The NASA footage should've been pretty convincing, though...
I wouldn't be such a believer if I hadn't personally seen a shooting star stop in mid-air, dart around doing some pretty amazing speeds and 90 degree angles and what not, and go back up as quickly as it came down... my girlfriend was there to confirm it. It all happened in a matter of seconds of me saying, "Wow a shooting star...WTF!!"
She only turned in time to see it go back up...
Last I checked, I'm pretty sure shooting stars can't choose to go back up...
Everyone always likes to make a laundry list of excuses to doubt people's stories on anything. My question is: Why would I make up some lame ass story to get some 'props' on a dream views site...lol...While it's still good to be skeptical and doubt typed and spoken words...sometimes videos and pictures say more than any words can...
Do you really need to doubt we are alone? That in itself is crazy...common sense would dictate that within the 100's of billions of stars within our 1 galaxy surrounded by 100's of billions of other galaxies each with 100's of billions of stars...that one...would have a planet with life capable of visiting other galaxies and stars in an instant...and perhaps even observe them and interact with their development subtly... much like a sims video game... perhaps even dropping clues of what they are doing as we speak... actually with the number of galaxies, stars, and planets out there...statistically speaking its something like 99.999999999999999999999% Yes...
They even propose this idea on an episode of Stargate Atlantis, The Game (Stargate Atlantis)
For two years, John Sheppard and Dr. Rodney McKay have been playing a computer game left by the Ancients, in which they each develop villages on opposite sides of a river in competition with one another (much like the video game Populous). While McKay has been pushing his town ("Geldar", named after a former romantic interest of McKay's) to develop technologically, Sheppard has been encouraging his ("Hallona", named by the Ancients who created it) to develop its military.
On a routine survey mission, however, a team from Atlantis discovers that it is not, in fact, a game. Their villages, and all the people in them, are real; living on a planet somewhere in the Pegasus Galaxy. With a satellite network in orbit to track their development and Ancient technology to receive the "players'" instructions, their civilization has, in fact, been a Lantean social experiment. The team has stumbled upon McKay's village (easily identifiable by the multitude of paintings of his face throughout the village), they go to the planet to investigate.
...that was a great episode...makes you think who's playing who
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