Jump to content

Recommended Posts

NASA scientist: Evidence of alien life on meteorite


In what's sure to rekindle the debate over the question of life beyond Earth, a scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center says he has fossil evidence of bacterial life inside of a rare class of meteorites.


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_162-20039658-501465.html




http://i53.tinypic.com/az8bxk.jpg

The evidence seems to hinge on the fact that these formations can't be generated by anything but organic life.


It's one of those issues that will struggle to get an sensible debate around it. For adherents to anthropocentric (human-centred) religion, the discovery undermines every tenet of their narcissistic dogma. All of the assertions regarding a Universe created only as a playpen and moral test for humans, a God that is relentlessly preoccupied with mankind, who sacrifices his son etc., fall around their ears...


Hence religiously-oriented people will deny all of the evidence, will crap on about 'doubt' that doesn't exist, will roll out obscure scientists in unrelated fields that support their views, and as with climate change deniers, are more likely to accuse scientists of being liars and frauds than recognise humanity's insignificance.

Huguenot, surely religious oriented people believe in Alien life, ie Supernatural God, angels, devils and so are more open minded on the subject than most?


In fact I wouldn't be surprised that in a world of multiple universes there is a Pope Huguenot dispensing blessings as we speak

The only 'alien life' that anthropogenic religions believe in, is a God whose whole existence revolves around propelling the trivial pursuits and moral wrangles of mankind to centre stage.


To such vain people, the discovery that alien life was getting on perfectly happily without, for example, the subjugation of women or homosexuals, would come as such a crashing revelation they'd be unlikely to survive it.

Let's hope there isn't any alien life on meteorites for their own sake.


If some scientist squinting down a microscope does discover such lifeforms the EEC will tax them, people like Huguenot will sell them insurance, some idiot will find a way to extend human rights law to them and I'll invent an alien bug spray, marketed to kill 99% of alien lifeforms we haven't even discovered yet.

AS suspected -it appears the evidence is nothing of the sort.


the scientist may well be correct but for the wrong reasons. he may be a nutter.


that doesn't mean that alien life doesn't exist. just that there's no proof yet. a bit like the God question really.

What's your source silverfox?


I suspect that's just the start of the unsubstantiated assertions, obfuscation and denial supported by bogus claims of doubt and personal attacks on the scientists isn't it?


When are you going to wheel out a paediatrician to challenge the cosmologists?

Source is the scientific community as reported in The Times today. no point in me posting link for you as you have to pay to read it.


Anyway, you've only got to look at the picture to see it looks as if the scientist sneezed snot on the sample.

"Anyway, you've only got to look at the picture to see it looks as if the scientist sneezed snot on the sample."


Ha ha, I forgot this, it's YOU. I remember this from the climate change denial thread - you're a better scientist than all these academic types, down to your famous gut feel.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • It's a bit simplistic blaming cats for the decline in bird populations, it's human activity as a whole in particular land management and farming practices.  Climate change no doubt is beginning to damage numbers, the changes in the season are already creating issues with the food not being around at the right time in the nesting season.  That said our domestic cats are an introduced species, so bird predation on birds is not natural; the number of indigenous wild cats in the days gone past would have been pretty small and tiny now down to a few 100 in Scotland. That said many urban birds are semi domesticated as they rely so much on people to feed them, and some such as goldfinches are doing very well.  And I have never seen an urban cat with a dead bird, mice - yes. An article from the Natural History Museum on bird decline https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2023/may/britain-has-lost-73-million-birds-over-the-last-50-years.html  
    • Did Young's have a policy of only letting unpleasant couples be licencees? I remember the couple who ran the Clock House. Their son was an arse, as well. New Year's Day, probably 1998/99. Absolutely freezing. Lovely walk through Peckham Rye Park, fancied a pint. They wouldn't let us sit inside with a two year old. We had to sit out in the sleet. Tiny, cold hands. Massive, hot chips. A fortnight of toddler chilblains. I think the landlord was ex Met, if I recall correctly.  
    • Hi everyone, My pet cat, Nido, is lost. He’s a British Shorthair, grey / blue and is an indoor cat. We just moved into the area (East Dulwich, Lordship Lane, near local Sainsbury’s) and had some contractors come do some work in the house. They either left the door or window open and our cat managed to escape. He is absolutely precious and is likely to be scared. Please reach out to 07519665507 if you happen to see him.   Many thanks, Aqsa
    • ❤️❤️❤️ They are my favourite birds! I had never seen any round here before, then I suddenly spotted some in a tree across the  road when I was walking down East Dulwich Grove. I got talking to a passer by as I was gawking at them, and she said they were often around  there. I think she said that a man in a nearby flat fed them, but I may have misremembered that. A cat with a bell comes and sits very still next to  my bird feeders. Once he is there, you can't hear the bell. I don't know whether the birds can still sense that he is there, as I chase him away whenever I see him. I get loads of other cats without bells, who also sit very still waiting for birds 😢 I do like cats, but there is definitely an issue with them and birds. But it's nature, I suppose. The only bird I've definitely seen killed in my garden was a starling, carried off howling piteously  by a bird of prey. I've never seen a starling in the garden since. I used to get loads, years ago.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...