Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense

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gregg

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Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« on: March 04, 2009, 03:36:51 AM »
Since the other topic has been closed without reason ("This experiment was already in here" - I found stuff about gravity, but not of this experiment itself)
Furthermore i got some other questions to you at the end..

Dear Mod: I would really be pleased, if you could read, before doing anything.. (u know.. first thinking...)

So here's the original post:

Quote
http://www.fourmilab.ch/gravitation/foobar/

Just before half of the document there is a nice description for a gravity experiment anyone can do which profes the existence of gravity, making the UA (if I remeber right) kinda senseless..

But it would also show, that at least parts of the theory are disprovable..

Maybe you guys think about the hole theory after that..

and last but not least - why pumping millions of dollars into a conspiracy that does not provides any power or profit?

I'm really surprised btw that the other topic only got closed and not deleted.. because this experiment is unevitable evidence for "magic", like some of you like to call gravity..

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markjo

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #1 on: March 04, 2009, 08:35:15 AM »
This Cavindish in the basement experiment has already been discussed and has been deemed to be of questionable reliability.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
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Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
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It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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markjo

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #2 on: March 04, 2009, 02:11:54 PM »
Among other things, the tuna fish can of water used as a damper didn't seem to impress the people who took a closer look at the setup.  That and the fact that it's hard to eliminate all possible stray influences that could skew the results (i.e. air currents, uneven mass density of the floor, gravitational attraction from random items in the basement, etc.).  Some guy's basement isn't exactly lab quality controlled conditions.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #3 on: March 04, 2009, 03:01:32 PM »
Quote
[ ...] gravitational attraction from random items in the basement, etc.)[ ...]

which could only occur if gravity existed, wouldn't it?

And this experiment is repeatable - it always gets the same results - so you can exclude random events that led to this outcome

And btw.. what the hell you got with the tuna fish can? who cares if it is a tuna fish can or a holed diamond?
« Last Edit: March 04, 2009, 03:04:03 PM by gregg »

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #4 on: March 04, 2009, 04:21:12 PM »
Kinda... lacking answers for a topic that "has been discussed alot of times and was proven false" in my point of view..

Oh.. and please regard my 2nd question
"and last but not least - why pumping millions of dollars into a conspiracy that does not provides any power or profit?"

Thanks :)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #5 on: March 04, 2009, 05:15:00 PM »
Kinda... lacking answers for a topic that "has been discussed alot of times and was proven false" in my point of view..

Oh.. and please regard my 2nd question
"and last but not least - why pumping millions of dollars into a conspiracy that does not provides any power or profit?"

Thanks :)

No profit?  You need to look at the amount of money that NASA lost... every year, for years.  Do a search for NASA, Audit, Pricewaterhouse.  I posted the links a couple of times.

Even the outside auditors couldn't tell where all of NASA's money went, because NASA wouldn't tell them.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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JoshuaZ

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #6 on: March 04, 2009, 07:50:29 PM »
Among other things, the tuna fish can of water used as a damper didn't seem to impress the people who took a closer look at the setup.  That and the fact that it's hard to eliminate all possible stray influences that could skew the results (i.e. air currents, uneven mass density of the floor, gravitational attraction from random items in the basement, etc.).  Some guy's basement isn't exactly lab quality controlled conditions.

Gah. If there are other gravitational attractions then they exist. That's fine. And any stray issues are an issue for measuring G accurately, not determining its existence (it isn't at all hard to get using this sort of apparatus G to one sig fig). This is a great example of a DIY experiment that gives the same results each time. Any FEr can do this anyways. And moreover, many physics buffs have done this sort of thing and gotten the correct result. So unless they are a) in the conspiracy and b) the conspiracy predates NASA by hundreds of years...

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #7 on: March 05, 2009, 04:09:53 AM »

No profit?  You need to look at the amount of money that NASA lost... every year, for years.  Do a search for NASA, Audit, Pricewaterhouse.  I posted the links a couple of times.

Even the outside auditors couldn't tell where all of NASA's money went, because NASA wouldn't tell them.

I think I haven't understood you - losing money is in my point of view the exact opposite of profit :)

Or do you mean the space missions from NASA that are all fake and they take the money from the government?

Even that wouldn't make much sense, because there are much more easier ways to hide money (look at the black budget for FBI, Area 51 for example..)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #8 on: March 05, 2009, 07:47:39 AM »

No profit?  You need to look at the amount of money that NASA lost... every year, for years.  Do a search for NASA, Audit, Pricewaterhouse.  I posted the links a couple of times.

