All over the news is the story of dozens of people in Stephenville, Texas seeing a UFO. In this day and age of just about every person having a cell phone or gadget with a cheap digital camera in it, did one single person in Stephenville think to get a pic of this thing? That sure would be real cool to see. Got one. See the comments below. Special kudo to Anthony!
Tag Archives: Oddities
A Taser MP3 player?
This has got to be the worst idea I think I’ve ever heard of in my entire life:

I see people having a few drinks, cruising the bars, and suddenly flopping wildly all over the sidewalk in an electric induced seizure for no explanable reason. I really do. If they’re dumb enough to buy this thing, I don’t trust them to operate a Taser.
Man, I want to hang out their product development people. They must be a riot!
Did life on Earth come from space?
There is a long held theory that life on Earth evolved from life forms raining down on Earth from other places. So far, there isn’t any proof of this, it just sounds logical. However, we might have some proof in the making right now:
Now, my non-experienced thinking is this is one of two possibilities. First, and most likely, it’s fumes caused by the intense heat of the meteorite.
Second, and more intriguing to me, is it could be some virus from a far off galaxy. Pretty cool huh? Pretty unlikely tho.
A third possibility of course, it could be some man-made experiment where a meteor was planted with a mutated gene and it crashed back to Earth.
Arthur Clarke and plasma life
Better turn down the lights and pour yourself a strong one, this post is DEEP.
OK, ready?
I have been a huge fan of Arthur C. Clarke, particularly of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Most people are familiar with the movie. I consider it the greatest sci-fi movie ever made. However, it is somewhat vague in what is going on. However, the book
does explain what’s going on. Not in profound detail, but in little snippets that told us of our future. Debit cards, video conferencing, using gravity to slingshot around planets, all kinds of little bits telling us what was to become. And, in some cases, trying to explain where we came from. He doesn’t say evolution is the rule, he just laid out how evolution occurred. And, sometimes, when that evolution wasn’t progressing appropriately, how it got a little help from a god-like being. The help was in the form of a simple shape. It wasn’t a cross, but even simpler, an obolisk. However, the “being” had more religious overtones. Digressing a little, all of the main religions of the world today expect a belief in “God”. This “God” can neither be seen, touched, or heard. In other words, it is a being purely of energy and no matter. When one communicates with “God”, it is purely by an energy force. There is no audible sound. This omnipotent “God” created our universe as we know it. Clarke morphed this faith in a non-matter God into 2001 and gave it some definition:
And now, out among the stars, evolution was driving toward new goals. The first explorers of Earth had long since come to the limits of flesh and blood; as soon as their machines were better than their bodies, it was time to move. First their brains, and then their thoughts alone, they transferred into shining new homes of metal and of plastic.
In these, they roamed among the stars. They no longer built spaceships. They were spaceships.
But the age of the Machine-entities swiftly passed. In their ceaseless experimenting, they had learned to store knowledge in the structure of space itself, and to preserve their thoughts for eternity in frozen lattices of light. They could become creatures of radiation, free at last from the tyranny of matter.
Into pure energy, therefore, they presently transformed themselves; and on a thousand worlds, the empty shells they had discarded twitched for a while in a mindless dance of death, then crumbled into rusty
Now they were lords of the galaxy, and beyond the reach of time. They could rove at will among the stars, and sink like a subtle mist through the very interstices of space. But despite their godlike powers, they had not wholly forgotten their origin, in the warm slime of a vanished sea.
And they still watched over the experiments their ancestors had started, so long ago.
What Clarke states here is that “life” doesn’t have to have matter. It can be pure energy. Without the confines of matter, physics as we know it completely changes. Being of matter, I don’t see how Man can travel at the speed of light. Therefore, visiting far away galaxies is impossible. However, without the confines of matter, traveling at the speed of light is simple. Traveling throughout the universe is simple. Manipulating matter is simple. The power this entity would have is mind-boggling. Convincing a very simple animal that you are God would be simple.
All of this ties into today’s events in two forms.
First, we have the creationist vs evolution fight going wild right now. Neither side is in any mood to compromise or even try to understand the other’s reasons for believing what they do. What they are both doing is struggling to understand how all this came to be. Arthur C. Clarke I think struggled with those two concepts long ago. He came up with a unique answer. “Our” universe is limited by what we can see and understand. For some people, “our” universe is limited to matter. For other people, “our” universe is not limited to matter. There are things beyond matter that they don’t want to try to understand. They just know something is more powerful than matter. That something to them is “God”. That “God” to Arthur Clarke was a being no more wise than the average man. He did however, have the power to change entire worlds simply to amuse himself. He was however, a product of the universe. He was both a product of evolution and subsequently creationism. Since I read the book, I have been more a believer in Clarke’s understanding of “God” than probably any other. Both the creationists and evolutionists expect me to believe they know the answer to a question that is extremely profound based on nothing but limited evidence and a faith in what they are saying is correct. I don’t work that way. I don’t think the two theories are totally exclusionary. Neither did Clarke. I’m in good company.
Secondly, all of this sounds pretty damn crazy I imagine. I’m OK with that. Start by reading the actual 2001: A Space Odyssey. Then, read this:
Put me on Arthur Clarke’s team on this one.
The heavy religious overtones continue throughout 2001. Clarke definitely had “the Dawn of Man” on his mind when he wrote this. So, I see no coincedence here at all. However, what he did not have in 1967 was access to plasma. Maybe, if Clarke is correct, we’re getting our first glimpses at something we’ve never understood before. And, it could get rather profound.
This is sickening

