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Dear Ominus Dei,
I've been aware of this since March. I am in total agreement. Just so you know you aren't alone here. Do you follow Danny Wilten's work on youtube also by any chance?
Meta
I honestly do not believe our sun is a stargate, but thanks anyways.
At least, let me put it this way. I do not believe a somewhat triangular shaped sunspot proves the sun is a stargate. Nor do I believe that ancient mayan relic suggests our sun is a stargate. If there was any other evidence, however, I would be open minded.
I'd say that it may have them/one near it. It would be clever to use it as the point, just because I'd expect youd wanna look for specific suns when looking for planets they may harbor. I don't really think though, that a Sun itself, would be it. I'd believe it to be the location for whatever other reasons (magnetism tracking? idk), but I'd guess most stars to predate races that would be using the said gates. Otherwise that would be saying they would be going around creating suns for the soul purpose of making it a gate? Who knows, maybe :3
I think the inference is that stars are natural gates, not turned into gates. There is more and more growing evidence that stars have borderline black holes (singularities) in their centers. Keep in mind, there is only ONE singularity, with many points of access. The singularity at the center of black hole X is the exact same one in the center of black hole Y. Therefore, enter one place, exit another. The interesting thing is that during, or after, a partial or mass coronal ejection, the surface of the sun appears completely black. No light at all.
Metaphasic, if your avatar is an actual picture of you then that would make your apparent cognitive capacity make a lot more sense. I find myself incredibly impressed with your standard for scientific evidence. -_-
[QUOTE=Oceanboy;1901585]All black holes have the same singularity?
[QUOTE]
No. All black holes do not have the same singularity. If all black holes had the same singularity, then they would, e.g., all be the same size. But they're not so they don't.
Thinking is hard.
[QUOTE=PhilosopherStoned;1901618][QUOTE=Oceanboy;1901585]All black holes have the same singularity?
Since eveybody deserves one honest reply...Quote:
No. All black holes do not have the same singularity. If all black holes had the same singularity, then they would, e.g., all be the same size. But they're not so they don't.
Thinking is hard.
While I appreciate your right to cling to mainstream science, I do not appreciate the inference (few posts above) that I lack cognitive skills (essentially calling me stupid). No, that's not an image of me. I'm a 43 year old male.
Second, I realize I made a statement in my last past which was just as assuptive as the one you just made, but let me ask this: have you ever been beyond the event horizon of a black hole? If not, how do you know what is, or isn't there? There is a lot to be said for thinking with the left (or logical brain), but in my opinion, real thought comes from using both logic and abstract. It's ok if you disagree, just please do not insult me, or others for it.
This is my last response to you until you apologize.
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To Oceanboy. Quite possible. We all know the definition of a singularity in terms of science, but let's look at the mathematical definition:
"A point at which the derivative does not exist for a given function but every neighborhood of which contains points for which the derivative exists."
I'm not going to tell you what you should think here, I have faith that people will come to the proper insight if they think beyond conventional science.
PhilosopherStoned, if our sun isn't a stargate then how do you explain Mel Gibson? Maybe do some research before you post. God.