RE: Things that make you go hmmmmmm

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Things that make you go hmmmmmm

in informationwar •  2 years ago  (edited)

Thankyou and as always great engagement. I don't think there's enough of it on here. Very few people actually engage. Is it a fear of triggering or upsetting? People do not want to discuss things any more like grown ups.
Thanx for ur imaginative input but the vaporized thing doesn't ring true either. Where's the debris? How does a solid thing that went past the 'van allen belt' not vaporize before hitting? What causes things to vaporize? Not impact.


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  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Meteors do fall from space on Earth , i saw some in my life ,. red smoking tail falling apart before getting low enough to do damage . And some even do damage or hit the ground sometimes , but that's very rare .
And i have to admit , good find @offgridlife , they official claim is that they did find some remains of the big rock in this crater , could be made up for tourist attraction , but i think that's even a bit over the top . Still a rock hitting the Earth with enough mass would not burn in the belts or atmosphere , and most of that energy will be released on impact , in a split second . Vaporizing most of that rock in to the atmosphere .


Same as the engines of the plane that flew in to the pentagon ,. vaporized , not even a burn mark .
Hmmmmmm,.. ? ,. sorry wrong example ,. i think ?
Anyways ,. who's throwing these rocks at us ,.. a evil alien race ? ,.. NASA ?
Hmmmm ? ,. NASA has tungsten rods on satellites they can drop on any city they like .
One can destroy a small city , leaving no trace of the tungsten rod .

Want some more rabbit holes to explore ?

Electrical Universe theory ,.. lighting created the stars and planets , and a lot of craters and mountains on the solid objects while doing so .

;-)


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Thank you very much. Keep an open mind.


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

I liked the guys original story of a lorry exploding, seems odd that he would create such a story to cover up a 'natural' meteor strike? Very odd. Just coz you've seen burning stuff falling from the sky doesn't mean it came from outer space. How did this thing not take out some of those satellites up there on it's way down? Maybe it WAS a satellite.
https://presearch.com/videos?q=satellite%20crash


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  ·  2 years ago  ·   (edited)

Very dramatic but none of this proves it was a meteor and not some kind of missile made to look like a meteor? Also how come NASA and all the other spave buffs knew nothing about it?


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

NASA - Never A Straight Answer .
It could be anything ,.. aliens , secret technology ,.. things that monger more fear then naturally sometimes space rocks fall from the sky . It would worry me more if i knew someone was doing it on purpose .

Did NASA not know or saw it heading for Russia and just didn't care ?


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

No there are Russians in NASA too. It's 'international' remember. Why would manmade worry you more than natural? Manmade we can do something about, nature always wins and nothing we can do will change it. Plus nature always seeks balance, man just tries to tip it constantly.


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Hmmmm ? ,.. what would happen when we warn people about a space rock probably hitting there region tomorrow ? Maybe NASA decided it's best to say nothing and hope for the best . ;-)

nature always wins and nothing we can do will change it. Plus nature always seeks balance, man just tries to tip it constantly.

You answered your own question ,.. as that's exactly why . No need to worry about nature ,.. worry about the sick wannabe nature controllers that control this realm today .
;-)


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  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Hmmmm….

As the shock waves expand into the planet and the meteorite, they dissipate energy and form zones of vaporized, melted, and crushed material outward from a point below the planet's surface that is roughly as deep as the meteorite's diameter. The meteorite is usually vaporized completely by the released energy.


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They dissipate energy? Where does the energy come from that they dissipate? It's a rock no? Do rocks store energy? I know crystals do but not enough energy to blow a hole in the earth.


Posted from https://blurtlatam.com

  ·  2 years ago  ·   (edited)

They absorb quite a bit of energy when coming in hot … most of them explode before they ever hit the earth.

Any meteors that actually hit the earth are pretty much ready to explode.



Posted from https://blurtlatam.com