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just a punk 03-09-2015 02:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413406)
No time before big bang? Based on what?

Based on a simple fact there was not time before the creation of the University (time and space can't exist one without the other). Even a kid knows that. Ah yeah, I forgot, we have a very shitty education here :winkwink:

Phoenix 03-09-2015 03:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413630)
Just one question: where did you study the math, man? :1orglaugh

Obviously where he got his B.Sc.Opine
lol

just a punk 03-09-2015 03:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EngineCash (Post 20413623)
No one can tell what happened so long ago... :) Those are all just theories and nothing else... :)

The CMB can say a lot, actually :2 cents:

Harmon 03-09-2015 03:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413630)
Just one question: where did you study the math, man? :1orglaugh

Read up on it sometime: Fermi paradox - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

just a punk 03-09-2015 03:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Harmon (Post 20413647)

How does it relate to the statement below?

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20412864)
math as shown that an entire galaxy can be colonized in a few 100 million yeas.


aka123 03-09-2015 04:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413638)
Based on a simple fact there was not time before the creation of the University (time and space can't exist one without the other). Even a kid knows that. Ah yeah, I forgot, we have a very shitty education here :winkwink:

What a argument; they say so, so it is so. :)

So, that very dense mass that did exist before big bang, didn't take any space? They say it was dense, but come on, it gotta have taken some space if all the shit around here is from it. :)

Time is by the way a measurement; measurement that measures and connects events. If nothing happens, you just can't measure time. Although I am quite sure there wasn't no one measuring time even after big bang, I mean for some time, and at least around here (if there is some another shit far away; like folks from older big bang, that is different matter).

Time exists as much as metre.

just a punk 03-09-2015 04:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413667)
So, that very dense mass, that did exist before big bang didn't take any space?

Who said there was a mass? Where did you learn physics, man? There was just energy which has created a mass after the explosion. The scientists blame it on Higgs boson. But with or without it, the mass can be produced from pure energy, as well as the energy can be produced from pure mass. A 9th grade of mandatory school in my country :)

P.S. Here is a simple formula for you that fully explains my post: m = E / c^2 (actually it was already posted in this thread). If you want, I can easily calculate the minimal amount of pure energy which was needed to create our University from nothing (no physical bodies with a mass).

aka123 03-09-2015 04:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413670)
Who said there was a mass? Where did you learn physics, man? There was just energy which has created a mass after explosion. The scientists blame it on Higgs boson. But with or without it, the mass can be produced from pure energy, as well as the energy can be produced from pure mass. A 9th grade of mandatory school in my country :)

P.S. Here is a simple formula for you that fully explains my post: m = E / c^2 (actually it was already posted in this thread). If you want, I can easily calculate the minimal amount of pure energy which was needed to create our University from nothing (no physical bodies with a mass).

You surely take somewhat uncertain things and take it as a granted. Have you no theoretical thinking? You just repeat things like a parrot.

But let me rephrase. That energy didn't take any space? Or whatever that did exist before big bang didn't take any space? You know, in volume, etc.?


And here, dear Ruski.

Mass | Define Mass at Dictionary.com

just a punk 03-09-2015 05:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413667)
What a argument; they say so, so it is so.

I'm not a scientist, so I accept the knowledge "as is". I think that Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking are much smarter than me so I don't question their conclusions. The E=m/c^2 works just perfect, but I will accept any better formula if it will be invented.

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413674)
But let me rephrase. That energy didn't take any space?

Depends on what type of energy you are talking about. Kinetic? Potential? Gravitational? Internal? The energy of explosion? Dark energy?

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413674)

LOL ))) I gave you a formula above. Don't you agree with it?

aka123 03-09-2015 05:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413681)
Depends on what type of energy you are talking about. Kinetic? Potential? Gravitational? Internal? The energy of explosion? Dark energy?

"Or whatever that did exist before big bang didn't take any space?"

Your superior Russian school books don't define it? You are the one who was talking about energy, so pick the one you meant.

just a punk 03-09-2015 05:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413684)
Your superior Russian school books don't define it? You are the one who was talking about energy, so pick the one you meant.

Don't read Russian books because they will turn you into a communist human-eating vampire, or at least into Putin. I'd suggest you to start with something popular and easy to read like the Grand Design by Stephen Hawking.

aka123 03-09-2015 05:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413681)
LOL ))) I gave you a formula above. Don't you agree with it?

I was not talking about the formula. I just referred what I meant with the mass.

