Archive for conspiracy theory

Conspiracy theory: Obama went to Mars as teen

Forget 2012 prophecies, Mayan calendars and lurking planets that go only by the name “X” … there’s an even kookier conspiracy theory in town, and it has to do with our nation’s fearless leader and his teenage teleportation adventures on Mars.

Yes, you read that right.

It seems that two government employees and self-professed time-travelers — er, “chrononauts” — Andrew D. Basiago and William Stillings have come forth and named President Obama as one of their own, along with the current head of DARPA, Regina Dugan.

(DARPA, if you don’t know, is the agency responsible for keeping U.S. defense up-t0-date with advancements in technology. Begun as a response to the Sputnik program in the late 50s, DARPA finds ways to integrate cutting-edge tech developments into stuff the military might want.)

Basiago, a Washington state lawyer, says that he was part of a time travel program developed by DARPA in the 1970s code-named Project Pegasus. He and Stillings claim that both Obama and Dugan were in their “Mars training class” at California’s College of the Siskiyous in 1980, part of a group of 10 young adults chosen to travel to Mars via a top-secret teleportation “jump room.”

They also claim that the then-19-year-old Barack Obama went by the name “Barry Soetero”.

But wait, there’s more.

The two former chrononauts also said that they encountered the future president at secret U.S. bases on Mars, which he is said to have visited twice between the years 1981 and 1983. On one instance Basiago said he even exchanged words with Ob — uh, Soetero — en route to the “jump room” while on Mars.

“We’re here,” Basiago claims the young president-to-be said to him.

And the supposed reason for the secret teen task force’s Red Planet expedition? To “acclimate Martian humanoids and animals to their presence,” according to Basiago.

You know, to make good with the locals so there’d be no trouble when setting up camp.

White House officials have denied all allegations of the President’s Martian travels, or the existence of a Mars training class. But, of course, they would.

And you thought the whole birther thing was a bit extreme? Wake up sheeple, this is some real crazy here. Chrononaut style.

Read more on Wired.com’s “Danger Room

More from Universe Today:

This report originally appeared Jan. 4 on Universe Today with the headline “Beam Me Up, Obama: Conspiracy Theory Claims President Teleported to Mars.”

Copyright © 2012 Universe Today. Republished with permission.

Article source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45878146/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Beam Me Up, Obama: Conspiracy Theory Claims President Teleported to Mars


Was the 44th President of the United States a top-secret teenage Mars explorer?

Forget 2012 prophecies, Mayan calendars and lurking planets that go only by the name “X”… there’s an even kookier conspiracy theory in town, and it has to do with our nation’s fearless leader and his teenage teleportation adventures on Mars.

Yes, you read that right.

It seems that two government employees and self-professed time-travelers – er, “chrononauts” – Andrew D. Basiago and William Stillings have come forth and named President Obama as one of their own, along with the current head of DARPA, Regina Dugan.

(DARPA, if you don’t know, is the agency responsible for keeping U.S. defense up-t0-date with advancements in technology. Begun as a response to the Sputnik program in the late 50s, DARPA finds ways to integrate cutting-edge tech developments into stuff the military might want.)

Basiago, a Washington state lawyer, says that he was part of a time travel program developed by DARPA in the 1970s code-named Project Pegasus. He and Stillings claim that both Obama and Dugan were in their “Mars training class” at California’s College of the Siskiyous in 1980, part of a group of 10 young adults chosen to travel to Mars via a top-secret teleportation “jump room”.

They also claim that the then-19-year-old Barack Obama went by the name “Barry Soetero”.

But wait, there’s more.

“I’ll beam ya down Mister President but I’ll have to see your birth certificate first.” (Photo via startrek.com)

The two former chrononauts also said that they encountered the future president at secret U.S. bases on Mars, which he is said to have visited twice between the years 1981 and 1983. On one instance Basiago said he even exchanged words with Ob – uh, Soetero – en route to the “jump room” while on Mars.

