Profile: rolo (Roelof Klaas Zijlstra)

Personal background
Used to study English and then, later, Economics.
That didn't work out so I did a lot of odd jobs.
Been working for some time now. Learned a thing or two.
Am now a Cisco Certified Nerwork Professional working at a servicedesk.

Isn't life just dandy ?!

PhylosoWHAT?

God and science, same difference.

You think => you process => you work

You dream => you fantasize => you invent
Thoughts about SETI and SETI@home
There should be life out there.
Whether or no it is more intelligent or advanced is impossible to tell as yet.
One thing is sure: No one literally TRAVELS at a speed greater than the speed of light.
Now, were one able to fold timespace, one might travel great distances in virtually no time. However, if this were the way aliens move about, aliens NEVER visited earth in recent years. Any such means of transportation would surely be noticed instantly by our satellites and such, seeing as the point of exit would have a great affect on the surrounding spacetime. This phenomenon would cause noticeable anomalies which cannot be ingored, especially if found in ones backyard.

Thus, seeing that the only means of transportation has never been noticed NEAR earth, it stands to reason that we CANNOT EVER have been visited by aliens since the start of the age of science.

Also we cannot contact the aliens since they live too far away. Besides, we are either more advanced or considered brute primitive savages unworthy as yet to communicate with other species.

If this is all untrue, then aliens already roam the earth, governments are withholding evidence and blackmailing scientists who find anything AND this whole effort is a waste of resources.
Your feedback on this profile
Recommend this profile for User of the Day: I like this profile
Alert administrators to an offensive profile: I do not like this profile
Account data View
Team None



 
©2024 University of California
 
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.