The Age of Disclosure
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 14:01 last edited by
Sounds vaguely like some sort of consent law...but it's NOT! It's..... ALIENS!
So, what say you? Contact with aliens, yay or nay?
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 16:13 last edited by
Nay.
I think that there are others out there, and if there are, they are obviously much more technical advanced than us.
Based on human behavior, any time a more advanced "civilization" comes across a less advanced one, they NEVER EVER do not make contact.
Not sure why an alien people would come here and just try and observe and hide.
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 17:14 last edited by
No. And it never goes well for the less advanced.
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 21:44 last edited by
Over the past 24 months, there have been congressional hearings with physical evidence and military witnesses along with official documents stating that Aliens are real. And yet we are all rolling our eyes and moving along?
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 21:49 last edited by
I don't think there's any actual evidence.
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wrote on 22 Mar 2025, 22:00 last edited by
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Sounds vaguely like some sort of consent law...but it's NOT! It's..... ALIENS!
So, what say you? Contact with aliens, yay or nay?
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wrote on 23 Mar 2025, 14:25 last edited by
Yeah, I find it unlikely.
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wrote 12 days ago last edited by
Astronomers announced Thursday that they had detected the most promising "hints" of potential life on a planet beyond our Solar System, though other scientists expressed scepticism.
There has been vigorous debate in scientific circles about whether the planet K2-18b, which is 124 light years away in the Leo constellation, could be an ocean world capable of hosting microbial life.
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, a British-US team of researchers detected signs of two chemicals in the planet's atmosphere long considered to be "biosignatures" indicating extraterrestrial life.
On Earth, the chemicals dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and dimethyl disulfide are produced only by life, mostly microscopic marine algae called phytoplankton.
The researchers emphasised caution, saying that more observations were needed to confirm these findings, and that they were not announcing a definitive discovery.
But the implications could be huge, according to Nikku Madhusudhan, a Cambridge University astrophysicist and lead author of the study, published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
"What we are finding at this point are hints of possible biological activity outside the solar system," he told a press conference.
"Frankly, I think this is the closest we have come to seeing a feature that we can attribute to life."
But outside experts pointed to disputes over previous discoveries about the exoplanet, adding that these chemicals could have been created by unknown means having nothing to do with life.
https://www.sciencealert.com/strongest-evidence-of-alien-life-yet-found-124-light-years-away