Meet Evans the Atom, the British scientist who will end the world on Wednesday

Blackleaf

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Dr Lyn "The Atom" Evans is the British scientist who, on Wednesday, will switch on Europe's Large Hadron Collider, the world's most powerful particle collider.

The LHC is based as CERN, in Switzerland, where Tim Berners-Lee invented the internet in 1989.

Atoms will spin around a 17-mile-long circular tunnel at the speed of light - so fast they will go round 11,000 times per second.

Scientists hope to recreate the conditions that occurred an instant afte the Big Bang.

But some scientists have gone to the European Court of Human Rights campaigning for the Wednesday's big switch on to not take place - fearing that the LHC could create black holes that could destroy Earth.

Meet Evans the Atom, who will end the world on WednesdayBy Jonathan Petre
07th September 2008
Daily Mail


The man behind the world’s biggest scientific experiment, which critics claim could cause the end of the world, is a British miner’s son who has admitted blowing things up as a child.

Dr Lyn Evans, who has been dubbed Evans the Atom, will this week switch on a giant particle accelerator designed to unlock the secrets of the Big Bang.

But the 63-year-old physicist revealed yesterday that his passion for science was fuelled by the relatively small bangs he had created with his chemistry set at his council house in Aberdare in the Welsh valleys.


Inspired: 'Evans the Atom' at school in Wales in 1962

‘I was more interested in chemistry than physics when I was young,’ he said.

‘I had a number of chemistry sets. Like everybody, I used to make explosives. I even blew the fuses of the whole house a few times.’

His interest in physics grew at his boys-only grammar school, where lessons had an added attraction because they were attended by girls bussed in from a nearby school that lacked a physics teacher.

On Wednesday, Dr Evans will fire up the Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile-long doughnut-shaped tunnel that will smash sub-atomic particles together at nearly the speed of light.

Built by the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), the collider lies beneath the French-Swiss border, near the institution’s headquarters in Geneva, at depths ranging from 170ft to 600ft.

The aim of the £4.4billion experiment is to recreate the conditions that existed a fraction of a second after the Big Bang – the birth of the universe – and provide vital clues to the building blocks of life.

It will track the spray of particles thrown out by collisions in a search for the elusive Higgs Boson, a theoretical entity that supposedly lends weight, or mass, to the elementary particles. So important is this mysterious substance that it has been called the ‘God Particle’.

Scientists also hope to shed some light on the invisible material that exists between particles – dubbed ‘dark matter’ as no one knows what it really is – which makes up most of the universe.



Relaxed: Dr Evans - in his shorts at the CERN control centre in Geneva - dismisses the fears of doom-mongers

But a handful of scientists believe that the experiment could create a shower of unstable black holes that could ‘eat’ the planet from within, and they are launching last-ditch efforts to halt it in the courts.

One of them, Professor Otto Rossler, a retired German chemist, said he feared the experiment may create a devastating quasar – a mass of energy fuelled by black holes – inside the Earth.

‘Nothing will happen for at least four years,’ he said. ‘Then someone will spot a light ray coming out of the Indian Ocean during the night and no one will be able to explain it.

‘A few weeks later, we will see a similar beam of particles coming out of the soil on the other side of the planet. Then we will know there is a little quasar inside the planet.’

Prof Rossler said that as the spinning-top-like quasar devoured the world from within, the two jets emanating from it would grow and catastrophes such as earthquakes and tsunamis would occur at the points they emerged from the Earth.

‘The weather will change completely, wiping out life, and very soon the whole planet will be eaten in a magnificent scenario – if you could watch it from the moon. A Biblical Armageddon. Even cloud and fire will form, as it says in the Bible.’

He said that attempts were still being made in the European Court of Human Rights to halt the experiment on the grounds that it violated the right to life. The court has, however, already rejected calls for a temporary delay in the project, and it is unlikely to come to a speedy decision about whether the CERN experiment should be halted for good.

Meanwhile Dr Walter Wagner, an American scientist who has been warning about the dangers of particle accelerators for 20 years, is awaiting a ruling on a lawsuit he filed a fortnight ago in his home state of Hawaii.

