Monday, March 27, 2006

Possible wherabouts for Buddha Boy

On March 19, the Chairman of the Om Namo Buddha Tapaswi Sewa Samiti (ONBTSS), Bed Bahadur Lama, and his colleagues allegedly met with Bomjan about 2 miles (3 kilometers) south-west of his meditation site. They say they spoke to him for thirty-minutes, during which Bomjan told them there is no peace here and he would return in six years.

read the wikipedia article here and decide for yourself and post a comment.
read here the full BBC article from March 20th about his return.

Employees get microchip implants

A Cincinnati company is requiring any employee who works in its secure data center to be implanted with a microchip.

The video surveillance company CityWatcher.com injected two of its employees in the triceps area of the arm with the VeriChip, a glass-encapsulated RFID, or radio-frequency identification, tag, according to Liz McIntyre, co-author of "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID."

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

World's Seagrass Beds Are Declining

A University of New Hampshire scientist says the world's seagrass beds -- important habitats, food sources and sediment stabilizers -- are disappearing.

Research Professor Frederick Short said as the shallow water seagrass ecosystems disappear, so do commercially valuable fish, waterfowl and other wildlife, as well as water quality and erosion prevention.

Short, founder of the global monitoring program SeagrassNet, collaborates with teams of researchers to monitor seagrass at 45 sites in 17 nations.

"Almost everywhere we start monitoring seagrass, it's declining," he says. And while conclusive global results are not yet available, Short says he is fairly certain the causes are consistent around the world: human impact.

For example, at a state park in Malaysia satellite imaging showed the disappearance of the seagrass beds was not due to a global force like climate change, but rather to on-shore logging that had increased the level of water-borne sediments.

Short and his SeagrassNet colleagues have not ruled out global climate change as a factor in the decline of seagrass beds. Yet, so far, he's found the affects on seagrass to be far more localized.
© 2006 United Press International. All rights reserved.

Sounds like this report may be a little one-sided.... 'fairly certain' is not the same as scientific proof -- read about seagrass from the experts at http://www.worldseagrass.org/ where Fred Short is the president of the org.

Rocket Fails on Its Maiden Launch

A partly reusable commercial rocket developed by a California entrepreneur failed during its maiden launch from a Pacific island Friday, a spokeswoman said.

Space Exploration Technology's Falcon 1, designed to carry payloads to orbit at low cost, lifted off from Kwajalein Atoll about 2:35 p.m. PST, but a Webcast provided by the company immediately lost its picture.

Spokeswoman Gwynn Shotwell told reporters on a conference call that there was about a minute of powered flight.

"We do know that the vehicle did not succeed after that," she said. "Clearly this is a setback but we're in this for the long haul."

The rocket carried an Air Force Academy satellite to study space plasma phenomena.
SpaceX, as the company is known, is an El Segundo, Calif.-based venture of Elon Musk, who co-founded the PayPal Inc. electronic payment system.

Falcon 1 is a 70-foot-long, two-stage rocket powered by liquid oxygen and kerosene. The first stage is designed to parachute into the ocean to be recovered and used again.
© 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Quote of the Day March 27th

"All knowledge is oriented toward some object and is influenced in its approach by the nature of the object with which it is pre-occupied. But the mode of approach to the object to be known is dependent upon the nature of the knower." -- Karl Mannheim
read about him here

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Picture of the Week

Good thing he has rubber soles!

Thieves stupery again...

Thief Stuck in Bank's Chimney Rescued
GRANGER, Wash. (AP) -- A man found stuck in a Washington bank chimney didn't try to cover up his intent. "We asked him what he was doing down there and he said, 'What do you think? I'm trying to rob the bank," said Police Chief Robert Perales....

New Buddha reincarnate? or more web-trash?

