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Alleged 'exotic UFO material' laboratory test results published


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4 hours ago, Hazzard said:

SPOILER ALERT

The specimen's physical properties are consistent with a material of terrestrial origin," the report reads.
 

This is what I posted in goose's thread. Funny how the pro-ETH crowd did not respond, react or retort to what I linked. 🧐

It was this EXACT report. The AARO addendum is attached to this study on their website,

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On to the next sample!

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It must be fun to speculate and invent novel materials with astonishing properties. Red Matter.  Unobtainium.  Dark Matter.  That stuff in Wakanda.  But we know better: science, the dispassionate study of knowledge and reality, tells us what is and isn't possible. 

Okay - spoiler/proviso! - it's not impossible that a certain alloy of magnesium, zinc and bismuth might twist and contort spacetime in a manner that permits instantaneous travel, or unlimited transfer of information, or time-travel, or whatever suits the latest silly plot.  (Or build pyramids or such stuff - you get the idea.)

Not impossible: just extremely unlikely.

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1 hour ago, Tom1200 said:

It must be fun to speculate and invent novel materials with astonishing properties. Red Matter.  Unobtainium.  Dark Matter.  That stuff in Wakanda.  But we know better: science, the dispassionate study of knowledge and reality, tells us what is and isn't possible. 

Okay - spoiler/proviso! - it's not impossible that a certain alloy of magnesium, zinc and bismuth might twist and contort spacetime in a manner that permits instantaneous travel, or unlimited transfer of information, or time-travel, or whatever suits the latest silly plot.  (Or build pyramids or such stuff - you get the idea.)

Not impossible: just extremely unlikely.

Do you have something in mind? Ij terms of the materials you mentioned. It's a good topic for discussion.

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18 hours ago, MrAnderson said:

Do you have something in mind? Ij terms of the materials you mentioned. It's a good topic for discussion.

Sadly, no.

But what little I know about Physics and Materials Science tells me that we're only beginning to scratch the surface of understanding what matter is and how particles interact.

So it would be extremely foolish for me to declare this material that I've never studied can't have unusual properties.

So maybe, possibly, perhaps an alternating electric current at a specific frequency sets up resonance in the metal crystal structure, making it incredibly hard and almost infinitely tough.  Helpful for smashing your way through space debris at light speed.

Or what if light is absorbed, carried half way round the hull then re-emitted.  Hey-presto! you're invisible.

And if you shape Tomium just so it absorbs cosmic rays and redirects them into a jet that accelerates you Warp Factor 12 or blows up the White House in Independence Day.

All I now need to do is test trillions of alloy mixtures of MgZnBi with every conceivable a.c. frequency.  I'll start tomorrow. 

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Not at all surprised it contains bismuth, known for antigravity properties. Interested to see what the
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1 hour ago, Nicolette said:

Not at all surprised it contains bismuth, known for antigravity properties. Interested to see what the

That is simply not true.  Unless of course there's scientific research you know of that has demonstrated this.

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1 hour ago, Nicolette said:

 Interested to see what the

Don’t keep us in suspense 

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49 minutes ago, Trelane said:

That is simply not true.  Unless of course there's scientific research you know of that has demonstrated this.

Woops most of my comment got cut off. But deciding facts aren't true because nobody personally demonstrated concepts to you sounds like narcissism.

What makes you think that your opinion determines reality? 

Simply not true. Unless theres scientific research you know of that has demonstrated this.

 

And I was joking but there is and I don't have time to gather websites to satisfy your lazy expectations, do your own research.

Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties. Try using Google, not me.

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5 minutes ago, Nicolette said:

Woops most of my comment got cut off. But deciding facts aren't true because nobody personally demonstrated concepts to you sounds like narcissism.

What makes you think that your opinion determines reality? 

Simply not true. Unless theres scientific research you know of that has demonstrated this.

 

And I was joking but there is and I don't have time to gather websites to satisfy your lazy expectations, do your own research.

Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties. Try using Google, not me.

