The Emoluments of Mars
"Mike Bara sees glass over Picard"
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Picard is a 23-km diameter crater in Mare Crisium (Sea of Crises) on the Moon. Writing Ancient Aliens on the Moon, college drop-out Mike Bara considered Mare Crisium so important that he devoted the whole of Chapter 5 to it.
Mare Crisium has been the site of numerous historical reports of TLP (transient lunar phenomena), and also the sensational (and utterly mistaken) 1953 report by journalist John O'Neill of an artificial bridge over part of the mare1,2. It's also the site of the so-called "spire," which may well be yet another scanner fault. It certainly isn't, as both Bara and Hoagland have written, part of a box several miles high. Even those satellite dishes, that I blogged about on October 12th, are right around here.
But back to Picard. Mike Bara shows us this picture, a small detail from AS16-121-19438:
[Image] caption: High contrast version of crater Picard from AS16-121-19438 That image was taken after Apollo 16's LM, Orion, had returned to orbit following three highly fruitful moonwalks. It's a really wide angle, showing fully a third of the lunar hemisphere. Bara writes (p.103):
This unmistakable pie-slice shaped structure glows in the sunlight, illuminating what must be the last remaining piece of a solid, watch-crystal like dome over the crater itself.Under intense enhancement, the wedge-shaped piece is even more obvious. (emphasis added)
That "what must be" is a strong contender for "most unscientific statement written this century." As with the satellite dishes, it's a profound mystery why Mike Bara chose this extremely poor image of Picard, when an image at approximately 0.8m resolution is so easily available from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (14.6°N, 54.7°E). Here it is:
[Image] photo credit: LROC NAC
Where's that pie-slice now, Bara? Eh?? EH?????
========================================
1. See Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of Czechoslovakia, vol. 8, p.33
2. O'Neill's Bridge (wikispaces)
Mare Crisium has been the site of numerous historical reports of TLP (transient lunar phenomena), and also the sensational (and utterly mistaken) 1953 report by journalist John O'Neill of an artificial bridge over part of the mare1,2. It's also the site of the so-called "spire," which may well be yet another scanner fault. It certainly isn't, as both Bara and Hoagland have written, part of a box several miles high. Even those satellite dishes, that I blogged about on October 12th, are right around here.
But back to Picard. Mike Bara shows us this picture, a small detail from AS16-121-19438:
[Image] caption: High contrast version of crater Picard from AS16-121-19438 That image was taken after Apollo 16's LM, Orion, had returned to orbit following three highly fruitful moonwalks. It's a really wide angle, showing fully a third of the lunar hemisphere. Bara writes (p.103):
This unmistakable pie-slice shaped structure glows in the sunlight, illuminating what must be the last remaining piece of a solid, watch-crystal like dome over the crater itself.Under intense enhancement, the wedge-shaped piece is even more obvious. (emphasis added)
That "what must be" is a strong contender for "most unscientific statement written this century." As with the satellite dishes, it's a profound mystery why Mike Bara chose this extremely poor image of Picard, when an image at approximately 0.8m resolution is so easily available from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (14.6°N, 54.7°E). Here it is:
[Image] photo credit: LROC NAC
Where's that pie-slice now, Bara? Eh?? EH?????
========================================
1. See Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of Czechoslovakia, vol. 8, p.33
2. O'Neill's Bridge (wikispaces)
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Trekker said...
- I don't see how Mike can use the 'sun at the wrong angle excuse'
for not using the LROC images. If there truly was a 'pie-slice shaped'
(whatever that is) glass dome fragment over Picard, the edges would
easily be visible in this overhead view, as well as the shadow it would
cast on the ground below, not to mention a reflection from the sun.
- Yes, it's totally lame.
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Misti Parker said...
- Picard, after Jean-Luc?
It's same as you pointed out in a previous thread, Paddycakes, the original face on Mars had what, 5 meters of resolution, is it? So the face on Mars is actually a squished together image of the desert which is actually spread out a lot more than what's depicted, right?
Or would film used during Apollo, not be subject to that same sort of spacial distortion?
- Not Jean-Luc but Jean.
The original, Viking orbiter, image was 250m/pixel. Really, really crude. The Ektachrome film used for Apollo was very fine grained, but there were a variety of lenses provided and the Apollo 16 shot was the shortest focal length they had, meaning the widest angle possible. Hence it was useless for seeing detail in them thar craters. Mike Bara doesn't understand that.
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Trekker said...
- Viking orbiter? Didn't Viking go to Mars, not the moon?
- Yes, "Misti" was asking about Mars, Face On.
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Trekker said...
- Ah, sorry. I thought you were referring to the imaging of Picard.
- FYI the lenses were:
Command Module: 80mm f/2.8, 250mm
Lunar Module: 60mm, 500mm
ref: Press Kit,, p.123
- approx view angle in degrees =
180d/πf
where d =width of film (70mm for Apollo)
f=focal length of lens
So for the 60mm lens, angle is 67° -- pretty wide.
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Misti Parker said...
- Those specs help, but I sort of wonder if the resolution of film
with grain doesn't provide more information than the space between the
pixels of digital imaging?
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Misti Parker said...
- I recently watched a trailer for the anniversary theatrical
release of a directors cut of the God Father. That vintage movie was
not made for the larger projection lenses and screens of this more
modern era. At such high magnification, the grain is intolerable. Of
course it was film bumped to digital, but pixelation was not
contributing to the distortion at all. The grain was simply gigantic.
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Anonymous said...
- Why are Mike and Hoagy so hung up on glass domes. Given that their pictures show nothing but their own imaginations, why domes?
Would not oh... pyramids fit better with their mythos?
-James
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James Concannon said...
- I wonder what Mike means when he writes "enhancement"? The
so-called enhanced image of Picard in his Picasa gallery just looks a
bit more contrasty. In terms of interpreting what it shows, I'd say he's
degraded it rather than enhanced it. Perhaps that's deliberate.
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Chris Lopes said...
- James,
The whole "we can add information by 'enhancing' the image" idea is completely bogus anyway. If it's not in the original image, it's not there. You can't make it appear by applying Photoshop magic.
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Misti Parker said...
- Why was NASA wrong about the show that bombed when the bunker
buster they dropped where Hoagland says there are domes, didn't produce
the predicted cloud of rising dust?
- LCROSS didn't bomb (well, I guess it did, it dropped a bomb of a kind on crater Cabeus) it was highly successful.
Here's a press release:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/2010/10-89AR.html
Here's the wikipage:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LCROSS
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Misti Parker said...
- No, NASA said that there would be a big dust plume that would
show up brightly illuminated by the Sun. They got everybody to stare at
the Moon and we didn't see shit. Why didn't we?
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Misti Parker said...
- science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2008/11aug_lcross
A Flash of Insight: LCROSS Mission Update
August 11, 2008: There are places on the Moon where the sun hasn't shined for millions of years. Dark polar craters too deep for sunlight to penetrate are luna incognita, the realm of the unknown, and in their inky depths, researchers believe, may lie a treasure of great value.
NASA is about to light one up.
Sometime between May and August 2009, depending on launch dates, the booster stage for NASA's LCROSS probe will deliberately crash into a permanently-shadowed lunar crater at 9,000 km/hr, producing an explosion equivalent to about 2,000 pounds of TNT (6.5 billion joules). The blast will jettison material out of the crater into broad daylight where astronomers can search the debris for signs of lunar water.
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Misti Parker said...