And it’s supposed to be. Instead of clubbing people for getting out of line, this gadget will make them throw up. Actually, this reminds me of every concert I attended in the late 70′s. After a while, you sort of got acclimated to strobe lights. Not sure what’s different about this gadget. However, I still think I like the idea of knocking someone unconscious instead of creating a very, very, nasty mess, without necessarily stopping them. ( Think of some of the stories of people on strong stimulants. )
Spider bitten?
Mrs. Moon sent me this one:
There’s more to it. However, it ends, more or less, with this:
“We have to make sure there are no side effects … so that it can be used as a gel in combination with condoms, or as suppositories for women.”
I got news for these guys, an erection that last for days with occasional ejaculations IS a side effect. Having a major boner for a couple of hours is great, if you’ve got someone to share it with. However, having one for days assures that for the most part, you’re not going to have anyone to share it with. Occasional ejaculations pretty much assures you probably won’t have anyone to share it with the rest of the time either. If you’ve made it through all that, THEN the spermicidal effect is great. But there are easier ways to keep that from being an issue in the first place. If they can eliminate those side effects, then they’ve got another Viagra, Cialis, or whatever on their hands. My gut feeling is this is much ado over nothing. I won’t be investing in it any time soon myself.
But if I do visit Chile, I might taunt a black widow ( if adequately numb from alcohol ), just to check out that old tale. Justa mythbuster I guess.
Bigfoot an endangered species?
A while back I did a piece on Bigfoot. It was sort of done tongue in cheek, sort of serious. To me, that’s where Bigfoot exists. Nothing to be taken serious, but fun to think about anyway. However, some guys in Canada are wanting to take all the fun out of it by proving Bigfoot exists. And, before they’ll do that, they want Bigfoot listed as an endangered species. Now, where it gets even sillier is apparently 500 people have signed the petition to do so.
Me? I think there are a lot of animals out there that have had little to no human contact. However, most of them are small or in very strange places that man just doesn’t hang around too much. Something as big as Bigfoot would have been bumped into all the time. And, with the advent of digital cameras and cameras on cell phones, documenting a siting would be very easy to do. The fact no one has done this to date makes it a little hard for me to believe something that big, in a place where man is all the time, would exist. Could be wrong, and have been many times, but I’m willing to put some money on this one.
Full Moons Make Us Crazy?

It’s that time of the month again. We’ve got a big, bright, full moon floating in the sky. For a long, long, long time, man has considered the full moon a sign of craziness.

According to Mythic Realm, Werewolves have been around throughout most of mankind’s written history. Probably the first account of a shapeshifting was from the book Metamorphoses , written in 8 BC. In this story, man is changed to an ass, setting the stage for the scarier Werewolves we know now later. So, to put it simply, the werewolve idea has been around longer than Jesus. The original werewolves didn’t have anything to do with the Moon. That came later on during the 17th century or so. So, the assumption the Moon has anything to do with people morphing into blood eating animals is not supported by legend.
The common argument, and one that I heard today on Fox, is that since the Moon’s gravity controls the tides, and we’re about 60% water, it therefore controls us. That’s just silly as all get-out and hardly worth “debunking”. The Moon’s no closer or farther away just because it’s not obscured by the Earth interfering with the Sun’s light.
Where I think this all comes from is a lot simpler. Only in VERY modern times, and I mean the 21st century being the only exclusive century, was man not the prey of other beasts. Those beasts could see a LOT better during a full moon than a dark night. In more modern times, robbers could see you a LOT better during a full Moon than a dark night. Therefore, if you weren’t careful, and were traveling at night, a brightly lit full Moon posed a threat. It would probably be best to stay inside or things could get kinda crazy on you real easy during a full Moon.
Now, there are all kinds of reputed studies that connect the Moon to psychological problems. But, there are just as many, probably more, that debunk that theory.
So, what I do during a full Moon is look up in the sky and think, “Wow! What a beautiful Moon we’ve got tonight!”. And go about my normal business.
Now, the only myth I will go along with is full Moon’s make you hornier. My very scientific theory behind that is not that it tugs on your body’s water more or less, or gravity lighten the load of a man’s nuts thereby making them feel a little randier. It’s a lot simpler than that. The pale, pure white light of the Moon has a two-fold double-whammy effect. It not only makes the object of your desire visible, it’s faint enough to hide their imperfections. And, if you’re close enough to them when it’s that dark and the only light you’ve got is the Moon, you’re probably horny in the first place.
So, during this, and all the full Moons to come, don’t fret the bad stuff and most definitely enjoy the good.
Color Conflict
The Inner Life of a Cell
I don’t know how accurate this is, but it’s just plain cool to watch. It’s hard to imagine that this is even remotely “real”, that all this action occurs in every single cell of not only my body, but every single living organism in the universe. Pretty profound to think about, huh?