Even the outside auditors couldn't tell where all of NASA's money went, because NASA wouldn't tell them.

I think I haven't understood you - losing money is in my point of view the exact opposite of profit :)

Or do you mean the space missions from NASA that are all fake and they take the money from the government?

Even that wouldn't make much sense, because there are much more easier ways to hide money (look at the black budget for FBI, Area 51 for example..)

Ah, but those funds go back to the government.  If you want funds for something you don't want the entire government to know about... you have to "spend" it on some they do know about.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #9 on: March 05, 2009, 02:08:15 PM »
Ah, but those funds go back to the government.  If you want funds for something you don't want the entire government to know about... you have to "spend" it on some they do know about.

Hmm - but even in this case it would be easier to start projects there which are consuming less money and giving some of the money back instead of the huge expenses for a conspiracy of this size. :)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #10 on: March 05, 2009, 02:10:04 PM »
Ah, but those funds go back to the government.  If you want funds for something you don't want the entire government to know about... you have to "spend" it on some they do know about.

Hmm - but even in this case it would be easier to start projects there which are consuming less money and giving some of the money back instead of the huge expenses for a conspiracy of this size. :)

And give up the 17.9 billion dollars a year?  Are you crazy?

Hm... I can run the same scam as long as it works...
or I can try and make up a new one every few years or every year and try and get as much money.

Which one sounds better to you?
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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markjo

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #11 on: March 05, 2009, 02:47:34 PM »
Ah, but those funds go back to the government.  If you want funds for something you don't want the entire government to know about... you have to "spend" it on some they do know about.

Hmm - but even in this case it would be easier to start projects there which are consuming less money and giving some of the money back instead of the huge expenses for a conspiracy of this size. :)

And give up the 17.9 billion dollars a year?  Are you crazy?

Hm... I can run the same scam as long as it works...
or I can try and make up a new one every few years or every year and try and get as much money.

Which one sounds better to you?

Scammers get caught because they don't change up their game every so often.  People do eventually catch on, you know (hence the Price-Waterhouse and GAO audits that you referred to earlier).
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #12 on: March 05, 2009, 03:06:03 PM »
Ah, but those funds go back to the government.  If you want funds for something you don't want the entire government to know about... you have to "spend" it on some they do know about.

Hmm - but even in this case it would be easier to start projects there which are consuming less money and giving some of the money back instead of the huge expenses for a conspiracy of this size. :)

And give up the 17.9 billion dollars a year?  Are you crazy?

Hm... I can run the same scam as long as it works...
or I can try and make up a new one every few years or every year and try and get as much money.

Which one sounds better to you?

Scammers get caught because they don't change up their game every so often.  People do eventually catch on, you know (hence the Price-Waterhouse and GAO audits that you referred to earlier).

Nope... check it for your self...  NASA openly admitted that they couldn't account for all of the more and property they were supposed to have and all the Auditors did was write a note at the beginning of the Audit.

Allow me to show you a few things I have found:

Arthur Andersen "did not meet professional standards" in its audit of NASA's 1999 financial statements, which included a $644 million error, according to a General Accounting Office report issued last year.


http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-322123.html

PricewaterhouseCoopers also concluded that NASA's financial management systems do not substantially comply with the requirements of FFMIA.

Although the auditor's report draws attention to the issue, NASA's financial management difficulties are not new. NASA has been on GAO's High-Risk list3 for contract management since 1990, in part, because the agency has failed to successfully implement a modern, integrated financial management system, which is central to producing accurate and reliable financial information needed to support contract management.


http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=5014

Basically, research will show that NASA has not been properly audited since at least 1982... and possibly before then.

How exactly do you "lose" 644 million dollars?
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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markjo

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #13 on: March 05, 2009, 03:11:31 PM »
Don't attribute to malice what can be just as easily explained by stupidity.  Incompetence or improper accounting practices are not the same as fraud.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #14 on: March 05, 2009, 03:14:11 PM »
Don't attribute to malice what can be just as easily explained by stupidity.  Incompetence or improper accounting practices are not the same as fraud.

2 or 3 million is an error... 644 million is a bit different.  Even i can take amount A(Amount given to NASA by COngress,), subtract amount B(Amount NASA spent in that fiscal year,) and see what's left.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #15 on: March 05, 2009, 03:37:48 PM »
Don't attribute to malice what can be just as easily explained by stupidity.  Incompetence or improper accounting practices are not the same as fraud.