NASA moon bombing violates space law & may cause conflict with lunar ET/UFO civilizations
Politics
June 19, 2009
By: Alfred Lambremont Webre
Commentary: The planned October 9, 2009 bombing of the moon by a NASA orbiter that will bomb the moon with a 2-ton kinetic weapon to create a 5 mile wide deep crater as an alleged water-seeking and lunar colonization experiment, is contrary to space law prohibiting environmental modification of celestial bodies. The NASA moon bombing, a component of the LCROSS mission, may also trigger conflict with known extraterrestrial civilizations on the moon as reported on the moon in witnessed statements by U.S. astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong, and in witnessed statements to NSA (National Security Agency) photos and documents regarding an extraterrestrial base on the dark side of the moon.
If the true intent of the LCROSS mission moon bombing is a hostile act by NASA against known extraterrestrial civilizations and settlements on the moon, then NASA and by extension the U.S. government are guilty of aggressive war which is the most serious of war crimes under the U.N. Charter and the Geneva Conventions, to which the U.S. is subject. The U.N. Outer Space Treaty, which the U.S. has ratified, requires that “ The moon and other celestial bodies shall be used by all States Parties to the Treaty exclusively for peaceful purposes. The establishment of military bases, installations and fortifications, the testing of any type of weapons and the conduct of military manoeuvres on celestial bodies shall be forbidden.” 98 nations have ratified and 125 nations have signed the U.N. Outer Space Treaty.
[continues]
http://www.examiner.com/article/nasa-moon-bombing-violates-space-law-may-cause-conflict-with-lunar-et-ufo-civilizations
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Esteban Navarro said...
- The conversation , the ET base...is an old English prank, Mistic,but I think you already know, don´t you?
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Trekker said...
- Well, Misti, nobody on the moon retaliated, did they? Lol!
- Alfred Lambremont Webre is a lawyer, not a scientist.
There are no statements by U.S. astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong regarding an extraterrestrial base on the dark side of the moon, unless you count statements along the lines of "No, we didn't see that."
LCROSS was not a weapon.
I don't know why the impact plume was less than expected. Phil Plait's blog may have something on that.
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Strahlungsamt said...
- @Trekker
Don't be so sure. Remember Alderaan?
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Trekker said...
- Sorry, remind me. Who or what is Alderaan?
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Strahlungsamt said...
- I just loooove the whole conspiracy mindset. Better to believe
some celebrity gossip site than a NASA report (because celebrity
journalists are always right and NASA covers up everything in case we
might turn into brain-eating zombies and re-elect Obama or something).
BTW, have you guys seen Iron Sky yet? I just did and it's hilarious. It literally rips open every space-based conspiracy and just gets nuttier and nuttier as it goes along. Basically, the descendants of the original Nazis escaped to the Moon, built a base and taught their kids that once all humans are Aryanized, there will be world peace. The first man on the moon in 50 years is black, Sarah Palin is president and there's references to Dr. Strangelove and there's a 1138 in there somewhere.
If you've ever listened to a conspiracy rant, that's what the story is like. Loads of inconsistent to impossible events took place to make improbable things happen and, of course, it's all true. If Hoagie and Mike were good storytellers, they could almost have written it themselves.
Best bit, the movie makes fun of conspiracies too much for Hoagie and Mike to use it for clues. Guess they'll have to stick with "Mission to Mars" for now.
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Strahlungsamt said...
- @Trekker
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBAZGtBfcY4
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Trekker said...
- Lol, thanks!
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Misti Parker said...
- Hoagland says that the reason that there was no dust plume, was
because the domes are sooooo big, that the hole that the bunker buster
put in one, was not big enough for the dust to get out. I haven't heard
any explanation from NASA at all. That's what I mean about NASA. They
never give you all the information. Is it any wonder that people get
all conspiratorial? NASA need to become much more accountable, because
tax payers are fed up with paying their money and taking it in the butt.
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Trekker said...
- Misti, a two-second google search provided me with NASA's explanation, dating from Oct. 21, 2010:
http://lcross.arc.nasa.gov/observation.htm
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Esteban Navarro said...
- Exactly, mistic, NASA has to explain any infatuation that comes
to mind to any nutcase, yes, it would be wellworth its money .... Not
like the U.S. DOD, right? yes ... they do well in explaining in what
democratic things spends 40% "taxpayers' money" (Don´t you get tired of
that demagogic litany yet?)
Thanks for the link, Strahlungsamt, that Shakespearean accent of Peter Cushing... (And a little of Carrie Fisher!!!, ha ha ,ha...) Nice.
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Misti Parker said...
- Trekkie, you are full of shit. That linked article does not give
NASASS' explanation as to why they made the false claim, that there
would be a dust plume visible from Earth, and why that plume did not
occur.
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Misti Parker said...
- Estabanned, when NASA makes false claims and the public calls
them on it, your name calling does not defend NASA for lying again.
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Misti Parker said...
- Even the close up videos don't show a plume. It's a perfect example of the Emperor's New Cloths.
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jourget said...
- Misti, I think the fact that they originally claimed that a
prominent plume would most likely occur, and then a plume less
conspicuous in the visual spectrum than expected (not NO plume, as you
seem to imply) showed up is a really excellent example of why we do
science. The current models of ice on the lunar south pole said one
thing would happen, then the LCROSS results said something was a little
off. The conclusion to be drawn from these quotes is that we learned
something we didn't know before. Before the fact statements that end up
being incorrect and non-credentialed folks who said something on the
internet once do not compelling evidence of a conspiracy make.
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Misti Parker said...
- NASA publicized a great big plume that was supposed to be visible
from Earth, and it wasn't even visible in video. NASA offered no
explanation as to what happened to the plume. It's just like Hoagland
announcing his birthday wish for loot so he could go to Egypt. Instead,
he gypped everybody and went to his local bar and celebrated his
birthday there. He hasn't said a word about that, either.
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Misti Parker said...
- I want my money back from NASA. At least I had sense enough after that fiasco then to give any money to Hoagland.
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jourget said...
- Not only wasn't the plume visible on video, it wasn't visible in
even the highest-powered Earth telescopes looking for it. Still doesn't
mean anything. NASA isn't a Hollywood studio promising a whiz-bang
blockbuster and then failing to deliver. They do science. If they could
have said with 100% accuracy what they would see before they launched
the mission, then there would have been no need for the mission. They
didn't say why they got those results immediately afterward because,
with real scientists, incorporating new results takes time. You're right
about the advantages about a balanced critique, but absolutely wrong
about Hoagland and NASA being exactly alike.
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Misti Parker said...
- Really? I'm still waiting for NASA to make a retraction about
that arsenic eating bacteria. NASA delays a press conference to
coincide with the return of the nine month absence of the nuclear
powered, Project Prometheus, X-37B, which Hoagland also ignored, makes a
big bogus announcement of new, alien forms of life, and then never owns
up to having lied yet again.
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Misti Parker said...
- NASA delays the press conference to steal the headlines about the
unexplained mission of the X-37B. The Air-force claimed that it had
simply disappeared. All the public's attention was on NASA claiming
alien life now astronomically much more feasible with the discovery of
the arsenic eating bacteria. Richard C Hoagland goes on Coast to Coast
AM in support of NASASS' claims, while also making no mention, even in
passing, about the X-37B. George Noory's first interview with Hoagland
was an entire show about Project Prometheus, the nuclear powered
Spacecraft. The next day after the press conference, Hoagland nuked all
referecne from his facebutt page, about the X-37B and Project
Prometheus. NASA held that televised press conference, not only to
divert from the secret mission of the nuclear powered Project
Prometheus, X-37B, but also to reach the largest possible audience. How
many people today, are still under the impression that alien life has
been announced by NASA, despite the small articles that subsequently
smashed the faulty science to smithereens? There is no arsenic eating
bacteria.