Hundreds of people scoured a jungle in southern Nepal on Sunday for a missing teenager who many believe is the reincarnation of Buddha. Ram Bahadur Banjan, 15, disappeared Saturday from a forest where he had meditated for the last 10 months, during which his associates said he consumed no food or water. Local official Santaraj Subedi said police, followers and family members were looking for the boy in the jungles of Bara, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of the capital, Kathmandu. Police official Gautam Raj Kattel said some people said they saw Banjan walking southwards before dawn on Saturday. His clothes were found near where he had been meditating. Banjan had been sitting cross-legged and motionless with his eyes closed in a niche among the roots of a tree in the jungle since May 17, 2005. Thousands of followers flocked to see him every day... read more here

Friday, March 24, 2006

Polar Earthquakes on the Rise

The rise in the number of glacial earthquakes over the past four years lends further weight to the idea that Greenland's glaciers and its ice sheet are beginning to move and melt on a scale not seen for perhaps thousands of years.

The annual number of glacial earthquakes recorded in Greenland between 1993 and 2002 was between six and 15. In 2003 seismologists recorded 20 glacial earthquakes. In 2004 they monitored 24 and for the first 10 months of 2005 they recorded 32.

The latest seismic study, published today in the journal Science, found that in a single area of north-western Greenland scientists recorded just one quake between 1993 and 1999. But they monitored more than two dozen quakes between 2000 and 2005.
"People often think of glaciers as inert and slow-moving, but in fact they can also move rather quickly," said Goran Ekstrom, professor of geology and geophysics at Harvard University, who led the study."Some of Greenland's glaciers - as large as Manhattan and as tall as the Empire State Building - can move 10 metres in less than a minute, a jolt that is sufficient to generate moderate seismic waves," Professor Ekstrom said.
Average temperatures in the Arctic have risen far faster than in other parts of the world over the past few decades, resulting in the rapid acceleration in polar melting.
As the glacial meltwater seeps down it lubricates the bases of the "outlet" glaciers of the Greenland ice sheet, causing them to slip down surrounding valleys towards the sea, explained Meredith Nettles of Columbia University.

"Our results suggest that these major outlet glaciers can respond to changes in climate conditions much more quickly than we had thought," Dr Nettles said.
"Greenland's glaciers deliver large quantities of freshwater to the oceans, so the implications for climate change are serious. We believe that further warming of the climate is likely to accelerate the behaviour we've documented," she said.

The seismologists also found that the glacial earthquakes of Greenland occurred mainly during the summer months, indicating that the movements were indeed associated with rapidly melting ice - normal "tectonic" earthquakes show no such seasonality. Of the 136 glacial quakes analysed by the scientists, more than a third occurred during July and August.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Quote of the Day

"All ancient books which have once been called sacred by man, will have their lasting place in the history of mankind, and those who possess the courage, the perseverance, and the self-denial of the true miner, and of the true scholar, will find even in the darkest and dustiest shafts what they are seeking for,--real nuggets of thought, and precious jewels of faith and hope."
-- Max Müller, Introduction to the Upanishads Vol. II.

Baghdad ancient battery

n 1936, while excavating ruins of a 2000-year-old village near Baghdad, workers discovered mysterious small vase. A 6-inch-high pot of bright yellow clay dating back two millennia contained a cylinder of sheet-copper 5 inches by 1.5 inches. The edge of the copper cylinder was soldered with a 60-40 lead-tin alloy comparable to today's solder. The bottom of the cylinder was capped with a crimped-in copper disk and sealed with bitumen or asphalt. Another insulating layer of asphalt sealed the top and also held in place an iron rod suspended into the center of the copper cylinder. The rod showed evidence of having been corroded with an acidic agent.

German archaeologist , Wilhelm Konig, examined the object and came to a surprising conclusion that the clay pot was nothing less than an ancient electric battery.

read the full article here

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Bob Dylan's UFO connection?

By Sean Casteel

"The farmers and the business men, they all did decide, To show you where the dead angels are that they used to hide . . ."