“We’re here,” Basiago claims the young president-to-be said to him.

And the supposed reason for the secret teen task force’s Red Planet expedition? To “acclimate Martian humanoids and animals to their presence,” according to Basiago.

You know, to make good with the locals so there’d be no trouble when setting up camp.

White House officials have denied all allegations of the President’s Martian travels, or the existence of a Mars training class. But, of course, they would. 

And you thought the whole birther thing was a bit extreme? Wake up sheeple, this is some real crazy here. Chrononaut style.

Read more on Wired.com’s “Danger Room”.

 

Top image assembled by J. Major from NASA and Hubble images and a campaign photo of President Obama. Star Trek image from www.startrek.com. © 2010 CBS Studios Inc., All Rights Reserved.

Jason is a graphic artist from Rhode Island now living and working in Dallas, Texas. He writes about astronomy and space exploration on his blog Lights In The Dark, here on Universe Today and also on Discovery News.


Article source: http://www.universetoday.com/92359/beam-me-up-obama-conspiracy-theory-claims-president-teleported-to-mars/

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Was the Real Discovery of the Expanding Universe Lost in Translation?

The greatest astronomical discovery of the 20th century may have been credited to the wrong person. But it turns out to have been nobody’s fault except for that of the actual original discoverer himself.

Writing in the November 10th issue of the journal Nature, astrophysicist Mario Livio of the Space Telescope Science Institute has put to bed a growing conspiracy theory about who was fairly credited for discovering the expanding universe.

For nearly a century, American astronomer Edwin P. Hubble has held the fame for this landmark discovery, which would recast all of 20th century astronomy. Hubble reported that the universe is uniformly expanding in all directions. It solved Einstein’s dilemma of explaining why the universe didn’t already collapse under its own gravity.

Ironically, Hubble never got a Nobel Prize for this discovery, though astronomers from two teams who independently uncovered evidence for an accelerating universe won the 2011 Noble Prize in Physics. But Hubble did get the most celebrated telescope of modern history named after him.

Hubble published his landmark paper in which he determined the rate of expansion of the universe in 1929. This was based on the apparent recessional velocities (deduced from redshifts) of galaxies, as previously measured by astronomer Vesto Slipher, coupled to distances to the same galaxies, as determined by Hubble.

Hubble’s analysis showed that the farther the galaxy was, the faster it appeared to be receding. The rate of cosmic expansion is now known as the Hubble Constant.

But two years earlier, a Belgian priest and cosmologist, Georges Lemaitre, published very similar conclusions, and he calculated a rate of expansion similar to what Hubble would publish two years later.

Lemaitre based his analysis on Slipher’s same redshift data, which he combined with estimates of galaxy distances inferred from Hubble’s 1926 published observations.

But Lemaitre’s discovery went unnoticed because it was published in French, in a rather obscure Belgian science journal called the Annales de la Societe Scientifique de Bruxelles (Annals of the Brussels Scientific Society).

The story would have ended there, except that Lemaitre’s work was later translated and published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. When published in 1931, some of Lemaitre’s own calculations from 1927, of what would be later called the Hubble Constant, were omitted!

The fact that paragraphs were missing from the translated paper has been known (although not widely) since 1984. There has been persistent speculation among astronomers over “who dunnit?” Did the Monthly Notices editors cut the paragraphs out? Did Edwin Hubble himself have an influencing hand and censor the paper to eliminate any doubt that he was the original discoverer of the expanding universe?

After going through hundreds of pieces of correspondence of the Royal Astronomical Society, as well as minutes of the RAS meetings, and material from the Lemaitre Archive, Livio has discovered that Lemaitre omitted the passages himself when he translated the paper into English!

In one of two “smoking-gun letters” uncovered by Livio, Lemaitre wrote to the editors: “I did not find advisable to reprint the provisional discussion of radial velocities which is clearly of no actual interest, and also the geometrical note, which could be replaced by a small bibliography of ancient and new papers on the subject.”

