Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 2:23 a.m. No.5221017   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5220918

 

I saw the movie "Gallipoli" and later read something by, I believe, D.H. Lawrence, and learned that several years later they had made no headway whatever from that little slip of land. That stirred my first awareness that something was horribly wrong about WW1. Stupid at minimum, evil at maximum.

Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 2:34 a.m. No.5221061   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5220941

 

So funny! It's a take-off on the old Tweety Bird and Sylvester the Cat cartoons. Tweety's typical phrase was "I tawt I taw a putty-tat. I did! I did! I did see a putty-tat!"

Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 2:44 a.m. No.5221104   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1125

>>5220937

 

Most stars are binary or multiple. Our single star is rare. It is been hypothesized that we are actually in a binary system with the other star being a non-luminous brown dwarf. I am not going to make a big deal over what may be a temporary imaging artifact. I am not endorsing (nor denying) the theory. (And it is a true theory, as it has the possibility of being disconfirmed.) For your information, Anons who are interested see here:

 

http://binaryresearchinstitute.com/bri/

Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 3:19 a.m. No.5221261   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5221093

 

Polaris does move, but because it's so close to the rotation axis of the Earth, it's not detectable by the naked eye, but is captured on time-lapse photography.

 

Because of precession, Polaris' distance from true north changes over longer periods of time, and has been measured.

Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 3:28 a.m. No.5221302   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5221125

>life is typically found in a binary star system

 

Anon, how would we know that to begin with? As far as (consensus) science knows for sure, we have only knowledge of one case - ours. (I am trying to word this carefully. This-Anon is very well versed in UFOlogy, some cutting-edge science, and consensus science.)

Anonymous ID: bfe1fd Feb. 17, 2019, 4:26 a.m. No.5221587   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5221321

 

My reading is that getting prisoners into Guantanamo is relatively easy (with cause, of course). Getting any of them out to the US is decidedly more difficult.