• Re: "The Day The Earth Stood Still"

    From Thomas Heger@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 20 08:21:22 2025
    XPost: sci.physics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sci.math

    Am Montag000019, 19.05.2025 um 17:58 schrieb The Starmaker:
    "Klaatu barada nikto"????

    Easy, it comes from Albert Einstein language...German!!!!


    KLAATU means I'm the victory of the people in the German language.


    This is not German!

    I have read, that this sentence means:

    God will not destroy the Earth (possibly: this time?).

    TH

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  • From Harlie Kabanov@21:1/5 to Thomas Heger on Tue May 20 12:09:30 2025
    XPost: sci.math

    Thomas Heger wrote:

    I have read, that this sentence means:

    God will not destroy the Earth (possibly: this time?).

    indeed; in relativity the US corporate media = CIA mouthpieces. Thus, you
    may not discover the freaking relativity is wrong. Turn off your
    television. You needed to do that for at least 40 years ago. Before the
    illegal introduction of the raping capitalism in communist countries.

    you want your fake printed money, now you eat the euro and the dollar fake printed money. Eat that. Just eat that.

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  • From J. J. Lodder@21:1/5 to x@x.net on Thu Jul 24 13:00:57 2025
    XPost: sci.physics, sci.math

    x <x@x.net> wrote:

    On 7/23/25 15:37, The Starmaker wrote:
    Chris M. Thomasson wrote:
    [-]
    How many asteroids have hit the earth and killed many things from the
    result of its impact?

    I'm surprised you 'fall' for NASA's 'the sky is falling' cons..

    NEVER in the History of Earth has an asteriod fell on earth!


    In other words, no insects, no animals, no fishes or people or person
    has EVER been killed by an asteroid!


    Okay, I'll make it easier for you since science is not your forte...

    When was the last asteroid that hit the earth????

    There could be various meanings of the word 'hit' but
    I am thinking that some types of dust do drift or blow
    to the ground every day that are supposed to be derived from
    meteor fragments or micrometeorites.>
    That would tend to mean today and every day.

    A common convention is to call things smaller than 1 meter meteoroids,
    and bigger things asteroids. [1]
    (you may prefer another convention of course)

    With this convention asteroid impacts are not rare events,

    Jan

    [1] This is about the size that is needed to reach the ground.

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