Now that NASA says that a "plastic containment" of an uncertain origin was discovered by Curiosity. What ever happened to all of those dispersing Mars probes? Did they crash on the surface of the planet, did the Martians shoot them down, or did the X-37B already go and retrieve them all?
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Misti Parker said...
- NASA has deliberately muddied the water. By announcing
feasibility of alien life, irrespective of the fact that the science was
bogus, everybody thinks that it's true. By finding plastic on the
surface of Mars, if bacteria ever is discovered, there is no way to say
that it wasn't introduced by the clumsiness of NASA; plastic can't be
sterilized. There is no way for anybody to know anything for certain,
one way or another. The one true thing that Hoagland often says, is:
"The lie is different at every level."
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Misti Parker said...
- Now, if bacteria is announced to have been discovered on Mars,
and NASA is to say that it can't be sure if they didn't put it there
themselves, people will jump to the conclusion that NASA is being overly
conservative, or trying to cover up alien life. After all, even if a
silicone based bacteria were to be found on Mars, NASA already will be
remembered to have already discovered it in the Salton Sea in the low
valley of the Southern California desert.
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Misti Parker said...
- Yep. Just like the X-37B, and the plume on the Moon, all those
old Mars probes simply disappeared. I wan't my FLICK'N money back!
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Misti Parker said...
- Yep, just like that arsenic eating bacteria, simply disappeared, so did MY MONEY!
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Biological_Unit said...
- all those old Mars probes simply disappeared
I'm sure you could do better with help from Orbs and "feelings".
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Esteban Navarro said...
- "My name callin?" Me? Ha ha ha...
Are Chris and Expat terrible secret agents of disinformation already or not?
Have you run out for insulting Arabs and communists? Why insult our intelligence with that childish tantrums ´bout NASA and taxes and "The public"?Who´s the public ?You?
Please, tell me you have something more than x37b and bacteria to conclude that NASA lies ... A far-right tradition of conspiranoia on Internet against science and common sense depends on it ...
- >>NASA already will be remembered to have already
discovered it in the Salton Sea in the low valley of the Southern
California desert.<<
Mono Lake, not Salton Sea.
- The claim was not that GFAJ-1 "ate" arsenic but that it
substituted arsenic for phosphorous in its DNA backbone. NOT
nucleotides, by the way, as Hoagland thought.
But indeed, the claim is now falsified.
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Misti Parker said...
- NASASS' claim has indeed been proven to be WRONG and NASA has yet
to own up to it, let alone, hold another big press conference to clear
things up with all the people who were hoodwinked.
"Feelings"? How am I supposed to feel?
As far as the Orbs are concerned, my opinions are based upon observations, not feelings. However, when the Orbs showed up outside my terminal mothers hospital room, and minutes after she died, folded her corpse up in the electric bed, so that the only way we could stop it was to unplug the current, yeah, that sort of made me feel like shit.
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Trekker said...
- Expat, did you see Mike's scaaaary message to you on his FB (author) page? I'm sure you'll be shaking in your boots. Lol!
- I may be wrong but I see some humor in that. I'm not taking it as scary.
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Esteban Navarro said...
- I'm not sure we could say the same phrase for Misti, Expat. (Glups)
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Trekker said...
- Well, as he's not the most articulate, I suppose it could be seen in more ways than one.
I took it as meaning he was going to elaborate on what you wrote on the 15th about his comment on a radio show: "that he's hired an investigator to track me down and he will soon file a restraining order against me."
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Binaryspellbook said...
- Perrys Ridiculouswig I'm not sure that pointing out the many many
factual errors in your work would be classed as cyberstalking Mike. For
example writing that light can penetrate our deepest oceans and be
reflected off the ocean floor back into space. This is what you wrote
Mike, and it's horribly wrong.
17 minutes ago · Like
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Misti Parker said...
- Just because what I have to say rubs up against other people's irrational denial, doesn't mean that I'm the one who's scared.
Bareass' just hoping ExPat might stir up some ratings for him's all.
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Chris Lopes said...
- For those of us banned from Mikey's FB page, what is he saying?
- Chris, I doubt if you're banned from the author page. I'm not.
http://www.facebook.com/AuthorMikeBara
btw binaryspellbook's comment is already history.
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Chris Lopes said...
- Expat,
I found it and left a quote from a very wise man.
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Misti Parker said...
- I just posted to Bara's facebutt author page, with a couple of my handles, and both of those ghosts are banned.
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Anonymous said...
- Misti, if you will shut up about "orbs, Prometheus, nuclear
powered X-37B, and your feelings" I will personally give you your share
of the NASA back. I will even let Expat be the go between so you won't
feel threatened.
Good grief, woman, why don't you spend some time in your local library actually learning some science rather than listening to Hoax to Hoax and whining about things you don't understand?
- I heard most of Bara on Darkness last night. There was no opportunity for cyber-stalking, in fact.
It's not worth a review -- same old drivel.
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Binaryspellbook said...
- Have some fun.....
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=321044127993998&set=a.321044124660665.69844.320728991358845&type=1&theater
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Binaryspellbook said...
- And a laugh..
http://tinyurl.com/cn3jkcs
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Misti Parker said...
- You guys are the ones talking about feelings, so screw you.
NASA lies about lost Mars probes.
NASA lies about the color of Mars.
NASA lies about alien life forms.
NASA lies about plumes on the Moon.
NASA lies about plastic on Mars.
You guys are the one's talking about you luvy duvy feeling for NASA.
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Strahlungsamt said...
- Misti,
1. Plastic can be sterilized. If Curiosity was infected, the infection probably wouldn't get very far. Mars is very very cold with such a thin atmosphere, the germs would probably remain in deep freeze, if they survived at all. I also doubt NASA would be that careless since it sterilizes the rest of the probe so thoroghly.
2. Ever hear of satellite tracking stations? Basically, they are in every country that has ever launched a satellite and they monitor every object orbiting the planet, whether they own it or not. If xb37 (or whatever number it was) took off for Mars, the tracking stations would have noticed and somebody would have opened their big mouth. Classified or not, it was visible and if it made any funny moves, it would be detected immediately. Plus, if it had nuclear engines, it would have left a trail of radioactive material behind it which I think would be easily detected. There's satellites watching for all kinds of stuff now.
3. Mars probes are pretty vulnerable. Mars is not far from the Asteroid Belt so the probability of smashing into a rock should be higher around Mars than around Earth. Plus, if even the slightest thing breaks in space, a probe is toast. Not a conspiracy.
4. I've already posted about false color photography. I won't repeat myself.
5. No life has been found on the Moon or Mars. The Russians, Japanese, Indians, Europeans and Chinese haven't found life either. I think it's safe to say both worlds are sterile.
6. If there were smaller than expected plumes, that's because the Lunar soil is different from what the scientists expected. Not a conspiracy. I hope you didn't catch a cold watching the Moon and hoping to see something.
- Comment deleted
- This comment has been removed by the author.
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Misti Parker said...