He fears the experiments might unwittingly create something he calls a ‘strangelet’ that could result in a fusion reaction that might ultimately turn the Earth into a supernova, or an exploding star.

But Dr Evans, the leader of the project, who has devoted 14 years of his life to building the vast particle accelerator, is dismissive of the doom-mongers.

In fact, he is so relaxed about the project, he even wears shorts to work.

He said that Prof Rossler was a ‘crazy’ retired professor who had invented his own theory of relativity.

‘We have shown him where his elementary errors are, but of course people like that just will not listen,’ said Dr Evans.

Meanwhile, Dr Wagner’s fears were ‘totally and completely’ unfounded. ‘There are thousands of scientists around the world who have been preparing this machine and they know what they are talking about, unlike these guys,’ he added.

Dr Evans says his real nightmare is not that he will destroy the world but that, with the cameras rolling, the machine will break down. ‘This is not the first accelerator I have commissioned, but the first under the glare of the whole world,’ he said.

‘My main worry is that we’ve got a huge amount of equipment and it is new. If something trips off, we are down for hours and we have all these Press people sitting around.

‘We are not used to that. We are used to setting things up quietly and announcing it afterwards.’

Experiment produces lab rap hit

The Large Hadron Collider may be causing fears for the future of the world, but it has become the bizarre setting for an unlikely music hit.

Written and performed by 23-year-old Kate McAlpine, who works in the Press office at the CERN laboratory in Switzerland, the video features Kate and two background dancers bopping about in lab coats.

A long way from rap’s usual subjects of violence and crime, the rap focuses on the science of high-energy particle physics. One section goes: ‘Two beams of protons/ swing ’round./ Through the ring they ride/’til in the hearts of the detectors/ they’re made to collide!/ And all that energy packed/ in that tiny room/ becomes mass,/ particles created from the vacuum.’

Kate, who wrote her first physics rap while studying at Michigan State University, says: ‘Rap and physics are culturally miles apart and I find it amusing to throw them together.’

A CERN spokesman said: ‘We love the rap and the science is spot on.’

dailymail.co.uk
 
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AmberEyes

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I'm pretty excited too :) I have a hard time taking those fear mongers seriously... if they did any research at all they'd realize there's very little to fear from a few giant magnets.
 

quandary121

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There are also fears when they turn on the LHC we will all die ,but hay im just a tinfoil hat type of guy

Large Hadron Collider will not turn world to goo, promise scientists


Meteor hits earth in the film deep impact (DreamWorks)





