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#131
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article , Dan wrote:
Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? Space has no bottom, obviously, you heretic. |
#132
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article , Dan wrote:
Tom De Moor wrote: In article , ple says... One does have to consider how man person-hours are spent driving... No, one does not have to. 38,000 deaths are an awful lot, period. About the same number of people in the US commit suicide. Strangely enough 38000 is also roughly identical to the number of peole who die per day in the US... But last I looked this newsgroup was about airplanes, homebuilts etc. Not about carcrashes nor its toll. That's statistics and with that tool it is perfectly proveable that Earth is flat. Tom De Moor I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Would you believe: "talf si htraE eht" ? Actually, according to one well-known story there is a turtle there. *snicker* |
#133
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article , Dan wrote:
george wrote: On Feb 18, 6:39 am, Dan wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? No bottom its turtles - all the way down Egad, an infinity of turtles. Shell, yes. *GRIN* |
#134
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
Robert Bonomi wrote:
In article , Dan wrote: george wrote: On Feb 18, 6:39 am, Dan wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? No bottom its turtles - all the way down Egad, an infinity of turtles. Shell, yes. *GRIN* I have to admit it makes one shell of a story. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#135
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
Steve Hix wrote:
In article , Dan wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? Space has no bottom, obviously, you heretic. OK, now I'm having a problem. The Earth is flat, and I have heard space is curved, those must be some flexible turtles. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#137
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article , Dan wrote:
Steve Hix wrote: In article , Dan wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? Space has no bottom, obviously, you heretic. OK, now I'm having a problem. The Earth is flat, and I have heard space is curved, those must be some flexible turtles. They surf when they can, obviously. |
#138
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article , Dan wrote:
Steve Hix wrote: In article , Dan wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , sisu1a wrote: I have always suspected the Earth is flat. Now what I want to know is what's on the other side. Easy - four elephants standing on a turtle. visual aid... http://controversy.wearscience.com/img450/turtle.gif Obvious heretical teaching there; it shows a tortoise, not the correct turtle swimming though the depths of space. Time to get out the tar and feathers, boys... OK, how deep is the water and what's at the bottom? Space has no bottom, obviously, you heretic. OK, now I'm having a problem. The Earth is flat, and I have heard space is curved, those must be some flexible turtles. Nah. Remember The earth is at the bottom of a gravity well. Now, while it may be a "bottom-less" pit, turtles are admirably suited to brace themselves against the sides of it. As long as it's big enough to reach the side with all four limbs, that is. guffaw |
#139
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If all midair collisions were eliminated...
In article ,
Tom De Moor wrote: It's all rock and roll to me but ... let's get tar and feathers anyway: we'll build some wings with it. Has been done before and the Icarus-family claimed it worked. Might work again! I don't like the risk/reward ratio. If anything is not *exactly* right, you'll be DEAD-alus! |
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