinces me that such ability is not that advanced. And thus, not likely from aliens, who should be more advanced.
Originally posted by Gorman91
Actually, no ufo or alien contact ever had or possessed technology we didn't already know about.
Originally posted by Gorman91
In fact, as we as a human society learn more about the universe, how it works, and how to manipulate it, aliens and stories about them grow ever more complex.
Originally posted by Gorman91
A decade ago we were convinced that aliens used some type of heavy manufactured molecule in a nuclear reactor of some sort.
Originally posted by Gorman91
Today we know that by simply blocking virtual particles of gravity, you can achieve weightlessness.
Originally posted by Gorman91
When did aliens reveal to us the existence of virtual particles?
Originally posted by Gorman91
A decade ago aliens used plasma or laser weapons. Now that we have these weapons, all of the sudden aliens have something better. A decade ago we were convinced that they somehow had antigravity technology that the government was hiding from us. Today we know how to suck a photon out of space time, essentially discovering warp drive. No alien ever told us about this before we learned it on our own.
Fact is, nothing aliens are reported to have has ever been reported before humans discovered/invented/learned how to use it.
Today we know that by simply blocking virtual particles of gravity,
vir·tu·al /ˈvɜrtʃuəl/ Show Spelled[vur-choo-uhl] Show IPA
adjective
1. being such in power, force, or effect, though not actually or expressly such: a virtual dependence on charity.
2. Optics .
a. noting an image formed by the apparent convergence of rays geometrically, but not actually, prolonged, as the image formed by a mirror ( opposed to real).
b. noting a focus of a system forming virtual images.
3. temporarily simulated or extended by computer software: a virtual disk in RAM; virtual memory on a hard disk.
grav·i·ty /ˈgrævɪti/ Show Spelled[grav-i-tee] Show IPA
noun, plural -ties.
1. the force of attraction by which terrestrial bodies tend to fall toward the center of the earth.
2. heaviness or weight.
3. gravitation in general.
4. acceleration of gravity.
5. a unit of acceleration equal to the acceleration of gravity. Symbol: g