[meteorite-list] Alien life? or Fungus from space? Or VIRAL HUMANITY?
From: Meteorites USA <eric_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2009 11:25:14 -0700 Message-ID: <4A942C8A.40206_at_meteoritesusa.com> Interesting perspective. I always thought it looked rather like bacteria growth in a petri dish. Kinda sad really. Maybe you're right. Maybe we are parasites on the earth. Using up Earth's natural resources, devouring the planet, and chewing up the growth media that is the land. When we're finished maybe we'll start to devour ourselves, notwithstanding we might even destroy ourselves completely with fire by war as the disease of humanity spreads forth across the Earth. Hmmm... Ok maybe that's a little melodramatic and over the top, but when viewed from space and outside our little bubble of Earth, it's certainly easy to see we're having a great impact on our planet. What if these aliens we we're talking about are way more technologically advanced by millions of years of adaptation and genetic engineering enough to have evolved their thought processes to see early human, or humanoid life as threats to developing planets? If extra terrestrial life exists and they are much more technologically and intellectually advanced than us, we might be in trouble if they ever come visit. What if we are the virus that infests the living cells of the universe called planets? I've seen video animations or simulations of what our universe looks like from the outside as the camera slowly zooms out from our planet showing first our system, then other systems, then our own galaxy, galaxy clusters, and large dark voids between clusters, and finally what seem to be pathways between these super clusters of galaxies which are not unlike the neural pathways in our own brains. Are we merely a virus, living on a brain cell of a larger living organism? Gives a new perspective on Rob's earlier comment that our reality isn't really real. Maybe it's just relative... Regards, Eric Wichman Meteorites USA Steve Schoner wrote: > Alien life discussion is interesting, but, this is what our cities look like from space: > > http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/picture-galleries/5973258/Cities-at-night-from-space-photographed-by-NASA-astronauts-on-the-International-Space-Station.html > > Looks like mold. > > Our planet is rotting! > > Steve Schoner > IMCA #447m > > ____________________________________________________________ > Shop & save on the supplements you want. Click now! > http://thirdpartyoffers.mybluelight.com/TGL2341/fc/BLSrjpdohpFmlD1bl8g9IAEv8JJcrpp8m0eXTSNn09eRf1SYg1yffvBiQzG/ > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > > Received on Tue 25 Aug 2009 02:25:14 PM PDT |
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