Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
REPPED: This is a review of a video called "The Secret nasa Transmissions: The Smoking Gun." The video is called the most popular underground tape among astronauts, and it claims to show video evidence of aliens in space. There's allegedly some form of intelligent life flying around on the nasa videos.
I decided to take a look at this video because a lot of people were mentioning it, and they knew that I was interested in evidence of life beyond Earth (even if it's just microbial life on Mars). |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Because someone at nasa decided to do the calculations in the English system of measurement rather than the metric system. Funny thing, isn't it, how miles and kilometers don't measure up the same when you're trying to orbit a planet...
So why don't we take some capable people and put them in charge of space exploration? Why don't we offer the job to Burt Rutan, the builder of Spaceship One, the first privately funded craft that has actually reached outer space. This guy knows how to get things done. And his designs actually fly!
Or why don't we invite Jeff Bezos to be in charge of nasa? |
| All of this reminds me of the fiasco that happened when nasa sent the rovers to Mars. When the rovers first got to Mars and started taking pictures, nasa suddenly discovered that, 'Gee! The onboard computer memory is getting full!' For some reason, when you actually take photos, it takes up memory. And after only a couple of days, the rovers were unresponsive because they were constantly rebooting due to the fact that their memories were full. It was as if no one had thought to actually test the rovers here on Earth before launching them into space at a cost of 800 million dollars. |
| Clearly, we have significant quality control problems at nasa. I recall a recent satellite that was supposed to orbit Mars but instead slammed into the red planet and destroyed itself. Why? Because someone at nasa decided to do the calculations in the English system of measurement rather than the metric system. Funny thing, isn't it, how miles and kilometers don't measure up the same when you're trying to orbit a planet...
So why don't we take some capable people and put them in charge of space exploration? |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
I think nasa is withholding a lot of information from the public on many subjects. And I'd love to see all that caught on film, but the Secret nasa Transmissions video is definitely not it.
I believe that a lot of what scientists say today about the universe is flat wrong. For example, scientists don't really have a good understanding of what comets are made of. They don't even know what the Earth is made of, or the sun. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Ever since Bush appointed nasa administrator Michael Griffin to the head post in 2005, NASA's scientific reputation has nosedived into the ground faster than a poorly programmed Mars orbiter. The question on everybody's mind is, simply: What the heck happened to nasa? And why is the agency's top bureaucrat now officially denying that global warming is a problem? |
| This left all the other nasa scientists gasping for air and e-mail blasting their resumes out to private-sector institutions that still remember what "scientific thinking" really means.
NASA is also the organization that launched the twin robot rovers to Mars, also at a cost of several hundred million dollars. Before the launch, nasa didn't bother to test the robots to see if they could take pictures without overloading their memory and constantly rebooting. |
| It's true: In a recorded interview that aired on National Public Radio a few weeks ago, nasa head Michael Griffin actually said, on the air, that it was arrogant and unfair to believe that global warming was a problem that needed solving. This left all the other nasa scientists gasping for air and e-mail blasting their resumes out to private-sector institutions that still remember what "scientific thinking" really means.
NASA is also the organization that launched the twin robot rovers to Mars, also at a cost of several hundred million dollars. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
So, you may find that many of the people who believe in the secret nasa transmissions video are some of the same people that I might tend to agree with on many subjects, but not on this one. I don't see a single thing in this entire video (and I've watched it twice) that is moving in any way that couldn't be explained by the basic physics of common particles. You know, some of this could just be ice crystals. It could be the urine dumps outside the space capsules, it could be space dust, or it could be debris from the capsules. |
| A lot of people who've read my work may be surprised by this personal assessment of the secret nasa transmissions video. They might think, "What happened to Mike? I thought he believed in alternative theories?" I do believe in many alternative theories, but I arrived at them all through a process of skepticism. I believe that there is microbial life on Mars right now. There's no question in my mind that there is intelligent life in the universe far beyond what we know about today. I believe in the Drake equation. |
| And when I view this secret nasa transmissions video, I don't see anything resembling alien life or UFOs, I just see a bunch of space dust, floating crystals, lens effects and camera zooms that are grossly misinterpreted as showing piloted alien spacecraft. And this is from a guy who believes, beyond any doubt, that there is extraterrestrial life beyond planet Earth. It's out there, but as far as I can tell, it's not on this video. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
The question on everybody's mind is, simply: What the heck happened to nasa? And why is the agency's top bureaucrat now officially denying that global warming is a problem?
