(07-12-2022, 05:29 PM)Dark Dick Wrote: [ -> ]I'm calling it now.
They'll find Ancient Alien Civilisations that existed in the first billion years of the Universe.
They're gonna find something... that's for damn sure.
I know it's a fucked up thing to say and I realize it basically makes no sense...
But I get a sad vibe from it.
And I've been a lover of space photography for many, many years...
I've got many books full of photos from the Hubble etc., I've had a lot of personal experience with space photography.
I'm telling ya...
Whatever they find and determine is gonna be a hard pill to swallow for a lot of people on an existential level.
The sad truth in it has something to do with whatever causes the light to warp around the large star systems...
An important note to me on a synchronistic level is when I posted that "sigh" emotie on the previous page.
I typed that shit in : sigh : and posted it without even realizing what I was doing.
It was a damn near subconscious response...
To me, that means there's a collective sad feeling around whatever conclusions are gonna be reached through this James Webb telescope.
I know it's nothing I don't already personally know...
But a lot of people don't know, and it's gonna make them feel like shit.
Look out for when they start calling the telescope "Jimmy"...
If you ever see this happen, please let me know. I pretty much don't read anything besides my own site and super random news articles these days, so I won't be up on any of the trends.
The James Webb and what it uncovers was prophesied...
By the time we have the capability to get into space on a regular/frequent basis, it'll be with the understanding that there is no escaping this solar system and that there is no point in trying to colonize other planets...
It'll be all about mining and temporary base operations instead.
Jimmy also sounds a little like genie.
You gotta rub it the right way, bby.
Apparently they're trying to be hardcore copyright sticklers when it comes to images from the James Webb.
I also love how they are making these awe inspiring artworks about this 400 meter long space turd.
It's a good thing Oumuamua didn't enter Earth's atmosphere.
The planet would have been smelling like flaming space dookie for generations.
I knew the satellite looked familiar.