Joanna Sugden

Cancel your plans for next Wednesday, it could be your last day on Earth. Or could it?
If you believe a vocal lobby of doomsayers, at the flick of a switch on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) next week the world will be consumed from the inside out and turned to a pile of grey goo. Yesterday their apocalyptic warnings were challenged by a report from the scientists behind the project outlining just how safe it is to recreate the Big Bang under the France-Switzerland border.
The Large Hadron Collider - the atom-smashing machine built underneath the Alps - has sent more internet-based harbingers of doom into a spin than it will have atomic particles whizzing around its 17-mile circumference when it is put into action next week. They fear that the energies released will be so powerful that a runaway black hole will be created that will engulf the planet or produce “quantum strangelets” transforming the Earth into a dead lump of “strange matter”.
So worried are they about the impending end of the Universe that they have been to court to try to stop it.
Walter L. Wagner and Luis Sancho in Hawaii sought a temporary restraining order on scientists at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, or CERN, who they say have played down the chances that the collider could produce a tiny black hole, which could eat the Earth. They say that CERN has failed to provide an environmental impact statement as required under the National Environmental Policy Act.
Their objections have been so vehement that the scientists behind the LHC have published a report to allay their fears and convince them that the world will carry on as normal after the biggest and most powerful atom collider ever built is turned on in Geneva.
“Nature has already conducted the equivalent of about a hundred thousand LHC experimental programmes on Earth – and the planet still exists,” the report says.
Just outside Geneva, 300ft below ground, the LHC will blast atomic particles around its circumference approximately 11,200 times every second, before smashing them headlong into one another.
Scientists have been using particle collision devices for 30 years without incident but concerns have arisen over the LHC because of its size and power.
The report was written by five CERN physicists, who were told to review a safety assessment written by colleagues in 2003 that also gave the project the green light.
The LHC is to start unleashing a beam of protons in the first stage of its commissioning process on Wednesday. Two parallel beams of particles, pulsing around the underground ring in opposite directions, will be bent by superconducting magnets at four points to cause them to collide. Detectors in the giant chamber will record the resulting sub-atomic debris.
This invisible rubble could help to resolve some of the biggest questions in physics such as the nature of mass, the weakness of gravity and whether, as some suggest, dimensions exist beyond our own. The new Safety Assessment Report, published by the Institute of Physics in London, says that any black holes produced by the collider would be “microscopic” and would decay almost immediately because they would lack the energy to grow or be sustained.
“Each collision of a pair of protons in the LHC will release an amount of energy comparable to that of two colliding mosquitoes, so any black hole produced would be much smaller than those known to astrophysicists,” it says.
As for the hypothesised “strange-lets”, the report referred to data from the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, to say that these would not be produced by collisions in the LHC.
France has also asked its Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) to carry out a safety appraisal of the collider.
The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg rejected a last-ditch legal attempt last month to stop the LHC. The suit had been filed by a group of European citizens, led by a German biochemist, Otto Rössler, of the University of Tübingen.
He had deduced that it would be “quite plausible” to conclude that black holes resulting from the collider experiment “will grow exponentially and eat the planet from the inside” across a devastating four-year period of decay.
The saner voice of science is shining through, however, as Valerie Jamieson, deputy features editor of New Scientist, explains on her blog.
“Scale the cosmic ray sums up to cover the 100 billion stars in the Milky Way and the 100 billion galaxies in the visible Universe and you find that nature has already made the equivalent of 1,031 LHCs. Or if you like, 10 trillion LHCs are running every second. And we’re still here.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4682260.ece
 
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Dexter Sinister

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Atoms will spin around a 17-mile-long circular tunnel at the speed of light
Aw jeez, count on the scientifically illiterate media not to get it right or explain it even halfway correctly.

It's an attempt to re-create some of the conditions in the first fraction of a second after the Big Bang (terrible name for it, in my opinion) that started up this universe 13.7 thousand million years ago. It's the only way to test the final predictions of what's come to be called the Standard Model, or the Theory of Almost Everything (because it doesn't include gravity). The Standard Model, which is really just the body of quantum theory, has predicted many things, all of which have been found, it's been tested exhaustively and predicts results in full agreement with experiments accurate to ten decimal places, with one exception. If the Standard Model is correct, there must be a particle called the Higgs boson, and the theory predicts within certain limits what its characteristics must be, but it's never been observed. It's too energetic to be created by any previous particle accelerators, but the LHC should be able to do it.

The LHC is a ring of superconducting magnets 27 km in circumference that accelerates two hair-thin beams of protons (NOT atoms) in opposite directions up to what's called six nines or better, meaning 99.9999% or more of the speed of light (no object with mass can be accelerated to light speed), then smashes them into each other. Just for interest, if we could accelerate a baseball to that speed, it'd have a kinetic energy equivalent to a 40 megaton nuclear explosion. The kinetic energy of those proton impacts, 40 million collisions a second, will create a shower of other particles, among which physicists expect to find the Higgs boson. Under Big Bang conditions there were big, high energy particles, among them the Higgs boson, which as the universe expanded and cooled decayed into other particles more familiar to us now.

Higgs bosons, according to the Standard Model, continue to exist in nature now as virtual particles, which is a rather bizarre idea. Space is not empty at the subatomic level, according to the Standard Model it's a seething foam of particle creation and destruction: a particle and its antiparticle pop into existence randomly, travel a very short distance, then recombine and annihilate each other. The net effect is zero, nothing is actually created or destroyed on balance, so they're called virtual particles; quantum randomness and the uncertainty principle allow, in fact they require, such things. And this appears to be an accurate description, the quantum foam, as it's usually called, does have detectable effects, the most famous of which is called the Casimir Effect. The key point about the Higgs boson is that its interactions with other particles is what gives them what we detect as mass. No Higgs boson means the Standard Model is fundamentally wrong. And if it is, how can we possibly explain the fact of its unprecedented accuracy and predictive power?

