How I see all of you.

Sorrily not intentional double post.

But sources and resources(resourcing) change meaning in a double twisted metaphoric in version, alluding to the original forking level.

So the double entendre may flow out of an invisible abyss of contension.

Yes with hidden variable references, bupliciously pleasing, and intricately composed, just as sai to Ishthus previously

Most art , becoming great, do have this gift to concern a singular individual and the entire singularity imminently in an indisputable fusion, creating works either detrimentally confusing, or, can rise above such hidden distinction.

Which positioned middle medium can make friends or foes out of variable friend into foes , shifting sides .

Don’t get me wrong, such double dealings may be an intricate part of any evolving dialogue, sometimes necessary to remove any devolution to the contrary, as the registration has been accepted to sign on board.

I’m going to isolate my affect with intellectualization now.

Ec.

Laptops are super cheap, but downloading the YouTube app to your phone & creating a new channel is super cheaper.

You’re not Ec.

Cost is no object in supercomputing a decisive/decisive attempt to conquer any intrinsic channeling without the need to go out and buy a linearly linked super duper computer. We are a product of an intricately developed , type, whic can overcome such possibilities with ease, as we can absolutely not give UP.

The parables speak of such attempt by an UN heeding of the ultimate price we have to pay, singularly , with a strange imminent connection to common sense.

Intellectualizatiin can easily be chanelled and replicated to change a defense into its mean expedience.

Yes, Ec is recognized as the third man

See saw Acquinus’ 3 rd man argument for a cosmological linkage

Ichthus…

You don’t understand my problem. I can’t change resolution on my iPhone and ILP is not designed for that much data to post.

With my laptop I can do compression.

Not on my phone.

Recognized… by whom?

Likely story.

Likely glib.

buy new laptop mister supposedly piano man

Why are you so mad at me?

I’m not rich. Actually I have nothing to my name. Sure …. I live in an apartment and eat and drink water and I have a roommate …

I don’t have that kind of money.

I live off the kindness of others.

Everyone lives off the kindness of others.

All the billionaires live off the kindness of others.

But I teach truth which is why people pay for me.

That’s too much to ask from the world…. A new computer.

That’s two things I’m not doing so far. Visiting you first. Buying you a new computer. What shall we add next?

You’re a demon.

I know know something you don’t …

“Everyone gets all of their dreams to come true without hurting any being.”

You can’t offer that. So you writhe and stew.

You have no power.

As well , Parmenedies for one,and remember going with the flag w blurs identities

google.com/search?q=is+the+ … OV_lIvo450

To say this more correctly…. Your lord has no power.

If your lord had power, we wouldn’t be having this discussion.

You can’t convert the singularity.

I’m the first person in all existence that said consent violation is the only problem we need to solve.

I don’t want your lord to suck my dick…. I’m not gay.

“Gaylord Focker”. From Meet the Parents.

If the only way we can meet Jesus is to fuck him… because he’s all of us …

Then everyone is gay…

As Kurt Cobain so eloquently stated.

Kurt cobain was a comedian, but he was dead serious and sarcastic.

Something in the way
All apologies
Smells like teen spirit

Masterpieces of condemning Christian theology.

[quote=“Meno_”]

[quote=“Meno_”]
https://www.google.com/search?q=is+the+realization+of+cosmic+flow+almot+a+mir

A SPIRAL GALAXY DEFYING THE COSMIC FLOW

I’d like to introduce you to an interesting galaxy today. The reason it’s interesting is because it’s surprising, and in a way that caught me off guard.

It’s called M98 (or NGC 4192; every object in the sky is in multiple catalogs and has multiple handles), and it’s a spiral galaxy much like the Milky Way. It’s located about 50 million light-years away, which isn’t exactly close on a cosmic scale but isn’t all that far away either. If I had to make an analogy, it’s like it’s in the next town over.

We see M98 at a pretty low angle, so it appears nearly edge-on to us; spiral galaxies are pretty flat, and can have wildly different appearances depending on our viewing angle. Still, the spiral pattern is obvious enough, and you can see bright blue regions where stars are being born; those trace the arms. There is also lots of patchy dust along the arms; molecules of silica and aluminum as well as complex carbon-based molecules that are more like soot than anything else.