Although that line dates from 1966, "Sad-Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands," it seems a fairly good summation of the now famous "Roswell Incident" in which a New Mexico farmer named Mack Brazel reported finding a crashed disk with the bodies of dead aliens strewn nearby. The "dead angels" were subsequently covered up by the military and the whole incident was said to consist of nothing more than a downed weather balloon.
Dylan's unconscious mind was somehow directed to write a neat little summary of the incident in rhyme nearly 13 years before the public knew anything about it. Perhaps you've heard of New Mexico Congressman Steven Schiff's attempts to get records of the incident declassified by the Department of Defense. Some part of Dylan "knew" the truth even when some members of the government remained shut out.

sounds interesting, or crazy?... let us at constant skeptic know with a message....
check out the whole article here

Quote of the Day

"As I understand it, laws, commands, rules and edicts are for those
who have not the light which makes plain the pathway."
- Anne
Hutchinson

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

MICROCHIP IMPLANTS ARE HERE

Although it sounds like science fiction, microchips meant to be implanted into human beings are here, they are being marketed world wide, and have even been approved by the FDA, and yes people have already begun to get them implanted.

check it out http://www.countercurrents.org/puder200306.htm

Bird Flu culprit points to poultry industry?

Global poultry industry may be implicated in bird flu
A study by the international non-governmental organization GRAIN suggests that avian influenza is spread primarily by the global poultry trade, not migratory birds or free-range poultry operations as has been suggested, and that confined factory farm production contributed to its mutation into its current deadly form. The organization tracked the movements of the disease over time and found that they were correlated, not with migratory bird routes or the locations of free-range farms, but with integrated trade networks involving poultry, eggs, meat, feathers, manure and animal feed. U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns warned that bird flu will almost certainly come to the United States. Read the GRAIN report, Fowl Play: The Poultry Industry's Central Role in the Bird Flu Crisis. Read about Johanns's announcement.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"The very essence of a free government consists in
considering offices as public trusts, bestowed for the
good of the country, and not for the benefit of an
individual or a party." -- John C. Calhoun

Friday, March 17, 2006

Hotter, Faster, Worse - Hell on Earth?

extracted from an article by John Atcheson

"In August of 2005 a team of scientists from Oxford and Tomsk University in Russia announced that a massive Siberian peat bog the size of Germany and France combined was melting, releasing billions of tons of methane as it did.
The last time it got warm enough to set off this feedback loop was 55 million years ago in a period known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum or PETM, when increased volcanic activity released enough GHGs to trigger a series of self-reinforcing methane burps. The resulting warming caused massive die-offs and it took more than a 100,000 years for the earth to recover.
It’s looks like we’re on the verge of triggering a far worse event. At a recent meeting of the American Academy for the Advancement of Sciences in St. Louis, James Zachos, foremost expert on the PETM reported that greenhouse gasses are accumulating in the atmosphere at thirty times the speed with which they did during the PETM.
We may have just witnessed the first salvo in what could prove to be an irreversible trip to hell on earth."

hows that for gloom and doom news readers? I don't know about you but I'm moving to Canada with two gas masks and some major sunblock to wait for the greatest prime time event in the history of modern times....

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

alien skull in mississippi

Bizarre alien skull found in Mississippi? Or is it just pig skull? read the whole thing here
Google launches interactive Mars maps? check it out...

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Quote of the Day - March 12th

"All that separates, whether of race, class, creed, or sex, is
inhuman, and must be overcome." -- Kate Sheppard

New Noah's Ark evidence?


[posting courtesy of one of our very own Constant Skeptic readers - thelizardman]
By Joe Kovacs
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

A new, high-resolution digital image of what has become known as the "Ararat Anomaly" is reigniting interest in the hunt for Noah's Ark.

read the full article here

More Wackos from Pennsylvania claim UFOs land

Frances Kalp was walking with her children that night in Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania. she claimed to have seen a four-pointed star crash in the woods. John Sibal watched the object change directions three times in the sky before landing, and hid in the woods watching the military converge. Don Sebastian heard the report on the radio, evaded state police, snuck around a roadblock, and watched military maneuvers in the woods until he heard unearthly screams and gunshots, and snuck back to his car. a police officer was overheard as saying there was a pulsating blue light in the forest. Witnesses insist they saw a ship from outer space. Police claim there was a meteorite. Reporters are convinced that what landed was a russian probe. Military sources argue that nothing landed at all.Is Kecksburg an example of mass hysteria, a military theft of Russian technology, or the site of a UFO landing? as long as the government refuses to release the truth, we remain in the dark of what was really under the tarp. by Jennifer Kietch

click here for more info about the Kecksburg, PA UFO crash

Pittsburgh Post Gazette article on the Kecksburg UFO

Easter Island - Birthplace of the world?

