- Jun 30, 2004
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Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
but is this guy crazy or what?
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
but is this guy crazy or what?
No, he is not crazy.
Originally posted by: Shockwave
Should I get my tinfoil hat before reading this??
Originally posted by: Shockwave
Should I get my tinfoil hat before reading this??
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
but is this guy crazy or what?
No, he is not crazy.
yeah it sounds believable, but he doesn't give any real evidence.... just a bunch of opinions.
It takes even more if there are five or six heavy people aboard in those space suits and bulky shoes.
If it takes that much power to raise a rocket, then according to Newton, the same amount of force is being exerted on the earth. Considering the earth's bulk, one lift-off may not have much effect, but think how many launches there are from Cape Kennedy every year and assume that each launch pushes the planet a few feet out of its normal orbit. In the course of a decade, that could amount to a major displacement, enough to have a major effect on the earth's climate.
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
but is this guy crazy or what?
No, he is not crazy.
yeah it sounds believable, but he doesn't give any real evidence.... just a bunch of opinions.
You have to do a little research yourself. Mainly international weather archives. Typically after every shuttle launch, within 2-3 days there is a regional weather change. This regional weather change follows the shuttle's trajectory as it leaves our atmosphere.
The same effect does not occur on reentry. Maybe it the the rapid expansion of the gases that thrust the shuttle out of the atmosphere.
Originally posted by: Eli
It takes even more if there are five or six heavy people aboard in those space suits and bulky shoes.
LMFAO!
If it takes that much power to raise a rocket, then according to Newton, the same amount of force is being exerted on the earth. Considering the earth's bulk, one lift-off may not have much effect, but think how many launches there are from Cape Kennedy every year and assume that each launch pushes the planet a few feet out of its normal orbit. In the course of a decade, that could amount to a major displacement, enough to have a major effect on the earth's climate.
What a crock of sh!t.
I'm no physicist, but when the shuttle lifts off ... it isn't exerting force against the planet, is it?
And there's no way in fsck that it "pushes the planet a few feet out of its normal orbit" ... LMAO! That's laughable.
Originally posted by: Drekce
Maybe if we got everyone on earth to stand on the opposite side from where the shuttles take off we could "push" the planet back into its original position!
Considering the earth's bulk, one lift-off may not have much effect, but think how many launches there are from Cape Kennedy every year and assume that each launch pushes the planet a few feet out of its normal orbit
Originally posted by: Descartes
Considering the earth's bulk, one lift-off may not have much effect, but think how many launches there are from Cape Kennedy every year and assume that each launch pushes the planet a few feet out of its normal orbit
Exactly.
Originally posted by: XZeroII
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
Originally posted by: rudder
Originally posted by: ABitTooSpicy
but is this guy crazy or what?
No, he is not crazy.
yeah it sounds believable, but he doesn't give any real evidence.... just a bunch of opinions.
You have to do a little research yourself. Mainly international weather archives. Typically after every shuttle launch, within 2-3 days there is a regional weather change. This regional weather change follows the shuttle's trajectory as it leaves our atmosphere.
The same effect does not occur on reentry. Maybe it the the rapid expansion of the gases that thrust the shuttle out of the atmosphere.
But each launch is definately not causing the earth to move 2-3 feet off it's orbit.