Message from @Dark Magician

Discord ID: 639913995335368704


2019-11-01 19:48:25 UTC  

was molten

2019-11-01 19:48:29 UTC  

so how is this evidence of mass extinction on the moon

2019-11-01 19:48:33 UTC  

for a period of time?

2019-11-01 19:48:38 UTC  

that is on the order of billions of yrs ago

2019-11-01 19:48:40 UTC  

Also there was a neat theory that Venus erupts every 10k years

2019-11-01 19:48:40 UTC  

and that was unrelated to the sun

2019-11-01 19:48:44 UTC  

not a couple thousand

2019-11-01 19:48:45 UTC  

there's not even evidence of life so how is their evidence of extinction

2019-11-01 19:48:45 UTC  

I mean its surface

2019-11-01 19:48:53 UTC  

svar, interesting

2019-11-01 19:48:54 UTC  

a couple thousand?

2019-11-01 19:48:55 UTC  

again

2019-11-01 19:49:02 UTC  

that'd exterminate life on Earth

2019-11-01 19:49:07 UTC  

and destroy the entire ecology

2019-11-01 19:49:11 UTC  

their evidence suggested the moon event was also 10k yrs ago

2019-11-01 19:49:15 UTC  

so venus

2019-11-01 19:49:18 UTC  

unless it was extremely brief

2019-11-01 19:49:19 UTC  

and the moon

2019-11-01 19:49:26 UTC  

and I do mean *extremely*

2019-11-01 19:49:26 UTC  

curious

2019-11-01 19:49:45 UTC  

so you're seriously suggesting there was life on the moon 10,000 years ago

2019-11-01 19:49:50 UTC  

no

2019-11-01 19:49:58 UTC  

are you retarded? of course not

2019-11-01 19:50:16 UTC  

he's suggesting something that just seems so incredibly unnatural and unlikely

2019-11-01 19:50:30 UTC  

no, only suggesting that there is evideence to suggest some type of a cyclic earth change

2019-11-01 19:50:35 UTC  

a massive burst of the Sun's power for a relatively, extremely short period of time

2019-11-01 19:50:38 UTC  

which is a function of the sun

2019-11-01 19:51:16 UTC  

you'd need to at least outline a mechanism for the Sun to even store such an amount of energy in a way to be so readily released in a short burst

2019-11-01 19:51:30 UTC  

what?!

2019-11-01 19:51:35 UTC  

they are called CME

2019-11-01 19:51:41 UTC  

they happen all the time

2019-11-01 19:51:47 UTC  

...sunspots?

2019-11-01 19:52:01 UTC  

I was under the assumption that the sun has a relatively stable fusion rate

2019-11-01 19:52:04 UTC  

it does

2019-11-01 19:52:06 UTC  

had the one in 2017 hit earth rather than been in the opposite direction, we'd be in the stone age

2019-11-01 19:52:12 UTC  

no

2019-11-01 19:52:29 UTC  

these are relatively frequent solar events; we are in a shooting gallery after all

2019-11-01 19:52:41 UTC  

```The largest recorded geomagnetic perturbation, resulting presumably from a CME hitting the Earth's magnetosphere, was the solar storm of 1859 (the Carrington Event), which took down parts of the recently created US telegraph network, starting fires and shocking some telegraph operators.```

2019-11-01 19:52:42 UTC  

the odds are just so low that one will happen to be directed at earth

2019-11-01 19:52:47 UTC  

it already did

2019-11-01 19:52:51 UTC  

I mean it wouldn't be the stone age it'd be like 17th century Europe