By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - Politics Discussion - I wish I knew...

I am a huge sucker for ancient technologies, ancient civilizations and most importantly ancient aliens. I have watched ancient aliens documentary and many other related documentary like some sort of "real" science show. I know people like Giorgio A. Tsoukalos put a lot of imagination and uses their charisma to make a clamin into reality. But for some unknown reason I want t believe it.

I want to see how ancient people 2 thousand years ago were using electricity (baghdad battery) or analog computer (antikythera mechanism). I want to see what really happened to apollo 20 mission. I want to see all video censored by NASA.

I wish I knew the reality behind these.



Around the Network

We'll have to wait for the Anunnaki. No but seriously, I wish I knew too.



Have you watched Alias?



You have much work to do, Agent Mulder.



If you really want to believe, then look into...

Falcon Lake, 1967 (Manitoba, Canada) (Man burned in grid pattern from object)
JAL Flight 1628, 1986 (Alaska, USA) (Pilot barred from speaking with press, regulated to desk work)
Kecksburg, 1965 (Pennsylvania, USA) (Object quarantined and hauled off)
Washington, 1952 (DC, USA) (First time; fighters scrambled, objects disappear, reappear when fighters grounded)
Washington, 2002 (DC, USA) (Two F-16s chase down object for 50 minutes)



"On my business card I am a corporate president. In my mind I am a game developer. But in my heart I am a gamer." - Satoru Iwata

Around the Network

 

Check out this amazing photograph of a thermal covering/alien artifact captured in space by NASA.



Billions of people over thousands of years, some of them are bound to stumble upon the basic principles that run the universe. The key is that a lot of these ancient discoveries don't stick; their value is not realized, the infrastructure does not exist for mass-production, or there are sociopolitical boundaries to realizing them. Some brilliant concepts from long ago never caught on by chance, but enough of them caught on to create technological progress, which becomes self-reinforcing: now it's hard for a good idea to go by unnoticed, and other technical discoveries make it easier to disseminate and distribute a brilliant idea. It was easier to mass-produce and sell batteries in the late 19th century than in 2000 or so BC, though the knowledge behind it is still relatively straightforward.



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

And for some unknown reason I want to play no mans sky which is related with the topic.



I want to know what a civilization ruled by dolphins would have been like had they not been overthrown in 840BC



I want to know how a virgin can have a child 2015 years ago.







VGChartz♥♥♥♥♥FOREVER

Xbone... the new "N" word   Apparently I troll MS now | Evidence | Evidence