S
Scott64a
Furthermore, when we choose to pretend to see things that don't exist in the data shown, we miss all of the really amazing stuff that's already in front of us to be seen.
Internet hoaxes about imaginary planets when the entire sky, (and multiple views of the sun, other planets and and the rest from other points in Earth's path further away from our own perspective, and all easily searchable as data and imagery... there is no reason to jump for this idea. Nothing in the data proves Nibiru's existence at all.
Know what Nibiru believers show as evidence? The images are lifted form the hundreds of sites with free access to pretty much every satellite telescope that has ever been without regard to what it actually IS or bothering to cross check those coordinates and learn that it was actually a photo of a galaxy or of Jupiter. All of it is right there, archived and available for anyone online 24/7.
It's really that simple.
I'm not trying to insult anyone here. If that were the case, I'd just have to start calling THC names and walk away in a huff.
I'm really concerned that in a day and age where millions of volumes of solid data available at our fingertips, nobody knows enough to use it or spend the time researching things.
We have this amazing luxury of information, and people want to cling to firelight tales about a whole host of garbage that is readily debunked with even minimal effort.
Show me something that has actual astronomers scratching their heads and that would be interesting enough, I'm sure. Never mind something someone who was looking for a secret planet found and misinterpreted. That's bogus.
People are so gullible. Maybe they always have been. Maybe there were always the followers who absolutely are incapable of processing data in order to make an educated guess about something for themselves.
I'm just kidding... Everyone has this ability.
They've just had their neural pathways cultivated by the TV and flashy imagery or have been doped by religion, as in the early days.
The irony here is that the same people who'd guffaw at the churches for chasing scientists around for charges of witchcraft in the middle ages are the ones who stand here with a blurry photograph and make a claim that Planet X exists but when the scientists show what they are actually looking at, they dismiss it as a conspiracy on a modern day crusade to push a bullshit line.
Ain't shit changes.
Internet hoaxes about imaginary planets when the entire sky, (and multiple views of the sun, other planets and and the rest from other points in Earth's path further away from our own perspective, and all easily searchable as data and imagery... there is no reason to jump for this idea. Nothing in the data proves Nibiru's existence at all.
Know what Nibiru believers show as evidence? The images are lifted form the hundreds of sites with free access to pretty much every satellite telescope that has ever been without regard to what it actually IS or bothering to cross check those coordinates and learn that it was actually a photo of a galaxy or of Jupiter. All of it is right there, archived and available for anyone online 24/7.
It's really that simple.
I'm not trying to insult anyone here. If that were the case, I'd just have to start calling THC names and walk away in a huff.
I'm really concerned that in a day and age where millions of volumes of solid data available at our fingertips, nobody knows enough to use it or spend the time researching things.
We have this amazing luxury of information, and people want to cling to firelight tales about a whole host of garbage that is readily debunked with even minimal effort.
Show me something that has actual astronomers scratching their heads and that would be interesting enough, I'm sure. Never mind something someone who was looking for a secret planet found and misinterpreted. That's bogus.
People are so gullible. Maybe they always have been. Maybe there were always the followers who absolutely are incapable of processing data in order to make an educated guess about something for themselves.
I'm just kidding... Everyone has this ability.
They've just had their neural pathways cultivated by the TV and flashy imagery or have been doped by religion, as in the early days.
The irony here is that the same people who'd guffaw at the churches for chasing scientists around for charges of witchcraft in the middle ages are the ones who stand here with a blurry photograph and make a claim that Planet X exists but when the scientists show what they are actually looking at, they dismiss it as a conspiracy on a modern day crusade to push a bullshit line.
Ain't shit changes.