On a tiny volcanic island in the south pacific ocean, 4000 kilometers off of the coast of the south american nation of chile, enormous rock statues guard the coastline. they are the megaliths of easter island, mysterious remnants of a lost culture. in 380 a.d., settlers landed on this lush island and made it their own. over the next 1000 years, they erected over 600 giant stone statues, called moai, which stand up to 40 feet tall and weigh more than 80 tons. these statues were carved by rudimentary tools out of volcanic mountains and placed up to 14 miles away from the site of their creation at strategic vantage points on the outlying beaches and cliffs. eventually deforestation and wars led to famine, and the struggling inhabitants were picked off by disease, violence, and slave traders until nothing of their society remained except for the silent monuments.
read the full article here

Saturday, March 11, 2006

another scary thought for the future

Telescopes 'worthless' by 2050.

(
By Paul Rincon, BBC News science reporter.)

Ground-based astronomy could be impossible in 40 years because of pollution from aircraft exhaust trails and climate change, an expert says. Aircraft condensation trails - known as contrails - can dissipate, becoming indistinguishable from other clouds. If trends in cheap air travel continue, says Professor Gerry Gilmore, the era of ground astronomy may come to an end much earlier than most had predicted. Aircraft along with climate change will contribute to increased cloud cover.


Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4755996.stm

Friday, March 10, 2006

water geysers in space

Cassini spots water geysers on Saturn Moon
ALICIA CHANG
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - The orbiting Cassini spacecraft has spotted what appear to be water geysers on one of Saturn's icy moons, raising the tantalizing possibility that the celestial object harbors life.
The surprising images from the moon Enceladus represent some of the most dramatic evidence yet that water in liquid form may be present beyond the Earth.
Excited by the discovery, some scientists said Enceladus should be added to the short list of places within the solar system most likely to have extraterrestrial life.
Scientists generally agree several ingredients are needed for life to emerge, including water in liquid form and a stable heat source. But so far, the evidence of any large amounts of water in liquid form on celestial objects beyond Earth is circumstantial and indirect, based on scientists' analysis of rocks and other data.
Cassini recently snapped high-resolution images showing geyser-like eruptions of ice particles and water vapor at Enceladus' south pole, scientists said. The pictures do not actually show any water in liquid form, but scientists believe the ice and vapor must be coming from underground reservoirs of water close to the surface.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Quote of the Day - March 9th

"The great enemy of clear language is insincerity." George Orwell

The Constant Skeptic Daily Updates: Red rain in Kerala

Original Flying Saucer - Mt. Ranier

1947 Mt. Ranier, Washington is a celebration of Kenneth Arnold's historic sighting in the U.S. Northwest,coining the term now forever embedded in the lexicon of UFOlogy... "Flying Saucer." Arnold witnessed 9, brightly gleaming heel shaped craft skipping across the atmosphere like saucers across a lake, while piloting his small private airplane. Though rarely noted, Arnold had a second, closer encounter with the same craft only a week later and confirmed that these ships were by no means of earthly origin and defied everything thenunderstood about aerodynamics and propulsion.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Red rain in Kerala

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Red rain in Kerala was a phenomenon observed over several weeks, beginning in July 2001, in the southern Indian state of Kerala. Heavy downpours occurred in which the rain was bright red, staining clothes and burning leaves on trees.
A convincing explanation for the phenomenon has yet to be found. Initially it was suspected that, like many instances of coloured rain, dust transported from elsewhere was responsible; but the distribution of the red rain was patchy whereas a dust layer would be expected to give rise to evenly distributed coloured rainfall. Scientists at the Mahatma Gandhi University in Kottayam have proposed a far more outlandish theory — that the dust is in fact composed of organic matter of extraterrestrial origin. If this were to be proven, it would be the first direct evidence in favour of the theory of panspermia, which posits that life on Earth arrived here from outer space.

