I just got back from work and I don't really have much fuel left in me to write a huge wall of text about it, so I'll let this video do the talking from now on.
My personal opinion: I don't think this is real. I just created this topic to find out what others think about it, and to make MLK a bit more interesting. No, I don't believe in little men from mars (or whatever planet) and neither is there any proof that the spicemen in this documentary is real. However, I kinda admit that this would make me more or less a hypocrite because I as a Christian also can't prove the existence of God directly. I'm not trying to be a hypocrite, but for some reason I just have a harder time believing in intelligent alien life then an almighty being.
So, what are your opinions about it?
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 12:50 pm
by Regulus
Nice CGI.
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 7:12 pm
by DGFone
When people who never took a science class in their life start playing scientist...
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 7:24 pm
by DGFone
Woeler wrote:Albert Einstein dropped out of highschool, just sayin.
Only one of the most clueless and wrong statements to come out of your mouth. Look it up, siriusly.
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:28 pm
by DGFone
I have no idea where you got your sources, but then how about this simple dummy test:
How can someone who failed school get into a university, and then, to top it off, get a nobel prize in Physics (and not for his theory of relativity)? If anything, all it meant was that the school system was broken.
Also, everywhere I look up, I come across two things about his education: A: He excelled in school B: He had a speech problem. (This is proven to be false, BTW)
Sure, I've heard that "Einstein failed school", how come I never saw it in print? And then again, right back to the dummy question: How did he get into a university if he failed school?
Correction: At most, I see that he "failed some examinations". This is not the same as failing school, and in the end, for a physicist, is philosophy so important?
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:35 pm
by Azdgari
How about we agree that you don't necessarily have to have a degree to do intelligent things and talk about Sirius? :3
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:36 pm
by Regulus
Azdgari wrote:How about we agree that you don't necessarily have to have a degree to do intelligent things and talk about Sirius? :3
DGFone wrote:When people who never took a science class in their life start playing scientist...
Based on this, I don't think we can agree on that.
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:41 pm
by DGFone
Azdgari wrote:How about we agree that you don't necessarily have to have a degree to do intelligent things and talk about Sirius? :3
You don't need a degree. You need to know what you're talking about. From that video, it was made very clear to me that these people have no idea what they are talknig about.
"What we are attempting to achieve is a device which defeats the perpendicular force of gravity". Just think about it.
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:53 pm
by Regulus
DGFone wrote:"What we are attempting to achieve is a device which defeats the perpendicular force of gravity". Just think about it.
If you think about it, it almost does make sense. Only the north end of a magnet increases entropy. The south end decreases it. So, in theory, an electronic flywheel, combined with an electronic gyroscope should generate east and west electromagnetic forces, which could potentially counter perpendicular gravity in the other 10 dimensions.
Re: Sirius
Posted: April 9th, 2013, 8:56 pm
by DGFone
Regulus wrote:If you think about it, it almost does make sense. Only the north end of a magnet increases entropy. The south end decreases it. So, in theory, an electronic flywheel, combined with an electronic gyroscope should generate east and west electromagnetic forces, which could potentially counter perpendicular gravity in the other 10 dimensions.
Don't even get me started on how many ways this is wrong...