Stats Now Put Us in
the Crosshairs For
an Impact Event
YOWUSA.COM, 12-March-01 Marshall Masters
Continued
Seriously, Could This Really Happen?
The warnings are out there, from NASA and everyone else in between. The problem is that we will not truly believe it happens until it happens.
We know we are more likely to die in a car crash than in an airplane crash, but we’re more afraid of airplane crashes because both dramatic events
with large losses of life and well covered by the media. But, the blame does not rest solely on us, the average folk who do our best to make life work each day.
Ample evidence of the threat is there but we must rely on scientists to explain it to us, and what makes that really difficult for that average person
is that the scientists themselves are not in full agreement. Consequently, those of us who have never seen such an event have a hard time relating to
this scientific dissonance. Or as Scarlet O’Hara said in the movie Gone With The Wind, “I’ll worry about that tomorrow.”
But if you worry about it today, there is a very simple thing you can do for yourself to see the unquestionable hard evidence that major impact events have and will continue to happen.
The next time there is a full moon and a clear sky, step outside and view it with a relatively inexpensive pair of 7x35 binoculars. As you look at the moon keep two
things in mind.
First, notice that it is an airless and lifeless landscape, and second, notice that it is pockmarked with large impact craters.
Next, consider this: Any impact crater on the moon that is large enough to be seen with an inexpensive pair of binoculars represents a devastating possibility for
mankind if an impactor of that size were to strike our planet.
Also, be sure to note Tycho Crater. If something that big hit us, we’d be goners and probably so would the cockroaches.
It is not a matter of if, but rather, a matter of when. To date, we have been very lucky, but any Las Vegas odds maker will tell you that no lucky streak
ever lasts forever, which begs the question: Do we have any aces up our sleeves?
Now There is Some Hope
In 1999, NASA added the Deep Impact mission to its Discovery Program. On February 2001, they finalized their preliminary design, which calls for a
unmanned probe that will shoot a half ton copper dart into Comet 9P/Tempel 1, in early 2004.
The stated scientific aim of the Deep Impact probe (when boiled down to its essence) is to create a really big hole in the middle of the
Comet 9P/Tempel 1, so that NASA scientists can see
whatever is to be seen.
NASA however, is a only front man for the operation. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory is the one running the show, and JPL is to the department of defense, what bananas are to a banana split.
To give you an example of JPL runs things, the dumb copper dart NASA originally initially planned to use will now be equipped with an autonomous guidance system.
Or in other words, once Deep Space arrives on station, it will be at a safe, stand off distance from Comet Temple 1 when it launches it’s half-ton smart bomb, which just happens to have a dummy payload this time.
Upon closer examination, it is easy to see that the Deep Space project represents the first generation of unmanned, remotely piloted anti-impactor
launch platforms. For the sake of brevity, let’s just call them “rock killers.”
What is really good about this, is that these rock killers can be quickly mass-produced using a off the shelf technology.
For example, the Delta II three-stage rocket will be used as the launch
vehicle for Deep Impact and is also the workhorse of the unmanned military space program and can be easily mass-produced by Boeing.
As to the probe, once the Deep Impact rock killer and its various support systems are operational, they can also be quickly mass produced the like Delta II rockets.
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Surviving 2012 and Planet X Video
This 5-part video series offers a straightforward view of this coming human event. Produced and hosted by Marshall Masters, a former CNN science feature field producer, it is an ideal Planet X / 2012 primer for those new to this vital topic.
As the co-author and publisher of Planet X Forecast and 2012 Survival Guide, Marshall believes that 2012 will be a survivable, evolutionary event.
Stream for Free (YouTube, iTunes and more)
Planet X / Nibiru 2012
Flyby
Scenarios —
February 2009 Report
Produced and narrated by Marshall Masters, the first part of this February 2009 video report focuses on the revised upwards estimates for a more violent solar maximum in 2012.
The second half of the program presents a series of 2012 Planet X / Nibiru flyby scenarios developed by Jacco van der Worp, MSc. Based on core criteria called “the electrical kill zone,” it presents several Planet X / Nibiru flyby scenarios.
[watch HD video] [eBook Transcript]
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Once Deep Impact completes is mission successfully, mankind will posses a reliable rock killer. Go Deep Impact go!
But before we allow our exuberance about our new “untried” rock killers to bury our attention to the threat let’s keep in mind that so system is foolproof, or rock proof for that matter.
We Need To Raise Our Consciousness
We tend to view the possibility of an impact event from an external viewpoint. It is a statistical probability that draws our attention to films and
television programs. We watch them, and then we talk about the actors and the script and bandy a few quotes around but do we really get it?
No we do not, because if we did we would be hounding our elected officials without mercy.
Therefore, our highest priority for impact defense needs to be an increased public consciousness. Here is where the science community can step and
make a big difference without spending a single red cent, and we already know how to do it.
As a child I grew up during the height of the Cold War and we regularly practice duck and cover drills at our grade school. On a periodic basis,
my teacher would suddenly announce, “This is a nuclear attack drill. Everyone duck and cover.”
With that, we’d stop what we were doing and jump under our desks, curl up and then wait for the all clear signal to let us know the drill was over.
Afterwards, we’d often discuss the prospects of nuclear war with our teachers, and then again that evening at the dinner table with our families. It was sobering to say the least.
There is no doubt in my mind that these grade school duck and cover drills elevated our public consciousness, which in turn contributed to the peaceful end of the Cold War.
If the science community could reinvent the duck and cover drills of the Cold War era, they could encourage a whole new generation of American citizens to say, “Here is your mandate. Here is all the money you
need. Now make it so, or we’ll elect someone who will!”
If we could manage this, we would no longer have to listen to the propaganda spewed at us by governments who know we cannot handle the real truth. Of course, this would put a lot of conspiracy theorists and
Machiavellian government types out of work, but this omelet is well worth the breaking of many eggs. |