I have no required experience valuating your formula; it can be anything between bullshit and work of a genius.

aka123 03-09-2015 05:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413687)
Don't read Russian books because they will turn you into a communist human-eating vampire, or at least into Putin. I'd suggest you to start with something popular and easy to read like the Grand Design by Stephen Hawking.

Or you could read what I wrote. It only costs 1000 000 euros and is collected retrospectively.

just a punk 03-09-2015 05:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413695)
I have no required experience valuating your formula; it can be anything between bullshit and work of a genius.

It's not mine. It's the most famous in the World formula created by Einstein :error Man, it's a mandatory school material and you "have no experience to evaluate it?" Is it a joke or you really live in a cave? :helpme :1orglaugh

aka123 03-09-2015 05:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413704)
It's not mine. It's the most famous in the World formula created by Einstein :error Man, it's a mandatory school material and you "have no experience to evaluate it?" Is it a joke or you really live in a cave? :helpme :1orglaugh

I have no experience evaluating that neither. Besides, you wrote it differently or wrong.

What is mandatory school material? Evaluating the mathematical presentation or the formula itself? We didn't evaluate that much about Einstein's work. So, how it worked? Did you prove it right?

just a punk 03-09-2015 06:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413707)
I have no experience evaluating that neither.

I will help you my Finnish friend. So here we go:

m = E / c^2 is the formula invented by Einstein and every kid here knows it. Let me explain it to you in the concept of the Big Bang Theory. We take pure energy (E in Joules) which has no mass ("no", means absolutely no), divide it by the light speed (c in meters per second) multiplied by itself and... get the mass outcome (m in kilograms) produced during the explosion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413707)
What is mandatory school material?

Means that every citizen must learn it in the school. If a kid doesn't visit school, he will be taken out of family and will be forced (literally forced) to visit school in orphanage. The mandatory minimum in Russia is a 9 grade school and Einstein's theory of relativity is included into that education program. You may stay in school for more 2 years and then go to the university, but 9 grades is "a must". I feel a bit strange when explaining the basics of our education to such a serious expert of Russia like you.

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413707)
So, how it worked?

See my explanation above.

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413707)
Did you prove it right?

Yes, his formula has been proven many times. For example, the nuclear bomb won't exist if it didn't work.

dyna mo 03-09-2015 06:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413630)
Just one question: where did you study the math, man? :1orglaugh

That's a stupid fucking question. I studied the math in university.

dyna mo 03-09-2015 06:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phoenix (Post 20413641)
Obviously where he got his B.Sc.Opine
lol

You're a miserable joke phoenix. I know the butthurt lingers in you.

Gofuckyourself fuckwad

dyna mo 03-09-2015 06:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413658)
How does it relate to the statement below?

Where did you study fermis paradox? Obviously nowhere.

Lolz.

just a punk 03-09-2015 07:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413732)
Where did you study fermis paradox? Obviously nowhere

"Learned"? :1orglaugh

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413737)
"Learned"? :1orglaugh

OK, if that helps you, I'll rephrase the question-

Where did you learned fermis paradox?

just a punk 03-09-2015 07:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413744)
OK, if that helps you, I'll rephrase the question-

Where did you learned fermis paradox?

It's not something you have to learn (I didn't "learn" it). It's just a theory you maybe familiar with. Anyways, what it has to do with your "math as shown that an entire galaxy can be colonized in a few 100 million yeas" statement? Go ahead and show your "math" then. Will be very interesting to discuss :)

aka123 03-09-2015 07:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413716)
I will help you my Finnish friend. So here we go:

m = E / c^2 is the formula invented by Einstein and every kid here knows it. Let me explain it to you in the concept of the Big Bang Theory. We take pure energy (E in Joules) which has no mass ("no", means absolutely no), divide it by the light speed (c in meters per second) multiplied by itself and... get the mass outcome (m in kilograms) produced during the explosion.

Means that every citizen must learn it in the school. If a kid doesn't visit school, he will be taken out of family and will be forced (literally forced) to visit school in orphanage. The mandatory minimum in Russia is a 9 grade school and Einstein's theory of relativity is included into that education program. You may stay in school for more 2 years and then go to the university, but 9 grades is "a must". I feel a bit strange when explaining the basics of our education to such a serious expert of Russia like you.

See my explanation above.

Yes, his formula has been proven many times. For example, the nuclear bomb won't exist if it didn't work.

That equation looks a tad different in wikipedia and in other sources.

