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Sunday, July 27, 2008

Is there life in the universe ?

This has often been a very touch question and issue. Some christians say God did not specifically mention so its an open topic, while others say we are the only one in the universe. Sometimes i wonder how big actually is the universe ? What is beyond the universe ? If i can be on a spaceship to travel the galaxy, i would certanly jump at the chance.

Apparently Nasa says that there is ailen lifeform... but how true is it? Below is an article for your viewing pleasure



Hollywood, not NASA, reveals alien truth
By Geoff Shearer
July 28, 2008 09:25am
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''THE craft was triangular in shape and had at least three white lights that alternated indiscernibly and perhaps one light in the middle.
"I know it was triangular because it would block out the stars that were illuminated behind it. "It moved very slowly and made absolutely no sound and seemed to move in any direction in an indetectable fashion. "It seemed to be 'searching' or 'surveying' the area around our land ..." That report was posted by Janet Hahn on ufoevidence.org as her description of what she saw in the sky over Port Angeles, Washington, US, in September 1990. Let's take her report - one of thousands of similar unsubstantiated reports that are available on the web - as truth. The whole truth. Nothing but that same truth Mulder and Scully were looking for. UFOs and aliens exist. And we can make that leap - with certitude now - because former NASA astronaut Dr Edgar Mitchell says it is so. The Apollo 14 moonwalker announced late last week that not only do aliens exist but they have visited Earth many times, for cups of tea and cake and a quick tour of the Smithsonian, one assumes, and governments have been covering it up for decades. Now, mind you, this is the same moonwalker who dabbled in a few private extra-sensory perception experiments with his friends back on Earth during the Apollo 14 flight. Not sure what you'd say - or telepathise, for that matter - from up there. "Could you check if I left the oven on?" or "I'm thinking cheese, I'm thinking cheese ..." But there you go. Anyway, let's accept aliens are here - Janet saw them and Edgar says it's true. The question then begs: why haven't we been told before? The answer, remarkably, is even simpler than the long-held suspicion that the US Government thought we'd panic and go running around gibbering, pulling at our eye sockets and using it as an excuse for criminal acts. The answer lies in a far more powerful force than the US Government - it lies in Hollywood. For if we knew that aliens were here and we knew what they looked like, it would rip the forks out of the nighties of a plethora of celluloid legends. We'd all know that aliens don't punch their way out of your chest like a mutant sock-puppet as they do in Alien. Nor would we find the depictions in Men In Black all that humorous. On your bike, ET, we've got the real thing at our local zoo. Gone too would be much of the point and a lot of the fun of Star Wars, Star Trek and Doctor Who. It would be like making films about September 11. They can never be as powerful as the news footage of the actual event. And films such as Tim Burton's Mars Attacks, which ridiculed alien life forms on Earth, would be legal minefields if a Martian, now a resident Earthian, was to bring a racism claim against Burton in the courts. Best for Hollywood to keep a lid on the whole thing - even throwing a few red herrings into play such as Roswell to keep both the sceptics and the believers confused. Keep the alien hidden, downtrodden, enslaved and watch the box office continue to pay. Oh, the inhumanity of it all. But now that Edgar has opened the door on the closed encounters, things are beginning to unravel. Even the Vatican's got a whiff of what was on the wind. The Pope's chief astronomer - probably sparked into action by the Mars landing, quite literally, attempting to dig up the dirt on extraterrestrial life - came out last month to say the search for other beings does not necessarily contradict a belief in God. "Just as there are a plethora of creatures on Earth, there could be others, equally intelligent, created by God," said Jesuit priest Jose Gabriel Funes, who mans the Vatican's space observatory near Rome. And, he reckons, some aliens may even be innocent of original sin. All of which sounded like the Vatican was priming us for something. Or hedging some bets of some kind. Either way it was a radical departure from the "we're the only ones" spiel of previous centuries. If we accept the overwhelming evidence (from Janet and Edgar and their mates) that aliens exist and the overwhelming conspiratorial conclusions as outlined to why their presence on Earth is kept quiet, why then do we continue to send probes into space? Is that just another part of the ploy? Another red herring? Really, such pretence is a sad reflection on humankind. The greatest thing that has happened to this planet - we receive visitors from another world - and what do we, as a human race, do? We go "shuuusssh, don't tell anyone, it'll stuff our economy and Nicole Kidman will be out of a job".
Shame, shame, shame. It leaves you then with that last line in Monty Python's Galaxy Song from The Meaning Of Life which so aptly sums up the situation: "And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space ... 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth."

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