The red rain in Kerala first fell on 25 July 2001, in the districts of Kottayam and Idukki in the southern part of the state. As well as red rain, some reports suggested that other colours of rain were also seen [1]. Many more occurrences of the red rain were reported over the following 10 days, and with diminishing frequency until the end of September.
The coloration of the rain was due to red particles in suspension in the rain water. When it fell, the red rain was at times as strongly coloured as blood. It typically fell over small areas, no more than a few square kilometres in size, and was sometimes so localised that normal rain could be falling just a few metres away from red rain. Red rainfalls typically lasted less than 20 minutes [2].

Campbells Soup Cans Invade town


Mysterious giant Campbell Soup cans have appeared in the tiny town of Schnaskyville PA. Residents fear a natural disaster looms on the horizon. Most residents agree that "The Campbell Soup Boys" are a lot scarier than any Mothman. Just think if these cans explode into mutant alien spawn beings. Ahhh!

Alternative energy breakthrough - Mutant Algae

Alternative energy breakthrough - Mutant Algae is hydrogen factory
source: by Sam Jaffe / WIRED.com / 2.23.06

Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley have engineered a strain of pond scum that could, with further refinements, produce vast amounts of hydrogen through photosynthesis. The work, led by plant physiologist Tasios Melis, is so far unpublished. But if it proves correct, it would mean a major breakthrough in using algae as an industrial factory, not only for hydrogen, but for a wide range of products, from biodiesel to cosmetics. The new strain of algae, known as C. reinhardtii, has truncated chlorophyll antennae within the chloroplasts of the cells, which serves to increase the organism's energy efficiency. In addition, it makes the algae a lighter shade of green, which in turn allows more sunlight deeper into an algal culture and therefore allows more cells to photosynthesize...

Free community broadband networks nationwide

source: http://FreePress.net
High-speed Internet access is fast becoming a basic public necessity - just like water, gas or electricity. But far too many Americans are finding themselves on the wrong side of the digital divide, unable to get connected or afford expensive commercial service. Community Internet is the answer. Soon all media -- TV, telephone, radio and the Web -- will be delivered via the Internet over a broadband connection. New wireless and wired technologies allow local governments, public-private partnerships, schools and community groups to offer faster, cheaper and more reliable Internet service.Hundreds of Community Internet and municipal broadband projects have sprouted up across the country. Click here to find a network near you...

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Largest Solar Generator Farms being built in SoCal

The barren deserts of Southern California are known for relentless sunshine and miles of empty space-- the perfect combination for the world's most ambitious solar-energy projects. Two Southern California utility companies are planning to develop a pair of sun-powered power plants that they claim will dwarf existing solar facilities and could rival fossil-fuel-driven power plants. Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric are working with Stirling Energy Systems, a Phoenix startup that has paired a large and efficient solar dish with a 200-year-old Stirling engine design. Stirling Energy Systems is planning to build two separate solar farms, one with the capacity to generate 500 megawatts of electricity in the Mojave Desert near Victorville, California, for SoCal Edison, and a 300-megawatt plant in the Imperial Valley, near Calexico, California, for SDG&E. The utilities have signed 20-year deals to buy all the juice the farms can turn out, and have options to expand the plants if they are successful. "Without question, this will be the largest solar project in the world," said Gil Alexander, a spokesman for SoCal Edison. "It will be bigger than all U.S. solar-energy projects combined."

Evidence of Star Children?