The LHC can also provide, for the first time, first order tests of some of the claims of string theory. If, for instance, there really are multiple hidden dimensions of space-time in addition to the three geometric and one time coordinate we can detect directly, the LHC should create certain kinds of other never before seen particles, including micro black holes that'll evaporate in a trillionth of a second via a mechanism called Hawking radiation. Physics has bet the farm on this machine, and it'll either prove that the physicists are heading in the right direction, or it'll prove that everything we think we understand about quantum theory is simply wrong, and not just a little bit, but massively, egregiously wrong. It'll mean that the Standard Model is really just a complicated calculating trick that consistently and accurately gives the right answers to every question but one, for the wrong reasons, which is going to raise some pretty thorny philosophical problems under the general headings of ontology and epistemology.
 

quandary121

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Time travel
CERN And Our Approaching Future Selves
Russian scientists have claimed that time travel could take place this year(Aug. 2008) as an inadvertent by-product of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) run by Cern.


Mathematicians Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich said that when the LHC begins to smash atoms into each other the conditions will be perfect to open a wormhole into the distant future.

"Proton-proton collisions at the LHC could lead to the formation of time machines (space-time regions with closed time-like curves) which violate causality."

Perhaps some of the unknown lights we see in the sky are us.
 

quandary121

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!@!@$!@$!@$ Dammit, the LHC WILL NOT EVER be smashing atoms into each other. It's PROTONS! Got that? PROTONS!

OH HERE WE GO Dexter Sinister GREAT MIND AND THINKER OF THE 21 CENTURY KNOWER OF EVERYTHING BELIEVER OF NOTHING
KNOWS MORE ABOUT THE LHC THEN Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich, of Moscow's Steklov Mathematical Institute

YOUR FULL OF S*&%T DEXTER GET OFF YOUR HIGH HORSE PAL YOU AINT THE GREAT WISDOM OF THE AGE, NOT EVEN CLOSE ,YOU MAY HAVE SOME RESPECT AROUND HERE ,COS OF YOUR LONG BORING POSTS, BUT I DON'T THINK MUCH OF WHAT YOU SAY,IS CREDIBLE OR WORTH LOOKING AT MOSTLY ITS DECREMENTAL OR FULL OF CYNICISM .:angryfire::angryfire::angryfire:

http://current.com/items/88847925_russian_scientists_claim_to_be_close_to_creating_time_machine

Two Russian scientists have claimed that they are close to creating a time machine.

Russian mathematicians Irina Aref’eva and Igor Volovich have said the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) - a giant atom-smashing machine - could open the door to unexpected visitors from the future.
The machine, due to come on stream this year, has been constructed at CERN, the European particle physics centre near Geneva.

As per their calculations, the machine will tear a hole in the fabric of space and time, creating a gateway to tomorrow. That means, with sufficiently advanced technology, people from the future might even be able to walk through it.

Designed to investigate the origins of the universe, the machine will generate particles with so much energy that scientists are not entirely sure what will happen when they switch the machine on.

According to The Times, Aref’eva and Volovich believe a “wormhole” could open up, linking our time with another in the future.

This could happen if “dark energy” - the mysterious anti-gravity force that causes galaxies to accelerate away from each other - possesses a special “phantom” property.

Manipulating such a wormhole to create a viable time machine would take incredibly advanced technology, they said.

GO HAVE A LOOK WHO YOUR PUTTING DOWN BEFORE YOU OPEN YOUR BIG FAT GOB MAINLY
Who is Aref'eva Irina Yaroslavna?

Aref'eva Irina Yaroslavna is working at the Steklov Mathematical Institute at the Department of Theoretical Physics as a Doctor Phys.-Math. Sci., Professor, Leading Scientific Researcher
 

quandary121

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Wonderful. Does anyone here but me and Niflmir have any idea that really means?