- Plastic cannot be sterilized, but there is probably lots of other
contaminated trash on Mars as well. Nevertheless, any bacterial
contamination on Mars from NASA may be as you say,
Strangulatedautoeroticassphixation,unlikely, but still possible enough
that NASA cannot say for sure that any bacteria found on Mars was not
introduced there by them, or from one of their missing probes, or one of
Russia's missing probes. Russia may or may not care to sterilize their
gear, and they most certainly do not permit any independent inspection
of them.
Even if NASA nuked the Moon, there is so much radiation in Space that man can't colonize Mars anyway.
Secret or not, you'll never know.
If any alien forms of bacteria are found, someone can always insinuate that it could have come from Earth, anyway, because NASA made the false claim about the arsenic eating bacteria.
Without an accurate grey scale, any color reproductions might well absorb certain actual colors.
Governments have and do keep secrets quite effectively. If not, then tell us, Strangulatedautoeroticassphixation,just precisely where did the X-37B disappear to?
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jourget said...
- Strahlungsamt,
You bring up a good point. The Planetary Society recently ran an article on China's second lunar orbiter (Chang'e 2) that has departed lunar orbit and is enroute for a flyby of asteroid Toutatis. China being who they are, nothing has been heard about the mission's events except an announced flyby date of January 6, 2013. However, turns out that Chang'e 2 was "discovered" by a telescope doing a sky survey and given a temporary designation as an asteroid, until its true identity became known. Refinement of the spacecraft's orbit gives an actual flyby date in December 2012, a month earlier than the Chinese government's statements, despite there being no announcement to that effect.
You can read the article here: http://www.planetary.org/blogs/guest-blogs/20120825-change-2-the-full-story.html
Chang'e 2 is roughly half the mass of the X-37B (2550 kg vs. 4990 kg), so the X-37B would be even more visible if it decided to hightail it out of Earth orbit. Additionally, I'm sure there are many more conspiracy-minded folks besides Misti who actually keep an eye on the behavior of the X-37B while it's in flight, and would scream bloody murder if anything remotely like what she or Hoagland is saying happened actually happened.
This isn't a new phenomenon. Spacecraft have been spotted outside of Earth orbit on multiple occasions (Galileo, Rosetta, etc.), and many of you may remember an Apollo-era S-IVB being designated as an asteroid a few years back. It's not easy to sweep a single secret space mission under the rug, and I'd wager it's impossible for a whole secret space program to exist.
- Once again, GFAJ-1 does NOT EAT ARSENIC. The claim was that it substituted As for P in its DNA backbone.
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Misti Parker said...
- I make a lot more good points than just that. I blast you out of the water, Strangulatedautoeroticassphixation.
There were reports of armature astronomers who had supposedly believed themselves to have sighted the X-37B in orbit, but the Airforce never said that was the case. Just like NASA pays Hoagland to convince everybody that they are hiding stuff, so that people will support NASA. The X-37B is the nuclear powered Project Prometheus, and you don't need nuclear power to orbit the Earth.
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Misti Parker said...
- You know Patacakes, there are snake handle'n churches in Alabama,
where the congregation all drinks strychnine with no problemo.
Da-ta-DA-ta-DA-ta-DA-ta-DA.
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Biological_Unit said...
- Off topic - like your Manly Arms and Penis.
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Anonymous said...
- Misti, do you want your contribution to NASA back or not?
Oh yes, care to explain to me how plastics roytinely used in medical practice are sterilized? Oh, wait, they have not told you on Hoax to Hoax yet so you are essentially clueless.
Misti, it isn't what you don't know that will hurt you nearly as much as what you do know that isn't so.
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Misti Parker said...
- Plastic used in medical setting ISN'T sterilized and
coincidentally, super bugs are found primarily, in medical settings. If
doctors actually cured people, they'd be out of business.
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Misti Parker said...
- If radiation even were an effective means of sterilization, then there could be no life on Mars in any event.
This whole pretense of NASA sterilizing everything it sends to the Moon and Mars, is just to make an indirect subliminal suggestion to the subconscious mind of the public, inferring that there actually could be life on the Moon and Mars.
With all of the radiation in Space, what sort of life forms could possibly exist there?
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Misti Parker said...
- The explanation by doctors for the ever increasing incidence of
super bugs in hospitals is, that it's the result of so much
sterilization. Supposedly, only the strongest bugs can resist the
disinfectant cleaning solutions used to TRY and sterilize operating
rooms.
- Comment deleted
- This comment has been removed by the author.
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Misti Parker said...
- Even if NASA were to have irradiated all plastic sent to Mars,
there is no guarantee that the material had actually been effectively
sterilized. If bacteria is claimed to be found on Mars, then it could
only be a factual claim, if radiation is not an effective means of
sterilization; which by the way, it isn't.
So we are back to square one again. Finding bacteria on Mars does not prove alien life, especially according to NASASS' standing claim that a silicone based life form has already been found on Earth.
The public will never know the truth for certain, because NASA has muddied the water with evidence subject to inherent circular reasoning.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Hoagland had the right idea to start with, by looking for
artifacts. Finding artifacts is the only thing that will prove life on
Mars. Of course, Hoagland softens the blow to the concern cited in the
so-called, Brookings' Report, by asserting that the Martians who built
the monuments on Mars, originally came from Earth, or vice versa. The
problem with this is, that the only evidence we have are inaccurate
color images from an agency that has a proven track history of
deception. Bacteria may be resistant to radiation, and man may have
some tolerance, but sending INDEPENDANT, objective, open, honest, eye
witnesses to Mars, in probably a non-starter.
-
jourget said...
- If you understood natural selection, you'd realize that the explanation for superbugs that you quoted makes perfect sense.
If you read about extremophiles, you'd realize that a high radiation environment does not preclude the existence of life.
Just because a random claim exists that runs counter to the "mainstream" explanation, does not mean that that claim is invested with any kind of veracity, even among a modern populace that's highly suspicious of the government. You have to either understand the concepts involved, or *look up* whether what the alternative claim suggests could even be possible. Sorry it takes a little more work, but that's the way it is. No one's impressed by the random reposting of something you saw once. Oooooh, it was on the INTERNET, everybody!!
Also, I'll thank everyone for refraining from a juvenile joke about Pamela Anderson being the "silicone" based life form Misti's talking about.
....oh shit.
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-
Misti Parker said...
- I've looked up everything necessary to make my point, Jourget,
but you are certainly free to cite any studies to support your vague
allusions.
I'm not saying that super bugs aren't cultivated by disinfecting. In fact the point is that if that is the case, then irradiation might produce a similar effect. It might even be possible to create a silicone based bacteria, despite the fact that NASA failed to actually produce one.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Belief in supposed possibilities is not science. A hypotheses is simply the first step towards developing a testable theory.
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-
Misti Parker said...
- Just as GM foods without clinical trials, is like pushing Phen
Phen out on the market they way that was done, this big anxious
impatience for instant gratification does not justify pseudo scientists
voting for the most glamorous hypothesis upon which to base conclusions.
-
Misti Parker said...
- However, with all the radiation out in Space, that greatly
decreases the likelihood of life off planet. One more reason why the
Orbs are probably not quite what would be considered to be physical
life.
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-
Misti Parker said...
- Has anybody found anywhere yet, in some other solar system or
different galaxy perhaps, a planet with or without a humanly breathable
atmosphere, that has a magnetic field that shields it from radiation?
-
Biological_Unit said...
- or different galaxy perhaps?
Nearest Galaxy - 1 Million Light Years distant.
