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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 4, 2017 7:34:59 GMT
Answer: They both have a bulge! Michelle's bulge is easily explained (a no-brainer really), so I thought I'd post the comments of our old friend Thornews regarding the Venus bulge for those of you who are interested in these Biblical end times that we live in. Enjoy.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Mar 4, 2017 7:43:47 GMT
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 4, 2017 7:47:10 GMT
Cine didn't like it. That's tough.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Mar 4, 2017 7:52:04 GMT
Not at all. I thought it was a pretty humorous delivery (thought it's super-faster to read the short article) and gravity waves, common though they may be on Venus and Earth, are an interesting phenomenon.
Did you have any thoughts on them?
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Post by Deleted on Mar 4, 2017 8:01:22 GMT
Not at all. I thought it was a pretty humorous delivery (thought it's super-faster to read the short article) and gravity waves, common though they may be on Venus and Earth, are an interesting phenomenon. Did you have any thoughts on them? Everybody knows Michelle has a dick.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 4, 2017 8:04:19 GMT
Not at all. I thought it was a pretty humorous delivery (thought it's super-faster to read the short article) and gravity waves, common though they may be on Venus and Earth, are an interesting phenomenon. Did you have any thoughts on them? Only that I've never seen Venus so big and bright, and sometimes it looks like a comet, and I've been watching it since sometime before Thanksgiving of last year. Still collating. Here's another from a channel I am subscribed to. It's nice to see that some people find the topic interesting.
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Post by Cinemachinery on Mar 4, 2017 8:15:39 GMT
Not at all. I thought it was a pretty humorous delivery (thought it's super-faster to read the short article) and gravity waves, common though they may be on Venus and Earth, are an interesting phenomenon. Did you have any thoughts on them? Only that I've never seen Venus so big and bright, and sometimes it looks like a comet, and I've been watching it since sometime before Thanksgiving of last year. Still collating. Here's another from a channel I am subscribed to. It's nice to see that some people find the topic interesting. Interesting vid, but here's the first glaring issue: the guy is taking exception to NASA labeling the gravity wave a "wave" (he's not clear why, but he says "they have the audacity") then he says "but it doesn't move!" (which is actually discussed in your first article/video)... then he goes on to show images of Venus's Y-wave atmospheric cloud structures (due to its cloud layer rotating at blinding speeds), and insists the gravity "wave" is actually the atmosphere interacting with solar wind, causing the y-shape to even out. The problem being, the gravity wave is question, the image featured in your first video, is detected via infrared (elctromagnetic radiation) - it's an image of energy, if you will, whereas the images the guy is using and referring to are clouds, direct images of Venus' atmosphere. And neither event is mirroring the other. He's literally talking about two different things visible in two different spectra. Sounds like he's really interested in Venus, though.
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