abaddon
Penultimate Amazing
'I'm a Reptiloid and so is my wife'
Pics or it didn't happen.
'I'm a Reptiloid and so is my wife'
and yet you are stating that there is no mass there, when in fact as far as science is concerned there is. you're the one arguing earthly political boundaries to define a physical space billions of miles away, but im the irrational one. yep sure am.And you entirely missed the point. How heavy is the boundary between ice and water? How heavy is the boundary between water and steam? How heavy is the boundary between your garden and your neighbours garden? These are the meaningless questions you ask.
The universe is vast.. bigger than anyone knows.. that life only exists on earth is ludicrous.. but there's things you have to accept before you can truly believe ufo's are aliens from distant worlds.. for one thing any ufo that's spotted on earth most likely originated from earth. (By my estimates 5% of ufo sightings are unexplainable, and of that 5 about 90% are advanced devices created by "super terrestrial beings)
Why do i believe that? Well i believe in evolution. Evolution is not the black and white timeline that the media would have you believe. Humans didn't come from apes, humans and apes descend from a common ancestor millions of years ago.
Time for a history lesson.. primates came from a rat like mammal that flourished after the dinosaurs extinction, leading also to the birds and other reptiles that are still alive today.. but are those the only things that survived?
I doubt it. Considering that even the most extreme extinction events humans can survive (70%+ that humanity will survive being able to reproduce albeit with a genetic bottlenecks) and the fact that reptiles are far more adaptive than we are as humans, and their genetic line has been active much longer than ours (millions of years) i think it would be naive to completely dismiss the possibility that they achieved sentient sapienism long before us. Their devices and their bodies looking very "alien" to us (theyre closer related to reptiles than humans).
They obviously have no desire to "kill" us.. though that could be synonymous with our lack of desire to "kill" cows. They've known of us for hundreds of thousands of years, probably influenced our evolution as well(seeds for religion come to mind), though most of them are actually quite indifferent to humans in general.
The reptilian super terrestrial (probably what people perceive as the greys) are likely not the only ones here, but they seem to be the most dominant. The others unaware of each other or also as indifferent.
Where are they located? Thats the easy part. They're in the ocean. You ever hear about high incidents of Soviet uso's?(unidentified submerged objects) the ocean is so vast, weve only explored 5% maybe.. and if we ever found their colonies we either wouldn't know thats what it is or they wouldn't let us tell anyone.. (Bermuda triangle comes to mind)
Are they aggressive? I doubt it. But they obviously have some kind of influence on us, for better or worse..
Considering that they now can conclusively detect gravitational waves, finding out their location shouldn't be difficult, assuming they really do exist. A big dense gravitational mass in the ocean would stand out quite similar to a sore thumb, so at least this question can be answered sooner rather than later.The bolded sections are where you jump the shark
Considering that they now can conclusively detect gravitational waves, finding out their ( aliens) location shouldn't be difficult, assuming they really do exist.

Considering that they now can conclusively detect gravitational waves, finding out their location shouldn't be difficult, assuming they really do exist. A big dense gravitational mass in the ocean would stand out quite similar to a sore thumb, so at least this question can be answered sooner rather than later.
Sonjouten said:Where are they located? Thats the easy part. They're in the ocean.
The bolded section is where he is setting the scene to say "Atlantis". We've been through this routine before on the other forum.The bolded sections are where you jump the shark
No, it isnt.
So far your argument has been entirely you speculating off of your own "common sense."
like i said, i think theyre rather indifferent to us in general. interacting with humans relatively infrequently. the fact is evolution allowed for one grandfather to give birth to many variations of species, (humans and a common rat can seem vastly different, yet they all share a common grandfather millions of years ago.) To think the same couldnt be said about a gecko to a *reptiloid is rather narcissistic and close-minded. especially if you have any kind of belief in cryptozoology. Hate to break it to everyone but theres nothing special about humanity.
Don't be silly, they're not reptiles at all. They're ducks...
That's about like saying "common sense is always right"
You don't know what you are talking about.
[qimg]http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z191/fromdownunder_bucket/crocoduck.jpg[/qimg]
Norm
Because a boundary does not have mass.and yet you are stating that there is no mass there,
WTF? Politics?when in fact as far as science is concerned there is. you're the one arguing earthly political boundaries to define a physical space billions of miles away,
I shall defer to your judgement on that matter.but im the irrational one. yep sure am.
Yep. The event horizon is simply a demarcation between two different sets of conditions. By definition it cannot have mass.is the event horizon on earth devoid of mass?
What does that have to do with anything?no there's an atmosphere.
Sorry, but you are doing nothing more than asking what mass your height has. If you are unable to figure out why that is utter baloney I cannot help you.is the event horizon on the sun devoid of mass, no definitely not. yet you believe that the event horizon on a black hole is devoid of mass? honestly that sounds kinda.. racist..