E = mc2

Mass–energy equivalence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


I didn't know that you blew out nukes in school. Besides "the nuclear bomb won't exist if it didn't work."- sounds a tad silly. Usually the equation is tested, not the other way around. You know; we observe things and make equations to model those things; not making some shit up and say: "my equation makes this and that possible". :)

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413746)
It's not something you have to learn (I didn't "learn" it). It's just a theory you maybe familiar with. Anyways, what it has to do with your "math as shown that an entire galaxy can be colonized in a few 100 million yeas" statement? Go ahead and show your "math" then. Will be very interesting to discuss :)

have at it.


To arrive at their conclusion Dr Hair and Mr Hedman assumed that outer space is dotted with solar systems, about five light years apart. They then asked how quickly a single civilisation armed with the requisite technology would spread its tentacles, depending on the degree of colonising zeal, expressed as the probability that intelligent beings decide to hop from one planet to the next in 1,000 years (500 years for the trip, at a modest one-tenth of the speed of light, and another 500 years to prepare for the next hop).

All these numbers are necessarily moot. If the vast majority of planets is not suitable, for instance, the average distance for a successful expedition might be much more than five light years. And advanced beings might not need five Earth centuries to get up to speed before they redeploy. However, Dr Hair and Mr Hedman can tweak their probabilities to reflect a range of possible conditions. Using what they believe to be conservative assumptions (as low as one chance in four of embarking on a colonising mission in 1,000 years), they calculated that any galactic empire would have spread outwards from its home planet at about 0.25% of the speed of light. The result is that after 50m years it would extend over 130,000 light years, with zealous colonisers moving in a relatively uniform cloud and more reticent ones protruding from a central blob. Since the Milky Way is estimated to be 100,000-120,000 light years across, outposts would be sprinkled throughout the galaxy, even if the home planet were, like Earth, located on the periphery.

Crucially, even in slow-expansion scenario, the protrusions eventually coalesce. After 250,000 years, which the model has so far had the time to simulate, the biggest gaps are no larger than 30 light years across. Dr Hair thinks they should grow no bigger as his virtual colonisation progresses. That is easily small enough for man's first sufficiently powerful radio transmissions (in the early 20th century) to have been detected and for a reply to have reached Earth (which has been actively listening out for such messages since the 1960s). And though 50m years may sound a lot, if intelligent life did evolve more than once, it could easily have done so billions of years before this happened on Earth. All this suggests, Dr Hair and Mr Hedman fear, that humans really do have the Milky Way to themselves. Either that or the neighbours are a particularly timid bunch.

Sentient Developments: New mathematical study reveals that our Galaxy should have been colonized by now


maybe phoenix will do another drive by dickhead post and handwave off the math, since he took a math class once, yay!

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:30 AM

In the context of a homogeneous universe, we note that the appearance of aggressively expanding advanced life is geometrically similar to the process of nucleation and bubble growth in a first-order cosmological phase transition. We exploit this similarity to describe the dynamics of life saturating the universe on a cosmic scale, adapting the phase transition model to incorporate probability distributions of expansion and resource consumption strategies. Through a series of numerical solutions covering several orders of magnitude in the input assumption parameters, the resulting cosmological model is used to address basic questions related to the intergalactic spreading of life, dealing with issues such as timescales, observability, competition between strategies, and first-mover advantage. Finally, we examine physical effects on the universe itself, such as reheating and the backreaction on the evolution of the scale factor, if such life is able to control and convert a significant fraction of the available pressureless matter into radiation. We conclude that the existence of life, if certain advanced technologies are practical, could have a significant influence on the future large-scale evolution of the universe

[1411.4359] Homogeneous cosmology with aggressively expanding civilizations


Olson set out to test the ambitious idea using a mathematical model. Not only does he show that intelligent life can theoretically come to fill the vast void of space in a fraction of the universe?s lifetime, but universe spanning civilizations may influence the evolution of the cosmos itself?a profound and entirely novel suggestion.


How Long Would It Take to Colonize the Universe? | Motherboard

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:32 AM

fyi, i'm not a rookie at this gfy shit.

just a punk 03-09-2015 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413748)
That equation looks a tad different in wikipedia and in other sources.

E = mc2

Mass–energy equivalence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It's the same one (laterally: absolutely the same formula) - just believe me. What's wrong with you, man? Yet another victim of Finnish education? :helpme

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413748)
Besides "the nuclear bomb won't exist if it didn't work."- sounds a tad silly.

*facepalm smile here*. Are you really that dumb or just kidding on me (I'm still can't believe it's for real)? Einstein said it clear: E = m/c^2 - the energy of explosive will be equal to the mass (Google for "critical mass" in case of nuclear reaction) multiplied by the speed of light in square. I can't believe you didn't learn it in the school... And you were talking something about education level here and there? OMFG :disgust

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:48 AM

Abstract

If even a very small fraction of the hundred billion stars in the galaxy are home to technological civilizations which colonize over interstellar distances, the entire galaxy could be completely colonized in a few million years. The absence of such extraterrestrial civilizations visiting Earth is the Fermi paradox.

