The Pluto Murder: IAU motive...jealously.
Today was the last day of the International Astronomical Union meeting
in Prague, and the final item on the agenda at the end of two weeks’
worth of discussion was a vote on what to do with Pluto. Everyone’s
favorite ice ball was in imminent danger of being cast out of the
pantheon of planets by the vote of astronomers assembled half a world
away, and whatever happened would be big news around the globe.
I like planets, but I didn’t care enough about Pluto to get up at 4:30
a.m. But this Pluto vote mattered enough for me to drag myself out of
bed that morning. For me that vote had nothing to do with the ninth
planet; it was all about the tenth.
And I cared a lot about that tenth planet, because
eighteen months earlier, I had discovered it, a ball of ice and rock
slightly larger than Pluto circling the sun every 580 years. I had been scanning the skies night after night looking for such a thing for most
of a decade, and then, one morning, there it finally was.
The Starmaker wrote:
The Pluto Murder: IAU motive...jealously.
Today was the last day of the International Astronomical Union meeting
in Prague, and the final item on the agenda at the end of two weeks’
worth of discussion was a vote on what to do with Pluto. Everyone’s favorite ice ball was in imminent danger of being cast out of the
pantheon of planets by the vote of astronomers assembled half a world
away, and whatever happened would be big news around the globe.
I like planets, but I didn’t care enough about Pluto to get up at 4:30
a.m. But this Pluto vote mattered enough for me to drag myself out of
bed that morning. For me that vote had nothing to do with the ninth
planet; it was all about the tenth.
And I cared a lot about that tenth planet, because
eighteen months earlier, I had discovered it, a ball of ice and rock slightly larger than Pluto circling the sun every 580 years. I had been scanning the skies night after night looking for such a thing for most
of a decade, and then, one morning, there it finally was.
If Pluto was to be a planet, then so too Xena/Eris. If Pluto was to be
kicked out, Xena/Eris would get the same boot. It was worth waking up
early to find out the answer.
IAU thinks, therefore You are. You think what the cabal tells you to
think...
The Starmaker wrote:
The Starmaker wrote:
The Pluto Murder: IAU motive...jealously.
Today was the last day of the International Astronomical Union meeting
in Prague, and the final item on the agenda at the end of two weeks’ worth of discussion was a vote on what to do with Pluto. Everyone’s favorite ice ball was in imminent danger of being cast out of the pantheon of planets by the vote of astronomers assembled half a world away, and whatever happened would be big news around the globe.
I like planets, but I didn’t care enough about Pluto to get up at 4:30 a.m. But this Pluto vote mattered enough for me to drag myself out of
bed that morning. For me that vote had nothing to do with the ninth planet; it was all about the tenth.
And I cared a lot about that tenth planet, because
eighteen months earlier, I had discovered it, a ball of ice and rock slightly larger than Pluto circling the sun every 580 years. I had been scanning the skies night after night looking for such a thing for most
of a decade, and then, one morning, there it finally was.
If Pluto was to be a planet, then so too Xena/Eris. If Pluto was to be kicked out, Xena/Eris would get the same boot. It was worth waking up
early to find out the answer.
IAU thinks, therefore You are. You think what the cabal tells you to think...
When a person
who is not a
member of the IAU
discovers a
tenth planet...
all HELL
breaks loose!
It means all the
IAU members are a
worthless piece
of garbage.
good fer nuthin
useless
irrelevant.
IAU thinks, therefore You are...
garbage.
The Starmaker wrote:
The Starmaker wrote:
The Starmaker wrote:
The Pluto Murder: IAU motive...jealously.
Today was the last day of the International Astronomical Union meeting in Prague, and the final item on the agenda at the end of two weeks’ worth of discussion was a vote on what to do with Pluto. Everyone’s favorite ice ball was in imminent danger of being cast out of the pantheon of planets by the vote of astronomers assembled half a world away, and whatever happened would be big news around the globe.
I like planets, but I didn’t care enough about Pluto to get up at 4:30 a.m. But this Pluto vote mattered enough for me to drag myself out of bed that morning. For me that vote had nothing to do with the ninth planet; it was all about the tenth.
And I cared a lot about that tenth planet, because
eighteen months earlier, I had discovered it, a ball of ice and rock slightly larger than Pluto circling the sun every 580 years. I had been scanning the skies night after night looking for such a thing for most of a decade, and then, one morning, there it finally was.
If Pluto was to be a planet, then so too Xena/Eris. If Pluto was to be kicked out, Xena/Eris would get the same boot. It was worth waking up early to find out the answer.
IAU thinks, therefore You are. You think what the cabal tells you to think...
When a person
who is not a
member of the IAU
discovers a
tenth planet...
all HELL
breaks loose!
It means all the
IAU members are a
worthless piece
of garbage.
good fer nuthin
useless
irrelevant.
IAU thinks, therefore You are...
garbage.
There are 13,116 total members of
The International Astronomical Union (IAU)
to vote what is a planet.
Only 424 voted out of 13,116 total members voted
(that's less than 5 percent of The International Astronomical Union (IAU) who voted)
As long as you have corrupt leaders running
The International Astronomical Union (IAU)
controlling the votes...you're not going to get the correct votes in.
https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81m1ZFcggzL._AC_SL1000_.jpg
13,116 is Too Big to Rig.
So the IAU sent everybody home except for the 424 (easier to rig)
Trust The Science.
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