SPACE SCIENCE
July 12, 2016 at 8:33 pm
(This post was last modified: July 13, 2016 at 4:22 am by Alex K.)
This page deserves to be Stickie. I'mmma poud your imaginations pussy.
Let's start with PLANET X:
the Nebulaa, or what ever - Nibiru thing, they call it.
Let us evaluate the situation!
If Nibiru was believed to be a planet orbiting our sun, perhaps intertwined with the binary star system outside our solar system -
which as a star system would be required to be hurling through space with the sun if they were moving, and not in some celestial balance. -
and it had been near earth before,
bright as a star,
then would it not be a Planet we can actually associate with that event now today?
Seeing as we are quite aware of our immediate place in space?
Pluto.
When I was in grade 7, I said straight up,
"we have never seen or studied Pluto orbit earth. therefor we can't call it a planet. maybe it is not."
in grade 8 it was officially declared not a planet.
Pluto's orbit ahs never been observed, but it is clear that it is curving back towards earth sharp enough to indicate it does not orbit the sun in a circle, or elyptical wide enough to assert it has a common reoccurring orbit.
Shine like the Sun bae.
and don't forget to collide with mercury or mars one day., maybe
Nibiru is fun for fact facts because fact is no one knows anything else about Pluto's orbit other than what I have stated. It's clearly curving sharp. and otherwise. where the fuck is it today? Find me that information. and good luck. Lightspeed, buddy. I can't resource it.
Let's start with PLANET X:
the Nebulaa, or what ever - Nibiru thing, they call it.
Let us evaluate the situation!
If Nibiru was believed to be a planet orbiting our sun, perhaps intertwined with the binary star system outside our solar system -
which as a star system would be required to be hurling through space with the sun if they were moving, and not in some celestial balance. -
and it had been near earth before,
bright as a star,
then would it not be a Planet we can actually associate with that event now today?
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Seeing as we are quite aware of our immediate place in space?
Pluto.
When I was in grade 7, I said straight up,
"we have never seen or studied Pluto orbit earth. therefor we can't call it a planet. maybe it is not."
in grade 8 it was officially declared not a planet.
Pluto's orbit ahs never been observed, but it is clear that it is curving back towards earth sharp enough to indicate it does not orbit the sun in a circle, or elyptical wide enough to assert it has a common reoccurring orbit.
Shine like the Sun bae.
and don't forget to collide with mercury or mars one day., maybe
Nibiru is fun for fact facts because fact is no one knows anything else about Pluto's orbit other than what I have stated. It's clearly curving sharp. and otherwise. where the fuck is it today? Find me that information. and good luck. Lightspeed, buddy. I can't resource it.