In a galaxy far far away

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Sea monkeys--i could never get the damn things to hatch out. Our old house had copper pipes, so I think that always poisoned them.
 
lenny flank said:
Sea monkeys--i could never get the damn things to hatch out. Our old house had copper pipes, so I think that always poisoned them.

You could have gotten your $1.25 refund? :p
Seriously, Gary68, where did you find that? I haven't seen that since the 60's I think?
 
ah... a visualization of the Fermi paradox. An interesting line of thought for sure. I sometimes wonder if it is an accident that so many astrophysicists are huge potheads. Duuuuuude so there are billions of stars in our galaxy and billions of galaxies. So there has to be life right? So how come they haven't come here and messed with us?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox
 
slynne said:
ah... a visualization of the Fermi paradox. An interesting line of thought for sure. I sometimes wonder if it is an accident that so many astrophysicists are huge potheads. Duuuuuude so there are billions of stars in our galaxy and billions of galaxies. So there has to be life right? So how come they haven't come here and messed with us?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox

Perhaps because they're so large that our galaxy is merely a speck of dust in their universe.  Or perhaps that we're so large that theirs is contained in a speck of OUR dust.  Or perhaps we're the most advanced.  Or perhaps they are so advanced that they have no use for us?  The list of questions go on and on.  None of which, of course, are significant NOR have any bearing on 'evidence.'   ;)
 
There are dozens of hypotheses about the Fermi paradox and every one of them sounds like they were hatched in some stoner's living room ;)
 

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