YES PAL THESE PEOPLE DO UNLIKE YOU YOU BIGHEADED GIT

Who is Igor Vasyl'evich Volovich?

Igor Vasyl'evich Volovich
is working at the Moscow's Steklov Mathematical Institute at the Department of Mathematical Physics as a head of departement. He is Doctor Phys.-Math. Sci.
He specializes in Mathematical physics. p-Adic analysis. Including mathematical problems in quantum field theory. String theory. Gravity. Quantum information. Quantum optics
His site: http://www.mi.ras.ru/~volovich/
Mathematical physics, p-adic analysis, including mathematical problems in quantum field theory, string theory, gravity, quantum information, quantum optics.
Biography

Education
1970, Moscow State University - 1973, Graduated School of Steklov Mathematical Institute -
1980, Kandidate of science (Ph.D.), Steklov Mathematical Institute - 1990, Doctor of Science, Steklov Mathematical Institute - Academic appointments: 1990, present, leading researcher in Department of Mathematical Physics, Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences. 1983–1991, Leading scientific researcher, Steklov Mathematical Institute. 1981–1983, Scientific researcher, Steklov Mathematical Institute - 1973–1980 Scientific editor of Journal "Theoretical and Mathematical Physics" - 2003, Corresponding member of Russian Academy of Sciences
Special honors and awards
The prize of Mathematical Branch of Academy of Science of USSR, 1984. - Member of the Editor Board of the journals: "Izvestiya Akadenii Nauk. Seriya Matematicheskaya" - Infinite Dimensional Analisys, Quantum Probability and Related Topics", World Scientific - "International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics", World Scientific.
Main publications
* 150 articles and two monographies:
* p-adic Analys and Mathematical Physics (with V. S. Vladimirov, E. I. Zelenov), 1994, World Sci.
* Quantum Theory and its Stochastic Limit (with L. Accardi, Yu. G. Lu), 2002, Springer-Verlag.
 

quandary121

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TO DEXTER SINISTER READ AND TRY TO LEARN SOMETHING INSTEAD OF SHOOTING YOUR MOUTH OFF
http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2209280/travel-possible-months

Russian scientists have claimed that time travel could take place this year as an inadvertent by-product of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) run by Cern.
Mathematicians Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich said that when the LHC begins to smash atoms into each other the conditions will be perfect to open a wormhole into the distant future.
"Proton-proton collisions at the LHC could lead to the formation of time machines (space-time regions with closed time-like curves) which violate causality," said the scientists in a research paper.
"One model for the time machine is a traversable wormhole. We argue that the traversable wormhole production cross section at the LHC is of the same order as the cross section for black hole production."
The other possibility, according to the mathematicians, is that miniature black holes will be formed under the French and Swiss countryside.
However, if the time machine hypothesis is correct we will not be seeing visitors from the future because the wormholes will be barely larger than atoms.
The LHC is the world's largest scientific instrument, consisting of a 27km loop 100 metres under the French and Swiss countryside. It is due to go live later this year.
 

quandary121

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Time Machine Possible in New Particle Accelerator

Published by noel at 12:52 pm under Nuclear Reactions

In recent years, time traveling has been not only a scenario in science fictions and Hollywood blockbusters, but also a scientific possibility due to the rapid developments of quantum theory. Tidbits on the possibility of achieving time traveling has sprouted up in news in the past couple of weeks.