2 or 3 million is an error... 644 million is a bit different.  Even i can take amount A(Amount given to NASA by COngress,), subtract amount B(Amount NASA spent in that fiscal year,) and see what's left.

But they already got their 30 billion dollar budget of which nobody knows where exactly it flows to - and they dont need such a huge lie to cover it - its just there.. :) (The Black Budget) or smth. like that its called - some people say its mostly used for area 51 and stuff - i mentioned that earlier ;)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #16 on: March 05, 2009, 03:53:57 PM »
Don't attribute to malice what can be just as easily explained by stupidity.  Incompetence or improper accounting practices are not the same as fraud.

2 or 3 million is an error... 644 million is a bit different.  Even i can take amount A(Amount given to NASA by COngress,), subtract amount B(Amount NASA spent in that fiscal year,) and see what's left.

But they already got their 30 billion dollar budget of which nobody knows where exactly it flows to - and they dont need such a huge lie to cover it - its just there.. :) (The Black Budget) or smth. like that its called - some people say its mostly used for area 51 and stuff - i mentioned that earlier ;)

That's not NASA's money though... That money is controlled by the GAO.

Look at it like this... When you lived at home with your parents, they made X amount of money, which was theirs.

They gave you an allowance of Y dollars, which you could spend anyway you wanted.

The X amount of money was there, in the household, but you didn't have access to it.

If you wanted to buy something they wouldn't approve of, you had to make your Y money cover it.

NASA is doing the same thing... Last year, they got 17.8 billion dollars.  If they could make 644 million disappear from the 1992 budget of a mere 7 billion dollars...  how much can they make disappear from 17 almost 18 billion?

And here is another strange thing...  The government is always trying to cut waste, etc.  Why are all the NASA centers doing pretty much the same thing?  All ten of them?

http://www.jstor.org/pss/976477  This link has an interesting article about the organizational problems of NASA.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #17 on: March 05, 2009, 04:28:02 PM »
Why are all the NASA centers doing pretty much the same thing?  All ten of them?

Sorr but your going to provide some evidence that all NASA centers are doing the same thing (apart from space research and exploration which is the obvious)

your link only says there is some overlap. that is all.

Excuse me?  Other than space exploration and remaining at the forefront of the space race, what does NASA do?

Nothing.

*  To advance and communicate scientific knowledge and understanding of the earth, the solar system, and the universe.

* To advance human exploration, use, and development of space.

* To research, develop, verify, and transfer advanced aeronautics and space technologies.

So... why do they need ten separate centers to do that?

This link:  http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/codez/plans.html

Has a section called: "Center Implementation Plans" and that link, or those links show that almost half of each center overlaps with at least one other center.

One agency, two or more different groups working on the same thing.  Why?  Brainstorming with other people working on the same thing you are is one of the best ways to share information.

That is why conventions are so common.

But... if you want to hide money going out... having far more outlays than you need is a very good way to cover up disappearing money.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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gregg

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #18 on: March 05, 2009, 04:31:46 PM »
Well thats a point - but this would include that the conspiracy would just come from NASA without the support of the government because I am pretty sure they could spend their money more wisely :)

Besides: Anyone did the experiment yet? :)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #19 on: March 05, 2009, 04:55:58 PM »
Why are all the NASA centers doing pretty much the same thing?  All ten of them?

Sorr but your going to provide some evidence that all NASA centers are doing the same thing (apart from space research and exploration which is the obvious)

your link only says there is some overlap. that is all.

Excuse me?  Other than space exploration and remaining at the forefront of the space race, what does NASA do?

Nothing.

*  To advance and communicate scientific knowledge and understanding of the earth, the solar system, and the universe.

* To advance human exploration, use, and development of space.

* To research, develop, verify, and transfer advanced aeronautics and space technologies.

So... why do they need ten separate centers to do that?


Because they very difficult things to do! i lol'd

also link just show overlap you not give evidence they all do pretty much same thing.

and now you say it make more money nasa to repeat same thing over and over at every center? this not sound like good conspiracy to me.


Are you stupid or simply unable to think of anything that isn't spelled out for you?

NASA claims that two or more centers are working on the same thing.

Only one center is doing any of the work.  They pocket millions of dollars.

