Tag Archive: Secret Science

Look! Up In The Sky!

“Look up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’ a Plane!” No it’s none of those actually! Now the government, after being coerced by the ever growing media attention, finally made a statement. “It’s not a missile, it’s just a plane.” It sure did attract a lot of attention, didn’t it? And a whole lot of theories too!

I wasn’t too surprised to see Dr. Michio Kaku to make all the media rounds. He loves the cameras! You know who he is; that guy that’s always on the Science Channel lately. It was kind of funny to watch him in the morning on the morning talk shows say that it seemed to be a missile and then as the evening news came around he started saying that it was an airplane. I would like to take a look at his cell phone records and see who he talked to!

The fact of the matter is, by the time I get this article posted, this story will be forgotten by the media and thus most people. I don’t know, maybe it was a stunt to promote the new movie Skyline! The studios will stop at nothing to promote a movie these days!

The Gulf Oil Spill & The Gulf Seabed

Even though the residents of the Gulf are still suffering from the oil spill and will likely continue to feel it’s effects for years to come, the Media and thus the world is starting to lose interest. Maybe it’s time to do some reflecting and some rethinking concerning the seriousness of what we’ve seen, or what we yet may see!

First off I’m not a geologist. If you are and you’re reading this, please correct my misunderstandings. Oil, gasses and other liquids we pull from underneath the ground, or “seabed” in this case, must leave a “space”.

Can You Hear It Coming?

A recent comment on one of my good friend Ray Ward’s reports, has encouraged me to communicate with you these following words:

In a recent book, and a film, called The Other Side of Heaven, John H. Groberg tells the story of an elderly Tongan sailor.

It reads: “In Tongan the word hala means road or path, but is incomplete by itself and needs to have a modifier, such as hala uta (path on land) or hala tali (path on sea). I became convinced that many of those old captains were as sure where they were on their sea paths as we are on our land paths. The ocean is home to them and they develop a feel that is hard for us to comprehend. Let me give an example: I remember returning home from a long voyage in very contrary weather with heavy seas, strong winds, and a cloudy, rainy sky. We were out of sight of land all afternoon, all night and into the next morning. I became a little concerned and asked the captain if he knew for sure where we were.