1 Million times 6 Trillion Miles equals 6 MILLION TRILLION miles.
You are an Idiot.
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-
Misti Parker said...
- Hubble can see so far, it can look all the way back in time, to the moment after the supposed Big Bang.
New solar systems are being discovered all the time. Even planets have been found in other solar systems.
I honestly don't know if any of these newly discovered solar systems with found planets are in any other galaxy or not, but I'm allowing for the greatest potential number of "possibilities" for an example of any other planet, anywhere, that has a magnetic field which can shield out radiation.
Can any genius here can come up with that example?
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Google "extra-solar planets".
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Other questions are how likely exoplanets are to possess moons
and magnetospheres. No such moons and magnetospheres have yet been
detected, but they may be fairly common.
-
Misti Parker said...
- HIP 13044b is the only planet that I can find to be located
outside the Milky Way. Mercury, Saturn, and Jupiter have
magnetospheres. So why are we wasting our time with Mars?
-
Biological_Unit said...
- According to evolutionary theories, HIP 13044 was formed in another galaxy, and became part of the Milky Way.
IT IS IN THE MILKY WAY. OUR GALAXY.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Mars USED to have a magnetic shield. Any bacteria found on Mars
today, would most likely have to be fossilized. Sifting for DNA in the
Martian soil might be another story, but we've all already seen Jurassic
Park, to know where that leads.
Europa a moon of Jupiter, has a magnetic field and oxygen atmosphere. THAT'S where we should be. I'll bet that THAT'S where the X-37B went.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Saturn, and Jupiter have magnetospheres - but they also have
killing radiation which NASA is always being "surprised" about. Saturn
and Jupiter also have NO SURFACE.
-
Misti Parker said...
- The only good reason to go to Mars would be if there actually
were a library there, as Hoagland asserts. Looking for life in
irradiated water is bullshit.
Europa has a surface. The oxygen there was initially created by radiation, I'll wager, BEFORE the full development of it's magnetosphere.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Europa's surface temperature averages about 110 K (−160 °C; −260
°F) at the equator and only 50 K (−220 °C; −370 °F) at the poles,
keeping Europa's icy crust as hard as granite. The surface pressure of
Europa's atmosphere is 0.1 μPa - almost non-existent. Gravity? Yes -
humans need Gravity to live and Europa has next to nothing.
-
Misti Parker said...
- "ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT
EUROPA.
ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE."
-
Misti Parker said...
- Yeah, screw it. FLICK NASA.
-
Trained Observer said...
- Am I wrong to equate the scientific value of anything coming out
of Hoagland, Bara, or Johnston with that of a script from Irwin Allen's
Lost in Space? After too many misspent hours looking into their nonsense
I hardly think so. You have a great blog. It is a treasure trove to say
the least.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- Trained Observer,
You are pretty much on target there, maybe closer than you think. Most of the ideas these guys talk about come from science fiction stories/novels, movies, and TV shows. The ancient cities on Mars thing is straight out of Edgar Rice Burroughs. The Space Nazis on the Moon idea comes from a late 1940's children's book written by Robert Heinlein. And all the conspiracy nonsense is from The Invaders and the X Files. So not only is their work nonsense, it's derivative nonsense as well.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Hoagland is obsessed with the notion of sci fi writers being in
on the conspiracy, yet he takes great offense at being refereed to as a
science fiction adviser to Coast to Coast AM.
I wonder if the X-37B might actually rather have gone out to rendezvous with objects Elenin and YU55, and why didn't Hoagland jump on THAT bandwagon?
-
Misti Parker said...
- Spellcheck. Gott'a love it.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- The "science fiction writers are in on it" meme is just
Hoagland's way of explaining why his theories look so much like famous
(and not so famous) works of science fiction. Since he can't admit he
stole the ideas, the writers who actually came up with them become part
of some vast and ancient conspiracy. In other words, he's using his lack
of creativity as a virtue to lend credibility to his nonsense. Quite
ingenious actually.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Why can't Hoagland just say that his books are science fiction?
Not only would that take the wind out of your guys sails, then readers
might say about him like he says about his favorite writers; that he's
really in the know?
-
expat (from vacation) said...
- trained obs: glad you get something out of this boggery.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- Hoagland can't call what he does science fiction because it's
really bad science fiction. It only becomes semi-entertaining (as in
marketable) if you add the element of "this could be true!!!!!" to it.
Of course if you have a bent sense of humor like me, most of his stuff
is entertaining in the "I can't believe he's trying to pawn this stuff
off as real" kind of way.
-
Strahlungsamt said...
- Sometime back in the Apollo days, Hoagland had an L. Ron Hubbard
moment and realized he wasn't going to make a lot of money as a
commentator for real science so he decided to form his own conspiracy
movement. He chose the Face on Mars as a starting point and a conspiracy
was born and, as they say, the rest is history.
Unfortunately for Hoagland (and fortunately for the rest of us) he and Hubbard were not on the same pills. That's why he's a very minor player in the world of woo and not the founder of Hoagology.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- Hubbard could be (with some pharmaceutical encouragement) quite
industrious and creative during the "up" swings of his manic depression.
Those bursts of energy were mistaken for genius, which gave him a
charismatic quality that helped him generate a following. As long as his
down periods were (mostly) kept from the faithful, he could maintain
the appearance of the insightful leader his followers needed to worship.
Hoagland has none of that going for him. He can't write anything longer than a Power Point presentation and he can't even stand to talk to his own fans these days. He's just too lazy to be a real cult leader. That's nothing a serious psychological illness and a boat load of methamphetamines wouldn't cure.
-
Trained Observer said...
- I think the answer to the question: "Why not fiction?" is that
Hoagland and company cannot sell their wares outside of the very
forgiving and undemanding UFO subculture. If it were sold as fiction
then plot, characterization, internal logic, and motivation would all
have to conform to some accepted standard. There are no standards in the
UFO subculture genre. I think practically anyone can cobble together
enough nonsense from the Internet to create something that the Fantasy
Prone and Easily Hoodwinked set (as opposed to their preferred title of
Awake and Aware) will gladly consume while they fantasize about
Disclosure.
-
Misti Parker said...
- I like your analysis T.O., however, while "plot,
characterization, internal logic, and motivation" are quite necessary to
an entertaining story, I disagree that there needs to be any accepted
standard. Sci-fi, and/or, fantasy, is all about novel ideas. Perhaps
it is the finest Science fiction that actually in fact is what
establishes any accepted alternative standards.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- The basic needs of story telling don't change with genre. Yes
your story can have lots of strange and wonderful ideas, but if those
ideas aren't presented in a logical way, you will lose your audience.
Characters have to have motivation for their actions, the internal logic
of the story has to be consistent, and there has to be a beginning,
middle, and an end (though not necessarily in that order).
The idea is to give the readers a chance to suspend their disbelief long enough to get into the story. If characters start acting out of character, if the rules of your literary world change without warning, or if the story itself doesn't seem to have any logical flow, that suspension of disbelief disappears. That makes for very uninteresting reading.
