Message from @shanepottermi

Discord ID: 521156526686339082


2018-12-09 02:46:07 UTC  

not just a political, a everglades style swamp

2018-12-09 02:46:56 UTC  

@Misomania Is that the big ass meteor i told this discord i saw like a week ago?

2018-12-09 02:47:09 UTC  

You see, a lot of coastal wetlands are under threat from mere inches of sealevel rise because a lot of coastal wetlands are in the intertidal zone

2018-12-09 02:47:22 UTC  

rip gators

2018-12-09 02:47:35 UTC  

not sure, this one had nasa look up and basically ask what the hell they were seeing @shanepottermi and it was large enough to wreck a large city

2018-12-09 02:47:42 UTC  

I think there was a meteor a couple days ago

2018-12-09 02:47:50 UTC  

if it was on a different trajectory it would have cratered something for sure

2018-12-09 02:47:57 UTC  

biggest one i ever saw

2018-12-09 02:47:59 UTC  

If low tide ends up so that areas that were exposed at low tide are no longer exposed, those areas go away

2018-12-09 02:48:06 UTC  

flew half way between the earth and moon, which is nothing spacewise

2018-12-09 02:48:08 UTC  

The massive one was 1 mile wide

2018-12-09 02:48:28 UTC  

Which in turn has *implications* for flooding in the area whenever a storm rides in

2018-12-09 02:48:30 UTC  

oh what i saw actually entered the atmosphere

2018-12-09 02:48:43 UTC  

it was so big i could see the thing on fire inside the shooting star

2018-12-09 02:49:06 UTC  

it was burning for like 2 seconds

2018-12-09 02:49:09 UTC  

I think this was a few months back. Would've wiped out even a city like new york and they had zero clue it was there until they looked up and saw it

2018-12-09 02:49:30 UTC  

that stuff happens all the time.. near misses

2018-12-09 02:49:35 UTC  

@Misomania There is probably a lot more that they don't see

2018-12-09 02:49:43 UTC  

we're sitting in between 2 giant meteor belts

2018-12-09 02:49:53 UTC  

Space force baby

2018-12-09 02:49:58 UTC  

'well in our solar system at least'

2018-12-09 02:50:06 UTC  

imagine a pulstar

2018-12-09 02:50:08 UTC  

@shanepottermi You mean the lagrange points?

2018-12-09 02:50:30 UTC  

We have plenty of Trojans there

2018-12-09 02:50:51 UTC  

no one would've lived through a near miss of a chunk of a pulstar

houston gets fucking owned after every flood because theres nowhere for the water to hold anymore

2018-12-09 02:51:20 UTC  

@Misomania You mean gamma ray burst. Pulsars are a type of solar body

used to have fields to soak up all the water... now those fields are nasty ugly subdivisions

2018-12-09 02:52:22 UTC  

@H3llbender the radiation that eminates from that end of a dying star, if mobile. Was listening to someone talk of rogue black holes and potential for dying stars to move that way

2018-12-09 02:53:45 UTC  

Still caused by global warming.

2018-12-09 02:53:54 UTC  

@H3llbender what would we be able to do against something like that? moving solar or rogue black holes... besides kiss our ass goodbye that is

2018-12-09 02:54:07 UTC  
2018-12-09 02:55:11 UTC  

@Misomania By the time we knew it was happening it would have already happened, we don't have FTL *anything* and we would need to have FTL sensors to spot it coming

2018-12-09 02:55:37 UTC  

The last paper UF sumited to the National Geologist Union said humans are responsible for 15% of golobal warming

2018-12-09 02:56:26 UTC  

It is actually a scenario that could potentially bring about some of the whole blood moon, blotting out the sun, wormwood stuff in revalations

2018-12-09 02:56:54 UTC  

Califonia wild fires put oun more C02 then humans trhis year and the number of fire have been going down

2018-12-09 02:56:57 UTC  

@woodchuck00 Got a link?

2018-12-09 02:57:32 UTC  

"he state is estimated to have released emissions equivalent to about 68 million tons of carbon dioxide, based on data analyzed by the U.S. Geological Survey. That’s close to the roughly 76 million tons of emissions produced by California’s electricity sector in all of 2016, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke said in a statement Friday. It equates to about 15 percent of all California emissions."