Scott Miller: What if (on White Dwarfs)



This secondary topic reply is going back into the Usenet stack once
again and again because, while other topics and groups seemingly post
and properly index update as they should, whereas instead we keep
getting: GOOGLE/Usenet "An error was encountered while trying to post,
please try again later". Even with the "Your post was successful",
there's no such indication of our reply being available.

If all else fails, we get to deal with their ultimate "The archive for
this group is currently unavailable" as they proceed to stealth
moderate and/or exclude whatever's rocking their good ship LOLLIPOP.
In fact, a recent Usenet search for my stuff in "alt.astronomy" is
seemingly missing in action, whereas whatever I post becomes much like
Muslim WMD (aka invisible).

Actually, I've just proven that the following GOOGLE/Usenet posting
problem is in fact being orchestrated by and/or on behalf of Scott
Miller, an obvious Usenet borg insider with a nasty ***-load of
hidden agendas and ulterior motives to boot. It seems our Scott
Miller is a Usenet God.

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.astronomy/browse_frm/thread/ccdfca1d336f5a08/129411f145e1f757?hl=en#129411f145e1f757
On May 4, 3:45 am, Scott Miller <jsfmil...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
BradGuth wrote:

And that has what if anything to do with the honest jest of this
topic?

Are you offering up a public owned supercomputer and of its full blown
3D orbital mechanics software?

Are you otherwise offering us your own best swag of hard numbers?

I've already produced more computational information than you have on
this and other topics. The more relavent question would be - can you
produce anything useful on this topic?

Give me and "G=EMC^2 Glazier" access to most any one of our spendy
supercomputers, and as such we'll proceed to knock your socks off.

This sort of thing is absolutely ideal for a supercomputer to be
working on.


One additional computation I have finished - IF by some odd chance some
planet was captured into the lifezone of a white dwarf like Sirius B
(for which I did the calculation) - it would become tidally locked to
the central white dwarf in 10,000 to 1 million years. That would be far
too short a time period for that planet to become life bearing, if the
scenario that occurred here on Earth happened there. Tidal locking
would cause one side to become hot all the time, the otherside very
cold. Atmosphere, if developed, evaporates, keeping water from existing
in liquid form on the planet.

I must say that your faith-based skewed science is certainly darn good
at excluding evidence, as well as having excluded and/or skewed the
regular laws of physics in order to suit your terrestrial mainstream
mindset, and otherwise good at keeping the rest of us village idiots
away from our own supercomputers. Why is that?


So, in the end, the legwork that should have been done by the proposer
of this topic was done by one who actually understands a bit about how
science works rather than the likes of you who offer zip.

So, as per status quo usual, Scott Miller and others of their all-
knowing kind claim to have accomplished those extremely complex and
fully interactive 3D simulations via supercomputer, but they're not
about to share squat. Is that also why your MIB are also doing all
they can to trash my PC, or to otherwise divert/block Usenet access?
-
Brad Guth

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