Okay, so it's alien in the sense that it is arsenic based,
and it's actually Mono Lake, as a location, not our dear Henke.
Although, I am sure Mr Henke supports aliens of all kinds, since they invented dub and all
*raises hand*beats me wrote:Raise your hand if you're expecting to stick around to see that happen.

And this fixes the economy how?1nfinitezer0 wrote:It's a hugely significant finding if the basis for this organic life form (no matter how small) is uniquely different from our own. It means that we have been fortunate enough not only to be able the results of one miracle (our current biosphere) but a SECOND genesis of life. This would change the proportion of life expected to be found in the universe drastically!
And this fixes the economy how?
i believe there's a bigger chance of finding life in space than fixing the economy. life in space depends on the desire to be. the economy depends on the desire to agree... something that humans are running low on. now, if we can find a way to extract agreeable nature from the new found life form, then the economy could be on the mend, but don't count your amoebas just yet. since single celled lifeforms still have more scruples than your average politician it could be a slow transition phase.beats me wrote:And this fixes the economy how?1nfinitezer0 wrote:It's a hugely significant finding if the basis for this organic life form (no matter how small) is uniquely different from our own. It means that we have been fortunate enough not only to be able the results of one miracle (our current biosphere) but a SECOND genesis of life. This would change the proportion of life expected to be found in the universe drastically!
LoopStationZebra wrote:it's like a hipster commie pinko manifesto. Rambling. Angry. Nearly divorced from all reality; yet strangely compelling with a ring of truth.
Actually I saw something the other day (although reported in 2008) that Japan owns more of our debt than China. So we need to start practicing having frequent but pixilated sex in front of a live and politely appreciative audience.H20nly wrote:i believe there's a bigger chance of finding life in space than fixing the economy. life in space depends on the desire to be. the economy depends on the desire to agree... something that humans are running low on. now, if we can find a way to extract agreeable nature from the new found life form, then the economy could be on the mend, but don't count your amoebas just yet. since single celled lifeforms still have more scruples than your average politician it could be a slow transition phase.beats me wrote:And this fixes the economy how?1nfinitezer0 wrote:It's a hugely significant finding if the basis for this organic life form (no matter how small) is uniquely different from our own. It means that we have been fortunate enough not only to be able the results of one miracle (our current biosphere) but a SECOND genesis of life. This would change the proportion of life expected to be found in the universe drastically!
don't worry beats. the economy will fix itself after it implodes... you should start learning Mandarin now though...
LoopStationZebra wrote:it's like a hipster commie pinko manifesto. Rambling. Angry. Nearly divorced from all reality; yet strangely compelling with a ring of truth.