21 sats \ 5 replies \ @OneOneSeven 18 Dec 2023 \ parent \ on: Do you ACTUALLY believe we have been visited by Aliens? aliens_and_UFOs
I'm gonna fasten my tinfoil hat and say it's the exact opposite.
I think there's plenty of eyes on everything in this world and not nearly enough on bitcoin and the UFO topic, and I think they have much MUCH more in common than anyone on either sides of the topic thinks.
There's another ~$1.9 trillion missing from the latest Pentagon budget, for example.
Where, oh where, does it all go..
Ask Nancy Pelosi's husband where it's gone , or Janet yellen, or any one of those theivesš¤£š¤£
I see what you're saying. I don't know if I believe in UFOs, some things don't add up, like how far away the nearest potentially habitable planet is to us would take too long. The speed of light is a speed limit... As far as we know. But I also conceed that there are a lot of occurrences that can't be explained and technological leaps in our advancement that don't happen by accident. Discovery of semiconductors? Crazy how rapidly we jumped in tech.
So I stand firmly in the camp of it is incredibly improbable that technology required to visit us by aliens exists. Under our current understanding of what would be required. But that doesn't mean a solution we don't understand doesn't exist and is being utilised.
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These so called leaps are attributed to something called the "technological singularity." Essentially, it means that as technology progresses, it enables further advancements at a quicker rate. Each technological breakthrough serves as a foundation for new developments, leading to a compounding effect where progress accelerates due to the tools, knowledge, and capabilities provided by existing technologies.
Due to advancements in microscopics, super cooling and information sharing Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered superconductivity when he observed mercury's electrical resistance drop to zero at temperatures near absolute zero.
There are people wayyyy smarter and with access to wayyy more resources than the ordinaries like you and I that are the single reason for these leaps.
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That's true, I don't pretend to understand how we've made these leaps. But we have and I'd not heard of "technological singularity" before but it makes total sense. The example you gave about mercury is a great one to show how one tiny breakthrough can cascade into massive implications.
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Iām glad my insights helped. It never hurts to question things, infact I think itās vital. Just donāt fall into rabbit holes. The brain will find patterns along the way, make sure it finds the rights ones!
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Trust nothing, verify everything š
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