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Aliens exist!
Or, at least NASA thinks so, according to this article.
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/nas...2&cid=fb_wn_sf Thoughts? |
Aka propaganda for more funds. Either or, it's a win-win. I don't see it happening though.
---------- Post added at 10:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:21 PM ---------- And IF there is life out there, it's best we not make contact. History shows a more advanced civilization usually takes control of the less-intelligent one. |
I don't think you read the article. Lol. The positing of alien life by NASA is that of the smallest scales. Tiny, microscopic, organic microbes.
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alien
adjective \ˈā-lē-ən, ˈāl-yən\ : not familiar or like other things you have known : different from what you are used to Edit: As you can see, there is no allusion to humanoid features implicit in the meaning of the term alien. |
noun
1. a foreigner, especially one who is not a naturalized citizen of the country where they are living. |
Public opinion is usually dumbed down by quite a few degrees. It doesnt mean we should dumb down our language to accommodate them.
And fuck yeah its there and they better keep looking for it. We've explored the majority of the earth (not counting oceans, we should be combing those too) and we are discoverers by nature. Looking upward is the next logical step. |
I doubt thats all nasa knows... if so they are SOOO far behind.
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or it could solve a bunch of long established massive problems.
Honestly though, religions would adapt. There are plenty of facts that already debunk religions. They just blindly ignore those facts and live on willfully ignorant. |
where there's water, there is life
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lol
Yes, there's probably other intelligent life in the universe. It's a big place out there, maybe even an infinitely big place. There's bound to be something intelligent other than us. However, I'm sure it will be nothing like us. It might barely even be recognizable as a life-form, or undetectable to us (floating on gas giants, made from xenon, eat gravity fields, dark matter-based?). And consider how briefly humanity has been in its current stage. We've been Homo sapiens sapiens for what, two hundred thousand years? And we've only been doing anything resembling civilization for a small part of that. Soon, we'll probably either hit the technological singularity, or wipe ourselves out first (maybe even both at the same time!). So, assuming other alien species follow a roughly similar developmental timeframe - which is a big assumption - it would be sensible to assume that most of them are far more primitive than we are, or far more advanced. The amount of civilizations on our level will be an incredibly tiny fraction. We might be alone in the Milky Way, or even the Virgo supercluster. But I'm sure there's life out there. The question is, where? I don't think we're ready to know that for sure, yet. |
NASA's deep space communications center is here on Fort Irwin
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You're judging the ingredients for life on our own very specific set of rules. It's an ignorant view. We aren't venturing out into "alien" territory because it's "familiar" |
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hella salt being thrown back and forth here.
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you dont need Nasa to tell us aliens exist...They exist whether nasa says they do or not..
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---------- Post added at 07:33 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:29 PM ---------- most things we know require water to survive. Therefore, i think it's ok to assume that if there's water on mars, then there might just be organisms or "living life-forms" out there. In saying that we can also assume that alien lifeforms do not require h20 to live.. |
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Good use of played out come back though, bro. |
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Aliens have already determined the human species isn't intelligent enough to handle the truth and any technological help from them would ultimately be used against ourselves.
#EmoPost |
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