Hoagland's work is so full of logical inconsistencies and institutions and people acting out of character that he had to come up with a phrase to cover his BS:"The lie is different at every level." The only thing that saves him is that he has a self selected group of gullible fans who will accept whatever rationalizations dear leader gives them. The typical group of science fiction fans would tear his work apart in short order.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Windswept house:
a Vatican novel
Front Cover
Malachi Martin
9 Reviews
Doubleday, May 1, 1996 - Fiction - 646 pages
"In Biblical times they would have called him a prophet," saidThe Dallas Morning Newsof Malachi Martin.The Houston Chronicledubbed him "one of the people most knowledgeable about the inner workings of the Vatican currently writing about the church." InWindswept House, this brilliant theologian and writer offers a gripping, provocative novel of faith and betrayal, power and conspiracy, within and without the walls of the Vatican. As the Cold War ends and the Soviet government collapses, a secret international association of political, religious, and financial leaders at last sees a clear path to a new world order--the establishment of a single global government and economy. Theirmodus operandi:taking control of the Roman Catholic Church by forcing the Pope's resignation and seizing power through a network of co-opted cardinals. Their perfect pawns: a pair of American brothers, one a lawyer and one a priest, scions of an old Texas family based at Windswept House, who will be placed as unknowing operatives within the Vatican. What the conspirators cannot know is that, while one brother will play along willingly, the other will become one of the Pope's closest allies--and that within their own ranks lies another, more secret group, with aims even more ambitious and deadly than their own. Complex and thrilling, set against a backdrop as broad as the world and as intimate as the most rarefied chambers of Vatican power and privilege,Windswept Houseis as vivid and immediate as today's headlines--and tomorrow's.
http://books.google.com/books?id=dd8OAQAAMAAJ&dq=windswept%20house&source=gbs_similarbooks
-
Trained Observer said...
- " I disagree that there needs to be any accepted standard. Sci-fi, and/or, fantasy, is all about novel ideas. "
I was talking about standards of execution rather than content. We have all encountered works of fiction where the writer may have had a good idea, but none of the tools to craft a passable story. The "made for SyFy channel" movies provide some good examples.
-
Trained Observer said...
- Misti,
Good example of someone spinning their weirdness into fiction. Oddly enough, I cannot find the alleged Dallas Morning News quote about Martin anywhere other than where the book is being promoted. It isn't on the DMS website apparently. It makes you wonder about it and the Houston Chronicle quote.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Father Malachi Martin, PhD, a regular on Coast to Coast AM, passed away, July 27, 1999.
He was a scholar of the highest order, one of the finest gentlemen ever to serve God, and the best guest that Art Bell ever had.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Why are you here - and not at Bible Skule? Is it normal for Christians to be deceptive?
-
Misti Parker said...
- Why was Malachi Martin such a favorite guest of Art Bell's? As
much as I admired and appreciated Fr Martin, as did Art, that doesn't
mean that I necessarily ascribed to his point of view, or agreed
entirely with his theology. I was raised Catholic, but now I go by the
King James.
I came here because Storm Thor of Hoagland's facebutt page referred me here. I hang around because you guys are part of Hoagland's act.
I went to Hoagland's page because he gets more airtime on Coast than any other guest. I hung around there because he tried so hard to get rid of me. Coast to Coast is down to an audience of only about five million listeners now, but it's still the biggest media outlet for the pending, End Times Delusion.
Besides, it's no fun preaching to the choir.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Deceptive? Why should I be the only one to show my ID? Nobody
else here does? Also, I enjoy providing bit of satire. If people don't
have a sense of humor, and try to label that as deceptive, then they
can just be laughed at instead of with.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Ironic how easy it is, to debunk the debunkers. You guys can't
take the heat any more than Hoagland can. That's because you guys are
as phony as he is. There is no real objectivity here at all. At least
Pattacakes admits that he has an axe to grind.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- You are really Trolling the Trollers. I disagreed with Manned
Moon Landings - I stated that there were numerous Photo missions to the
Moon in the 1960's. I was allowed to continue posting here! I think this
OPEN Blog CAN take the heat.
-
Misti Parker said...
- Pattacakes can't very well ban anyone like Hoagland and Bara do
to him, without losing the moral high ground. So, I get to show how
Hoagland is right about NASA being full of shit, just as Pattacakes
shows how full of shit Hoagland is. That ruins the entire game that
Hoagland and NASA conspire together to run against tax payers and
Christians.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- God would have killed Stan long ago, rendering your statement moot.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- http://sherriequestioningall.blogspot.ca/2012/10/43-trillion-dollar-suit-against-us-govt.html
This week financial news organization CNBC gave some mainstream attention to the largest money laundering and racketeering lawsuit in United States History, in which “Banksters” and their U.S. racketeering partners are being accused of laundering of 43 trillion dollars worth of ill gotten gains.
The lawsuit is said to involve officials located in the highest offices of government and the financial sector.
Since this information was surprisingly revealed by the mainstream news organization there has been a very suspicious and deadly fallout at the CNBC headquarters.
Within hours the original page for the article was taken down, and CNBC senior vice president Kevin Krim received news that his children were killed under very suspicious circumstances.
It seems that the murder happened first and then the page was removed later.
According to mainstream accounts the children’s nanny is responsible for the murders, allegedly stabbing both children.
However, those same mainstream news sources report the highly unlikely story that the nanny slit her own throat just after committing the homicides.
Just being a Conspiracy Loon - 43 Trillion could be spent on NASA, after all...
-
Misti Parker said...
- NASA won't see a dime. The money is already gone. If it goes to any Space program, it will be to a private one in Argentina.
-
Misti Parker said...
- No law firm would actually use the word, "banksters," however. This is bullshit that you created, Bioillogical Eunuch
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Screenshots of CNBC running it.
Just like Expat said about 911 - he saw it on TV, end of story = IT WAS NOT FAKED!!
-
Misti Parker said...
- I can't even read that crap. Screenshots are as subject to fakery
as are NASASS' images of Mars. "Banksters" isn't proper English
grammar. It is not a term that a lawyer would write. How much
horseshit can one Preston proliferate? You manufactured this hooey,
same as usual.
As for whatever Pattacakes thinks he saw on TV, you haven't said, but that's the same source as the Dukes of Hazard.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- You believe that CNBC made up the story "whole-cloth"?
That means you're an Anti-Semite! I will report you to the ADL.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- As for whatever Pattacakes thinks he saw on TV, you haven't said
THE SAME DAMN THING all the Dumb Brainwashed Murkans believe!
I believe the Towers were emptied of people, drone attacks may have hit WTC 1 and 2, then they were demolished by Mid-Sized Underground Nukes.
-
Misti Parker said...
- I think you hacked CNBC, planted that bullshit, so they took it down. That's what.
-
Misti Parker said...
- The jet airliners that hit the towers were most likely on
autopilot, programed remotely by Russians. If there were other
explosives involved, the Russians planted them and detonated them.
Russia's proxy, Usoma Bin Laden laughed at the useful idiots who
believed in his invention of Wahhabi.
-
Misti Parker said...
- There are conventional explosives now, which are as powerful as the Hiroshima bomb.
-
Misti Parker said...
- The 9/11 Commission was indeed a cover up, because as usual, the
Administration, irrespective of presiding party, does not wish to engage
in a direct confrontation with Russia.
Just as Russia moved Saddam's WMD to the Bekaa Valley of Syrian occupied Lebanon. Now today, everybody just acts as if Syria some how naturally came up with the crap.
- Comment deleted
- This comment has been removed by the author.
-
Binaryspellbook said...
- Yeah Expat...you bloody snob.
Hi Richard, wherever you are I hope you are well. I just had the misfortune of hearing you and Mike Bara getting "slagged off" by someone calling himself "Expat" on an episode of the podcast show TheParacast. "Expat", who I strongly suspect of being Richard Pattinson could barely put two words together as he sounded like he'd spent several hours in the local brewery. A typical BBC snob and a reminder of what I detest about the UK.