As long as they "Show" some progress, they get more money next year.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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Ambassadork

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #20 on: March 05, 2009, 05:21:49 PM »
Ravenwood240 - You know the first "A" in NASA stands for "Aeronautics," right?  ::)

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #21 on: March 05, 2009, 05:23:52 PM »
Ravenwood240 - You know the first "A" in NASA stands for "Aeronautics," right?  ::)

NO!!  Really!?!?  I didn't know that.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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markjo

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #22 on: March 05, 2009, 07:02:44 PM »
Ravenwood240 - You know the first "A" in NASA stands for "Aeronautics," right?  ::)

NO!!  Really!?!?  I didn't know that.

I think that the subtle point that he's trying to make is that NASA's entire budget is not dedicated to space systems.  NASA needs to use a significant portion of that that budget for aeronautical research and educational programs.  Therefore it really isn't fair to imply that NASA's whole budget is used to further the conspiracy.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #23 on: March 05, 2009, 07:10:17 PM »
I think that the subtle point that he's trying to make is that NASA's entire budget is not dedicated to space systems.  NASA needs to use a significant portion of that that budget for aeronautical research and educational programs.  Therefore it really isn't fair to imply that NASA's whole budget is used to further the conspiracy.

If NASA's faking its space research to save money, what makes you think that they aren't also faking its aeronautical research to save money?

Until last year NASA didn't even know how far the atmosphere even extended.

http://current.com/items/89644124/space_is_closer_than_we_thought.htm
« Last Edit: March 05, 2009, 07:11:55 PM by Tom Bishop »

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Edtharan

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #24 on: March 05, 2009, 10:59:31 PM »
I think that the subtle point that he's trying to make is that NASA's entire budget is not dedicated to space systems.  NASA needs to use a significant portion of that that budget for aeronautical research and educational programs.  Therefore it really isn't fair to imply that NASA's whole budget is used to further the conspiracy.

If NASA's faking its space research to save money, what makes you think that they aren't also faking its aeronautical research to save money?
One word: Results.

NASA has been getting a lot of results form its research and there are many products that exist today that would not exist if NASA was not getting results. Not only of their Aeronautics division, but also their Space division.

What this means is that NASA can not be pocketing the money from their Space programs as they are getting results.

Also, NASA is not a pure research entity, they are in fact an "Administration" entity (and they state that in their name). That is that they are not solely dedicated to researching or even launching space missions, but are in fact the National Administrative Body for those endeavours. This means a lot of legal wrangling goes on, and as you might be aware, Lawyers are expensive.

Until last year NASA didn't even know how far the atmosphere even extended.

http://current.com/items/89644124/space_is_closer_than_we_thought.htm
Tom, the problem with the Atmosphere is that there is not a sharp line dividing Atmosphere form Outside the Atmosphere.

As you get higher, the atmosphere gets thinner and thinner. It doesn't just "end", but it keeps getting thinner and thinner.

http://photoshophelp.blogs.com/photos/grayscale/gradient.html

In the image in that link Tom, can you tell me where white ends and black begins?

No, because there is no sharp dividing line. Such as it is with the Atmosphere. It is only because of legal reasons that the "Edge" of the atmosphere has had to be defined, and because there was many countries and many different people (and because there were many lawyers involved) it has taken a long time to reach a consensus.

It is not that NASA "Discovered" the edge of the Atmosphere, but that a legal definition was reached.

Only one center is doing any of the work.  They pocket millions of dollars.
And as soon as they are audited, they are exposed and they loose all funding and the world knows the truth.

Now, the big question about the conspiracy is: IS there any proof that they really are doing it.

One of the major rationales behind the FE is Zetetic Philosophy. In it, it states categorically, you can not accept something if you have no direct proof of it. So, any Zetetics out there that claim to accept the conspiracy either has such evidence and are not releasing it, or are not actually following the Zetetic Philosophy and can not claim to be Zetetic.

The common "escape" that the Zetetics then use is to claims that as they accept the Earth is Flat, and so that if the Earth is flat, then NASA must therefore be conspiring.

BUT this was the very reason that the requirement for Direct evidence was included into the Zetetic philosophy. Without direct evidence of this conspiracy (as opposed to the current use of Inductive Reasoning as evidence),, then there is the possibility of NASA not being in a conspiracy and then the whole of FET falls down.

So, without DIRECT evidence, as Zetetic Philosophy REQUIRES, no Zetetic can support any conspiracy theory. This of course does not rule out the possibility of a conspiracy, but without the direct evidence, no true Zetetic can use that as support of FET.

