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Post by gus on Jul 30, 2019 5:05:42 GMT
Swamprat yes I think its possible to do black or wormhole space travel, because we are seeing ET's doing just that by being here on Earth. The trouble I currently have is that humanity is nowhere near close to being able to do what ET's are doing.
The zero isotopes found in UFO samples have been tested and basically we can't do anything like it and if we did it would cost us in the trillions to be make a small sample. Thats not including the other samples in which they are constructed on a Nano level mixed in with other metals. See clip, the first quarter I found interesting and the last quarter's conclusion fascinating.
So at what point does the first politician either in the UN, USA, China or Russia start saying that UFOs have ETs in them and what do they want? Its a tricky balancing act as we have no diplomatic relations with ETs.
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Post by gus on Jul 30, 2019 9:04:00 GMT
Rare UFOs over Melbourne in March this year. I have never seen such a large UFO wave currently going on around the world. youtu.be/z8g925zFsBM
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Post by gus on Jul 31, 2019 23:23:17 GMT
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Post by gus on Aug 3, 2019 0:31:30 GMT
How I suspect UFOs work.
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Post by gus on Aug 6, 2019 1:17:22 GMT
Wow just when I thought it couldn't get more spectacular see at 4:38
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Post by HAL on Aug 7, 2019 19:36:13 GMT
Gus, .. Its a tricky balancing act as we have no diplomatic relations with ETs... Or Syria. ...North Korea. ..Iran. and Bhutan if it comes to that. . .
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Post by gus on Aug 8, 2019 6:51:27 GMT
Gus, .. Its a tricky balancing act as we have no diplomatic relations with ETs... Or Syria. ...North Korea. ..Iran. and Bhutan if it comes to that. . . Yep well aware of the stupidity of our Nation States globally including my own country.
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Post by gus on Aug 8, 2019 6:52:20 GMT
Just found this.
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Post by gus on Aug 10, 2019 0:38:06 GMT
The real space race
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Post by gus on Aug 22, 2019 23:07:55 GMT
The build up continues.
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Post by gus on Aug 24, 2019 0:32:06 GMT
Just in. Could be natural as we are now better at detecting them is my guess.
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Post by gus on Aug 27, 2019 1:03:56 GMT
Busy in the sky at the moment no need to watch them all but you get the gist. Anyone who finds videos during August can you please tell me I want to collect them.
UFO Sighting Cincinnati OH 8/3/2019
11th August Victoria Australia
18th of August Buenos Aires, Argentina
19th August Japan
August 22nd over Victoria
23rd August Russia,
Kentucky 25th August
26th of August in Florida
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Post by gus on Aug 27, 2019 7:03:32 GMT
I thought this was interesting.
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Post by swamprat on Aug 29, 2019 16:47:12 GMT
US Military Eyes Strategic Value of Earth-Moon Space By Leonard David 5 hours ago
A potential framework for the use of lunar water ice and asteroid resources.
(Image: © Aiden O'Leary/Jason Aspiotis/Booz Allen Hamilton)
This week, the new United States Space Command officially makes its debut, emphasizing that space is a vital military domain — one that's critical to America's security and economic well-being.
Standing up the command coincides with ongoing White House support to establish a Space Force as a separate military branch.
To this end, there is increasing military interest in cislunar space. That's the region extending beyond Earth to the moon. Indeed, the protection of trade routes and lines of communication are traditional military responsibilities, and this will continue to be true as cislunar space becomes "high ground" — a position of advantage or superiority.
Phased approaches
At last June's Space Resources Roundtable, held at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, the military utility of phased approaches to tap lunar water ice and asteroid resources for propulsion and other applications was detailed.
Jason Aspiotis and Aiden O'Leary of Booz Allen Hamilton in Charlotte, North Carolina, presented a stimulating paper: "In-space Water Supply Chain Servicing the U.S. Military: A Preliminary Estimate of Future Potential U.S. Military Supply and Demand for In-space Water-Based Fuel."
"It's a preliminary first-look study to gauge the potential utility of in-space resources, specifically water in the context of U.S. military and intelligence assets," Aspiotis told Space.com.
"It adds a lot of capability in terms of more maneuverable assets. I think the high brass is definitely paying attention and starting to consider what it really means for their own strategic plans for the future," he said.
It's very important for the military to have diverse supply chains, added O'Leary, so that backups can carry the load in the event that any supply chain is cut off. "I believe it has tremendous value for them," he said.
New focus
The U.S. military's cislunar interest is interesting, said Joan Johnson-Freese, a professor in the National Security Affairs Department at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island.
It is the opinion of Johnson-Freese that cislunar seems to be a "new focus" for the Department of Defense.
"It appears partly driven by the new, open U.S. push toward the weaponization of space … required because virtually everything China does in space is considered a threat — and bureaucratic politics," she told Space.com.
All bureaucracies need a purpose, Johnson-Freese said. "Apparently part of the 'need' is protecting U.S. economic/commercial space interests. It would be interesting to know if this protection was requested by commercial countries or merely anticipated," she said.
Strategically vital
Cislunar space is strategically vital because the exploitation of space resources can — and will — alter the balance of power on Earth.
That's the view of Peter Garretson, an independent strategy consultant who focuses on space and defense. A retired Air Force officer, he was previously the director of Air University's Space Horizons Research Task Force, America's think tank for space.
"What is driving the U.S. military to look at cislunar is not some present tactical advantage," Garretson said. "It is fear that China's moves to cislunar space will provide it with a positional and logistic advantage from which it could occupy, constrict, threaten or coerce U.S. interests."
Domain awareness
The military will need to articulate requirements, Garretson said, that include cislunar "domain awareness," in-space refueling and the ability to make use of moon-derived propellant.
"Cislunar space offers a vast maneuver space that is difficult to surveil and from which surprises can then emerge, analogous to deep-sea submarine warfare. The People's Republic of China's military-run space program is positioning itself in cislunar space. We are behind, and we must catch up," Garretson said. "Cislunar space is already the high ground, and the U.S. is already far behind China in its position and its planning."
Lunar industrialization
Garretson said that China's Chang'e-4 farside moon mission and the nation's Magpie Bridge relay satellite at the Earth-moon L2 halo orbit are part of a well-conceived and cumulative plan.
"They have already put in place the first node in a broader communications architecture, and perhaps a cislunar space domain awareness system as well," Garretson said. "Next comes sample return, polar landings and 3D printing of a 'Lunar Palace' with an industrial mission to make economic use of lunar resources."
China is absolutely clear on its strategic intent in cislunar space, Garretson said.
"They intend to build an infrastructure to industrialize the moon, and use its resources and ideal location to build large numbers of solar-power satellites for their own energy supply and to service a $21 trillion energy market," Garretson said.
An industrial-logistical system of that magnitude, Garretson said, would obviously establish China as the dominant power.
"Without an equivalent plan to industrialize the moon, the game is lost for the United States of America. We will find ourselves having lost without fighting … confronting a juggernaut with an industrial, logistical and maneuver advantage we cannot possibly match," Garretson concluded.
www.space.com/us-military-strategic-value-earth-moon-space.html
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Post by HAL on Aug 29, 2019 20:29:59 GMT
Perhaps there is somthing to be leared from the Communist party.
If they want something done, it gets done.
If they need a few thousand people to work somewhere on a project, a few thousand unemployed find themselves doing something productive.
No argument.
Some people may jump up and down and scream ' what's the difference between that and The Draft ?'
The difference is you get to go home afterwards.
All nations (including my own) that have things that need doing and still allow people not to work are wasting manpower.
HAL.
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