The soon to be available Large Hadron Collider (LHC, pictured above) of CERN utilizes several superconducting magnets (kept at just 1.9 K) to guide charged particles to a desired projectile. Scheduled to be in operation by May of this year, it is the largest and highest energy particle accelerator in the world.[1] Using the LHC, a special run is scheduled for April 2008 in attempt to recreate the Big Bang.
By colliding charged particles at high velocity, researchers hope to reproduce the first billionth second after the Big Bang. By successfully doing so, this exercise would further validate the theory–some claim as the origin of life–since the Nobel win of Professor George Smoot in 2007.
However, the public hype of the launch of LHC isn’t all for the recreation of the mysterious Big Bang. Much of its attention is the possibility of creating a time machine as a side product of this exercise. As mathematicians Irina Aref’eva and Igor Volovich of Moscow’s Steklov Mathematical Institute pointed out, Einstein’s theory of general relativity suggests that particle collisions at such high energy level would distort the space-time fabric surrounding it. This distortion can create a wormhole, or “time tunnel,” allowing time traveling.[2] A related interview with Irina Aref’eva is available on YouTube.
Such claim sounds little more than a scene out of some scifi movie; and many in the scientific community agrees. Most remains skeptical of the production and application of the man-made wormhole. Surely, arguments like the lack of “time travelers” from the future still echo every time machine idea is brought up. Since what will happen inside the particle accelerator is still largely unknown, its secondary consequences also remain unpredictable.
Noel
[1] Large Hadron Collider, Wikipedia
[2] The world’s first time machine? Tunnel to the past could open door to future within three months, say Russians
http://www.nuclearblog.org/2008/02/19/time-machine-possible-in-new-particle-accelerator/

A related interview with Irina Aref’eva is available on YouTube.

DID YOU READ THIS BIT DEXTER SORRY TO DISAPPOINT YOU AND SUCH LIKE SEEING AS YOU SEEM TO THINK
just another illustration of Sturgeon's Law: 90% of everything is sh1t. Internet sources are no exception.

Internet sources are no exception. There are legitimate sources of technical and engineering information about what happened on 9/11, but Google and YouTube videos are not among them. Anyone who believes everything he finds on the Internet is an ignorant idiot
THE ONLY IGNORANT IDIOT HERE PAL IS YOU DEXTER
 

quandary121

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The details matter, Quandary. The LHC does not and never will smash atoms into each other. Get the facts right if you want to be taken seriously.

Look you sarcastic old git i did not write atoms ok
Mathematicians Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich said that when the LHC begins to smash atoms into each other


Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich did so if you got a problem with THEM using the word "atoms" take it up with them all right ,im sure Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich would be over whelmed by your superior knowledge of such matters ,me i don't give a SH1T
bog off.fool
 

Dexter Sinister

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Oct 1, 2004
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Look you sarcastic old git i did not write atoms ok
Okay, but you didn't flag it as a mistake either, because you didn't know it was. And I'm tired of your gratuitous name calling. I'm not a sarcastic old git, I do the research and I know what I'm talking about. You don't. I've called you names too, but it's not gratuitous, it's the truth. 9/11 conspiracies, chemtrails, UFOs, alien reptiles... you really are credulous and ignorant. I'm done trying to explain anything to you, you don't want to know and you're not paying attention anyway.
 

quandary121

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Okay, but you didn't flag it as a mistake either, because you didn't know it was. And I'm tired of your gratuitous name calling. I'm not a sarcastic old git, I do the research and I know what I'm talking about. You don't. I've called you names too, but it's not gratuitous, it's the truth. 9/11 conspiracies, chemtrails, UFOs, alien reptiles... you really are credulous and ignorant. I'm done trying to explain anything to you, you don't want to know and you're not paying attention anyway.

Look grandad when you bother to do some more research such as into things that ,may sound far fetch or even rediculass to most sane people, you will find that some things will indeed twist your melon more the you think, 9/11lies , chemtrails, UFOs, aliens and reptiles,are real if you bother to find out ,your total disability to "LEARN" any of this stuff is because you refuse to believe from the beginning, that any of this is "true" thus clouding your judgement over such matters.

credulous and ignorant

Is that your new catch phrase or something , i tell you what take a look at this and without prejudiced if you please,and learn something new about the world you live in, before its too late ok ,you seem like a sensible man i wonder if you can actually be sensible for a moment,i suppose that would be asking too much from you, but here this is the beginning of a 16 part video series,if you can find the time to watch one maybe two ,you might become a little more educated.
Things that to you are impossibility,and nut job ideas,may not be so far fetched after all, but hey im probably wasting my time, as you have already made up your mind, about anything i have to say or know , but im willing to show you,something that will open your eyes and unblock your ear,s if and only if, you watch them all ,which i very much doubt you will.???
Dr.Deagle about questions for the end of the age 1