I especially appreciated the Stearman and helicopter chase scenes at the end!Reminds me of Capricorn One, which IIRC featured O.J. Simpson. So bonus conspiracy connections there!
The Space Shuttle main engines were fueled with deconstructed water.OK, I should have said "fueled by" ...
My former barber would go on at length about how the entire world was controlled by a secret cabal with the Rothschild family at the top... Freemasons, bankers, FEMA, you name it and "they" were in on it. I wanted to engage, or at least ask him why he and I were apparently the only ones not in on the whole deal, but you know -- I look bad in a bowl cut.
Seems like people are conflating "myth" with "conspiracy theory."
There is an abundance of evidence that points towards collusion.
They don’t. They beat the air into submission.
Totally relevant, because the people in Washington are in a conspiracy to conflate myth with reality.Seems like people are conflating "myth" with "conspiracy theory."
What did I just attempt to read?All the answers you need are right here: https://timecube.2enp.com/
Nauga,
who wonders what day it is.
This sounds like a Bernoulli vs Newton argument.nah - helicopters are so ugly, the earth repels them.
My friends parents growing up, most of my teachers in school, many of my bosees, local (especially) and higher level governments, all advertisers and big businesses adhere to this reasoning. Is it any wonder that after a lifetime of being subjected to people who get you do do what they want you to do by "backward engineering" the "facts" to fit their preconceived notions, some people-- especially those more limited than you or I -- believe that everything, or at least everything they haven't personally experienced is the same?Justified that made up science was OK as long as the result was good... ends justify the means logic...
Don't worry 'The Flying Spaghetti Monster' told me to just put a colander on my head and forget I clicked the link...What did I just attempt to read?
I realize that this is a conspiracy thread, but the theory was proposed by someone other than Sagan:I see it like a function generator. Inputs are: noise, imagination, fears, dreams, historical events, scientific evidence, random observations. Filters are distortion, more noise, personal biases. Then you set it to create whatever you want: myth, religion, manifesto, conspiracy theory, scientific proof, rumor, trend. Feed a little bit of the output back to the input. Like a 1970's analog synth. But it never sounds as good as a Hammond B3.
Changing my answer on favorite conspiracy theory. Nuclear Winter. It's not a theory, from what I understand Carl Sagan admitted in later life that he just made it up. The math wasn't right, and subsequent events have proven it silly, but he justified that made up science was OK as long as the result was good. For a relatively bright guy to fall for ends justify the means logic should be surprising, but it's not.
Good conspiracy theories, like any good lie, have a little bit of truth in them.
You are referring to the conspiracy to mislead people on how lift is created?This sounds like a Bernoulli vs Newton argument.
JFK junior is back
Changing my answer on favorite conspiracy theory. Nuclear Winter. It's not a theory, from what I understand Carl Sagan admitted in later life that he just made it up. The math wasn't right, and subsequent events have proven it silly, but he justified that made up science was OK as long as the result was good.
Only when one is ready will the truth be made clear.What did I just attempt to read?
...
I believe the larger conclusion, that humanity really should avoid nuclear war, still holds up pretty well.
Of that list, the only one that requires replication of results is scientific evidence.I see it like a function generator. Inputs are: noise, imagination, fears, dreams, historical events, scientific evidence, random observations....
It wasn't so much that he made it up. There was a lot of math and computer modeling behind the nuclear winter idea that Sagan and colleagues proposed. I was working in the next building over at the time, and so was exposed to some of it when the debate went public. But you are correct, the math wasn't right. That old "Garbage In => Garbage Out" problem. The models contained some bad assumptions, with the biggest gaffe being failure to account for the temperature buffering effects of the oceans. The models were, as we say, directionally correct, but the effects would almost certainly be less dire than was predicted back in the '80s.
I believe the larger conclusion, that humanity really should avoid nuclear war, still holds up pretty well.
Do you have evidence that was done? The The Iraqi oil well calculations were somewhat flawed as a comparison because that soot didn't go into the stratosphere, and it was only thick smoke locally (see the reference cited in my earlier reply to you). Mt. Pinatubo would be a better example, although I feel the volcanic gasses are different than that from what would result from a nuclear explosion.But we don't need fake science to make that statement. I worked with a group that does plume modeling for "normal" particulate emissions around things like power plants. From them, the Iraqi oil well fires put that to bed. When scientists steer their results to fit the answers they want, rather than what the data suggests, it leads people to mistrust the entire scientific community, believing it to be political...because in this case it was. This wasn't the only over hyped thing from the scientific community in the 80's, and I believe it resulted in a decent part of a generation viewing scientists as just another type of marketing executive.
Perhaps I misunderstand what you mean here. The Iraqi fires and any modeling thereof came almost a decade after the nuclear winter modeling…so it’s not like Sagan and colleagues chose to ignore those results.But we don't need fake science to make that statement. I worked with a group that does plume modeling for "normal" particulate emissions around things like power plants. From them, the Iraqi oil well fires put that to bed.
Do you have evidence that was done? The The Iraqi oil well calculations were somewhat flawed as a comparison because that soot didn't go into the stratosphere, and it was only thick smoke locally (see the reference cited in my earlier reply to you). Mt. Pinatubo would be a better example, although I feel the volcanic gasses are different than that from what would result from a nuclear explosion.
https://climate.envsci.rutgers.edu/pdf/RobockNW2006JD008235.pdf
Perhaps I misunderstand what you mean here. The Iraqi fires and any modeling thereof came almost a decade after the nuclear winter modeling…so it’s not like Sagan and colleagues chose to ignore those results.
Surface particles and particles lofted very high up into the atmosphere don't necessarily mean the same effects. I think that is the reasoning behind the difference between any possible nuclear winter (or volcanic winter) vs a ground based fire. Millions of acres are burning across Siberia every year and that does not seem make a big difference, yet some volcanic eruptions in the past have caused a significant (temporary) climate shift.Correct. My point being that the Iraqi fires were the nails in the coffin in the theory, according to the people I know in that field.