I like the central region of the galaxy; it’s bright but from this angle is cut in half by a dust lane, distorting the apparent shape of the usually elliptical hub.

All in all, it’s quite lovely, and that shot by the New Technology Telescope really shows it off.

But in that way it’s like a zillion other spirals. So what makes this one special?

Unlike nearly every single other galaxy in the Universe, this one isn’t moving away from us. It’s moving toward us.

There’s no danger of a collision! At its speed of 150 km/sec, it would take a hundred billion years to get here, so don’t wait up. Also, it’s probably not heading directly at us, because it’s part of the Virgo Cluster, a grouping of about thousand galaxies bound by their own gravity. It’s the closest true cluster to us, and our own small Local Group of a couple dozen galaxies is like a small town near a bigger one. M98 is part of the Virgo Cluster, so it’s in orbit around the cluster center. We’re way outside the cluster, so it can’t hit us.

Here’s the fun bit. The Universe, as you may know, is expanding. One way to think of it is that space itself is getting bigger, and as it does galaxies are swept along with it. Galaxies aren’t really moving away from each other, they’re just floating along with the local flow.

But in many ways it’s like they really are moving away. One way is that their light is redshifted; the wavelength of the light they emit is stretched (it’s very similar to the Doppler effect that makes a motorcycle go EEEEEEeoowwwwwww as it passes you, changing the pitch of the noise). Practically every galaxy in the Universe shows this redshift, and in fact that’s how all this was discovered in the first place. The farther away a galaxy is, the more it’s light is shifted.

But not every galaxy shows it. Close by galaxies have much lower redshifts, and if the galaxy itself is moving rapidly through space (and not just with it), that local velocity will get added to or subtracted from the recession velocity.

One example of this is the monstrous Andromeda galaxy, which is headed toward us at high speed. We actually will collide with it, though not for quite some time (like, 4 billion years). But it shows a distinct blueshift in its light; it’s moving around faster than space is expanding.

M98 is doing the same thing. That surprised me when I saw it in a catalog; it’s far enough away that the Universal expansion should make it recede from us at about 1,000 km/sec.

But then I saw it was in the Virgo Cluster, and I understood. The massive gravity of all those galaxies means they orbit the center at a decent clip, so some galaxies are redshifted more than average as they head away from us, in the part of their orbit taking them to the other side of the cluster. Some have lower velocities because they’re headed toward us in their orbits.

But M98 is still unusual because it can completely overcome the recession of the cluster, and actually be physically headed toward us. That’s almost certainly because it’s recently interacted with another galaxy in the cluster; when galaxies pass each other one can be flung away at high speed, something like a slingshot effect. M98 may very well have done this, and that’s why it’s blueshifted, not redshifted.

As you look to more distant clusters this gets rare or nonexistent, because at that distance the cosmic expansion dominates, and it doesn’t matter how fast the galaxy is moving: It can’t overcome that recession. All galaxies past a certain distance are redshifted, which is yet another reason (among many, many others) that we know the Universe actually is expanding.

That’s pretty cool. I like surprises when I’m reading up on lovely astronomical objects; that means I’ve learned something. M98 is headed toward us, a rare blueshifted galaxy. Huh. That just adds to its beauty and intrigue to me.

It’s a really beautiful Universe, and it’s also a really interesting one. I’d say that’s its best quality.

All Good Things…

Simulations show some stars possess purloined planets
Exoplanet found with one-day orbit near a hot Jupiter
Mea culpa: Planet definitions and Earth clearing its orbit
Tonight, NASA’s DART will slam into an asteroid at 24,000 kph
JWST’s Neptune: The best infrared view in 30 years
Happy September equinox!
Whoop! NASA InSight ‘hears’ an asteroid impact on Mars
Nearby black hole is closest one yet found

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I edited my post meno.

And your link is not hyperlinked …. It’s just text.

Try again.