It's not my opinion, it's scientific fact. Antimagnetic does not equal antigravity. You should do all kinds of research, that is after a reading comprehension class.

That's why I asked if maybe there was something that had been researched that I was unaware of. 

 

The only thing lazy here are your posts. They are the intellectual equivalent of wet toilet paper. 

 

Edited by Trelane
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14 minutes ago, Nicolette said:

Woops most of my comment got cut off. But deciding facts aren't true because nobody personally demonstrated concepts to you sounds like narcissism.

What makes you think that your opinion determines reality? 

Simply not true. Unless theres scientific research you know of that has demonstrated this.

 

And I was joking but there is and I don't have time to gather websites to satisfy your lazy expectations, do your own research.

Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties. Try using Google, not me.

i agree. it's his opinion. not reality.

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52 minutes ago, Nicolette said:

I don't have time to gather websites to satisfy your lazy expectations, do your own research.

Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties. Try using Google, not me.

I've never heard of this either - genuine 'anti-gravity' is a purely hypothetical concept so I don't think anything has ever been shown to have 'antigravity properties', has it ?

If there's a specific source where you've found this information I'd be interested to see it as well.

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47 minutes ago, Green Devil said:

i agree. it's his opinion. not reality.

Rather than just being contrary to whatever skeptics say on the forum, it would help if you could elaborate on your comments.

If you are agreeing with the quoted comment, then what is your basis for believing that bismuth has anti-gravity properties ?

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1 hour ago, Green Devil said:

i agree. it's his opinion. not reality.

Ok slick, provide the documentation that shapes your reality.

Let's see something more than your drive-by, garbage one liners. Be a productive member of a thread for once.

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2 hours ago, Trelane said:

Ok slick, provide the documentation that shapes your reality.

Bismuth is element #83.

"Bismuth" is an anagram of "submit H".  If Bismuth 'submits' Hydrogen you get element #82 which is lead.

Lead can be used for writing things such as "Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties.FACT.*  Also lead is poisonous, and when you puke that's kind of antigravity, right?

What more proof does anyone need?  End of thread.** XxX 

 

* Factual status limited to lead's usefulness as a means of recording information and does not automatically extend to the veracity of any information recorded using said medium.

** Might not actually be the end of thread.

Edited by Tom1200
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7 hours ago, Nicolette said:

Not at all surprised it contains bismuth, known for antigravity properties. Interested to see what the

I think you are confusing it with Cavorite

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five years, are they for real?

they did identify the elements in that metalic conglomeration, but they never mentioned the relative isotopes, which is essential 
to prove where the metals came from (planet earth or elsewhere)

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7 minutes ago, Earl.Of.Trumps said:

five years, are they for real?

they did identify the elements in that metalic conglomeration, but they never mentioned the relative isotopes, which is essential 
to prove where the metals came from (planet earth or elsewhere)

Yes, I fid this very odd times be honest. Did it take them that long to be able to identify these elements or am I missing something here?

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11 hours ago, Trelane said:

Ok slick, provide the documentation that shapes your reality.

Let's see something more than your drive-by, garbage one liners. Be a productive member of a thread for once.

And who is in your opinion a productive member of the forum? Everyone is entitled to their opinions no matter how much they say and what they have to say. You can't force others to reply the way you want them to reply. As to the second part of your post it's a usual aggressive reply and quite rude I would say. 

Edited by MrAnderson
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16 hours ago, Tom1200 said:

Bismuth is element #83.

"Bismuth" is an anagram of "submit H".  If Bismuth 'submits' Hydrogen you get element #82 which is lead.

Lead can be used for writing things such as "Bismuth has long since been known to harbor antigravity properties.FACT.*  Also lead is poisonous, and when you puke that's kind of antigravity, right?

What more proof does anyone need?  End of thread.** XxX 

 

* Factual status limited to lead's usefulness as a means of recording information and does not automatically extend to the veracity of any information recorded using said medium.

** Might not actually be the end of thread.

..

Edited by Hazzard
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