It's true: In a recorded interview that aired on National Public Radio a few weeks ago, nasa head Michael Griffin actually said, on the air, that it was arrogant and unfair to believe that global warming was a problem that needed solving. This left all the other nasa scientists gasping for air and e-mail blasting their resumes out to private-sector institutions that still remember what "scientific thinking" really means. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Scientists punished for "alternative" views on gravity
Speaking of nasa, a few outspoken nasa scientists are now being punished for going public with their own views on gravity. Claiming that gravity both exists and is very healthful for the human skeletal system, one nasa scientist has already been publicly admonished and reassigned to studying mosquito feces. "The voicing of unproven personal opinions about gravity will not be tolerated," explained the head of nasa as he stomped his foot on the ground. "Scientists must learn to confine their ideas to those that are officially recognized. |
| In preparation for this resettlement plan, nasa is reportedly working hard on figuring out how to launch people into outer space without exploding them.
Scientists punished for "alternative" views on gravity
Speaking of nasa, a few outspoken nasa scientists are now being punished for going public with their own views on gravity. Claiming that gravity both exists and is very healthful for the human skeletal system, one nasa scientist has already been publicly admonished and reassigned to studying mosquito feces. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
I think nasa should call all their launches 'Beta' launches. 'Today we're having a beta launch of the Mars rover. And if this one actually works, we may have an official launch many years later. But we won't actually test the spacecraft until it gets to Mars. That's when we'll boot it up for the first time and see if it can manage to store digital images and send them back to Earth.'
Come on, folks. This isn't rocket science. Okay, actually it IS rocket science, but these people are supposed to be the smartest geniuses on the planet. |
| When the rovers first got to Mars and started taking pictures, nasa suddenly discovered that, 'Gee! The onboard computer memory is getting full!' For some reason, when you actually take photos, it takes up memory. And after only a couple of days, the rovers were unresponsive because they were constantly rebooting due to the fact that their memories were full. It was as if no one had thought to actually test the rovers here on Earth before launching them into space at a cost of 800 million dollars.
So I have a question. |
| I'm not saying that I could do a better job at it, but then again, I'm not running nasa. If I were, you can bet I'd have one policy firmly in place: test the hardware before launch day, not after. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
There's allegedly some form of intelligent life flying around on the nasa videos.
I decided to take a look at this video because a lot of people were mentioning it, and they knew that I was interested in evidence of life beyond Earth (even if it's just microbial life on Mars). While it's true that I am curious about things out that run counter to the mainstream, I do not automatically believe those things. In fact, I'm skeptical of everything I hear, see or view. |
Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts |
The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) was set up as a joint project by the European Space Agency and nasa to study the effect of the sun on the Earth. For more information, see http://sohowww.nascom. nasa.gov/. For other aspects of space weather, including charts of geomagnetic activity, see http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/spaceweather/. This website includes useful charts on geomagnetic activity, solar wind, and high-energy proton and X-ray flux.
All geomagnetic activity is measured on a K index, with 0 being the most quiet and 9 the most turbulent. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
NASA-tested aeroponic technology" - Maybe nasa tested the technology, but what were the results of those tests? They sure don't use these on the space shuttle.