The remaining question is why Lemaitre essentially erased evidence for credit due to him, for first discovering (at least tentatively) the expanding universe.

Livio concludes, “Lemaitre’s letter also provides an interesting insight into the scientific psychology of some of the scientists of the 1920s. Lemaitre was not at all obsessed with establishing priority for his original discovery. Given that Hubble’s results had already been published in 1929, he saw no point in repeating his more tentative earlier findings again in 1931.”

Perhaps in some alternative history parallel universe, people are marveling at the deep-space pictures from the Lemaitre Space Telescope.

Article source: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Was_the_Real_Discovery_of_the_Expanding_Universe_Lost_in_Translation_999.html

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‘Apollo 18′ may be NASA’s worst nightmare – The Virginian

The dark side of the moon is pondered in the low-budget “Apollo 18,” which suggests yet another conspiracy theory on space exploration.

If you believe the nonsense about this being based on decades-old footage suppressed by NASA, you may be disturbed. Notice we say disturbed, not horrified.

There is tension. A lot of it.

The film’s predominant weapon is isolation, not special effects. Isolation is the mainstay of horror movies, and outer space is a good deal more isolated than a mere haunted house. The Weinstein brothers, often the producers of Oscar winners, refused to allow advance screenings of “Apollo 18.” They made a mistake because the film actually is more level-headed and logical than would be expected based on efforts via the Internet to create a “reality” theory for the movie.

At its best, “Apollo 18″ hits us with a current fear of government, combined with a past fear, the Russians. Whoever is at fault, you quickly develop a real fear that these astronauts aren’t going to get back home.

One of the astronauts says, “It may be my mind playing tricks, but every once in a while, I look out these windows and I get the sense something may be looking back.”

Sure enough, we get the same feeling.

But with this low budget, you don’t get to see anything too elaborate. For that, you need to see the huge-budgeted, and somewhat similar, “Transformers: Dark of the Moon.”

Directed by Gonzalo Lopez-Gallego, “Apollo” is done in documentary style. Filmmakers seem to think if you keep things out of focus and shake the camera, someone will take it for reality. After all, there were those who claimed they were terrified by the inept nonsense of “The Blair Witch Project” or the even more boring “Paranormal Activity.”

“Apollo 18″ isn’t that desperate. It has a premise. The astronauts have been launched in secrecy. Even their families don’t know. If something happens, they will be written off as killed in test missions, with bodies never found.

Too much time is spent establishing how routine space flight has become.

Then things start to go wrong, inexplicably.

Someone steals the American flag planted on the moon’s surface. There are footprints.

An abandoned Russian spaceship is found.

Red scare all over again.

We’ve seen the aborted missions of “2001: A Space Odyssey,” a film that owes much to Hal, the misbehaving computer. We’ve experienced the stomach buster from “Alien.”

The problem with “Apollo 18″ is not in its script but in the blatant dishonesty of claims that it doesn’t have a script. It opens with the assertion that it is compiled from more than 80 hours of “rediscovered” authentic space footage.

A lie. A palpable lie.

While it is fully capable of making us squirm, “Apollo 18″ is not in the same league with another low-budget sci-fi entry, “Moon” (2009), which featured a stellar performance by Sam Rockwell in the same isolated mode. That one proves that a big budget is not needed for good sci-fi.

Rent it.

“Apollo 18′s” persistently creepy mood is enough, at least, to get on your nerves. That isn’t the same as being horrified.

Mal Vincent, (757) 446-2347, mal.vincent@pilotonline.com

Article source: http://hamptonroads.com/2011/09/apollo-18-may-be-nasas-worst-nightmare-not-ours

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‘Apollo 18′ Offers Conspiracy Theory, to NASA’s Surprise

The film purports to be from found footage representing a real government cover-up.

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