Oh, and by the way, if you use acceptance of a FE as proof of a conspiracy, but then use that conspiracy to support FET, then that is circular logic and is a logical fallacy. The other requirement of Zetetic Philosophy is that you use correct logic to reach conclusions, and so the use of such a logical fallacy is also against Zetetic philosophy.
Everyday household experimentation.

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #25 on: March 06, 2009, 10:42:52 AM »
I think that the subtle point that he's trying to make is that NASA's entire budget is not dedicated to space systems.  NASA needs to use a significant portion of that that budget for aeronautical research and educational programs.  Therefore it really isn't fair to imply that NASA's whole budget is used to further the conspiracy.

If NASA's faking its space research to save money, what makes you think that they aren't also faking its aeronautical research to save money?
One word: Results.

And?  They would get results if some of them were working on the missions that they claim to be working on.  Nor have I ever said that their entire budget is going to the Conspiracy.  90% of NASA doesn't even know about it.  They just work for the people that do run the Conspiracy.

NASA has been getting a lot of results form its research and there are many products that exist today that would not exist if NASA was not getting results. Not only of their Aeronautics division, but also their Space division.

What this means is that NASA can not be pocketing the money from their Space programs as they are getting results.

Uh huh.  So, you think they actually paid 1800.00 bucks for toilet seats?

Also, NASA is not a pure research entity, they are in fact an "Administration" entity (and they state that in their name). That is that they are not solely dedicated to researching or even launching space missions, but are in fact the National Administrative Body for those endeavours. This means a lot of legal wrangling goes on, and as you might be aware, Lawyers are expensive.

And?  18 billion dollars.  They managed to misplace 644 million dollars in 1992, hiding it even from the Auditors at first.  In 1992, they didn't have 18 billion dollars to play with.  Google "NASA budget audit (ANY year)...  They all have the same first pages and one of them is an admission from the Auditors that NASA is within federal guidelines... for the money shown, but that NASA couldn't account for all of their money.  That's been going on since at least 1982, that being as far back as I have looked so far.

Until last year NASA didn't even know how far the atmosphere even extended.

http://current.com/items/89644124/space_is_closer_than_we_thought.htm
Tom, the problem with the Atmosphere is that there is not a sharp line dividing Atmosphere form Outside the Atmosphere.

As you get higher, the atmosphere gets thinner and thinner. It doesn't just "end", but it keeps getting thinner and thinner.

http://photoshophelp.blogs.com/photos/grayscale/gradient.html

In the image in that link Tom, can you tell me where white ends and black begins?

No, because there is no sharp dividing line. Such as it is with the Atmosphere. It is only because of legal reasons that the "Edge" of the atmosphere has had to be defined, and because there was many countries and many different people (and because there were many lawyers involved) it has taken a long time to reach a consensus.

It is not that NASA "Discovered" the edge of the Atmosphere, but that a legal definition was reached.

Only one center is doing any of the work.  They pocket millions of dollars.
And as soon as they are audited, they are exposed and they loose all funding and the world knows the truth.

No, they don't.  NASA simply says... they lost some money and the Auditors put their disclaimer on the audit.

"Two weeks later, troubling new doubts were raised about NASA's financial management. PricewaterhouseCoopers, the agency's auditor, issued a disclaimed opinion on NASA's 2003 financial statements. PwC complained that NASA couldn't adequately document more than $565 billion ? billion ? in year-end adjustments to the financial-statement accounts, which NASA delivered to the auditors two months late. Because of "the lack of a sufficient audit trail to support that its financial statements are presented fairly," concluded the auditors, "it was not possible to complete further audit procedures on NASA's September 30, 2003, financial statements within the reporting deadline established by [the Office of Management and Budget]."


http://www.solariactionnetwork.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=1167

Now, the big question about the conspiracy is: IS there any proof that they really are doing it.

One of the major rationales behind the FE is Zetetic Philosophy. In it, it states categorically, you can not accept something if you have no direct proof of it. So, any Zetetics out there that claim to accept the conspiracy either has such evidence and are not releasing it, or are not actually following the Zetetic Philosophy and can not claim to be Zetetic.

The common "escape" that the Zetetics then use is to claims that as they accept the Earth is Flat, and so that if the Earth is flat, then NASA must therefore be conspiring.

BUT this was the very reason that the requirement for Direct evidence was included into the Zetetic philosophy. Without direct evidence of this conspiracy (as opposed to the current use of Inductive Reasoning as evidence),, then there is the possibility of NASA not being in a conspiracy and then the whole of FET falls down.