I don't know about you, but calling a plastic lid a "mini greenhouse" seems like a stretch. By the same definition, a soda cup with a plastic lid might also be called a "mini greenhouse." And calling a tub of water with a lid an, "aeroponic optimizing chamber" is laughable. It's not even air-tight! Furthermore, claiming it's "oxygenated" is no different than claiming the air in your living room is "oxygenated. |
Bruce H. Lipton See book keywords and concepts |
The rovers have antennas ("receptors") that are tuned to receive information broadcasts by a human being in the form of a nasa controller. The Earth-bound controller actually sends information that animates the Mariner on Mars. But the information is not a one-way street. The nasa controller also learns from the lander, because the vehicle transmits information about its Mars experiences back to Earth. The nasa controller interprets the information about the lander's experiences and then applies that new awareness to better navigate the Martian terrain. |
Lynne Mctaggart See book keywords and concepts |
No one was prepared to take the drawing seriously, until the nasa mission revealed that Jupiter indeed had a ring at the time.12
Swann's experiment demonstrated that no individual needed to be present and also that humans could, in effect, 'see' or gain access to information at virtually any distance ?something that Ed Mitchell had also found with his card tests when traveling to and from the moon.
Puthoff and Targ wanted to create a scientific protocol for remote viewing. Gradually they moved away from coordinates to places. |
| On one occasion, the traveler intended to visit the Saturn moon rocket at the nasa Space Center in Houston, Texas. The remote viewer, meanwhile, 'saw' an indoor scene where the traveler was playing on the floor with a group of puppies. But that same evening, the traveler (who knew, nothing of the remote viewer's impressions) visited a friend's home, where he did indeed play with a litter of newborn puppies, one of which he was prompted to take home with him.
The remote viewers even picked up information about events or scenes that had distracted their travelers from their main targets. |
| CHAPTER TWELVE
The Zero Point Age in a drab little corner classroom at the UK's University of Sussex on a frosty day in January 2001, a group of sixty scientists from ten countries had crowded together to try to work out exactly how they were going to fly 20 trillion miles into deep space. nasa had had a few Breakthrough Propulsion Physics workshops in America and this was to be the international equivalent: one of the first independent workshops ever held on propulsion. |
| Within the next two years he left nasa when the last three lunar flights were canceled for lack of funds, and that was when the real journey began. Exploring inner space would prove infinitely longer and more difficult than landing on the moon or searching out Cone Crater.
His little experiment with ESP was successful, suggesting that some form of communication defying all logic had taken place. Ed hadn't been able to do all six experiments as planned and it took some time to match the four he'd managed with the six sessions of guessing which had been conducted on earth. |
Dan Buettner See book keywords and concepts |
In the basement of the Children's Hospital Pavilion, the world's first hospital-based proton radiation treatment system treats about 160 patients five days a week (many for brain or prostate cancer) and provides research for nasa scientists. Down the hall is a wall covered with pictures of happy, healthy children. Through the pioneering work of Dr. Leonard Bailey, a few hundred of the United States' infant heart transplants have occurred at LLUMC. |
Bill Sardi See book keywords and concepts |
NASA's space exploration budget. A 2001 initiative only called for policymakers to streamline and accelerate approval of more and more ineffective drugs. Meanwhile, effective cancer prevention programs are almost nonexistent. Organizations intended to fight cancer also deserve some criticism. For the most part, donations to cancer treatment groups only fill the bank accounts of probably what are the wealthiest of disease clubs. It has been said there are so many people employed in the cancer industry that a bona fide cure would produce an unacceptable amount of unemployment. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Given all the hype surrounding this product, and the cool-sounding nasa comparisons, I was strongly disappointed to discover what was really under the hood. Sure, retailers can claim it's an aeroponic device, but is it really aeroponic, or is it more of a hydroponic device? Let's take a look at the definitions of both hydroponic and aeroponic devices to find out.
Hydroponic devices
I have considerable experience in both hydroponic gardening and aeroponic gardening, and I've owned and operated several such units over the years. |