Remarkable "Stuff" You've Seen On YouTube.
Aug 1, 2020 17:20:25 GMT
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Post by Mr Whippy on Aug 1, 2020 17:20:25 GMT
We view travel in a linear fashion. Travelling at 60mph will get you 120 miles in two hours or 360 miles in three hours, etc. For traveling any great distances - galaxies away - it's a non-starter. Looking through your telescope you see a planet you like the look of and it's a light year away. You get in your rocket and head for it at a speed of 500mph. Getting there will take you 1.37 million years, if I've worked it out right. So that's not on. Even if you could, there's no certainty the planet will still exist when you get there. It could have been destroyed and the light of that event would still be on it's way back to your point of origin.
The only way such great distances could be traversed would be by distorting time and space, apparently. You have your starting point and you have your destination point, and you pull the two together, sort of. The example Bob Lazar gives is having two objects lying on a bed and some distance apart. You move the two objects closer together by pressing down on the mattress between them. He's said that UFOs operate by altering the gravitational field in a direction which creates a ripple effect which the craft rides. And if that's the case, I would imagine producing an internal gravitational field wouldn't be out of the question.
If YouTube comments are anything to go by, perhaps the Government's opinion of their public might be as valid as you say. There's all this talk of disclosure. In the 50s the US Government set-up up a focus group to gauge what the public's reaction would be if they were told that flying saucers were real and visiting willy-nilly. The findings that came back were that on no account should the public be made aware of such goings on. It was said that there would be a break down in the rule of law, religious beliefs would go out the window and anachy would ensure. Well, maybe that's how the Yanks would have reacted. I think us Brits might have responded a bit more pragmatic: Aliens?... Visiting us?... Do they eat cake? Do they play cricket over there on Alfa Centauri? More tea, Vicar?
That was 70 years ago; the world is a different place now. Could people now handle the truth, whatever that might be? Well, some are wanting just that, and the number grows as more revelations come to light.
In the space of 100 years, which isn't much really, Americans have gone from traveling around in covered waggons to putting men on the moon (although some have it in their heads they haven't). So, who's to say what the future has to offer?
The only way such great distances could be traversed would be by distorting time and space, apparently. You have your starting point and you have your destination point, and you pull the two together, sort of. The example Bob Lazar gives is having two objects lying on a bed and some distance apart. You move the two objects closer together by pressing down on the mattress between them. He's said that UFOs operate by altering the gravitational field in a direction which creates a ripple effect which the craft rides. And if that's the case, I would imagine producing an internal gravitational field wouldn't be out of the question.
If YouTube comments are anything to go by, perhaps the Government's opinion of their public might be as valid as you say. There's all this talk of disclosure. In the 50s the US Government set-up up a focus group to gauge what the public's reaction would be if they were told that flying saucers were real and visiting willy-nilly. The findings that came back were that on no account should the public be made aware of such goings on. It was said that there would be a break down in the rule of law, religious beliefs would go out the window and anachy would ensure. Well, maybe that's how the Yanks would have reacted. I think us Brits might have responded a bit more pragmatic: Aliens?... Visiting us?... Do they eat cake? Do they play cricket over there on Alfa Centauri? More tea, Vicar?
That was 70 years ago; the world is a different place now. Could people now handle the truth, whatever that might be? Well, some are wanting just that, and the number grows as more revelations come to light.
In the space of 100 years, which isn't much really, Americans have gone from traveling around in covered waggons to putting men on the moon (although some have it in their heads they haven't). So, who's to say what the future has to offer?