-
Anonymous said...
- http://i48.tinypic.com/v3k8wx.png
Yeah! Get told Expat! How dare you insult the fearless leaders of the clueless bookfacers with your vile personal attacks and complete lack of rationale or scientific evidence! You should be banned from the interweb, you drunk illiterate troll you.
Oh, and next time you decide to refer to the great pioneer of modern science, address him by his CORRECT name - that's DR Dick to you!
http://i49.tinypic.com/29e6oo6.png
(I'd go for a gigantic facepalm, but I've used up all my energy laughing at these retarded fookwits)
-
Anonymous said...
- (Ok Ok, so Hoagie might not be a doctor in the "official,
academic" sense, like anyone could be - but he was Kronkite's right hand
man 40 years ago for nasa don't you know! (or something?!) That's
NASA!!! The equivalent to having like 8 doctorates... not to mention his
single-handed re-writing of modern physics with his torsion wristwatch!
Dr is too small a title in my opinion!)
-
Misti Parker said...
- What do we know about "Richard Patterson"?
-
Anonymous said...
- Richard Pattison - isn't he that gay vampire from Twilight?!?!... (bara would have a field day with him)
-
Misti Parker said...
- Expat is Pestersum Nickels.
-
moo said...
- If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck
then it's most likely not a government liberty-stealing drone out to
spy on you, but in fact a duck.
Bloody daft paranoid nutjobs always looking for some pattern that's not there because they're insecure and seeking a approval.
-
Chris Lopes said...
- For those who still care about such things, the Hoagster will be
on C2C for the first half tonight. Apparently he'll be talking about
methane and such on Mars. He can't do the whole show because he has to
get up early tomorrow for his day job as a greeter at Wallmart.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- No one ratted me out yet?
-
Chris Lopes said...
- One more thing. Since it appears to be a TBA situation, I'm
guessing that Hoagie is just filling in for someone who canceled out. Of
course he'd be available, what else does he have to do?
-
Misti Parker said...
- Bioillogical Eunuch is Expat.
-
Misti Parker said...
- An Invitation from George Noory
http://www.coasttocoastam.com/article/an-invitation-from-george-noory
An Invitation from George Noory
November 01, 2012
An Invitation from George Noory
Hi Everyone,
Would John Cooper like to take advantage of a unique opportunity to be a member of a live studio audience? We're looking for people who live in and around the Denver/Boulder area to be part of a live studio audience as we tape special episodes for a television show that I will host. If you're interested, please send me an email with your name and phone number to bbaudience@yahoo.com. Hurry the audience spots will fill up fast!
--George Noory
- "Biological Unit is Expat."
Not true.
-
Misti Parker said...
- How about you Topher; are going to be on Noory TV?
-
Misti Parker said...
- Friday nights is always open lines, without a guest. Hoagland will serve subject to Noory's tolerance.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Bioillogical Eunuch is Expat.
I have no need to respond. No Cyberpolice have visited over my alleged hacking of CNBC.
-
Biological_Unit said...
- www.whatreallyhappened.com
Market Watch STILL runs story of $43 trillion lawsuit against US banks after CNBC erases their version following murder of CNBC executive's children.
If this is a hoax, it is a damned expensive one - they went so far as to hire someone to answer their phone "Spire Law Group." And a 900 page hoax - that is certainly not "phoning it in."
This could very well be "the story of the century."
Oh - and the Nanny was on SSRIs and then put in a "medically induced coma." Whoever the Nanny was, I'll bet she ain't her any more.
Is this the sort of thing Expat would post?
-
Misti Parker said...
- You keep all you ghosts neatly compartmentalized, Bioillogical
Eunuch. Let's see you, Topher, and John Cooper, all sitting side by
side, on George Noory's TV show.
-
Misti Parker said...
https://www.nyed.uscourts.gov/search/node/12-cv-04269-JBW-RML
Your search yielded no results
-
Misti Parker said...
- http://wayback.archive.org/web/*/http://spire-law.com/
Hrm.
Wayback Machine doesn't have that page archived.
-
Misti Parker said...
I don't know what this pdf is supposed to be, but it most certainly isn't a legal document. You don't put a press release in a complaint, and you don't get to demand a jury trial unless you are the defendant. Furthermore, nowhere does it say who the attorneys are, or even that the law firm is filing the complaint.
It's complete balderdash.
http://www.soldierhugs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/SPIRE-LAW-FEDERAL-COMPLAINT-IN-NEW-YORK.pdf
-
Ra said...
- Female posters are among the most sinister elements in the Debunking community.
I am the poisonous butterfly, Misti is Queen rattlesnake ;)
-
Tara Jordan said...
- Glitch.... I am the author of the previous post
-
Biological_Unit said...
- James N. Fiedler, Managing Partner of Spire Law Group, LLP,
stated: "It is hard for me to believe as a 47-year lawyer that our
nation's guardians have been unwilling to stop this theft. Spire Law
Group, LLP stands for the elimination of corruption and implementation
of lawful strategies, and that is what we're doing here. Spire Law
Group, LLP's charter is to not allow such corruption to go unanswered."
Comments were requested from the Attorney Generals' offices in NY, CA, NV, NH , OH, MA and the White House, but no comment was provided.
About Spire Law Group
Spire Law Group, LLP is a national law firm whose motto is "the public should be protected -- at all costs -- from corruption in whatever form it presents itself." The Firm is comprised of lawyers nationally with more than 250-years of experience in a span of matters ranging from representing large corporations and wealthy individuals, to also representing the masses. The Firm is at the front lines litigating against government officials, banks, defunct loan pools, and now the very offshore entities where the corruption was enabled and perpetrated.
Contact: James N. Fiedler877-438-8766 http://spire-law.com
SOURCE Spire Law Group, LLP
Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved
-
Misti Parker said...
- Law firms don't have bar numbers. Only individual attorneys do.
http://www.google.com/search?q=spire+law+grou[]&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a
Spire Law Group, LLP
spire-law.com/
Spire Law Group, LLP, California State Bar Registration Number 54393, is a national law firm with lawyers across the country.
-
Misti Parker said...
http://members.calbar.ca.gov/fal/Member/Detail/54393
Attorney Search
Marjorie Ellen Reed - #54393
Current Status: Resigned
This member is resigned and may not practice law in California.
See below for more details.
Profile Information
The following information is from the official records of The State Bar of California.
Bar Number: 54393
Address: 8431 Valencia Dr
Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Phone Number: (714) 847-1557
Fax Number: Not Available
e-mail: Not Available
County: Orange
Undergraduate School: No Information Available;
District: District 4
Sections: None Law School: Western State Univ; CA
Status History
Effective Date Status Change
Present Resigned
4/18/1999 Resigned
12/31/1997 Inactive
12/14/1972 Admitted to The State Bar of California
Explanation of member status
Actions Affecting Eligibility to Practice Law
Effective Date Description Case Number Resulting Status
Disciplinary and Related Actions
Overview of the attorney discipline system.
This member has no public record of discipline.
Administrative Actions
4/18/1999 Resignation, no charges pending Resigned
Start New Search »
-
Biological_Unit said...
- That proves what??
-
Biological_Unit said...
- Call them! Girlie-Man wants to expose me as a hacker fraud, making up a 900 page complaint for jollies...
Call them!
-
Strahlungsamt said...
- Misti and Biological Unit.
