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Post by altitudelou on Jun 12, 2006 22:02:09 GMT -5
This really has a bad smell to it, the smell of Bushit ! www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2006/06/09/nasa_shelves_climate_satellites/NASA shelves climate satellites Environmental science may suffer By Beth Daley, Globe Staff | June 9, 2006 NASA is canceling or delaying a number of satellites designed to give scientists critical information on the earth's changing climate and environment. The space agency has shelved a $200 million satellite mission headed by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor that was designed to measure soil moisture -- a key factor in helping scientists understand the impact of global warming and predict droughts and floods. The Deep Space Climate Observatory, intended to observe climate factors such as solar radiation, ozone, clouds, and water vapor more comprehensively than existing satellites, also has been canceled.
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Post by Swamp Gas on Jun 13, 2006 9:45:16 GMT -5
The Bushmen and NWO know that Global Warming is accelerating, and they want to keep the public still fighting on whether or not it is as bad as some say. Without satellite evidence, then it's a guessing game, even though the facts are there. When the Air Force took over NASA very quietly a few years ago, I knew the dream of Space travel was being kept from the general public. The Escape Route or Back Door if you will. The Elite want to be able to escape, and leave us peons to fighht at the bottom of the gravity well. news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060613/ap_on_sc/stephen_hawkingHawking says humans must go into space By SYLVIA HUI, Associated Press Writer 2 hours, 52 minutes ago HONG KONG - The survival of the human race depends on its ability to find new homes elsewhere in the universe because there's an increasing risk that a disaster will destroy the Earth, world-renowned scientist Stephen Hawking said Tuesday. The British astrophysicist told a news conference in Hong Kong that humans could have a permanent base on the moon in 20 years and a colony on Mars in the next 40 years. "We won't find anywhere as nice as Earth unless we go to another star system," added Hawking, who arrived to a rock star's welcome Monday. Tickets for his lecture planned for Wednesday were sold out. He added that if humans can avoid killing themselves in the next 100 years, they should have space settlements that can continue without support from Earth. "It is important for the human race to spread out into space for the survival of the species," Hawking said. "Life on Earth is at the ever-increasing risk of being wiped out by a disaster, such as sudden global warming, nuclear war, a genetically engineered virus or other dangers we have not yet thought of." The 64-year-old scientist — author of the global best seller "A Brief History of Time" — is wheelchair-bound and communicates with the help of a computer because he suffers from a neurological disorder called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. Hawking said he's teaming up with his daughter to write a children's book about the universe, aimed at the same age range as the Harry Potter books. "It is a story for children, which explains the wonders of the universe," his daughter, Lucy, added. They didn't provide other details.
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Post by DannyRock on Jun 14, 2006 8:40:45 GMT -5
So does this one Lou. Yoram Kaufman, 57; NASA Researcher Studied Effects of Aerosols on Climate From Times Staff and Wire Reports June 12, 2006 Yoram Kaufman, 57, a leading scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center whose research led to greater understanding of global warming, died May 31 at Prince George's Hospital Center in Maryland. He was seriously injured after an automobile struck him while he was riding a bicycle. In 1979, Kaufman joined the space flight center in Greenbelt, Md., as a research scientist. His primary fields were meteorology and climate change, with a specialty in analyzing aerosols — airborne solid and liquid particles in the atmosphere. He played a key role in the development of NASA's Terra satellite, which collects data about the atmosphere. Franco Einaudi, director of the division in which Kaufman worked, said the space flight center had lost "a superstar." From 1997 to 2001, Kaufman was project scientist for the flagship satellite of NASA's Earth Observing System, which includes three satellites that monitor conditions affecting the Earth's climate. Kaufman helped develop the experiments and instrumentation of the $1.3 billion Terra satellite, which was launched in December 1999 and has returned a wealth of information on the travel of airborne particles. Kaufman, who wrote more than 200 scientific papers, found ways to measure aerosols to determine whether they were caused by humans or occurred naturally, and he was working to understand their ultimate effect on Earth's warming climate. www.latimes.com/news/printedition/c...s-pe-california
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Post by altitudelou on Jun 14, 2006 16:35:22 GMT -5
Hmmm, Kaufman, we can now add his name to the growing list of top scientist around the planet that have met with highly suspicious, untimely deaths in recent years.
I was reading an article not long ago that put the odds of so many leading microbiologist, physicist and scientific researchers being killed in such a short period of time by coincidence at something like a billion to one.
The short story on this is that someone does not want these people around because they could spill the beans about what's really going on with the climate or climate control, the viruses like H5-N1 which are probably being custom made and released to kill off a few billion useless sheeple who are not needed to serve the NWO types.
We are up to our collective necks in deep shit and most people either don't care, don't know or don't want to know, they all seem more than willing to die apathetically ignorant, that does not speak very well to us as a society, now does it ?
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