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The Other Side of Midnight - Richard C. Hoagland - Live Chat Thread

Started by cosmic hobo, June 24, 2015, 09:00:52 PM


WhiteCrow

Hoagie Hoagie Hoagie..Our Saturn 5 moon rocket had 5 different engines in the first stage that had to light simultaneously.

Musk is a modified ponzi and improved Am-way scam, no different that paying  taxes except he gets rich instead of politicians.
Long live free enterprise! Things get done one way or another.


Dr. MD MD

Oh, thank God! I thought he said Tom DeLong there for a minute.  :D

Dr. MD MD

Quote from: WhiteCrow on January 07, 2018, 11:22:06 PM
Hoagie Hoagie Hoagie..Our Saturn 5 moon rocket had 5 different engines in the first stage that had to light simultaneously.

Musk is a modified ponzi and improved Am-way scam, no different that paying  taxes except he gets rich instead of politicians.
Long live free enterprise! Things get done one way or another.


WhiteCrow

Quote from: OstrichThief on January 07, 2018, 11:35:57 PM
Tesla’s are fun to drive
.

They sure are... Tonight's guest needs Musk type scamming skills to solve all the world's energy  problems.

Tom Valone's two-bit begging for investors on Hoagie  ain't going to make it.


What We Need & What You Get
We need a minimum of $25,000 to rent a separate office that just became available last month in the Sunnyside Building here in Beltsville MD where the IRI office and lab are located to set up parallel test stations for every viable model, use available data acquisition for optimizing the various mag-switching protocols, build larger prototypes as the one-year time frame permits, and assign a volunteer technician to assist with the assembly and testing.
Our unique perks are various levels of membership in IRI besides unique product offerings. We always provide gift books, CDs, DVDs, and quarterly newsletters on the best, cutting edge, emerging energy, propulsion, and bioenergetics to our members!
If we don't reach our entire goal, we will still go ahead with the one-year project with any amount of funds raised over $5,000 (one-year's rent) to bring about one or more working permanent Spiral Magnet Motors as possible.


https://youtu.be/2edLkAk0YOU

WhiteCrow

Quote from: Dr. MD MD on January 07, 2018, 11:40:05 PM


Hoagie was blabbing on about Musk, that he was the first to perfect simultaneously firing rocket engines. Duh Saturn 5 had 5.

It's obvious  that Hoagie's audience is miniscule




expat

Well, so much for Tom Valone being "controversial material that the Deep Sate dare not allow."

Sheer dishonesty...





Theadora

Quote from: expat on January 08, 2018, 09:02:20 AM
Well, so much for Tom Valone being "controversial material that the Deep Sate dare not allow."

Sheer dishonesty...



astroguy

Except, today is a waning crescent moon.  It is at 390,000 km from Earth.  That is close to the middle of its perigee and apogee.  And the waning crescent means the Sun-Earth-Moon forms a right angle, which is when we have the lowest tides.  A big earthquake now, as opposed to in about 3 weeks, or 1 week ago, IS LITERALLY THE OPPOSITE of what advocates of syzygy-causes-earthquake proponents predict.

albrecht

Quote from: astroguy on January 09, 2018, 11:42:43 PM
Except, today is a waning crescent moon.  It is at 390,000 km from Earth.  That is close to the middle of its perigee and apogee.  And the waning crescent means the Sun-Earth-Moon forms a right angle, which is when we have the lowest tides.  A big earthquake now, as opposed to in about 3 weeks, or 1 week ago, IS LITERALLY THE OPPOSITE of what advocates of syzygy-causes-earthquake proponents predict.
There is a lag time due to the viscosity of the fluids underneath.  ;)

GravitySucks

Quote from: albrecht on January 10, 2018, 12:10:19 AM
There is a lag time due to the viscosity of the fluids underneath.  ;)

Plus, according to Hoagland, the moon’s affects are only tidal at night.



Theadora

Quote from: astroguy on January 09, 2018, 11:42:43 PM
Except, today is a waning crescent moon.  It is at 390,000 km from Earth.  That is close to the middle of its perigee and apogee.  And the waning crescent means the Sun-Earth-Moon forms a right angle, which is when we have the lowest tides.  A big earthquake now, as opposed to in about 3 weeks, or 1 week ago, IS LITERALLY THE OPPOSITE of what advocates of syzygy-causes-earthquake proponents predict.

The late Jim Berkland is unfortunately unavailable to speak to your usual, out of context misrepresentations, of his methodology, but his predictions invariably tolerate a +/- ten day seismic window; the greater the magnitude - the longer the delay.

Theadora

Quote from: albrecht on January 10, 2018, 12:10:19 AM
There is a lag time due to the viscosity of the fluids underneath.  ;)

Perhaps; good thinking, though.

Theadora

Quote from: GravitySucks on January 10, 2018, 12:15:32 AM
Plus, according to Hoagland, the moon’s affects are only tidal at night.

That might depend upon if whether or not the Moon sets at Dawn.  If so, then after the Moon has set, then the tide might more quickly recede in it's absence, during the early, day.

Theadora

Quote from: Dr. MD MD on January 08, 2018, 03:36:32 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksSZPNQaFP8

Ostensibly, there would be atmosphere inside the glass domes.  If your view out into Space is to look through the glass domes, then you might not see stars.  Also, with cameras, the exposure settings might not convey enough light for the film to capture the stars, without over exposing the intended subject.  The astronauts who say that they didn't see stars, might inadvertently be revealing that there are glass domes on the Moon.  Those who did see stars, weren't talking about when they were looking through the glass domes.  Glad to have cleared that up for you.

expat

RCH has never claimed that the glass domes contain an atmosphere. He has asked us to imagine them "as delicate as cigarette smoke." In the case of Apollo 14 he has even stated that the LM descended through the glass.

ref:http://www.enterprisemission.com/debate.html

Theadora

Quote from: expat on January 10, 2018, 06:29:11 PM
RCH has never claimed that the glass domes contain an atmosphere. He has asked us to imagine them "as delicate as cigarette smoke." In the case of Apollo 14 he has even stated that the LM descended through the glass.

ref:http://www.enterprisemission.com/debate.html

Didn't he say that some of the glass is broken?  So, then how were the astronauts supposed to be able to smoke in there?

Yorkshire pud

Quote from: Theadora on January 10, 2018, 07:13:04 PM
Didn't he say that some of the glass is broken?  So, then how were the astronauts supposed to be able to smoke in there?

Didn't they take charcoal and lighter fluid?  ???

Lunger

Quote from: Theadora on January 10, 2018, 01:19:14 PM
The late Jim Berkland is unfortunately unavailable to speak to your usual, out of context misrepresentations, of his methodology, but his predictions invariably tolerate a +/- ten day seismic window; the greater the magnitude - the longer the delay.

The window should be within a 468 hour period.

Lunger

Quote from: expat on January 10, 2018, 06:29:11 PM
RCH has never claimed that the glass domes contain an atmosphere. He has asked us to imagine them "as delicate as cigarette smoke." In the case of Apollo 14 he has even stated that the LM descended through the glass.

ref:http://www.enterprisemission.com/debate.html

I have always wonder what kind of space-faring retards would build structures 60 miles high.  Not only 60 miles high but 60 miles high in an area that is heavily bombarded by meteors.  Everything that these guys build; on the Moon, on Mars, on Pluto is always on such a massive scale that it is so far beyond the realm of simple practicality that they must just be stupid.

Maybe its Hoaggie.





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