I created a monster
-----Original Message-----
From: Clay
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 5:29 PM
To: Brando
Subject: Re: Wed
The energy required to blow up Xenu's victims would also have been colossal, requiring thousands of hydrogen bombs with a cumulative yield equivalent to gigatonnes of TNT would have been needed. This would certainly have left physical traces; Forde lists plausible craters as the Manson crater (35 km, dated at 73.8 MYA), Eagle Butte (10 km) and Dumas (2 km, both 78–74 MYA). Such a huge release of energy, more than during a full-scale nuclear war, would have wrecked the Earth's climate, resulting in a nuclear winter and the mass extinction of all life on Earth. The hydrogen bombs would have left a residue of radioactive isotopes which would have been easily detectable today.
On 3/22/06, Clay wrote:
This stuff is great! HAHA!!
Hubbard did not elaborate on the number of space planes required to transport a population of some 13.5 trillion people. The Douglas DC-8, said to be an exact copy of Xenu's spaceships, seats a maximum of 250 people and has a payload of only around 40–50,000 kg, depending on the specific model. This means that, assuming the Galactic citizens had bodies about the same mass as humans and the space planes were the same scale as DC-8s, only about 600 to 700 human-sized frozen bodies could have been transported with each trip. It would therefore have required around 54.1 billion trips with everyone seated or 19.3 billion trips with frozen bodies packed more efficiently.
Assuming the people were about the same size as humans, 76×178 billion×2 ft³ per alien is 184 cubic miles (766 km³). This is about ten percent of the volume of the Chicxulub Crater, the site of the asteroid impact that is credited with killing the dinosaurs in the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event 65 mya (million years ago). The frozen bodies would have had to have been stacked a mile ( 1.6 km) deep, covering an area more than six miles (10 km) across around 6 volcanos. Even assuming that they were all killed, their fossilized remains would certainly be visible in geological strata today. There is no sign of any such remains.
On 3/22/06, Brando wrote:
We should sell Xenu t-shirts
-----Original Message-----
From: Clay
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 5:22 PM
To: Brando
Subject: Re: Wed
In an early-1990s interview with Kurt Loder for MTV, Scientology Human Rights Director Leisa Goodman responded to a query about Xenu with "I don't know what you're talking about." In the relatively few instances in which it has acknowledged Xenu, the Church has stated the story is a religious writing that can be seen as the equivalent of the Old Testament, in which miraculous events are described that are unlikely to have occurred in real life, and assumes true meaning only after years of study. They complain of critics using it to paint the religion as a science fiction fantasy ( Observer, Sun 16 May 2004).
On 3/22/06, Claywrote:
wow! I can't believe people are this stupid! Did you see the think about the court case and how the church makes sure the copy of the case is checked out at all times so no one from the media or the regular public can get it?
On 3/22/06, Brando wrote:
People are stoopid. Look at that cult who killed themselves because they saw the comet and thought it was their leader coming to take them back to their own planet. Heaven's Gate i think their name was
From: Clay
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 5:29 PM
To: Brando
Subject: Re: Wed
The energy required to blow up Xenu's victims would also have been colossal, requiring thousands of hydrogen bombs with a cumulative yield equivalent to gigatonnes of TNT would have been needed. This would certainly have left physical traces; Forde lists plausible craters as the Manson crater (35 km, dated at 73.8 MYA), Eagle Butte (10 km) and Dumas (2 km, both 78–74 MYA). Such a huge release of energy, more than during a full-scale nuclear war, would have wrecked the Earth's climate, resulting in a nuclear winter and the mass extinction of all life on Earth. The hydrogen bombs would have left a residue of radioactive isotopes which would have been easily detectable today.
On 3/22/06, Clay wrote:
This stuff is great! HAHA!!
Hubbard did not elaborate on the number of space planes required to transport a population of some 13.5 trillion people. The Douglas DC-8, said to be an exact copy of Xenu's spaceships, seats a maximum of 250 people and has a payload of only around 40–50,000 kg, depending on the specific model. This means that, assuming the Galactic citizens had bodies about the same mass as humans and the space planes were the same scale as DC-8s, only about 600 to 700 human-sized frozen bodies could have been transported with each trip. It would therefore have required around 54.1 billion trips with everyone seated or 19.3 billion trips with frozen bodies packed more efficiently.
Assuming the people were about the same size as humans, 76×178 billion×2 ft³ per alien is 184 cubic miles (766 km³). This is about ten percent of the volume of the Chicxulub Crater, the site of the asteroid impact that is credited with killing the dinosaurs in the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event 65 mya (million years ago). The frozen bodies would have had to have been stacked a mile ( 1.6 km) deep, covering an area more than six miles (10 km) across around 6 volcanos. Even assuming that they were all killed, their fossilized remains would certainly be visible in geological strata today. There is no sign of any such remains.
On 3/22/06, Brando wrote:
We should sell Xenu t-shirts
-----Original Message-----
From: Clay
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 5:22 PM
To: Brando
Subject: Re: Wed
In an early-1990s interview with Kurt Loder for MTV, Scientology Human Rights Director Leisa Goodman responded to a query about Xenu with "I don't know what you're talking about." In the relatively few instances in which it has acknowledged Xenu, the Church has stated the story is a religious writing that can be seen as the equivalent of the Old Testament, in which miraculous events are described that are unlikely to have occurred in real life, and assumes true meaning only after years of study. They complain of critics using it to paint the religion as a science fiction fantasy ( Observer, Sun 16 May 2004).
On 3/22/06, Claywrote:
wow! I can't believe people are this stupid! Did you see the think about the court case and how the church makes sure the copy of the case is checked out at all times so no one from the media or the regular public can get it?
On 3/22/06, Brando wrote:
People are stoopid. Look at that cult who killed themselves because they saw the comet and thought it was their leader coming to take them back to their own planet. Heaven's Gate i think their name was
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