“Another Hollow OnLine Experience”






         

June 26, 2007

Still Believe in Man Made Global Warming?

Filed under: politics, science, social comment — 1:13 am

2mass_allskyatlas The Milky Way

The Milky Way

“For only a few percent of its 240 million-year orbit around the Milky Way galaxy does our Solar System pass through the path of Sagittarius debris,” Majewski said. “Remarkably, stars from Sagittarius are now raining down onto our present position in the Milky Way. Stars from an alien galaxy are relatively near us. We have to re-think our assumptions about the Milky Way galaxy to account for this contamination.”

http://astsun.astro.virginia.edu/~mfs4n/sgr/

FULL PAPER

June 7, 2007

Is a Powerful Government as Bad as Medieval Organized Religion?

Filed under: politics, science, social comment — 6:04 pm

It certainly appears that way when one looks at curriculum dictated by government.

The following link is evidence of such corruption in the English Physics Curriculum as outlined by Professor Wellington Grey.

“I am a physics teacher. Or, at least I used to be. My subject is still called physics. My pupils will sit an exam and earn a GCSE in physics, but that exam doesn’t cover anything I recognize as physics. Over the past year the UK Department for Education and the AQA board changed the subject…”

LINK

April 1, 2007

Hypothesis: Cause of Global Warming

Filed under: science, updates — 3:04 am

For some time now I have been a strong proponent of the idea that global warming is caused by a decrease in the electro-magnetic field of Earth allowing a greater amount of galactic energy in as we near the galactic equator.

windowslivewriterhypothesiscauseofglobalwarming-28cbwooly2 Hypothesis: Cause of Global Warming

I now propose that what is happening is as we near the galactic equator, the galactic equator is overriding and weakening our electro-magnetic field. As our electro-magnetic field weakens, the atoms that compose the Earth are no longer held in a strong uniformity thus allowing for a greater amount of turbulence. More turbulence equals higher temperatures. Conversely when the magnetic field is strong, temperatures should be cooler as the atoms are held in a less excited state. or not…

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