You guys should get your own radio show. It would be hilarious.
You can start by calling Howard Stern. He'd love to have you on.
-
Anonymous said...
- Can we get a platform align and get back on topic? Orbs,fantasy
nuclear spaceships, and imaginary plastic sterilization gets very old,
very fast. Thank you.
- I second that.
-
jourget said...
- Chris, I was just wondering yesterday whether Hoagland would be
on to talk about the so-far negative results for methane. I didn't
listen, but I can guess the highlights: There is methane, but it's been
covered up; his prior assurances about Obama's "October surprise" about
life on Mars will be minimized by either saying he didn't mean it for
*sure* (shades of Elenin) or saying that it's evidence that the bad guys
are even more powerful than he realized; and he's been seeing
"stunningly artificial" artifacts in Curiosity's pictures. Use of the
word "geometry" is optional.
- I'll be writing up RCH's rubbish from last night later on today,
after I can review it on Z Fire Light. It'll make a change from
castigating Mike Bara.
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Misti Parker said...
- scribd.com/doc/111407039/Transcript-of-CA-v-Mitchell-J-Stein
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Misti Parker said...
- http://www.dobielaw.org/upload/transcript.concise.PDF
https://www.google.com/search?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.dobielaw.org%2Fupload%2FBank%2520Fraud%2520S&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a#hl=en&client=firefox-a&hs=kXP&rls=org.mozilla:en-US%3Aofficial&sclient=psy-ab&q=http:%2F%2Fwww.dobielaw.org%2Fupload%2FBank+Fraud+S&oq=http:%2F%2Fwww.dobielaw.org%2Fupload%2FBank+Fraud+S&gs_l=serp.12...15780.19386.0.20659.2.2.0.0.0.0.166.298.0j2.2.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.f-aRnZENXWM&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_cp.r_qf.&fp=b883e7ba776c80ef&bpcl=37189454&biw=1318&bih=944
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Misti Parker said...
- http://www.dobielaw.org/upload/transcript.concise.PDF
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
3 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
WESTERN DIVISION
4
5
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
6 )
)
7 PLAINTIFF, )
)
8 VS. ) CASE NO. 11-MJ-02995
)
9 )
MITCHELL J. STEIN, ) LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
10 ) DECEMBER 19, 2011
) (3:35 P.M. TO 4:13 P.M.)
11 )
DEFENDANT. )
12 ______________________________)
13 BAIL HEARING
14 BEFORE THE HONORABLE PATRICK J. WALSH
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
9 I'M NOT GOING TO PUT A COLLAR ON HIM BECAUSE UNLESS
10 AND UNTIL HE'S DISBARRED, HE CAN PRACTICE LAW. AND I DON'T
11 THINK I NEED TO RESTRICT HIM TO LOS ANGELES TO PRACTICE LAW.
12 HE CAN GO TO NEW YOUR AND THESE OTHER PLACES AND DO HIS
13 CASES.
-
Misti Parker said...
- http://members.calbar.ca.gov/fal/Member/Detail/121750
Attorney Search
Mitchell J. Stein - #121750
Attorney Provided Information
The information below was provided by the attorney and has not been verified or monitored. The State Bar does not recommend or endorse any attorney.
Practice Area(s):
Litigation
Website:
www.dobielaw.org
Current Status: Not eligible to practice law (Not Entitled)
See below for more details.
Profile Information
The following information is from the official records of The State Bar of California.
Bar Number: 121750
Address:
Mitchell J. Stein & Associates LLP
21781 Ventura Blvd # 607
Woodland Hills, CA 91364
Phone Number: (310) 421-8152
Fax Number: Not Available
e-mail: oceibod@gmail.com
Undergraduate School:
Univ of Pittsburgh; Pittsburgh PA
Law School:
Univ of Pittsburgh SOL; Pittsburgh PA
County: Los Angeles
District: District 2
Sections:
None
Status History
Effective Date Status Change
Present Not Eligible To Practice Law
1/1/2012 Not Eligible To Practice Law
12/10/1985 Admitted to The State Bar of California
Explanation of member status
Actions Affecting Eligibility to Practice Law
Effective Date Description Case Number Resulting Status
Disciplinary and Related Actions
Overview of the attorney discipline system.
1/1/2012 Ordered inactive 11-TR-18758 Not Eligible To Practice Law
Administrative Actions
This member has no public record of administrative actions.
Copies of official attorney discipline records are available upon request.
Explanation of common actions
State Bar Court Cases
NOTE: The State Bar Court began posting public discipline documents online in 2005. The format and pagination of documents posted on this site may vary from the originals in the case file as a result of their translation from the original format into Word and PDF. Copies of additional related documents in a case are available upon request. Only Opinions designated for publication in the State Bar Court Reporter may be cited or relied on as precedent in State Bar Court proceedings. For further information about a case that is displayed here, please refer to the State Bar Court's online docket, which can be found at: http://apps.statebarcourt.ca.gov/dockets/dockets.aspx
DISCLAIMER: Any posted Notice of Disciplinary Charges, Conviction Transmittal or other initiating document, contains only allegations of professional misconduct. The attorney is presumed to be innocent of any misconduct warranting discipline until the charges have been proven.
Effective Date Case Number Description
1/1/2012 11-TR-18758 Decision [PDF] [WORD]
Blogger Misti Parker said...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dobielaw.org/upload/transcript.concise.PDF
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
3 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
WESTERN DIVISION
4
5
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
6 )
)
7 PLAINTIFF, )
)
8 VS. ) CASE NO. 11-MJ-02995
)
9 )
MITCHELL J. STEIN, ) LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
10 ) DECEMBER 19, 2011
) (3:35 P.M. TO 4:13 P.M.)
11 )
DEFENDANT. )
12 ______________________________)
13 BAIL HEARING
14 BEFORE THE HONORABLE PATRICK J. WALSH
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
9 I'M NOT GOING TO PUT A COLLAR ON HIM BECAUSE UNLESS
10 AND UNTIL HE'S DISBARRED, HE CAN PRACTICE LAW. AND I DON'T
11 THINK I NEED TO RESTRICT HIM TO LOS ANGELES TO PRACTICE LAW.
12 HE CAN GO TO NEW YOUR AND THESE OTHER PLACES AND DO HIS
13 CASES.
November 3, 2012 12:04 PM
Delete
Blogger Misti Parker said...
Expat, that's the second time you deleted Stein's California Bar status. He VOLUNTARILY became ineligible to practice law IN CALIFORNIA. The Bar number used on his webpage, is that of a retired attorney, who otherwise would be eligible to practice IN THAT STATE. He must have obtained permission from her to use that number.
November 3, 2012 12:15 PM
Delete
Blogger Misti Parker said...
Michael J Stein is very smart, but he doesn't follow proper form and style in his legal documents. He's sort of the same as Hoagland, in that he inoculates the bad guys from justice, by using hyperbole instead of plain facts. Who will bother to go after those crooks, after Stein has already blown the case against them?
November 3, 2012 12:20 PM
Delete
Blogger Misti Parker said...
President William Jefferson Clinton was about to be indicted for treason, for selling national defense secrets to China, but he got inoculated from both the Democrats and the Republicans, by being impeached without censure, for something so ludicrous that there would be no further interest in the actual offense.
November 3, 2012 12:23 PM
Delete
http://www.dailypaul.com/260919/43-trillion-bankster-lawsuit-please-add-this-video-to-your-posts
ReplyDelete