I'm thinking about going to my niece's house for a day, just to use her high speed connection so that I can finish watching Ewaranon.
I have been fascinated by comets for many years. Any fresh information would make my day!
To continue the gist of my earlier post about comets and Covid, I have found this.
Actually, there is a goodly amount of internet info about "space" causing diseases. The book article below also mentions SARS, which is the parent of Covid.
The article examines pathogens as the culprits.
ok, seems possible, but we've also seen Electric Universe theories that blame illnesses on harmful ranges in the electromagnetic spectrum. Microwaves in countertop ovens and cell phones, for example, are harmful. Uranium is not, according to some nuclear engineers like Galen Winsor.
7.83 Hz, the Schumann Resonance, is often called earth's heartbeat. It is also our natural frequency which, when disturbed by the environment, throws our biology off balance.
Flatearthers think that "space" is the region between us and the dome. The dome itself is, I'm guessing, an inert glasslike material. It rotates in reaction to an energy production of earth's saltwater and metals. Mount Meru, at the North Pole, has long been proposed as the magnetic pole which transmits the power upward.
Electric systems are unpredictable. When there is a disturbance in the force, bad stuff happens.
Literature, even sci-fi fictions, give us many clues to the truth.
- - - - -
Anyway, here is one of several sources about disease and/or death from above.
Diseases from Space - Wikipedia
Diseases from Space is a book published in 1979 that was authored by astronomers
Fred Hoyle and
Chandra Wickramasinghe, where they propose that many of the most common diseases which afflict humanity, such as
influenza, the common cold and
whooping cough, have their origins in extraterrestrial sources. The two authors argue the case for
outer space being the main source for these pathogens- or at least their causative agents.
[1][2][3]
Diseases From Space
![[Image: 220px-Diseases_from_space.jpg] [Image: 220px-Diseases_from_space.jpg]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/1b/Diseases_from_space.jpg/220px-Diseases_from_space.jpg)
Author
Chandra Wickramasinghe,
Fred HoyleCountryUnited KingdomLanguage
EnglishGenre
Space medicinePublished1979
ISBN978-0060119379LC ClassRC1137The claim connecting terrestrial disease and extraterrestrial pathogens was rejected by the scientific community.
Contents
Fred Hoyle and
Chandra Wickramasinghe spent over 20 years investigating the nature and composition of
interstellar dust. Though many hypotheses regarding this dust had been postulated by various astronomers since the middle of the 19th century, all were found to be wanting as and when new data on the gas and dust clouds became available.
Chandra Wickramasinghe proposed the existence of polymeric composition based on the molecule
formaldehyde (H
2CO).
[4]
In 1974 Wickramasinghe first proposed the hypothesis that some dust in interstellar space was largely
organic (containing carbon and nitrogen),
[5][6] and followed this up with other research confirming the hypothesis.
[7] Wickramasinghe also proposed and confirmed the existence of polymeric compounds based on the molecule
formaldehyde (H
2CO).
[4] Fred Hoyle and Wickramasinghe later proposed the identification of bicyclic aromatic compounds from an analysis of the ultraviolet extinction absorption at 2175A.,
[8] thus demonstrating the existence of
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules in space.
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe went further and speculated that the overall
spectroscopic data of cosmic dust and gas clouds also matched those for desiccated bacteria. This led them to conclude that diseases such as
influenza and the
common cold are incident from space and fall upon the Earth in what they term "pathogenic patches." Hoyle and Wickramasinghe viewed the process of
evolution in a manner at variance with the standard
Darwinian model. They speculated that
genetic material in the form of incoming
pathogens from the
cosmos provided the mechanism for driving the evolutionary engine.
[1][9] Hoyle died in 2001, and Wickramasinghe still advocates for these views and beliefs.
Scientific consensus
Edit
The claim connecting terrestrial disease and extraterrestrial pathogens was rejected and dismissed by the scientific community.
[10] On 24 May 2003
The Lancet journal published a letter from Wickramasinghe,
[11] jointly signed by Milton Wainwright and
Jayant Narlikar, in which they speculate that the
virus that causes
severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) could be extraterrestrial in origin instead of originating from chickens.