A former registered nurse who has worked with hundreds of clients, including many children, will be revealing evidence of their encounters with extraterrestrial beings at an upcoming conference in Montreal, Canada. After a decade of research as a professional counselor and clinical hypnotherapist, Australia's Mary Rodwell says that there is now enough evidence to conclude that these "beings" appear to come from other planets and other dimensions parallel to our own. She will be making her presentation at the 31st annual conference of the International Institute of Integral Human Sciences (IIIHS) taking place in Montreal May 5th to 14th, 2006. ....The IIIHS is a non-profit organization affiliated with the United Nations Department of Public Information. It serves over 10,000 general members and students from many nations towards the convergence of new sciences with spirituality and universal human values, creating inter-religious and inter-cultural understanding for world peace.
Jeez... Sounds like the looneys have invaded the UN... even though the existance of parallel universes is compelling. One nurse's account doesn't equal scientific proof. Al this proves is that you should definitely not believe everything you read.

Pesticides found in most rivers, streams

Pesticides Found In Most Rivers, Streams'
Most of the nation's rivers and streams — and the fish in them — are contaminated with pesticides linked to cancer, birth defects and neurological disorders, but not at levels that can harm humans.
'But simply detecting the presence of a pesticide does not always mean there is reason for concern, said Jay Vroom, president of CropLife America, which represents pesticide developers and manufacturers.
'"Water quality is of paramount importance to us," he said. "And the USGS report correctly recognizes that the large majority of pesticide detections in streams and groundwater were trace amounts, far below scientifically based minimum levels set for protecting human health and the environment."' (AP article).

Boy ruins 1.5 million dollar painting with gum

DETROIT - A 12-year-old visitor to the Detroit Institute of Arts stuck a wad of gum to a $1.5 million painting, leaving a stain the size of a quarter, officials say.

The boy was part of a school group from Holly, Mich., that visited the museum on Friday, officials say. They say he took a piece of Wrigley’s Extra Polar Ice gum out of his mouth and stuck it on Helen Frankenthaler’s “The Bay,” an abstract painting from 1963.

The museum acquired the work in 1965 and says it is worth about $1.5 million.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Rapid Warming Spreads Havoc in Canada's Forests


The Washington Post's Doug Struck declares "Millions of acres of Canada's lush green forests are turning red in spasms of death. A voracious beetle, whose population has exploded with the warming climate, is killing more trees than wildfires or logging."

Is this sensationalist propaganda to push the old global warming ticket, or based on facts backed up by raw data?

The beetle in question is the bark beetle. A little seemingly harmless creature attracted to the smell of ethanol and decaying matter, like most things on the planet nowadays. They are known to attack trees already weakened by drought, and since Canada and much of the Northwestern United States have been experiencing a drought for the past four years, these supple pines are ripe for devastation.

One expert on the phenomenon states that two main causes are contributing to this frenzy. The first is unnaturally dense forests due to misguided conservation measures from the past century. Forest fires are not always a bad thing, and many places actually need to burn periodically to weed out the old and bring in new growth, much like civilizations throughout history (our modern day 'Rome' shall burn again I assure you). These beetles can move a lot easier through this denser forest. The second cause is allegedly global warming, warmer temperatures means these beetles aren't dying off every year as they should, and instead are spreading to more northern and traditionally colder locales, at all estimates double the area every year.

So the question is, are these beetles just natures natural defense mechanism? Is this a sign of an ecosystem that is stressed by rising temperatures, drought, and misconservation? The final answer is.... we'll have to wait and see. It is alarming though to realize that beetles are causing more deforestation than logging and human development. If temperatures keep rising in Canada, real estate is going to boom, and I for one wouldn't mind sharing some space with evil pine slurping beetles as long as I can get it at 10 dollars and acre.

Remember to clap at your TV when you see Los Angeles's surrounding high priced acres burning. WEED OUT HOLLYWEIRD!

- JC Editor The Constant Skeptic

read more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bark_beetle

Quote of the Day - March 1st

I dreamt the past was never past redeeming: But whether this was false or honest dreaming I beg death's pardon now. And mourn the dead. -- Richard Wilbur --