A model for interstellar colonization is proposed using the assumption that there is a maximum distance over which direct interstellar colonization is feasable. Due to the time lag involved in interstellar communications, it is assumed that an interstellar colony will rapidly develop a culture independent of the civilization that originally settled it.

Any given colony will have a probability P of developing a colonizing civilization, and a probability (1-P) that it will develop a non-colonizing civilization. These assumptions lead to the colonization of the galaxy occuring as a percolation problem. In a percolation problem, there will be a critical value of the percolation probability, Pc. For P<Pc, colonization will always terminate after a finite number of colonies. Growth will occur in "clusters," with the outside of each cluster consisting of non-colonizing civilizations. For P>Pc, small uncolonized voids will exist, bounded by non-colonizing civilizations. When P is on the order of Pc, arbitrarily large filled regions exist, and also arbitrarily large empty regions.

The Fermi Paradox: An Approach Based on Percolation Theory
NASA Lewis Research Center,

dyna mo 03-09-2015 07:50 AM

cyber, you and phoenix crunch those #s and get back to me after you've shot holes in the maths.

just a punk 03-09-2015 07:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413777)
Abstract

If even a very small fraction of the hundred billion stars in the galaxy are home to technological civilizations which colonize over interstellar distances, the entire galaxy could be completely colonized in a few million years.

I haven't asked you for any abstractions. I've just asked you to show me the math. I'm not aka123 and I can read/evaluate formulas(I don't need the explanations etc). So please just go ahead and shoot it here.

just a punk 03-09-2015 07:58 AM

Just a small fix:

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413769)
IAre you really that dumb or just kidding on me (I'm still can't believe it's for real)? Einstein said it clear: E = m/c^2

Course I've meant E = mc^2, as it's explained in the same post.

aka123 03-09-2015 08:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413769)
It's the same one (laterally: absolutely the same formula) - just believe me. What's wrong with you, man? Yet another victim of Finnish education? :helpme

*facepalm smile here*. Are you really that dumb or just kidding on me (I'm still can't believe it's for real)? Einstein said it clear: E = m/c^2 - the energy of explosive will be equal to the mass (Google for "critical mass" in case of nuclear reaction) multiplied by the speed of light in square. I can't believe you didn't learn it in the school... And you were talking something about education level here and there? OMFG :disgust

Maybe the same formula, but it is first time I see it written that way.

You said something about proving that equation in school. So did you make nuke tests to prove it or not? It doesn't work the other way around, as I already said.

By the way, I haven't said anything about Russian education. Surely you have superior school system. You are so smart people-> knowledge increases pain->thus you drink so much to relieve all that pain. It makes sense.

dyna mo 03-09-2015 08:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413783)
I haven't asked you for any abstractions. I've just asked you to show me the math. I'm not aka123 and I can read/evaluate formulas(I don't need the explanations etc). So please just go ahead and shoot it here.

:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh

what a bullshit way to bail out of your shitass comment about where I studied the maths.

https://41.media.tumblr.com/f861f8cc...vw65o1_400.jpg

just a punk 03-09-2015 09:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413863)
what a bullshit way to bail out of your shitass comment about where I studied the maths

Forget it. Just post your math calculations please.

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413831)
Maybe the same formula, but it is first time I see it written that way.

Hint: it can be written in 3 different ways ;)

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413831)
You said something about proving that equation in school.

No, I didn't :) I did't even sent a single sputnik to the outer space to prove the Lagrange's formula and I've never tested a single submarine to prove that Archimedes was right ;)

just a punk 03-09-2015 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20413831)
You are so smart people-> knowledge increases pain->thus you drink so much to relieve all that pain. It makes sense.

Sure thing :winkwink:

http://www.stat.fi/til/ksyyt/2013/ks...004_en_001.gif

Source: Statistics Finland - 4. Deaths from alcohol-related causes almost unchanged

The graph doesn't look good ;)

dyna mo 03-09-2015 09:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20413880)
Forget it. Just post your math calculations please.



