Login Register






Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average


What do you think about the past and future? filter_list
Author
Message
RE: What do you think about the past and future? #21
Plays of Shakespeare.......Life is not a Tempest nor a Midsummer night's dream but is a Comedy of errors so you live it As you like it.

[+] 1 user Likes Bluelemon's post
Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #22
On August 15, 1975, a signal was received at the “Big Ear” observatory at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. This was known as the “WOW” signal, owing to the word “WOW” being written on a printout of the signal received. The public was told that 6 bytes of information were received by the telescope and that after exhaustive off-axis and off-frequency searches, no repetition of the non-random signal could be found. This is simply false.

The signal received at Ohio State, represented as signal-to-noise ratio, was “6EQUJ5.” The reason why the dish operator was stunned by this was not because this data was non-random; those letters are quite random. The reason why this was shocking was because at the time, it was the control password for their radio telescope, needed for system access and to be able to reposition the telescope. At the time, it was considered a very secure password. The odds of noise from deep space coinciding with this password was essentially zero.

The radio telescope was part of the SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) and the simple fact was, there was no possibility that aliens would have known what the password was for their radio telescope. The first theory was that a prank was being played by someone working at the observatory. Before the operator of the dish could get off the phone with their supervisor, more data began streaming in.

There was one other possibility: That human beings in the future sent the message deliberately with the intention assuring that the operators pay attention to it. This possibility was confirmed when, just moments later, the radio telescope received, “ELVIS DIES TOMORROW.” Sure enough, on August 16, 1975, news broke that The King of Rock and Roll had perished. (These events were the true reason for the multitude of conspiracy theories concerning Elvis, some of which were promoted at request of the U.S. Government in order to discredit anyone telling the story I am now describing.)

Before long, officers of the Central Intelligence Agency arrived at Ohio State University to gather information and swear the staff to secrecy. As this was transpiring, the telescope continued to receive data. The data included instructions for building a neutrino detector, something which had never been done before, along with instructions to place the detector deep under the Earth. The events happening from 1975 onward became the inspiration for the novel Contact, with Carl Sagan having knowledge of the events of August 15, 1975.

Over the next several years, DARPA worked in secret to develop the first neutrino detector, which had/have the exclusive purpose of facilitating receipt of communications from the future. When knowledge of neutrino detectors went public, they were assigned other stated applications. It was only thanks to the existence of a sufficiently sophisticated tachyon trajectory system on the front end of the previous timeline that a radio telescope not meant for receiving neutrinos was able to detect the signal, since it’s a fact of physics that sufficiently intense convergences of neutrinos lead to the creation of electrons, something which the radio telescope was indeed very sensitive to.

The intention of the people sending the message was to give the United States a technical and strategic advantage they would not have otherwise had. The message was sent by an individual within the conquered United States in 2072, a number of years after the U.S. had been defeated by the People’s Republic of China in a calamitous war. After the end of that war, China had developed the technology to communicate with the past, and were actively using that technology to further oppress people around the world.

Tachyon generation requires extremely fine beam control of neutrinos passed within an atomic width of a horizontally-oriented skyrmion lattice. Near-collisions with magnetons (quantized magnetism emitted from the rotating magnetic fields that are skyrmions) increase the spin of neutrinos. The more magnetons skimmed by the neutrinos fired, the faster the spin, and the faster the spin, the more the neutrinos can resist re-accumulation of their Higgs field while in temporal transit after the mass negation/magneton collision phase. Neutrinos, already having infinitesimally low mass, may be bestowed with NEGATIVE mass through a collision with a magneton. Magneton collision is the necessary second phase of tachyon generation. In this way, a message may be sent to a very specific set of space-time coordinates; by controlling lattice density, length, and proximity to beam. This level of precision was only made possible by launching a tachyonic trajectory system satellite into orbit of the Earth, where there is absolutely zero vibration energy to skew the beam. This is a system that can only function at this level of precision in orbit as even microchip fabrication plants built upon giant springs allow for some movement. Although the technology can work with ground-based emitters, if one wishes to hit a radio telescope that is oriented toward the sky and do so from 97 years in the future with a target time frame of only a few hours, it is best to do so from space, where targeting accuracy can be maximized.

The message, it seems, was only sent because an American had been able to hack into China’s most secure facility and hijack their tachyonic trajectory system.

Although the sender of the message assured 1975 that no universe-ending paradox would result from the dispatch of information and any future use of the American device, the Americans in charge of the program were nevertheless superstitious about this possibility. As such, regulations were established mandating that anyone working on the program may not, without escort, leave the compound where the neutrino detector was placed.

The first-generation detector built by DARPA was operated in a secure facility at ground level for about 5 years until a place of sufficient depth within the borders of the United States could be identified and construction could be completed. The second-deepest cave in America, discovered in 1987, is the Lechuguilla cave, part of the Carlsbad Caverns cave system, which happens to enjoy the protection of the National Park Service and happens to be one of the most remote of the national parks. The cave’s depth was determined to be 1200 feet, and has been closed to the public for the past 34 years for “safety reasons.” Wouldn’t want anyone to fall down that hole!

John Westbrook was an employee of this program. After many years of wanting to enter retirement and fearing that former employees are routinely killed, he decided not to return from a scheduled outing. This fact, combined with his fluency in Mandarin, led his superiors to assume he was defecting to China, when, after using LNSS mainframes to mine nearly one million dollars in Bitcoin, paid a local for a used automobile using the cryptocurrency, which would have been the only form of tender he had access to as LNSS staff are not permitted to have money or personal vehicles; their pay is deposited to savings accounts they have no access to. Twice-annual outings, usually to Boulder, are the only respite from the desert the employees are allowed, and these are chaperoned trips using government vehicles.

Still, to this day, people that have worked at the LNSS labs (a dedicated couple dozen of souls) have routinely disappeared after divulging any related information to the project. Even to the point of the NSA pursuing them across international borders and overseas as is the case of John.
ed25519/0x21AB6B6A6CB2C337
C87D87466FD205945CF10A3821AB6B6A6CB2C337

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #23
Past is over, can't do anything about it.
Can't predict the future as well.
Just living the present.

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #24
Past gives us courage and it protect us. Future depends on how we live in the present.

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #25
Past is something which has gone by. It might have taught you lot of lessons and given you enough experience to confidently face the unpredictable future. Everyone hopes for a good or at least a better future. But only time can reveal how the future will turn out to be.

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #26
the past is trash and we have to forget it. The future is bright and always will be!!

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #27
Learn from the past and prepare for the future.😁

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #28
I used to think always that people in the past have worked very hard since there were no technology back then. Travel food clothes lifestyle were all different. But now for us everything is just a click away. So imagine how future would be🤩

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #29
my tought about those two,
both doesnt exist right now

Reply

RE: What do you think about the past and future? #30
You can predict the future with scary accuracy if you understand the past enough

Reply







Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)