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Printable Version of Topic "Have you ever seen an alien?"

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-- Posted by gregorymahony at 7:53 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Have you ever seen a REAL alien, not in movies or on books but a REAL alien?


-- Posted by Rollo Tomasi at 7:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

yeah, there was one posting pics all of last night


-- Posted by MariJani at 7:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

There's no such thing.  


-- Posted by deadteddiebear77 at 7:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

do ppl in roswell in newmexico count???


-- Posted by FurryPanther at 7:55 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Yes. I see foreign people all the time. They are drawn to the mountains I live by.

FP


-- Posted by Kornboy627 at 7:55 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

yes... although i don't remember much more b/c he erased my memory


-- Posted by venom90 at 7:55 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

yeah, but I think it was a mix of nyquill and depressed paranoia...


-- Posted by Heart92 at 7:55 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

If you learn in school we are all alians and plants and people.


-- Posted by sarah mae at 7:55 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Can't say I have.. I would probably get freaked out if I did.


-- Posted by reyshells at 7:56 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Well I do live near the California/Mexican border. So occasionally, I'll see one.


-- Posted by Bara no Mitsukai at 7:56 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

yes. he works for us!


-- Posted by cpjcjhsh at 8:00 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Quote: from MariJani at 9:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007


There's no such thing.  

And what degrees do you hold that allow you to make such a claim?


-- Posted by emmy350 at 8:03 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Nope, I have not had that pleasure.


-- Posted by MariJani at 8:07 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Quote: from cpjcjhsh at 8:00 pm on Jan. 8, 2007


Quote: from MariJani at 9:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

There's no such thing.  

And what degrees do you hold that allow you to make such a claim?


common sense


-- Posted by JoeTeets at 8:08 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Yeah,some of my friend are wetback.


-- Posted by norock at 8:24 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

eh. deleted


-- Posted by ajm51987 at 10:07 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Quote: from reyshells at 7:56 pm on Jan. 8, 2007


Well I do live near the California/Mexican border. So occasionally, I'll see one.

damn, beat me too it.

"Yes, his name is Javier and he mows our lawn..."

=/


-- Posted by Bara no Mitsukai at 10:18 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Quote: from ajm51987 at 10:07 pm on Jan. 8, 2007


Quote: from reyshells at 7:56 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Well I do live near the California/Mexican border. So occasionally, I'll see one.

damn, beat me too it.

"Yes, his name is Javier and he mows our lawn..."

=/


beat me too it too T.T


-- Posted by espresso8097 at 10:32 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

There are over 1000 in towns right near me.
Extra Terrestrial: Never


-- Posted by bilzey1992 at 2:46 pm on Jan. 9, 2007

yes you


-- Posted by Karaden at 3:57 pm on Jan. 9, 2007

My little brother count?


-- Posted by cpjcjhsh at 7:41 pm on Jan. 9, 2007

Quote: from MariJani at 10:07 pm on Jan. 8, 2007


Quote: from cpjcjhsh at 8:00 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

Quote: from MariJani at 9:54 pm on Jan. 8, 2007

There's no such thing.  
 
 And what degrees do you hold that allow you to make such a claim?


common sense


Bahaha, yeah, because that certainly falls within the domain of common, AND sense.


-- Posted by MetalHead at 10:36 pm on Jan. 9, 2007

Quote: from MariJani at 12:54 pm on Jan. 9, 2007


There's no such thing.  

It'd be really closed-minded to think that we are the only form of life in the universe... Out of all the planets we don't know about you would think there would be intelligent life on one of them.


-- Posted by Cumulonimbus at 5:58 pm on Jan. 10, 2007

Yes, he came to me in silver space ship, asked my name, then called me a jerk and left.  : /


-- Posted by asb at 4:57 am on Jan. 16, 2007

The argument goes that the universe is sufficiently vast that it is quite likely there exists another planet with the necessary conditions for life.  However whether that life is intelligent is irrelevant, since the universe is also sufficiently vast that it would be most unlikely that we ever come into contact with it.


-- Posted by norock at 5:36 am on Jan. 16, 2007

why?
we are on the cusp [by cusp i mean 50-100 years] of developing technologies for deep space travel.

a mexican physicist developed a theory called "Alcubierre warp drive" which creates an entirely plausible solution to FTL speeds [faster than light]

there are theories involving nuclear explosions as a means of propulsion through space [being no friction, there would be constant acceleration when given force.

there are also ideas of massive sails that would be the target of a giant laser [not the lasers in the movies, a focused single wave light source.] which would, if you dont know now you know, create a thrust, again accelerating the shuttle into deep space...

i wouldnt be so certain that the life that is most certainly out there does not have the technology. you do not know what type of conditions they are accostomed to. you dont know what type of materials they have available. do you suppose that ALL the universe is just like the earth? that is entirely unlikely...


-- Posted by asb at 6:15 am on Jan. 16, 2007

The basic requirements for life are something to use as a 'building block' and something for reactions to occur in.  These things happen to be carbon and water on Earth, and there are few other realistic options.  Silicon and ammonia are one set, possibly the most likely alternative.  Life also requires an energy input, so it would need a planet not so close to its star that it gets fried, but not so far that reactions take forever and a day.  So while life does not require conditions exactly like earth, they must be similar, or at least equivalent.

Much of near space is in fact filled with very low pressure gas (helium and hydrogen), so there is in fact a minute amount of friction. Incidentally, if you don't believe this, just consider how it is they can tell you the temperature of space - a complete vacuum doesn't have a temperature.

As for speeds faster than light, I'll believe that when I see it.  There are plenty of people who believe they have found loopholes in the laws of thermodynamics, and of relativity, but turned out to be mistaken.  The theories may not work on a subatomic scale, or on a universal scale, but on a human scale they have never come under threat.


-- Posted by Zodiac at 10:32 am on Jan. 17, 2007

Yes my sister. i swear she isnt human. aliens kidnapped by parents and brainwashed them to believe she is their second child. she crawled out of an aliens arse.


-- Posted by melodramatic at 6:43 pm on Jan. 23, 2007

Oh yeah, plenty of times [/end sarcasm]


-- Posted by me llamo alice at 6:58 pm on Jan. 23, 2007

hm. nope. but my uncle earl has.  

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