Yes,no one has yet to explain how the pyramid's got built when we still can't move all those blocks.!
2007-12-31 08:53:48
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answer #1
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answered by peppersham 7
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Consider that the Milky Way galaxy alone has 300 billion stars, and 250 planets have been confirmed in the relatively few stars observed. Even observing stars an area of the milky way about the size of the moon (the size it appears in the sky) for just a few weeks we found 16 extrasolar planets. Then there are hundreds of billions of galaxies out there, each with billions of stars, many of which likely have planets orbiting them. It's almost impossible that there is not intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
Have they visited Earth? Will we visit them? I doubt it. It would take 25,000 years just to get to the nearest star (alpha proxima), and that's if we had a vehicle that was able to travel 100,000 mph -- and there isn't even a planet orbiting Alpha Proxima.
2007-12-31 08:47:45
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answer #2
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answered by Mickey Mouse Spears 7
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"If we are the only ones here, it seems like an awful big waste of space."
Quote from the movie "Contact".
I think that sums it up.
EMT
2007-12-31 08:39:45
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answer #3
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answered by emt_me911 7
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yes. 100%
I think that it would be extremely egocentric for humans to believe that they are the only living ones in the university.
Just as self-centered as the believe from the middle ages that the sun and planets all revolved around Earth.
2007-12-31 08:39:35
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answer #4
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answered by EJ 5
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100%; I was married to one. A real Space Creature!!
2007-12-31 08:38:57
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answer #5
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answered by Nunya Bidniss 7
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100% yes! They walk among us everyday in every way! Believe me
2007-12-31 08:37:32
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answer #6
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answered by GREGOR 2
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yes 97%
2007-12-31 08:36:53
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answer #7
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answered by straight_up 5
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I'm sure I saw 6 of them at the Home Depot at Western Center half an hour ago.
2007-12-31 08:36:29
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answer #8
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answered by General Leon Pleasant 6
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Absolutely,100%,not!
2007-12-31 08:36:20
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answer #9
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answered by G.W. loves winter! 7
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The chances are darn good.
Billions of planets, suns, moons, and most having some variations of what we have here... if life started here, there's a great chance it did elsewhere... and might be at earlier or later stages. There's life living 15,000 feet below our oceans feeding off matter coming out of the Earth.. there's life in caves, things that LOOK like they're not of this planet... and 98% of every species that lived is extinct. That's variation, over time.
And out There.. time was happening before the Earth was even formed, and became a sphere by spinning & orbiting.
Aliens could be out there... but they may not know how to drive. They might be microbes. They might be fungus, with eyes for all we know. You have to find a place that has its own containing atmosphere... and then, there's a tougher probability... I'm saying I'm 100% sure that SOMETHING's alive out there -- but, it might be billions of light years away and not at all, looking for us. Or, they might look something like us -- and we were 'lab experiments' as it was written in Chariots of the Gods, 30 years ago? More advanced? (stay tuned)
2007-12-31 08:35:52
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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