Hint: it can be written in 3 different ways ;)



No, I didn't :) I did't even sent a single sputnik to the outer space to prove the Lagrange's formula and I've never tested a single submarine to prove that Archimedes was right ;)

they're not MY calculations, i stated THE math shows that the galaxy can be colonized in x million years, and also supplied several mathematicians work on the subject, you can't comprehend that, I get it. Instead of embracing their math, you'd rather dodge and deflect with some silly nonsense about it all being my math.

you can talk about the subject or make it about me. you choose to make it about me, I'm trying to keep to the topic.

if you want to keep to the topic too, then read the shit I posted and comment on the results they reveal and don't act like a dick about where I learned math all while you act like you have some sort of superior math comprehension.

just a punk 03-09-2015 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413945)
they're not MY calculations

Not a problem, please post math calculations performed by others. I'm really excited to look at them.

Thank you in advance!

dyna mo 03-09-2015 10:02 AM

jesus fucking christ you didn't even read the articles I linked, why would I waste energy on digging up more shit you won't read or comprehend.

it's not like you're interested in the topic, you're just interested in trying to gotcha me.

gofuckyourself.

just a punk 03-09-2015 10:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413958)
it's not like you're interested in the topic, you're just interested in trying to gotcha me.

Don't be that ambitious. It's not about you. I've just asked you to post the math calculations (not yours - ok with that). No need it all those useless posts with so many words. And not a Finnish guy, so I can read raw formulas w/o problems.

dyna mo 03-09-2015 10:28 AM

do your own research. based on your posts I'd have to include proofing 2+2=4 to you.

just a punk 03-09-2015 10:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20413987)
do your own research. based on your posts I'd have to include proofing 2+2=4 to you.

So you will not post any math calculations to prove your own post? Ok, I see now.

P.S. Even 2+2 is not always 4 (hint: complex numbers) ;)

dyna mo 03-09-2015 10:35 AM

again, making it about me. while you claim you are so intently interested in the topic yet completely lack any interest or desire to investigate it on your own all while pointing your finger at me.

riiiiiiiiight. ruskie logic right there.

just a punk 03-09-2015 10:43 AM

So there will be no math calculations? Ok, it was expected.

mineistaken 03-09-2015 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 20410709)
Maybe once they figure out another great mystery of the world. This is the one where in 2000 the adult industry had the perfect business model of giving away very little which resulted in signup ratios that were through the roof and money basically falling from the sky, but still they insisted on seeing who could give away the most free content and turn the industry into a battle for scraps.

Somebody said - stupidity is endless. When you have a large group of people you can count on somebody being stupid enough to fuck things up for everybody. Sometimes for personal short term gain.

dyna mo 03-09-2015 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberSEO (Post 20414029)
So there will be no math calculations? Ok, it was expected.

as if you were going to actually go through the calculations and verify the maths. :1orglaugh:1orglaugh

i hope you don't think I'd fall for that bullshit.

Drake 03-09-2015 01:56 PM

I'm at a loss. Do we have to go back to bible thumping now?

aka123 03-09-2015 02:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Drake (Post 20414296)
I'm at a loss. Do we have to go back to bible thumping now?

Not yet, we are still waiting CyberSEO to confirm this equation: G=G≥G, that proves the existence of the God (G).

noshit 03-09-2015 06:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mutt (Post 20413536)
Well there ya go, noshit has figured it all out.

You bet... Thanks..! :thumbsup

420 03-09-2015 07:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Harmon (Post 20413647)

Quote:

The Sun is a typical star, and relatively young. There are billions of stars in the galaxy that are billions of years older.
With high probability, some of these stars will have Earth-like planets.[2] Assuming the Earth is typical, some of these planets may develop intelligent life.
Some of these civilizations may develop interstellar travel, a technology Earth is investigating even now (such as the 100 Year Starship).
Even at the slow pace of currently envisioned interstellar travel, the galaxy can be completely colonized in a few tens of millions of years.
Fermi based his paradox on assumptions. First he assumes Earth is typical. Next he assumes interstellar travel is possible/cost effect. And he assumes there would be reason to colonize/explore everything and that it happened in the past 200,000 during human existence. Last he assumes millions of years is short time frame for an advanced species to survive and remain advanced.


------------------------

I don't think humans are typical. I think there was spark required to make life then a separate spark to make human life. Maybe we are the only lifeforms that can travel to space. Maybe others came here and brought dinosaurs home as pets. Maybe their stealth is so advanced they're undetectable.

We just learned to fly about 50 or 60 years before we left the atmosphere. But, for at least 200,000 years before that we humans, the most advanced of all species (in our own minds) didn't know much about flight or space flight. That doesn't mean intelligent advanced life didn't exist on Earth. We just hadn't figured out how to fly yet. Now we've known how to for about 0.1% of the estimated time of our existence.

pornmasta 03-09-2015 07:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MiamiBoyz (Post 20413541)

hit satrap
Satrap - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


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