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Political Asylum Publicly Debate Politics, War, Media. |
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29-11-07, 07:46 PM | #1 | |
Thanks for being with arse
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Sitting in the stand of the sports arena, waiting for the show to begin. Red lights, green lights, strawberry wine, a good friend of mine follows the stars..... |
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29-11-07, 09:55 PM | #2 | |
flippin 'em off
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29-11-07, 10:41 PM | #3 | |
Thanks for being with arse
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shutup dickhead.. <yawn> go back to the sad boring life in your head... |
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30-11-07, 05:49 AM | #4 | |
flippin 'em off
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The life where there are other earthlike planets in the solar system? That one's yours.
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I mean the majority of course, not you. Someday it will dawn on even the dimmest bulbs that global warming isn't the disaster they've been taught. Another mild hurricane season for the U.S. just slips out of the global warming propaganda that was shouting 'terrible storms' awhile ago. |
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30-11-07, 05:26 PM | #5 |
Thanks for being with arse
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What are ya ? a fucking doormat?
You must enjoy me wiping my feet on your face... It is generally thought Venus and Mars were both earthlike planets at some stage of their existance with atmosphere and oceans |
30-11-07, 07:21 PM | #6 |
flippin 'em off
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Since when are generals experts in planetary science? Get a brain of your own to think with and get the balls to state your own opinion so I can make fun of it.
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01-12-07, 03:05 AM | #7 |
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Although a world stripped of water and melted by temperatures hot enough to liquefy lead, Venus may once have been a planet much like Earth. The vast oceans could have supported life, according to the latest discoveries of Venus Express, a European Space Agency (ESA) craft launched in November 2005 to investigate our "sister" planet.
"Our new data make it possible to construct a scenario in which Venus started out like the Earth, possibly including a habitable environment, billions of years ago, and evolved to the state we see now," said Professor Fred Taylor of Oxford University. Once considered Earth’s twin planet, Venus became inhospitable for life due to a series of change events. The planet’s history led to loss of water, an atmosphere clogged with carbon dioxide and a runaway effect that gave rise to severe global warning. The Venus Express, which has been orbiting Venus since 2006, has also helped to conclude why the climate of this planet is so severe, according to Prof. Taylor. "It is now becoming clear why the climate on Venus is so different from Earth, when the planets themselves are otherwise quite similar," he said. ...more |
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