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Post by Catman on Jul 10, 2017 14:18:05 GMT
This is the result of all the distilled spirits poured out during Prohibition.
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Post by FilmFlaneur on Jul 10, 2017 14:28:52 GMT
Is this the same Toasted Cheese who claimed recently on the Philosophy Board that nothing perceived other than himself can be vouched for? Just saying.
This of course is exactly the opposite of one who claims that everything he thinks he perceives, by watching YouTube videos for instance, or after some well-oiled porch-side observations, is necessarily so.
How come many of your posts sound a tad confused, attempting to tell me something, but not getting anywhere? It's ok, the universe is all in order as it should be, even if it is all illusion. ![](https://s26.postimg.org/tek3suwt5/laugh.gif) Can you vouch for this now then? You couldn't before. And why should things have to be an illusion to be OK?
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Post by general313 on Jul 10, 2017 14:59:33 GMT
At 1/4 past Midnight I looked at the moon from my porch, at its zenith, about 45 degrees in the sky, as opposed to the sun which at noontime yesterday was almost directly over me. The ungodly would have you believe this is all perfectly normal. Indeed, as would the sensible godly. I'm assuming this "observation" was made near the summer solstice. At this time of year the sun's noontime declination (the angular distance of a point north or south of the celestial equator) is at its most northerly. Also at this time, the full moon will have a midnight declination at its most southerly. If one were to expect the midnight full moon to be at its most northerly like the noonday sun, what one would observe would be very confusing because the moon is almost 45 degrees further south than the sun. But that expectation is wrong: at the same time that the equator is tilted up on the noon side of the earth, it is tilted down on the midnight side of the earth. ![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png/300px-Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png)
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Post by cupcakes on Jul 10, 2017 16:23:49 GMT
tpfkar For the spasmodic, the world never stills. You haven't proven it's the moon yet, you filthy vile scumbag.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Jul 10, 2017 16:46:17 GMT
You've discovered axial precession!
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Post by Cinemachinery on Jul 10, 2017 16:55:15 GMT
![](https://s26.postimg.org/tek3suwt5/laugh.gif) Dude... Edit: N/M Cham linked the same model someone was kind enough to look up for you last time.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 16:55:51 GMT
Yes, it does. Christ said that people would party and play as they did in the time of Noah, and quite frankly that's what I see going on now.
That's debatable. One of your pals (graham, I think it was, but I'm not sure)) told me that wherever the moon is in the sky it is natural for the moon to be there. If you agree, then yes, all is as it should be.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 16:57:13 GMT
![](https://s26.postimg.org/tek3suwt5/laugh.gif) Dude... What, laughing boy? Am I a liar? Or is my vision failing? ![](https://s26.postimg.org/gf93ycxax/giveup.gif)
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 16:59:14 GMT
At 1/4 past Midnight I looked at the moon from my porch, at its zenith, about 45 degrees in the sky, as opposed to the sun which at noontime yesterday was almost directly over me. The ungodly would have you believe this is all perfectly normal. Indeed, as would the sensible godly. I'm assuming this "observation" was made near the summer solstice. At this time of year the sun's noontime declination (the angular distance of a point north or south of the celestial equator) is at its most northerly. Also at this time, the full moon will have a midnight declination at its most southerly. If one were to expect the midnight full moon to be at its most northerly like the noonday sun, what one would observe would be very confusing because the moon is almost 45 degrees further south than the sun. But that expectation is wrong: at the same time that the equator is tilted up on the noon side of the earth, it is tilted down on the midnight side of the earth. ![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png/300px-Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png) I've been living here for slightly over thirteen years, and I never noticed it before.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Jul 10, 2017 17:00:27 GMT
![](https://s26.postimg.org/tek3suwt5/laugh.gif) Dude... What, laughing boy? Am I a liar? Or is my vision failing? ![](https://s26.postimg.org/gf93ycxax/giveup.gif) Simple graph above is simple.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 17:14:21 GMT
Bullshit. But it can do wobbling based on the introduction of a massive foreign object in the solar system. ![](https://s26.postimg.org/m8f14k0ih/yes.gif) And we're back to Nibiru. It's a shame you can't find a YouTube video of someone pointing out exactly where in the solar system it's supposed to be. You could try asking NASA, the European Space Agency, or the Vatican where it is, but I doubt they're going to tell you, unless you have the necessary security clearance.
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Post by maya55555 on Jul 10, 2017 17:15:04 GMT
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 17:17:56 GMT
Droughts, huh? And the droughts are no doubt caused by "global warming?" Gee, why didn't we think of that? ![](https://s26.postimg.org/5hoy7902h/confused.gif)
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Post by maya55555 on Jul 10, 2017 17:19:48 GMT
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Post by maya55555 on Jul 10, 2017 17:21:19 GMT
THE -----------![???](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/huh.png)
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 17:28:17 GMT
THE -----------![???](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/huh.png) That strikes me as an accurate picture.
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Post by general313 on Jul 10, 2017 17:32:30 GMT
Indeed, as would the sensible godly. I'm assuming this "observation" was made near the summer solstice. At this time of year the sun's noontime declination (the angular distance of a point north or south of the celestial equator) is at its most northerly. Also at this time, the full moon will have a midnight declination at its most southerly. If one were to expect the midnight full moon to be at its most northerly like the noonday sun, what one would observe would be very confusing because the moon is almost 45 degrees further south than the sun. But that expectation is wrong: at the same time that the equator is tilted up on the noon side of the earth, it is tilted down on the midnight side of the earth. ![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png/300px-Ra_and_dec_on_celestial_sphere.png) I've been living here for slightly over thirteen years, and I never noticed it before. You may not have noticed it but it was there all along.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Jul 10, 2017 17:37:32 GMT
I've been living here for slightly over thirteen years, and I never noticed it before. You may not have noticed it but it was there all along. I've been told the same about those chemical trails from the airplanes and the strange clouds. They were there all along and I just never noticed. ![](https://s26.postimg.org/7r8xnn0k9/roll.gif)
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Post by general313 on Jul 10, 2017 17:42:57 GMT
You may not have noticed it but it was there all along. I've been told the same about those chemical trails from the airplanes and the strange clouds. They were there all along and I just never noticed. ![](https://s26.postimg.org/7r8xnn0k9/roll.gif) Well think about this: if the earth seems to be wobbling like a drunkard, perhaps the simplest explanation is that it is not the earth that is drunk.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Jul 10, 2017 17:45:45 GMT
THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING!!!
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