Originally posted by: DrPizza
	
	
		
		
			Originally posted by: SlickSnake
	
	
		
		
			Originally posted by: SuperjetMatt
You don't respond to anything in a reasonable manner.
Prove me wrong.  Show us how the any particle accelerator research has ever been weaponized?
Show us how CERN is a military experiment?
Once we move past those basics, perhaps we can get you to address the issues of Hawking Radiation on extremely small gravitational singularities.
		
		
	 
DOOMSDAY FEARS SPARK LAWSUIT
Obviously some people are worried enough about it to sue over it. 
I am not your physics professor. I posted an article you either agree with, or disagree with. Obviously most posters here disagree with it, including myself. I made my feelings quite clear on the matter. I do not have to repeat myself in every post. Read the entire thread. 
I also do not have to respond to every poster who cuts and pastes google searches about it that I either A: Agree with or B: Know nothing about. 
If someone posts a funny comment, I also have every right to respond to it, or not. I obviously don't carry a stick up my ass as far as most of you obviously do. That's a personal problem you have to deal with, not me.
		
 
		
	 
Amusingly, you're accusing the people in here of relying on Google for all their information.  I don't think such an accusation is fair, nor do I think that being able to find(and understand) information found on google is necessarily a bad thing.     However, one thing is certain (and you admitted such) - you yourself are relying on Google.   However, there appears to be one fundamental difference between you and the rest of us:  those that do use Google at least read the articles.   You apparently seem to get no further than the title of the article. 
Case in point:  the article you linked to in the above quoted post.  It essentially says "the critics who filed this lawsuit are fearmongering morons."  Nice job though, linking to an article that weakens your own position (as if it had any strength to start with.)  Additionally, if you read the article in the OP objectively, it appears that the author is biased and is trying hard to make the case that there really is some level of danger.   Fortunately, we are told 
	
	
		
		
			"A crusade against it is a danger,? he said of the new collider. ?It would not be based on rational argument.?
		
		
	 
- a quote from the physics Nobel winner mentioned in the article.   Let me translate for you.  He's saying that YOUR little crusade, SlickSnake, is irrational.   But, you're right, at least he did tell the folks at CERN 'don't take this too lightly, give it serious consideration.'   He didn't say "oh nooooes!  The earth is gonna blow up!"  Perhaps you're misinterpreting the title "Might a Laboratory Experiment Destroy Planet Earth" as "the LHC might destroy the earth!"  He didn't say that.
It's funny though - you seem to think less of someone capable of doing research on Google - perhaps it's because of your own inability to read and grasp the content that can be found.   Or perhaps it's because you lack the skill to actually use Google to find scholarly, peer reviewed articles on the subject (you found a link to an msnbc article... lol.   Great job doing some google research.)  Nonetheless, Google often serves my needs just fine for learning about some of the most recent research done.  
Here are a couple better articles to read, some of which have been peer reviewed and accepted:
peer reviewed
another
read this one; good articlejust at a glance, you might want to check out pages 15-16
[L = Not a doomsday article; simply about how easy it will be to discriminate BH's]http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0801/0801.3281v1.pdf[/L]
someone mentioned magnetic monopoles - article on the search for them
Unfortunately, I couldn't find much crap about there being a "danger", except at sites for whom sensationalism sells (i.e. MSNBC, CNN, etc.).   I did find this: 
	
	
		
		
			Experiments at the Brookhaven National Laboratory will study collisions between gold nuclei at unprecedented energies. The concern has been voiced that ?strangelets? ? hypothetical products of these collisions ? may trigger the destruction of our planet. We show how naturally occurring heavy-ion collisions can be used to derive a safe and stringent upper bound on the risk incurred in running these experiments.
		
		
	 
 from 
here  It's from Physics Letters B, Volue 470, Issues 1-4 from way back in Dec 1999.   You can purchase it for $31.50 if you're really that concerned about the topic.  However, looks to me like the intent of your thread is more about fearmongering and seeing how much of a reaction you can get out of the pro-science people in this forum.  Thus, I doubt you're genuinely interested in the article.
Here's another journal article: 
here 
	
	
		
		
			We discuss speculative disaster scenarios inspired by hypothetical new fundamental processes that might occur in high energy relativistic heavy ion collisions... we find that they [chances of destruction] are absurdly small... Given minimal physical assumptions the continued existence of the Moon, in the form we know it, despite billions of years of cosmic ray exposure, provides powerful empirical evidence against the possibility of dangerous strangelet production.
		
		
	 
	
	
		
		
			Legitimate scientists say such concerns are nonsense. However, as science columnist Allan Boyle points out, for real scientists to say  something is absolutely impossible doesn't come easy. Some scientists find it difficult to state categorically that such-and-such a theoretical catastrophe has no chance of happening. 
So critics seize on a statement akin to "OK, there is a one in 10 trillion chance that we could blow up the Earth." In the real world, common sense is on the side of the scientists.
		
		
	 
And, while I'm at it, one last thing:  the moron bringing this lawsuit also brought the same lawsuit against the RHIC.   His familiarity with court procedings doesn't stop there though; he's been indicted on charges of first-degree identity theft and attempted first-degree theft related to botanical gardens in Hawaii.  There are already nearly a million dollars in civil judgements against him, his wife, and two others in the case. 
source  Sounds to me like the guy is a scum bag.  "Self-proclaimed physicist."  Ha!
Perhaps next time you rely on Google to battle the rest of us "relying on Google", you can research more thoroughly and not use such dubious sources to support your side of the argument.   Then again, without such sources, you actually don't have any support for your side of the argument.