So, without DIRECT evidence, as Zetetic Philosophy REQUIRES, no Zetetic can support any conspiracy theory. This of course does not rule out the possibility of a conspiracy, but without the direct evidence, no true Zetetic can use that as support of FET.

Oh, and by the way, if you use acceptance of a FE as proof of a conspiracy, but then use that conspiracy to support FET, then that is circular logic and is a logical fallacy. The other requirement of Zetetic Philosophy is that you use correct logic to reach conclusions, and so the use of such a logical fallacy is also against Zetetic philosophy.

NASA is doing something with huge chunks of money.  I have posted at least a dozen links to claims of lost money, including the one above.

If NASA is so clean, what happened to that 565 billion dollars they can't account for?

And please don't try to claim that half a trillion dollars is an accounting error.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

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Ravenwood240

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #26 on: March 06, 2009, 11:14:34 AM »
NASA is doing something with huge chunks of money.  I have posted at least a dozen links to claims of lost money, including the one above.

If NASA is so clean, what happened to that 565 billion dollars they can't account for?

And please don't try to claim that half a trillion dollars is an accounting error.

I think 65 billion a lot money but i remeber now that article very vague. but 65 billion loss was collected over several years.

If nasa get billions a year is 65 billion a lot? It sound like lot, but it only small percentage of total money recieved.

That's 565 billion, not 65 billion.  NASA was created in 1961.  It is 2009, and NASA has been around just 48 years, correct?

That means that if they have lost 565 billion dollars, they have lost an average of 11,530,612,244.89 dollars per year.

Considering that NASA only got 17.9 billion dollars in 2008's budget... Those are some very ugly numbers.
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")

Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #27 on: March 06, 2009, 07:37:08 PM »

That's not NASA's money though... That money is controlled by the GAO.

Wrong. The GAO controls only its budget, not NASA's.

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zork

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Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #28 on: March 07, 2009, 03:49:04 AM »
NASA is doing something with huge chunks of money.  I have posted at least a dozen links to claims of lost money, including the one above.

If NASA is so clean, what happened to that 565 billion dollars they can't account for?

And please don't try to claim that half a trillion dollars is an accounting error.
Not accounting error. Quote from the link you gave:
NASA says blame for the financial mayhem falls squarely on the so-called Integrated Financial Management Program (IFMP), an ambitious enterprise-software implementation. In June 2003, the agency finished rolling out the core financial module of the program's SAP R/3 system. NASA's CFO, Gwendolyn Brown, says the conversion to the new system caused the problems with the audit. In particular, she blames the difficulty the agency had converting the historical financial data from 10 legacy systems ? some written in COBOL ? into the new system, and reconciling the two versions for its year-end reports.
 I guess you are expert for migrating stuff from legacy systems so that you can say for sure that there can't be problems in way of transition from older systems to new one.
Rowbotham had bad eyesight
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http://thulescientific.com/Lynch%20Curvature%202008.pdf - Visually discerning the curvature of the Earth
http://thulescientific.com/TurbulentShipWakes_Lynch_AO_2005.pdf - Turbulent ship wakes:further evidence that the Earth is round.

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Ravenwood240

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  • I disagree. What was the Question?
Re: Gravity Experiment and Questions of common sense
« Reply #29 on: March 07, 2009, 11:28:26 AM »
NASA is doing something with huge chunks of money.  I have posted at least a dozen links to claims of lost money, including the one above.

If NASA is so clean, what happened to that 565 billion dollars they can't account for?

And please don't try to claim that half a trillion dollars is an accounting error.
Not accounting error. Quote from the link you gave:
NASA says blame for the financial mayhem falls squarely on the so-called Integrated Financial Management Program (IFMP), an ambitious enterprise-software implementation. In June 2003, the agency finished rolling out the core financial module of the program's SAP R/3 system. NASA's CFO, Gwendolyn Brown, says the conversion to the new system caused the problems with the audit. In particular, she blames the difficulty the agency had converting the historical financial data from 10 legacy systems ? some written in COBOL ? into the new system, and reconciling the two versions for its year-end reports.
 I guess you are expert for migrating stuff from legacy systems so that you can say for sure that there can't be problems in way of transition from older systems to new one.

So 565 billion dollars was just an accounting error?

Do you believe there were nuclear weapons in Iraq too?
Belief gets in the way of learning.  If you believe something, you've closed your mind to any further thought.  I know some things, little things, not the nine million names of God.

(Paraphased from R.A. Heinlein's "Time Enough For Love.")